18
\ ' Bishop Says 'The Fruits, 'of Your G,iving'. Provide Monuments to Charity >' Of Understanding, .Companionship, Security . "How eloquently. the. two Nazareth Hallll he emphasized, "it is a more blessed thing' t9 esan priests 'supported, by hundreds of.. paid ., . 8ehools for Exceptional Children speak of the give than to receive." .' UlY-ass-istants. fruits of your'giving," the Most Rev. James L. l'he Bishop's Appear statement follows: The image of Catholic Charity looms large t:onnolly, Bishop of Fall River, observed in his "Once again, I address you in the interest in the Fall River DiQCese. We have a considerable annua],' Catholie Charities Appeal statement of our Diocesall· works of -mercy. There are the' heritage in our nurseries, and homes for children. - 'which :was read at aU masses in the diocesan ,spi'ritual wol'l(S which, everyone. of. us' should, / . Youth' activity-. welfare-bureaus,' free health:" .tlurches' last Sunday.',' " show in , his Hfe. Then there are the corporal c'amps and pay-camps have been conducted ",What monuments to Charity, and indeed works: of mency; carried out to extent by for many So" too, in our provisioll el)mnumity spirit, are ,our five Homes for the all of us;. but, sinae they are so many and v.aried, Aaed and Chronically III 1" the Bishop said as administered by, Religiouf3, sisters, nurses" ·Dioc- '. Turn to Page Six I' I I I !(.,:r Z;,'-)- '" •.. :' '. " ..\ .1". ' .J'- , . ,'1,1 I' BISHOP VISITS NAZARETH SR. JAMECITA TEACHES TELEPHONE TECHNH}UE Christian Renewai Diocesan Board For . Over 1,100 Outlaws So Lovable, 'Appreciative Diocesan Adults School Sales Over a thousand adults of 'l'he Diocesan School De- the Diocese of Fall, RiveJr partment has again voiced F or. Anything You Do mad e Wednesday night" its disapproval of the distri- April 26, a busy one. In five bution of promotional liter- areas of the diocese they' con- ,By Eva E. Dane ' ature and door-to·door !!und werged to pray, listen, discuss raising campaigns. lMld pray again. Diocesan schools All of us have a contribution of our' own to make to the world we live 'in. Those 'Thc diocesan policy states that .pened their doors to "old" stu- schools may not distribute to whose intellectual grasp is narrower haves sunnier disposition aI1da much greater litudents that night. In :Fall River !ltudents or parents advcrtise- capacity for patience and love than average. people. Just step into the bright rooms of S'l3 camc to Mt. S. Mary Acad- ments, coupons and other pro- Ncw Berford sent 357 te. Nazareth Hail around the cornel' from St. Francis Xavier Church in Hyannis and see' motional literature of a commer- Bishop Stang High School; Taun- the warm welcome you will cial nature. Schools may not rc- ton, 85 at Bishop Cassidy High; tel' games from which to derive "They are so lovable and ap- lease lists of students to com- reCeive from Bishop James basic skills. pre'ciate anything that is done panies for direct mailing or lit- Attlcboro, 110 at Bishop Fcehalll L. Connolly's speCial child-: The older ,gl'0up learns to buy for them and with' them. Often erature. High and Cape Cod, 260 at Holy- 'l'lI'inity School. reno 'l'hen watch their eager groceries, plan meals from you learn much more from these It was also voted that schools In each area, the sessiolIll graphic cards, to express their opened with a very brief Bible tion geared for the below 50 per .feelings in drawings - all pre- retarded, than you can give ing activities which involve the response to class room instruc- special children, termed mentally ,may not make use of fund rais- , dominantly happy ones-about them." Vigil. The biblical lesson - St. cent I.Q. Some catch on faster , door-to-door selling of merchan- Peter's' Epistle - reminded the and will help a companion who school, home" people around Sister Mary Jamecita has dise by school children. audicllces that they were part needs more time to ·assimilate them. cared for the 25 students aged the task at hand. . - ' Both classes avidly listen to 6 to 16 ever since Nazareth Hall a Pcople of God, valued and bible told by two was established in Hyannis 8 Women Convene stories the redeemed at a high price bY' For the younger ones there are sisters of Mercy in charge. years ago. Christ; each ox whom had in diS- picture puzzles, number and let-' Principal Sister Mary Jameeita, Next Saturday Sister Mary Howard instructs Turn to Page Eleven a diminutive spark of fire, in- the older children. A student troduces you to everyone of her from Cape Cod Community Col- Scores of workers are nec- little pupils, with a word or rec- lege near by and another lay essary for the success of a Teachers Meet in Attleboro two major undertaking such as ommendation for each as if it volunteer. assist the sistel's was her very own. The Catholic Teachers Association of the Diocese :Us holding its twelfth annual convention today and tomorrow at Bishop Feehan High school illl Attleboro. Approximately 1,000 religious and lay teachers as well aa priests associated with school work are attend- . ing sessions and panels deal- tute teachers from the first three IiDg with every phase of moo- gl\"ades, while at 3:30. the teach- ... edueation.. ell'S flI'om grades 4 to 8 wm helllr her address on Essentials of '!'his afternoon, Miss Therese Readbg Instructions. . UJThe ANCHOR in their work. the annual convention of the It takes an enormOUi amount Diocesan Council of Catholic of patience and a SeLJe of humor Women, to be held Saturday at to be in Special Education, but Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall the ultimate satisfaction is in- River. ' finite. Many people don't realize Under ,direction of' Mrs. Mi- the latent capacities in these chael J. McMahon, convention youngsters. They are very good chairman, . cOmmittees are in at crafts and will excel at many charge of al: facets of the day- jobs that most people find dreary long program, to which repre- and routine." -sentatives of all Protestant and Sister ,Mary Jamecita, like her Jewish churches and synagogues M. Bluhm, senior editor at Ginll\ Vol. 11, No. 18 May 4, 1967 predecessor Sister Mary Joel, in Fall, River have been inviteo1. Co., will address elementary Miss Bluhm has worked! ilim lFall River. Massachusel\1s hopes some day there will be a Convention advisors are Msgr. IIChool teachers in two sections. dAoceses throughout the countG' ® 1967 PRICi: lOe workshop center for those be- Thomas F. Walsh, Rev. Raymoniil .& 2 , her audience will CO!lSU- TurD to Page Seveg $4.00 per 1(0= Turn to Page Six Turn to Page Eleven

05.04.67

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IiDg with every phase of moo- gl\"ades, while at 3:30. the teach­ . Aaed and Chronically III 1" the Bishop said as administered by, Religiouf3, sisters, nurses" ·Dioc-'. Christ; each ox whom had in diS- picture puzzles, number and let-' ",What monuments to Charity, and indeed works: of mency; carried out to ~Jf)me; extent by to be in Special Education, but Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall audicllces that they were part needs more time to ·assimilate them. I major undertaking such as I' ® 1967 I

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Page 1: 05.04.67

Bishop Says The Fruits of Your Giving

Provide Monuments to Charitygt

Of Understanding Companionship Security How eloquently the two Nazareth Hallll he emphasized it is a more blessed thing t9 esan priests supported by hundreds of paid

8ehools for Exceptional Children speak of the give than to receive UlY-ass-istants fruits of yourgiving the Most Rev James L lhe Bishops Appear statement follows The image of Catholic Charity looms largetonnolly Bishop of Fall River observed in his Once again I address you in the interest in the Fall River DiQCese We have a considerable

~ annua] Catholie Charities Appeal statement of our Diocesallmiddot works of -mercy There are the heritage in our nurseries and homes for children - which was read at aU masses in the diocesan spiritual woll(S which everyone of us should Youth activity- welfare-bureaus free health

tlurches last Sunday show in his Hfe Then there are the corporal camps and pay-camps have been conducted What monuments to Charity and indeed works of mency carried out to ~Jf)me extent by for many ve~ls So too in our provisioll

el)mnumity spirit are our five Homes for the all of us but sinae they are so many and varied Aaed and Chronically III 1 the Bishop said as administered by Religiouf3 sisters nurses middotDioc- Turn to Page Six

I I

II

(r Z-)-

bull 1 J-

11

I

BISHOP VISITS NAZARETH SR JAMECITA TEACHES TELEPHONE TECHNHUE

Christian Renewai Diocesan Board For Over 1100 Agai~ OutlawsSo Lovable AppreciativeDiocesan Adults School Sales

Over a thousand adults of lhe Diocesan School Deshythe Diocese of Fall RiveJr partment has again voicedFor Anything You Domad e Wednesday night its disapproval of the distri shyApril 26 a busy one In five bution of promotional litershyareas of the diocese they conshy By Eva E Dane ature and door-tomiddotdoor und werged to pray listen discuss raising campaigns lMld pray again Diocesan schools All of us have a contribution of our own to make to the world we live in Those Thc diocesan policy states that pened their doors to old stushy schools may not distribute towhose intellectual grasp is narrower haves sunnier disposition aI1da much greaterlitudents that night In Fall River ltudents or parents advcrtiseshycapacity for patience and love than average people Just step into the bright rooms ofSl3 camc to Mt S Mary Acadshy ments coupons and other proshy~y Ncw Berford sent 357 te Nazareth Hail around the cornel from St Francis Xavier Church in Hyannis and see motional literature of a commershyBishop Stang High School Taunshy the warm welcome you will cial nature Schools may not rcshyton 85 at Bishop Cassidy High tel games from which to derive They are so lovable and ap- lease lists of students to comshyreCeive from Bishop James basic skills preciate anything that is done panies for direct mailing or lit shyAttlcboro 110 at Bishop Fcehalll L Connollys speCial child- The older gl0up learns to buy for them and with them Often eratureHigh and Cape Cod 260 at HolyshyllIinity School reno lhen watch their eager groceries plan meals from you learn much more from these It was also voted that schools

In each area the sessiolIll graphic cards to express their

opened with a very brief Bible tion geared for the below 50 per feelings in drawings - all preshy retarded than you can give ing activities which involve the response to class room instrucshy special children termed mentally may not make use of fund rais-

dominantly happy ones-about themVigil The biblical lesson - St cent IQ Some catch on faster door-to-door selling of merchanshyPeters Epistle - reminded the and will help a companion who school home people around Sister Mary Jamecita has dise by school children audicllces that they were part needs more time to middotassimilate them cared for the 25 students aged

the task at hand - Both classes avidly listen to 6 to 16 ever since Nazareth Hallbull a Pcople of God valued and bible told by two was established in Hyannis 8 Women Convene stories theredeemed at a high price bY For the younger ones there are sisters of Mercy in charge years ago

Christ each ox whom had in diS- picture puzzles number and let- Principal Sister Mary Jameeita Next SaturdaySister Mary Howard instructsTurn to Page Eleven a diminutive spark of fire inshy the older children A student troduces you to everyone of her from Cape Cod Community Colshy Scores of workers are necshylittle pupils with a word or recshy lege near by and another lay essary for the success of aTeachers Meet in Attleboro two major undertaking such asommendation for each as if it volunteer assist the sistels was her very own

The Catholic Teachers Association of the Diocese Us holding its twelfth annual convention today and tomorrow at Bishop Feehan High school illl Attleboro Approximately 1000 religious and lay teachers as well aa priests associated with school work are attend- ing sessions and panels deal- tute teachers from the first three IiDg with every phase of moo- glades while at 330 the teachshy edueation ellS flIom grades 4 to 8 wm helllr

her address on Essentials ofhis afternoon Miss Therese Readbg Instructions

UJThe ANCHOR

in their work the annual convention of the It takes an enormOUi amount Diocesan Council of Catholic

of patience and a SeLJe of humor Women to be held Saturday at to be in Special Education but Mt St Mary Academy Fall the ultimate satisfaction is inshy River finite Many people dont realize Under direction of Mrs Mishythe latent capacities in these chael J McMahon convention youngsters They are very good chairman cOmmittees are in at crafts and will excel at many charge of al facets of the dayshyjobs that most people find dreary long program to which represhyand routine -sentatives of all Protestant and

Sister Mary Jamecita like her Jewish churches and synagoguesM Bluhm senior editor at Ginll Vol 11 No 18 May 4 1967 predecessor Sister Mary Joel in Fall River have been inviteo1~d Co will address elementary Miss Bluhm has worked ilim lFall River Massachusel1s hopes some day there will be a Convention advisors are MsgrIIChool teachers in two sections dAoceses throughout the countG reg 1967 PRICi lOe workshop center for those be- bull Thomas F Walsh Rev Raymoniilamp 2 her audience will COlSU- TurD to Page Seveg $400 per 1(0=

Turn to Page Six Turn to Page Eleven

2 -

THE A~CHOR-~iocese of Fall River-Thurs fAoy 4 1967 Diocesan ~ ~ut$es

To Meet MGlY]3 Fall River Dio~san CouncJi d

Catholic Nurses wip hold DUi Spring plenary meeting Saturd~

afternoon and evenIng May ~

at St Annes Hospital Fall Rivli1Je A business meeting at 4 will btl followed by an address bY Sister Mary Patricia of si Annes Hospital Her topic wiJl be A Christian Hospital in Q Non-Christian Country and shcopy will also show a film of t1lw hospital operated in Baghda~

Iraq by her community Benediction at 6 will igte oQ

fered by Rev Comelim J Kello her Diocesan Council mo~erato~

and ~ishop Connolly will speoo at tb~ dinner concl~dng tml ~eeting bull

~ist~r Mary Patri~a is a latiw of SS Peter and Paul parish FaJll

River and a graduate middotpt Sa Anmfs Hospital SChool of Nungt ing She entered the Dominicam Sisters of the Presentation bm 1953 and in 1955 volunteered fOO mission work

She is in the United States k1l observe new methods and equip ment and has visited hospitaifJ in WlShington D C and tbtl New England area onmiddot inspcctiofil

ECUMENISM IN NORTH EASTON Very Rev John tours The religious is also hopshyT Cor~ CSC president of Sto~ehill College preached iDg to interest lay people in gi Sunday in the Unity Church of North Easton at the usual ing two years of apostplic wor)

to the Baghdad hospitalservice of the Church and initiated an experienCe in the She notes that a diploma nufltoolife of the Unity 9hurch ing school was startedin conneoshy

tion with the institution Ii shy d fomiddot~middotSImiddotck ~ I years ago and that a nevy ~o beGlwing is scheduled for CODlple-shyAtten

~ ~ bull _ lion in Sept~mber She will i

211 Catholic Priests Among 771 Now Sermiddot I turn to Iraq 1D the Fall r 1 I I 1 Ibullbull t Imiddotrng I

As Chaplains in NationsVA Hospitals Stonehill Campaign Seniors at Stonehill College

BObber Catholic are co~direcshyWASHINGTON (NC)-There are undertaking a three-yeaw tors of the school which has al shyare 271 Catholic priests among eampaign to raise a class gift of

the 771 chaplains serving full or ready graduated 30 chaplainshy $19900 $1000 for each year Gf part time in the Veterans Admin students of all faiths the colleges existence First inshyistrations coast-to-coast hospi Numbered among the Catholic stallment on pledges will be paiC

graduates are Father Roger Ptal system in SeptemberQuilty CSC Boston native whoSeven including a Benedictine hr taught at the Holy Crossabbot are graduates of one of Fathers serillnary in North Easshythe Post unusual scl)pol~Jn the JEFFREY E SULLIVANton Fr Quilty a fortner fibtlcher

ngttio~_ at Kings College in Wilkes Fe-a 80 ae ~ ~ The vA Chaplain Schoo~ at Batre Pi and Notre DiIme Uni- 550 Loe~ streetJeffe~son Barracks (Mo VA middot -versityis how a chaplaih ~t the

~ospital has no plob~em witlb fall River Mass Jammed classrooms Theteachmg

Boston IVA Hospital I J ilmiddot i 6722391middot~middotmiddotmiddotAnbther graduate isFrther

gtstaff~utnumbers the studentll ~ ~ Joseph M Caplice a native of] 5 to i I ~)Rose E SldilvaD~ bull IRockland Mass aha foimer Alhough the ~A c~a~lalDs Navy cI-aplain at theProvitllbnee f Je~fre7 E SaUiyan

ServIce was establIshed In 1945 (RI) -VA Hospital I 0

it was only ~three years ago that the school was opened after studIes proved clerygmellneeded special training in institutional procedure and techmques to sucshyceed in their work in hospital surromiddotmdings

Chaplain Roy F Reynolds Baptist and Father Raymar E

MANUFACFURERS NATIONAL BANKD D Sullivanmiddotamp Sons

) - BRISTOL (Ol1NTw FUNERAL I-fOMmiddot bull bull bull _ Imiddotj 0 i -~ l I

6 ~~~R~S MpST ACCOMMOD4T1NG BANK fmiddot

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fALL RIVER MASSbull 1 bull I I ~l f t t I ~ 11 it I J tlt I ll ~ bull J ~ t ~t 6723381 ~ ~~( ~( L I 9RJH ~rrr~BORO~ ~~NSFIELI)

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middotGENERA[ (ONlliOOIS - and fNGINEERS 5 middot~fj ) r ~AtA~ t1rltfoaUt4S C~ilPres

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bull ~OUTH YAAMOUTH

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bull Memoer No )IIS~ciety Professional Elginrmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot

r imiddot FRA~centI~imiddot~ COIILINS JR reas bullr bull THOMAmiddotSK COUiNS Secy lID

ACADEMY BUILDING FAn RIVER MASS middot bullbullbullmiddotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullIIibullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Chqriti~middot~ App~g~ ~elPrts

InitiaiSp~cw(d Girt~ The first returns in the Special faU River

Gifts phase of the Silver Jubilee Catholic Charities Appeal have $1500 been released by the general Fall River Herald News headquarters today $1200

Commemorating 25 years of Fall River Electric Light CoLove of Neighbor the theme

$1000lIor this year is A contribution Gold Medal Bakeryof $25 as an Act of ~rhanksgiving

for 25 Years of Blessings $600 throughout the Diocese Knights of Columbus-Bishop

The initial contrlbutions are Cassidy Council J3fi69 Swansea $550

Duro Fiili~~ Corp $500 ~ Atty amp Mrs Hahgtld EClarkin Mr amp Mrs John R McGinn

(Leary Press) $150

Confirmation Class - Santo Christo Parish

A Friend Amy Lynn Draperies Inc D amp D Sales and Service Colonial Wholesale Beverage

Corp A Friend Radio Station WSAR

New Bedford $1000

Merchants National Bank of New B~ford A Friend

$100 $100 Rev F Anatole Desmarais ContiIiental Screw Company Rev Patrick ON~iII1 Aerovox Corp

Rev Ja1es A CJar~ Blue Ribbon LlUldfY Rev Joseph L Powers Rev Albert F Shov~lton MassOrdo La Salette Shri~e-Attleboro FRlDAy-stPiusv Po~ arid Walsh Brothers Confessor lII ClaSs White

Mass Proper Two VotiveNorth Attleboro Masses in honor of the Sacred

1000 Heartmiddot of Jesus permitted$ G ory 2nd Pra r St Pi V

John F Smith Estate bull ye us 00 No Creed Preface of the $2 middot thSacred Heart T mMrs Leon Pini 0 orrow IS e $150 first Saturday of tle month

St Vincent de Paul S t SATURDAY - Mass - of theOC1eSacred Heart Conference y- Blessed Virgin for Saturday

$100 IV Cla~s W~lteff~ssPr~l Duvernay Council jf~2 LUilion G1~ry no Crlild ~fe~ of

St~ jean tile Baptist dll~nieriqueBlessedYlrgm Mary yr Thom~s p Mcb6riouiih Coui-cil bull ~l1Nlt)~y~Sunda~ afte~ the As-

t=OO K of C cel~SIO~ II CI~ss Whlte Mass ~ PrOper ql0TJ C~~ P~faceO bull

J Necrology flf the Amiddot~enslon ~ ~ MONDAY - yenass of Ascensionshy l-lay 12 IV Classmiddot White Mass Prilper

Rev John F da Valles-192() Glory no Creed Preface of Chaplain United States Army Ascension

~I ~Iay 13 TUESDAY-St Gregory N~zian-Rt Rev Osias Bou~her 1955 zen Bishop Confessor and

Pastor Blessed Sacrament Fall Doctor of the Church III River Class Whit~ Mass PoPer1

May 16 Glory no Creed Preface of Rev William McDonald SS Ascen~ion

1941 St Patrick Falmouth WEDNESDAY-St Antoninus Rt Rev J Joseph lSullivan Bishop and Confessor III

PR 1960 Pastor Sacred Heart Class White Mass Pr~r Fall River Glory 2-d Prayer SS Gordian

May 17 and Epimachus Martyrs no Most Rev James E Cassidy Creed Prefacemiddotof Ascension

DD 1951 3rd Bishop of Fall THURSDAY- SS PhiliPand River 1934-51

bull bull bull I ~ Dlocesdmiddot(J~O$ts( (

SAGINAW (NC) ~ Bishop (~ James A ijickey newly conse~

~( crated auxilihmiddotY~ormiddotmiddotth~Saglnaw t Diocese in Michigan has been

appoin~e~a Vilt3f geherall ~nd 4 ( diocesllDcorlstIltdr i I I ~ bull r

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

May ~t Vincent lHome Fall River

May 7-o~r Lady of the Imshymaculate Concei)tion

J middotNorth EastclD I 0

St Mary Hebronville

TME ANCHOR lecond Class Postage Paid at FallllWer

Mass Published every Thursday at 410 HighlanCl Avenue Fall Rivel Mass 02722 i by the cathOlic tress Olthe Diocesf) of fall River SUDscriplion prioe middotIly mall pestpalCl$400 per_

James Apostles II Class Red Mas(Prop~r Glory Creoo Prefa~ ~fApostIes

( bull I j

iO~ROURKE F~fJrfIIiTome gt

sif S~~6nd Street fallmiddot River Mass

679-fJ072 MICHAEL J McMAHON

Licensed Funeral DirectOr Registered Embalmer

BROOKLAW~ FUNERALmiddotHOME~INC bullbull

R Marcel Roy - G LOJrslne80Jmiddot Roger laFrance

FUrlErtA DI~ECTPfl$ _ IS Ir~ingt~n Ct

55l66 New Bedford

3 Prelate Stresses Progress Following Vatican Council

PIDLADELPHIA (NC)-The incredible thrust forward ~f the Second Vatican Council will not be impeded Philashyltdelphias Archbishop John J~ KlOl declared here In an address to the men of the Catholic Philopatrian Literary Institute which awarded the archbishop its 1967 Father Sourin Medal he said that extremists-both the apashythetic and the overzealous-are m-eating disturbances that retard the progress of genuine renewal and reform but the progress will not be impeded much less reshyversed~

It is our task not always pleasant to jar the apatlietic who resist change and to restrain the ver-eager tho would displace mI that is traditional and ignore the precise lines and directives of the Council for renewal

The Sourin Medal is named for Father Edward J Sourin SJ who was instrumental in foundshymg the Philopatrian Institute in ]850 The 1967 presentation marked the first time in the orshyganizations 117-year history that the award was made to a clergyshyman-ordinarily it is giVen to a Catholic layman The archbishop was cited for his confident and courageous leadership

The atchbishop admitted these moe trOubled times but he reshyminded that the Prihce ofPeace and the source of the twin comshymandment of love told His discishyples I have come tn cast fire lIPon the earth

By nature and by middotvocation I am a confirmed optimist he continued I desire peace but DOt at any price Jr dislike and ky to avoid turmoil and controshyversy but cannot abdicate the llesponsibility of my office ][ must face issues and make decishysions and sometimes a decision must be a No Nevertheless reshyviewing the past century I find much reason for optimism

Leadership may be considered the pl10per and successful exershyelse of authority the archbishoplltated There is a terietency to re-

Maronite Parish I

Holds Jubilee Ai week-long MiSSion will be

held in observance of the Golden Jubilee of Our LadYof PurgashytorYParish New Bedford start shying Sunday May 7 and will last to Mothers Day May gt14 Rev John Foley CSC will co~duct the Mission at both Sunday morning Masses and every weekshyday evening at 7 The public is hlvited

Most Rev Francis M Zayek Maronite Apostolic Exarcb ofshyUae United States will arrive ia )lew Bedford Friday May 12 to help celebrate Our Lady of Purgatory Parishs golden jubishyee

During a Maronite POl)tif~cal

Mass in the parish the bishop will administer First Commun- ion and Confirmation Then he will go to dedicate the parishs Lebanese Center the former Merrimac Street School The -others of the First CommnniOil lind Confirmation classes wiiI bull en serve II buffet iii honor of tiaeir bishop

On Saturday also the lltfaroni~ JIlelate will pay a formal call

eo Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of the Fall River Diocese

Sunday May 14 will be the of ficial jubilee day with a P~ntifi

ealMass in the Syriac Lituru (St James the Apostle) at S clock in the afternoon in New Bedfords St James Church County Street

The jubilee banquet will be held at Lincoln Park with a Golden Table reserved for the First Lebanese Settlers-those who came to New Bedford before 1811

gard authority as a naughty word as something incompatible with full personal responsibility

In reality the exercise of Duch responsibility as well as the exercise of freedom of conscience m external acts demands the existence and the protection of authority No institution can surshyvive without authority

Todays talk about the crisis of authority in the Church said the archbishop points up an exshyaggeration of a very normal and human urge for full responsibil shyity ll at times accompanied by impatience with the middottraining training preparation and khowlshyedge which is necessary for the full exercise of personal responshysibility It may be accompanied by a resentment of dependence and subordination and of obedishyence to higher authority

Archbishop Krol said Vatican Council II unleashed a tremenshydous ferment He s~id it is a joy and a comfort to see so many interested so many eager to learn and to live in the councils program of renewal

Hits PulblOlteation Of Statements On Birth Control

VATICAN CITY (NC) shyPublicationmiddot of once - secret reports to Pope Paul VI of the majority and minority views of the commission on birth control by an American publicashytion has been criticized here as displeasing

Msgr Fausto VanIainc said in reply to a question on the reportS pU~lished in the NatipI)aJ CathoshyBe Reporter tha hit could ~mlyshyreply personally MWVallaincmiddotmiddot head of the Vatican press office stressed that he was only speakshy~g from a p~rsonal point of view and was not speaking for the Holy See

However Msgr Vallaincs comshyment reflected and echoed nushymerous comments frorn various Vaticim areas ~

lie began by notiQg that the paper which published the indisshyteretians although it has the name of Catholic does not deshypend on ecclesiastic authority

Magr Vallainc said that if the two reports in question had been turned over to the newspaper by bull member or consultor of the Papal commission on family regshyulation as it is sllid it is cershytainly displeasing

Magr Vallainc said that if the report w~re true then someone failed in the grave obligation of ~cy and this is on the conshyacieillce of the person involved

He added that the calm examishynation of the problem under stUdy is not aided by indirect

Pressure which only provokes theagitation of public opinion

Jlsgr Vallaine concluded tbat --

moral norms do Ji~ obey caprice IX the pressures of haste or pubshy bull lie opinon bUt must answer TELEPHONE 675-7992divine law

YOURS VO LOVE AND TO GIVE tile life of a DAUGHTER OF S1 PAUL Love God more and give ttl souls knowledge and love ot Gad by serving Him In a Mission which uses the Press Radio Motion Pictures 9nd TV to bring His Word to souls everywhere ZealoiJs younggirls 14-23 years Interested In this uniqueAjlostolate may write to

REVIEREND MOTHER SUPERIOR DAUGHTIERS Of ST PAUL

50 ST PAULS AVE BOSTON 30 MASS

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1967

Name btm~rro~a~s To CQn1mmgt)~a~

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Four Americans including a layman have been named consultors for the Commission for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law

The four include Msgr Steshyphen Kelleher of New York Rev Frederick R McManus of the Catholic University of Amershyi~a Msgr John Quinn of Chishycago

The layman Stephen Kutt1er is a professor of history of canon law at Yale University

Two other laymen were apshypointed one from a Roman unishyversity ano the other from Frishybourg Switz They are now inshycluded among the lOr consultors hom all over the world working in 12 groups preparing studies and reports for the commission

Actor$ tcopy ~~tror

HCrOiC~ MtlM[ucopylIl1 NEW YORK (NC)-The Cath~

olic Actors Guild will salute Horace McMahon television and stage actor as Man of the Year at its Spring supper tlance here tbmorrow night

The award will be presented in recognition of the Catholic principles exemplified tllrough him in his professional life his family and his free and wideshyspread giving of time and talent to many and varied activities of faith and charity

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SI(JiMJERSET JUBILARIAN Most Rev Jose V Alvershynarz latriarch of the East Indies a~d Archbishop of CQa and a seminary classmate ofRt Rev Msgr Augusto L Furtado who celebrated 50 years in the priesthood on Sunshyday was the guest speaker at the testimonial banquet for the Somerset prelate

Immoral Means Mmami Bishop Carroll Strongly Protests Bill

To Ease present Florida Abortion Law MIAMI (NC)~As proponents Violatell the sacrl~d right to life

of liberalized abortion laws pre- l and therefore isa cime~ pared tomiddot present a bill in the current session ofFloridas legisshylature Bishop Coleman F Car- roll of Miami has urged legislashytors to perpetuate our traditiopal American respect for human life and to safeguard the ~ghts of the unborn

Bishop Carroll said We must be irrevocably con-

cerned about Safeguarding hu- man life whether it be the new life of an unborn baby or the ebbing life of the incurable aged

We cannot in any way supshyport the movement which seeks legal approval for directly asshysaulting the innocent life of the unborn whatever the motives Such an attack whether based on ~ugenic or social grounds

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THE ANCHQrshy4 ceD Directors Urge NationalT~urs Mo) 4 1967 I bull bullbull ~ ~i1 - bull - f bull ~ ( gt t II[ ----- _-------

Offpoundc~ of ReEigious middotEduc~tionmiddotmiddotmiddot-

The LOS ANGELES CNCNine Agitation for cat~cheticai~

ty-seven diocesan directors of newaLP alJr]isecth PmiddotGtlJIade the Confraternity of Ci)Ji~tiari Present efforts at religious eel--Doctrine (CCD) have called for ucation which are often uneooli shy

~It vi(J)SllWIi the creation of a national office dinated ill-defined and underrshy1FamplIlI lRllITlElR - of religious education as -a top- financed-----shy

-he patish countif W)1I1if6et priority need of the Roman IPlI2n Conference

at 8 tonight in the school hall Catholic Church The national office is needed Father John S Russell of S~

SIlbull lli(J)l8IN BAJgtIlllSIl to fill the huge gap which is aeuse NY national chairman GI CIENIIRamplI VllJLlLAGIE causing a crisis in religious edushy the CCD directors said that lIB

The Ladies Guild wdl hold its cation the directors declared at a prerequisite for the creation oJI monthly meeting at 7 30 Thurs- the conclusion of the 31st nationshy a national office of religious edshyday night May 11 in the parish al CCD conference here ucation the directors plan a speshyhall Election of officers will be cial conference next Fall involvshyThe crisis exists the directors followed by a potluck supper said because of ing the hea s of nationa~ Cathoshyto which members may invite Difficulties in the implementashy lic agencies concerned witlJreshyguests Mrs Loretta PotteI Mrs tion of Vatican Council II ligious education Agnes Potter and Mrs Estl~r The growing percentage of The directors also voted to

Perry are hostesses Catholic students in public work for establishment of ~

schools and universities -greater community among CatbshyST GEORGE The urgent necessity of conshy ()lic religious edl1cators and teWESTPORT

tinuing adtllt education among establish a structure for i~seyenebA public Maybasket whist will Catholics and professional studies I

be held at 8 Saturday night May 6 in the school hall -- -7 - l

ST JEAN THE BAPTIST FALL RllVEI

SIST~~~The Council of Catholic Women J will hold its regular monthly meeting on Monday evening IVIUSL~MS May 8 at 730 in the church hall

Mrs Remi Rinfret chairman AND TAXI - ~ ~ and Mrs Alfrcd Berube co-

chairman have announced hat REQUIEM FORADENAUERPontifical Requiem Mass DRIVERSall members are encouraged to bring theil mothers for the spe- forthe late Dr Konrall Adenauer offeredbyArlthbishop

THEHOLY FATHERIscwissioN AID 10 THE ORIENTAL CHURIH t ~ I ) _ ~ ~ - bull cial old fashioned Mothers Night Patrick A OJ30yle in St Matthews-Cath~dralWashington

lndSocial prOgrlm -was attended bv members of the diplomatic corpsChief j1 bull WISH frl Nfilif~slthe H~1y Land our 13 Sister~ 081

ST FRANCIS XAVIER Justice Earl Wa~ren Speaker of thllHQuse John McCormack YOU Joseph have -been asked to teach Englisli tb ttl middot HYANNIS and otherdignitaries of church and state German Minister LIVED taxi middotdrivers who care for American pilgrim

The new slate of officers for Gliqrg von LiU~nflld her~ gTe~~sectI t1~_ Al~hbishop NC Ph9tO y ~ NEAR r It- r~fleQts the esteem tt-Je Sisters eilJoYin thi - ~ shyiihe Womens Guiid is as foliows ENOUGH Muslim toWR~ Carol Hunnybun reports Two-

I Mrs Mary MurisScyplesid~nt - TO thirds oPthe children In the Sisters school ere Mrs Barbara Cannon vlce- MIX Muslim not to mention most of the 70000 middot president Mrs Pauline Antil reshy CEMENTl people the Sisters treated last year In thelrYrshy

eltgtrding seeretary Mn Flora nosemiddotan(Hhroat -dispensary bull bull You do Ifv Bisbee treasurer Federal Equality Opportunity Board Reports nearefKlugh tobelp SImply walk toyour corner

The sehedule of futum events maitOOx ampfIdsendsomething ($100 $75 _Few Religious Biasmiddot Complaintswas annoullced by Mrs Leo $25 $100 $5~ $2) to help complete the chapelGregoire plcsident The annual WASHINGTON (NC) -Only to Congress covered the fiscal

(simple functional devotional) the SlstGuild blll](luet i scheduled for two per cent of the diserimina- year ending June 30 last

liFe building evenings with their own handFriday June 2 and will be under tion charges filed with the Equal Exceed Expectation

(Look lor it if you visit the Holy Land) To finlillthe supervision of co-chairmen Employment Opportunity Com- Major point made middotby the re-Mrs JUl1iee lIcCarthy and Mrs mission during its first year of port is that the comlTissio~ reshy this desperatelymiddotneeded chapel they need Betty Burke opeiatjon alleged unequal treat- ceived 8854 complaints in its $3800 for materials and furnishings Give them

meilt beQause of religion first year whereas budget and In memory of your loved ones A plaque at the lVIIS Kay Lycett wili he~da Racial discrimination was ~taffing was predicated on esti- entrance will ask the boys and girls (and riottolarge committee fora rummage

sale planned for Mhy 22 in the charged in 59 per cent of the mates that som~ 2000 complaints Christians too) to pray foryou and yours for61181

Masonic Building l-Iain Street 5525 cases considered by the woule be madel The actlJ~1 num- commission Discrimination be- ber was more than tWIce the bull GAiAArticles mJy Ijy leftin the lower UNRWA Comm1ssloner-Ge1eral Laurence MIchelo bull cause of sex was cited in 37 per number all state fall employment f~

~ middotWEREChurch )ctwicn 1113 J5- 20 and middotmore oCClbles urgently that $75 Is needed now at the lIsonic If]]] On $Uilday cent and discdnmination because practice agencies receive in a WORRIED for ~h ofotlr 67 blind boys and girls to comshyevening May 21 befween 7 and of religion nd naflal origin year plete this years training at the Pontifical MI middoteacl-) accounted for two per cent The commISSIon repol ted ThIS

dramatic response to the new lawD siOfl-centel f(J( the Blind Gazas only Monasnor

A hml and bean SUPPllr wBl Thefl~ur~S ~ade publIc 111 the (Civil Rights Act of 1964) reshy -Gartland In Beirut requests the total Imnledlo bE selv(d from 3 tomiddot~ on Slturshy commISSIOn s fIrst middotannual repolmiddott flected the confidence of civil 1ltety $5925 bullbullbull Every gift will help Take 08 f middot day evci1ing lr y 27 inthf~ lower

rights organizations ald minority ~f tmebl~middotchlf4 ($75) or twolchurch hall persons in this new middotavenue middottoMrs Trudy Sylvestcr will head Prelate Supports bullbullbullbullrelief from discriminationthe committee for the annual FREE -01 a fr_ CQJlY of Monsignor Norans reen

It almost swamped middotthe smallSummer Fair set for Saturday COpy aFtiele 1orprldta Holy Land Torment July 29 Welfare Hike middotcommission staff and middotasa result bmd 8~H1d ua ysur address It cOnllllHf

the commissions first yearCINCINNATI (NC) - Efforts ~ to the tfoJy Land pilgrIm Sot -ended with many middothundred middotUftshytf raise welfare payments fur

Appe~1 Bus Ruling reached casesOhios dependent children frQRl 78 per cent to 100 middotper cent minishyTo Supreme Court mum needs has middotdraw-n strong

WASHINGTON (NC) -- Th~ support from Archbishop Kad JU S Supreme Court ha been

0Alter of Cincinati middot asked tc rule once again on the In middota letter to pliests Religious col1stitHtionality of transpQrling and lait~ of the archdiocese middothe student~ to privt~ schonls at declared llubHc expense The i st time the

As concerned Christiails andcourt ruled in the matter-- in a as citizens we shoul- take middotan middotacshymiddot 1947 New Jersey case-it upheld tive personal interest imiddotn the proshythe practice gJams of the government and middotofThis time the American Civil the community middotand ()f the

Libertie~ Union and the AmershyChurch to aid the poorican Jewish Congress on behalf

Gf scvclal I~nsylvania eiiizens Worthy of particular attention are challenging a 1965 Pennsylshy at this time is the efforl t) seshy GEO OHARA vania law which r-luires public cure adequate welfare benefits transportation of pupils to nonshy for the some 14000Ppoor chil shymiddotprofit privte schools within cershy dren of our state Under the tain distance limits present Aid to Dependent Chil shy THI CATHOLIC NImiddotAR IAIIT WILFAAE ASSQCIATIbullbull

The law was uphelc Jan 17 by dren program these children reshy CHEVROLETceive only 78 per cent of the cost decisi~ which relied heavily on the state Supreme Court in a 5-2

of living by the very minimum the U S Suprem~ COUltS 1947 standards of health andmiddotdecency

opinion The app -1 charges Must of us have never expeshymiddot -however that many Amelicans rienced the pain of poverty middotWe

are alarmed at what seems to be live comfortably in areas where n ever-widening breach h~ the we are spared the distasteful wall of separation of church and sign of human beings il misery state and only this court can Yet e poormiddot are our neighbors clarify the law on this vital and we must not shut them out issue middotof our Iives

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SCOUTHNG AWARDS As the scouting year comes to an end all usociated with this youth work meet for the ~JlIlluai awards night Left HIm Medas Jr St Pauls Taunton and Miss Joan Corrigan St Theresas A-ttleooro Center Rudolph Blanchard St Annes New Bedford Mrs

Lawrence Harney St Lawrences New Bedford Bi~hop Connolly Edgar J Bowen Our Lad~ of the Isle Nantucket Right Arthur L Bergeron~ Immaculate CooceptitlR Fall River Miss Mary Carreiro Our Lady of the Angels Fall River

Department of Education Survey Shows Catholic Schools Increase

WASHINGTON (NC) - The aumber of Catholic schools of lID elassifications in the United states increased by 110 or 0-3 per eent between 1963 and 1965 acshyeording to the latest national Mlmmary of Catholic education published ~re by the Departshyment of Education of the United States Catholic Conference

The number of instructors inshycreased 13759 or 69 per cent whHe the number of students jnshyer~ased 34785 or 06 per cent the survey found

But- for the first time since the Catholic education surveyswere begun by the department lin 1920 the practice in certain dioceses of dropping elementary 5Chool grades has been reflected 10 I October 1965 Catholic eleshymentary schools enrolled 4492- 1107 pupils a decrease of 41664 pupils or 09 per cent under the plevious survey of 1964

The statistical data in the curshylre1t summary is based on inforshymation as of Oct 31 1964 and Oct 31 1965 It gives a state by state breakdown of Catholic lieminaries and religious houses ef formation universities and collegell diocesan teacneils 001shyAegesJUld teacher trflining insti ~tipflS secondary schools anti ele~entllry schools

Lay TelMlhcl1S Ihncllcase Tjte survey notes that Catholic

elementary schools are conshydQcted in each of the 144 archshydioceses and dioceses and in all etf the 50 states The number aries from three schools in th~

diocese of Juneau Alaska to 442 in the Chicago archdiocese New York with 1158 has more Catholic elemenary schools than MY other state

The 1965 survey showed a ~tal of 1202GS teachers staffing llO879 elementary schools This number which includes 76195 llleligious teacheZs and 44011 lay reachers is an inczoaaSJl of 13373 tbeachers over the lS53-54 total

Th-e greates~ incrCiase was irouna in the number of lay ~acheIs in 1954 there were e356 lay teachers Of 122 Per (OOnt of the tota~ in 1e65 there 4lt1011 lay teaclleJrs in Catholic

elementary schools or 366 per rent oi the total

A total of 4492107 elemenshytaiY school pupils in 1965 mukedmiddot an- iRcrease of 388 per cent ia theH-year period since 1953-~

but It decline of 9 per cent from 19M

On the seeondary school level the stHvey founda marked inshyeTeQSe in the past decade in censhytral or diocesan high schools NMing that the advantages which accompany the consolidashytion of smalll schools into larger units has led to the closing 0f sORle schools formerly serving 1Il

llllgie parislln the report predicts that this trend will continue

The percentage of private seeshyondiilry schools - schools owned and controlled by religious CGIlshy

gregations more or less indeshypendently oi parish and diocese -remained constant

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Mom say with a resigned smile Well the dishes woot do themselves so Id better get busy She cant bear those piles of dirty dishes staring her inmiddot the face so she goes at them with as much vigor as she can muster But she doesnt have to Hke it

No the dishes wont wash themselves but an automatic electric dishwasher will Thats just one reson why more and more families choose total- electric Gold Medallion Homes Many have electric dishwashers f1lready installed Those withshyout dishwashers have ample electrical capacity to permit easy economical installation of this popular work-saving appli shyance

Whether you choose a built- I in 01 portable model youll I find an electric dishwasher is-I just a work-saver Dishes comeshyout cleaner and more sanitary than is possible w)th handshy~ashing -tlanks to the use of super-hot water Also a dishwasher ~l1inimizes breakage because theres less handling of fragile china and ~lassware

New models offer a variety of washing cycles including 11 soft wash for delicate china

and crystal At the other end of the scale theres a vigorous wash for pots and pans and heavily soiled utensils

SmaU families find they can do all of a days dirty-dish accumulation at one time And

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6 THE ANCHor -Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 4 1967

CommunicotioRS There is geperal agreement~that the Vatican f CotmcD

Declaratiorion Communications is not an outstanding doeshy ument when viewed in thelight of the otherdOel)Ipents

coming from that momentous meeting But the fact that the Fathers of the Council wanted to deal with the matter of communications testifies to their awareness that men are indeed living in one world and that communications has made it a small world indeed

Television communication satellites radio newspapers movies air and rail and road travel-all these have opened up the world so that news travels around the earth as soon as it happenB opinions and v~ewsare projected into the ears of million of persons ideas which in decades past were suggested to as many persons as could hear the ~ound of a voice in a hall are now flung literally throughout the world

The very proliferation of communications media has both its advantages and its dangers Ideas get aroundshyboth good and bad Values are broadcast-noble ones and others News and opinions and propaganda are grouno out into ears that are discriminating and sophisticated and quite the opposite

This then is the challenge of communications to man _ -and the Church is not afraid to meet this challenge There is no question of censorship of manipulating the news and opinions To begin with that does not work And where it has worked it has worked perhaps more for evil than for good ideas The chsllenge is one of education-of conveyshying the values of Christ so persuasively and convincingly to people by both educative processes and by the witlHSS of personal lives that people will develop a taste for what is right There mUllt also be the honest realization that adults are adults and children are children and what might be acceptable for the one group could be hannful to the developing characters of the other

Thing are th(~re to be used 7 newspapers radio movies teleision And as the hite Atomic ~nergy Comshymission chainnan Thomas Murray once said Our only fear and our great llesponsibility is not what we do with things but what we do with ourselves How will man use the means of communication

The Giver ReceiiJeB When Buddhists give in the name of religion they

profer their gift with an expressi~n of thanks reasoning that they themselves should be grateful for this opportu Dity of gaining merit through a work of charity and religion

Such-an attitude does little to feed ones ego but cershytainly enlarges the soul and puts the emphasis where it belongs In the words of St AUgllstine whom Pope Paul

quoted in his recent encyclical You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person You are hanling over to him what is his For what has been given in common for the use of all you have arrogated to yourself The world is given to all and not only to the rich

It is quite difficult for one who has to give to one who has not and not to feel that he is giving and therefore virtuous generous deserving of fawJiing thanks and deep gratitude But for the Christjan giving is sharing with a brother in Christ who has not some of the world which one has It is an act that brings Gods blessing down upon the giver It helps the recipient yes but it also helps the giver to heed the words that the Apostle St John was said to repeat over and over again - Little children love one another

Giving to the Catholic Charities Appeal should be conshysidered not only a tax write-off not merely a tedious duty not just a yearly affair It should be seen as an opshyportunity to gain within oneself by helping a brother or sister in need-the poor the young the bewildered the aged the sick the dying the underprivileged the excepshytional Christ is in eaAh of these In giving to Christ we do not expect thanks but we are grateful to Him for the privilege of serving him

rhe ANCHOR OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVIER

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722middot 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P DrisltoJl -

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~frreg~ [Q)D~regillLfO QUTI~frDBOlJtlDnsshy

o~[uw [PDreg~reg~ f A[f~~8

Con~inued from Page One

for the aged we have Sacred Heart Home New Bedford long antedating our Chariti(s Appeals And we have four new Homes with accommodations for upwards of 640 as a result of past appeals

To any curious visitor or prospective manufacturer wanting to know the type of community he moves into our institutions appear to be quite important III faet we are told they are the show pieces of the area ADd

theres quite a bit of truth in that What monuments shyCharity and indeed community spirit are our five Homes for the Aged and Chronically Ill How eloquently the two Nazareth Hall Schools for Exceptional ChildreJl speak of ~hefruits of your giving Andthe Youth activity emphasizing not alone social but whatever makes 1M self-improvement our summer camps for which weue planning programmes of st~dy for ambitious youngsters combining work and play All these have their appeal to people outside the diocese They certainly speak weD for those who are directing services set up and financed by Catholic Charities

More important than a passing impression made 011 someone who is witness to the ever widening activity of our Charities is the judgment of those who benefit by them Who can measure the contentment of rejected children who experience love and understanding they ought to have from their parents Who can say what it means to a parent or grandparent to find understanding and companionship and security Who can tell the joy

- of a dedicated servant of Christ who finds an outlet for love in what they do for a neighbor in need And this is but a partial glimpse of what Catholic Charit~ entails

Years ago they talked and sang about counting your blessings Let me ask you do we or do we DOt have a whole litany of blessings serving our needs aDd

d t th f f th I t thrty

We Need Help bull bull

May 7 ~ 17

al mg our commum lea m e orm 0 e amos 1 St Louis University board Cllpound separate services~ applying what we contribute to help trustees solve meeds of men women and children in our fourcounties Mrs Shriver executive viee

president of the Joseph P Ken-Admittedly we take care of our own Who doesntU nedy Jr Foundation is wife CIl

But we have never drawn a line of discrimination on a federal anti-poverty director basis of color or creed in Cancer Home or any of our Sargent Shriver and a sister at

the late President John F KeDoopublic services Our rule and law is that of Christ to nedy Wilkins is executive direoshywhom all men are brethren and children of the Father tor of the National AssociatiOli Who is in heaven for the Advancement of Colored

In our best tradition we love our neighbor as our- Peopleselves We want to do for our neighbor what we would St Louis University was tile have him do for us were we in need So we thank God first major Catholic school in thecountry to announce plans _for the sick the homeless the aged and 1l1e ones lacking shared lay-clergy control friends It may sound strange but were it riot for them Thirteen members of the Soshywe could not put into practice the charity of Christ It ciety of Jesus which condudll is for us to reach out the love of God to those that yearn the university made up the fOlshyfor it We are His instruments What we give in money mer board of trustees Five wiD to support Catholic social services is important to our- remain as trustees All are 0i6shyselves as well as to the needy For it is a more blessed ficials of the university Among thing to give than to receive them is Father Paul C ~

SJ university president Invoking Gods Blessing on all men and women who Five other Jesuits from ins60

present our cause this year to parish and public and tutions outside St Louis haWi with cordial gratitude to those who come generously to been appointed to the new our support member board

Cape Nasareth Caatinued from Page D~

3ODd II 0 that ell tbat ~~b aecompllsbecl ill the 10 period a ebDd caD studymiddotheJe DOt lost

Some CIi the students fnIIII Nazareth Han have been brought to 100 public junior high schoOl level and are able to enter classtW and later find employment

Others will simply have beet given the aesthetic surroundinllJ they crave and the sympathetklinsight that enables them tilt overcome many of the obstaclelJ that have and all too often still are deemed unsurmountable

The school year and v3catioDl run parallel with the pubIklschool schedule In recent years transportation from Cape Cod towns as far down as Eastham and as far up as Onset is beingprovided by the towns

The curriculum includes ru6 mentary courses in r~aliinll

writing and arithmetic as weD as art and music for which th9 children have a special incl= nation

Religious instruction is offereQ if parents desire it Many of tha children are non Catholic kill have wanted to avail themselvefJ of it for religion is deeply rootedin these little ones

To teach at Nazareth Hall reshyquires Massachusetts educatiOiiil certificates and special educatiom certification The Sisters stud~

at Cardinal StritcH College iLl Wisconsin and obtain additional training at St Colettas in Hanshyover

Teaching here is a long patienfiprocess Repetition is needed bufjmust be of different nature eacti time or the children get boredand lose attention There a many audio-visual aids availablearid pauses for brief music perishyods to relax tension The moJIfj

active the teacher the grea1elir is the attention paid her What happens beyond the sta

at Nazareth Hall is up to parente ~d socety The sisters presenilthe children with the tools for bull useful and happy existence iJa buing them with basic academJie studies self confidence and strong mental attitude

They are aware of their li~

tations but also that they haWl a purpose in life no matter how small it might look statistica~

Their guileless friendly attishytude earnest application to the skills acquired help all those they come in contact with 110 carry their burdens easier

University Board Has 18 Laymen

ST LOUIS (NC) _ Eighteoo Catholic and non-Catholic 1 persons-including Eunice Kenshynedy Shriver and Roy Wilkin~ have been named members of the

Play an extra set of tennis

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on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

J

~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

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THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

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iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

==

j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 2: 05.04.67

2 -

THE A~CHOR-~iocese of Fall River-Thurs fAoy 4 1967 Diocesan ~ ~ut$es

To Meet MGlY]3 Fall River Dio~san CouncJi d

Catholic Nurses wip hold DUi Spring plenary meeting Saturd~

afternoon and evenIng May ~

at St Annes Hospital Fall Rivli1Je A business meeting at 4 will btl followed by an address bY Sister Mary Patricia of si Annes Hospital Her topic wiJl be A Christian Hospital in Q Non-Christian Country and shcopy will also show a film of t1lw hospital operated in Baghda~

Iraq by her community Benediction at 6 will igte oQ

fered by Rev Comelim J Kello her Diocesan Council mo~erato~

and ~ishop Connolly will speoo at tb~ dinner concl~dng tml ~eeting bull

~ist~r Mary Patri~a is a latiw of SS Peter and Paul parish FaJll

River and a graduate middotpt Sa Anmfs Hospital SChool of Nungt ing She entered the Dominicam Sisters of the Presentation bm 1953 and in 1955 volunteered fOO mission work

She is in the United States k1l observe new methods and equip ment and has visited hospitaifJ in WlShington D C and tbtl New England area onmiddot inspcctiofil

ECUMENISM IN NORTH EASTON Very Rev John tours The religious is also hopshyT Cor~ CSC president of Sto~ehill College preached iDg to interest lay people in gi Sunday in the Unity Church of North Easton at the usual ing two years of apostplic wor)

to the Baghdad hospitalservice of the Church and initiated an experienCe in the She notes that a diploma nufltoolife of the Unity 9hurch ing school was startedin conneoshy

tion with the institution Ii shy d fomiddot~middotSImiddotck ~ I years ago and that a nevy ~o beGlwing is scheduled for CODlple-shyAtten

~ ~ bull _ lion in Sept~mber She will i

211 Catholic Priests Among 771 Now Sermiddot I turn to Iraq 1D the Fall r 1 I I 1 Ibullbull t Imiddotrng I

As Chaplains in NationsVA Hospitals Stonehill Campaign Seniors at Stonehill College

BObber Catholic are co~direcshyWASHINGTON (NC)-There are undertaking a three-yeaw tors of the school which has al shyare 271 Catholic priests among eampaign to raise a class gift of

the 771 chaplains serving full or ready graduated 30 chaplainshy $19900 $1000 for each year Gf part time in the Veterans Admin students of all faiths the colleges existence First inshyistrations coast-to-coast hospi Numbered among the Catholic stallment on pledges will be paiC

graduates are Father Roger Ptal system in SeptemberQuilty CSC Boston native whoSeven including a Benedictine hr taught at the Holy Crossabbot are graduates of one of Fathers serillnary in North Easshythe Post unusual scl)pol~Jn the JEFFREY E SULLIVANton Fr Quilty a fortner fibtlcher

ngttio~_ at Kings College in Wilkes Fe-a 80 ae ~ ~ The vA Chaplain Schoo~ at Batre Pi and Notre DiIme Uni- 550 Loe~ streetJeffe~son Barracks (Mo VA middot -versityis how a chaplaih ~t the

~ospital has no plob~em witlb fall River Mass Jammed classrooms Theteachmg

Boston IVA Hospital I J ilmiddot i 6722391middot~middotmiddotmiddotAnbther graduate isFrther

gtstaff~utnumbers the studentll ~ ~ Joseph M Caplice a native of] 5 to i I ~)Rose E SldilvaD~ bull IRockland Mass aha foimer Alhough the ~A c~a~lalDs Navy cI-aplain at theProvitllbnee f Je~fre7 E SaUiyan

ServIce was establIshed In 1945 (RI) -VA Hospital I 0

it was only ~three years ago that the school was opened after studIes proved clerygmellneeded special training in institutional procedure and techmques to sucshyceed in their work in hospital surromiddotmdings

Chaplain Roy F Reynolds Baptist and Father Raymar E

MANUFACFURERS NATIONAL BANKD D Sullivanmiddotamp Sons

) - BRISTOL (Ol1NTw FUNERAL I-fOMmiddot bull bull bull _ Imiddotj 0 i -~ l I

6 ~~~R~S MpST ACCOMMOD4T1NG BANK fmiddot

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469 LOCUST STREET

fALL RIVER MASSbull 1 bull I I ~l f t t I ~ 11 it I J tlt I ll ~ bull J ~ t ~t 6723381 ~ ~~( ~( L I 9RJH ~rrr~BORO~ ~~NSFIELI)

bull~ 1 yen ii Ii~ ~il nt1 q l It bulljlWilfred C James E~ bull Driscoll i) bullbull ium~cin Jr bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull ~E -- f ~ ~ bullbull~~~middotillll

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INl9RPORATfD1937

middotGENERA[ (ONlliOOIS - and fNGINEERS 5 middot~fj ) r ~AtA~ t1rltfoaUt4S C~ilPres

~

l P9~1~~L~MtS r IN~cSllpoIlAntl

tun~r~fSerVki bull~ 4-~-middott ~ r Ij

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i middot-HYANNI~ ~ ~ l HARWICHPORT

bull ~OUTH YAAMOUTH

I t~ ~ ~[ ~~9iser~~Fi~il 11 and~t~~ct~r~ Engin~er t ~~ bull

bull Memoer No )IIS~ciety Professional Elginrmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot

r imiddot FRA~centI~imiddot~ COIILINS JR reas bullr bull THOMAmiddotSK COUiNS Secy lID

ACADEMY BUILDING FAn RIVER MASS middot bullbullbullmiddotbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullIIibullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Chqriti~middot~ App~g~ ~elPrts

InitiaiSp~cw(d Girt~ The first returns in the Special faU River

Gifts phase of the Silver Jubilee Catholic Charities Appeal have $1500 been released by the general Fall River Herald News headquarters today $1200

Commemorating 25 years of Fall River Electric Light CoLove of Neighbor the theme

$1000lIor this year is A contribution Gold Medal Bakeryof $25 as an Act of ~rhanksgiving

for 25 Years of Blessings $600 throughout the Diocese Knights of Columbus-Bishop

The initial contrlbutions are Cassidy Council J3fi69 Swansea $550

Duro Fiili~~ Corp $500 ~ Atty amp Mrs Hahgtld EClarkin Mr amp Mrs John R McGinn

(Leary Press) $150

Confirmation Class - Santo Christo Parish

A Friend Amy Lynn Draperies Inc D amp D Sales and Service Colonial Wholesale Beverage

Corp A Friend Radio Station WSAR

New Bedford $1000

Merchants National Bank of New B~ford A Friend

$100 $100 Rev F Anatole Desmarais ContiIiental Screw Company Rev Patrick ON~iII1 Aerovox Corp

Rev Ja1es A CJar~ Blue Ribbon LlUldfY Rev Joseph L Powers Rev Albert F Shov~lton MassOrdo La Salette Shri~e-Attleboro FRlDAy-stPiusv Po~ arid Walsh Brothers Confessor lII ClaSs White

Mass Proper Two VotiveNorth Attleboro Masses in honor of the Sacred

1000 Heartmiddot of Jesus permitted$ G ory 2nd Pra r St Pi V

John F Smith Estate bull ye us 00 No Creed Preface of the $2 middot thSacred Heart T mMrs Leon Pini 0 orrow IS e $150 first Saturday of tle month

St Vincent de Paul S t SATURDAY - Mass - of theOC1eSacred Heart Conference y- Blessed Virgin for Saturday

$100 IV Cla~s W~lteff~ssPr~l Duvernay Council jf~2 LUilion G1~ry no Crlild ~fe~ of

St~ jean tile Baptist dll~nieriqueBlessedYlrgm Mary yr Thom~s p Mcb6riouiih Coui-cil bull ~l1Nlt)~y~Sunda~ afte~ the As-

t=OO K of C cel~SIO~ II CI~ss Whlte Mass ~ PrOper ql0TJ C~~ P~faceO bull

J Necrology flf the Amiddot~enslon ~ ~ MONDAY - yenass of Ascensionshy l-lay 12 IV Classmiddot White Mass Prilper

Rev John F da Valles-192() Glory no Creed Preface of Chaplain United States Army Ascension

~I ~Iay 13 TUESDAY-St Gregory N~zian-Rt Rev Osias Bou~her 1955 zen Bishop Confessor and

Pastor Blessed Sacrament Fall Doctor of the Church III River Class Whit~ Mass PoPer1

May 16 Glory no Creed Preface of Rev William McDonald SS Ascen~ion

1941 St Patrick Falmouth WEDNESDAY-St Antoninus Rt Rev J Joseph lSullivan Bishop and Confessor III

PR 1960 Pastor Sacred Heart Class White Mass Pr~r Fall River Glory 2-d Prayer SS Gordian

May 17 and Epimachus Martyrs no Most Rev James E Cassidy Creed Prefacemiddotof Ascension

DD 1951 3rd Bishop of Fall THURSDAY- SS PhiliPand River 1934-51

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3 Prelate Stresses Progress Following Vatican Council

PIDLADELPHIA (NC)-The incredible thrust forward ~f the Second Vatican Council will not be impeded Philashyltdelphias Archbishop John J~ KlOl declared here In an address to the men of the Catholic Philopatrian Literary Institute which awarded the archbishop its 1967 Father Sourin Medal he said that extremists-both the apashythetic and the overzealous-are m-eating disturbances that retard the progress of genuine renewal and reform but the progress will not be impeded much less reshyversed~

It is our task not always pleasant to jar the apatlietic who resist change and to restrain the ver-eager tho would displace mI that is traditional and ignore the precise lines and directives of the Council for renewal

The Sourin Medal is named for Father Edward J Sourin SJ who was instrumental in foundshymg the Philopatrian Institute in ]850 The 1967 presentation marked the first time in the orshyganizations 117-year history that the award was made to a clergyshyman-ordinarily it is giVen to a Catholic layman The archbishop was cited for his confident and courageous leadership

The atchbishop admitted these moe trOubled times but he reshyminded that the Prihce ofPeace and the source of the twin comshymandment of love told His discishyples I have come tn cast fire lIPon the earth

By nature and by middotvocation I am a confirmed optimist he continued I desire peace but DOt at any price Jr dislike and ky to avoid turmoil and controshyversy but cannot abdicate the llesponsibility of my office ][ must face issues and make decishysions and sometimes a decision must be a No Nevertheless reshyviewing the past century I find much reason for optimism

Leadership may be considered the pl10per and successful exershyelse of authority the archbishoplltated There is a terietency to re-

Maronite Parish I

Holds Jubilee Ai week-long MiSSion will be

held in observance of the Golden Jubilee of Our LadYof PurgashytorYParish New Bedford start shying Sunday May 7 and will last to Mothers Day May gt14 Rev John Foley CSC will co~duct the Mission at both Sunday morning Masses and every weekshyday evening at 7 The public is hlvited

Most Rev Francis M Zayek Maronite Apostolic Exarcb ofshyUae United States will arrive ia )lew Bedford Friday May 12 to help celebrate Our Lady of Purgatory Parishs golden jubishyee

During a Maronite POl)tif~cal

Mass in the parish the bishop will administer First Commun- ion and Confirmation Then he will go to dedicate the parishs Lebanese Center the former Merrimac Street School The -others of the First CommnniOil lind Confirmation classes wiiI bull en serve II buffet iii honor of tiaeir bishop

On Saturday also the lltfaroni~ JIlelate will pay a formal call

eo Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of the Fall River Diocese

Sunday May 14 will be the of ficial jubilee day with a P~ntifi

ealMass in the Syriac Lituru (St James the Apostle) at S clock in the afternoon in New Bedfords St James Church County Street

The jubilee banquet will be held at Lincoln Park with a Golden Table reserved for the First Lebanese Settlers-those who came to New Bedford before 1811

gard authority as a naughty word as something incompatible with full personal responsibility

In reality the exercise of Duch responsibility as well as the exercise of freedom of conscience m external acts demands the existence and the protection of authority No institution can surshyvive without authority

Todays talk about the crisis of authority in the Church said the archbishop points up an exshyaggeration of a very normal and human urge for full responsibil shyity ll at times accompanied by impatience with the middottraining training preparation and khowlshyedge which is necessary for the full exercise of personal responshysibility It may be accompanied by a resentment of dependence and subordination and of obedishyence to higher authority

Archbishop Krol said Vatican Council II unleashed a tremenshydous ferment He s~id it is a joy and a comfort to see so many interested so many eager to learn and to live in the councils program of renewal

Hits PulblOlteation Of Statements On Birth Control

VATICAN CITY (NC) shyPublicationmiddot of once - secret reports to Pope Paul VI of the majority and minority views of the commission on birth control by an American publicashytion has been criticized here as displeasing

Msgr Fausto VanIainc said in reply to a question on the reportS pU~lished in the NatipI)aJ CathoshyBe Reporter tha hit could ~mlyshyreply personally MWVallaincmiddotmiddot head of the Vatican press office stressed that he was only speakshy~g from a p~rsonal point of view and was not speaking for the Holy See

However Msgr Vallaincs comshyment reflected and echoed nushymerous comments frorn various Vaticim areas ~

lie began by notiQg that the paper which published the indisshyteretians although it has the name of Catholic does not deshypend on ecclesiastic authority

Magr Vallainc said that if the two reports in question had been turned over to the newspaper by bull member or consultor of the Papal commission on family regshyulation as it is sllid it is cershytainly displeasing

Magr Vallainc said that if the report w~re true then someone failed in the grave obligation of ~cy and this is on the conshyacieillce of the person involved

He added that the calm examishynation of the problem under stUdy is not aided by indirect

Pressure which only provokes theagitation of public opinion

Jlsgr Vallaine concluded tbat --

moral norms do Ji~ obey caprice IX the pressures of haste or pubshy bull lie opinon bUt must answer TELEPHONE 675-7992divine law

YOURS VO LOVE AND TO GIVE tile life of a DAUGHTER OF S1 PAUL Love God more and give ttl souls knowledge and love ot Gad by serving Him In a Mission which uses the Press Radio Motion Pictures 9nd TV to bring His Word to souls everywhere ZealoiJs younggirls 14-23 years Interested In this uniqueAjlostolate may write to

REVIEREND MOTHER SUPERIOR DAUGHTIERS Of ST PAUL

50 ST PAULS AVE BOSTON 30 MASS

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1967

Name btm~rro~a~s To CQn1mmgt)~a~

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Four Americans including a layman have been named consultors for the Commission for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law

The four include Msgr Steshyphen Kelleher of New York Rev Frederick R McManus of the Catholic University of Amershyi~a Msgr John Quinn of Chishycago

The layman Stephen Kutt1er is a professor of history of canon law at Yale University

Two other laymen were apshypointed one from a Roman unishyversity ano the other from Frishybourg Switz They are now inshycluded among the lOr consultors hom all over the world working in 12 groups preparing studies and reports for the commission

Actor$ tcopy ~~tror

HCrOiC~ MtlM[ucopylIl1 NEW YORK (NC)-The Cath~

olic Actors Guild will salute Horace McMahon television and stage actor as Man of the Year at its Spring supper tlance here tbmorrow night

The award will be presented in recognition of the Catholic principles exemplified tllrough him in his professional life his family and his free and wideshyspread giving of time and talent to many and varied activities of faith and charity

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SI(JiMJERSET JUBILARIAN Most Rev Jose V Alvershynarz latriarch of the East Indies a~d Archbishop of CQa and a seminary classmate ofRt Rev Msgr Augusto L Furtado who celebrated 50 years in the priesthood on Sunshyday was the guest speaker at the testimonial banquet for the Somerset prelate

Immoral Means Mmami Bishop Carroll Strongly Protests Bill

To Ease present Florida Abortion Law MIAMI (NC)~As proponents Violatell the sacrl~d right to life

of liberalized abortion laws pre- l and therefore isa cime~ pared tomiddot present a bill in the current session ofFloridas legisshylature Bishop Coleman F Car- roll of Miami has urged legislashytors to perpetuate our traditiopal American respect for human life and to safeguard the ~ghts of the unborn

Bishop Carroll said We must be irrevocably con-

cerned about Safeguarding hu- man life whether it be the new life of an unborn baby or the ebbing life of the incurable aged

We cannot in any way supshyport the movement which seeks legal approval for directly asshysaulting the innocent life of the unborn whatever the motives Such an attack whether based on ~ugenic or social grounds

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THE ANCHQrshy4 ceD Directors Urge NationalT~urs Mo) 4 1967 I bull bullbull ~ ~i1 - bull - f bull ~ ( gt t II[ ----- _-------

Offpoundc~ of ReEigious middotEduc~tionmiddotmiddotmiddot-

The LOS ANGELES CNCNine Agitation for cat~cheticai~

ty-seven diocesan directors of newaLP alJr]isecth PmiddotGtlJIade the Confraternity of Ci)Ji~tiari Present efforts at religious eel--Doctrine (CCD) have called for ucation which are often uneooli shy

~It vi(J)SllWIi the creation of a national office dinated ill-defined and underrshy1FamplIlI lRllITlElR - of religious education as -a top- financed-----shy

-he patish countif W)1I1if6et priority need of the Roman IPlI2n Conference

at 8 tonight in the school hall Catholic Church The national office is needed Father John S Russell of S~

SIlbull lli(J)l8IN BAJgtIlllSIl to fill the huge gap which is aeuse NY national chairman GI CIENIIRamplI VllJLlLAGIE causing a crisis in religious edushy the CCD directors said that lIB

The Ladies Guild wdl hold its cation the directors declared at a prerequisite for the creation oJI monthly meeting at 7 30 Thurs- the conclusion of the 31st nationshy a national office of religious edshyday night May 11 in the parish al CCD conference here ucation the directors plan a speshyhall Election of officers will be cial conference next Fall involvshyThe crisis exists the directors followed by a potluck supper said because of ing the hea s of nationa~ Cathoshyto which members may invite Difficulties in the implementashy lic agencies concerned witlJreshyguests Mrs Loretta PotteI Mrs tion of Vatican Council II ligious education Agnes Potter and Mrs Estl~r The growing percentage of The directors also voted to

Perry are hostesses Catholic students in public work for establishment of ~

schools and universities -greater community among CatbshyST GEORGE The urgent necessity of conshy ()lic religious edl1cators and teWESTPORT

tinuing adtllt education among establish a structure for i~seyenebA public Maybasket whist will Catholics and professional studies I

be held at 8 Saturday night May 6 in the school hall -- -7 - l

ST JEAN THE BAPTIST FALL RllVEI

SIST~~~The Council of Catholic Women J will hold its regular monthly meeting on Monday evening IVIUSL~MS May 8 at 730 in the church hall

Mrs Remi Rinfret chairman AND TAXI - ~ ~ and Mrs Alfrcd Berube co-

chairman have announced hat REQUIEM FORADENAUERPontifical Requiem Mass DRIVERSall members are encouraged to bring theil mothers for the spe- forthe late Dr Konrall Adenauer offeredbyArlthbishop

THEHOLY FATHERIscwissioN AID 10 THE ORIENTAL CHURIH t ~ I ) _ ~ ~ - bull cial old fashioned Mothers Night Patrick A OJ30yle in St Matthews-Cath~dralWashington

lndSocial prOgrlm -was attended bv members of the diplomatic corpsChief j1 bull WISH frl Nfilif~slthe H~1y Land our 13 Sister~ 081

ST FRANCIS XAVIER Justice Earl Wa~ren Speaker of thllHQuse John McCormack YOU Joseph have -been asked to teach Englisli tb ttl middot HYANNIS and otherdignitaries of church and state German Minister LIVED taxi middotdrivers who care for American pilgrim

The new slate of officers for Gliqrg von LiU~nflld her~ gTe~~sectI t1~_ Al~hbishop NC Ph9tO y ~ NEAR r It- r~fleQts the esteem tt-Je Sisters eilJoYin thi - ~ shyiihe Womens Guiid is as foliows ENOUGH Muslim toWR~ Carol Hunnybun reports Two-

I Mrs Mary MurisScyplesid~nt - TO thirds oPthe children In the Sisters school ere Mrs Barbara Cannon vlce- MIX Muslim not to mention most of the 70000 middot president Mrs Pauline Antil reshy CEMENTl people the Sisters treated last year In thelrYrshy

eltgtrding seeretary Mn Flora nosemiddotan(Hhroat -dispensary bull bull You do Ifv Bisbee treasurer Federal Equality Opportunity Board Reports nearefKlugh tobelp SImply walk toyour corner

The sehedule of futum events maitOOx ampfIdsendsomething ($100 $75 _Few Religious Biasmiddot Complaintswas annoullced by Mrs Leo $25 $100 $5~ $2) to help complete the chapelGregoire plcsident The annual WASHINGTON (NC) -Only to Congress covered the fiscal

(simple functional devotional) the SlstGuild blll](luet i scheduled for two per cent of the diserimina- year ending June 30 last

liFe building evenings with their own handFriday June 2 and will be under tion charges filed with the Equal Exceed Expectation

(Look lor it if you visit the Holy Land) To finlillthe supervision of co-chairmen Employment Opportunity Com- Major point made middotby the re-Mrs JUl1iee lIcCarthy and Mrs mission during its first year of port is that the comlTissio~ reshy this desperatelymiddotneeded chapel they need Betty Burke opeiatjon alleged unequal treat- ceived 8854 complaints in its $3800 for materials and furnishings Give them

meilt beQause of religion first year whereas budget and In memory of your loved ones A plaque at the lVIIS Kay Lycett wili he~da Racial discrimination was ~taffing was predicated on esti- entrance will ask the boys and girls (and riottolarge committee fora rummage

sale planned for Mhy 22 in the charged in 59 per cent of the mates that som~ 2000 complaints Christians too) to pray foryou and yours for61181

Masonic Building l-Iain Street 5525 cases considered by the woule be madel The actlJ~1 num- commission Discrimination be- ber was more than tWIce the bull GAiAArticles mJy Ijy leftin the lower UNRWA Comm1ssloner-Ge1eral Laurence MIchelo bull cause of sex was cited in 37 per number all state fall employment f~

~ middotWEREChurch )ctwicn 1113 J5- 20 and middotmore oCClbles urgently that $75 Is needed now at the lIsonic If]]] On $Uilday cent and discdnmination because practice agencies receive in a WORRIED for ~h ofotlr 67 blind boys and girls to comshyevening May 21 befween 7 and of religion nd naflal origin year plete this years training at the Pontifical MI middoteacl-) accounted for two per cent The commISSIon repol ted ThIS

dramatic response to the new lawD siOfl-centel f(J( the Blind Gazas only Monasnor

A hml and bean SUPPllr wBl Thefl~ur~S ~ade publIc 111 the (Civil Rights Act of 1964) reshy -Gartland In Beirut requests the total Imnledlo bE selv(d from 3 tomiddot~ on Slturshy commISSIOn s fIrst middotannual repolmiddott flected the confidence of civil 1ltety $5925 bullbullbull Every gift will help Take 08 f middot day evci1ing lr y 27 inthf~ lower

rights organizations ald minority ~f tmebl~middotchlf4 ($75) or twolchurch hall persons in this new middotavenue middottoMrs Trudy Sylvestcr will head Prelate Supports bullbullbullbullrelief from discriminationthe committee for the annual FREE -01 a fr_ CQJlY of Monsignor Norans reen

It almost swamped middotthe smallSummer Fair set for Saturday COpy aFtiele 1orprldta Holy Land Torment July 29 Welfare Hike middotcommission staff and middotasa result bmd 8~H1d ua ysur address It cOnllllHf

the commissions first yearCINCINNATI (NC) - Efforts ~ to the tfoJy Land pilgrIm Sot -ended with many middothundred middotUftshytf raise welfare payments fur

Appe~1 Bus Ruling reached casesOhios dependent children frQRl 78 per cent to 100 middotper cent minishyTo Supreme Court mum needs has middotdraw-n strong

WASHINGTON (NC) -- Th~ support from Archbishop Kad JU S Supreme Court ha been

0Alter of Cincinati middot asked tc rule once again on the In middota letter to pliests Religious col1stitHtionality of transpQrling and lait~ of the archdiocese middothe student~ to privt~ schonls at declared llubHc expense The i st time the

As concerned Christiails andcourt ruled in the matter-- in a as citizens we shoul- take middotan middotacshymiddot 1947 New Jersey case-it upheld tive personal interest imiddotn the proshythe practice gJams of the government and middotofThis time the American Civil the community middotand ()f the

Libertie~ Union and the AmershyChurch to aid the poorican Jewish Congress on behalf

Gf scvclal I~nsylvania eiiizens Worthy of particular attention are challenging a 1965 Pennsylshy at this time is the efforl t) seshy GEO OHARA vania law which r-luires public cure adequate welfare benefits transportation of pupils to nonshy for the some 14000Ppoor chil shymiddotprofit privte schools within cershy dren of our state Under the tain distance limits present Aid to Dependent Chil shy THI CATHOLIC NImiddotAR IAIIT WILFAAE ASSQCIATIbullbull

The law was uphelc Jan 17 by dren program these children reshy CHEVROLETceive only 78 per cent of the cost decisi~ which relied heavily on the state Supreme Court in a 5-2

of living by the very minimum the U S Suprem~ COUltS 1947 standards of health andmiddotdecency

opinion The app -1 charges Must of us have never expeshymiddot -however that many Amelicans rienced the pain of poverty middotWe

are alarmed at what seems to be live comfortably in areas where n ever-widening breach h~ the we are spared the distasteful wall of separation of church and sign of human beings il misery state and only this court can Yet e poormiddot are our neighbors clarify the law on this vital and we must not shut them out issue middotof our Iives

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SCOUTHNG AWARDS As the scouting year comes to an end all usociated with this youth work meet for the ~JlIlluai awards night Left HIm Medas Jr St Pauls Taunton and Miss Joan Corrigan St Theresas A-ttleooro Center Rudolph Blanchard St Annes New Bedford Mrs

Lawrence Harney St Lawrences New Bedford Bi~hop Connolly Edgar J Bowen Our Lad~ of the Isle Nantucket Right Arthur L Bergeron~ Immaculate CooceptitlR Fall River Miss Mary Carreiro Our Lady of the Angels Fall River

Department of Education Survey Shows Catholic Schools Increase

WASHINGTON (NC) - The aumber of Catholic schools of lID elassifications in the United states increased by 110 or 0-3 per eent between 1963 and 1965 acshyeording to the latest national Mlmmary of Catholic education published ~re by the Departshyment of Education of the United States Catholic Conference

The number of instructors inshycreased 13759 or 69 per cent whHe the number of students jnshyer~ased 34785 or 06 per cent the survey found

But- for the first time since the Catholic education surveyswere begun by the department lin 1920 the practice in certain dioceses of dropping elementary 5Chool grades has been reflected 10 I October 1965 Catholic eleshymentary schools enrolled 4492- 1107 pupils a decrease of 41664 pupils or 09 per cent under the plevious survey of 1964

The statistical data in the curshylre1t summary is based on inforshymation as of Oct 31 1964 and Oct 31 1965 It gives a state by state breakdown of Catholic lieminaries and religious houses ef formation universities and collegell diocesan teacneils 001shyAegesJUld teacher trflining insti ~tipflS secondary schools anti ele~entllry schools

Lay TelMlhcl1S Ihncllcase Tjte survey notes that Catholic

elementary schools are conshydQcted in each of the 144 archshydioceses and dioceses and in all etf the 50 states The number aries from three schools in th~

diocese of Juneau Alaska to 442 in the Chicago archdiocese New York with 1158 has more Catholic elemenary schools than MY other state

The 1965 survey showed a ~tal of 1202GS teachers staffing llO879 elementary schools This number which includes 76195 llleligious teacheZs and 44011 lay reachers is an inczoaaSJl of 13373 tbeachers over the lS53-54 total

Th-e greates~ incrCiase was irouna in the number of lay ~acheIs in 1954 there were e356 lay teachers Of 122 Per (OOnt of the tota~ in 1e65 there 4lt1011 lay teaclleJrs in Catholic

elementary schools or 366 per rent oi the total

A total of 4492107 elemenshytaiY school pupils in 1965 mukedmiddot an- iRcrease of 388 per cent ia theH-year period since 1953-~

but It decline of 9 per cent from 19M

On the seeondary school level the stHvey founda marked inshyeTeQSe in the past decade in censhytral or diocesan high schools NMing that the advantages which accompany the consolidashytion of smalll schools into larger units has led to the closing 0f sORle schools formerly serving 1Il

llllgie parislln the report predicts that this trend will continue

The percentage of private seeshyondiilry schools - schools owned and controlled by religious CGIlshy

gregations more or less indeshypendently oi parish and diocese -remained constant

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6 THE ANCHor -Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 4 1967

CommunicotioRS There is geperal agreement~that the Vatican f CotmcD

Declaratiorion Communications is not an outstanding doeshy ument when viewed in thelight of the otherdOel)Ipents

coming from that momentous meeting But the fact that the Fathers of the Council wanted to deal with the matter of communications testifies to their awareness that men are indeed living in one world and that communications has made it a small world indeed

Television communication satellites radio newspapers movies air and rail and road travel-all these have opened up the world so that news travels around the earth as soon as it happenB opinions and v~ewsare projected into the ears of million of persons ideas which in decades past were suggested to as many persons as could hear the ~ound of a voice in a hall are now flung literally throughout the world

The very proliferation of communications media has both its advantages and its dangers Ideas get aroundshyboth good and bad Values are broadcast-noble ones and others News and opinions and propaganda are grouno out into ears that are discriminating and sophisticated and quite the opposite

This then is the challenge of communications to man _ -and the Church is not afraid to meet this challenge There is no question of censorship of manipulating the news and opinions To begin with that does not work And where it has worked it has worked perhaps more for evil than for good ideas The chsllenge is one of education-of conveyshying the values of Christ so persuasively and convincingly to people by both educative processes and by the witlHSS of personal lives that people will develop a taste for what is right There mUllt also be the honest realization that adults are adults and children are children and what might be acceptable for the one group could be hannful to the developing characters of the other

Thing are th(~re to be used 7 newspapers radio movies teleision And as the hite Atomic ~nergy Comshymission chainnan Thomas Murray once said Our only fear and our great llesponsibility is not what we do with things but what we do with ourselves How will man use the means of communication

The Giver ReceiiJeB When Buddhists give in the name of religion they

profer their gift with an expressi~n of thanks reasoning that they themselves should be grateful for this opportu Dity of gaining merit through a work of charity and religion

Such-an attitude does little to feed ones ego but cershytainly enlarges the soul and puts the emphasis where it belongs In the words of St AUgllstine whom Pope Paul

quoted in his recent encyclical You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person You are hanling over to him what is his For what has been given in common for the use of all you have arrogated to yourself The world is given to all and not only to the rich

It is quite difficult for one who has to give to one who has not and not to feel that he is giving and therefore virtuous generous deserving of fawJiing thanks and deep gratitude But for the Christjan giving is sharing with a brother in Christ who has not some of the world which one has It is an act that brings Gods blessing down upon the giver It helps the recipient yes but it also helps the giver to heed the words that the Apostle St John was said to repeat over and over again - Little children love one another

Giving to the Catholic Charities Appeal should be conshysidered not only a tax write-off not merely a tedious duty not just a yearly affair It should be seen as an opshyportunity to gain within oneself by helping a brother or sister in need-the poor the young the bewildered the aged the sick the dying the underprivileged the excepshytional Christ is in eaAh of these In giving to Christ we do not expect thanks but we are grateful to Him for the privilege of serving him

rhe ANCHOR OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVIER

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722middot 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P DrisltoJl -

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

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Con~inued from Page One

for the aged we have Sacred Heart Home New Bedford long antedating our Chariti(s Appeals And we have four new Homes with accommodations for upwards of 640 as a result of past appeals

To any curious visitor or prospective manufacturer wanting to know the type of community he moves into our institutions appear to be quite important III faet we are told they are the show pieces of the area ADd

theres quite a bit of truth in that What monuments shyCharity and indeed community spirit are our five Homes for the Aged and Chronically Ill How eloquently the two Nazareth Hall Schools for Exceptional ChildreJl speak of ~hefruits of your giving Andthe Youth activity emphasizing not alone social but whatever makes 1M self-improvement our summer camps for which weue planning programmes of st~dy for ambitious youngsters combining work and play All these have their appeal to people outside the diocese They certainly speak weD for those who are directing services set up and financed by Catholic Charities

More important than a passing impression made 011 someone who is witness to the ever widening activity of our Charities is the judgment of those who benefit by them Who can measure the contentment of rejected children who experience love and understanding they ought to have from their parents Who can say what it means to a parent or grandparent to find understanding and companionship and security Who can tell the joy

- of a dedicated servant of Christ who finds an outlet for love in what they do for a neighbor in need And this is but a partial glimpse of what Catholic Charit~ entails

Years ago they talked and sang about counting your blessings Let me ask you do we or do we DOt have a whole litany of blessings serving our needs aDd

d t th f f th I t thrty

We Need Help bull bull

May 7 ~ 17

al mg our commum lea m e orm 0 e amos 1 St Louis University board Cllpound separate services~ applying what we contribute to help trustees solve meeds of men women and children in our fourcounties Mrs Shriver executive viee

president of the Joseph P Ken-Admittedly we take care of our own Who doesntU nedy Jr Foundation is wife CIl

But we have never drawn a line of discrimination on a federal anti-poverty director basis of color or creed in Cancer Home or any of our Sargent Shriver and a sister at

the late President John F KeDoopublic services Our rule and law is that of Christ to nedy Wilkins is executive direoshywhom all men are brethren and children of the Father tor of the National AssociatiOli Who is in heaven for the Advancement of Colored

In our best tradition we love our neighbor as our- Peopleselves We want to do for our neighbor what we would St Louis University was tile have him do for us were we in need So we thank God first major Catholic school in thecountry to announce plans _for the sick the homeless the aged and 1l1e ones lacking shared lay-clergy control friends It may sound strange but were it riot for them Thirteen members of the Soshywe could not put into practice the charity of Christ It ciety of Jesus which condudll is for us to reach out the love of God to those that yearn the university made up the fOlshyfor it We are His instruments What we give in money mer board of trustees Five wiD to support Catholic social services is important to our- remain as trustees All are 0i6shyselves as well as to the needy For it is a more blessed ficials of the university Among thing to give than to receive them is Father Paul C ~

SJ university president Invoking Gods Blessing on all men and women who Five other Jesuits from ins60

present our cause this year to parish and public and tutions outside St Louis haWi with cordial gratitude to those who come generously to been appointed to the new our support member board

Cape Nasareth Caatinued from Page D~

3ODd II 0 that ell tbat ~~b aecompllsbecl ill the 10 period a ebDd caD studymiddotheJe DOt lost

Some CIi the students fnIIII Nazareth Han have been brought to 100 public junior high schoOl level and are able to enter classtW and later find employment

Others will simply have beet given the aesthetic surroundinllJ they crave and the sympathetklinsight that enables them tilt overcome many of the obstaclelJ that have and all too often still are deemed unsurmountable

The school year and v3catioDl run parallel with the pubIklschool schedule In recent years transportation from Cape Cod towns as far down as Eastham and as far up as Onset is beingprovided by the towns

The curriculum includes ru6 mentary courses in r~aliinll

writing and arithmetic as weD as art and music for which th9 children have a special incl= nation

Religious instruction is offereQ if parents desire it Many of tha children are non Catholic kill have wanted to avail themselvefJ of it for religion is deeply rootedin these little ones

To teach at Nazareth Hall reshyquires Massachusetts educatiOiiil certificates and special educatiom certification The Sisters stud~

at Cardinal StritcH College iLl Wisconsin and obtain additional training at St Colettas in Hanshyover

Teaching here is a long patienfiprocess Repetition is needed bufjmust be of different nature eacti time or the children get boredand lose attention There a many audio-visual aids availablearid pauses for brief music perishyods to relax tension The moJIfj

active the teacher the grea1elir is the attention paid her What happens beyond the sta

at Nazareth Hall is up to parente ~d socety The sisters presenilthe children with the tools for bull useful and happy existence iJa buing them with basic academJie studies self confidence and strong mental attitude

They are aware of their li~

tations but also that they haWl a purpose in life no matter how small it might look statistica~

Their guileless friendly attishytude earnest application to the skills acquired help all those they come in contact with 110 carry their burdens easier

University Board Has 18 Laymen

ST LOUIS (NC) _ Eighteoo Catholic and non-Catholic 1 persons-including Eunice Kenshynedy Shriver and Roy Wilkin~ have been named members of the

Play an extra set of tennis

~ I I

CD

on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

J

~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

IDEAL LAUNDRY

From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

Sunbeam English Muffins Baked byyour Sunbeam Baker

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

-~ - I Cpp~teOn~-Stop Banking 24 H ~ W S ClubAccounts - Auto Loci ~ OUt ree Ier ery~e

zJ l 1o~middotD-~lt t i lt Checking Accouts ~ Buriesso~ns

tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

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BISAILLONS

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

j ~OMPANY tl bull

Complete line middotfmiddot

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8 SPRlNG ST FAIRHAVEN t I loft

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RESIDENTIAL

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WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

II-MEMORIAL CARDS

These cards are made on Ihe finest salin finish double weight portrait paper wilh the photograph of Ihe deceased on Ihe fronl side and name date of death and prayer Ogtl the back side and just Ihe right size to fit II HI missal or wallet

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

bull -- bull j

(ORREIAampSONS ONE stOP

SHOPPING CENTER

bull 1elevisioa bull Groceiy bull AppflGnces bull Furniture 101 AiIen St New IecIfOId

997-9354

SAVINGS1

Nw Eartm

f~ mey save any amount Gay t5me when you have bull ieguloll Savings Account OlicishyIlashioned Pass Book flexibiQiiJ

SAVE BY MAIL w provide Postage-Paid enWIIshy for convenience Spedir til account

OOIIII iii lilInIAI I

slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

CHURCH FUNDS-TRUSTS PENSIONS -ORGANIZAllOlM$

CORPORATEmiddot PERSONAl SAVINGS

As of January hft

NEW HIGH RATE

on INVESTMENT

SAVINGS CERTIFICATES

bull $1000 Multiples hefd ~ Six Months or Longer

bull Dividends paid twice yearir

bull No Notice Required for Withdrawal

bull Dividends not lIubject ~ Mass Income Tax

REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP Rf nav BDWAnlll OmiddotMaAnA NATIONAL DIRaOTClIn

NeIIlllV 10111 1Ma OPAAPION CF Ttla PA~bullbullee t1H Ava NYbullbull NV 1000t

~ IItWBf YOUR II)lRIlCTOIlIltl RIT RIlY RAYMOND CONElIDINIl E1Ge 10 MAllO OT

if youd like something bett~r for your family this WE)e~ ~ervEl FIRST CHOrCeMEATS We guarantee youll bedeshylIghted shy or your money back

YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

middot1

f ~

~

-

~ 1 ~s

~ gt ~

T CHOICE MEATS

~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

==

j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

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IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 3: 05.04.67

3 Prelate Stresses Progress Following Vatican Council

PIDLADELPHIA (NC)-The incredible thrust forward ~f the Second Vatican Council will not be impeded Philashyltdelphias Archbishop John J~ KlOl declared here In an address to the men of the Catholic Philopatrian Literary Institute which awarded the archbishop its 1967 Father Sourin Medal he said that extremists-both the apashythetic and the overzealous-are m-eating disturbances that retard the progress of genuine renewal and reform but the progress will not be impeded much less reshyversed~

It is our task not always pleasant to jar the apatlietic who resist change and to restrain the ver-eager tho would displace mI that is traditional and ignore the precise lines and directives of the Council for renewal

The Sourin Medal is named for Father Edward J Sourin SJ who was instrumental in foundshymg the Philopatrian Institute in ]850 The 1967 presentation marked the first time in the orshyganizations 117-year history that the award was made to a clergyshyman-ordinarily it is giVen to a Catholic layman The archbishop was cited for his confident and courageous leadership

The atchbishop admitted these moe trOubled times but he reshyminded that the Prihce ofPeace and the source of the twin comshymandment of love told His discishyples I have come tn cast fire lIPon the earth

By nature and by middotvocation I am a confirmed optimist he continued I desire peace but DOt at any price Jr dislike and ky to avoid turmoil and controshyversy but cannot abdicate the llesponsibility of my office ][ must face issues and make decishysions and sometimes a decision must be a No Nevertheless reshyviewing the past century I find much reason for optimism

Leadership may be considered the pl10per and successful exershyelse of authority the archbishoplltated There is a terietency to re-

Maronite Parish I

Holds Jubilee Ai week-long MiSSion will be

held in observance of the Golden Jubilee of Our LadYof PurgashytorYParish New Bedford start shying Sunday May 7 and will last to Mothers Day May gt14 Rev John Foley CSC will co~duct the Mission at both Sunday morning Masses and every weekshyday evening at 7 The public is hlvited

Most Rev Francis M Zayek Maronite Apostolic Exarcb ofshyUae United States will arrive ia )lew Bedford Friday May 12 to help celebrate Our Lady of Purgatory Parishs golden jubishyee

During a Maronite POl)tif~cal

Mass in the parish the bishop will administer First Commun- ion and Confirmation Then he will go to dedicate the parishs Lebanese Center the former Merrimac Street School The -others of the First CommnniOil lind Confirmation classes wiiI bull en serve II buffet iii honor of tiaeir bishop

On Saturday also the lltfaroni~ JIlelate will pay a formal call

eo Most Rev James L Connolly Bishop of the Fall River Diocese

Sunday May 14 will be the of ficial jubilee day with a P~ntifi

ealMass in the Syriac Lituru (St James the Apostle) at S clock in the afternoon in New Bedfords St James Church County Street

The jubilee banquet will be held at Lincoln Park with a Golden Table reserved for the First Lebanese Settlers-those who came to New Bedford before 1811

gard authority as a naughty word as something incompatible with full personal responsibility

In reality the exercise of Duch responsibility as well as the exercise of freedom of conscience m external acts demands the existence and the protection of authority No institution can surshyvive without authority

Todays talk about the crisis of authority in the Church said the archbishop points up an exshyaggeration of a very normal and human urge for full responsibil shyity ll at times accompanied by impatience with the middottraining training preparation and khowlshyedge which is necessary for the full exercise of personal responshysibility It may be accompanied by a resentment of dependence and subordination and of obedishyence to higher authority

Archbishop Krol said Vatican Council II unleashed a tremenshydous ferment He s~id it is a joy and a comfort to see so many interested so many eager to learn and to live in the councils program of renewal

Hits PulblOlteation Of Statements On Birth Control

VATICAN CITY (NC) shyPublicationmiddot of once - secret reports to Pope Paul VI of the majority and minority views of the commission on birth control by an American publicashytion has been criticized here as displeasing

Msgr Fausto VanIainc said in reply to a question on the reportS pU~lished in the NatipI)aJ CathoshyBe Reporter tha hit could ~mlyshyreply personally MWVallaincmiddotmiddot head of the Vatican press office stressed that he was only speakshy~g from a p~rsonal point of view and was not speaking for the Holy See

However Msgr Vallaincs comshyment reflected and echoed nushymerous comments frorn various Vaticim areas ~

lie began by notiQg that the paper which published the indisshyteretians although it has the name of Catholic does not deshypend on ecclesiastic authority

Magr Vallainc said that if the two reports in question had been turned over to the newspaper by bull member or consultor of the Papal commission on family regshyulation as it is sllid it is cershytainly displeasing

Magr Vallainc said that if the report w~re true then someone failed in the grave obligation of ~cy and this is on the conshyacieillce of the person involved

He added that the calm examishynation of the problem under stUdy is not aided by indirect

Pressure which only provokes theagitation of public opinion

Jlsgr Vallaine concluded tbat --

moral norms do Ji~ obey caprice IX the pressures of haste or pubshy bull lie opinon bUt must answer TELEPHONE 675-7992divine law

YOURS VO LOVE AND TO GIVE tile life of a DAUGHTER OF S1 PAUL Love God more and give ttl souls knowledge and love ot Gad by serving Him In a Mission which uses the Press Radio Motion Pictures 9nd TV to bring His Word to souls everywhere ZealoiJs younggirls 14-23 years Interested In this uniqueAjlostolate may write to

REVIEREND MOTHER SUPERIOR DAUGHTIERS Of ST PAUL

50 ST PAULS AVE BOSTON 30 MASS

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1967

Name btm~rro~a~s To CQn1mmgt)~a~

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Four Americans including a layman have been named consultors for the Commission for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law

The four include Msgr Steshyphen Kelleher of New York Rev Frederick R McManus of the Catholic University of Amershyi~a Msgr John Quinn of Chishycago

The layman Stephen Kutt1er is a professor of history of canon law at Yale University

Two other laymen were apshypointed one from a Roman unishyversity ano the other from Frishybourg Switz They are now inshycluded among the lOr consultors hom all over the world working in 12 groups preparing studies and reports for the commission

Actor$ tcopy ~~tror

HCrOiC~ MtlM[ucopylIl1 NEW YORK (NC)-The Cath~

olic Actors Guild will salute Horace McMahon television and stage actor as Man of the Year at its Spring supper tlance here tbmorrow night

The award will be presented in recognition of the Catholic principles exemplified tllrough him in his professional life his family and his free and wideshyspread giving of time and talent to many and varied activities of faith and charity

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SI(JiMJERSET JUBILARIAN Most Rev Jose V Alvershynarz latriarch of the East Indies a~d Archbishop of CQa and a seminary classmate ofRt Rev Msgr Augusto L Furtado who celebrated 50 years in the priesthood on Sunshyday was the guest speaker at the testimonial banquet for the Somerset prelate

Immoral Means Mmami Bishop Carroll Strongly Protests Bill

To Ease present Florida Abortion Law MIAMI (NC)~As proponents Violatell the sacrl~d right to life

of liberalized abortion laws pre- l and therefore isa cime~ pared tomiddot present a bill in the current session ofFloridas legisshylature Bishop Coleman F Car- roll of Miami has urged legislashytors to perpetuate our traditiopal American respect for human life and to safeguard the ~ghts of the unborn

Bishop Carroll said We must be irrevocably con-

cerned about Safeguarding hu- man life whether it be the new life of an unborn baby or the ebbing life of the incurable aged

We cannot in any way supshyport the movement which seeks legal approval for directly asshysaulting the innocent life of the unborn whatever the motives Such an attack whether based on ~ugenic or social grounds

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THE ANCHQrshy4 ceD Directors Urge NationalT~urs Mo) 4 1967 I bull bullbull ~ ~i1 - bull - f bull ~ ( gt t II[ ----- _-------

Offpoundc~ of ReEigious middotEduc~tionmiddotmiddotmiddot-

The LOS ANGELES CNCNine Agitation for cat~cheticai~

ty-seven diocesan directors of newaLP alJr]isecth PmiddotGtlJIade the Confraternity of Ci)Ji~tiari Present efforts at religious eel--Doctrine (CCD) have called for ucation which are often uneooli shy

~It vi(J)SllWIi the creation of a national office dinated ill-defined and underrshy1FamplIlI lRllITlElR - of religious education as -a top- financed-----shy

-he patish countif W)1I1if6et priority need of the Roman IPlI2n Conference

at 8 tonight in the school hall Catholic Church The national office is needed Father John S Russell of S~

SIlbull lli(J)l8IN BAJgtIlllSIl to fill the huge gap which is aeuse NY national chairman GI CIENIIRamplI VllJLlLAGIE causing a crisis in religious edushy the CCD directors said that lIB

The Ladies Guild wdl hold its cation the directors declared at a prerequisite for the creation oJI monthly meeting at 7 30 Thurs- the conclusion of the 31st nationshy a national office of religious edshyday night May 11 in the parish al CCD conference here ucation the directors plan a speshyhall Election of officers will be cial conference next Fall involvshyThe crisis exists the directors followed by a potluck supper said because of ing the hea s of nationa~ Cathoshyto which members may invite Difficulties in the implementashy lic agencies concerned witlJreshyguests Mrs Loretta PotteI Mrs tion of Vatican Council II ligious education Agnes Potter and Mrs Estl~r The growing percentage of The directors also voted to

Perry are hostesses Catholic students in public work for establishment of ~

schools and universities -greater community among CatbshyST GEORGE The urgent necessity of conshy ()lic religious edl1cators and teWESTPORT

tinuing adtllt education among establish a structure for i~seyenebA public Maybasket whist will Catholics and professional studies I

be held at 8 Saturday night May 6 in the school hall -- -7 - l

ST JEAN THE BAPTIST FALL RllVEI

SIST~~~The Council of Catholic Women J will hold its regular monthly meeting on Monday evening IVIUSL~MS May 8 at 730 in the church hall

Mrs Remi Rinfret chairman AND TAXI - ~ ~ and Mrs Alfrcd Berube co-

chairman have announced hat REQUIEM FORADENAUERPontifical Requiem Mass DRIVERSall members are encouraged to bring theil mothers for the spe- forthe late Dr Konrall Adenauer offeredbyArlthbishop

THEHOLY FATHERIscwissioN AID 10 THE ORIENTAL CHURIH t ~ I ) _ ~ ~ - bull cial old fashioned Mothers Night Patrick A OJ30yle in St Matthews-Cath~dralWashington

lndSocial prOgrlm -was attended bv members of the diplomatic corpsChief j1 bull WISH frl Nfilif~slthe H~1y Land our 13 Sister~ 081

ST FRANCIS XAVIER Justice Earl Wa~ren Speaker of thllHQuse John McCormack YOU Joseph have -been asked to teach Englisli tb ttl middot HYANNIS and otherdignitaries of church and state German Minister LIVED taxi middotdrivers who care for American pilgrim

The new slate of officers for Gliqrg von LiU~nflld her~ gTe~~sectI t1~_ Al~hbishop NC Ph9tO y ~ NEAR r It- r~fleQts the esteem tt-Je Sisters eilJoYin thi - ~ shyiihe Womens Guiid is as foliows ENOUGH Muslim toWR~ Carol Hunnybun reports Two-

I Mrs Mary MurisScyplesid~nt - TO thirds oPthe children In the Sisters school ere Mrs Barbara Cannon vlce- MIX Muslim not to mention most of the 70000 middot president Mrs Pauline Antil reshy CEMENTl people the Sisters treated last year In thelrYrshy

eltgtrding seeretary Mn Flora nosemiddotan(Hhroat -dispensary bull bull You do Ifv Bisbee treasurer Federal Equality Opportunity Board Reports nearefKlugh tobelp SImply walk toyour corner

The sehedule of futum events maitOOx ampfIdsendsomething ($100 $75 _Few Religious Biasmiddot Complaintswas annoullced by Mrs Leo $25 $100 $5~ $2) to help complete the chapelGregoire plcsident The annual WASHINGTON (NC) -Only to Congress covered the fiscal

(simple functional devotional) the SlstGuild blll](luet i scheduled for two per cent of the diserimina- year ending June 30 last

liFe building evenings with their own handFriday June 2 and will be under tion charges filed with the Equal Exceed Expectation

(Look lor it if you visit the Holy Land) To finlillthe supervision of co-chairmen Employment Opportunity Com- Major point made middotby the re-Mrs JUl1iee lIcCarthy and Mrs mission during its first year of port is that the comlTissio~ reshy this desperatelymiddotneeded chapel they need Betty Burke opeiatjon alleged unequal treat- ceived 8854 complaints in its $3800 for materials and furnishings Give them

meilt beQause of religion first year whereas budget and In memory of your loved ones A plaque at the lVIIS Kay Lycett wili he~da Racial discrimination was ~taffing was predicated on esti- entrance will ask the boys and girls (and riottolarge committee fora rummage

sale planned for Mhy 22 in the charged in 59 per cent of the mates that som~ 2000 complaints Christians too) to pray foryou and yours for61181

Masonic Building l-Iain Street 5525 cases considered by the woule be madel The actlJ~1 num- commission Discrimination be- ber was more than tWIce the bull GAiAArticles mJy Ijy leftin the lower UNRWA Comm1ssloner-Ge1eral Laurence MIchelo bull cause of sex was cited in 37 per number all state fall employment f~

~ middotWEREChurch )ctwicn 1113 J5- 20 and middotmore oCClbles urgently that $75 Is needed now at the lIsonic If]]] On $Uilday cent and discdnmination because practice agencies receive in a WORRIED for ~h ofotlr 67 blind boys and girls to comshyevening May 21 befween 7 and of religion nd naflal origin year plete this years training at the Pontifical MI middoteacl-) accounted for two per cent The commISSIon repol ted ThIS

dramatic response to the new lawD siOfl-centel f(J( the Blind Gazas only Monasnor

A hml and bean SUPPllr wBl Thefl~ur~S ~ade publIc 111 the (Civil Rights Act of 1964) reshy -Gartland In Beirut requests the total Imnledlo bE selv(d from 3 tomiddot~ on Slturshy commISSIOn s fIrst middotannual repolmiddott flected the confidence of civil 1ltety $5925 bullbullbull Every gift will help Take 08 f middot day evci1ing lr y 27 inthf~ lower

rights organizations ald minority ~f tmebl~middotchlf4 ($75) or twolchurch hall persons in this new middotavenue middottoMrs Trudy Sylvestcr will head Prelate Supports bullbullbullbullrelief from discriminationthe committee for the annual FREE -01 a fr_ CQJlY of Monsignor Norans reen

It almost swamped middotthe smallSummer Fair set for Saturday COpy aFtiele 1orprldta Holy Land Torment July 29 Welfare Hike middotcommission staff and middotasa result bmd 8~H1d ua ysur address It cOnllllHf

the commissions first yearCINCINNATI (NC) - Efforts ~ to the tfoJy Land pilgrIm Sot -ended with many middothundred middotUftshytf raise welfare payments fur

Appe~1 Bus Ruling reached casesOhios dependent children frQRl 78 per cent to 100 middotper cent minishyTo Supreme Court mum needs has middotdraw-n strong

WASHINGTON (NC) -- Th~ support from Archbishop Kad JU S Supreme Court ha been

0Alter of Cincinati middot asked tc rule once again on the In middota letter to pliests Religious col1stitHtionality of transpQrling and lait~ of the archdiocese middothe student~ to privt~ schonls at declared llubHc expense The i st time the

As concerned Christiails andcourt ruled in the matter-- in a as citizens we shoul- take middotan middotacshymiddot 1947 New Jersey case-it upheld tive personal interest imiddotn the proshythe practice gJams of the government and middotofThis time the American Civil the community middotand ()f the

Libertie~ Union and the AmershyChurch to aid the poorican Jewish Congress on behalf

Gf scvclal I~nsylvania eiiizens Worthy of particular attention are challenging a 1965 Pennsylshy at this time is the efforl t) seshy GEO OHARA vania law which r-luires public cure adequate welfare benefits transportation of pupils to nonshy for the some 14000Ppoor chil shymiddotprofit privte schools within cershy dren of our state Under the tain distance limits present Aid to Dependent Chil shy THI CATHOLIC NImiddotAR IAIIT WILFAAE ASSQCIATIbullbull

The law was uphelc Jan 17 by dren program these children reshy CHEVROLETceive only 78 per cent of the cost decisi~ which relied heavily on the state Supreme Court in a 5-2

of living by the very minimum the U S Suprem~ COUltS 1947 standards of health andmiddotdecency

opinion The app -1 charges Must of us have never expeshymiddot -however that many Amelicans rienced the pain of poverty middotWe

are alarmed at what seems to be live comfortably in areas where n ever-widening breach h~ the we are spared the distasteful wall of separation of church and sign of human beings il misery state and only this court can Yet e poormiddot are our neighbors clarify the law on this vital and we must not shut them out issue middotof our Iives

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SCOUTHNG AWARDS As the scouting year comes to an end all usociated with this youth work meet for the ~JlIlluai awards night Left HIm Medas Jr St Pauls Taunton and Miss Joan Corrigan St Theresas A-ttleooro Center Rudolph Blanchard St Annes New Bedford Mrs

Lawrence Harney St Lawrences New Bedford Bi~hop Connolly Edgar J Bowen Our Lad~ of the Isle Nantucket Right Arthur L Bergeron~ Immaculate CooceptitlR Fall River Miss Mary Carreiro Our Lady of the Angels Fall River

Department of Education Survey Shows Catholic Schools Increase

WASHINGTON (NC) - The aumber of Catholic schools of lID elassifications in the United states increased by 110 or 0-3 per eent between 1963 and 1965 acshyeording to the latest national Mlmmary of Catholic education published ~re by the Departshyment of Education of the United States Catholic Conference

The number of instructors inshycreased 13759 or 69 per cent whHe the number of students jnshyer~ased 34785 or 06 per cent the survey found

But- for the first time since the Catholic education surveyswere begun by the department lin 1920 the practice in certain dioceses of dropping elementary 5Chool grades has been reflected 10 I October 1965 Catholic eleshymentary schools enrolled 4492- 1107 pupils a decrease of 41664 pupils or 09 per cent under the plevious survey of 1964

The statistical data in the curshylre1t summary is based on inforshymation as of Oct 31 1964 and Oct 31 1965 It gives a state by state breakdown of Catholic lieminaries and religious houses ef formation universities and collegell diocesan teacneils 001shyAegesJUld teacher trflining insti ~tipflS secondary schools anti ele~entllry schools

Lay TelMlhcl1S Ihncllcase Tjte survey notes that Catholic

elementary schools are conshydQcted in each of the 144 archshydioceses and dioceses and in all etf the 50 states The number aries from three schools in th~

diocese of Juneau Alaska to 442 in the Chicago archdiocese New York with 1158 has more Catholic elemenary schools than MY other state

The 1965 survey showed a ~tal of 1202GS teachers staffing llO879 elementary schools This number which includes 76195 llleligious teacheZs and 44011 lay reachers is an inczoaaSJl of 13373 tbeachers over the lS53-54 total

Th-e greates~ incrCiase was irouna in the number of lay ~acheIs in 1954 there were e356 lay teachers Of 122 Per (OOnt of the tota~ in 1e65 there 4lt1011 lay teaclleJrs in Catholic

elementary schools or 366 per rent oi the total

A total of 4492107 elemenshytaiY school pupils in 1965 mukedmiddot an- iRcrease of 388 per cent ia theH-year period since 1953-~

but It decline of 9 per cent from 19M

On the seeondary school level the stHvey founda marked inshyeTeQSe in the past decade in censhytral or diocesan high schools NMing that the advantages which accompany the consolidashytion of smalll schools into larger units has led to the closing 0f sORle schools formerly serving 1Il

llllgie parislln the report predicts that this trend will continue

The percentage of private seeshyondiilry schools - schools owned and controlled by religious CGIlshy

gregations more or less indeshypendently oi parish and diocese -remained constant

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6 THE ANCHor -Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 4 1967

CommunicotioRS There is geperal agreement~that the Vatican f CotmcD

Declaratiorion Communications is not an outstanding doeshy ument when viewed in thelight of the otherdOel)Ipents

coming from that momentous meeting But the fact that the Fathers of the Council wanted to deal with the matter of communications testifies to their awareness that men are indeed living in one world and that communications has made it a small world indeed

Television communication satellites radio newspapers movies air and rail and road travel-all these have opened up the world so that news travels around the earth as soon as it happenB opinions and v~ewsare projected into the ears of million of persons ideas which in decades past were suggested to as many persons as could hear the ~ound of a voice in a hall are now flung literally throughout the world

The very proliferation of communications media has both its advantages and its dangers Ideas get aroundshyboth good and bad Values are broadcast-noble ones and others News and opinions and propaganda are grouno out into ears that are discriminating and sophisticated and quite the opposite

This then is the challenge of communications to man _ -and the Church is not afraid to meet this challenge There is no question of censorship of manipulating the news and opinions To begin with that does not work And where it has worked it has worked perhaps more for evil than for good ideas The chsllenge is one of education-of conveyshying the values of Christ so persuasively and convincingly to people by both educative processes and by the witlHSS of personal lives that people will develop a taste for what is right There mUllt also be the honest realization that adults are adults and children are children and what might be acceptable for the one group could be hannful to the developing characters of the other

Thing are th(~re to be used 7 newspapers radio movies teleision And as the hite Atomic ~nergy Comshymission chainnan Thomas Murray once said Our only fear and our great llesponsibility is not what we do with things but what we do with ourselves How will man use the means of communication

The Giver ReceiiJeB When Buddhists give in the name of religion they

profer their gift with an expressi~n of thanks reasoning that they themselves should be grateful for this opportu Dity of gaining merit through a work of charity and religion

Such-an attitude does little to feed ones ego but cershytainly enlarges the soul and puts the emphasis where it belongs In the words of St AUgllstine whom Pope Paul

quoted in his recent encyclical You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person You are hanling over to him what is his For what has been given in common for the use of all you have arrogated to yourself The world is given to all and not only to the rich

It is quite difficult for one who has to give to one who has not and not to feel that he is giving and therefore virtuous generous deserving of fawJiing thanks and deep gratitude But for the Christjan giving is sharing with a brother in Christ who has not some of the world which one has It is an act that brings Gods blessing down upon the giver It helps the recipient yes but it also helps the giver to heed the words that the Apostle St John was said to repeat over and over again - Little children love one another

Giving to the Catholic Charities Appeal should be conshysidered not only a tax write-off not merely a tedious duty not just a yearly affair It should be seen as an opshyportunity to gain within oneself by helping a brother or sister in need-the poor the young the bewildered the aged the sick the dying the underprivileged the excepshytional Christ is in eaAh of these In giving to Christ we do not expect thanks but we are grateful to Him for the privilege of serving him

rhe ANCHOR OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVIER

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722middot 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P DrisltoJl -

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~frreg~ [Q)D~regillLfO QUTI~frDBOlJtlDnsshy

o~[uw [PDreg~reg~ f A[f~~8

Con~inued from Page One

for the aged we have Sacred Heart Home New Bedford long antedating our Chariti(s Appeals And we have four new Homes with accommodations for upwards of 640 as a result of past appeals

To any curious visitor or prospective manufacturer wanting to know the type of community he moves into our institutions appear to be quite important III faet we are told they are the show pieces of the area ADd

theres quite a bit of truth in that What monuments shyCharity and indeed community spirit are our five Homes for the Aged and Chronically Ill How eloquently the two Nazareth Hall Schools for Exceptional ChildreJl speak of ~hefruits of your giving Andthe Youth activity emphasizing not alone social but whatever makes 1M self-improvement our summer camps for which weue planning programmes of st~dy for ambitious youngsters combining work and play All these have their appeal to people outside the diocese They certainly speak weD for those who are directing services set up and financed by Catholic Charities

More important than a passing impression made 011 someone who is witness to the ever widening activity of our Charities is the judgment of those who benefit by them Who can measure the contentment of rejected children who experience love and understanding they ought to have from their parents Who can say what it means to a parent or grandparent to find understanding and companionship and security Who can tell the joy

- of a dedicated servant of Christ who finds an outlet for love in what they do for a neighbor in need And this is but a partial glimpse of what Catholic Charit~ entails

Years ago they talked and sang about counting your blessings Let me ask you do we or do we DOt have a whole litany of blessings serving our needs aDd

d t th f f th I t thrty

We Need Help bull bull

May 7 ~ 17

al mg our commum lea m e orm 0 e amos 1 St Louis University board Cllpound separate services~ applying what we contribute to help trustees solve meeds of men women and children in our fourcounties Mrs Shriver executive viee

president of the Joseph P Ken-Admittedly we take care of our own Who doesntU nedy Jr Foundation is wife CIl

But we have never drawn a line of discrimination on a federal anti-poverty director basis of color or creed in Cancer Home or any of our Sargent Shriver and a sister at

the late President John F KeDoopublic services Our rule and law is that of Christ to nedy Wilkins is executive direoshywhom all men are brethren and children of the Father tor of the National AssociatiOli Who is in heaven for the Advancement of Colored

In our best tradition we love our neighbor as our- Peopleselves We want to do for our neighbor what we would St Louis University was tile have him do for us were we in need So we thank God first major Catholic school in thecountry to announce plans _for the sick the homeless the aged and 1l1e ones lacking shared lay-clergy control friends It may sound strange but were it riot for them Thirteen members of the Soshywe could not put into practice the charity of Christ It ciety of Jesus which condudll is for us to reach out the love of God to those that yearn the university made up the fOlshyfor it We are His instruments What we give in money mer board of trustees Five wiD to support Catholic social services is important to our- remain as trustees All are 0i6shyselves as well as to the needy For it is a more blessed ficials of the university Among thing to give than to receive them is Father Paul C ~

SJ university president Invoking Gods Blessing on all men and women who Five other Jesuits from ins60

present our cause this year to parish and public and tutions outside St Louis haWi with cordial gratitude to those who come generously to been appointed to the new our support member board

Cape Nasareth Caatinued from Page D~

3ODd II 0 that ell tbat ~~b aecompllsbecl ill the 10 period a ebDd caD studymiddotheJe DOt lost

Some CIi the students fnIIII Nazareth Han have been brought to 100 public junior high schoOl level and are able to enter classtW and later find employment

Others will simply have beet given the aesthetic surroundinllJ they crave and the sympathetklinsight that enables them tilt overcome many of the obstaclelJ that have and all too often still are deemed unsurmountable

The school year and v3catioDl run parallel with the pubIklschool schedule In recent years transportation from Cape Cod towns as far down as Eastham and as far up as Onset is beingprovided by the towns

The curriculum includes ru6 mentary courses in r~aliinll

writing and arithmetic as weD as art and music for which th9 children have a special incl= nation

Religious instruction is offereQ if parents desire it Many of tha children are non Catholic kill have wanted to avail themselvefJ of it for religion is deeply rootedin these little ones

To teach at Nazareth Hall reshyquires Massachusetts educatiOiiil certificates and special educatiom certification The Sisters stud~

at Cardinal StritcH College iLl Wisconsin and obtain additional training at St Colettas in Hanshyover

Teaching here is a long patienfiprocess Repetition is needed bufjmust be of different nature eacti time or the children get boredand lose attention There a many audio-visual aids availablearid pauses for brief music perishyods to relax tension The moJIfj

active the teacher the grea1elir is the attention paid her What happens beyond the sta

at Nazareth Hall is up to parente ~d socety The sisters presenilthe children with the tools for bull useful and happy existence iJa buing them with basic academJie studies self confidence and strong mental attitude

They are aware of their li~

tations but also that they haWl a purpose in life no matter how small it might look statistica~

Their guileless friendly attishytude earnest application to the skills acquired help all those they come in contact with 110 carry their burdens easier

University Board Has 18 Laymen

ST LOUIS (NC) _ Eighteoo Catholic and non-Catholic 1 persons-including Eunice Kenshynedy Shriver and Roy Wilkin~ have been named members of the

Play an extra set of tennis

~ I I

CD

on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

J

~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

IDEAL LAUNDRY

From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

Sunbeam English Muffins Baked byyour Sunbeam Baker

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

-~ - I Cpp~teOn~-Stop Banking 24 H ~ W S ClubAccounts - Auto Loci ~ OUt ree Ier ery~e

zJ l 1o~middotD-~lt t i lt Checking Accouts ~ Buriesso~ns

tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

- Me~b~~ FedeialDeposirfnsoronce Corporation

BISAILLONS

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D ADSON OIL BURNERS Complete Heating Installations

24 Hour Oil Burner Service

To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

j ~OMPANY tl bull

Complete line middotfmiddot

Building Materi(lls

8 SPRlNG ST FAIRHAVEN t I loft

993-2611 t

RESIDENTIAL

11

Rt 6 at

WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

II-MEMORIAL CARDS

These cards are made on Ihe finest salin finish double weight portrait paper wilh the photograph of Ihe deceased on Ihe fronl side and name date of death and prayer Ogtl the back side and just Ihe right size to fit II HI missal or wallet

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these cards bull e PRICE OF CARDS WITH PHOTO II 25 for $1050 I 50 for 1450

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THE KEYSTONE OFFICE EQUIPMENT SALES 101 Jimes middotSt fftar IInrf Sf

Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~ gt ~

T CHOICE MEATS

~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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North Dighton Spring S~-North Easton Main St

Member federal Deposit insurance Corporation

-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 4: 05.04.67

THE ANCHQrshy4 ceD Directors Urge NationalT~urs Mo) 4 1967 I bull bullbull ~ ~i1 - bull - f bull ~ ( gt t II[ ----- _-------

Offpoundc~ of ReEigious middotEduc~tionmiddotmiddotmiddot-

The LOS ANGELES CNCNine Agitation for cat~cheticai~

ty-seven diocesan directors of newaLP alJr]isecth PmiddotGtlJIade the Confraternity of Ci)Ji~tiari Present efforts at religious eel--Doctrine (CCD) have called for ucation which are often uneooli shy

~It vi(J)SllWIi the creation of a national office dinated ill-defined and underrshy1FamplIlI lRllITlElR - of religious education as -a top- financed-----shy

-he patish countif W)1I1if6et priority need of the Roman IPlI2n Conference

at 8 tonight in the school hall Catholic Church The national office is needed Father John S Russell of S~

SIlbull lli(J)l8IN BAJgtIlllSIl to fill the huge gap which is aeuse NY national chairman GI CIENIIRamplI VllJLlLAGIE causing a crisis in religious edushy the CCD directors said that lIB

The Ladies Guild wdl hold its cation the directors declared at a prerequisite for the creation oJI monthly meeting at 7 30 Thurs- the conclusion of the 31st nationshy a national office of religious edshyday night May 11 in the parish al CCD conference here ucation the directors plan a speshyhall Election of officers will be cial conference next Fall involvshyThe crisis exists the directors followed by a potluck supper said because of ing the hea s of nationa~ Cathoshyto which members may invite Difficulties in the implementashy lic agencies concerned witlJreshyguests Mrs Loretta PotteI Mrs tion of Vatican Council II ligious education Agnes Potter and Mrs Estl~r The growing percentage of The directors also voted to

Perry are hostesses Catholic students in public work for establishment of ~

schools and universities -greater community among CatbshyST GEORGE The urgent necessity of conshy ()lic religious edl1cators and teWESTPORT

tinuing adtllt education among establish a structure for i~seyenebA public Maybasket whist will Catholics and professional studies I

be held at 8 Saturday night May 6 in the school hall -- -7 - l

ST JEAN THE BAPTIST FALL RllVEI

SIST~~~The Council of Catholic Women J will hold its regular monthly meeting on Monday evening IVIUSL~MS May 8 at 730 in the church hall

Mrs Remi Rinfret chairman AND TAXI - ~ ~ and Mrs Alfrcd Berube co-

chairman have announced hat REQUIEM FORADENAUERPontifical Requiem Mass DRIVERSall members are encouraged to bring theil mothers for the spe- forthe late Dr Konrall Adenauer offeredbyArlthbishop

THEHOLY FATHERIscwissioN AID 10 THE ORIENTAL CHURIH t ~ I ) _ ~ ~ - bull cial old fashioned Mothers Night Patrick A OJ30yle in St Matthews-Cath~dralWashington

lndSocial prOgrlm -was attended bv members of the diplomatic corpsChief j1 bull WISH frl Nfilif~slthe H~1y Land our 13 Sister~ 081

ST FRANCIS XAVIER Justice Earl Wa~ren Speaker of thllHQuse John McCormack YOU Joseph have -been asked to teach Englisli tb ttl middot HYANNIS and otherdignitaries of church and state German Minister LIVED taxi middotdrivers who care for American pilgrim

The new slate of officers for Gliqrg von LiU~nflld her~ gTe~~sectI t1~_ Al~hbishop NC Ph9tO y ~ NEAR r It- r~fleQts the esteem tt-Je Sisters eilJoYin thi - ~ shyiihe Womens Guiid is as foliows ENOUGH Muslim toWR~ Carol Hunnybun reports Two-

I Mrs Mary MurisScyplesid~nt - TO thirds oPthe children In the Sisters school ere Mrs Barbara Cannon vlce- MIX Muslim not to mention most of the 70000 middot president Mrs Pauline Antil reshy CEMENTl people the Sisters treated last year In thelrYrshy

eltgtrding seeretary Mn Flora nosemiddotan(Hhroat -dispensary bull bull You do Ifv Bisbee treasurer Federal Equality Opportunity Board Reports nearefKlugh tobelp SImply walk toyour corner

The sehedule of futum events maitOOx ampfIdsendsomething ($100 $75 _Few Religious Biasmiddot Complaintswas annoullced by Mrs Leo $25 $100 $5~ $2) to help complete the chapelGregoire plcsident The annual WASHINGTON (NC) -Only to Congress covered the fiscal

(simple functional devotional) the SlstGuild blll](luet i scheduled for two per cent of the diserimina- year ending June 30 last

liFe building evenings with their own handFriday June 2 and will be under tion charges filed with the Equal Exceed Expectation

(Look lor it if you visit the Holy Land) To finlillthe supervision of co-chairmen Employment Opportunity Com- Major point made middotby the re-Mrs JUl1iee lIcCarthy and Mrs mission during its first year of port is that the comlTissio~ reshy this desperatelymiddotneeded chapel they need Betty Burke opeiatjon alleged unequal treat- ceived 8854 complaints in its $3800 for materials and furnishings Give them

meilt beQause of religion first year whereas budget and In memory of your loved ones A plaque at the lVIIS Kay Lycett wili he~da Racial discrimination was ~taffing was predicated on esti- entrance will ask the boys and girls (and riottolarge committee fora rummage

sale planned for Mhy 22 in the charged in 59 per cent of the mates that som~ 2000 complaints Christians too) to pray foryou and yours for61181

Masonic Building l-Iain Street 5525 cases considered by the woule be madel The actlJ~1 num- commission Discrimination be- ber was more than tWIce the bull GAiAArticles mJy Ijy leftin the lower UNRWA Comm1ssloner-Ge1eral Laurence MIchelo bull cause of sex was cited in 37 per number all state fall employment f~

~ middotWEREChurch )ctwicn 1113 J5- 20 and middotmore oCClbles urgently that $75 Is needed now at the lIsonic If]]] On $Uilday cent and discdnmination because practice agencies receive in a WORRIED for ~h ofotlr 67 blind boys and girls to comshyevening May 21 befween 7 and of religion nd naflal origin year plete this years training at the Pontifical MI middoteacl-) accounted for two per cent The commISSIon repol ted ThIS

dramatic response to the new lawD siOfl-centel f(J( the Blind Gazas only Monasnor

A hml and bean SUPPllr wBl Thefl~ur~S ~ade publIc 111 the (Civil Rights Act of 1964) reshy -Gartland In Beirut requests the total Imnledlo bE selv(d from 3 tomiddot~ on Slturshy commISSIOn s fIrst middotannual repolmiddott flected the confidence of civil 1ltety $5925 bullbullbull Every gift will help Take 08 f middot day evci1ing lr y 27 inthf~ lower

rights organizations ald minority ~f tmebl~middotchlf4 ($75) or twolchurch hall persons in this new middotavenue middottoMrs Trudy Sylvestcr will head Prelate Supports bullbullbullbullrelief from discriminationthe committee for the annual FREE -01 a fr_ CQJlY of Monsignor Norans reen

It almost swamped middotthe smallSummer Fair set for Saturday COpy aFtiele 1orprldta Holy Land Torment July 29 Welfare Hike middotcommission staff and middotasa result bmd 8~H1d ua ysur address It cOnllllHf

the commissions first yearCINCINNATI (NC) - Efforts ~ to the tfoJy Land pilgrIm Sot -ended with many middothundred middotUftshytf raise welfare payments fur

Appe~1 Bus Ruling reached casesOhios dependent children frQRl 78 per cent to 100 middotper cent minishyTo Supreme Court mum needs has middotdraw-n strong

WASHINGTON (NC) -- Th~ support from Archbishop Kad JU S Supreme Court ha been

0Alter of Cincinati middot asked tc rule once again on the In middota letter to pliests Religious col1stitHtionality of transpQrling and lait~ of the archdiocese middothe student~ to privt~ schonls at declared llubHc expense The i st time the

As concerned Christiails andcourt ruled in the matter-- in a as citizens we shoul- take middotan middotacshymiddot 1947 New Jersey case-it upheld tive personal interest imiddotn the proshythe practice gJams of the government and middotofThis time the American Civil the community middotand ()f the

Libertie~ Union and the AmershyChurch to aid the poorican Jewish Congress on behalf

Gf scvclal I~nsylvania eiiizens Worthy of particular attention are challenging a 1965 Pennsylshy at this time is the efforl t) seshy GEO OHARA vania law which r-luires public cure adequate welfare benefits transportation of pupils to nonshy for the some 14000Ppoor chil shymiddotprofit privte schools within cershy dren of our state Under the tain distance limits present Aid to Dependent Chil shy THI CATHOLIC NImiddotAR IAIIT WILFAAE ASSQCIATIbullbull

The law was uphelc Jan 17 by dren program these children reshy CHEVROLETceive only 78 per cent of the cost decisi~ which relied heavily on the state Supreme Court in a 5-2

of living by the very minimum the U S Suprem~ COUltS 1947 standards of health andmiddotdecency

opinion The app -1 charges Must of us have never expeshymiddot -however that many Amelicans rienced the pain of poverty middotWe

are alarmed at what seems to be live comfortably in areas where n ever-widening breach h~ the we are spared the distasteful wall of separation of church and sign of human beings il misery state and only this court can Yet e poormiddot are our neighbors clarify the law on this vital and we must not shut them out issue middotof our Iives

Where A GOOD NAME

Means A

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LAWYER -last fl1()I)hfrom bull $1 million bequest frem _ 8fOOIIlyn RaJ estate executivebullbullbullbull Yeur lie flume lo 1115 (IepI title CATHOLIC NUll lAw WntAH ASSOCIATIOII) wtll fight Communlm an4 _useEl~yotHtirectlnthe lIoly FatheralNlme-----------------shyco

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SCOUTHNG AWARDS As the scouting year comes to an end all usociated with this youth work meet for the ~JlIlluai awards night Left HIm Medas Jr St Pauls Taunton and Miss Joan Corrigan St Theresas A-ttleooro Center Rudolph Blanchard St Annes New Bedford Mrs

Lawrence Harney St Lawrences New Bedford Bi~hop Connolly Edgar J Bowen Our Lad~ of the Isle Nantucket Right Arthur L Bergeron~ Immaculate CooceptitlR Fall River Miss Mary Carreiro Our Lady of the Angels Fall River

Department of Education Survey Shows Catholic Schools Increase

WASHINGTON (NC) - The aumber of Catholic schools of lID elassifications in the United states increased by 110 or 0-3 per eent between 1963 and 1965 acshyeording to the latest national Mlmmary of Catholic education published ~re by the Departshyment of Education of the United States Catholic Conference

The number of instructors inshycreased 13759 or 69 per cent whHe the number of students jnshyer~ased 34785 or 06 per cent the survey found

But- for the first time since the Catholic education surveyswere begun by the department lin 1920 the practice in certain dioceses of dropping elementary 5Chool grades has been reflected 10 I October 1965 Catholic eleshymentary schools enrolled 4492- 1107 pupils a decrease of 41664 pupils or 09 per cent under the plevious survey of 1964

The statistical data in the curshylre1t summary is based on inforshymation as of Oct 31 1964 and Oct 31 1965 It gives a state by state breakdown of Catholic lieminaries and religious houses ef formation universities and collegell diocesan teacneils 001shyAegesJUld teacher trflining insti ~tipflS secondary schools anti ele~entllry schools

Lay TelMlhcl1S Ihncllcase Tjte survey notes that Catholic

elementary schools are conshydQcted in each of the 144 archshydioceses and dioceses and in all etf the 50 states The number aries from three schools in th~

diocese of Juneau Alaska to 442 in the Chicago archdiocese New York with 1158 has more Catholic elemenary schools than MY other state

The 1965 survey showed a ~tal of 1202GS teachers staffing llO879 elementary schools This number which includes 76195 llleligious teacheZs and 44011 lay reachers is an inczoaaSJl of 13373 tbeachers over the lS53-54 total

Th-e greates~ incrCiase was irouna in the number of lay ~acheIs in 1954 there were e356 lay teachers Of 122 Per (OOnt of the tota~ in 1e65 there 4lt1011 lay teaclleJrs in Catholic

elementary schools or 366 per rent oi the total

A total of 4492107 elemenshytaiY school pupils in 1965 mukedmiddot an- iRcrease of 388 per cent ia theH-year period since 1953-~

but It decline of 9 per cent from 19M

On the seeondary school level the stHvey founda marked inshyeTeQSe in the past decade in censhytral or diocesan high schools NMing that the advantages which accompany the consolidashytion of smalll schools into larger units has led to the closing 0f sORle schools formerly serving 1Il

llllgie parislln the report predicts that this trend will continue

The percentage of private seeshyondiilry schools - schools owned and controlled by religious CGIlshy

gregations more or less indeshypendently oi parish and diocese -remained constant

The Best

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so day ~otieo f1J7 wltllllTllWlll

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less RiveO Scvill1S]s BOlfik I8C1ll11c lJy- Maol

We fey iTampu~ ))~S~ClI~ iP )aIIllJlr YllliMl1im bull Rlffi~NIl)

lt1RMOUTH SHOPPING lUWl

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bullElectric Dishwasher IS the Greatest How often have you heard

Mom say with a resigned smile Well the dishes woot do themselves so Id better get busy She cant bear those piles of dirty dishes staring her inmiddot the face so she goes at them with as much vigor as she can muster But she doesnt have to Hke it

No the dishes wont wash themselves but an automatic electric dishwasher will Thats just one reson why more and more families choose total- electric Gold Medallion Homes Many have electric dishwashers f1lready installed Those withshyout dishwashers have ample electrical capacity to permit easy economical installation of this popular work-saving appli shyance

Whether you choose a built- I in 01 portable model youll I find an electric dishwasher is-I just a work-saver Dishes comeshyout cleaner and more sanitary than is possible w)th handshy~ashing -tlanks to the use of super-hot water Also a dishwasher ~l1inimizes breakage because theres less handling of fragile china and ~lassware

New models offer a variety of washing cycles including 11 soft wash for delicate china

and crystal At the other end of the scale theres a vigorous wash for pots and pans and heavily soiled utensils

SmaU families find they can do all of a days dirty-dish accumulation at one time And

See them orJ display at yout

EOelaquoftrocCJI ApplDQl1Jce Deale OIT The bull bull t

fC1ll RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

Electric dishwashers take the

the dishwasher is a real blessshying after a dinner-party Just scrape load the machine and push a button

The electric dishwasher has so much to offer bull bull bull its no

drudgery out of dishwasbing

wonder so many home builders select this wonderful unit as one of the four major electric appliances hich must be inshystalled in every Golu Medallion Homel

6 THE ANCHor -Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 4 1967

CommunicotioRS There is geperal agreement~that the Vatican f CotmcD

Declaratiorion Communications is not an outstanding doeshy ument when viewed in thelight of the otherdOel)Ipents

coming from that momentous meeting But the fact that the Fathers of the Council wanted to deal with the matter of communications testifies to their awareness that men are indeed living in one world and that communications has made it a small world indeed

Television communication satellites radio newspapers movies air and rail and road travel-all these have opened up the world so that news travels around the earth as soon as it happenB opinions and v~ewsare projected into the ears of million of persons ideas which in decades past were suggested to as many persons as could hear the ~ound of a voice in a hall are now flung literally throughout the world

The very proliferation of communications media has both its advantages and its dangers Ideas get aroundshyboth good and bad Values are broadcast-noble ones and others News and opinions and propaganda are grouno out into ears that are discriminating and sophisticated and quite the opposite

This then is the challenge of communications to man _ -and the Church is not afraid to meet this challenge There is no question of censorship of manipulating the news and opinions To begin with that does not work And where it has worked it has worked perhaps more for evil than for good ideas The chsllenge is one of education-of conveyshying the values of Christ so persuasively and convincingly to people by both educative processes and by the witlHSS of personal lives that people will develop a taste for what is right There mUllt also be the honest realization that adults are adults and children are children and what might be acceptable for the one group could be hannful to the developing characters of the other

Thing are th(~re to be used 7 newspapers radio movies teleision And as the hite Atomic ~nergy Comshymission chainnan Thomas Murray once said Our only fear and our great llesponsibility is not what we do with things but what we do with ourselves How will man use the means of communication

The Giver ReceiiJeB When Buddhists give in the name of religion they

profer their gift with an expressi~n of thanks reasoning that they themselves should be grateful for this opportu Dity of gaining merit through a work of charity and religion

Such-an attitude does little to feed ones ego but cershytainly enlarges the soul and puts the emphasis where it belongs In the words of St AUgllstine whom Pope Paul

quoted in his recent encyclical You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person You are hanling over to him what is his For what has been given in common for the use of all you have arrogated to yourself The world is given to all and not only to the rich

It is quite difficult for one who has to give to one who has not and not to feel that he is giving and therefore virtuous generous deserving of fawJiing thanks and deep gratitude But for the Christjan giving is sharing with a brother in Christ who has not some of the world which one has It is an act that brings Gods blessing down upon the giver It helps the recipient yes but it also helps the giver to heed the words that the Apostle St John was said to repeat over and over again - Little children love one another

Giving to the Catholic Charities Appeal should be conshysidered not only a tax write-off not merely a tedious duty not just a yearly affair It should be seen as an opshyportunity to gain within oneself by helping a brother or sister in need-the poor the young the bewildered the aged the sick the dying the underprivileged the excepshytional Christ is in eaAh of these In giving to Christ we do not expect thanks but we are grateful to Him for the privilege of serving him

rhe ANCHOR OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVIER

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722middot 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P DrisltoJl -

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~frreg~ [Q)D~regillLfO QUTI~frDBOlJtlDnsshy

o~[uw [PDreg~reg~ f A[f~~8

Con~inued from Page One

for the aged we have Sacred Heart Home New Bedford long antedating our Chariti(s Appeals And we have four new Homes with accommodations for upwards of 640 as a result of past appeals

To any curious visitor or prospective manufacturer wanting to know the type of community he moves into our institutions appear to be quite important III faet we are told they are the show pieces of the area ADd

theres quite a bit of truth in that What monuments shyCharity and indeed community spirit are our five Homes for the Aged and Chronically Ill How eloquently the two Nazareth Hall Schools for Exceptional ChildreJl speak of ~hefruits of your giving Andthe Youth activity emphasizing not alone social but whatever makes 1M self-improvement our summer camps for which weue planning programmes of st~dy for ambitious youngsters combining work and play All these have their appeal to people outside the diocese They certainly speak weD for those who are directing services set up and financed by Catholic Charities

More important than a passing impression made 011 someone who is witness to the ever widening activity of our Charities is the judgment of those who benefit by them Who can measure the contentment of rejected children who experience love and understanding they ought to have from their parents Who can say what it means to a parent or grandparent to find understanding and companionship and security Who can tell the joy

- of a dedicated servant of Christ who finds an outlet for love in what they do for a neighbor in need And this is but a partial glimpse of what Catholic Charit~ entails

Years ago they talked and sang about counting your blessings Let me ask you do we or do we DOt have a whole litany of blessings serving our needs aDd

d t th f f th I t thrty

We Need Help bull bull

May 7 ~ 17

al mg our commum lea m e orm 0 e amos 1 St Louis University board Cllpound separate services~ applying what we contribute to help trustees solve meeds of men women and children in our fourcounties Mrs Shriver executive viee

president of the Joseph P Ken-Admittedly we take care of our own Who doesntU nedy Jr Foundation is wife CIl

But we have never drawn a line of discrimination on a federal anti-poverty director basis of color or creed in Cancer Home or any of our Sargent Shriver and a sister at

the late President John F KeDoopublic services Our rule and law is that of Christ to nedy Wilkins is executive direoshywhom all men are brethren and children of the Father tor of the National AssociatiOli Who is in heaven for the Advancement of Colored

In our best tradition we love our neighbor as our- Peopleselves We want to do for our neighbor what we would St Louis University was tile have him do for us were we in need So we thank God first major Catholic school in thecountry to announce plans _for the sick the homeless the aged and 1l1e ones lacking shared lay-clergy control friends It may sound strange but were it riot for them Thirteen members of the Soshywe could not put into practice the charity of Christ It ciety of Jesus which condudll is for us to reach out the love of God to those that yearn the university made up the fOlshyfor it We are His instruments What we give in money mer board of trustees Five wiD to support Catholic social services is important to our- remain as trustees All are 0i6shyselves as well as to the needy For it is a more blessed ficials of the university Among thing to give than to receive them is Father Paul C ~

SJ university president Invoking Gods Blessing on all men and women who Five other Jesuits from ins60

present our cause this year to parish and public and tutions outside St Louis haWi with cordial gratitude to those who come generously to been appointed to the new our support member board

Cape Nasareth Caatinued from Page D~

3ODd II 0 that ell tbat ~~b aecompllsbecl ill the 10 period a ebDd caD studymiddotheJe DOt lost

Some CIi the students fnIIII Nazareth Han have been brought to 100 public junior high schoOl level and are able to enter classtW and later find employment

Others will simply have beet given the aesthetic surroundinllJ they crave and the sympathetklinsight that enables them tilt overcome many of the obstaclelJ that have and all too often still are deemed unsurmountable

The school year and v3catioDl run parallel with the pubIklschool schedule In recent years transportation from Cape Cod towns as far down as Eastham and as far up as Onset is beingprovided by the towns

The curriculum includes ru6 mentary courses in r~aliinll

writing and arithmetic as weD as art and music for which th9 children have a special incl= nation

Religious instruction is offereQ if parents desire it Many of tha children are non Catholic kill have wanted to avail themselvefJ of it for religion is deeply rootedin these little ones

To teach at Nazareth Hall reshyquires Massachusetts educatiOiiil certificates and special educatiom certification The Sisters stud~

at Cardinal StritcH College iLl Wisconsin and obtain additional training at St Colettas in Hanshyover

Teaching here is a long patienfiprocess Repetition is needed bufjmust be of different nature eacti time or the children get boredand lose attention There a many audio-visual aids availablearid pauses for brief music perishyods to relax tension The moJIfj

active the teacher the grea1elir is the attention paid her What happens beyond the sta

at Nazareth Hall is up to parente ~d socety The sisters presenilthe children with the tools for bull useful and happy existence iJa buing them with basic academJie studies self confidence and strong mental attitude

They are aware of their li~

tations but also that they haWl a purpose in life no matter how small it might look statistica~

Their guileless friendly attishytude earnest application to the skills acquired help all those they come in contact with 110 carry their burdens easier

University Board Has 18 Laymen

ST LOUIS (NC) _ Eighteoo Catholic and non-Catholic 1 persons-including Eunice Kenshynedy Shriver and Roy Wilkin~ have been named members of the

Play an extra set of tennis

~ I I

CD

on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

J

~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

IDEAL LAUNDRY

From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

Sunbeam English Muffins Baked byyour Sunbeam Baker

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

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matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

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iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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if youd like something bett~r for your family this WE)e~ ~ervEl FIRST CHOrCeMEATS We guarantee youll bedeshylIghted shy or your money back

YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

middot1

f ~

~

-

~ 1 ~s

~ gt ~

T CHOICE MEATS

~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

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Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

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Page 5: 05.04.67

III v

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SCOUTHNG AWARDS As the scouting year comes to an end all usociated with this youth work meet for the ~JlIlluai awards night Left HIm Medas Jr St Pauls Taunton and Miss Joan Corrigan St Theresas A-ttleooro Center Rudolph Blanchard St Annes New Bedford Mrs

Lawrence Harney St Lawrences New Bedford Bi~hop Connolly Edgar J Bowen Our Lad~ of the Isle Nantucket Right Arthur L Bergeron~ Immaculate CooceptitlR Fall River Miss Mary Carreiro Our Lady of the Angels Fall River

Department of Education Survey Shows Catholic Schools Increase

WASHINGTON (NC) - The aumber of Catholic schools of lID elassifications in the United states increased by 110 or 0-3 per eent between 1963 and 1965 acshyeording to the latest national Mlmmary of Catholic education published ~re by the Departshyment of Education of the United States Catholic Conference

The number of instructors inshycreased 13759 or 69 per cent whHe the number of students jnshyer~ased 34785 or 06 per cent the survey found

But- for the first time since the Catholic education surveyswere begun by the department lin 1920 the practice in certain dioceses of dropping elementary 5Chool grades has been reflected 10 I October 1965 Catholic eleshymentary schools enrolled 4492- 1107 pupils a decrease of 41664 pupils or 09 per cent under the plevious survey of 1964

The statistical data in the curshylre1t summary is based on inforshymation as of Oct 31 1964 and Oct 31 1965 It gives a state by state breakdown of Catholic lieminaries and religious houses ef formation universities and collegell diocesan teacneils 001shyAegesJUld teacher trflining insti ~tipflS secondary schools anti ele~entllry schools

Lay TelMlhcl1S Ihncllcase Tjte survey notes that Catholic

elementary schools are conshydQcted in each of the 144 archshydioceses and dioceses and in all etf the 50 states The number aries from three schools in th~

diocese of Juneau Alaska to 442 in the Chicago archdiocese New York with 1158 has more Catholic elemenary schools than MY other state

The 1965 survey showed a ~tal of 1202GS teachers staffing llO879 elementary schools This number which includes 76195 llleligious teacheZs and 44011 lay reachers is an inczoaaSJl of 13373 tbeachers over the lS53-54 total

Th-e greates~ incrCiase was irouna in the number of lay ~acheIs in 1954 there were e356 lay teachers Of 122 Per (OOnt of the tota~ in 1e65 there 4lt1011 lay teaclleJrs in Catholic

elementary schools or 366 per rent oi the total

A total of 4492107 elemenshytaiY school pupils in 1965 mukedmiddot an- iRcrease of 388 per cent ia theH-year period since 1953-~

but It decline of 9 per cent from 19M

On the seeondary school level the stHvey founda marked inshyeTeQSe in the past decade in censhytral or diocesan high schools NMing that the advantages which accompany the consolidashytion of smalll schools into larger units has led to the closing 0f sORle schools formerly serving 1Il

llllgie parislln the report predicts that this trend will continue

The percentage of private seeshyondiilry schools - schools owned and controlled by religious CGIlshy

gregations more or less indeshypendently oi parish and diocese -remained constant

The Best

c 5001 a SYSTEMAnc J bull 10 vear SAVINGS

9S monthly deposits required

5 00 01 a aNVESTMOO bull 10 veal SAVI~~SS

so day ~otieo f1J7 wltllllTllWlll

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lt1RMOUTH SHOPPING lUWl

o DIENNIS PORl OSTERViiU

bullElectric Dishwasher IS the Greatest How often have you heard

Mom say with a resigned smile Well the dishes woot do themselves so Id better get busy She cant bear those piles of dirty dishes staring her inmiddot the face so she goes at them with as much vigor as she can muster But she doesnt have to Hke it

No the dishes wont wash themselves but an automatic electric dishwasher will Thats just one reson why more and more families choose total- electric Gold Medallion Homes Many have electric dishwashers f1lready installed Those withshyout dishwashers have ample electrical capacity to permit easy economical installation of this popular work-saving appli shyance

Whether you choose a built- I in 01 portable model youll I find an electric dishwasher is-I just a work-saver Dishes comeshyout cleaner and more sanitary than is possible w)th handshy~ashing -tlanks to the use of super-hot water Also a dishwasher ~l1inimizes breakage because theres less handling of fragile china and ~lassware

New models offer a variety of washing cycles including 11 soft wash for delicate china

and crystal At the other end of the scale theres a vigorous wash for pots and pans and heavily soiled utensils

SmaU families find they can do all of a days dirty-dish accumulation at one time And

See them orJ display at yout

EOelaquoftrocCJI ApplDQl1Jce Deale OIT The bull bull t

fC1ll RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

Electric dishwashers take the

the dishwasher is a real blessshying after a dinner-party Just scrape load the machine and push a button

The electric dishwasher has so much to offer bull bull bull its no

drudgery out of dishwasbing

wonder so many home builders select this wonderful unit as one of the four major electric appliances hich must be inshystalled in every Golu Medallion Homel

6 THE ANCHor -Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 4 1967

CommunicotioRS There is geperal agreement~that the Vatican f CotmcD

Declaratiorion Communications is not an outstanding doeshy ument when viewed in thelight of the otherdOel)Ipents

coming from that momentous meeting But the fact that the Fathers of the Council wanted to deal with the matter of communications testifies to their awareness that men are indeed living in one world and that communications has made it a small world indeed

Television communication satellites radio newspapers movies air and rail and road travel-all these have opened up the world so that news travels around the earth as soon as it happenB opinions and v~ewsare projected into the ears of million of persons ideas which in decades past were suggested to as many persons as could hear the ~ound of a voice in a hall are now flung literally throughout the world

The very proliferation of communications media has both its advantages and its dangers Ideas get aroundshyboth good and bad Values are broadcast-noble ones and others News and opinions and propaganda are grouno out into ears that are discriminating and sophisticated and quite the opposite

This then is the challenge of communications to man _ -and the Church is not afraid to meet this challenge There is no question of censorship of manipulating the news and opinions To begin with that does not work And where it has worked it has worked perhaps more for evil than for good ideas The chsllenge is one of education-of conveyshying the values of Christ so persuasively and convincingly to people by both educative processes and by the witlHSS of personal lives that people will develop a taste for what is right There mUllt also be the honest realization that adults are adults and children are children and what might be acceptable for the one group could be hannful to the developing characters of the other

Thing are th(~re to be used 7 newspapers radio movies teleision And as the hite Atomic ~nergy Comshymission chainnan Thomas Murray once said Our only fear and our great llesponsibility is not what we do with things but what we do with ourselves How will man use the means of communication

The Giver ReceiiJeB When Buddhists give in the name of religion they

profer their gift with an expressi~n of thanks reasoning that they themselves should be grateful for this opportu Dity of gaining merit through a work of charity and religion

Such-an attitude does little to feed ones ego but cershytainly enlarges the soul and puts the emphasis where it belongs In the words of St AUgllstine whom Pope Paul

quoted in his recent encyclical You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person You are hanling over to him what is his For what has been given in common for the use of all you have arrogated to yourself The world is given to all and not only to the rich

It is quite difficult for one who has to give to one who has not and not to feel that he is giving and therefore virtuous generous deserving of fawJiing thanks and deep gratitude But for the Christjan giving is sharing with a brother in Christ who has not some of the world which one has It is an act that brings Gods blessing down upon the giver It helps the recipient yes but it also helps the giver to heed the words that the Apostle St John was said to repeat over and over again - Little children love one another

Giving to the Catholic Charities Appeal should be conshysidered not only a tax write-off not merely a tedious duty not just a yearly affair It should be seen as an opshyportunity to gain within oneself by helping a brother or sister in need-the poor the young the bewildered the aged the sick the dying the underprivileged the excepshytional Christ is in eaAh of these In giving to Christ we do not expect thanks but we are grateful to Him for the privilege of serving him

rhe ANCHOR OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVIER

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722middot 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P DrisltoJl -

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~frreg~ [Q)D~regillLfO QUTI~frDBOlJtlDnsshy

o~[uw [PDreg~reg~ f A[f~~8

Con~inued from Page One

for the aged we have Sacred Heart Home New Bedford long antedating our Chariti(s Appeals And we have four new Homes with accommodations for upwards of 640 as a result of past appeals

To any curious visitor or prospective manufacturer wanting to know the type of community he moves into our institutions appear to be quite important III faet we are told they are the show pieces of the area ADd

theres quite a bit of truth in that What monuments shyCharity and indeed community spirit are our five Homes for the Aged and Chronically Ill How eloquently the two Nazareth Hall Schools for Exceptional ChildreJl speak of ~hefruits of your giving Andthe Youth activity emphasizing not alone social but whatever makes 1M self-improvement our summer camps for which weue planning programmes of st~dy for ambitious youngsters combining work and play All these have their appeal to people outside the diocese They certainly speak weD for those who are directing services set up and financed by Catholic Charities

More important than a passing impression made 011 someone who is witness to the ever widening activity of our Charities is the judgment of those who benefit by them Who can measure the contentment of rejected children who experience love and understanding they ought to have from their parents Who can say what it means to a parent or grandparent to find understanding and companionship and security Who can tell the joy

- of a dedicated servant of Christ who finds an outlet for love in what they do for a neighbor in need And this is but a partial glimpse of what Catholic Charit~ entails

Years ago they talked and sang about counting your blessings Let me ask you do we or do we DOt have a whole litany of blessings serving our needs aDd

d t th f f th I t thrty

We Need Help bull bull

May 7 ~ 17

al mg our commum lea m e orm 0 e amos 1 St Louis University board Cllpound separate services~ applying what we contribute to help trustees solve meeds of men women and children in our fourcounties Mrs Shriver executive viee

president of the Joseph P Ken-Admittedly we take care of our own Who doesntU nedy Jr Foundation is wife CIl

But we have never drawn a line of discrimination on a federal anti-poverty director basis of color or creed in Cancer Home or any of our Sargent Shriver and a sister at

the late President John F KeDoopublic services Our rule and law is that of Christ to nedy Wilkins is executive direoshywhom all men are brethren and children of the Father tor of the National AssociatiOli Who is in heaven for the Advancement of Colored

In our best tradition we love our neighbor as our- Peopleselves We want to do for our neighbor what we would St Louis University was tile have him do for us were we in need So we thank God first major Catholic school in thecountry to announce plans _for the sick the homeless the aged and 1l1e ones lacking shared lay-clergy control friends It may sound strange but were it riot for them Thirteen members of the Soshywe could not put into practice the charity of Christ It ciety of Jesus which condudll is for us to reach out the love of God to those that yearn the university made up the fOlshyfor it We are His instruments What we give in money mer board of trustees Five wiD to support Catholic social services is important to our- remain as trustees All are 0i6shyselves as well as to the needy For it is a more blessed ficials of the university Among thing to give than to receive them is Father Paul C ~

SJ university president Invoking Gods Blessing on all men and women who Five other Jesuits from ins60

present our cause this year to parish and public and tutions outside St Louis haWi with cordial gratitude to those who come generously to been appointed to the new our support member board

Cape Nasareth Caatinued from Page D~

3ODd II 0 that ell tbat ~~b aecompllsbecl ill the 10 period a ebDd caD studymiddotheJe DOt lost

Some CIi the students fnIIII Nazareth Han have been brought to 100 public junior high schoOl level and are able to enter classtW and later find employment

Others will simply have beet given the aesthetic surroundinllJ they crave and the sympathetklinsight that enables them tilt overcome many of the obstaclelJ that have and all too often still are deemed unsurmountable

The school year and v3catioDl run parallel with the pubIklschool schedule In recent years transportation from Cape Cod towns as far down as Eastham and as far up as Onset is beingprovided by the towns

The curriculum includes ru6 mentary courses in r~aliinll

writing and arithmetic as weD as art and music for which th9 children have a special incl= nation

Religious instruction is offereQ if parents desire it Many of tha children are non Catholic kill have wanted to avail themselvefJ of it for religion is deeply rootedin these little ones

To teach at Nazareth Hall reshyquires Massachusetts educatiOiiil certificates and special educatiom certification The Sisters stud~

at Cardinal StritcH College iLl Wisconsin and obtain additional training at St Colettas in Hanshyover

Teaching here is a long patienfiprocess Repetition is needed bufjmust be of different nature eacti time or the children get boredand lose attention There a many audio-visual aids availablearid pauses for brief music perishyods to relax tension The moJIfj

active the teacher the grea1elir is the attention paid her What happens beyond the sta

at Nazareth Hall is up to parente ~d socety The sisters presenilthe children with the tools for bull useful and happy existence iJa buing them with basic academJie studies self confidence and strong mental attitude

They are aware of their li~

tations but also that they haWl a purpose in life no matter how small it might look statistica~

Their guileless friendly attishytude earnest application to the skills acquired help all those they come in contact with 110 carry their burdens easier

University Board Has 18 Laymen

ST LOUIS (NC) _ Eighteoo Catholic and non-Catholic 1 persons-including Eunice Kenshynedy Shriver and Roy Wilkin~ have been named members of the

Play an extra set of tennis

~ I I

CD

on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

J

~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

IDEAL LAUNDRY

From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

Sunbeam English Muffins Baked byyour Sunbeam Baker

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

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tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

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WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

II-MEMORIAL CARDS

These cards are made on Ihe finest salin finish double weight portrait paper wilh the photograph of Ihe deceased on Ihe fronl side and name date of death and prayer Ogtl the back side and just Ihe right size to fit II HI missal or wallet

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~ gt ~

T CHOICE MEATS

~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 6: 05.04.67

6 THE ANCHor -Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 4 1967

CommunicotioRS There is geperal agreement~that the Vatican f CotmcD

Declaratiorion Communications is not an outstanding doeshy ument when viewed in thelight of the otherdOel)Ipents

coming from that momentous meeting But the fact that the Fathers of the Council wanted to deal with the matter of communications testifies to their awareness that men are indeed living in one world and that communications has made it a small world indeed

Television communication satellites radio newspapers movies air and rail and road travel-all these have opened up the world so that news travels around the earth as soon as it happenB opinions and v~ewsare projected into the ears of million of persons ideas which in decades past were suggested to as many persons as could hear the ~ound of a voice in a hall are now flung literally throughout the world

The very proliferation of communications media has both its advantages and its dangers Ideas get aroundshyboth good and bad Values are broadcast-noble ones and others News and opinions and propaganda are grouno out into ears that are discriminating and sophisticated and quite the opposite

This then is the challenge of communications to man _ -and the Church is not afraid to meet this challenge There is no question of censorship of manipulating the news and opinions To begin with that does not work And where it has worked it has worked perhaps more for evil than for good ideas The chsllenge is one of education-of conveyshying the values of Christ so persuasively and convincingly to people by both educative processes and by the witlHSS of personal lives that people will develop a taste for what is right There mUllt also be the honest realization that adults are adults and children are children and what might be acceptable for the one group could be hannful to the developing characters of the other

Thing are th(~re to be used 7 newspapers radio movies teleision And as the hite Atomic ~nergy Comshymission chainnan Thomas Murray once said Our only fear and our great llesponsibility is not what we do with things but what we do with ourselves How will man use the means of communication

The Giver ReceiiJeB When Buddhists give in the name of religion they

profer their gift with an expressi~n of thanks reasoning that they themselves should be grateful for this opportu Dity of gaining merit through a work of charity and religion

Such-an attitude does little to feed ones ego but cershytainly enlarges the soul and puts the emphasis where it belongs In the words of St AUgllstine whom Pope Paul

quoted in his recent encyclical You are not making a gift of your possessions to the poor person You are hanling over to him what is his For what has been given in common for the use of all you have arrogated to yourself The world is given to all and not only to the rich

It is quite difficult for one who has to give to one who has not and not to feel that he is giving and therefore virtuous generous deserving of fawJiing thanks and deep gratitude But for the Christjan giving is sharing with a brother in Christ who has not some of the world which one has It is an act that brings Gods blessing down upon the giver It helps the recipient yes but it also helps the giver to heed the words that the Apostle St John was said to repeat over and over again - Little children love one another

Giving to the Catholic Charities Appeal should be conshysidered not only a tax write-off not merely a tedious duty not just a yearly affair It should be seen as an opshyportunity to gain within oneself by helping a brother or sister in need-the poor the young the bewildered the aged the sick the dying the underprivileged the excepshytional Christ is in eaAh of these In giving to Christ we do not expect thanks but we are grateful to Him for the privilege of serving him

rhe ANCHOR OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVIER

410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722middot 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P DrisltoJl -

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~frreg~ [Q)D~regillLfO QUTI~frDBOlJtlDnsshy

o~[uw [PDreg~reg~ f A[f~~8

Con~inued from Page One

for the aged we have Sacred Heart Home New Bedford long antedating our Chariti(s Appeals And we have four new Homes with accommodations for upwards of 640 as a result of past appeals

To any curious visitor or prospective manufacturer wanting to know the type of community he moves into our institutions appear to be quite important III faet we are told they are the show pieces of the area ADd

theres quite a bit of truth in that What monuments shyCharity and indeed community spirit are our five Homes for the Aged and Chronically Ill How eloquently the two Nazareth Hall Schools for Exceptional ChildreJl speak of ~hefruits of your giving Andthe Youth activity emphasizing not alone social but whatever makes 1M self-improvement our summer camps for which weue planning programmes of st~dy for ambitious youngsters combining work and play All these have their appeal to people outside the diocese They certainly speak weD for those who are directing services set up and financed by Catholic Charities

More important than a passing impression made 011 someone who is witness to the ever widening activity of our Charities is the judgment of those who benefit by them Who can measure the contentment of rejected children who experience love and understanding they ought to have from their parents Who can say what it means to a parent or grandparent to find understanding and companionship and security Who can tell the joy

- of a dedicated servant of Christ who finds an outlet for love in what they do for a neighbor in need And this is but a partial glimpse of what Catholic Charit~ entails

Years ago they talked and sang about counting your blessings Let me ask you do we or do we DOt have a whole litany of blessings serving our needs aDd

d t th f f th I t thrty

We Need Help bull bull

May 7 ~ 17

al mg our commum lea m e orm 0 e amos 1 St Louis University board Cllpound separate services~ applying what we contribute to help trustees solve meeds of men women and children in our fourcounties Mrs Shriver executive viee

president of the Joseph P Ken-Admittedly we take care of our own Who doesntU nedy Jr Foundation is wife CIl

But we have never drawn a line of discrimination on a federal anti-poverty director basis of color or creed in Cancer Home or any of our Sargent Shriver and a sister at

the late President John F KeDoopublic services Our rule and law is that of Christ to nedy Wilkins is executive direoshywhom all men are brethren and children of the Father tor of the National AssociatiOli Who is in heaven for the Advancement of Colored

In our best tradition we love our neighbor as our- Peopleselves We want to do for our neighbor what we would St Louis University was tile have him do for us were we in need So we thank God first major Catholic school in thecountry to announce plans _for the sick the homeless the aged and 1l1e ones lacking shared lay-clergy control friends It may sound strange but were it riot for them Thirteen members of the Soshywe could not put into practice the charity of Christ It ciety of Jesus which condudll is for us to reach out the love of God to those that yearn the university made up the fOlshyfor it We are His instruments What we give in money mer board of trustees Five wiD to support Catholic social services is important to our- remain as trustees All are 0i6shyselves as well as to the needy For it is a more blessed ficials of the university Among thing to give than to receive them is Father Paul C ~

SJ university president Invoking Gods Blessing on all men and women who Five other Jesuits from ins60

present our cause this year to parish and public and tutions outside St Louis haWi with cordial gratitude to those who come generously to been appointed to the new our support member board

Cape Nasareth Caatinued from Page D~

3ODd II 0 that ell tbat ~~b aecompllsbecl ill the 10 period a ebDd caD studymiddotheJe DOt lost

Some CIi the students fnIIII Nazareth Han have been brought to 100 public junior high schoOl level and are able to enter classtW and later find employment

Others will simply have beet given the aesthetic surroundinllJ they crave and the sympathetklinsight that enables them tilt overcome many of the obstaclelJ that have and all too often still are deemed unsurmountable

The school year and v3catioDl run parallel with the pubIklschool schedule In recent years transportation from Cape Cod towns as far down as Eastham and as far up as Onset is beingprovided by the towns

The curriculum includes ru6 mentary courses in r~aliinll

writing and arithmetic as weD as art and music for which th9 children have a special incl= nation

Religious instruction is offereQ if parents desire it Many of tha children are non Catholic kill have wanted to avail themselvefJ of it for religion is deeply rootedin these little ones

To teach at Nazareth Hall reshyquires Massachusetts educatiOiiil certificates and special educatiom certification The Sisters stud~

at Cardinal StritcH College iLl Wisconsin and obtain additional training at St Colettas in Hanshyover

Teaching here is a long patienfiprocess Repetition is needed bufjmust be of different nature eacti time or the children get boredand lose attention There a many audio-visual aids availablearid pauses for brief music perishyods to relax tension The moJIfj

active the teacher the grea1elir is the attention paid her What happens beyond the sta

at Nazareth Hall is up to parente ~d socety The sisters presenilthe children with the tools for bull useful and happy existence iJa buing them with basic academJie studies self confidence and strong mental attitude

They are aware of their li~

tations but also that they haWl a purpose in life no matter how small it might look statistica~

Their guileless friendly attishytude earnest application to the skills acquired help all those they come in contact with 110 carry their burdens easier

University Board Has 18 Laymen

ST LOUIS (NC) _ Eighteoo Catholic and non-Catholic 1 persons-including Eunice Kenshynedy Shriver and Roy Wilkin~ have been named members of the

Play an extra set of tennis

~ I I

CD

on the energy you get from 3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

J

~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

IDEAL LAUNDRY

From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

Sunbeam English Muffins Baked byyour Sunbeam Baker

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

-~ - I Cpp~teOn~-Stop Banking 24 H ~ W S ClubAccounts - Auto Loci ~ OUt ree Ier ery~e

zJ l 1o~middotD-~lt t i lt Checking Accouts ~ Buriesso~ns

tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

- Me~b~~ FedeialDeposirfnsoronce Corporation

BISAILLONS

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D ADSON OIL BURNERS Complete Heating Installations

24 Hour Oil Burner Service

To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

j ~OMPANY tl bull

Complete line middotfmiddot

Building Materi(lls

8 SPRlNG ST FAIRHAVEN t I loft

993-2611 t

RESIDENTIAL

11

Rt 6 at

WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

II-MEMORIAL CARDS

These cards are made on Ihe finest salin finish double weight portrait paper wilh the photograph of Ihe deceased on Ihe fronl side and name date of death and prayer Ogtl the back side and just Ihe right size to fit II HI missal or wallet

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these cards bull e PRICE OF CARDS WITH PHOTO II 25 for $1050 I 50 for 1450

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THE KEYSTONE OFFICE EQUIPMENT SALES 101 Jimes middotSt fftar IInrf Sf

Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~ gt ~

T CHOICE MEATS

~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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Member federal Deposit insurance Corporation

-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 7: 05.04.67

Play an extra set of tennis

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~ANCHORD1oceseof FaR Riv-T--hurs May 4 1967IIIIBishops Conlmittec~-to Discuss 7 ~I~middote~iIJI~ imiddotmiddotfflil~vleloping atigtomiddot~_ middot gt~

1I~~l~~ ~J J IJ I~ J ~ Ecumenical Commi$$ion~to~ ~lnYite ~- SOWDH ORANGE~(NC~Pop- What the lltaasl favored Mshy

middota1llti6nmiddot i probleIrfsillJid mom is- tions of the world need more t Consultorsmiddotmiddotof iOtermiddot ~Re1 jgions sues incident to warj will be than a soup kitchen middotot a rice YJ meimdNO (NCj-The RIch t~- gnd~ Cathollci in parli~fpatshy

I bull smolg topics ~clded lliy the kitchen is an JmPlrovet econshy mond1 liiocekan commission for ing in the offtcial worship of

newly established U S Bishops amy said the bishop who is ecumenical affairs will invite other churchesCommittee on World Justice and president of Seton Hall Univershy persons 01 other religions to The statement said that CathshyPeace sity here serve as official consultors to the olics may join others in theirPart of our work will be to The rich nations need to help

the commission official worship out of respectprovide moral guidance in such the J)OOr nations-mull the way Msgr Harold Nott of Lynch- for them and their faith and formatters said Auxiliary Bishop to do it is by governmental poli shy burg Va commission chairman the purpose of acquiring a deepshyJolln J Dougherty of Newark des on tariff regulation and said the commission will recom- er knowledge of and respect forhead of the committee banldng that give preference to mend the consultors with the their belief and practicesThe committee will be a U S the least favored nations approval of Bishop John J Rus- However the statement conshyltoounterpart to the Pontifical COlI dont mean to denigratlta sell ~f Richmond 3fter they tinued it is against the CathshyCommission for Justice and measures like sending food and have ~dlCated a WIllingness to olic conscience to participatefelice he said He predicted clothing to underdeveloped counshy-serve actively in the official worshiplhe Vatican com~sion will tries the bishop said These

middotMeanwhile Bisbop Russen has of another church in such a manshywelcome studies and suggestions things are goon but it has got to aPPrQveda commission statement ner middotormiddot with such frequency asfrQm national conferillnces of be bigger than that We have to

l3iiIlOps on population get our governments to endo~ would constitute a sign of deshynial of ones faith TrlWllta RegtllatiiolllS certaiJl trade regulations C~~ ~~imta Studernf$)

In an interview here Qn his sall~ssltas E~ilcmMoIll IiiIl)liii Hence Catholics minful that return from the Spring meeting The main contributions ~hat ~ JI T IL the Eucharist is the sign of unity of the U S hierarchy in Chicago the committee can make is an ~[lI~cJje etulruel1~ yet to be achieved may not parshyBishop Dougherty spoke force- educational one he said SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - At take of the Eucharist at the fully of the needs of developing We will service existing agen- Seton Hall University the stu- worship services of other ChrisshyIilati ns and the role his commis- des within the Church in the dents are in the process of grad- tian churches nor may they lllCshyDion will play in hel~ing to meet US with information on the ing the teachers And the teach- cept roles of leadership in these them situation of the poor nations he ers dont like it services

said Our scope will range from Undergraduates have been They may however partici shykindergarten through the uni- given evaluation sheets for all pate by joining the worshipping

W3~Monsin Parsh versfity and beyond to adult ed- of their instructors and are to group in various elements of the ucation pro g ram s presented turn them in 10 a 40-member worship service-such as standshy

Has Tuition P~an thlZough such groups as the student commUtee on faculty ing sitting kneeling praying NCCM NCCW CFM (National evaluation and singing hymns - providedKENOSHA (NC) -A tuition Councils of Catholic Men and The committee intends to pub- these be in harmony with Cathshyplan to provide funds fOIr inshy Women and the Christian Family Ush the results in a booklet en- olic beliefs and practicesereased operating expenses win Movement) titled Student Guide to Faculty The statement reminded Cathshybe inaugurated at St Marks plllrshy We plan to utilize all existing and Courses and make it avail- olics that attendance at othersh school here next Fan institutions to educate our peo- able to students next year Christian services on Sunday lllIld The plan approved by parishshy pIe to stimulate and inspire holy days of obligation does not

tOners at a recent general meet7 tQeIl) he said And while the The students had asked the substitute for their participationmg was proposed because volun- program is geared primarily to- facultY senate to approve the in the celebration of Mass 00tfl~ ~ontributionswere not sufgtmiddot ~~ Catholic community the evaluation but the senate votedI required on these days~cient to maintam the scpooi W6tk will also be ecumenical- againstitmiddot 11 to 4 with 4 abstenshy

Ufl~il now any parishioner with collaborating with the non-Cath- lions However no attempt to t~ldren in the school wM re- olic groups agencies and insti- I IpreVipoundntmiddot the studentsfrom under-

quested to contribute $150 annu- tutions 1 1 talgng tle SUreY was made ally in Sunday collection envel- ~Eplaining the purpose of the opes Approximately two-thirds tmiddot proJect student senate president 0f the parishioners corpplied reachelrs Meetmiddotmiddot gt Thomas Hein said Weare inshyvoluntarily terested in providing coiistruc- MOMTHlY (tilURCH

lVlsgr Ralph Altstadt pastor~ Cortinued fro~ Page One I I tive criticism ~id the iwti~n system will pr~ in directing teadu~rs in reading q 1 Stating the faculty view was BUDeuro~l ~~V~lOESVIde for addItional salanes for 4nprovement L Prot Ftahcis lVicQuade who said lay teachers and also enable the The importanelt of scienelt in evaluation middotmiddotshould beona vol- PRINTIiC AND MAILED

8Ch~1 to off~r arnore attr~Ctiv~ ~ th~~~esent day curricuI~ni is in- WR)Il SCHOLARSHIPS unta~ basis No professo~ when bull middot Salary s~hedule ~ I creilSmg every dRYJo meet this bull1middot~e Signed biscontractWltb the Write or hone 672-1322 - Beginning next-Septembei-n gtbtvtlt Rev patrickt ONeillIFubltultIon scholarshIp wm-i~~vllr~y ElxPIl~tedto ~middotPU~i I bull I ~itj~~ r~tes at theicip~l~nbe ~Ci1) Dioltesan sutierihtendefit l

~er~to ~ottlinican Academy~ lf~~y yv~~Iti~t17 ~t Cll~ Tstrlil~ ~ ~~ S~~~n~middotsreet - Fall Rivermiddot~o~ ~ ~hrt ~~~~nclt~i i ~~~OISmiddote~~oss~r~tw~~~ I~ ~~~~~at~~~k~oP~~ii~I~ ~ ~4 ~~~~ of li~~1i~~~~~ I- jIIIII shy

middot SChool and $50 for the third I tilorernan Scienceprogram which S C D ~~lttJwtmiddotmiddot0ro~13rn~oollJfllfllIlIlt~lfl1lrommmrnmmrnm~gtaOThere will be no charge for dddi- is used in the Diocesan elemen- usan qs onunIC~ I~ I tionai clllidren who might attend tary schools to speak on Get- Academy elementary dlVi8-i1 I Notremiddot Dame

IIfrl)rhone family tirlg the Best from Our Scienelti6n ~winner of the Alumnae 11 Comparing the rates wlti- theImiddotC]asses A8~()ciation scholarship Su~ St~Vincentde aulStore ~itrillted $546 requited to edu~ i - Mr middotDeering will Ialso address z~hne Caron St Annes 799 fLEASANT STREET 7 FALL ~IVER MASSbull

ea~ a child in the public cshool highmiddot school teachers on coordi ISdlOltgtC l

elementary grades Msgr Altilatiog the elementary and high middotT~I~72-9129 - Call any clay 100 - 430 PM stadt noted that these figurea scflOol programsI Il l 11l t n 10th ue a bargain ~or anyo~e iter 1Also listed on thetwo-dayo New-Editor I j erp smiddot 0 e p ersI

ested in Catholic educatlOn program is special recognition ORLANDO (NC) _ Paul G We need IlIseable used furniture Especially appliancesshyof community involvement in Licameli veteran of more than Refrigerators Gas Stoves Used Furniture of any type this post counciliar age n years in the Catholic and see- PICKuP SERVICE EVERY MORNINGSeek to Increase Bister Mary Christopher RSM ular press on May 1 will beshylp of Newports Salve Regina Col-Teachers oy I~ge is present~y en~aged in so- com~ ~he mana~ing editor of the

NEW YORK (NC)-The New Cial work proJects In Newport ~nd~ Caiho~Ic n~wspapell of York archdiocese has annoUnced bull pa r1iclllarly the ~ead Start tllt St Augustme DIocese

i ~middotimprovedsalarylcalemiddotranging I~ro~m Hertop~er tQ the sec- I 1

uP to $8000 a year f6~Hl~ teachI 1on4rry school IP0~P will be 1 ~l~~------I ers in parish elementary schOOIiIIb~~~n~gersin ~lJe9om~~nItr~ ~ DONA BOISVEftT Ii ~

d Mh I t t ihng her personal expenence In i ~ e new s~a e _aran ees a k th th I I

I

~~innirig salaryof-$5OgtOJ1or wor ~ngeS IS age eve in ONSIUlRANCE AGENCY INC I I Imiddot teachers with baCl1elotsdegiees I~Q bull nlt 0 e 11 1 I I

I iltiii-IreaS~ o~ almost ~O per~nt l1ll4rylmiddot RbeaBarn~y)Irectpr Of l 96WILUAM STREETmiddot r $allneswIlI Increase at a ra~ oil tItf H~~d S~artJrogram In F~ tmiddot NEW BEDFORD MASS

middot $200 per year over 12 years to R~ve~ WIll talk to ele~ent~ry r 1

$1400 ~e~chers on the teachingmiddot the 998~5153 997-9161 Disadvantaged Child Mrs Bar- PERSONAL SERVICE

reachers with mastets degr~es ney will use films and slides wIll start at $5600 and receave demonstrate her lecture annual Increases up to $8000 based on 12 years of teaching experience

The announcement helped to avert a threatened strike by 16 Catholic lay teachers in Harlem But Msgr Raymond P Rigney archdiocesan superintendent of lfChools said that the salary inshyer~ases were under consideration before the Harlem teachers took actiqn

Th~ improved scale to be m- traduced in September affects

1500 lay teachers in th~ parish t5chools of the 10 counties of flbe aEChdiocese

GULF HlLl DAIRY $0 IDA~1JMOIlmH MAS$

You Can Whip Our Cream but YOlW Cant Beat Our Milk

Lour Gulf Hill Rou~e Man s Always at You Service

I=OR HOME IDlEnlVIERV CAi1L 998-5691

l

I

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

Reg Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M MONTLE

Oyer 35 Years of Satisfied Service

806 NO MAIN SYRIEn Fall River 675~7497

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

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From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

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THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

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iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 8: 05.04.67

rshyta THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs May 41967 Prelate Orders Sa10ry 1ncreas~s MakinQ ~ist of Worries RICHMOND (NC) - Bishop

John J Bussen has announcecl salary increases for lay and Be-Helps Ease AnxielY ligious teachers in Catholic eleshymentary schools in the diocese ClII Richmond fr l

As 0lle who s~~~ ~~e~~ywith an incurable The Dew salary schedule calIII optimist Ive learned the only way to worry and get the

utmost feminine satisfaction out of the procedure is 1(0 do it in silence Oh when there is a matter of deep mutual eoncern the Head of the ter washing them and before House goes along lOOper storing them In the heat of a cent Even then though his July day we undid the blankets approach is different like -and found wed put the moth the good reporter he is he first flakes in gets the whole story seeks Unpaid shoe bill For some every possible unaccountable reason we paid0 I uti 0 n and that bill three times finally reshyeonscientiously _ ceiving the rather embarrassing tries to solve the notation Overpayment Credit problem But he Do not pay Well no barefoot doesnt worry in the park for this family the way I do Craz- Cake Recipe was anshystewing he other 1966 worry A reader had calls it with all asked for our Crazy Cake Recipe the accompany- we sent it to her then came t ing What ifs uneasy panic that we migll- shythe Just sup- left out an essentiiii mgre posings and and ruined the poor womans ~ouldnt it be awfuls cookery If regular readers wonshy

lLittle lLists dered why the recipe was re-Long ago and probably forgot- printed in a following column

ten by himself he gave me a thats why clue to a compromise in our Forgotten Worries worry department by pointing Most of the rest of our 66 worshyout a passage in Lewis Carrolls ries didnt come through at all OLD FJRIEN])S MEET TheVery R~v James A Kielt Alice Adventures in Wonder- on the 1967 re-reading right superior general of the Columbail Fathers presentsland Magazine article What mag- Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston )Vith a copy of The

The horror of that moment azine article We were to have Red Lacquered Gate William E Barretts life of Bishop the King went on I shall never writtenorie Read one and paSs

Edward J Galvin founder of the Columban Fathers NCDever forget it on We~ll never know You will though the QueeD ReI Aff A relatives afflic- Photo

f~AAAAAAAAshysaid if you dont make a mem- tion Wed hardly forget that ----__---------- orandum of it a religious affair We were suP-

And that my dears is how my posed to bring a cake to a church Little Lists began a practice s~pper Join in a rosary Make ~PMA2fRor~p~Jthat brings momentary relief by a novena recognizing in writing eurrent Michaels Birthday What problems The list also contains about it Well Michael is due for some of the problems too trivial another one and well make up OUTf~TS for fretting aloud but worrisome to him for whatever we were all the same worrying about last year At this time of year the beauty ing to be stared at many of the

Clearing out the bottom iimreau Thus the 1966 Little List is magazines advocate either diet- really exciting ones come in drawer recently the catch-all supplanted by its 1967 successor ing or exercise to enable us to jungle print alive with color that is in itself a cause for worry Now we can go ahead and worry squeeze into lastmiddot years bathing that have their hemlines just if something should happen to our hearts content suit Even if youve already de- above your ankle bone and my h~irs were to try to dis- Well stewif you will cided that last years model has Sew-it-Yourself entangle the hodgepodge 1I came had it and feel If you are at all handy in the across last years list dutifUlly Education Stud afflwmtenough sewing_ department there are a titled 1966 Worries $ to indulge in large number of beautiful sim

Matthews fingers Now that TO Contonue a new one the pIe patterns available Vogue has was a real cause for alarm when Ulinc h e s a n d one smashing number in its pat- one of the twins had dropped a NOTRE DAME (NC) _ The po u n d s that tern collection for Summer a heavy barbell on his hand and University of Notre Dame has have piled up poncho with wide bat-like there was fear he might Imie two established an interdisciplinary during tho s e sleeves that cover a two-piece fingers a calamity merdfully Program for Research in Cath- Ion g Winter sporty bathing suit averted A prayer of thanlcsgiv- olic Education e ve n i ng sin The beauty of being able to ing as we re-readthatmemo FatherTheodore M Hesburgh fron~ of the TV sew- this season is that most of

Down the list Income Tax CSC univerlity president said won t l~ok any the look for sportswear calls for lust this time last year after the pzogram will carry forWard better lo t~IS simple uncluttered lines with the return had been mailedId Notre Dames three-year study of seaso~1S s Ul t design emphasis oil the fabric eoniureci up a fuilhead of steam Catholic education in the Unite~ Now IS th~ tlmetoevaluate what Therefore even a novice sea~shyoverthose gur~s Supposing States whic~ middot~~s supp0ited by your Summer figure is going to stressmiddotcaiJ turn out an eyec~tchshy th C F d t d look like and what you can do tfmiddott f h after all our cilre ~ed Villd~ Ii e anegl~ ouna 19n an ~~ to improve it lOg ou lIS e chooses the right jnilltakeiri aritfuetlc in oursultedmiddotI~ a teport qatholc fabri~ ltIesigh

~ favor not UncleSalnS rtd some Sclio()~~ i~ ActiQn issu~d iD O~e COh~()l~tion for those of Jlo matter ~hat typeof ~overshyfaroH computermiddotW6hiiImiddot reach bpokform last Fall us who ha~e left the slimness of upyoJl ~h60seor whether you outmiddot its mechanical tentaclen and The study involved 92 per ceDt oui young rearscari befourid in buy or paste it eventually youll lIummonusWe kepf tha~ ilix of the Catholic elementary the new beach outfits that come hlveto reveal the bathing suit file within easy reach all Suin schools 1D the U S 84 per cent with attractive colorful figure- underneath~ so choose this arti shymer jlist in case of the nations Catholic Secon- hiding cover-ups They are to be cle of apparel with as much dis-

Next item Blankets Now da schools analysis of 170000 used over bathing suits walking cretion (and good taste) as you what in the world was a blanket questumn31res completed by to and from the beaches and in did the topper worry Oh yes Had we put moth teacers and parents and cIepth this area are marvelous for wear toften seems to the casual flakes ir the Winter blankets af- studIes of schoo systems 1D 13 ing while driving to your favQr- observer that some women leave

of the natIons dIOceses ite sun and surf spot all cOnventionmiddot and decorum The program will not only If you plan to spend a~y of back in-the cityand confuse cas-

Apostolate of Sisters utilize the immense quantity of your vacation at a resort hotel ualness with sloppiness What untapped data whicl~ were gath- they are a must because most youre going t6 be doing at the

To Aid Underpriviledged ered during Ie progress of the hotels ban bathing suits any- beach should decide what type ALBANY (NC)-An Apostoshy Carnegie Foundation supported where other than the pool or of suit you will need The young

study but expects to enter new beach Some of these toppers mother wno is constantly chasinglate of Sisters is being formed fields -said Father John E have the look of bright mini- a toddler needs something inby Bishop Edward J Maginn

apostolic administrator of the Walsh CSC vice president for dressel while others are de- the cotton boxer short line more academic affairs signed like little boys rompers than does a bathing beauty whoAlbany diocese to expand the

dioceses programs to aid the Sunny colors and easy care ma- can recline gracefully on her poor and underprivileged Louisiana Nuns Request terials highlight many of these blanket exotic in lame In the

Bishop Maginn has asked an beach dresses and if youre will- same vein the gal who is a religious communities in the dishy Choice of Confessors serious swimmer wants a suit laquolcese to cooperate with the new BATON ROUGE (NC) - The that is unfussy and carefree program by assigning Sister~ to nuns of the diocese of BatoD On Deans lUst while the ~toes only dipper can work among the poor in tutollial Rouge have asked Bishop Robshy Named to the deans list at get away with the more frilly recreational homemaking and ert E Tracy to present a proposal T r in i t y College Washington attire home-visiting activities to the National Conference of D C for the first half of the Stra~geasit may seem to ~

An orientation program for Catholic Bishops which would academic year is Miss Mary talking about the carefree Sum- Sisters who will work in the allow nuns to select theirown Anne Kelly of Taunton a gradshy mer at ~his frigidSpririg time apostolate will be held on four confess01s Gupent~y a priest is uate of Sacred Hearts Academy July will come the beacb will Saturday afternoons-May 6 13 assigned by the bishop to hear Fall River She is asophomore beckonand now is the time to 27 and June 3 confssions n convents majoring in history get the pick of the faShion crop

for lay teachers to be paid leSs than 75 of the salary Ieshycaived by equally qualified teachers in public schools Teacb mg Sisters with bachelor degrees will receive $1200 per year aDd those with masters degrees $1500

Msgr Richard J Burke ocesan director of education sald tha~ the new schedule should be considered a floor not a ceil shying He expressed the hope that some schools would be able to pay teachers more than 75 per cent of the public school salary

Public school teachers with bachelor lIegrees receive a start shying salary of $5000 here with increases to $7100 in 12 years Those with an MA degree get $5500 to start and $7600 in 13 years

Catholic high school teacherD in the Richmond diocese receive a salary comparable to that otIl their public school counterpariD

Montie Plumbing amp Heating COOl Inc

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9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

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From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

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THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

-~ - I Cpp~teOn~-Stop Banking 24 H ~ W S ClubAccounts - Auto Loci ~ OUt ree Ier ery~e

zJ l 1o~middotD-~lt t i lt Checking Accouts ~ Buriesso~ns

tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

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RESIDENTIAL

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WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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These cards are made on Ihe finest salin finish double weight portrait paper wilh the photograph of Ihe deceased on Ihe fronl side and name date of death and prayer Ogtl the back side and just Ihe right size to fit II HI missal or wallet

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lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP Rf nav BDWAnlll OmiddotMaAnA NATIONAL DIRaOTClIn

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 9: 05.04.67

9 ~talian BeansEasy to -Grow Yieldmiddot Plenteous Harvest

lj l 1

j By Joe ami MariBYn Roderick p One of Marilyns faoti~ vekctables is the wide Italian

~en bean which has beOOrDe popular of late because it takes well to freezing This type of bean is very easy to grow and produces a good harvest from seed Marilyn picked up a packet of seed last year and we tried growing some over fence Actually these are pole beans and should be grown where they can reacln II

height of from four to five feet but we tried them 011 a three foot ~ntt and in partial shade Birt even under adverse conditions the beans grew well we got oorhe for the dinner tableoand theYwere delicious

This year we plan to gmw ~em under proper cOlllditiona flbllt is with sufficIent sunlight In good soll and on poles so tba~

tlhey can grow to their proper height If last years crop was any indication this Summer we Ghould have all the beans we cam eat

Like many of the annual vegshyetables Italian beans cannot ~

put out until after the danger Qrom frost has passed In this area tender plants may be lret gut any time after May 15 We plan to use Il few old Christmall trees for poles The trees were llllsed to protect our climbing lPeace rose and now we will reshyrnoveall the side br~nches and rret them up in~ row We wiU dig thesoil first set up a pole add fertilizer and then plant about six seeds around the base of the pole We plan to use foul )Oles so we bull ill be using about III third 9f bull box of seed which mould give tl9 more than enoUlgfJl beans

Amulmr Growtb These little seeds make amazshy

mg growth before they start ~ produce fruit so the need amshy

llle fertilizer water and sunshyahine Once genninated the meed approximately two months to mature which means we should have beans by the middle of July Once the beans begin to appear they should be picked iten since the more beans that are piCked the marc the planta will produce

If you havent tried growing 10ur own vegetables this is a good place to start because they llr~ very easily grown and each lant igi ves such an abundance of wcgetiibles that everY ~arderwll tfeels~e has a green thWllb Butmiddot mdr than that the fresh v~g~tshyfules are deliciom Just put the water on go out into the garden lllick and wash the beans and have flfrtem on the table 10 minuOO9 TI2ter But before we get to thG eating lets get them into Mhe [iround

In the Kitchellll

Filet mignons almom ~~ ilheinselves lobster can ~ pre-o IJ)a~Cd by (ven the most inexpeshyrienced but hamburg-nolP that takjes inventiveness and sfdUl ~

become anything other than plaIn old hamburg Nevertheless )[ enjoy having nothing but hamshyburg in my freezer because Hi represents something of a chalshylenge and 11 nice inexpensive me at that Of course in Jn1 bousehold the children would be oontent with this ground beef iain in patty form five Jlligb~ III week but Joe and I enjoy it better dressed up and disguised

Chopped beef as we know rt began originally as a GellllUW iiIIsh but it has become OOle ~

the mOll~popular foods ilJl Am~

P~ai~es Encydi~ WASHINGTON (Ne) - ftlil

board of governors of iht m~ America Developm~n~ BaH have sent Pope Paul Vi bull meliraquo

1iIa~ praising his recent encycJiishyeal tbc Development of ~b

nca ranking right beside apple pie and hot dogs as a national food

Children from coast tomiddot coast probably eat more of it than any other me~ and to attest to its popularity the thdny jiffy hamshyblferg stand has sprung up sucessshyfuliy aU over our land

This innovation in short order cooking has given birth to the flattest hamburg patties the thinnest french fries and the thickest milkshakes imaginable but the price is rigM and the American iamily is buying The trend toward outdoolmiddot cooking and backyard barbecuing has also elevated the popularity of ground beef and every male Chef Boyardee has his own favshyorite recipe for hamburg ala suburbia

When buying ground beef it is best to have it freshly ground s youre certain of both its contents and freshness The reashysoningbehind this was emphashysized for me recently when one Thursday I was shopping in a large supermarket that has all its mtat packaged and marked with the day it was cut or groUld J was quite amazed

I when I noticed that all the ground beef packets were marked with a fresh Friday sticker

Hamburg responds best whelll handled very lightly When forming patties the meat should be patted into shape rather thlllamp pushed or pressed Even tbe highest grade ground beef needlll some seasoning to give it flavor and along with the standard ~

and pel-per rosemary oregano finely chopped garlic minc~

onion or chopped chives heltraquo season your patties

Meat loaf is without a doub~

one of the best ways to use hamshyburg to stretch your budget and still get a flavorful dish rm always looking for new mea~

loaf recipes and the following ~

one middotof the tastiest I have found This ill n very adventuroUJ

hamburg recipe that brought raves from my husband who ro ordinarily not lit ml~at loaf faa

Meat Loafmiddot Company Style 1 pounds round steak groU11llJll 1 egg slightly beaten 1 Tablespoon minced onion oollfl ~ teaspoon ground pepper 1 can condensed Cheddar eheelltl

soup 3 Tablespoons milk ~ cups fresh bread erumbs an

used day old hamburgen buns put through my blenlllshy

ell 1Ik cup chopped celery cup chopped dill pickle

I In a mixing bowl combinte the ground beef the egg croom dash of salt and pepper

2) Dilute the soup with ~ $ Tablespoons milk and add il ~ of this milk soup mixtuliC to ~

meat mixture Mix well 3 On a lar~ pieCe Cllf lnX~

paper lightly pat meat loaf mmshyhire into II rectangle aoom l~

by 9 4) Im another bowl mAx ~

esrumbs eelery pickle ami yenll teaspoon of smt Spread tb3 the meat rectangle leaving ~

ll ome inch border ~) Now starting at narrow U1d

of m~at rcIl up ~ighty~

w~paper with one handwBlJn0 pftcllftnt melt with other ganalW ]llgtrress end ~ roll to seal

) Put seam side 00WD Alfl III lIill~ow b8king dish aJlll llgtlllllm lamp II 375middotmiddot owen 50 min

T iWr lleIlDaiming ~ IIllIIfj) ~e-z lloaf and C(mtinue ~

cmtlilll OO~ w liot aM ~ bull I ~

COMPASSION Help for the injured worker hurt in a street accident in erowded Madras is shared by the German Sister and the Indian ladies drawn to the scene The nun was there through hel assignment to medical work sponsored by Miserior German Catholic relief and develop ment agency NC Photo

Church Woman of Year Religious Heritagemiddot of America Names Former

Catholic Womens Council President WASHINGTON (NC) - Mm pIaJIlO who won the award last

Marcus KiIch former president ear at the annual RHA awardM lJf the National Council of Cath- ltiIDner here olic Women has been namecll Tnbe Rev Eugene Carson Ch~rch Wom~n of the Ye~ br Blake general secretary of the RelIgious Hentage of Amenca World Councii of Churches has

Mrs Kilch a widow W83 beelm named Churchman of t~

elected NCCW president in 1964 Year and Max M Fisher Detroit after serving in variow officeS indUJlStrialist and philanthropist 1m the Youngstown Ohio dioceoo ftBll been designated Layman cxr and Ofll the hational board of di- the YeQr rectors When she stepped do~ ~llgiQ~ Heritage of Ameriro from the preSidency she became is Q national nonprofit nonseeshy

d t of Women iJn Commlll- presl en tariaJll organization founded iml lIllit SlV1ce an interfh =d JIOOl ~ combat lhe decline 0amp gaffizatiolll that rCCW religious values and increaml screens gu1ll for the Women 0 general knowledge of the 1lID-Job Corps Igt 11 h middott

Mnl Kilch attended Youngs- oro13 10 glow en age iown University and studied ballet and drama FOO severnllmiddot years she has conllllllctedl III weekly television program 001 Catholie MterJlture

The seIectiOill Of MEa Kne~ wam announced b the Re lOll Norman Vincent Peale ebairJWWI

laquollf tlhle RHA awarciv committee ne honor win be eonferred _ Tlilel br Mari8ll Andeli$OD tllle lIO-

Ask Uniform Payment Pion for Indigents

ASBURY PAl1tK (He) - A Wfurm payment plan bull hospshy~ 101 the eare G6 indigents was advocated here at the Sprina ~erenee ol the New JerAlY Conference of Catholic HospitaP2

Jack W Owen dArectoll of the middotlfew Jersey Hospital AsscciatiOl1l

lmid tlhlat New Jersey hospitals me being sbort-cbanged$HI mAJ-

llift mmiddotear In the eeEe at m~ lllM~ ~ IlIIdd that illwIe Memiddot ~ow ~ tinma W9Jli _ whi~ ~ha~ _ the IJampatJlI Me re~ lilGrsed _ to~ w~

rtimk

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 4 1961

Catholic Women Plan Meeting

Members of Fall Rivers Cat~

oUc Womans Club will receive corporate Communion at li oclock Mass Sunday evening May 7 at St Patricks Church Dinner and the annual meeting will follow at 630 at Whiteil restaurant Guests of honor will be Rev John E Boyd club moderator past presidents anell charter club members and recipshyients of club scholarships and their mothers

The business of the meeting will include announcement 02 scholarship winners reading ~

annual reports and introductioi Qf new club officers

Fun with Musie Entertainment for the eveshy

ning will be a program entitled Fun with Music presented by Miss Phyllis Howes soprano anell Bob Phillips organist lVIisa Howes will appear in costumeo appropriate to her musical selecshytion

Dinner co-chairmen are Mrn Raymond Barrette and Mro Thomas Lawlor aided by a comshymittee of executive board memshybers

Dean of Studie$ Sister Mary Alban KerwlclX

RSM will be the new dean oil studies at Salve Regina CoXshylege effective 3ept 1 She su~ ICeeds Sister Mary Rosalia lPnashyherty RSM who hM been appointed director of an evaluashytion program for the Sistero of Mercy The new dean was asshysistant provincial for the Sistero of Mercy from 1960 to 1966 and eotnell to Salve Regina from St Xaviers Convent Providence where she is superior

373 New Iioston 1il0000Ql

fan liver 67$-56

IDEAL LAUNDRY

From an OIde English recipe Plumper rounder fuller muffins ~

Sunbeam English Muffins Baked byyour Sunbeam Baker

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

-~ - I Cpp~teOn~-Stop Banking 24 H ~ W S ClubAccounts - Auto Loci ~ OUt ree Ier ery~e

zJ l 1o~middotD-~lt t i lt Checking Accouts ~ Buriesso~ns

tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

- Me~b~~ FedeialDeposirfnsoronce Corporation

BISAILLONS

SCHOOLS CHURCHES

INDUSTRIAL bull BUNKER

D ADSON OIL BURNERS Complete Heating Installations

24 Hour Oil Burner Service

To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

j ~OMPANY tl bull

Complete line middotfmiddot

Building Materi(lls

8 SPRlNG ST FAIRHAVEN t I loft

993-2611 t

RESIDENTIAL

11

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WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP Rf nav BDWAnlll OmiddotMaAnA NATIONAL DIRaOTClIn

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

J 1 1

~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 10: 05.04.67

THE ANCHOR- Thurs Mat- 4 1967

Dutch PlreICite Denies Sehiism In Holland

LONDON (NC)-The Cathshyolic Church in the Nethershylands is very much alive but sensationcil new reports about its activities arl) distorted according to a Dutch bishop

Bishop Theodore Zwartkruis of Haarlem said Nobody in Holshyland even thinks of sehism The plain fact is that we hdve an exshycellent press and television netshywork and therefore all our acshytivities get maximum publicity Everything that happens gets into the news-especially the unshyusual things

But the Church in Holland is alive Our churches are packed am StindaYs We have between 13000 and 15000 discussion groups which are studyi)lg the decrees of the Second Vatican Council This means that a quarshyter of a milliol) people are conshycerned in finding out what is the job of the Crurch in our day

New Plans When you get that amount of

Interest you are bound[ to have some people running faster than others That is not beCluse they want to leave the Church They just want to push aheHi In Holland even b(fore the COllllCil we had readIed the point which others countries have now arrived Mass facing the people is nothing new to us

Very soon we hope to get applOval for the Canon in Dutch We usc all sorts of music from the more tradition)l to our Youth Masses which include Negro spirituals and Ihythmic

c which young people someshytimes accompany with clapping

Bishop Zwartkruis said he is planning a completely demoshycratic pastoral council of 100 members for his diocese There will pI reaJ CPflsUlttion Hti iintends to pUt to them as first items of di~(ilssioilth~ age ot euroonfirmation and the elCtensioD Csf thenewidea()f MaSf~rnmiddotmiddotthc

i~ome L- h t - ~ - -u -thim( CJuote~ rom both en I ove lIn C trl Y cyclicals arid i1udedthepeace~ The llIsIH)P H)SI~~~~ to br~~~ eflortsoi the Popes in his talk JhlO~gh ~he ~1~p~~lh ~~t~~ by gton~gta9~ to Peace at the in-~ ~ormlng pa~tllral unl~s of seven iugural convocation of the I~r elgllt PIIsts wOlkln~ as aracem in Terris Institute atl iteam hVll1g 1[1 a Ib~ock of apart-~anhattan Col~ege~ i )f I ~ents and ~ovltrnng a lYluFh wid~r arC~ They Will indude specialIsts m ~o~th sOflal welshyfa a~d other fle~ds

Flymg cUlates eccleSiastIcal troubleshooters to be shared eshytween thee or four one-Pllest parishes IS another of the blsfl- ops ideas If the resident priest does not feel he can do a certam job he will be able to ca~1 upon one of these younger pn(~sts to do It

The BIshop was not bothered apparently by the socalled Sjaloom groups oft~n criticized for their JitlirgicaJexpelil1ienta~ i~ion Their i~el lsquite light Ihe said They aim to spiead love [and charity among all Chrisshyitians

Holy Spirit Subject Of Catholic Hour

NEW YORK (NC)-The role

~il~e~~~s~~~~i~f ~h~o~~~~cr~

Hour i Speakers will incIude Fath~r ~

lValter Lo_Qng 8So81 Lo~is gt UniversitYl Thol1111illise Ptldeg- riaIl and Father Eugene BurkejySi=gt St Pr~]]SiC6h~ lege Washington IC1 ~ bull 11 The Cat~~)lic HOjJr is prOd~ICl1 by thlNatlOnal CounCIlof Cath- ~ olic Men and bro~dcJst by tpe Nation~l ~ro dcaatiiampg COrriP311Y ~

CLAPTRAP SAYS FATHER GEIB Father JosephM Geib SJ dean of men at St Josephs College in Philadelphia studies a 40-foot-Iong pop painting hanging in the students lounge at the college The work was painted by Sister Corita in California and has caused a split at the college between those who think it is art and others Father Geib included who think It IS claptrap NC Photo

uTh~nt Cormm~DlJd$ ~(i1]P~ ~eOlee Efforts UN Osectfi(ial

NEW YORK (NC) -The only alternative to co-existence in todays world is no existence says UN Secretary General U Thant

It has therefore become imshyperative he said thatwe make the world safe for diversity di shyversity of ideology of race of religion and of national interest

That is why I regard it as so significant that Pope John pointedto the overriding imporshytance of the universal common good in his encyclical (Pacemin Terris) and that Pope Pltluls t res 5ed Dcvelopment of Peoples) the oneness of lhehu man family r

Must Imp~~e gt J

ii He sliciltthat the Untted Nashyions provides the bestmeans~ of turning mankind away from the road to war and emphasized it is imperative that all nations should join in a fresh and comshymon effort to strengthe1 the United Nations as a force for peace

U Thant conceded that the United Nations record in peaceshykeeping efforts has not been wholly satisfactory and said that we must improve the

Con$oJidate Schools FRAN~~IN (NCic Hanson

High School for bo9s and St Johns Academy for girls here in Louisiana will be consolidated into one school with grades from One to 12 in September Msgr JohnH Disch pastor disclosed

i r

fPwafl~reg$ fP~~$ J]hM and Paul capacity readiness and effectiveshyness of the United Nations in the whole field of peace-keeping operations

Calling for an end to ideoshylogical intolerance among nashytions U Thant noted that the ecumenical movement has regshyistered cOl)siderable gains in eliminatnig religious intolerance

I believe similarly til at in the realm of ideology too dogshy

BenefitWhist ForNoviees

The Friends of the Presenhition of Mary Novitiate will Spollsor a nlay basket whist paity onmiddot 5atl1r day centvenilig May 20 at 8 in the auditoriurii of St AnilesHospital SchOOl of Ntiisiiig Forest Street Fall River

General chai dnan of the evelf i~ Mrs Leodore Salois Assisting Mrs Salois are Mrs Roger Vioshyletteprizes Mrs Henry Berthishyaume tickets

Cleveland-lleachers

SOMERSET MASSselies to be broadcast On the ~ Sundays of May by the Catholi~

GARAGE The most frien~ly d~mocratic BANK offering lt Ii ~ l 1 ~ J I

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tmiddot - i SCivlngs ~cc()unts Real Estate L~nS -653 ~qslh~ngton Sreet fairhaven ~tr$~ni~~~~(S~~pp~tL Ar~~-rightman ~t Iride -bull 994 5058

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To Get Increase CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr

Richard E McHale superintenshydent of schools for the Cleveland diocese has announced a recomshymehdation to pastors and school principals that teachers receive a raise this year

The increase which is not to exceed $300 would be based on 640 Pleasant Street Tel 996-8271 New Bedford the teachers preparation and years of experience The recommendation came

from the finance committee of the Catholic board of education which is studying teachers sal shy CONVENIENT BANKING aries in an attempt to establish

WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSa uniform pay scale at the

SLADEiS FERRYJRUST COMPANYbull

~ I i

matism is beginning to lose its sharp edge he stated

He forecast that before long the various ideologies all of which seem to TIe in one way or another to subscribe basically to the concept of the greatest hapshypiness for the greatest number will reach a consensus not only in regard to ends but also in regard to means When this great human syntliesis has been achieved we would have irideed progressed far on the road to pea~e

Hcentad~Boq ~d NORTH MIAMI (NC)--Fatiler John Joseph Lynch SJsciehtist of FordhaM University has been

named chairman Of the board of the North Miami Gerieral Hosshy

pital a 432-bed nonprOfit com- munity institution

~

I

PC I AnnounceSl NlewCourSe$i

PROVIDENCE (NC) ADfP vamping of the theology cUllJic1lolt lum at Providence College here is announced by the schoolV vice-president for academic afshyfairs The college is operated by the Dominican Fathers

Dr Paul van K Thomson saUl the curriculum changes are ~

response to Vatican Council U Various new elective courses afshyford the student opportunities become acquainted with probshylems brought to the attention oft Catholic thought by the recent council

At least a dozen new courses dealing with specific religious problems will be offered such as the religion of the Jews comshyparative religion human rights the nature and difficulties oil human love the theology of CCllshy

menism and contempOl1ary ideoo of God

Students will be given greateli opportunity to choose electives and the teaching staff will be enshylarged to help implement the

changes Dr Thomson said He added that for the first

time lay professors would be added to the theology faculty

JJltIlvots School Stand Hailed by Catholics

WASHINGTON (NC) - U S Senator Jacob K Javits of New York has received thanks from students in New York archdioceshysan Catholic schools for his supshyport of th~ move t6 repeal the Blaine amendment state conshystitutional bar to aid for childreE in non-public schools

The senators office reported that on two consecutive days the number of thank you letters received amounted to some 1000()

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iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~ gt ~

T CHOICE MEATS

~ CD~ another reason YOU COME FIRST

~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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North Dighton Spring S~-North Easton Main St

Member federal Deposit insurance Corporation

-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 11: 05.04.67

11

Rt 6 at

WHlirES

iHE ANCHOR~Women Convene If Theres a Hot Time in ToUUn Tonight lhurs May 4 1967 ContiJlued from PJge One

W McCllrthy Rev Walter A This 24Year Old Chief Will Be ThereSullivan llInd Rev James F rFac~dty O~ c Uo Lyons

Mrs Anthony J Geary is conshyvention secretary and publicity chairman and she and Mrs Vinshycent A Coady are in charge of luncheon arrangements

Other convention officers are Mrs James Leith treasurer and Mrs John J Mullaney parliashymentarian N~me Committee Chairmen Committees and their chairshy

men include Mrs Emile Auger coffee hour Mrs John Lauzonis Mass Mrs Herve Cummings ~lection Mrs Thomas Burke nomination Miss Margaret M Lahey guests

Members of the Fall River Council of Catholic Nurses will provide first aid care and hospishytality will be the responsibility of members of the Diocesan Board

Mrs Herve R Cummings Mrs Herman Mello and Mrs John Silvia head a registration comshymittee including representatives from each of the five DCCW districts

A literature display will be lJrranged by Mrs Stanley Janick and Mrs Patrick Murphy and convention aides will be stushydents of Mt St Mary Academy and Fall River Area CYO memshybers

Organizations represhypnting other faiths who have been invited to the convention include the Greater Fall River Council of United Church Womshyen Women of the Blessed Virgin Polish National Catholic Church St Johns Ukrainian Catholic Church Guild Ladies Philoptohos Society of St Demetrius Greek Orthodox Church Sisterhood of Temple Beth EI Adas Israel Sisterhood Sisters of Israel of the Union Street Synagogue

Adult Renewal Conthmed flOm Page One

tinct and iinportant job to do for the whole btiilding up and health of the Mystical Body of Christ

The leatulmiddoted spealw~ in eacl1 ease was a layman orlaywomani prominent in CCD affairs on a dioeesan level The speakers wer~ fall River Jamlts ~elle- her of Taunton New Bedford Mary Fuller of Bu~zards Bay Taunton Edward McDonagh ol ]T 0 I fh- Attleboro Attleboro ThomasFlangheddy of Taunton Cape Cod Patricia Mllin of Westport

In each case the chlnges since the Vatican Council II were mentioned with stress on the changes to come The adults were asked to judge how they received such changes Were they chaotic or were they in the spilit of the Council and the needs of the Church today a challeLlge for

them The realization that we form

part of a community (Church locality palish) was explained in the light of the Bible reading and further adult education was PJtrongly recommended

Then the assembled adults formed little groups of 6 to 8 and discussed the talk with canshydor Most wele suddenly surshyprised to find that they had something to say and much more io shme with their neighbors

Among the recommendations that carne for the palticipantsshy

was not a gripe session-were pelsonal reading proglams forshymation of religious libraries disshyfussion clubs formal coUrses in Scripture Lilulgy and film studies I

Family Covelpge BALTIMORE (NO) -The

Catholic Review Baltimore archshydiocesiin hewspaper wiltbegin ~ complete parish c(lverage plan next Fall

By Patricia Francis When the fire alarm clangs at Fire Department Headquarters in Acushnet Town Hall

on a Sunday morning two men at St Francis Xavier Church - across the street-pay more than passing attention to it One is Robert St Jean 24 chIef of the Acu~hn~t FIre Department The other is the Rev Aurele Pepin SSCC pastor of St FranCIS XaVIer He is Fire Department chaplain

Chief St Jean the youngshyest fire chief in New Enshygland is a third generation member of the Acushnet Fire Department He became a volunshytemiddot P when he was 18 --like his father and grandfather before him-and continued his affiliashytion through four years of duty in the Coast Guard

Ive been called out of Mass a coup~ of times the young chief-5 feet 10 and 184 pounds -says Father finishes Mass then he comes to the fire

Despite his youth which causes frequent upswung eyeshybrows when he attends Fire Chi e f Association meetings Chief St Jean knows what he is doing

He left New Bedford Vocashytional High School after two years to join the Coast Guard and finished high school while in the service He also attended firefighter schools conducted by the Coast Guard

Wilen he came home Robert St Jean picked up where he had left off as a volunteer Then he took exams to become a call fireman

When Chef Everett Booker resigned a little over two years ago the young Coast Guard vetshyeran was asked to take over as chief for a month

Then it was made permanent Today he is boss man of n

town fire department that has 42 volunteers and five pieces of firefighting equipment - four tank trucks and pumpers and one bland new fir~and rescue truck~and two fire stations

Usually I get in aboutmiddot 815 in the morning and leave about 4 U he says But Chief Jeans hours are iongel than they seem

As the only fulltime member of the aep~rtrilent heison call 24 hours a day exceptSundays

wIlen a deputy takes ove) Im clear~ng some land 1 boughtmiddot thQugh so Im always available~

Hi engrossnlentmiddot with the fire department is not new howshyever As a YOlll1gster when his

grandfather the late August St Jean was chief Robert was conshystantly underfoot

Now even his wife of a yearshythe former Barbara Borges of North Dartmouth--is used to the fact that if silen sounds her husband disappears

Mrs St Jean got a sudden inshytroduction to the ways of a fireshyfighter husband her wedding day Oct 16 1965 she and her bridegroom left Stmiddot Georges Church Westport in an ordinary car

When they reached the Acushshynet town line on their way to their wedding reception at Gaushydettes Pavilion Mrs St Jeanshywhite gown and bouffant veil and all-found she was to change mode of traansportation

Catholic ijJnionists Honor Jennings

NEW YORK (NC)-The Assoshyciation of Catholic Trade Unionshyists at its 30th anniversary eelshyebration here Monday presented its Msgr John PM6naghanSo- cialActiQn Award to Paul Jen-

Jiings labor oniCial The award nlllmed fbi the late

MsgrmiddotJohnmiddot P Monaghan ACTU nationa~~haplaill is given each year io a Catholic who has disshytiDlguished himself in the appli shy~lIltion of Catholic llOCial princishyp1e8

Imiddot I ~

ROBERT ST JEAN

Waiting for them at the line How did she meet the chief was Engine 2-on which they He grins againrode through Acushnet to the reception Her brother was a police ofshy

Today Mrs St Jean listens as ficer hi town before he moved attentively as her husband io to Fairhaven She was a blind the aIWRYS-turiled-on radio- at date home and in the family car The sparksgeneratedth~t which the chief also useS fot nig~t haY~rit b~en squelcled-~usiness e en by a fire chief whose ib

In December Chief St Jean is putting out fires ~ t bullwill be 25 He is looking forwud

tp it for a most uriu~ual re~s~n As chief he drives any of the

Fire Department equipment As an individual- under 2~ ~ he drives his own car

Cme December when he is 25 Chief St Jean will hit a financial bonaJlza~his automoshybile insurance will drop cOl)sld erably

Im looking forward to it the chief admits a grin creasing his face Right now I pay nearly $500 I dont know how much it wil drop but it will be a lot

Currently the chief and his wife live at 233 Main Street Acushnet the same house in which his parents Mr and Mrs Raymond A St Jean also live Once his piece of land is cleared Robert St Jean hopes u build a home of his own

Until then however his wife ~ ~~is getting a full dose of life ~ with two firefighters who take Off when they hear a fire alarm clang

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Seek Chwuges WASHINGTON (NC) --Fo]shy

lowing the reinstatement of Father Charles Curran to the school of theology the faculty oil the Catholic University of Amershyica will now work for sweeping reforms in its relationship with the universitys board of trustees

No sooner had ArchbishoB) Patrick A OBoyle of Washingshyton university chancellor anshynounced that the trustees votefll to abrogate their decision om Father Curran than a faculty spokesman said that an assembly of the faculty will be called to ask four major changes in the universitys by-laws The unishyversity will be asked to

Add six faculty members Ugt the board of trustees Many facshyulty members and students have complained about the lack of an effective liaison with the board

Repeal a regulation which limshyits the rectorship of the univershysity to priests and also provide for more faculty participation iJm the naming of the rector

Overhaul the makeup of the university senate to insure thall each school of the university iD allowed to elect one representashytive for every 25 or fewer facshyulty members

Ensure faculty representatiorm on the survey and objectiVepound) committee recently appointed to study the needs of the univclJshysity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

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~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

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Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 12: 05.04.67

--

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 41967 Michigan ReligiousLeaders Form 12 Int~~~ational ~Affairs ~CouncU I lFindsManchestersBook bull ADBION (NC) - Protestant Catliolic r d Jewish leaders hereFascinatingf fRepulsiveD

have formed the first state-wide interlaith gr6~p in the United

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Kennedy Stlitesaimed at studying lind William Manchesters The Death of a President (Harper makinf recommendations OD

problems of peace and U S forshysmdRow$l~ 49 E 33rd St New York NY 10016) is a eign policy book hard to categorize It purports to be history but it The Michigan Interfaith Conshyreads sometimes like a sentimental novel sometimes like a ference en International AHain drama of the absurd s()meshytimes like a telephone book Now it strikes one as a ~ markably intricate tapestry again as a dust heap of details lit is by turns fascinatiltrg and re- pulsive mawkshyllsh and brutal If the assassinashyton of Presishydent -Kennedy waS a traumatic experience for the country the preparation of this book was evidently such

an experience for the author and go in g through the book can well be the same fQr the reader

The book does cast a spell After one lias launched into the first paragraph one is led on anell en for almost 650 large pages and the events of four days in November (1963 become for the time that lit takes one to get through the book the relll world The doings of everyday life 1967 llSsume a dream-like quality and are annoyingly irrelevant

Emotional Involvement This is in part because of the

gtOwer of those now increasingly remote events to monopolize IIltshytention and arouse curio~ity The book revives but does not reshysolve their mystery It is also iDI part because of the authols emoshytional involvement with the late President and with eVNything having to do with the ltlircumshylItances of his death

Mr Manchester can to a deshylJree communicate his own feelshylngs to the reader but lt must be admitted that there is 11 cershytain morbidity both in MI Manshy

attmiddott dad Itn shyehester s I u en readers response to Mr Manshyehester s re en ess r CI 1 tl e middottal

Detachment is seldom if ever to be encountered in this book distributed at the funeral as a ~or Material Minis~rations lm4ll Dispassionate judgment ir con- Mas c~rd which is somethirti diocesan consultor tJis year apicuously lacking Mr Man- altogether different He hasCar~ chester is primarily a mllgturner dinal Cushing wearing ascarlet and like a imourner he tendsto~iferhichis Mi ~ancheSteriJmiddotltCOuntil of Priedf -romanticize eve~ything about the 0wlI original creatiolipoiSibl~~T~ S d p no 0

departed to disparage anyone patentable 0 tuy OdCI($ bull who does not fully shaJe his Raises Doubts ~ ST LOUS (NC~-The neW Sl moumers poiIt Of view t(Jlclin~ He says that four churches Louis Archdiocesan Coun81 (l(

desperately to whatmiddot is ilevo- were under consideration as the Priests has formed two coiiunit shyccably past and gone and tall scene of the- funeral MaSs St tees to study archdiocesan peJ~ strive fanatic~lly_tgt propagate Matihews St StevenS thEi middot~nIel policies and priests rm- legend Shrine at Catholic University nances

Preternatural Being andthe Shrine of the Immacu ThecoUDen met to consideR Was there ~ny fault at~u in lJle 9o~c7Ption~St Stevens suggestio~s on a questio~Iaire

Johl Fltzger~l~ ~enned~ ~o ~hoUltl 1)e middotspelle~St 3tepher~s t~nt twoweeks ago to all priesw hint of an occ1rs m thls~lgant~ a~d W~ Shrin~at Ca~holic U~~~A9out 28 p~r cent of the qu~ wak whIch outdoes Fmnel~anS versIfy andmiddot the Shrme of the tionnaires were returned lIlDd too if not in th~ artistry of its pres- lmma~ulate Conception are one doininantinte1estwlIlS in tllle entation atleastin its ma~sive- and the same ~ arem of perSonnel poliCIes imdI ness and intricacy Hewagt inshyeredibly handsome with the physique ofa Greek god H1 rashydiated not only glamor but glorY He was middotnaster of everything pershytaining to the office and vuieshygated responsibility of the P~s-idency

Thus Lewellyn Thompson whohad beer U S cmbassador to

Russia is quoted as sayin( of Kennedy He had drained me dry of all I knew and on the rare occasions when there was a difference of opinion between us he w3s right and I was wrong The total impression is that of a pteternatural Jgteing

In hi tiI1eless passi~gtn f~r deshy -

Jesuit Provindl1Dfi OAK pARK (NC) - father 9f olrdestin~ do_go On aJldpot

Robert F Harvan~k _So _hl18 nec~s~airily Qn tae Wrong traclt _ been appointed provincial of the or- without requisIte -personriell Chicago Province of the Society and resources

These remarks may be dis- finances Father Thomas F All shymissed as mean nitpicking But brechtchairman Of the COIlllnCllll they are orne points on which the reviewer remote from the event knows that Mr Manchesshyter is mistaken They undershystandably raise doubts as to the reliability of other and far more important particulars

It seems to me that the experishy

en-e of Jeading this book while as was said at the outset traushymatic does produce III catharsis which Mr Manchester may not have anticipated It does not make one put those terrible da)ro forevlr behind one

Buqtldoes make one feelquit ) ofmiddot them iD- the sense that thet are definitely of the past and thm life theriationthe workirigt)Qtil

will assist clergymen in formushytail Mr Manchester has dsltovshylating positions on the moralitTered arid recorded much that is of various foreign policy quesshy

invaluable He has also put down tions and in educating the pubshy~arti~ulars ~hich a~e interesting lie on such issuesif hardly IndlSpenable to bls Organizition of the council ac~d~nt followed a two-day seminar at

Questionable Taste Albion College here on formashyThis latter heading would inshy tion of U S foreign policy The

elude for exainple the -fact tl)at religious leaders named Episcoshyall transportation in the country pal Suffragan Bishop Archie Hstopped as the Presidents fun- BISHOP HAYDEN Crowley of Michigan actingeral Mass was scheduled to beshy chairman of th~ groupgin the fact that the rotuda ~f _ 1Ih12 A 0 ~ 0

the CapItol where the Pr~slde~ts body lay 18 undr the Jurisdlcshytion of the House of Represenshytatives the fact that during the lying in state at the White House a picket walked outside carrying a sign GOD PUNISHED JFK ~ut ther~ ~re ~ountless bits

whIch are InSIgnificant for exshyample the fact that at III certain point Jean Kennedy Smith JP- plied lipstick while Toni Bradlee

and Nancy Tuckerman debated whether they should do the same

other details are in questionshyable taste To my mind at least this estimate would apply to Mr Manchesters inching invenshytory of the autopsy room at Bethesda Naval Hospitaland his description of the casket displaT room in an undertakers estab-Iishment

Evidence Refutes How accurate bas Mr Manshy

chester been Some actual parti shycipants in happenings which he depicts minutely have flatly denied his version of these hapshypenings Photographic evidence has been produced to refute his assertion that Kenneth ODonnell and Lawrence OBrien were not present at President Johnsons oath-taking

It is patent that Mr MaJ1chesshytmiddoter IS wrong m many partleuI a18 having to do with Catholic pracshytmiddotIce For exampIe he repeated shyly refers to theniemorialcard

sal We want to make clear tblJli

this Ul not intended as a eriticiOlllil of policies and that we are IllG4 a gri~vance committee ail stnda Father Albrecht said i

Provide Goidanc~~a m~s AinU ~ rna r)f The Michigar Catholic ConfershyT(j) Arclk1~i~hon ence the Michigan Council of

IF Churches and the Jewish ComshyWASHINlt7TON (NC) - Pope munity C(mncil of Metropolitan

Paul VI has named Msgr Am- Detroit jointly sponsored the brose Hayden rector of the Ca- seminar thedral of St Paul to be titular Staff representJtives from the bishop of Lamsorti and auxiliary three organizations will work to Archbishop Leo Binz of St with Bishop Crowley f~r th~ Paul-Minneapolis next 14 months 0 refine the

Bishop-elect Hayde~ n structure Of the new organizashyin LeSueur Minn Sept 1 1918 tion and to prepare an igenda He attended Le Sueur Public for a second seminar in April

High School the College of St 1~68 ii Thomas St Paul and St Paul Seminary He was ordained illl st Paul Jan 29 1944 by Arcbshybishop John Gregory Murray bull Following ordination he made

studies in library science at the University of Minnesota and the University of Michigan taking bachelor of arts bachelor of scishyence and master of arts in library science degrees

Bishop Hayden was a student and a professor at the St Paw Seminary under the rectorship of Bishop Connolly Ordinary GI the Diocese of Fall River

He was librarian and professol1 01 homiletics at St Paul Semshylnaly from 1944 to 1948 spiritual director and librarian at Nazashyreth Hall Preparatory Seminary from 1948 19 1962 director of vocations for the archdiocese 01 St Paul from 1962 to 1967 and was named pastor of the Catbeshydral of St Paul EpiscopalViCSl

llNCOLN PARK

In introducing the plah bf orshyganization Catholic Bishop Alshyexander M Zaleski of Lansing cl1airman of the theological comshymiSsion of hie National Confershyence of Catholic Bishops said churchmen are-increasingly eaUshyed upon to provide guidance OD

the moral implications of Amershyleas worldwide role

middotUnless we as church leadellJ are cognizant of what motivates foreign policy decisions he said it is difficult for us to give an oovice or guidance We ought to get together regularly to studT the subject with the help of exshypets

Examples Oil Innuen~

The plan of organization for the foreign policy group noted th8lt relimous bodies have tradishy Uonally exercised considerable Anfluence in American publice opinionand policy Th~issues of

Rebuild Church B~~~LSmiddot(NC)middotjio~tin~ have been poured f~l(the Ifounshydation of the new StCatheHneD ChUrchii~rehiMichigan to reshyplace ohe which burned doWlill juDt before Christmas TOO cllureh Iii this Chippejva Indiam ooriuxiunitY Was full Of donated Chiistinas giftS for the IDdiana whell1 it bUrned Efforts te reshyplilc0tbe gifts brought donliltiOlltilhOm m~P8its of the MillwefBt

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slaverY industrial exploita8iEllil and probi~ ition were dted _ examples of ttill influertce

The plan noted that in the past American religious institUtiOlUl have middotprovided overwhelming support for governmental poHshydea in the field of foreign afshyfairs

This s not as true of the present it remarked beeause ampI the face of nuclear weapons reshyligious leaders are beginning tID probe and speak out OD the moral~ iiirnensiorul of Americaa fcreignltpolicy bull 2-

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REGULAR

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP Rf nav BDWAnlll OmiddotMaAnA NATIONAL DIRaOTClIn

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~ IItWBf YOUR II)lRIlCTOIlIltl RIT RIlY RAYMOND CONElIDINIl E1Ge 10 MAllO OT

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YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

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Page 13: 05.04.67

PolishAmericans Resent Survey At Notre Dame

SOUH BEND (NC) - A questionnaire circulated by students of the University of Notre Dame in this city bas been characterized as an insult to Polish-Americans

The nine-page questionnaire sought answers to a series of questions which included I would keep my children from asshysociating with a Polish person I would avoid shopping at the same neighborhoo(~ with a Polish person I would exclude a Polish person from my country I would not live in the same apartshyment house as a Polish person I would prevent a Polish person from participating in organizashytions and clubs to which beshylong

Persons were asked to answer the questions in these categoshyries-strongly agree disagree strongly disagree

IInsunting Questions The Polish American Journal

published in Scranton Pa and distributed to Americans of Polish descent called the quesshytions insulting and underscored that no other ethnic group was included in the questions

Father Walter Higgins CSC pastor of Holy Cross parish here denounced the questionnaire from the pulpit He said it was done in poor taste and to single out the Polish group was insulting stupid and danshygerous in implications

The pastor a priest of the Holy Cross community which conducts the university asserted As an Irish-American pastor of a parshyish where 70 per cent of my parishioners are Polish-Amerishycans I resent the entire spirit of this questionnaire

Newspaper Shocked The weekly Polish American

a newspaper published in Chishycago said it was shocked by the survey which creates the distinct implication that PolishshyAmericans are somehow differshyent in an unpleasant sense from the rest ofmiddot South Bend society

A spokesman for the university said the survey was undertaken to determine the religious atti shytudes of various groups in the South Bend area

The poll was conducted by Professor Donald Barrett aushythority on demography and II

group of graduate school stushydents Barrett teaches sociology in the graduate school

The questionnaire the univershysity spokes~an said contained a number of gen~ral questions apshyplicable to many nationalitY groups It also coniained specific questions concerning attitude) toward Jews Negroes and atheshy~b

It was explained that the quesshytions concerning the Polish group was included because the South Bend area is populated predominantly by Polish-Amershyicans

The spokesman said that Barshyrlttt has defended the questionshynaire and its value to the stushydenb in response to criticisms from various sources

Asks Prmests Views On Clergy Senate

SAGINAW (NC) - Priests ai the Saginaw diocese have beeD invited to submit their ideas 0Ii

bull senate of priests Bishop Stephen S Woznickll

of the Michigan See has apshyproved establishement of D senshyate and indicated his willingnesu to work with a group to be demshyocratically elected

Diocesan consultors given the task of ascertaining clergy viewfl have sent a questionnaire SIC tile pries-

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 4 19tH 13

Education Institute Eight New York State Dioceses Organize

Catholic School Research Program NEW YORK (NC) - New the public of information regardshy

Yorks eight Catholic dioceses ing Catholic schools in the state have joined to sponsor a Re- Public school administrators search Institute for Catholic on the state and -local levels Education should find this informatiOJl

Msgr Edward P McCarren helpful secretary for education in the New York Cathohc school sysshyRockville Centre diocese has terns educate over 800000 eleshybeen appointed director m~ntary ~nd secondary sc~ool chIldren 10 New York State

T~e ~nstItute wIlI asse~s the There are more than 60000 stushycontm~mg role m educatIon of dents in Catholic collegesCathohc efforts throughout the state

Expla~ning the function of the School to Close institute Msgr McCanen said OAKLAND (NC) - The 43shy

An effort will be made to colshy year-old St Peters grade schoo]I~) late all existing scientific and only Catholic school in Garrett sociological information about County here in Maryland willSIGN OF THE TIMES King Olav Y of Norway was Catholic education in one central close in June Father Regis Jliwelcomed to the Vatican by Pope Paul VI who called the source At present there is no Larkin pastor said high operashy

Kings visit a sign of the times as he spoke of the new focal point for the collection tion costs and decreased enrolll~

climate of ecumenical thought and activities NC Photo evaluation and dissemination to ment brought on the decision

HIVE YOU READ PARAURAPH 29 of Pope Paul8 new enoyeUcal Populorum Progrfi881o

We musl make hasle Too many are suBerlng

IRAVE YOU IDENTIFIED homes dispensaries orphanages DesS In the world by not only readshyrr WITH THESE CHILDREN flchool~ especially for the world Ing this papal plea but tearing out AndI abe otbem starving who CORa Ore8cent peopRe It foods those Oft these chtidren and sending a gUt Daly llMlg for enough to live from bull brreadl Ones edu~ates men gives all Dear Monsi~orl When you go to emf ml~aooorles many os possible 8 decent life Rome to see the Holy Father In

1MVB YOU IDENTIFIED 10000 WILL STARVE TODA May please take 810na this gift of IT WITH U8 MORE TOMORROW $_Ior his 001

1h1ltm4 oftbe HolyFathe helpl AND MORE LATER RiAMJU _ 4 malntalnhospltall leper WIU IOU not put a dent In this

THE MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP Rf nav BDWAnlll OmiddotMaAnA NATIONAL DIRaOTClIn

NeIIlllV 10111 1Ma OPAAPION CF Ttla PA~bullbullee t1H Ava NYbullbull NV 1000t

~ IItWBf YOUR II)lRIlCTOIlIltl RIT RIlY RAYMOND CONElIDINIl E1Ge 10 MAllO OT

if youd like something bett~r for your family this WE)e~ ~ervEl FIRST CHOrCeMEATS We guarantee youll bedeshylIghted shy or your money back

YOWl eoe lirst at Ifampst National

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~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

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-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

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Page 14: 05.04.67

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~~ ~4 - THE ANCHOR-DiocesefofFaIUlver-Thun May419~7

Church le~~~rS~ JI~~~Jogy~raquo Of Progre~~~~Cha~9~ lt~

From SO(lial Revonadion in the New Latin America Edited by 3oim-l Considine MM

Many Catholics wedded to an exaggerated fixity in all matters concerning the teaching and the practice of the Church unconsciously project this attitude into an opposi tion towards or at least a suspicion of all change in the social realm This is ironical soclalliving together during the

in our age of such rapid space of time allottedeach of us ~hange in all orders of in the progress toward eternity science technology and hu- God who redeems us through man relations It is ironical most hisWprd also cr~ated us aIi~ ~ll ltampf all in an age in which the thatmiddot exists through that saine search for a meaning in progress Word-for says St John (1) It for the sense and WClS through him that all things interpretation of came into being and without his tor y is so him came nothing that has come fundamental to to be modern thought From the beginning as is so To say that we graphically stated in the first Cat hoi i c s chapters of the book of Genesis Our FIRST CHOICE MEATS am the vsry best of therequire a theol-man was charged with all of mashyogy of progres- terial creation in the name of Choice grads bullbull and because were jealous of our repushysive c han g e God to people the earth and means also and bring it into subjection (Gen - lation for fine meat its the only kind we sell perhaps above 128) all that we must Nothing fits more intomiddot the Our cattlemen and suppliers throughout the country know a c qui r e once biblical concept of things than more a theology of history a the tremendous progress which we insist on outstanding quality They know too well acceptdynamic sense of history which man is making in our times lis our fundamental birthright toward a more complete domishy only the very best 11Ild which we have too often and nation of Gods creation Wo unconsciously renounced Gods glory said Pascal is And our butchers are experts in trimmingyour meat - our

It is the biblical revela~ion the glorification of man This w ltentered in the fact of the rEsur~_ true within the context of creshy way - for that extra flavor and that extra value thats made rection of Christ which intro- ation

Cliucea into the world the dynam- It does not imply an anthropo- flrstmiddotNational famous with generations of homemakers ~ lie arid progressive sense of hi~ -ee~tric view of life-interpreting tory of a march forward toa~d in human ~erms It ~ther ~nsummatemiddotpappiness for all ~ans that it is In fact God s re- which dominates our westerft -middotJvealed will that all middotthe universe--- shyworld and which has projected be subjected to man for his the doctrine of profess across glory for his life for he is made the entire world Yet we have in the image and likeness of God 0ften in our own Dlodem cEm- Olin praise of his glory fmries retreated to n quiet and Christian Hope lirtatic effort to construct our These are not or should not Christian life upon this earth be merely abstract theological and in our own timeS with little theses Douglas Hyde has re-

or no real reference to what has marked frequently how imporshyhappened in the p~ or to the tant It is for the communists to shyfuture which our lives and ae- get across to even the most ig-Uons must prepare norant of those they catecent~~~(i J J

Salvation IlistOI7 the marxist sense of history the Fortunately for us themodem~ neceSsary struggleof theeasses

~iblical patris~ic anell liwrgi~ wwcb ill ~~xo~~blY ~~na~ moveinents in the Church have iii -- elassless -socIety of Justice

(i)nce more centered our faith and ~d equality for all Its theological expressioil1wtthin i If this truncated material shythe context of the history of sal ized version of Christian hope l7ation - I b~ so successfuly stirred to

Revelation is once more for us startling heights of sacrifice and as it is in the Bible and as it WaB devotion indigenous communist for the early Fatherrs of the leaders in every corner of the Chutch the histol) of Gods globe how much more the entire dealings with man from creati~o m~SJage of hopetlO the promised parousiamp - the There is nothing good and ho17 return of the Lord when new in the marxist promises which ~

heavens and a new earth will not better set forth in that Chrisshyeonsummate the work ltl)f God in tian attitude toward the world mankind developed thlCough the which the Second Vatican CounshyltCenturies of time clI outlined in its Constitution

The Word of God made man on the Church in the Modem Who died and rose agaiu thatmiddotwe World - might rise with him 1ll0W from _ We too desire and work for sin ~~d finally into glory Is the an~ e~pasion of all material 1~ key to a Christian se~se o~~ means of production and welfare tory so that in our century for the

All of hlstory IS now the pro- first time in recorled history all gressive mcor~orati~nof~~)men men may have access to awate- I - into the divme hfe through rial standard and an education Christmiddot w hohas taken o~ our which will free them from the nature washed it of its sin andmiddot middotmiddot slav(ity to bodily want and the thusbrou~1lt- ~it about that aUsad almost animal dimness of who welcomlaquod him he empow life without knowledge without ered to become the childrn ~f culture without joy withom God all t40se who believe mhis beauty without love name (John 112)

This redemption is not realizltd In the abstract but ill to be worked out in the condiltions of (i)W terrestrial existence and our

First Layman Head BUFFALO (N() - Robert H

Chambers 35 has been apshypointed principal of Bishop Timon High School herE - the first layman to -head a Catholic high school hi the 113uffalo dishyocese The school is conducted for the diocese by the Francisshy~n Fathers

ElIECTIllUCAL ContrClldors

944 County S New Bedford

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

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254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

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t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

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Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

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j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

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IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

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Page 15: 05.04.67

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

( bull THE ANCHOR-Boston College- Faculty Sa10 ries f 17Thurs May 4 1967

IHighest Among Catholic Schools

CLEVELAND (NC)-Faculty VatD~hJ Methods sors Those at church-relatedmembers of church-related colshyuniversities earned an averageleges and universities are getting Ovregtr~v Qlf~5~rJilof $14068 those at privatebigger raises than their bettershy

AMSTERDAM (NC) - T h d schools 17390 and those at pub- Ipaid colleagues in public and lic institutions $15028 The pay Dutch national Catholic dail~private independent colleges acshy

cording to a study by a com~itshy was lower but the differences I De Tijd (The Time) has strongly remained proportionally the criticized the strong Italian ac=gttee of the American Association same same at liberal arts colleges cent on the Vaticans communi=of University Professors and junior colleges cations with the worldBut while their pay checks

The committee found howshy The paper was particuladymay be getting bigger faster ever that the lowest-paying inshy critical of the appearance of thetea c her s at church-related stitutions were increasing their Vatican yearbook the Annuari6schools are stlII making a lot salaries much faster than the Pontificio in only the ItaliaJ1llless than others in the profession highest-paying so fast in fact language It is called this typn~according to the survey that at thJ present rat~ in les~ cal of the provincialism of Vat-The study by the AAUPs than 20 years even the churchshy ican CityCommittee on the Economic related liberal arts colleges will Why are there no editions ilnStatus of the Academic Professhyoutpay the private universities world languages like Englishsion was presented here at the

French Spanish and perhaPBorganizations 53rd annual meetshy The report added however ing that such an extension of the German it asked Concern inn

The committee report covered papal encyclicals the paper also a two-year period from 1965 to curate forecast and suggested inshy

figures would hardly be an acshyasked why translations are nil~

1067 stead that salaries will eventushy made available to the press ilil

It revealed that faculty pay ally level out among all types of various languages prior to officii3ill at church - related institutions-shy release

Stm Foo Many institutions

the worst-paying-had increased The system is known all over18 per cent while pay at private

independent universities and colshy Oppose Su~port the world but the Vatican stUn does not know about it Now theleges-the best-paying-had inshy

creased only 12 per cent Public Obs~~nrnty Study text of an encyclical is throWJlIl institutions fell between those like a bomb in the big pond laquot

WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill publicity and at Rome there anefigures to establish a nationa committee angry comments when somlt2Catholicmiddot colleges however to study the problem of obscenshy news agency makes mistakes beshyranked well down in at least one ity and recommend solutions was cause it had to issue a story Ollrespect-the average pay of full shyopposed by the American Civil the event without proper prepatime faculty members Only eight Libe~ties ynion in hearings beshy mUon of the 250 institutions paying an fore a ~oule education subcom- middotIn the Vatican the newsshyaverage _of more than $10000 mittee paper went on the center of thewere euroatholic-operated Boston

But the bill did receive the Church world the Italian atm~College Notre Dame Catholic Close Old Schoolcautious endorsement of ihe Jusshy sphere still dominates the scen~Universlt~ Georgetown Santa tice Department and th~ Natronal The riumber of Italians in iieClara Sari Francisco St~ Johns Co u nc iI of Juvenile Court St Marys Was Setting for fro Finns College of Cardinals and iii the(Minn) and Marquette Judges Curia is ~till much too big iii ifLower End Famous Stories of T0IIIPmqyfair

Lawrence Speiser director of JatiCh to other nationaIlthfjBoston College was the highshy the ACLU Washington office ~ MARYS (NC) - Theyre find today A search of the Unishy though the situation was slightly

est of tht Catholic schools folshy c)osmg up Tom Playfairs old versity of Detroit libraries andtold the committee that the comshy improved in recent yearslowed eIosely by Notre Dame mission would not provide scienshy school after 119 years even the rooms of the ~lder Both ($11083 and $11012 reshy tific proof that pornography But the Jesuits who have run members of the Jesuit faculty spectively) were far behind the St Marys of Kansas since 1848 turned up only one copy of Tom Drops Two Gradescauses anti-social aets leader-Harvard Universityshy are closing the doors in grand Playfair and that in German CUDAHY (NC)-St JosephHe said tlie bill runs the danshywhich pays its teachers an avershy style a gigantic alumni reunion The Jesuits fou d dSt M elementary school here in Wisshyage of $15700 ler of creating a runaway Ma 27 and 28 n e alY s y as an Indian mission It was the consin will drop its seventh amllcommission that would make itBut the report also revealed As far as possible said Fr first educational institution in eighth grade classes next yeal1easier to obtain prosecutions andthat while average salaries might Joseph P Fisher SJ president Kansas The decision was made when theotherwise curtail borderline ofshybe Iuite different at churehshy the menu will be that of the old ~chool Sisters of St Francis sahlifensive lllaterialsrelated and private independshy days Jt is hoped however that Consecrate Mission middot1hep~rtsh would have one ie~ ent schools pay at the lower end The bill sponsored by New teachihg Sister In Septembeir

Jp the fare~ distance will lend enchantment

of the scale was not lt Jerseys Dominilt Daniels would Bishop on -May 25 Four Sisters and three lay teacn Instructors at churchrelated create a 16-member body to ers nbw teach 221 pupils - It was while at St Marys that BOSTOI (NC)-Richard Ca~shyuniversities and liberal arts colshy recommend definitions ot obshy

Fr Francis J Finn SJ created dinal Cushing of Boston will conshylege earned more than those at scenity and to propose legislashythe characters of Tom PlayfaiJ secrate Bishop-designate Jamespublic institutions and onry tion to curb traffic in offensive

slightly less than those at pri shy materials Percy Wynn and their friends C Burke OP in Holy Cwss ANTONE S fEND JRThe Catholic schoolequiyalent of Cathedralhere on 1IIay 25 Bishopvate schools

OISP~NSINGThe commission-made up of Horatio Alger and Jack Aqnshy John J Wright of Pittsburgh will Irlorease aster OPTICIAN ei g h t presidEmtial appointshy strong this intrepid duo was to deliver the sermon

Proscriptions Bishop-designate Burke is theThegap was wider for assist shy ees four named by the House roam through thousands of volshy

fa Eveglassesmiddotant and associate professors and speaker aildfour by the Senate urnes in scotesof languages apostolic administrator of Chimshy FillecIbecame widest for full profes- president-would report to the The boo~s are 8 bit harti to bote Peru an area iT which the Office- Hos President within III year priests of the Missionary Society 9110middot500 Assistant Attorney Gen~ral of S1 James the Apostle are except WedColorado Chaplain Fri Ew ~ ApptGeneral Fred M Vinson Jr said Law Professor Heads serving Cardinal Cushing Saturday-5-3Defends Program the Justice Department mildly founded the society in 1958 tfgt Room 1Phila School Boardendorses the bill but comshy help offset the shortage ofCANON CITY (NC) -A vetshy 7 No Main St Fall River 678middot0412

plained that the commissions life PHILADELPHlh (NC) - )Wilshy priests in Latin AmericaeraR Catholic prison cbaplain )iam D Volente Villanova Unishyspan would be too short amI thatdisputed charges by an Episceshyit would lack subpoena power versity law schoo professor is

patian priest that Colorado State He said however that it would the first layman elected presishy

Penitentiary religious programs develop valuable data for pro- tient of the Philadelphia archshy

ignore the moral reasons why posed legislation I diocesan board of education ANDERSON amp OLSENmen commit crimes

ODe of five laymen named teFather Justin McKeman Cathshy the 15-member board last Deshy INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIColic chaplain at the penitentiary Religious Schoo eember Valentes election bas

here for 23 years said religious DETROIT (NC) - Fourteen been announced by Msgr Edshyprograms at the institution are HEATING-PIPiNG andchurches in southeast Detroit are ward T Hughes board secretaryon a par with those offered at eooperating in sponsoring a reli shy and archdiocesan superintendentether prisons throughout the nashy AIR CONDITONINGgious school for laymen Cou~ses of schools tion in biblical heritage the Reforshy Valente is an alumJlus of the

I think we are doing a bang mation religious musical tradishy University of Pennsylvania here CONTRACTORS up job Father McKernan said tions and worship customs are and a past president of the PennshyUnder the circumstances we 312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedford being taught by a Protesta~t sylvania Federation of Citizena

PR~SENTS MEDAL Bishop Fred Pierce Corilon MethodIst leader and an Official Observer at Vatican II was c~osen b~ the Cttholic Philopatrian Literary 1l1stitut~ of PhIladelphIa to present to Archbishop John J Krol of Philadelphia its 1967 Father Sourin medal NC Photo

~ive plenty of instruction and we minister and a Catholic priest fer Educational Freedomhave very line religious preshy~rams both Protestant and Cathshyolic

Rev Richard E Thrumston Iector of Christ Episcopal Church Canon City charged the penitentiarys religious program bull ridiculouslylimited

Father Thrumston wbe has ~rved as volunteer Episcopalian ~haplain at the institution for the past five years feels the reli shyaious program is relegated te second class status by permitshyting it to operate only durin off hours rather thaR worliin~

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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

J 1 1

~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

==

j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 16: 05.04.67

-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Turs May 41967

-Exp~Q[Jl)~ ~~~regf

Clefty B[Jl)1remlPJr~ COampdregrt By Msgr GeOllge G lHIiggiIms

(Director Social ActnoIm Jlraquoept NCWC) Time magazine recently featured a perceptive essay

-entitled The Churchs Influence on Secular SocietY On balance while pointing to some of the possible pitfalls

middotinvolved in church-sponsored 01 church-related programs of social reform it pointed out middotthat most churchmen would agree thaf in a free market of ideas the churches should have the same right as any other middotorgan~zation to fight for their principles It also noted for g 0 d measure

that those layshymen who want the churches to stay out of the political social and economicbull _1 op her e s al shygether and stick w preaching and saving souls are

ion the distinct middotlininority During the same week ~at Times essay appeared the

ltoonservative evangelical Protesshytant forthnightly Christianity ioflay pu1gtlished the transcriptaf a panel discussion on the Barne general subject (The Church and Social Concern Christiaility Today April 14) Primary Obligation middot The three Protestant ministers

Who took par~ in this panel disshyeussion while cautiously admitshytmg that the churches must be eoncerned about social issues tended to put less emphasis on corporate church action in the temporal order and more emphashysis on the churches primary ()bligation bull bull ~o produce the kind of people who in the crisis moments of history bearing the iesponsibilitr of government can make the highest possible moral

would much prefer to have the ehurches as SUCh sayrelatively

Dttle about temporal aHairs~and

let committed Christians speak and act for themselves as indishyviduals with reference to these matters

Minority View In contrast as Time reports

the most enterprising of todaymiddotsehurchmen believe that the dlurches must run the risk of getting involved institutionally In social action for only thus they feel can the world relearn that no aspect of life or deathshy

Deither love nor money neither ftOvernment nor war-is beyond

the reach of Gods world and the Christian faith By conviction as well as by

temperamentmiddot and also by reason my ow~ ~xperience in the

fieldmiddot ofrehgIo~sl~Qtented ~~

~ tilat there IS som~1hlD~ to ~ aid for the nunority pomtmiddot ofj d middotttimiddot tf middot ew epresse --lD e Igen Y

-d VJth

m0ceratlOn-by tb~ - ree clergm~~ who took pa~

fa the pane~ dl~USSI~ r~ferred to above middot In tlI~ eo~rse ~ ~e~r ~n~r-~e~ wlt~ the EdItor of ChrIIIshy~a~uty Todar~ they m~de tbret ~mtsmiddotJn particular WhIch those ill us who favor the mvolvement of the churcheli in matters of SOCI~ concern wo~~d do well to eoosider very seriously

Point Well Taken First of all as one of the

panelists noted we must be fer~ careful not to~r~~~e that

our conscience is the conscience of the whole church or as anshyother member of the panel put it clergymen have ~obe very careshyful about their own personal arshyrogance as if they had a direct pipeline to God that maybe the President didnt have or the Secshyretary of State or the Secretary of Defense didnt have

The point is well taken evenshyor especially-if we think as I certainly do that churchmen have a right and at times a duty to speak out on the life-andshydeath issues (the war in Vietshynam for example) which haunt the waking hours of the Presishydent and his Secretary of state

and Secretary of Defense We may and we must as

clergymen address ourselves toshy theseissues but we Shu~fDd

we must do so with no t$ce of arrogance and ~ith ro-Clylm to iripoundallibiiity - Commends Jlgtubiic Servarits Secoridly as lDother 0pound the

-panelistsmiddot observed thechurch should not always be ji the role of judgment ane conde~i-tion~There are times he S1id when the important role is for the church to commend those men of integrity and high purshypose who do good things within government In this sometimes in my experience and observashylaquoon weve either been belated or totally negligent

On the basis of my experience in Washington I would second this complaint and would add tbat the federal service is blessed

lChoice -and on the churches with an abundance of men and middot first responsibility 0 bull to bring women whose iiinlegrity and middot People into a vital relationship higb - purpose are oeyond middot~th God question In general got the impres- AS another member of the

ilion thatmiddot the three panelists above-nientiOned panel pointed outmiddot diurchtneri are often prone to belittle the eHortsof these

dedicated public servants or worse than that to kick them to deathI share his wish that we cOuld somehow overcome this disease

Laymens Role Finally the three panelists

who were interviewed by the Editor of Christianity Today emphasized the all-important role of the layman in the church~s ministI tG the world

Im a clergyman he said and I baveto keep thinking of the ministry of the church and ~mindi~g the ~ople who are Lukens saie that such persecushy

politicians and economists that tion exists in an address to the they are ~he chuJch if theyrel1krainianmiddot Cathol~c SeminMy IChristians The church isnt just ~ere inConnecticut and reported~mething~ which people go ~ehad asked for a UN study OIl ~

dal actID I am lDclined~ go go bullbull emiddotmiddot middot aloftg wIthmiddot the latter pomt ofmiddot Thus to emphasize the role of wew the layman in the temporal order ~n the otherhand I ould ad- is not to d~my that clergymen

The church illI 110methirig that goes witb them wherever they

also ~aye ail important role to I th h

payln ec urchesnulustrytotbe world nor is it to suggest

that clergymen ~s a group are ~equately f~lfming their rolemiddot

allegations of religious persecushytion in the USSR

s

the matter in a letter tomiddot United IStates Ambassador to the UN Arthur Goldberg ~

Lukens particularly cited per-

Catholics Baptists to Study~~

~e~gmus F~eedomD Authority DE WITT (NC)e-Representashy

tives of the Catholic Church and th~ American Baptist Convention have launched a study into two areas of particular interest to Catholics in the 1960s-the reshylationship of religious freedom and ecclesiastical authority and the role of the laity in the life of the Church

The study was launched at the end of a two-day meeting of delegates from the American Baptist Convention and the u s Bishops Commission on Ecumenical Relations

The delegates~ightCatholics and six Baptists-met ata Franshy

ciscan retreat house in this tiny

community north of Jl1nsingMich The formal discussion opened with the pres~ntition of

position papers outlining pointsof agreement between distinctive Baptist and Catholic practicesand doctrines

It was the first official contact

between the two religious bodiesalthough leaders of the two groups Bishop Jos~ph Green of

RenO Ney and Prmiddot~ Rqbert G lor~~t o~Valley For~~ Paexshyecubve dIrector of th~ 4menc~n

~apb~ GonventlQns ~ommIs- SIOo on Ghnsban Umty had leld pr~v~tetalks for~oJe t~18n

l yearj

The next meeting will be held in a yelir In-th~ pe~ntime h~weyer a planning com011ttee

wilJ discuss and assign middotll]embers to iltidy three areas of future

consideration

~Concerns Bot~ bull The nature of Christian freeshy

dom in relationship to ecclesiasshytical authority

The role of the congregation in the total life of the church

The relationship between beshylievers Baptism (adult Baptism practiced by Baptists) and the sacrament of Confirmation (adshyministered to Catholics as tbey become adults)

FRENCH MISSIONARY Bi~hopJean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) born in France BLUE RIBBON first bishop of Santa Fe N M is commemorated fn this LAUNDRY stained glass window in the upper sacristy of the Nation 213 CENTRAL AVEal Shrine of the Immaculate

Conception Washington NC 992-6216photo

NEW BEDFORD Asks U N to StudySOvDet Persecutionshy

In a statementmiddot issueltl at file end of the meeting ~e deleshygates said

It is anticipated that the three topics under discussion will lead to a fruitful probing of the meaning of religious liberty which is of concern to both American Baptists and RomaD Catholics in our day

V S b degdiGte to U Sl Ize NUlIseso Training

TRENTON (NC)-By a unanlshymous vote the New Jersey Asshysembly passed and sent to Gov Richard J Hughes a bill to subshysidize the education of nurses attehding nursing schools mainshy

tained both by public and privatehospitals

THe bill would provide $600 toward the costmiddot of educating

each student There are 33 hosshy

pital-operated nursing schools in the state but the number has been decreasing because of the

costsNine such schools have closed

in the last 10 years Tmiddotwo Catholic hospitals have annourtcedtbe

closing of nursing schoolsin neshy cent months

t I bull 7

I

~poundW~ MON~Y()N ~ h~ bull

YOUR OltHEAT wYma~ eatt 3~592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD AlA$L

~~ ~

t7 HEATING OIL

STAMFORD (NC)-Rep Donshy IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHRlIII~

aId E Lukens (R Ohio) has asked the United Nations to esshytablisb a commission to study i__ Damp DSALES AND SERVICEi=

lecution _of the Jews whom he I AIR CONDIT~ONING Ic~arged are subject to unique shydl~rimhl~tion i 363 $EC~ND s~ FALL RIVER MA$S i - -- - iiilummmIIRlUllllnIllIIUIIIIIIIIIHNlllHIIIIIRlHIIUIua-mnItlIHIUIIIIHlRlHllllllllllllllllllla_--~

Vatican il waS reemppasizecll t----------------------------very forcefully by Pope Paul VI

INC = FRIGIDAffiE I

REFRIGERATION ~i APPLIANCES ~

bull at the present time iJ his recent encyclical Onmiddot~ Cites Encyclieal Development of Peoples

()n the other hanamiddot there is a If the role of the hierarchy iii FirstFed~ral S~vings rea~ need I think for the clergy to teach and to interpret authori

tomiddot keep remindiiig themselves-- tiltively the norms 0 morality to and the iaity-thai layineni~~ be followed in this matter (le AND WAN middotASSOCIATION or tbe church if theyre Christians

and ~tbat by reason of lttheir lay state they can rightly be exshypected to playa more direct role

than the clergy in the temporal order This pointwhich is made reshypeatedly in the documents of

the development of nations) it be~ongs to the laymen without waiting passively for orders and directives to take the initiative freely and to infuse a Christian spirit intQ the mentality laws and structures of the commullity

in which tiIey live

I

4V2 on dll Saving~ Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

J 1 1

~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

==

j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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bull bull

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middotmiddot bull i~ - middotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ $3495

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THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 17: 05.04.67

I

I )

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~ier-lhurs May 4 1967

Feehan High Seeks Second on Dealis ListBel Title of Schoo~ Year

By PETER BARTEK Nortolll Righ Coach

Harold (Chet) Hanewich whose Shamrocks corralled the football croWn last Fan is making a determined bid to garner his second sports championship in his final year at the helm of Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro as his baseshyball proteges pace the compeshytition in the Bristol County scholastic league Feehan was counted upon to make its presence felt in the diamond flag race put the fOlmer Barnstable High mentor did notsbare the

fvie w 0 tbe many who figshyured the Shamshyrocks for a lowshyer mot in the baseball rae e than their presshyent front-runshyning spot Meanshywhile Somerset Peter tl n d case of Barlek Swansea are hooked-up in a first place deadshylock in the Narragansett loop while Norton High leads the Trl

Valley Conference lhree clubs are battling to

retain their hold on the top berth in the Capeway Confershyence TJ1e three hooked up-iD the C~pe leadership b~~t~ an Barnstable Dartmoutbahd Denshynis-Yarmouth

Taunton and )oy~ HaiieWJchs pace setting Attieshy

ooro Sbamrocks open the second half of their league schedule today when they tackle Vocationshyal at New Bedford The muchshysought-after Feehan coach ill confident that bis lads will be ust as successful in regulation nille-bming games during the balance of the campaign as they were in the abbreviated sevenshyIraJJlecontests of We iirln haH reaSQ~ gt over Millis tomorrow middotafternoon

than defeats Trailing Ooach JQe Lewis fourth place Fall River Bine are New Bedford VQcationshynI Attleboro and Bishop Stang High of Dartmouth North Attieshyboro is in the cellar

~~qilJao~ ~~ tltldays BeL schedule will see Durfee at Taunton Attleboro vs Stang at Dartmouth and Coyle at North

Attlebor~O_waY Battle Coacb Jack McCarthys Case

High team which forced Feehan

iffii~~I~~12e~en~Itgti~il~~ home for next Saturdays imshypor1ant tussle withCoach Jim Sullivans Biue Raiders itb

is very much like it is in the bigger-school BeL While the challenging four are within striking distance it appeliIs most unlikely that either Case or Somerset will fall apart to allow this quartet to move any higher in the standing

Diman Vocational of Fall River Holy Family of New Bedshyford Msgr Prevost High of Fall River and Westport are the rivals keeping Case and Somershyset honest

Day for JPuents Dighton-Rehoboth and Seekonk

appear hopelessly out of the flag competition They will in all probability settle for the last two places in the final standing

This coming Saturday is the day which has been set aside for working parents so they can see their sons in action The Saturshyday schedule is

Dighton-Rehoboth at Seekonk Somerset vs Case at Swansea Diman at Prevost Fall Jiiv~rand Holy Family at Westport

Bouchard and AII~~ Sophom~re righthand~r Art

Bouchard and Soplionloresouthshypaw Ken Allen are two of the main reasons why the Norton Lancers are out flont in the Tri-Valley competition Ther have looked extremely good in their triumphs over the rest of the league whicb comprises schools loeated outside the confinesmiddoto the diocesan liries

Norton will De at home lookinpound for its second win of the season

circuit while CoachJim Burns first place tie diocesan aggregation is firmly Bourne and Lawrence High of eJltrenched hi third position Falmoutp ar deHnite possibili-

Both Taunton city clubs can be ties although they are chasing counted upon to wag~ a strong the three front r4nn~rs at this battle for the flag HeQce Fee- wrWng The Capewiy Confershyhan will continue its present cal- ence completes its first half of Jbre of play in order to stay out the season today The competishyahead of the two challengers tion in this loop is much tighter

Eliminated Early than in the Bristoi County and Durfee High of Fall River ap- Narragansett leagues as indicated

pears out of the title fight Gen- by the standings erany one of the better clubs Crucial Contests the Fall River combine is in The time is not far away howshyfourth position with very little ever when they will start to sep-

Matrieilliatting at Providenee Sehool BY r~ MIRANDA

John K Eddy of Swansea 1sshycompleting a most impressive

Eddy a former athletic standshy

two-year stay at Johnson and WalesP d

Business College in rOVl ence

out at CaseHigh has cQll)piled an outstanding record both irf the

classroorri)ind on the competishytive SJlbrts fields for Johnson and Wales~~

])ellDs List Student A Deans List Student Jack

is the oilt1est of five children and the son of Mr and Mrs Russell P Eddy of 142 Main Street in Swansea

Jack has two brothers at Case Hgh James a junior and Robshyert a sophomore another Peter at Brown School and a sister Judith who attends the Bark Street School in SWllllsea

Eddy first came into the athshyletic picture in the Swanea Lit shytie League baseball program and his competitive spirit polite manner and leadership qualities have stayed with him through high school and college

Eddy is a Becon baseman for Johnson and Wales and the teams leadoff hitter He also perfornie~ admirably for the the colleges basketball team

A member of Our Lady of Fatima Parisb in Swansea Jack is studying Business Administrashytion and Accounting and is II

high B student Eddy will continue his edushy

cation at Salem State Teachers College in September Jacks ambition is to become a teacher of Business Administration

Numerous Awards Jack carries 145 pounds on his

lye foot six inch structure but reached qase 70 per cent Qfthemiddot leagl~andgained a second team is a giant iii tlie eyes of former 1 ime as leadof1 batterHftin- beitb onmiddottheAll-Narry clubmiddotAJ

JOHN K EDDY OF SWANSEA

AU-League team as a second the All-Narry League team as 1m baseman althougb Jack played infielder shortstop to fill a berth in the Twilight ManagerCardinals infield in basketball Eddy scored

As a junior at Case Eddy 244 points as a senior finishingbatted 377 scored 20 runsand among the top ten scorers in the

TauJicm High and ifll intra- The Lancers easily diswsed of coaches Howie OHare find Jack shed shitllin the Narry ltv~rlge II junior Jack was astartilgcity riv~l ]~fsgi Coyle High ttMi Millill 8-2 in tJl~fiJlJt meet- McCarthY of Case race and was awardep ap ~n- guard for the Cardinals and loom lIS the principal threats to ing of the clubs His e~celle1t eqaracteJ and Jeague ber~h at second bas~ scored just~der10 points perr the league le~ding Hanewichmen Fire teams are aetually i~ personality make~ ~t a plea~~re Ja4fk lIB limited duty ~ a contest C 1 Coa~ ~~t~ Georg~s surprisJng contentIon for thtmiddot title in the for all that come III contact Ylth Case loplloll)~re but ShoweIpis Eddy alsolparticipated in middottheOral)p~~qd Black IS percJed in Capeway Conference ~lbeitthree the youthful Our LadYofFatIma poten~ial wth a 278ayerage annual Eastejmiddottournament atthethe runner-up spot in the county momentarily are tangledbi Z l parishioner anda~ Honorable Mel)tiol on CYOand was chosen to the AJIshy

Eddy was presented tbe Un- Star team of 1965 after his ootshysung Hero Award tbis Season for V O bull U Of standing performance with 0lll his efforts on behalf of the 1Cfilr1otemiddot to nf y Lady of Fatima Johnson and Wales basketball Religious Education This Summer John K Eddy team a tribute richly deserved will give some of his experienceaccording to hoop coach and atb- ROCHESTER (NC) - Bishop tQ young~r boys as manager of letic director Jack Yena who FultonJ Sheen of Rochester has the White Sox in the Swansea also serves as the Dean of Men ereated Lew episcopal vicariate Twilight League It is his second at JW for religious education and year at the WS helm last season

Last year as a freshman Jack named Father Albert J Shamon Jack directed his club to a league was presented the Presidents of St Patricks Church to fill the championship bull Trophy the highest award given post to a student at Johnson and The new icar according to Wales The award arm~ally goes Bilthop Sheen will supervise to a student who has perlormed and unify religious educationl in

prospect of ov~rcomIng the three arat~th~ ~~rP from the boys m anoutstinding capacrty in thedioceseih plirochial sc11661s teams higher r~ the standmg i iI- tlie papew-r rnce Next Mon- academic pursuits aridha~dis- catechetiCll schools NeWman

The remainder of the Bristol day--whElntlie first game of the played leadership inextraciifric- centers bigHsch6ois ildUWcdu- County teams now will be second half of the schedule is ular activities ind has siloiWn cationmiddot - werl~ver thl wold of striving to eke 0llt 8 winnirig liste~l ii find two ofihe puhgtosefuI 1 cooperatibri 2)1 d f God is foiinallt taught season that is more vi~toties three-den first place clubs strong college spirit r He Will iilso coopet~teh~ith I

~eetVtcent head-on middot1 r 1acIt latte~ 2~middot1 middotthemiddotecumiiilical coirVi)f~smiddot~6~t)n Barnstable will be seekingmiddotthe

first champlons~ip of the Caigte-The Swansea youth was also making pluralism serve GJflsts

gtvelf1theStudenf-Athletel)pound the reconcilifig roessage totIi~-ivorld way league when it opposes Den- Year Award which exerrtplifies arid with all educatiori81 agEmshy

nis-Yarmouth at field Also next

the regionals MondayFalshy

gdod sI1ortsmanshiI1 on and off cies who seek to intr6aucif ob~ec- the playing field andwho by tive courses on religion ihele-

middotmouthlmiddotwjlbeatB6tiffie~middotOld Qlutstanding character is inspira- mentary schoolsmiddot

DEmiddotBROSSmiddot OIL middot0 middot11

J 1 1

~ Heattng Oils ( 1 I

Qndr middotBueoners - 1 11 l rr f

365 NORTH FRONT STREet

N~ BEDFORD 992-5534

Rochester of Mattapoisett at tional to his teammates I I bull bull bull

Dartmouth and Fairhaven at All ~hi~ a~ a fre~hmah ~lus a sUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl11hllllllilllllllllllll1II1 IlJIlIllI1ll1llIllmIllIIllIlIlIlIllIllIllIlIlNIIIIII1III11IlIlIlIllIlIlIlUlIEIII~ Wareham 429 battmg average for coach =

~ I~~u~c~er~a~~~~li~~t~~g~~ _=_-_- ~oombsofn~gr Bb0fl~nton~gre 5 Joun Council National Junior College Atliletic i=_-

PORTLAND (NC)-Five p~r- Association team = r _

==

j~1~ t~rQ~~t~rff~~~~ ~dY S~~=lti6~~~~~~~ ~e~- I L~R ~~ LIYpound~ ~ ~ middoti_sect= Council of Churches at its 28tb fonner for three seasbrls with ~ I anpual meetijIg at Rose Clty Case High his senior year Sack =ZJiIJIIl ~ Imiddot bull sectPark~ethigtdist church here in cllptainEld the baseballteariiInsect M L I =

whom they are knotted in theNarry first place spot Four Narry rivals are closely

bunched behind the leaders but the situation in this competition

Oregon Mrs Maurice B Hodge 1965 he was third arpopg Natrycouncil president said it was a lLeague hitters witll a 368 avershywonderful experience welcom-age led the loop in bits with 21 Jng into the council the Catbolic and had three triple and seven parishes RBIs enroute to a berth on the

_=_-==-=== VNION GWCHIRFe FGAIRnHA VSEN Tel 9979358 ==_=====sect

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bull bull

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$6995

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L ( q ( 6 J

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YOUR CHOICE

$6995

n )) I

middotmiddot bull i~ - middotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ $3495

I I

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imiddot bull ) _ )

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bull~bull

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )

Page 18: 05.04.67

bull bull

~ V

$6995

I bull t ~

~ (

I bull ~ fl bull

L ( q ( 6 J

l bull Df ~~

$6995middot lt

YOUR CHOICE

$6995

n )) I

middotmiddot bull i~ - middotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ $3495

I I

middotmiddot

imiddot bull ) _ )

gt

(

bull~bull

THE ANCHORshy20 Thurs MQY 4 1967

Prese~t Petitions Ope~ b~i1y 9 AM fro]() IPM ~ bull Th~ Furniture Wonderland

For Beatification I~cluding Saturdays lof theE~st

Of Fr Damian VATICAN CITY (NC)--A

petition for beatification of Father Damian De Veuster the apostle of the lepers 5itAmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot7d~ sighed by 32864 leprosy patlents

- ilom 52 countries has been pre- _ rmiddot middot raquoented to Pope Paul VI

Yather Henry SystermaCls SSCC superior general of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts t6 which Father DaluiaR bull ~eI9ilged~ intrl~ufed ~~o po~ ) KR ~ 1H L ER

middot Ia ut Rao~i lfolle~ea4 president I ~ bull shy

4)f the ~nternation~l Mov~ineilt for the Glorification of Father DamianProf Jagadisan secre tary of the Indian Association ~ middotfql-the Struggle Against L~~19sy i ~ ) d c - 11) J gt an anon J J~ N Wal1staluf- bullbull Malta who represented the Church of England The three

ji -pen presented the petition to the ~~ Father Damian (baptized

middot Joseph) born in 1840 at Ttemolo Belgium made his profession as a member ltlithe Congregati6n ltif

the Sacred Hearts at Louvain) in 1860 Hewas ordained in Honoshy

lulu Hawaii i111864 Nine years later in 1873 he volunteemdto serve the lepergt on the islaTd Qf lVIolokaiHe died there ofl~pc()sy 16 years later His remains weremiddot brought backfomiddotBelgium in 1936 The cause for his beatfication has I

been introduced I

The Sacred Hearts Fathers- Imiddot

the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Maly and of the Perpetual Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament-have their provincial house for Eastern United Stat~s in Fllirhave~ (Mass) and staff numerous parishes throughout the Cape

middotCod area

Committee to Study School FinancelS

PHIVADELIHIA (NCi)~Aldil ) bishop John~J KrolliasmiddotdeoHg nated a 14-member=~mmi~tee f middotmiddotmiddotmiddot bull laymfJltp gttU(lythfi~calne~q8 ~ effecting the futuremiddot Of the sec ()ndary scl109lsystem i~~ t11~ Phil adlphia a-hd~ocese bull 11 )middot

T~ecoIrimittcent~ ~ ultI~f iil~ bull ~ ~ chaIrmanship of Raympncl ~E 1 Trainer president of tlie Roller Bearing ComJany of Anlerila has been chargtltd ~it carrying out a full and complete studymiddot in depth of the financial iind

bu~iness structure of the 30 sec oodary schoois in the five-countY area within the archdiocese

The group whose members Illlfere drawn from business banking industry and labor will middotbe expected to carry out a farshyreaching ~view on tl(l ~fiscalmiddot struCture and cmiddotommiddotmitmetltsmiddot of I

the highsc~ools and to ~ecoh-) Igt mend what the future of the ed- bull ucationalsystem should be Membership also includes repteshy

sentatives of large families with Think how little it costs to completely furnish your bedroom with famous low income Rroehlers Cape Cod Shopmiddottodayand see these expensively detailed designs

aU made of solid Maple with a warm Autumn Brown Maple finish soalloped bases heavy oa9tbrass-~inishedpullSJdovetailed and dustproof drawergGov~~~or Prodaims and gently shaped door and drawer fronts Dont wait See these out8taDd~

Catholic Renewam illlg bllYs today while our seleotion AIilI o~mplete BURLINGTON (NC)--Govershy

nor Paul H Hoff of Vermont has plOclaimed the week of June 18 as Catholic Renewal Week in conjunction with the anrlUal meeting of superiors of Catholic Convenient Budget terms religious ~ongregations represhysenting some 35000 plicsts and No Banks or lFinano Brothers

fM C Companlltt To PaJ

FREE DELIVERY

IThe Conference o aJor u- speriors of Men meeting for their bull 10th annual assembly from June New Englands largest Furnituro Showbull 21 to 24 win have Bishops

-------Major Religious Superiors Reshynewal as their theme The conshyference represe~tgt 95 religigtus communities of middotmen in the coun- try I i gt

bull l I bull ~ )