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04.04.68

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Estimates ranged from $90 to gain a tme picture. $125 per pupil. The basis for A Cat hoI ic educati011l Anchor. He is also active in tlie Chris­ tian Family and Cursillo Move­ ments and serves as a CCD High School instructor and Adult Education teacher. Mr. McDonagh resides at 5 m hils schedule and expreu fIOOOunting for school fiiian~ ~ followed: . 2. That a uniform basis foir llehool support be establishedo Turn to Page SeventeeB many youngsters as facilities MQ:-;t Rev. James L. Con­ " '
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McDonagh Lay Dioccesan Official; Consultant and CCD Coordinator The units under the super- the Diocesan Synod, he is edi- MQ:-;t Rev. James L. Con- vision of Mr. McDonagh in- tor of the Diocesan CCD DOlly, Bishop of the Diocese, cluded: Communication Ser- monthly publication, The Pulse M nOll nc e d today the aP7 vices, Printing and ·Duplicating, pointment of Edward P. Me- Office Utilization, Furniture ll>onagh as Lay Coordinator of and Equipment, Records and @be Confraternity of Christian Forms Control, Secretarial and l.\)octrine and business consul- File Units, and Security Oper- for' the Diocese of Fall ations. miNer with offices at 446 High- Additional assignments in- Innd Ave., Fall River. cluded clerical and supervisory Mr. McDonagh, a parishioner training, personnel relations, St. Mary's No. Attleboro, was facilities planning, purchasing, \))om in Brooklyn 36 years ago. publicity and data processing. (l,. 1957 of Fordham His budget responsibility ex- U1!1iversity. New York, with a ceeded one million dollars an- $.5. in Economics, the nually and involved the super- coordinator has also taken vision, through subordinates, of Ilildvancc courses in management 85 persons. n:1 Boston University. During the period of 1957-58, Following graduation from he served as Industrial Secur- fi:he Ncw York Jesuit Univer- ity Specialist for the U. S. Navy. aity, Mr. McDonagh became Vel'Y active in Apostolic Ac- 1Wanager of Office Services at tivities, MI', McDonagh is vice- '1L'exas Instruments Inc., Attle- president of the' Fall River Di- 1\)01'0. with the responsibility of ocesan Confraternity of Chris-' administering the various cen- tian Doctrine, a member of St. M'alized activities serving 500G Mary·s Parish, No. Attleboro, eJmployccs in domestic and in- CCD Board and Parish Council. fu»-national operations. Named a consultant in 1967 for EDWARD P. McDONAGH Pastors' Meeting Sets Financial A Cat hoI ic educati011l OPERATION COSTS some of the cost of maintenance of the school would have to be be available to as Estimates attributed to these activities t(J) many youngsters as facilities Estimates ranged from $90 to gain a tme picture. $125 per pupil. The basis for win allow - even to those FIN ANCIAL MEANS computing costs varied greatly, saiJlose parishes have no school however. Some pastors did not Difference <>=-and the base of support of catholic education must be include costs that others did There is a great difference bl'Oadened so that individual! inclUde. among parishes, embarrassing parishes will not be burdened Books to some pastors, in that some unduly. The present system parish schools charge tuition while These were the general aims books and annual reports- neighboring schools do not •. @f the Diocesan School Board though they are accurate finan- Range Financial Committee which met cial records - does not ade- No tuition: 7 schools 'ltfith the pastors of the Diocese quately isolate school costs nor $10-$30 tuition: 18 schools parishes staff schools. break, them down into mean- '17 schools $40-$50 tuition: ingful categories. The committee, composed o€ OVel" $50 tuition: 10 schools Monsignors Alfred Gendreau Maintenance Non-parish Children lIIItd George Sullivan, Judge The school is a parish facll- All 'pay some tuition ranging !Beatrice Mullaney, Dr. Clem- 14y, used for many other activi- from $10 to $125 per student. Mt Maxwell and Mr. John AnQ . ties (C.C.D., c.Y.e., adult :edu- Very few do charge a tuition bya, made the following. rec- cation, organizations, etc.). and Turn to Page SeventeeB " 1. That a uniform system fIOOOunting for school followed: . 2. That a uniform basis foir llehool support be establishedo 3. That par Ish es .ools· subsidize the Catholi@ of their children: 4. That' all the parishes «t« Ole Diocese help finance th@ aducation of poor children; 5. That the laity be more !Ill)oo It>>lved; 6. That the Diocese fonn fi range .plan for educatiOllt the Diocese. Among the findings of tllI1::J were: 'riests' Meeting Area meetings open to all priests are scheduled for 2:3. MondaY afternoon, April !J Bishop Cassidy Hi IJ lIi 5chool, Taunton lUld Toes- day afternoon, April D ai' Bishop Stang mgh School, N<o. Dartmouth. ·l&ach priest may ohoose more convenient day to m hils schedule and expreu 1I41ls views on the proposeil by tb6 Diocesan S4lhco!l ' PALM SUNDAY lfS SECOND SUNDAY IN PASSIONTIDE Wiot'h and pltlms,. the· multitudes meet the Redeemer, giving honor to the trium- jgllma.R1J!s as nations "iliibter the praises of the Son of God, their voices thundering thnl''lgh I;M:&se of 0hristg Hosanna. NC Photo. and ceo columnist for The Anchor. He is also active in tlie Chris- tian Family and Cursillo Move- ments and serves as a CCD High School instructor and Adult Education teacher. Mr. McDonagh resides at 5 Hunting Street, No. Attlebore with his wife, the former Cath- erine Corcoran, and their seven children. The children are: Patricia, 11; Dolores, 10; Vir- ginia, nine; Barbara, seven. Thomas, six; Catherine, five; .. and Richard, three. The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 4, 1968 Vol. 12, No. ]4 @ 1968 The Anchor Agency to Drop Criticized South Viet Aid Program NEW YORK (NC)-Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director, said here plans are underway by which Oatholic Relief Services, overseas relief agelicy of U.S. Gatholios, will'be able to wi,thdraw from the oontroversIal emergency suppleinentary . f-ood program for families get of criticism certain ele- and dependents .of Popular ments in this country, including in South Vietnam. Catholic publications, which Forces claimed the progmm amounted The bishop said that accord- to aiding the Vietnam war ef- ing to present plans, CRS will fort, while the Catholic agency be able to discontinue the pro- failed to provide relief for the gram by June 30. needy in North Vietnam. The relief program for· the Some Cahtolic groups and families and dependents of the publications advocated that U. S. Vietnamesef<lrce was instituted Catholics discontiriue contribu- about two years ago, after the tions to CRS and, instead, con- South Vietnamese government tribute to Caritas Intemation- failed to provide a pay raise for alis,. international Catholic char- the militia-type organization. ities organization in Rome, The program became the tar- which is giving aid to North Vietnam. . The CRS disclosure said new factors wili make it possible to devote more of the agency's supplies and energies to alle- viating the plight of the con- stantly mounting numbers of refugees in South Vietnam. One factor, CRS stated, is a recent decision of the South Vietnamese government to pro- vide a rice allowance for the families invoived, which is ex- pected to be instituted in June when a census of dependents is completed. Another factor, "agreed by all concerned," CRS stated, is II plan of. supplementary food and other necessary aid to be han- dled entirely by the appropriate military authorities. This will Turn to Page Fourteen Papal Honors The investiture of tale Dew Domestic Prelates and the bestowing of Papal Honors will take place OD Monday evening, April 15, at 8 P.M. ill St. Mary'S Cathedral, ]Fann River, with Most Rev. James L. COD- noUny, D.D.• Bishop of Faii nUveJr, JllresicJliDB.
Transcript
Page 1: 04.04.68

McDonagh Lay Dioccesan Official

Consultant and CCD Coordinator The units under the supershy the Diocesan Synod he is edishyMQ-t Rev James L Conshy

vision of Mr McDonagh inshy tor of the Diocesan CCDDOlly Bishop of the Diocese cluded Communication Sershy monthly publication The Pulse M nOll n c e d today the aP7 vices Printing and middotDuplicatingpointment of Edward P Meshy Office Utilization Furniture llgtonagh as Lay Coordinator of and Equipment Records and be Confraternity of Christian Forms Control Secretarial and l)octrine and business consulshy File Units and Security Opershy~t for the Diocese of Fall ations miNer with offices at 446 Highshy Additional assignments inshyInnd Ave Fall River cluded clerical and supervisory

Mr McDonagh a parishioner training personnel relations ~ St Marys No Attleboro was facilities planning purchasing ))om in Brooklyn 36 years ago publicity and data processing (l 1957 ~Iaduate of Fordham His budget responsibility exshyU11iversity New York with a ceeded one million dollars anshy$5 de~rec in Economics the nually and involved the supershy~w coordinator has also taken vision through subordinates of Ilildvancc courses in management 85 persons n1 Boston University During the period of 1957-58

Following graduation from he served as Industrial Securshyfihe Ncw York Jesuit Univershy ity Specialist for the U S Navy aity Mr McDonagh became VelY active in Apostolic Acshy1Wanager of Office Services at tivities MI McDonagh is viceshy1Lexas Instruments Inc Attleshy president of the Fall River Dishy1)010 with the responsibility of ocesan Confraternity of Chris- administering the various censhy tian Doctrine a member of St Malized activities serving 500G Marymiddots Parish No Attleboro eJmployccs in domestic and inshy CCD Board and Parish Council furaquo-national operations Named a consultant in 1967 for EDWARD P McDONAGH

Pastors Meeting Sets Financial Sugg~stions

A Cat hoI i c educati011l OPERATION COSTS some of the cost of maintenance of the school would have to be~wllld be available to as Estimates attributed to these activities t(J)many youngsters as facilities Estimates ranged from $90 to gain a tme picture$125 per pupil The basis forwin allow - even to those FINANCIAL MEANScomputing costs varied greatlysaiJlose parishes have no school

however Some pastors did not Differenceltgt=-and the base of support of catholic education must be include costs that others did There is a great difference blOadened so that individual inclUde among parishes embarrassing parishes will not be burdened Books to some pastors in that some unduly The present system ~f parish schools charge tuition while

These were the general aims books and annual reportsshy neighboring schools do notbull f the Diocesan School Board though they are accurate finanshy Range Financial Committee which met cial records - does not adeshy No tuition 7 schools ltfith the pastors of the Diocese quately isolate school costs nor $10-$30 tuition 18 schools ~ose parishes staff schools break them down into meanshy 17 schools$40-$50 tuition

ingful categoriesThe committee composed oeuro OVel $50 tuition 10 schools Monsignors Alfred Gendreau Maintenance Non-parish Children lIIItd George Sullivan Judge The school is a parish facll shy All pay some tuition ranging Beatrice Mullaney Dr Clemshy 14y used for many other activishy from $10 to $125 per student Mt Maxwell and Mr John AnQ ties (CCD cYe adult edushy Very few do charge a tuition bya made the following recshy cation organizations etc) and Turn to Page SeventeeB ~mendations

1 That a uniform system 0laquo fIOOOunting for school fiiian~ ~ followed

2 That a uniform basis foir llehool support be establishedo

3 That par Ish es withou~ oolsmiddot subsidize the Catholi ~ucation of their children

4 That all the parishes laquotlaquo Ole Diocese help finance th aducation of poor children

5 That the laity be more Ill)oo Itgtgtlved

6 That the Diocese fonn fi ~ng range plan for educatiOllt ~ithin the Diocese

Among the findings of tllI1J ~mmittee were

riests Meeting Area meetings open to all

priests are scheduled for 23 MondaY afternoon April J ~t Bishop Cassidy Hi IJ lIi 5chool Taunton lUld Toesshyday afternoon April D ai Bishop Stang mgh School Nlto Dartmouth

middotlampach priest may ohoose ~e more convenient day to m hils schedule and expreu 1I41ls views on the proposeil ~~ by tb6 Diocesan S4lhcol ~1l4llo

PALM SUNDAY lfS SECOND SUNDAY IN PASSIONTIDE Wioth ~ellS and pltlms themiddot multitudes meet the Redeemer giving honor to the triumshyjgllmaR1Js ~ as nations iliibter the praises of the Son of God their voices thundering

thnllgh ~~ bull IMampse of 0hristg Hosanna NC Photo

and ceo columnist for The Anchor

He is also active in tlie Chrisshytian Family and Cursillo Moveshyments and serves as a CCD High School instructor and Adult Education teacher

Mr McDonagh resides at 5

Hunting Street No Attlebore with his wife the former Cathshyerine Corcoran and their seven children The children are Patricia 11 Dolores 10 Virshyginia nine Barbara seven Thomas six Catherine five

and Richard three

The ANCHOR

Fall River Mass Thursday April 4 1968 Vol 12 No ]4 1968 The Anchor $400P~~~

Agency to Drop Criticized South Viet Aid Program

NEW YORK (NC)-Bishop Edward E Swanstrom executive director said here plans are underway by which Oatholic Relief Services overseas relief agelicy of US Gatholios willbe able to withdraw from the oontroversIal emergency suppleinentary f-ood program for families get of criticism b~ certain eleshyand dependents of Popular ments in this country including

in South Vietnam Catholic publications whichForces claimed the progmm amounted The bishop said that accord- to aiding the Vietnam war efshy

ing to present plans CRS will fort while the Catholic agency be able to discontinue the pro- failed to provide relief for the gram by June 30 needy in North Vietnam

The relief program formiddot the Some Cahtolic groups and families and dependents of the publications advocated that U S Vietnamesefltlrce was instituted Catholics discontiriue contribushyabout two years ago after the tions to CRS and instead conshySouth Vietnamese government tribute to Caritas Intemationshyfailed to provide a pay raise for alis international Catholic charshythe militia-type organization ities organization in Rome

The program became the tar- which is giving aid to North Vietnam

The CRS disclosure said new factors wili make it possible to devote more of the agencys supplies and energies to alleshyviating the plight of the conshystantly mounting numbers of refugees in South Vietnam

One factor CRS stated is a recent decision of the South Vietnamese government to proshyvide a rice allowance for the families invoived which is exshypected to be instituted in June when a census of dependents is completed

Another factor agreed by all concerned CRS stated is II plan of supplementary food and other necessary aid to be hanshydled entirely by the appropriate military authorities This will

Turn to Page Fourteen

Papal Honors The investiture of tale

Dew Domestic Prelates and the bestowing of Papal Honors will take place OD Monday evening April 15 at 8 PM ill St MaryS Cathedral ]Fann River with Most Rev James L CODshynoUny DDbull Bishop of Faii nUveJr JllresicJliDB

I

shy

()~O GuideUnesmiddot Endbrse WorkshyOf~ Churches -in Powlterrty War-

WASHINGTON (NC) - The role churches and church-related agencies canmiddot play in the war on poverty is endorsed and more strongly than ever in guideshylines which have just been issued fon impleIilentingl967 amend ments to the Economic Opporshytunity Act

Previous OEO guidelines fOr COmmunity Action programs statedmiddot that tpe delegaHonmiddot ofmiddot an actiVity to a churcH-related

middotagency~ rather middotthanmiddot to a public or non-sectarian agency had to bejilstified by evidence that use

of the church-relat~d organizashy tion would meet middot2middot need which

middotcOuld not be staisfied economishycally and efficiently by avail shyable alternatives Despitethis qualification OEO was able to approve numerous anti-poverty programs for spon-middot sorship by cliurch-related-organshyizations

Under the_ new OEO- guides to policies procedbres and timeshytables not only are contracts with church and ctiureh-related agencies encouraged) out it- is stipulated1 thatt no community aotion agency mily be named] if Ifor some reason it is unable to contract witti~ chureh-rela~dlor ganizations andl others

Between the initial enactment of tHe Economic OpporfunitY ~ Act in~ 19641 and this year OEO recognizoomore than rOOlrcom mimity action agencies (CAA)

Late in 1967 Congress amendshyoed the laW1 to give state local and tribal offiCialS the choice ST PATTT (N)_ NI POOlmiddot-tlu n

as to which agency should be founded aneL operared by a designared as- the communitY CatholiC priest andt a Rresby-middot action agency fbI the communi terian ministerr to relieve inner ty OEO must approve theselec- city tensionsgt has been taken Uon bW recognizingmiddot the- agency _over By ~he city amp~ OEQl lias issued new guide- Father- Edwardl J Fl8valianl

lines andJ has called upon poll and Rev Johnt SUndiulistl found tical j~sdictions to make sure ea the~ projeet two iearsJ ag~ that they understand the re- just to show it could be done statement tliat Brotn-erCassian quirements of the -law and the Themiddot project will De cattiecc OE0~ poliCies whiCh stem~ fiOm1 on under the~ cityJ~1 education tiiegt law andirecreationprogramsbull middotIG1oWilI

OEO has made it Kinowll ~ as Projectt Summer We rem diaL reading and recreationmiddot middotpro gramhas beam aided by We United Fund organizatiolEmiddot andbull

FRIDAY -Friday of RassioD private sources atia costtofsome Week m middotClass Violet $3~~lermemiddot~ told ci~ edtl

b middot 1 SATURDAY--Saturday- or Pas- cation antF recreltlt1onpfficialS

sion Week IlL Class Violettliey woula be unaole to con tihue the pro~am imieSs tlie

SUNDAyen-Plllm S~~ay ~ee city ~~edmiddot its r~spomibili~ ond- Sunday of Pa5Slontide I

~i ~~~a~l~fo~~ MQNDAY- Monday off Holy

Week L Class Violet -

TUESDAY - TueSday of Holy Week Reading ofmiddot Passion 1 Class Violet shy

WEDNESD1Yi~ Wednesday of Holy Week lteading- of PaSshysiOl1 I Class Violett

THURsDAY--Holymiddot Thursday l Class White Mass Proper Glory Preface of Holy) Cross

-

FORTY HOURS DVOTftON

April 7~ul Lady of the Immaculate Concep-shytion tall River

StBoniface New Bedshyford

April 21~t Paul Taunton St Iohn the Baptist Fall

River

ruE AtIlCHOft

middot SelndmiddotClass Postage Paid at~Fan Riiler1Mass Published every ThUrsdayat 41u Highlallll Ailenue filII River MasS 02722 bf the catholil Press-of tbe_Dioces~of Fall RIven Silbscription price bYi llI8it llIlStPa1d

~-IIU

before it will recognize a comshymunity action agency the CAA

must have legal authority unshyder statemiddot and local lawmiddot to do several specific things including authority to contract with and delegate to public or privat~ 01shy

ganizations (including religious organizations) the operation of programs

Legaily ~~limired

At another point the guide lines empnasize the ~iparticular

iniportance of the middotattorneys certification of an application for reCognition by a stateIoCal government or public agency as a new community action agency in view of the widely diltffering legal requirements and limitashytions applicable to state and 10- cal governments throughout the lTnited States

To be- recognized as a CAA a state local governmentcor public agency must not be legaliy lim-shyited in its ability to contract wilh a chulclirelatedl organishyzation as al delegatedmiddot agency

At another place the guideshylines state that OfJiicials 01 members of business industry latior religious edUoation signishyficant minority groups and other major private groups andinter- ests in the~ communit~ are among thosecwho should be membersl of~ me boardS of eoDl mWlity action agencies

St Yaur Tol(es Over ID ISrr-roJectmiddot ummer

bullbull ~~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull-

Priests~ Senate The Priests Senate of the Dl-shy

ocese will meet at 130 Fiiaay afternoon April 5 atmiddot the Catholic Memorial Home in FaIT River

Necrology APRILn

RevJohn Tobin 1909 Assist ant St Patrick Fall River

APRIL 14 Re~~ Loui~N Dequoy 1935

PastOr- Sacred Heart North Attleboro

APRIL-IS R~v Cllristopher G Hughes

DD 1908 Rector Cathedral Fan River shy

- - A)lPRIL 16

Rev Arthur E Langlois 1928 on sick leave- Denver Colorado

AJlraquoRlIlL_ 18 Rev Hugh B Harrold 1935

Pastor St -Mary lVIansfieIdI Rt~ Rev-Johnmiddot F middotMcKeon

PR 1956 Pasfur St IawreDCe NewtBeMOrdl - ___ I ~~

was not dismissedas was genshyerally reportedt in the national press Here _ as head off SU SWithins Approved Schooll foJ juvenile dtillilquents at YaI-o

mouth Isle of Wighq offsoutli middot ern England

F-urthermore he will not be excluded from COnsideration for any furthen stich appointment he maYlse~in the~ futUre shy

Brother euro8ssian461 wJsmiddotnor- mall~ duel to retire as headl of St Swithinls next June

si~e~~la~en~li~~~~~~~ school for 21 years when-after aninq~ry-intoallegations made by a former teaclier of brutalitY inmiddot caning boys Gallaghan rec omniended in January that _the interests of the school and of the boys would be best served if the headmaster whose term of office was due to end June 1968 should anticipate this by taking at once his accumulated leave J

Well Managed School Tlie inquiry had found that

on two occasions middotmiddotBrother Casshysian had caned- boys with exshycessive severity although the numbermiddot of strokes permitted und-er approved school rules was not exceeded

The sch901 was found to be

ijJeleJeIDlJCW Je ~n nn nRM fD Dn tblftrU~lpound U lpoundo ~1W1blB fJ [JB~

IFnU1JIU-11cmU [j]1J1JlUamp

gt t~lt ~

550 LocristStre0t ) ~1ll1)bers witness to Christ iJ1 II Iiniillw missioll--- I propagiltlOn 01 t~e printed Wont of God The

hlll lIUver MaSs I Sisters write illustrate prinf and bindtheir Dwn

- publications and diffuse them among people oft - 672~2391 I all creeds raCes and cultures Young girls 14-23 J ROse ESianiVaD -I interesteil in~mS MlJ~i~susiomIOay write to~

_ Imiddot _ ( -u ~R shyA_eff_t$_-_amp__S_uW_vaJl_~ 50j-oSt1 iwl1s- ~ 1Iass 02J~lr

Louisiana CEF Asks middotPupil Aid

NEW ORLEANS (NChmiddotTbe Louisiana Federation ofmiddot CitzeDII for Educational Freedom has announced it will ask the sta~

legislaturemiddot for tuition suppleshyments for non-public schoal stbdents

The supplements eEE saicij would be provided for the teaching of secular subjects such as history English matbeshy

matics foreign languages and sciences

Under the proposal elemenshytary school pupils would reshyceIve $25 per secular suqjectmiddot up to a maximum of $100 ~or the

school Year High school stushyf dents would receive $40 per SepoundgtshyI ular subject middottip to a maximum - of $160

GREEIINGS~FROlpoundORmHODOXgt Archbisliop Iakov08l oft the Gi1eelpound Orthodox Ohunill~ of North and South AmeriCa brougnt gIleetings and congratufafrons to Arclibishopeleet_ Terence J Coole~ of New York middoton Dehalpound 00 both himselfi and the~ ECumeniCal Fatrlaroli1 AJllienagoraamp 1 of COnstanti nOpn~ ~~ Photo~ ~

Revise Statement Home Secretary Clarifies Position

Of Christian Brother LONDON (Neuro)-Acting un-

del local pressure Britains H S t J C 11 ome ecre ary ames a agshyhan has agreed tOl clarifY the position of Brother cassiaDfJ FSC a Christian Brother whose tepn of office as a head master was terminated abruptly follOwihg- am~g~tions of brutal shyity

Callaghan has agreed to a

generall)7 well managed and conducted and it recognized B th C 1 10 er asslan song serVlee andldevotiorototheboys fbrthe pastt 21middot years

THe ruUng aroused considershyable protest Hundreds of fershymer studentsmiddot at the scnoor who have sirice made good thanks largely to) tlie work- and help of Brother Cassian senti him mesmiddot sagJSl of sympatliyr and~ teJemiddot plionedi themSUpport fOr itim to) Stt Switbihs

Both they and- the localpeoplb on the Isle oft Wightmiddot organizedmiddot apetition for his reinstatement

-TJiiswas signedl bymiddotmiddotmnre tI1an1 3000J people~ Inl addition repre sentations were mademiddot to uteshygovernment~by the~ localf man-deg bel of plUliament HL F- Ml WQodnutt

-

B~OOKUWN iqjt-E~AIJ HOME~ INC~ I

R Marcel Roy - G lorrallie Rci1 ROger taFmnce

fUNERAL DIRECTOR$ 15 Irvington Ct New Bedford

995-5166

OIROURKE Funeral Home

511 Second Street Fan River Mass

679-6072 MICHAEL J McMAHON

licensed Funeral Director Regjst~red Embalmer ~

DAUGHTERS OF ST PAUL~ombine a life of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Mes

sage to souls everywhere by meansmiddot of personal contact Pauline Missionarieslabor in 30 Nationsmiddot -

TaxPayer Saving ~ Even if-every child irinomshy

public schools received the maximum amount said Emilill Comar Louisiana CEF execushytive director the supplementsmiddot would total only $165 million forthe 196869 school year This represents 21 per cent of tHe $775- million tHatmiddot non-publle

school parents save Louisiano taxpayers annuaJ1t

The continued operationmiddot ~1 these sc1ioolk wIll result in In

tQX savings of more than )miIllim to LouiSiana citizens even when the $U5 million il provided to students

We believe tliatmiddot such a COli-gt

tribution must be recognizeci aJld thatmiddot the IegtBlat1lre mWlfl find meansmiddot of- assisting t~e papomiddot ents who pay taxes for publle education and at the same time BllPport the nompublia sch901s~

eomar said

He Puhiication AIJ3ANY (-NC~~larity Pubshy

lishing Inc Catholic publishshying firm here in New York middothas announceltf it willi launch a new monthly publication CroSIJiP winds beginning May 1 The new publicationwiU become part of Crux Information Sell shyviCe puolisned by Clarity fOr priestS Religfous and profeampshysional lay people 1Jl the 0 S and abroad

)~ D SullivanI Scms

I FUNERALmiddot HOME 469 LOCU$T STREET~

bull ~ - l ~~t

I FALlmiddot RIVER~ MAS5 672-33al~ 1 _ ~ bull

Wilfred c James] 1 l)ri~coIlJ Sullivan m

Igt HYANNIS o HARWICH POR o SqUHYARMOUTH

~m middotmiddotmiddotmiddot-middotmiddotmiddotmiddot ~I II

~ ~

KNIGHTS ATTEND ceD WORKSHOP Participating in a Diocesan ()CD Workshop in New Bedford were Robert Fontaine G K Fall River James W Dowd G K faunion Arnold F Chace DGK Swansea premiddot pare a film strip for classroom explanation Center Honore J VaillanshyQOurt G K Westportmiddot Edward P McDonagh CCD vice-president No

Stresses Council Legion of Mary Reaffirmation

PHILADELPHIA (NC)shy-You are a symbol of the unity of the Church John Cardinal Krol of Philadelshyphia has told Penna Legionaries

~ Mary Addressing 1300 Legionaries

he Cardinal said Today we witness efforts of

4be so-called informal groupsmiddot independent of the ecclesiastic 4l0mmunity and at times dissi shydent to being joined to groups which are presided over by the cauthority of the Church

Some of the informal groups BIlow a great deal of zeal the oardinal continued and some have a great capacity for doing goo~ But regrettably too often there is dissipation o~ effort a waste of talent and too often IIis it result there is engendered ia spirit of resentment of criti-middot

119m of the Churchmiddot or of its Dastors

This Is a source of sadness end grief for us because itmiddot is Bot a question of lack of intershyost-the interest is there It is not a question of lack of zealshythere is zeal unfortunately misshyguided Zeal is like a fire Fire eon trolled is a necessity for life

-Fire uncontrolled is destructive Apostolic zeal to be effective must be consolidated and inteshygrated There must be that right sense of relationship between the single mission and apostolic zeal which Christ gave to His Church

Now there are those he aoted who try to give the im pression that all forms of the lay apostolate including such groups as the Legion of Mary Were labeled out of date by the Vatican Council in the aggior-middot namento Be confident of the fact that your Legion of Mary

Diocesan Knights ofColumbus Attend One Day CCD Training Program

Knights of the diocese inaugurated a new crusade Saturday-getting Catholic men involved in the word of the church Occasion was a first in the state a Knights of Columbus conference to introduce meIVbers to the work of the Confraternity of Chrisshytian Doctrine and to the need for mens involvement in the various phases of the CCD

Approximately 60 Knightsand 25 CCD members attendshyed the all-day session at

Knights of Columbus Hall in New Bedford The program was arranged by the diocesan Knights in cooperation with the executive board of the Diocesan CCD

Manuel S White Jr of Falshymouth Knights of Columbus chairman for the diocese and a member of the Diocesan Board of the CCD said the

group represented twenty-two Knights of Columbus councils

vice programs White added He said general agreement had been reached on the need for programs touching on the drug problem and sex informiltion

He said the Knights also would seek greater communishycation with such fraternal orshyganizations as the Masons We envision joint meetings joint discussion of community probshylems and hopefully joint acshytion on the problems that arise

Although declining to be speshycific White said discussions had revealed there definitely ismiddot a

in the diocese and clerical andmiddot drug problem in certain areas lay observers from the Archdishyocese of Boston Worcester and Springfield

He said it is the first of a statewide series af programs scheduled to be initiated by each of the more than 200 councils in Massachusettsmiddot

Rev William Wmiddot Norton of St Kilians Church New Bedshyford opened the workshop with a Bible service Speakers inshyeluded Rev Joseph L Powers of Attleboro diocesan CCD dishyrector and Edward McDonough also of Attleboro

Following the general session the group divided into small groups for the give and take discussions on contemporary isshysues that included community living the image of the church the image of fraternal organishyzations

We talked about such things as the image of the church through the eyes of a teenager how to adapt to the needs of the

is a worldwide permanently teenager the need of adult edshyassembled association of very ucaWon and the s~cific need faithful lait3 middotwho are ready to for Catholic men to become inshylterve all the needs ofmiddot the volved in the work of the Church The Council farmiddot church White said

of the diocese We recognize the need to address ourselves to some solution

The group also dwelt at length on themiddot problems of adult education We recognized our approacqes to young peaple haVe to change if we are to reach them White said particshyularly in fields like sex educashytion There we have to change ~he adults first

A standing committee of K of C district deputies of the diocese will meet from time to time with the CCD executive board to try to develop positive plans

We intend to have some proshygrams going within three to four months-definitely by the time school reopens in the Fall

Honor Sociologist WASHINGTON (NC)-Dailiel

Patrick Moynihan author of The Negro Family The Case for National Action better known as the Moynihan Report of 1965middot will be awarded an honorary doctorate of laws at

the 50th anniversary convocashytion of themiddot National Catholic

from outdating reaffirms such We feel that we aremiddot unique-School of Social Service at wganizations as the Legion of ly equippedas an organizathm Catholic University here April

Attleboro Ellis ~ Johnson District Dep4ty Hyannis scan a magazine from the students reading rack Right John F Sullivan seated genshyeral chairman from No Grafton Robert B Kennedy Buzzards Bay Walshyter J Chase G K of McMahon Councilmiddot of New Bedford who hosted the affair study the days program

A repeat workshop probabshyly to be held in New Bedford also is scheduled within the next few months he said

Meanwhile the knights who inaugurated their campaign last week are going to be talking and planning

Archbishop Starts Charity Program

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshybishop Philip M Hannan of New Orleans has launched a new program to bring all Catholics into more direct charity and service work in the archdiocese Themiddotprogram-The Service ofmiddot

Charity in the Age of Renewall - is intended to expand and supplement services now offered by such agencies as the St Vinshycent de Paul Society and Catholic Charities which have been limited in their effectiveshyness by a majority of Catholics an archdiocesan statement said

IDEAL LAUNDRV 373 New ~ston R~d Fall River 678-5677

Ask Greater Aid To High Schools

TORONTO (NC) - Ontarios Catholic parents will launch II

campaign this year to have the prQvincial government support the provinces Catholic higlt schools for the full fi ve years instead of the present two years

At a recent convention of the Federation of Catholic ParentshyTeachers Associations here delshy

middot egates passed six resolutions asking for extension of the taxshysupported Catholic school sysshytem up to grade 13-senior mashytriculation (year)

Msgr V M Harrigan of Hamshyilton Ont the federations spirshyitual director sald parents have a right to a Catholic school sysshytem up to grade 13

He quoted from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which says the family is a fundashy

middot mental unit of society and parshymiddot ents have a right to educate their children acclrding to their conshyscience There are more than three million Catholics in Ontario 65 million middotpopulation

JmiddotB I-UMBER CO

So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartr~otith 997-9384 Hyannis 2921

l4ary _~ 9~aa s~c~fic c~nun~it7 8~r- middot29bull ~ ~ _ _

4 THE ANCfiOR--Dioc~se of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

The Parish Parade ST JOHN BAPTIST OUR LADY OF ANGELS CENTRAL VILLAGE FALL RIVER

Easter holy water bottles willThe Ladies Guild announces be available Holy Saturdaya rummage sale from 9 to 1 and Easter SundaySaturday morning April 6 in

The Children of Mary anshythe parish hall Mrs Jeanne nounce a penny sale for FridayBibeau is chairman April 26

HOLY NAME Lenten services inc Iud e FALL RIVER Masses at 7 each morning and

4 and 7 in the evening StationsA Christian Living Series Qn of the cross are held at 345 Fri shycurrent events will be held in day afternoons and 645 Fridaythe school hall Tuesday nights eveningsApril 16 23 and 30

Palm Sunday Masses will beA Spring dance sponsored by~ celebrated from 7 to noon onthe Holy Name Society will the hour and at 5 Sunday aftershytake place Friday 1ight April noon Palms will bf blessed at19 at Whites restaurant 7 oclock Mass and there willThe parish council will meet be a solemn blessing arid pro-Thursday night April 18 cession at 11 oclock

ST JOSEPH Parish societies will partici shyFALL RIVER pate in adoration Holy Thursshy

The parish council meets at day night Children of Mary from 8 to 9 CYO 9 to 10 Holy730 tonight

CCD executive board memshy Rosary and Council of Catholic bers will meet in the rectory Women 10 to 11 Holy Name following 930 Mass Sunday 11 to midnight

Solemn liturgical services willmorning April 7 take place at 4 Good FridayA lecture on Parental Apshy

proach to Sex Education will afternoon and Easter Vigil ser vices will be held at 8 Holybe heard at 730 Sunday night Saturday nightApril 28 in the school hall

Speakers will be Dr and Mrs STANTHONY OF PADUAEmile Mohler FALL RIVER ST JEAN BAPTISTE A few seats remain - for a one FALL RIVER day bus trip to New York City

to be sponsored Saturday AprilThe Council of Catholic Women 6 by the Council of Catholicwill hold election of officers at Women Information may be730 Monday night April 8 in obtained from Mrs Mary Silviathe church hall A bunny whist at 674-7528 She announceswill follow the business session that the bus will I e a v e for members and for other at 6 Saturday morning from women of the parish Mrs the church hall on 17th StreetLionel Deschenes is chairman and will leave New York at 9aided by Mrs Leo Patenaude Saturday night Participants

ST FRANCIS ASS lSI will be free to plan their own NEW BEDFORD activities in New YOlk

The League of St Francis will ST GEORGE sponsor a cake sale on Sunday WESTPORT April 28 after the 9 oclock and A whist party will be held at 11 oclock Masses 8 Saturday nigl)t April 6 in

The League presented Conshy the school hall on Route 177 firmation certificates to the with proceeds benefiting the class following the reception school fund Priies will be of the Sacrament on last Sunshy awarded and there will be day special attendance awalds

Oregon Archdio~ese to Support middotTwo Progra~s for Seminarians

PORTLAND (NC)-The Port- student should enroll at Portshyl~d archdiocese has decided to land State College he will have support two seminary programs th~ option of any general major ~an updated program at Mount related to his theologicalstudies

Angel Seminary at the Mount It could be philosophy sociology Angel Benedictine abbey and a psychology history or other of House of Studies at portland the humanities State College here Scholastic philosophy and ad-

After receiving college de- vanced Latin subjects usually grees House of Studies students not taught at non-seminary colshywill go directly to seminaries leges will be offered the semishy

for the remaining four years of narians at PSC at special classes study required for ordination arranged by the House of Stud-

The program is the result of ies 1his will qualify them for two years of study by the arch- admission to most seminary theshy

diocese and has been approved ology courses by the Archdiocesan Vocltltions

Spiritual DirectorCommittee and by the bishops of the Province of Portland Requests for transfers into the which includes the dioceses of House of Studies program fr~m Baker Ore Boise Idaho Hel- traditional seminaries will be o erta Mont and Great Falls handled on an individual basis Mont as well as the Portland Although middotthe House ~f Studies

archdiocese will be under the immediate As developed to date by the guidance of a spiritual director

archdiocese this is how the proshy house rules will be developed gram will be conducted and implemented by studies in

a fraternity-like setting HowshyMajor Optional ever members of the House of

Entrance requirements for Studies will be expeCted to live Mount Angel Seminary as in as ecclesiastical students the past will be set by the Beneshy No hard and fast rules have dictine Fathers Criteria for ac- been drawn up-nor will they ceptance of applications for the be until the students have been House of Studies will be develshy selected and consulted but stushyoped by the archdiocesan semishy dents will participate in mixed nary committee Young men who groups in study and at times wish to study for the priest shy recreation but not on a oneshyhood will be assisted in making to-one basis application to the proper semishy Ten or 15 students are expectshynary by the seminary admissions ed to begin their college courses

committee in the House of Studies program

CONVENT ENTRANCE The gaping hole was blown by attacking Viet Congo Through it they entered the conshyvent and school of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Vinh Long just as the last pelicopter load of Sisters children and guards took off Pacific Stars and Stripes photo by Gerard Forken NC Photo

Je~uit Explains Vatcceunl Relation To Communism

BOSTON (NC) - A Jesuit priest currently helping tc edit the official papers Cllf Pope Pius XII rejected the

idea that the Vatican is openshying to the left in a talk givelli to delegat~ at a Boston College conference on the Vatican and Peace here

-Father Robert A Graham SJ a Californian working afI the Vatican told his audiencea

It is a common error t6 imagine that the Holy Sees opshyposition to the Soviet system iD systematic and a priori datinC from the very first days of the Bolshevik revolution of 1911 Few are aware of the various desperate tries in the first d~cshyade and a half to awaken somiS toleration on the part of the Soviet authoiities They all came to nothing as Soviet inshy

transigence manifested itself1lI

New Warmth

AIl a result of this Father Graham explained the new warmth between the Vatican and the communist countries i8 not so much a Vatican opening to the left as increased comshymunist willingness to d ialogueStrike Settledmiddot with the Holy See

Nevertheless the Jesuit ed Methodist Hospital Recognizes Union tor added there have been some

definite steps taken by theCatholic Institutions Next in Line Vatican to encourage commlP nist response Among these b()

CLEVELAND (NC)-The St no-strike pledge in return for listedLuke (Methodist) Hospitalstrike union recognition some six

The Vaticans willingness tcof more than 10 months was months ago The hospital trusshydiscuss issues that formerlysettled here when hospital trusshy tees then refused were considered closed such aDtees agreed to union recognishy On strike were some 350 nonshyCatholic school subsidiestion and the union agreed to a professional employes

no-strike pledge With settlement of the St Pope John XXIIIs own pershyLuke strike five Catholic hosshy sonal warmth

Wages and other conditions pitals in this area are expected The Vaticans ability to recshysuch as grievance procedures ognize the collapse of the monshyto be next in line in the union are still to be worked out in olithic communist bloc that exshyorganization drivecollective bargaining sessions isted under Stalin and willingshyThe Ohio Catholic HospitalIt also was agreed that unreshy negotiate localAssociation last year had a conshy ness to with solved issues would go to bindshy leadersference devoted to finding waysing arbitration of keeping out unions Summarizes Role

The settlement was announced Get Senates Supportby Carl Stokes Clevelands The growing awareness ~ During the S1 Luke strikefirst Negro mayor after a conshy the Vaticans part that the

Father John J Humenskyference with the unions Joseph worlds social and economieCleveland diocese director ofE Murphy and C Colin Baldshy problems demand worldwidehospitals said that Cathoiicwin president of the hospitals effortS at solutionhospWils (and their employees)board of trustees During his The second Vatican Councilhad no need for unions TheNovember campaign for mayor FatherS deliberate refusal toemployees havent been heardStokes had promised to settle the condemn communism despitefrom y~tstrike the wishes of some 400 of the

The S1 Luke strikers had wide bishops presentThe union Local 47 of ihe support from community leadshy All of these considerations

-Building Service and Maintenshy ers and organizlltions Among coupled with the increased arne workers had offerejl the them were Father Albelt Koshy willingness to dialogue found iJa

kolwsky Clevelands voice of many communist countries the slums and pastor of Our have combined to form what

Chaplain May Lose Lady of Fatima Parish in the some describe as the openinHough Area scene of violent to the left

Use of A~ms Legs riots two years ago SALEM (NC)-Father Walter Support also came from the

Driscoll 40 Navy chaplain serNshyDiocese Senate of Priests headed ing with the Marines in Vietnam by Msgr - William Cosgrove

lose his arms Msgr Cosgrove is pastor of Stmay use of and legs as a result of battle wounds Henry parish wheIe many St his brother disclosed here Luke strikers (most of them

Negro) live Father Richard Driscoll cUIate The Senate of Religious Woshy

Con c e p t ionat Immaculate men representing 41 Sisters church said shrapnel inflicted a communities in this diocese al shysevere injury to the upper part so came to the aid of the strikers of his brothers back and theres with resolutions food and testi shya question whether hell be able mony before a Cleveland City

to have use of his limbs Council committee urging enshy]father Walter Driscoll a lieushy actment of municipal laborshy

tenant commander was injured management law while helpin-g wounded awaiting evacuation from Khe Sanh durshy

bull

bull TELEPHONE 675-7992

454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

GERALD E McNALLY Consfrucl~ori Co~ Inc

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ing mortar fire in the area He was taken to a station hospital I LIVE JUMBO iin Da Nang and will be returneltJ shortly to the United States = =I 89c Ib~ I

Favors Study 10 LBS AND UP TRENTON (NC) -The New I WHILE THEY LAST Jersey General Assembly has

unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a nine-member study commission to examine the states existing laws on abortion and to recommend IUN~~~A~~F~~N T~ 97-351 ichanges If the decision is that the at Portland State next Fall ~111I1II11111111111IIIIIIUlllllllliIlIlIlIIlIIlIllIIlJlJIImmllIIII1UIUIIIIIIII11II11I11IJ1J1II11~

Prelate rn2q~nins

[p~)(~~ rP~oGon

O~ ~~o0o~[Lfi) BOSTON (NC) - Archshy

bishop Igino Cardinale aposshyoolic delegate to Great Britmiddot ~in told an audience here (lhat Pope Paul VI did not mean ~ include conscientious objecshytors in a criticism of pacifists lle made last Dec 8

Addlessing participants in the evening session of a Boston College symposium on the Vatshy~n and Peace Archbishop Carshydinale speaking of the Dec 8 talk said

In the same message Pope Paul distinguishes peace from llJacifism It is obvious that it is not his intention to condemn pacifism as such but particular lIonns of pacifism such as he desclmiddotjbes which encourages citizens to shrink from their etivic responsibilities through oowardice or lack of due conshyoorn

Paul was well aware of what Vatican II had declared with regard to conscientious objecshy~ors that it seems right that laws make humane provisions for the case of those who for reasons of conscience refuse to bear arms provided however ~hey accept some other form of oervice to the human commushyllIlity

Important Pari

The papal message wi4ely repol-ted around the world eaused an uproar when it apshypeared Many felt that Pope Paul had betrayed the spirit of the Second Vatican Councils otatement on conscientious obshyjectors while others used the papal remark as an indication that pacifism could not coexist with Catholicism

Emphasizing his explanation ~ the remark by notifying reshyporters that half-page was one of the most important parts of his 36-page addres~ Archbishop Caldinale pointed out that few men could match Pope Paul in the earnestness of their search iilor peace

Prelate Continues Ban on Festival

JAFFNA (NC)-The bishop of laffna has declared that church

festivals on a tiny Indian Ocean island claimed by both India snd Ceylon will not be resumed until the local government solves the problem of illegal immishy(frants

Bishop Emilianus PilIai OM I said that the St Anthonys festival celebrated annually in March on the Kachativu island bad been suspended officially lor the past three years

The statement was the first Catholic reaction since Ceyshyionese church jurisdiction over the 105OOO-square-yard island located midway between the two eountries was cited in support of Ceylons ownership of it

Missouri See Plans Social Action Unit

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Bishop Charles H Helmsing of Kansas City-St Joseph has named Fashyther Vincent J Lovett pastor of St Stephens church here as chairman of an ad hoc comshymittee to set up a human relashytions or social action department ~r the diocese as called for by the diocesan synod

Father Lovett described his preliminary work as a factshyfinding process to collect inshyformation and ideas on the work of swh a department Other 4M)mmittee members havf not 1Ieen named he iaid

SMAlL UN Almost any Sunday at Regina Pacis Center New Bedford one is apt to meet the makings of a miniature United Nations On a typical Sunday worshippers include from left front Joaquim Desousa Cape Verde Islands Miss Ayaka Miyata Jashypan Rev Coleman Conley SSCC pastor rear Mrs Domingo Lopez and Mrs Amelda Hernandez Puerto Rico Miss Alicia Rodriguez Mexico

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs April 4 1968

sectU[]regS)~regS) ~~~regreg

~~reg OmJ ~01fOreg~ DENVER (NC) - The presishy

dent of Boston College said here Catholic liberal arts colleges must transforlTI themselves inshyto organic participating cells active in the struggle to improve the cities health with all the educational resources at their command

Father Michael P Walsh SJ speaking at Regis College here said this is one of the chalshylenges facing Catholic liberal arts colleges in the nation today The modern Catholic college he asserted has growing awareness of the new challenges facing it

Father Walsh said every school in a modern metropolis must not merely be open to the community in which it lives but each must actively reach out into city life in a genuinely helpshyful way And as it reaches out not only will its relationship to the community change but the nature of the college will change

Father Walsh was the princishyEnthusi(Jt3tlll~Sacred Hearts Father Sparks pal speaker at installation cereshymonies for Father Louis G MatshyActif1)iitiies at Regina Pacis Center tione SJ new president of Regis College

The Rev Coleman Conley SSCC helpeq write an Enlish language liturgy for use bv mi~sionaries before he left Japan five months ago The first time it was used with Press Continues 20 )nests concdebrating the Mass at Communion time the people were laughing and cr~ring at the same time When we left the altar they stood up and cheered for joy In Toils of Law

To Father Coleman 37 MADRID (NC)-The difficulshyvhill pro ve s the value of His 10 years in Japan were says Thats ~hat they wanted ties of Spanish Catholic publi shyto the enthusiastic priest a decshy Japan is Americanizedblinging Mass to the people cations with the government

ade of happiness in many ways Frequently Father ColemanA native of Belmont the continue unabated in a seemshyHo taught English at the Unishy the only Western within an hournearly six-footer now is direcshy ingly intenninable series of seishy

versity of Ibaraki several days and a half drive would invitetor of Regina Pacis Center in zures and denunciations a week Ibaraki he explains was his Christian and non-ChristianNew Bedford a center estabshy The Bulletin of HOAC theabout a three quarter of an hour neighbors alike to a barbecuelished by the Fall River Diocese national commission of thedrive from his parish in Tsushy He noticed one night that onein HI61 to help adjust a growing Workers Brotherhood of Cathshychiura guest was not eating olic Action has again felt theinflux of Puerto Rican families Tsuchiura itself he adds was Dont you like it Father heavy hand of the governmentt(l thei I new city and new way a city of about 180000 We had asked the man The ministry of Informationof life 40 Catholic families I think it is very good the has confiscated all copies of theToday the neighborl1ood surshy Why the low ratio man replied But I cannot eat latest edition of the Bulletinrounding the Center - which because my heart is fullNot a Package The reason given for thetechnically is part of St James

Because for too many years Mine was too when I heard latest confiscation is delictiveParish-is seeing a new flood that Father Coleman recallshe theorizes missionaries tried material or contents In violashyof newcomers pour in this time He learned another Japaneseto tie Christianity and Western tion of the countrys laws Thefamilies of Portuguese extracshy tradition by mistakeculture together in a package specific material in questiontion And they arent a package He was conducting a Requiem was an article entitled ChrisshyFather Coleman however

He also was principal of a Mass for a parishioner one day tianity and Revolution byemphasizes that regardless of s eve n - teacher kindergarten in a home in a small village Father Jose Maria Gonzaleztheir nationality his new parishshywhere J a pan e s e youngsters After he got the small altar Ruiz of Malagaioners are Americans first He learned English at an astoundshy set up Father explains I wash- The current Spanish pressdoesnmiddott let them or anyone else ing pace ed my hands in a bowl of water law permits the government toforget it

We visitors from the The crowd filling the room confiscate any published mateshyhadSince he took over the Cent~r Embassy one day he recalls had been chattering and laughshy rial that is presumed to be

a month ago its momentum has witti a grin ing When Father finished washshy delictive and subject to judgshy

picked up ment by a courtThe ambassadors wife walkshy ing his hands however and beshyHomeworkSession The government has also cooshyed in and was greeted in Engshy gan the Mass there was dead si shyFather Coleman has establishshy fiscated some editions of thelish by a little girl lenceed tutorial classes for youngshy Juventud Obrera organ of theWelcome and how are you Later a friEnd explained itsters who have completed the Catholic Young Women Workshyshe asked In Japan he said you washnon-English speaking program in ers organization It has alsoFine thank you the ambasshy your hands to get your heartthe ci ty schools and now are seized the latest edition of thesadors wife replied And how readymoving into regular classes shy review He has organized a homeshy are you Eventually Father built a

work session to give neighshy Fine think you we are too small water font in front of the borhood children help with the child answered church Parishioners attending ANTONE S FEND JRThats good said the ambasshy Mass would stop there to wash them the value of education school work and to impress on

DISPENSING Unfortunately Father Coleshy ing by also would stop for a

sadors wife their hands Non-Christians passshyOPTICIAN

man says that wasnt what she hand-washing session His staff is comprised of volshy

Prescriptions was supposed to say so our

un teer teachers including nuns for Eveglonelfrom St Anne School Then they would bow toward

Filledprize student was stymiedHe celebrates MasS at the the church and clap their hands Office HourAt first when English lessonsCenter on Sundays and on Wedshy before continuing on their way

900- 500nesday nights My first Sunshy This says Father is the way excopt Wedbegan he explained we hadda~ there were 23 people Last you learn things Fri Eve lIy Apptjust 10 minutes But they pickedSunday it was up to about 150 5alurday-9-3After 10 years in his Japaneseit up so fast we went to 35He is seeking some kind of a 191 BANK ST COR PURCHASE SImission Father Colemans heartminutes OPP F R TRUST PARKING LOT 618-0412work training program that will is with his Japanese peopleWe used a lot of gimmicksinsule jobs for heads of houseshy

broke it up every few minutes So M~my Thingsholds with songs They could sing 20 Currently however he doesIn between times Father ColeshyAmerican songs when I leftman studies psychology amiddott SMTI not have time to acutely miss DEBROSS OIL

and goes out meeting people At Hot Dogs them because he is too busy the moment hes trying to find To help speed the Englishshy helping his new parishioners co someone with $10000 to repair learning process the mother of There are so many things to a section of wall in the old each kindergarten had to come be done he mutters as he zips Heating Oils building that peeled off a week for an hours English lesson from one project to another with ago once a week so she could conshy an overpowering energy and Burners Being at Regina Pacis is not tinue English at home He has been at Regina Pacis a novelty for Father Coleman The mothers however got only a little more than a month 365 NORTH FRONT STREETRis parish in Japan where he more enjoyment out of Father Already things have changed started in a Quonset hut and Colemans cooking lessons there What will it be like after NEW BEDFORD after 10 years had a new church I built a barbecue pit and he has had a year to straighten

992-5534also was called Queen of Peace- taught them to barbecue hamshy out things 01 Regina Pacis burgers and hot dogs Father Only the Lord knows

6 THE ANCH9R-Dioceseo~ Fall River~ThursApriJ 4 19~

Priests Who Leave The National Association for Pastoral Renewal has

issued a report saying that 228 priests left their priestly work in 1966 and 480 in 1967

Several ~omments may be made on this survey

It is presumed that the report is correct There is no point in bringing this up except for the fact that the Association has not always presented itself in the best light At a Notre Dame meeting a year ago one of its priest-members argued for the removal of celibacy from the priesthood Then it was announced some weeks later that this priest had already been living in a marriage for a year The objectivity of his argUInentation could thus hardly be taken for granted In another case several priests reported to their bishop-one far removed from this locale -that their names had been listed as members of the Asshysociation while in fact they never belonged

But let it be assumed that the report is correct Itmiddot ineaps that less than one~half of one per cent of the na tions priests left their work in 1966 and that slightly more than one-half of one per cent left in 1967 While each priest is an individual and each leaving of the priest shyhood involved personal tragedy and some amount of shock to the community the number of those who leave must always be seen against the background of the vast the

overwhelming majority of those who are doing their work as priests

Further while it is quite possible to understand that an ordained priest might come toa decision to leave his priestly work there are ways this can be done without shock to the people of God for whom there must always be concern Calling a press conference decrying the hardshyheartedness ofmiddot bishops throwing darts of malice at other priests attacking the Church work and age~cies that are being sincerely carried on by others-all this smacks more of the childs kicking down someone elses sand castle than the grave decision of a mature man If a priest feels that he can no longer do the work of the priesthood lie can approach his bishop with this decision - and there is no bishop in the country who would not be made fearful and become helpful confronted with such a decision and such a man Arrangements can be made for the priest to leave his work and an appeal made to the Holy Father for this mans laicization This can all be done with dignity and with due concern for the people of God The tabloid-type treatment can upset people to such a degree that they can begin quesshytioning faith and the basic spiritual values of life Maybe they should not make such an unwarranted jump from one mans action- to their~ own spiritual equanimity but they do And it would bea poor observer o~ human nature who would say otherwise

A priest should not be self-centered even whEm he deshycides to leave or else he becomes unmindful of those whom his action can seriously hurt He should not project his personal problems onto the majority of the priests who stay to d9 Gods work - he should speak for himself alone And he should not as Father Greeley has observed expect to be treated like a folk hero of the American Church He should be treated with the kindness and understanding due a man who feels he has made a mistake in being a priest and wishes to chal1ge his status A problem yes a tragedy many times yes a cause for concern and help by all means yes

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James l Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll - MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J Golden

~fliIl ~~

~ltf~~

IJJCRIMIIArION ANI) SEGIU()Aro TNIUTEN rHG FUrtliE orEYEAY AAfeIMiAN II

N710I CMISfDN OJV CIVIL ()SOU)GRS

the mOOQlnq Rev John F Moore St Josephs Taunton

BA MA MEd

Vocations

09 Som~thing New Lets stop the old idea of recruiting This approach to vocations is archaic Young people

today hear enough about recruitIng from their local doraft board They also have had their fill of the trite and r~

diculous Yet in the field of vocational promotion to the priesthood and the reshyligious life the trite and the ridiculous still seems to excel

No wonder that there is a shortage of vocations

Lets take a couple of ex amples Have you read any of our catholic magazines recently If it wasnt for religious voshycational advertising many of these magazines would not be able to go to press bull bull bull And what ads

In most cases they are tasteshyless and so poorly done that any response to such an advertiseshyment woud be a miracle of the first order In this day and age why do we still encourage such

an attitude tThe idea that we can encourage vocations by~such faded Madison Avenue propashyganda methods boarders on the iidiculou1l American youths are

I bull

not stupid They can see through this retarded approach and view the sponsors of the ads in the light that they deserve

Another rather galling gimshymick is the trip to the semishynary routine This vocational promotion provides entertainshyment for the parish high school altar boys This is the extent of its influence

In s~ch a trip the highlights of seminary life are enthuiasti shycally indicated-such as recrashytion facilities beautiful buildings and sweet smiling seminarians What a picture

The idea of total commitment seems relegated to the locker room the pool table and the uniform In todays church how can we still lead our youth down such a primrose path Yet there are many who still view vocations through such rose colored glasses

Creating Atmosphere for Grace of God

~ Silicide Tendency First Obvious To Clergy

PARAMUS (NC)-Clergy- men may be among the first people to become aware- of suicidal tendencies in others a Baptist minister from New York told clergymen of an faiths at an institute here in New Jersey on clergy attitudes toward suicidal persons

The Rev Harry Warren III of the Richmond Hill Baptist Church said statistics show that 50 per cent of people witli suicidal tendencies consult a minister at some time or other

He said clergymen should b~

alert to such tendencies an(i also urged them to help educate the communnity about the problem Society he said noW tends to shut out people who have attempted suicide just as it shuts out the~ alcoholic the divorcee

Another speaker at the insUshytute held at Bergen Pinee County Hospital here was Dr John H Chilman of St Josephll Hospital Paterson He said that for a person considering suicide the attitude taken by a clergyshyman could mean the differetice between life and death

Dr Chilman a psychiatrist told the priests ministers and rabbis attending the one-day program that they can help the disturbed person by binding him to yourself

Other speakers discussed the behavioral patterns leading up to suicide attempts the legal attitudes toward persons who attempt suicide and the incishydence of suicide among varioUllJ groups

Refuses Request To Say Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) - The archdiocese of Washington has turned down a request from the Catholic Traditionalist Society for a Mass to be celebrated in a Washington church by the societys president Father Gom- mar DePauw

The refusal was made in a letter to William O Collins president of the societys Washshyington chapter from Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington

Bishop Herrmann said that permission was refused because of Father DePauws status Father DePauw has refused orders by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore to return to his archdiocese and accept II pastoral assignment

Bishop Hermann also noted that Masses are celebrated in Latin at three Washington churches The parishes were the only ones of the some 130 in the archdiocese to accept an offer made by Patrick Cardinal OBoyle last Summer to hold bull Latin Mass on Sunday if the parishioners so desired

Form Apostolatemiddot BUFFALO (NC) -Fourtees

inner-city parishes-12 in Bufshyfalo and two in Lackawana

have been incorporated into If we desire mature and sinshy A vocation is a grace 10 be inner-city apostolate middota new

cere candidates for the priest shy accepted or rejected The job of diocesan effort to meet the hood and the religious life our fostering vocations is one of needs of predominantly NegNl approach must be sincere and creating an atmosphere in wbich neighborhoods in the Buff mature The youth of today will the grace of God will be respond- diocese not follow the road of artless middoted to This indeed is a very inshyand juvenile schemes Such tacshy direct and subtle approach if tics they reject and rightly so you will llUt itis constant and life To foster vocations is

When young men and women effective The work of Gods foster the life of the Christian are ready to lend a helping hand ChurclI will be carried out in It is Christ who will have It to their fellow man it is truly the light of Gods grace To so He desires to work througll tragic to see so-called religious take any other view is to miss men In turn men must work leaders consider them as a group completely the entire point through God of idiotic hippies Most priests and religious will In this mutual rapport 1Ibe

We must begin to completely be the first to indicate the en-Church always will have fhepo reconsider the entire approach vironment of theJr persoJlal life herds for the flock and harveAshyto religious vocations was the seed of their vocational ers for the harvest

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

WEAR Shoes That Fit

THE FAMILY SHOE STORE

Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fall River OS 8-5811

I SYSTEMATIC550 year SAViNGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

a INVESTMENT500 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS

a REGULAR450 shy

year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We P~y The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull )ENNISPORT ~ST~RVILLE

~ ~- -

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

11I11111111I1111I11I11111111I11I111I111I111I11I1111I111I11111I11I111111111I11I11I11111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I11I11I11111111111I11I11I111111

lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

r--------------------------- L FIVE CONVENIENT ~FFICES to SERVE YOU ONE~Srop BANKIHG iL middot~FJRSTMACH(ImiddotNI STS

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

LEMIEUX PLUMBING ~ HE~TING iNC

~ Sales andService

for tlomestic and Industrial

Oil Burners 995-1631

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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7

rOffjf1kft(illWltJ1 OWD~ sect sect30copyJ C] sect e MSGRbullJ0HN G NOLAN National SecretaiY

Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

offering CITy STATE__ZIP COOE_

~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

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New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 2: 04.04.68

I

shy

()~O GuideUnesmiddot Endbrse WorkshyOf~ Churches -in Powlterrty War-

WASHINGTON (NC) - The role churches and church-related agencies canmiddot play in the war on poverty is endorsed and more strongly than ever in guideshylines which have just been issued fon impleIilentingl967 amend ments to the Economic Opporshytunity Act

Previous OEO guidelines fOr COmmunity Action programs statedmiddot that tpe delegaHonmiddot ofmiddot an actiVity to a churcH-related

middotagency~ rather middotthanmiddot to a public or non-sectarian agency had to bejilstified by evidence that use

of the church-relat~d organizashy tion would meet middot2middot need which

middotcOuld not be staisfied economishycally and efficiently by avail shyable alternatives Despitethis qualification OEO was able to approve numerous anti-poverty programs for spon-middot sorship by cliurch-related-organshyizations

Under the_ new OEO- guides to policies procedbres and timeshytables not only are contracts with church and ctiureh-related agencies encouraged) out it- is stipulated1 thatt no community aotion agency mily be named] if Ifor some reason it is unable to contract witti~ chureh-rela~dlor ganizations andl others

Between the initial enactment of tHe Economic OpporfunitY ~ Act in~ 19641 and this year OEO recognizoomore than rOOlrcom mimity action agencies (CAA)

Late in 1967 Congress amendshyoed the laW1 to give state local and tribal offiCialS the choice ST PATTT (N)_ NI POOlmiddot-tlu n

as to which agency should be founded aneL operared by a designared as- the communitY CatholiC priest andt a Rresby-middot action agency fbI the communi terian ministerr to relieve inner ty OEO must approve theselec- city tensionsgt has been taken Uon bW recognizingmiddot the- agency _over By ~he city amp~ OEQl lias issued new guide- Father- Edwardl J Fl8valianl

lines andJ has called upon poll and Rev Johnt SUndiulistl found tical j~sdictions to make sure ea the~ projeet two iearsJ ag~ that they understand the re- just to show it could be done statement tliat Brotn-erCassian quirements of the -law and the Themiddot project will De cattiecc OE0~ poliCies whiCh stem~ fiOm1 on under the~ cityJ~1 education tiiegt law andirecreationprogramsbull middotIG1oWilI

OEO has made it Kinowll ~ as Projectt Summer We rem diaL reading and recreationmiddot middotpro gramhas beam aided by We United Fund organizatiolEmiddot andbull

FRIDAY -Friday of RassioD private sources atia costtofsome Week m middotClass Violet $3~~lermemiddot~ told ci~ edtl

b middot 1 SATURDAY--Saturday- or Pas- cation antF recreltlt1onpfficialS

sion Week IlL Class Violettliey woula be unaole to con tihue the pro~am imieSs tlie

SUNDAyen-Plllm S~~ay ~ee city ~~edmiddot its r~spomibili~ ond- Sunday of Pa5Slontide I

~i ~~~a~l~fo~~ MQNDAY- Monday off Holy

Week L Class Violet -

TUESDAY - TueSday of Holy Week Reading ofmiddot Passion 1 Class Violet shy

WEDNESD1Yi~ Wednesday of Holy Week lteading- of PaSshysiOl1 I Class Violett

THURsDAY--Holymiddot Thursday l Class White Mass Proper Glory Preface of Holy) Cross

-

FORTY HOURS DVOTftON

April 7~ul Lady of the Immaculate Concep-shytion tall River

StBoniface New Bedshyford

April 21~t Paul Taunton St Iohn the Baptist Fall

River

ruE AtIlCHOft

middot SelndmiddotClass Postage Paid at~Fan Riiler1Mass Published every ThUrsdayat 41u Highlallll Ailenue filII River MasS 02722 bf the catholil Press-of tbe_Dioces~of Fall RIven Silbscription price bYi llI8it llIlStPa1d

~-IIU

before it will recognize a comshymunity action agency the CAA

must have legal authority unshyder statemiddot and local lawmiddot to do several specific things including authority to contract with and delegate to public or privat~ 01shy

ganizations (including religious organizations) the operation of programs

Legaily ~~limired

At another point the guide lines empnasize the ~iparticular

iniportance of the middotattorneys certification of an application for reCognition by a stateIoCal government or public agency as a new community action agency in view of the widely diltffering legal requirements and limitashytions applicable to state and 10- cal governments throughout the lTnited States

To be- recognized as a CAA a state local governmentcor public agency must not be legaliy lim-shyited in its ability to contract wilh a chulclirelatedl organishyzation as al delegatedmiddot agency

At another place the guideshylines state that OfJiicials 01 members of business industry latior religious edUoation signishyficant minority groups and other major private groups andinter- ests in the~ communit~ are among thosecwho should be membersl of~ me boardS of eoDl mWlity action agencies

St Yaur Tol(es Over ID ISrr-roJectmiddot ummer

bullbull ~~ bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull-

Priests~ Senate The Priests Senate of the Dl-shy

ocese will meet at 130 Fiiaay afternoon April 5 atmiddot the Catholic Memorial Home in FaIT River

Necrology APRILn

RevJohn Tobin 1909 Assist ant St Patrick Fall River

APRIL 14 Re~~ Loui~N Dequoy 1935

PastOr- Sacred Heart North Attleboro

APRIL-IS R~v Cllristopher G Hughes

DD 1908 Rector Cathedral Fan River shy

- - A)lPRIL 16

Rev Arthur E Langlois 1928 on sick leave- Denver Colorado

AJlraquoRlIlL_ 18 Rev Hugh B Harrold 1935

Pastor St -Mary lVIansfieIdI Rt~ Rev-Johnmiddot F middotMcKeon

PR 1956 Pasfur St IawreDCe NewtBeMOrdl - ___ I ~~

was not dismissedas was genshyerally reportedt in the national press Here _ as head off SU SWithins Approved Schooll foJ juvenile dtillilquents at YaI-o

mouth Isle of Wighq offsoutli middot ern England

F-urthermore he will not be excluded from COnsideration for any furthen stich appointment he maYlse~in the~ futUre shy

Brother euro8ssian461 wJsmiddotnor- mall~ duel to retire as headl of St Swithinls next June

si~e~~la~en~li~~~~~~~ school for 21 years when-after aninq~ry-intoallegations made by a former teaclier of brutalitY inmiddot caning boys Gallaghan rec omniended in January that _the interests of the school and of the boys would be best served if the headmaster whose term of office was due to end June 1968 should anticipate this by taking at once his accumulated leave J

Well Managed School Tlie inquiry had found that

on two occasions middotmiddotBrother Casshysian had caned- boys with exshycessive severity although the numbermiddot of strokes permitted und-er approved school rules was not exceeded

The sch901 was found to be

ijJeleJeIDlJCW Je ~n nn nRM fD Dn tblftrU~lpound U lpoundo ~1W1blB fJ [JB~

IFnU1JIU-11cmU [j]1J1JlUamp

gt t~lt ~

550 LocristStre0t ) ~1ll1)bers witness to Christ iJ1 II Iiniillw missioll--- I propagiltlOn 01 t~e printed Wont of God The

hlll lIUver MaSs I Sisters write illustrate prinf and bindtheir Dwn

- publications and diffuse them among people oft - 672~2391 I all creeds raCes and cultures Young girls 14-23 J ROse ESianiVaD -I interesteil in~mS MlJ~i~susiomIOay write to~

_ Imiddot _ ( -u ~R shyA_eff_t$_-_amp__S_uW_vaJl_~ 50j-oSt1 iwl1s- ~ 1Iass 02J~lr

Louisiana CEF Asks middotPupil Aid

NEW ORLEANS (NChmiddotTbe Louisiana Federation ofmiddot CitzeDII for Educational Freedom has announced it will ask the sta~

legislaturemiddot for tuition suppleshyments for non-public schoal stbdents

The supplements eEE saicij would be provided for the teaching of secular subjects such as history English matbeshy

matics foreign languages and sciences

Under the proposal elemenshytary school pupils would reshyceIve $25 per secular suqjectmiddot up to a maximum of $100 ~or the

school Year High school stushyf dents would receive $40 per SepoundgtshyI ular subject middottip to a maximum - of $160

GREEIINGS~FROlpoundORmHODOXgt Archbisliop Iakov08l oft the Gi1eelpound Orthodox Ohunill~ of North and South AmeriCa brougnt gIleetings and congratufafrons to Arclibishopeleet_ Terence J Coole~ of New York middoton Dehalpound 00 both himselfi and the~ ECumeniCal Fatrlaroli1 AJllienagoraamp 1 of COnstanti nOpn~ ~~ Photo~ ~

Revise Statement Home Secretary Clarifies Position

Of Christian Brother LONDON (Neuro)-Acting un-

del local pressure Britains H S t J C 11 ome ecre ary ames a agshyhan has agreed tOl clarifY the position of Brother cassiaDfJ FSC a Christian Brother whose tepn of office as a head master was terminated abruptly follOwihg- am~g~tions of brutal shyity

Callaghan has agreed to a

generall)7 well managed and conducted and it recognized B th C 1 10 er asslan song serVlee andldevotiorototheboys fbrthe pastt 21middot years

THe ruUng aroused considershyable protest Hundreds of fershymer studentsmiddot at the scnoor who have sirice made good thanks largely to) tlie work- and help of Brother Cassian senti him mesmiddot sagJSl of sympatliyr and~ teJemiddot plionedi themSUpport fOr itim to) Stt Switbihs

Both they and- the localpeoplb on the Isle oft Wightmiddot organizedmiddot apetition for his reinstatement

-TJiiswas signedl bymiddotmiddotmnre tI1an1 3000J people~ Inl addition repre sentations were mademiddot to uteshygovernment~by the~ localf man-deg bel of plUliament HL F- Ml WQodnutt

-

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DAUGHTERS OF ST PAUL~ombine a life of prayer and action Bringers of the Gospel Mes

sage to souls everywhere by meansmiddot of personal contact Pauline Missionarieslabor in 30 Nationsmiddot -

TaxPayer Saving ~ Even if-every child irinomshy

public schools received the maximum amount said Emilill Comar Louisiana CEF execushytive director the supplementsmiddot would total only $165 million forthe 196869 school year This represents 21 per cent of tHe $775- million tHatmiddot non-publle

school parents save Louisiano taxpayers annuaJ1t

The continued operationmiddot ~1 these sc1ioolk wIll result in In

tQX savings of more than )miIllim to LouiSiana citizens even when the $U5 million il provided to students

We believe tliatmiddot such a COli-gt

tribution must be recognizeci aJld thatmiddot the IegtBlat1lre mWlfl find meansmiddot of- assisting t~e papomiddot ents who pay taxes for publle education and at the same time BllPport the nompublia sch901s~

eomar said

He Puhiication AIJ3ANY (-NC~~larity Pubshy

lishing Inc Catholic publishshying firm here in New York middothas announceltf it willi launch a new monthly publication CroSIJiP winds beginning May 1 The new publicationwiU become part of Crux Information Sell shyviCe puolisned by Clarity fOr priestS Religfous and profeampshysional lay people 1Jl the 0 S and abroad

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KNIGHTS ATTEND ceD WORKSHOP Participating in a Diocesan ()CD Workshop in New Bedford were Robert Fontaine G K Fall River James W Dowd G K faunion Arnold F Chace DGK Swansea premiddot pare a film strip for classroom explanation Center Honore J VaillanshyQOurt G K Westportmiddot Edward P McDonagh CCD vice-president No

Stresses Council Legion of Mary Reaffirmation

PHILADELPHIA (NC)shy-You are a symbol of the unity of the Church John Cardinal Krol of Philadelshyphia has told Penna Legionaries

~ Mary Addressing 1300 Legionaries

he Cardinal said Today we witness efforts of

4be so-called informal groupsmiddot independent of the ecclesiastic 4l0mmunity and at times dissi shydent to being joined to groups which are presided over by the cauthority of the Church

Some of the informal groups BIlow a great deal of zeal the oardinal continued and some have a great capacity for doing goo~ But regrettably too often there is dissipation o~ effort a waste of talent and too often IIis it result there is engendered ia spirit of resentment of criti-middot

119m of the Churchmiddot or of its Dastors

This Is a source of sadness end grief for us because itmiddot is Bot a question of lack of intershyost-the interest is there It is not a question of lack of zealshythere is zeal unfortunately misshyguided Zeal is like a fire Fire eon trolled is a necessity for life

-Fire uncontrolled is destructive Apostolic zeal to be effective must be consolidated and inteshygrated There must be that right sense of relationship between the single mission and apostolic zeal which Christ gave to His Church

Now there are those he aoted who try to give the im pression that all forms of the lay apostolate including such groups as the Legion of Mary Were labeled out of date by the Vatican Council in the aggior-middot namento Be confident of the fact that your Legion of Mary

Diocesan Knights ofColumbus Attend One Day CCD Training Program

Knights of the diocese inaugurated a new crusade Saturday-getting Catholic men involved in the word of the church Occasion was a first in the state a Knights of Columbus conference to introduce meIVbers to the work of the Confraternity of Chrisshytian Doctrine and to the need for mens involvement in the various phases of the CCD

Approximately 60 Knightsand 25 CCD members attendshyed the all-day session at

Knights of Columbus Hall in New Bedford The program was arranged by the diocesan Knights in cooperation with the executive board of the Diocesan CCD

Manuel S White Jr of Falshymouth Knights of Columbus chairman for the diocese and a member of the Diocesan Board of the CCD said the

group represented twenty-two Knights of Columbus councils

vice programs White added He said general agreement had been reached on the need for programs touching on the drug problem and sex informiltion

He said the Knights also would seek greater communishycation with such fraternal orshyganizations as the Masons We envision joint meetings joint discussion of community probshylems and hopefully joint acshytion on the problems that arise

Although declining to be speshycific White said discussions had revealed there definitely ismiddot a

in the diocese and clerical andmiddot drug problem in certain areas lay observers from the Archdishyocese of Boston Worcester and Springfield

He said it is the first of a statewide series af programs scheduled to be initiated by each of the more than 200 councils in Massachusettsmiddot

Rev William Wmiddot Norton of St Kilians Church New Bedshyford opened the workshop with a Bible service Speakers inshyeluded Rev Joseph L Powers of Attleboro diocesan CCD dishyrector and Edward McDonough also of Attleboro

Following the general session the group divided into small groups for the give and take discussions on contemporary isshysues that included community living the image of the church the image of fraternal organishyzations

We talked about such things as the image of the church through the eyes of a teenager how to adapt to the needs of the

is a worldwide permanently teenager the need of adult edshyassembled association of very ucaWon and the s~cific need faithful lait3 middotwho are ready to for Catholic men to become inshylterve all the needs ofmiddot the volved in the work of the Church The Council farmiddot church White said

of the diocese We recognize the need to address ourselves to some solution

The group also dwelt at length on themiddot problems of adult education We recognized our approacqes to young peaple haVe to change if we are to reach them White said particshyularly in fields like sex educashytion There we have to change ~he adults first

A standing committee of K of C district deputies of the diocese will meet from time to time with the CCD executive board to try to develop positive plans

We intend to have some proshygrams going within three to four months-definitely by the time school reopens in the Fall

Honor Sociologist WASHINGTON (NC)-Dailiel

Patrick Moynihan author of The Negro Family The Case for National Action better known as the Moynihan Report of 1965middot will be awarded an honorary doctorate of laws at

the 50th anniversary convocashytion of themiddot National Catholic

from outdating reaffirms such We feel that we aremiddot unique-School of Social Service at wganizations as the Legion of ly equippedas an organizathm Catholic University here April

Attleboro Ellis ~ Johnson District Dep4ty Hyannis scan a magazine from the students reading rack Right John F Sullivan seated genshyeral chairman from No Grafton Robert B Kennedy Buzzards Bay Walshyter J Chase G K of McMahon Councilmiddot of New Bedford who hosted the affair study the days program

A repeat workshop probabshyly to be held in New Bedford also is scheduled within the next few months he said

Meanwhile the knights who inaugurated their campaign last week are going to be talking and planning

Archbishop Starts Charity Program

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshybishop Philip M Hannan of New Orleans has launched a new program to bring all Catholics into more direct charity and service work in the archdiocese Themiddotprogram-The Service ofmiddot

Charity in the Age of Renewall - is intended to expand and supplement services now offered by such agencies as the St Vinshycent de Paul Society and Catholic Charities which have been limited in their effectiveshyness by a majority of Catholics an archdiocesan statement said

IDEAL LAUNDRV 373 New ~ston R~d Fall River 678-5677

Ask Greater Aid To High Schools

TORONTO (NC) - Ontarios Catholic parents will launch II

campaign this year to have the prQvincial government support the provinces Catholic higlt schools for the full fi ve years instead of the present two years

At a recent convention of the Federation of Catholic ParentshyTeachers Associations here delshy

middot egates passed six resolutions asking for extension of the taxshysupported Catholic school sysshytem up to grade 13-senior mashytriculation (year)

Msgr V M Harrigan of Hamshyilton Ont the federations spirshyitual director sald parents have a right to a Catholic school sysshytem up to grade 13

He quoted from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which says the family is a fundashy

middot mental unit of society and parshymiddot ents have a right to educate their children acclrding to their conshyscience There are more than three million Catholics in Ontario 65 million middotpopulation

JmiddotB I-UMBER CO

So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartr~otith 997-9384 Hyannis 2921

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4 THE ANCfiOR--Dioc~se of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

The Parish Parade ST JOHN BAPTIST OUR LADY OF ANGELS CENTRAL VILLAGE FALL RIVER

Easter holy water bottles willThe Ladies Guild announces be available Holy Saturdaya rummage sale from 9 to 1 and Easter SundaySaturday morning April 6 in

The Children of Mary anshythe parish hall Mrs Jeanne nounce a penny sale for FridayBibeau is chairman April 26

HOLY NAME Lenten services inc Iud e FALL RIVER Masses at 7 each morning and

4 and 7 in the evening StationsA Christian Living Series Qn of the cross are held at 345 Fri shycurrent events will be held in day afternoons and 645 Fridaythe school hall Tuesday nights eveningsApril 16 23 and 30

Palm Sunday Masses will beA Spring dance sponsored by~ celebrated from 7 to noon onthe Holy Name Society will the hour and at 5 Sunday aftershytake place Friday 1ight April noon Palms will bf blessed at19 at Whites restaurant 7 oclock Mass and there willThe parish council will meet be a solemn blessing arid pro-Thursday night April 18 cession at 11 oclock

ST JOSEPH Parish societies will partici shyFALL RIVER pate in adoration Holy Thursshy

The parish council meets at day night Children of Mary from 8 to 9 CYO 9 to 10 Holy730 tonight

CCD executive board memshy Rosary and Council of Catholic bers will meet in the rectory Women 10 to 11 Holy Name following 930 Mass Sunday 11 to midnight

Solemn liturgical services willmorning April 7 take place at 4 Good FridayA lecture on Parental Apshy

proach to Sex Education will afternoon and Easter Vigil ser vices will be held at 8 Holybe heard at 730 Sunday night Saturday nightApril 28 in the school hall

Speakers will be Dr and Mrs STANTHONY OF PADUAEmile Mohler FALL RIVER ST JEAN BAPTISTE A few seats remain - for a one FALL RIVER day bus trip to New York City

to be sponsored Saturday AprilThe Council of Catholic Women 6 by the Council of Catholicwill hold election of officers at Women Information may be730 Monday night April 8 in obtained from Mrs Mary Silviathe church hall A bunny whist at 674-7528 She announceswill follow the business session that the bus will I e a v e for members and for other at 6 Saturday morning from women of the parish Mrs the church hall on 17th StreetLionel Deschenes is chairman and will leave New York at 9aided by Mrs Leo Patenaude Saturday night Participants

ST FRANCIS ASS lSI will be free to plan their own NEW BEDFORD activities in New YOlk

The League of St Francis will ST GEORGE sponsor a cake sale on Sunday WESTPORT April 28 after the 9 oclock and A whist party will be held at 11 oclock Masses 8 Saturday nigl)t April 6 in

The League presented Conshy the school hall on Route 177 firmation certificates to the with proceeds benefiting the class following the reception school fund Priies will be of the Sacrament on last Sunshy awarded and there will be day special attendance awalds

Oregon Archdio~ese to Support middotTwo Progra~s for Seminarians

PORTLAND (NC)-The Port- student should enroll at Portshyl~d archdiocese has decided to land State College he will have support two seminary programs th~ option of any general major ~an updated program at Mount related to his theologicalstudies

Angel Seminary at the Mount It could be philosophy sociology Angel Benedictine abbey and a psychology history or other of House of Studies at portland the humanities State College here Scholastic philosophy and ad-

After receiving college de- vanced Latin subjects usually grees House of Studies students not taught at non-seminary colshywill go directly to seminaries leges will be offered the semishy

for the remaining four years of narians at PSC at special classes study required for ordination arranged by the House of Stud-

The program is the result of ies 1his will qualify them for two years of study by the arch- admission to most seminary theshy

diocese and has been approved ology courses by the Archdiocesan Vocltltions

Spiritual DirectorCommittee and by the bishops of the Province of Portland Requests for transfers into the which includes the dioceses of House of Studies program fr~m Baker Ore Boise Idaho Hel- traditional seminaries will be o erta Mont and Great Falls handled on an individual basis Mont as well as the Portland Although middotthe House ~f Studies

archdiocese will be under the immediate As developed to date by the guidance of a spiritual director

archdiocese this is how the proshy house rules will be developed gram will be conducted and implemented by studies in

a fraternity-like setting HowshyMajor Optional ever members of the House of

Entrance requirements for Studies will be expeCted to live Mount Angel Seminary as in as ecclesiastical students the past will be set by the Beneshy No hard and fast rules have dictine Fathers Criteria for ac- been drawn up-nor will they ceptance of applications for the be until the students have been House of Studies will be develshy selected and consulted but stushyoped by the archdiocesan semishy dents will participate in mixed nary committee Young men who groups in study and at times wish to study for the priest shy recreation but not on a oneshyhood will be assisted in making to-one basis application to the proper semishy Ten or 15 students are expectshynary by the seminary admissions ed to begin their college courses

committee in the House of Studies program

CONVENT ENTRANCE The gaping hole was blown by attacking Viet Congo Through it they entered the conshyvent and school of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Vinh Long just as the last pelicopter load of Sisters children and guards took off Pacific Stars and Stripes photo by Gerard Forken NC Photo

Je~uit Explains Vatcceunl Relation To Communism

BOSTON (NC) - A Jesuit priest currently helping tc edit the official papers Cllf Pope Pius XII rejected the

idea that the Vatican is openshying to the left in a talk givelli to delegat~ at a Boston College conference on the Vatican and Peace here

-Father Robert A Graham SJ a Californian working afI the Vatican told his audiencea

It is a common error t6 imagine that the Holy Sees opshyposition to the Soviet system iD systematic and a priori datinC from the very first days of the Bolshevik revolution of 1911 Few are aware of the various desperate tries in the first d~cshyade and a half to awaken somiS toleration on the part of the Soviet authoiities They all came to nothing as Soviet inshy

transigence manifested itself1lI

New Warmth

AIl a result of this Father Graham explained the new warmth between the Vatican and the communist countries i8 not so much a Vatican opening to the left as increased comshymunist willingness to d ialogueStrike Settledmiddot with the Holy See

Nevertheless the Jesuit ed Methodist Hospital Recognizes Union tor added there have been some

definite steps taken by theCatholic Institutions Next in Line Vatican to encourage commlP nist response Among these b()

CLEVELAND (NC)-The St no-strike pledge in return for listedLuke (Methodist) Hospitalstrike union recognition some six

The Vaticans willingness tcof more than 10 months was months ago The hospital trusshydiscuss issues that formerlysettled here when hospital trusshy tees then refused were considered closed such aDtees agreed to union recognishy On strike were some 350 nonshyCatholic school subsidiestion and the union agreed to a professional employes

no-strike pledge With settlement of the St Pope John XXIIIs own pershyLuke strike five Catholic hosshy sonal warmth

Wages and other conditions pitals in this area are expected The Vaticans ability to recshysuch as grievance procedures ognize the collapse of the monshyto be next in line in the union are still to be worked out in olithic communist bloc that exshyorganization drivecollective bargaining sessions isted under Stalin and willingshyThe Ohio Catholic HospitalIt also was agreed that unreshy negotiate localAssociation last year had a conshy ness to with solved issues would go to bindshy leadersference devoted to finding waysing arbitration of keeping out unions Summarizes Role

The settlement was announced Get Senates Supportby Carl Stokes Clevelands The growing awareness ~ During the S1 Luke strikefirst Negro mayor after a conshy the Vaticans part that the

Father John J Humenskyference with the unions Joseph worlds social and economieCleveland diocese director ofE Murphy and C Colin Baldshy problems demand worldwidehospitals said that Cathoiicwin president of the hospitals effortS at solutionhospWils (and their employees)board of trustees During his The second Vatican Councilhad no need for unions TheNovember campaign for mayor FatherS deliberate refusal toemployees havent been heardStokes had promised to settle the condemn communism despitefrom y~tstrike the wishes of some 400 of the

The S1 Luke strikers had wide bishops presentThe union Local 47 of ihe support from community leadshy All of these considerations

-Building Service and Maintenshy ers and organizlltions Among coupled with the increased arne workers had offerejl the them were Father Albelt Koshy willingness to dialogue found iJa

kolwsky Clevelands voice of many communist countries the slums and pastor of Our have combined to form what

Chaplain May Lose Lady of Fatima Parish in the some describe as the openinHough Area scene of violent to the left

Use of A~ms Legs riots two years ago SALEM (NC)-Father Walter Support also came from the

Driscoll 40 Navy chaplain serNshyDiocese Senate of Priests headed ing with the Marines in Vietnam by Msgr - William Cosgrove

lose his arms Msgr Cosgrove is pastor of Stmay use of and legs as a result of battle wounds Henry parish wheIe many St his brother disclosed here Luke strikers (most of them

Negro) live Father Richard Driscoll cUIate The Senate of Religious Woshy

Con c e p t ionat Immaculate men representing 41 Sisters church said shrapnel inflicted a communities in this diocese al shysevere injury to the upper part so came to the aid of the strikers of his brothers back and theres with resolutions food and testi shya question whether hell be able mony before a Cleveland City

to have use of his limbs Council committee urging enshy]father Walter Driscoll a lieushy actment of municipal laborshy

tenant commander was injured management law while helpin-g wounded awaiting evacuation from Khe Sanh durshy

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454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

GERALD E McNALLY Consfrucl~ori Co~ Inc

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ing mortar fire in the area He was taken to a station hospital I LIVE JUMBO iin Da Nang and will be returneltJ shortly to the United States = =I 89c Ib~ I

Favors Study 10 LBS AND UP TRENTON (NC) -The New I WHILE THEY LAST Jersey General Assembly has

unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a nine-member study commission to examine the states existing laws on abortion and to recommend IUN~~~A~~F~~N T~ 97-351 ichanges If the decision is that the at Portland State next Fall ~111I1II11111111111IIIIIIUlllllllliIlIlIlIIlIIlIllIIlJlJIImmllIIII1UIUIIIIIIII11II11I11IJ1J1II11~

Prelate rn2q~nins

[p~)(~~ rP~oGon

O~ ~~o0o~[Lfi) BOSTON (NC) - Archshy

bishop Igino Cardinale aposshyoolic delegate to Great Britmiddot ~in told an audience here (lhat Pope Paul VI did not mean ~ include conscientious objecshytors in a criticism of pacifists lle made last Dec 8

Addlessing participants in the evening session of a Boston College symposium on the Vatshy~n and Peace Archbishop Carshydinale speaking of the Dec 8 talk said

In the same message Pope Paul distinguishes peace from llJacifism It is obvious that it is not his intention to condemn pacifism as such but particular lIonns of pacifism such as he desclmiddotjbes which encourages citizens to shrink from their etivic responsibilities through oowardice or lack of due conshyoorn

Paul was well aware of what Vatican II had declared with regard to conscientious objecshy~ors that it seems right that laws make humane provisions for the case of those who for reasons of conscience refuse to bear arms provided however ~hey accept some other form of oervice to the human commushyllIlity

Important Pari

The papal message wi4ely repol-ted around the world eaused an uproar when it apshypeared Many felt that Pope Paul had betrayed the spirit of the Second Vatican Councils otatement on conscientious obshyjectors while others used the papal remark as an indication that pacifism could not coexist with Catholicism

Emphasizing his explanation ~ the remark by notifying reshyporters that half-page was one of the most important parts of his 36-page addres~ Archbishop Caldinale pointed out that few men could match Pope Paul in the earnestness of their search iilor peace

Prelate Continues Ban on Festival

JAFFNA (NC)-The bishop of laffna has declared that church

festivals on a tiny Indian Ocean island claimed by both India snd Ceylon will not be resumed until the local government solves the problem of illegal immishy(frants

Bishop Emilianus PilIai OM I said that the St Anthonys festival celebrated annually in March on the Kachativu island bad been suspended officially lor the past three years

The statement was the first Catholic reaction since Ceyshyionese church jurisdiction over the 105OOO-square-yard island located midway between the two eountries was cited in support of Ceylons ownership of it

Missouri See Plans Social Action Unit

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Bishop Charles H Helmsing of Kansas City-St Joseph has named Fashyther Vincent J Lovett pastor of St Stephens church here as chairman of an ad hoc comshymittee to set up a human relashytions or social action department ~r the diocese as called for by the diocesan synod

Father Lovett described his preliminary work as a factshyfinding process to collect inshyformation and ideas on the work of swh a department Other 4M)mmittee members havf not 1Ieen named he iaid

SMAlL UN Almost any Sunday at Regina Pacis Center New Bedford one is apt to meet the makings of a miniature United Nations On a typical Sunday worshippers include from left front Joaquim Desousa Cape Verde Islands Miss Ayaka Miyata Jashypan Rev Coleman Conley SSCC pastor rear Mrs Domingo Lopez and Mrs Amelda Hernandez Puerto Rico Miss Alicia Rodriguez Mexico

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs April 4 1968

sectU[]regS)~regS) ~~~regreg

~~reg OmJ ~01fOreg~ DENVER (NC) - The presishy

dent of Boston College said here Catholic liberal arts colleges must transforlTI themselves inshyto organic participating cells active in the struggle to improve the cities health with all the educational resources at their command

Father Michael P Walsh SJ speaking at Regis College here said this is one of the chalshylenges facing Catholic liberal arts colleges in the nation today The modern Catholic college he asserted has growing awareness of the new challenges facing it

Father Walsh said every school in a modern metropolis must not merely be open to the community in which it lives but each must actively reach out into city life in a genuinely helpshyful way And as it reaches out not only will its relationship to the community change but the nature of the college will change

Father Walsh was the princishyEnthusi(Jt3tlll~Sacred Hearts Father Sparks pal speaker at installation cereshymonies for Father Louis G MatshyActif1)iitiies at Regina Pacis Center tione SJ new president of Regis College

The Rev Coleman Conley SSCC helpeq write an Enlish language liturgy for use bv mi~sionaries before he left Japan five months ago The first time it was used with Press Continues 20 )nests concdebrating the Mass at Communion time the people were laughing and cr~ring at the same time When we left the altar they stood up and cheered for joy In Toils of Law

To Father Coleman 37 MADRID (NC)-The difficulshyvhill pro ve s the value of His 10 years in Japan were says Thats ~hat they wanted ties of Spanish Catholic publi shyto the enthusiastic priest a decshy Japan is Americanizedblinging Mass to the people cations with the government

ade of happiness in many ways Frequently Father ColemanA native of Belmont the continue unabated in a seemshyHo taught English at the Unishy the only Western within an hournearly six-footer now is direcshy ingly intenninable series of seishy

versity of Ibaraki several days and a half drive would invitetor of Regina Pacis Center in zures and denunciations a week Ibaraki he explains was his Christian and non-ChristianNew Bedford a center estabshy The Bulletin of HOAC theabout a three quarter of an hour neighbors alike to a barbecuelished by the Fall River Diocese national commission of thedrive from his parish in Tsushy He noticed one night that onein HI61 to help adjust a growing Workers Brotherhood of Cathshychiura guest was not eating olic Action has again felt theinflux of Puerto Rican families Tsuchiura itself he adds was Dont you like it Father heavy hand of the governmentt(l thei I new city and new way a city of about 180000 We had asked the man The ministry of Informationof life 40 Catholic families I think it is very good the has confiscated all copies of theToday the neighborl1ood surshy Why the low ratio man replied But I cannot eat latest edition of the Bulletinrounding the Center - which because my heart is fullNot a Package The reason given for thetechnically is part of St James

Because for too many years Mine was too when I heard latest confiscation is delictiveParish-is seeing a new flood that Father Coleman recallshe theorizes missionaries tried material or contents In violashyof newcomers pour in this time He learned another Japaneseto tie Christianity and Western tion of the countrys laws Thefamilies of Portuguese extracshy tradition by mistakeculture together in a package specific material in questiontion And they arent a package He was conducting a Requiem was an article entitled ChrisshyFather Coleman however

He also was principal of a Mass for a parishioner one day tianity and Revolution byemphasizes that regardless of s eve n - teacher kindergarten in a home in a small village Father Jose Maria Gonzaleztheir nationality his new parishshywhere J a pan e s e youngsters After he got the small altar Ruiz of Malagaioners are Americans first He learned English at an astoundshy set up Father explains I wash- The current Spanish pressdoesnmiddott let them or anyone else ing pace ed my hands in a bowl of water law permits the government toforget it

We visitors from the The crowd filling the room confiscate any published mateshyhadSince he took over the Cent~r Embassy one day he recalls had been chattering and laughshy rial that is presumed to be

a month ago its momentum has witti a grin ing When Father finished washshy delictive and subject to judgshy

picked up ment by a courtThe ambassadors wife walkshy ing his hands however and beshyHomeworkSession The government has also cooshyed in and was greeted in Engshy gan the Mass there was dead si shyFather Coleman has establishshy fiscated some editions of thelish by a little girl lenceed tutorial classes for youngshy Juventud Obrera organ of theWelcome and how are you Later a friEnd explained itsters who have completed the Catholic Young Women Workshyshe asked In Japan he said you washnon-English speaking program in ers organization It has alsoFine thank you the ambasshy your hands to get your heartthe ci ty schools and now are seized the latest edition of thesadors wife replied And how readymoving into regular classes shy review He has organized a homeshy are you Eventually Father built a

work session to give neighshy Fine think you we are too small water font in front of the borhood children help with the child answered church Parishioners attending ANTONE S FEND JRThats good said the ambasshy Mass would stop there to wash them the value of education school work and to impress on

DISPENSING Unfortunately Father Coleshy ing by also would stop for a

sadors wife their hands Non-Christians passshyOPTICIAN

man says that wasnt what she hand-washing session His staff is comprised of volshy

Prescriptions was supposed to say so our

un teer teachers including nuns for Eveglonelfrom St Anne School Then they would bow toward

Filledprize student was stymiedHe celebrates MasS at the the church and clap their hands Office HourAt first when English lessonsCenter on Sundays and on Wedshy before continuing on their way

900- 500nesday nights My first Sunshy This says Father is the way excopt Wedbegan he explained we hadda~ there were 23 people Last you learn things Fri Eve lIy Apptjust 10 minutes But they pickedSunday it was up to about 150 5alurday-9-3After 10 years in his Japaneseit up so fast we went to 35He is seeking some kind of a 191 BANK ST COR PURCHASE SImission Father Colemans heartminutes OPP F R TRUST PARKING LOT 618-0412work training program that will is with his Japanese peopleWe used a lot of gimmicksinsule jobs for heads of houseshy

broke it up every few minutes So M~my Thingsholds with songs They could sing 20 Currently however he doesIn between times Father ColeshyAmerican songs when I leftman studies psychology amiddott SMTI not have time to acutely miss DEBROSS OIL

and goes out meeting people At Hot Dogs them because he is too busy the moment hes trying to find To help speed the Englishshy helping his new parishioners co someone with $10000 to repair learning process the mother of There are so many things to a section of wall in the old each kindergarten had to come be done he mutters as he zips Heating Oils building that peeled off a week for an hours English lesson from one project to another with ago once a week so she could conshy an overpowering energy and Burners Being at Regina Pacis is not tinue English at home He has been at Regina Pacis a novelty for Father Coleman The mothers however got only a little more than a month 365 NORTH FRONT STREETRis parish in Japan where he more enjoyment out of Father Already things have changed started in a Quonset hut and Colemans cooking lessons there What will it be like after NEW BEDFORD after 10 years had a new church I built a barbecue pit and he has had a year to straighten

992-5534also was called Queen of Peace- taught them to barbecue hamshy out things 01 Regina Pacis burgers and hot dogs Father Only the Lord knows

6 THE ANCH9R-Dioceseo~ Fall River~ThursApriJ 4 19~

Priests Who Leave The National Association for Pastoral Renewal has

issued a report saying that 228 priests left their priestly work in 1966 and 480 in 1967

Several ~omments may be made on this survey

It is presumed that the report is correct There is no point in bringing this up except for the fact that the Association has not always presented itself in the best light At a Notre Dame meeting a year ago one of its priest-members argued for the removal of celibacy from the priesthood Then it was announced some weeks later that this priest had already been living in a marriage for a year The objectivity of his argUInentation could thus hardly be taken for granted In another case several priests reported to their bishop-one far removed from this locale -that their names had been listed as members of the Asshysociation while in fact they never belonged

But let it be assumed that the report is correct Itmiddot ineaps that less than one~half of one per cent of the na tions priests left their work in 1966 and that slightly more than one-half of one per cent left in 1967 While each priest is an individual and each leaving of the priest shyhood involved personal tragedy and some amount of shock to the community the number of those who leave must always be seen against the background of the vast the

overwhelming majority of those who are doing their work as priests

Further while it is quite possible to understand that an ordained priest might come toa decision to leave his priestly work there are ways this can be done without shock to the people of God for whom there must always be concern Calling a press conference decrying the hardshyheartedness ofmiddot bishops throwing darts of malice at other priests attacking the Church work and age~cies that are being sincerely carried on by others-all this smacks more of the childs kicking down someone elses sand castle than the grave decision of a mature man If a priest feels that he can no longer do the work of the priesthood lie can approach his bishop with this decision - and there is no bishop in the country who would not be made fearful and become helpful confronted with such a decision and such a man Arrangements can be made for the priest to leave his work and an appeal made to the Holy Father for this mans laicization This can all be done with dignity and with due concern for the people of God The tabloid-type treatment can upset people to such a degree that they can begin quesshytioning faith and the basic spiritual values of life Maybe they should not make such an unwarranted jump from one mans action- to their~ own spiritual equanimity but they do And it would bea poor observer o~ human nature who would say otherwise

A priest should not be self-centered even whEm he deshycides to leave or else he becomes unmindful of those whom his action can seriously hurt He should not project his personal problems onto the majority of the priests who stay to d9 Gods work - he should speak for himself alone And he should not as Father Greeley has observed expect to be treated like a folk hero of the American Church He should be treated with the kindness and understanding due a man who feels he has made a mistake in being a priest and wishes to chal1ge his status A problem yes a tragedy many times yes a cause for concern and help by all means yes

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James l Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll - MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J Golden

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IJJCRIMIIArION ANI) SEGIU()Aro TNIUTEN rHG FUrtliE orEYEAY AAfeIMiAN II

N710I CMISfDN OJV CIVIL ()SOU)GRS

the mOOQlnq Rev John F Moore St Josephs Taunton

BA MA MEd

Vocations

09 Som~thing New Lets stop the old idea of recruiting This approach to vocations is archaic Young people

today hear enough about recruitIng from their local doraft board They also have had their fill of the trite and r~

diculous Yet in the field of vocational promotion to the priesthood and the reshyligious life the trite and the ridiculous still seems to excel

No wonder that there is a shortage of vocations

Lets take a couple of ex amples Have you read any of our catholic magazines recently If it wasnt for religious voshycational advertising many of these magazines would not be able to go to press bull bull bull And what ads

In most cases they are tasteshyless and so poorly done that any response to such an advertiseshyment woud be a miracle of the first order In this day and age why do we still encourage such

an attitude tThe idea that we can encourage vocations by~such faded Madison Avenue propashyganda methods boarders on the iidiculou1l American youths are

I bull

not stupid They can see through this retarded approach and view the sponsors of the ads in the light that they deserve

Another rather galling gimshymick is the trip to the semishynary routine This vocational promotion provides entertainshyment for the parish high school altar boys This is the extent of its influence

In s~ch a trip the highlights of seminary life are enthuiasti shycally indicated-such as recrashytion facilities beautiful buildings and sweet smiling seminarians What a picture

The idea of total commitment seems relegated to the locker room the pool table and the uniform In todays church how can we still lead our youth down such a primrose path Yet there are many who still view vocations through such rose colored glasses

Creating Atmosphere for Grace of God

~ Silicide Tendency First Obvious To Clergy

PARAMUS (NC)-Clergy- men may be among the first people to become aware- of suicidal tendencies in others a Baptist minister from New York told clergymen of an faiths at an institute here in New Jersey on clergy attitudes toward suicidal persons

The Rev Harry Warren III of the Richmond Hill Baptist Church said statistics show that 50 per cent of people witli suicidal tendencies consult a minister at some time or other

He said clergymen should b~

alert to such tendencies an(i also urged them to help educate the communnity about the problem Society he said noW tends to shut out people who have attempted suicide just as it shuts out the~ alcoholic the divorcee

Another speaker at the insUshytute held at Bergen Pinee County Hospital here was Dr John H Chilman of St Josephll Hospital Paterson He said that for a person considering suicide the attitude taken by a clergyshyman could mean the differetice between life and death

Dr Chilman a psychiatrist told the priests ministers and rabbis attending the one-day program that they can help the disturbed person by binding him to yourself

Other speakers discussed the behavioral patterns leading up to suicide attempts the legal attitudes toward persons who attempt suicide and the incishydence of suicide among varioUllJ groups

Refuses Request To Say Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) - The archdiocese of Washington has turned down a request from the Catholic Traditionalist Society for a Mass to be celebrated in a Washington church by the societys president Father Gom- mar DePauw

The refusal was made in a letter to William O Collins president of the societys Washshyington chapter from Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington

Bishop Herrmann said that permission was refused because of Father DePauws status Father DePauw has refused orders by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore to return to his archdiocese and accept II pastoral assignment

Bishop Hermann also noted that Masses are celebrated in Latin at three Washington churches The parishes were the only ones of the some 130 in the archdiocese to accept an offer made by Patrick Cardinal OBoyle last Summer to hold bull Latin Mass on Sunday if the parishioners so desired

Form Apostolatemiddot BUFFALO (NC) -Fourtees

inner-city parishes-12 in Bufshyfalo and two in Lackawana

have been incorporated into If we desire mature and sinshy A vocation is a grace 10 be inner-city apostolate middota new

cere candidates for the priest shy accepted or rejected The job of diocesan effort to meet the hood and the religious life our fostering vocations is one of needs of predominantly NegNl approach must be sincere and creating an atmosphere in wbich neighborhoods in the Buff mature The youth of today will the grace of God will be respond- diocese not follow the road of artless middoted to This indeed is a very inshyand juvenile schemes Such tacshy direct and subtle approach if tics they reject and rightly so you will llUt itis constant and life To foster vocations is

When young men and women effective The work of Gods foster the life of the Christian are ready to lend a helping hand ChurclI will be carried out in It is Christ who will have It to their fellow man it is truly the light of Gods grace To so He desires to work througll tragic to see so-called religious take any other view is to miss men In turn men must work leaders consider them as a group completely the entire point through God of idiotic hippies Most priests and religious will In this mutual rapport 1Ibe

We must begin to completely be the first to indicate the en-Church always will have fhepo reconsider the entire approach vironment of theJr persoJlal life herds for the flock and harveAshyto religious vocations was the seed of their vocational ers for the harvest

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

WEAR Shoes That Fit

THE FAMILY SHOE STORE

Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fall River OS 8-5811

I SYSTEMATIC550 year SAViNGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

a INVESTMENT500 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS

a REGULAR450 shy

year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We P~y The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull )ENNISPORT ~ST~RVILLE

~ ~- -

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

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lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

r--------------------------- L FIVE CONVENIENT ~FFICES to SERVE YOU ONE~Srop BANKIHG iL middot~FJRSTMACH(ImiddotNI STS

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Imiddot OF JTAUNJON t Norto~ W Main middotSt-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main Stbull North Disihto~ Spri~gSt-NorthmiddotEastoMain5t

Member rFederall~poSitInsurance Corporation L~ ~shy---

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(GfNfRIL (ONJRlaORS )shy and ~fl6INEERS

JAMES M COLLINSCE res ReglsteredCiVil ancPStructuraIEnginee

Member NationaimiddotSociety Professi~cilEngineers

fRANCIS c1 lCOLUNS rJR cTreas THOMAS ~K (COLLINS Seq

ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

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Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 3: 04.04.68

KNIGHTS ATTEND ceD WORKSHOP Participating in a Diocesan ()CD Workshop in New Bedford were Robert Fontaine G K Fall River James W Dowd G K faunion Arnold F Chace DGK Swansea premiddot pare a film strip for classroom explanation Center Honore J VaillanshyQOurt G K Westportmiddot Edward P McDonagh CCD vice-president No

Stresses Council Legion of Mary Reaffirmation

PHILADELPHIA (NC)shy-You are a symbol of the unity of the Church John Cardinal Krol of Philadelshyphia has told Penna Legionaries

~ Mary Addressing 1300 Legionaries

he Cardinal said Today we witness efforts of

4be so-called informal groupsmiddot independent of the ecclesiastic 4l0mmunity and at times dissi shydent to being joined to groups which are presided over by the cauthority of the Church

Some of the informal groups BIlow a great deal of zeal the oardinal continued and some have a great capacity for doing goo~ But regrettably too often there is dissipation o~ effort a waste of talent and too often IIis it result there is engendered ia spirit of resentment of criti-middot

119m of the Churchmiddot or of its Dastors

This Is a source of sadness end grief for us because itmiddot is Bot a question of lack of intershyost-the interest is there It is not a question of lack of zealshythere is zeal unfortunately misshyguided Zeal is like a fire Fire eon trolled is a necessity for life

-Fire uncontrolled is destructive Apostolic zeal to be effective must be consolidated and inteshygrated There must be that right sense of relationship between the single mission and apostolic zeal which Christ gave to His Church

Now there are those he aoted who try to give the im pression that all forms of the lay apostolate including such groups as the Legion of Mary Were labeled out of date by the Vatican Council in the aggior-middot namento Be confident of the fact that your Legion of Mary

Diocesan Knights ofColumbus Attend One Day CCD Training Program

Knights of the diocese inaugurated a new crusade Saturday-getting Catholic men involved in the word of the church Occasion was a first in the state a Knights of Columbus conference to introduce meIVbers to the work of the Confraternity of Chrisshytian Doctrine and to the need for mens involvement in the various phases of the CCD

Approximately 60 Knightsand 25 CCD members attendshyed the all-day session at

Knights of Columbus Hall in New Bedford The program was arranged by the diocesan Knights in cooperation with the executive board of the Diocesan CCD

Manuel S White Jr of Falshymouth Knights of Columbus chairman for the diocese and a member of the Diocesan Board of the CCD said the

group represented twenty-two Knights of Columbus councils

vice programs White added He said general agreement had been reached on the need for programs touching on the drug problem and sex informiltion

He said the Knights also would seek greater communishycation with such fraternal orshyganizations as the Masons We envision joint meetings joint discussion of community probshylems and hopefully joint acshytion on the problems that arise

Although declining to be speshycific White said discussions had revealed there definitely ismiddot a

in the diocese and clerical andmiddot drug problem in certain areas lay observers from the Archdishyocese of Boston Worcester and Springfield

He said it is the first of a statewide series af programs scheduled to be initiated by each of the more than 200 councils in Massachusettsmiddot

Rev William Wmiddot Norton of St Kilians Church New Bedshyford opened the workshop with a Bible service Speakers inshyeluded Rev Joseph L Powers of Attleboro diocesan CCD dishyrector and Edward McDonough also of Attleboro

Following the general session the group divided into small groups for the give and take discussions on contemporary isshysues that included community living the image of the church the image of fraternal organishyzations

We talked about such things as the image of the church through the eyes of a teenager how to adapt to the needs of the

is a worldwide permanently teenager the need of adult edshyassembled association of very ucaWon and the s~cific need faithful lait3 middotwho are ready to for Catholic men to become inshylterve all the needs ofmiddot the volved in the work of the Church The Council farmiddot church White said

of the diocese We recognize the need to address ourselves to some solution

The group also dwelt at length on themiddot problems of adult education We recognized our approacqes to young peaple haVe to change if we are to reach them White said particshyularly in fields like sex educashytion There we have to change ~he adults first

A standing committee of K of C district deputies of the diocese will meet from time to time with the CCD executive board to try to develop positive plans

We intend to have some proshygrams going within three to four months-definitely by the time school reopens in the Fall

Honor Sociologist WASHINGTON (NC)-Dailiel

Patrick Moynihan author of The Negro Family The Case for National Action better known as the Moynihan Report of 1965middot will be awarded an honorary doctorate of laws at

the 50th anniversary convocashytion of themiddot National Catholic

from outdating reaffirms such We feel that we aremiddot unique-School of Social Service at wganizations as the Legion of ly equippedas an organizathm Catholic University here April

Attleboro Ellis ~ Johnson District Dep4ty Hyannis scan a magazine from the students reading rack Right John F Sullivan seated genshyeral chairman from No Grafton Robert B Kennedy Buzzards Bay Walshyter J Chase G K of McMahon Councilmiddot of New Bedford who hosted the affair study the days program

A repeat workshop probabshyly to be held in New Bedford also is scheduled within the next few months he said

Meanwhile the knights who inaugurated their campaign last week are going to be talking and planning

Archbishop Starts Charity Program

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Archshybishop Philip M Hannan of New Orleans has launched a new program to bring all Catholics into more direct charity and service work in the archdiocese Themiddotprogram-The Service ofmiddot

Charity in the Age of Renewall - is intended to expand and supplement services now offered by such agencies as the St Vinshycent de Paul Society and Catholic Charities which have been limited in their effectiveshyness by a majority of Catholics an archdiocesan statement said

IDEAL LAUNDRV 373 New ~ston R~d Fall River 678-5677

Ask Greater Aid To High Schools

TORONTO (NC) - Ontarios Catholic parents will launch II

campaign this year to have the prQvincial government support the provinces Catholic higlt schools for the full fi ve years instead of the present two years

At a recent convention of the Federation of Catholic ParentshyTeachers Associations here delshy

middot egates passed six resolutions asking for extension of the taxshysupported Catholic school sysshytem up to grade 13-senior mashytriculation (year)

Msgr V M Harrigan of Hamshyilton Ont the federations spirshyitual director sald parents have a right to a Catholic school sysshytem up to grade 13

He quoted from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which says the family is a fundashy

middot mental unit of society and parshymiddot ents have a right to educate their children acclrding to their conshyscience There are more than three million Catholics in Ontario 65 million middotpopulation

JmiddotB I-UMBER CO

So Dartmouth and Hyannis

So Dartr~otith 997-9384 Hyannis 2921

l4ary _~ 9~aa s~c~fic c~nun~it7 8~r- middot29bull ~ ~ _ _

4 THE ANCfiOR--Dioc~se of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

The Parish Parade ST JOHN BAPTIST OUR LADY OF ANGELS CENTRAL VILLAGE FALL RIVER

Easter holy water bottles willThe Ladies Guild announces be available Holy Saturdaya rummage sale from 9 to 1 and Easter SundaySaturday morning April 6 in

The Children of Mary anshythe parish hall Mrs Jeanne nounce a penny sale for FridayBibeau is chairman April 26

HOLY NAME Lenten services inc Iud e FALL RIVER Masses at 7 each morning and

4 and 7 in the evening StationsA Christian Living Series Qn of the cross are held at 345 Fri shycurrent events will be held in day afternoons and 645 Fridaythe school hall Tuesday nights eveningsApril 16 23 and 30

Palm Sunday Masses will beA Spring dance sponsored by~ celebrated from 7 to noon onthe Holy Name Society will the hour and at 5 Sunday aftershytake place Friday 1ight April noon Palms will bf blessed at19 at Whites restaurant 7 oclock Mass and there willThe parish council will meet be a solemn blessing arid pro-Thursday night April 18 cession at 11 oclock

ST JOSEPH Parish societies will partici shyFALL RIVER pate in adoration Holy Thursshy

The parish council meets at day night Children of Mary from 8 to 9 CYO 9 to 10 Holy730 tonight

CCD executive board memshy Rosary and Council of Catholic bers will meet in the rectory Women 10 to 11 Holy Name following 930 Mass Sunday 11 to midnight

Solemn liturgical services willmorning April 7 take place at 4 Good FridayA lecture on Parental Apshy

proach to Sex Education will afternoon and Easter Vigil ser vices will be held at 8 Holybe heard at 730 Sunday night Saturday nightApril 28 in the school hall

Speakers will be Dr and Mrs STANTHONY OF PADUAEmile Mohler FALL RIVER ST JEAN BAPTISTE A few seats remain - for a one FALL RIVER day bus trip to New York City

to be sponsored Saturday AprilThe Council of Catholic Women 6 by the Council of Catholicwill hold election of officers at Women Information may be730 Monday night April 8 in obtained from Mrs Mary Silviathe church hall A bunny whist at 674-7528 She announceswill follow the business session that the bus will I e a v e for members and for other at 6 Saturday morning from women of the parish Mrs the church hall on 17th StreetLionel Deschenes is chairman and will leave New York at 9aided by Mrs Leo Patenaude Saturday night Participants

ST FRANCIS ASS lSI will be free to plan their own NEW BEDFORD activities in New YOlk

The League of St Francis will ST GEORGE sponsor a cake sale on Sunday WESTPORT April 28 after the 9 oclock and A whist party will be held at 11 oclock Masses 8 Saturday nigl)t April 6 in

The League presented Conshy the school hall on Route 177 firmation certificates to the with proceeds benefiting the class following the reception school fund Priies will be of the Sacrament on last Sunshy awarded and there will be day special attendance awalds

Oregon Archdio~ese to Support middotTwo Progra~s for Seminarians

PORTLAND (NC)-The Port- student should enroll at Portshyl~d archdiocese has decided to land State College he will have support two seminary programs th~ option of any general major ~an updated program at Mount related to his theologicalstudies

Angel Seminary at the Mount It could be philosophy sociology Angel Benedictine abbey and a psychology history or other of House of Studies at portland the humanities State College here Scholastic philosophy and ad-

After receiving college de- vanced Latin subjects usually grees House of Studies students not taught at non-seminary colshywill go directly to seminaries leges will be offered the semishy

for the remaining four years of narians at PSC at special classes study required for ordination arranged by the House of Stud-

The program is the result of ies 1his will qualify them for two years of study by the arch- admission to most seminary theshy

diocese and has been approved ology courses by the Archdiocesan Vocltltions

Spiritual DirectorCommittee and by the bishops of the Province of Portland Requests for transfers into the which includes the dioceses of House of Studies program fr~m Baker Ore Boise Idaho Hel- traditional seminaries will be o erta Mont and Great Falls handled on an individual basis Mont as well as the Portland Although middotthe House ~f Studies

archdiocese will be under the immediate As developed to date by the guidance of a spiritual director

archdiocese this is how the proshy house rules will be developed gram will be conducted and implemented by studies in

a fraternity-like setting HowshyMajor Optional ever members of the House of

Entrance requirements for Studies will be expeCted to live Mount Angel Seminary as in as ecclesiastical students the past will be set by the Beneshy No hard and fast rules have dictine Fathers Criteria for ac- been drawn up-nor will they ceptance of applications for the be until the students have been House of Studies will be develshy selected and consulted but stushyoped by the archdiocesan semishy dents will participate in mixed nary committee Young men who groups in study and at times wish to study for the priest shy recreation but not on a oneshyhood will be assisted in making to-one basis application to the proper semishy Ten or 15 students are expectshynary by the seminary admissions ed to begin their college courses

committee in the House of Studies program

CONVENT ENTRANCE The gaping hole was blown by attacking Viet Congo Through it they entered the conshyvent and school of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Vinh Long just as the last pelicopter load of Sisters children and guards took off Pacific Stars and Stripes photo by Gerard Forken NC Photo

Je~uit Explains Vatcceunl Relation To Communism

BOSTON (NC) - A Jesuit priest currently helping tc edit the official papers Cllf Pope Pius XII rejected the

idea that the Vatican is openshying to the left in a talk givelli to delegat~ at a Boston College conference on the Vatican and Peace here

-Father Robert A Graham SJ a Californian working afI the Vatican told his audiencea

It is a common error t6 imagine that the Holy Sees opshyposition to the Soviet system iD systematic and a priori datinC from the very first days of the Bolshevik revolution of 1911 Few are aware of the various desperate tries in the first d~cshyade and a half to awaken somiS toleration on the part of the Soviet authoiities They all came to nothing as Soviet inshy

transigence manifested itself1lI

New Warmth

AIl a result of this Father Graham explained the new warmth between the Vatican and the communist countries i8 not so much a Vatican opening to the left as increased comshymunist willingness to d ialogueStrike Settledmiddot with the Holy See

Nevertheless the Jesuit ed Methodist Hospital Recognizes Union tor added there have been some

definite steps taken by theCatholic Institutions Next in Line Vatican to encourage commlP nist response Among these b()

CLEVELAND (NC)-The St no-strike pledge in return for listedLuke (Methodist) Hospitalstrike union recognition some six

The Vaticans willingness tcof more than 10 months was months ago The hospital trusshydiscuss issues that formerlysettled here when hospital trusshy tees then refused were considered closed such aDtees agreed to union recognishy On strike were some 350 nonshyCatholic school subsidiestion and the union agreed to a professional employes

no-strike pledge With settlement of the St Pope John XXIIIs own pershyLuke strike five Catholic hosshy sonal warmth

Wages and other conditions pitals in this area are expected The Vaticans ability to recshysuch as grievance procedures ognize the collapse of the monshyto be next in line in the union are still to be worked out in olithic communist bloc that exshyorganization drivecollective bargaining sessions isted under Stalin and willingshyThe Ohio Catholic HospitalIt also was agreed that unreshy negotiate localAssociation last year had a conshy ness to with solved issues would go to bindshy leadersference devoted to finding waysing arbitration of keeping out unions Summarizes Role

The settlement was announced Get Senates Supportby Carl Stokes Clevelands The growing awareness ~ During the S1 Luke strikefirst Negro mayor after a conshy the Vaticans part that the

Father John J Humenskyference with the unions Joseph worlds social and economieCleveland diocese director ofE Murphy and C Colin Baldshy problems demand worldwidehospitals said that Cathoiicwin president of the hospitals effortS at solutionhospWils (and their employees)board of trustees During his The second Vatican Councilhad no need for unions TheNovember campaign for mayor FatherS deliberate refusal toemployees havent been heardStokes had promised to settle the condemn communism despitefrom y~tstrike the wishes of some 400 of the

The S1 Luke strikers had wide bishops presentThe union Local 47 of ihe support from community leadshy All of these considerations

-Building Service and Maintenshy ers and organizlltions Among coupled with the increased arne workers had offerejl the them were Father Albelt Koshy willingness to dialogue found iJa

kolwsky Clevelands voice of many communist countries the slums and pastor of Our have combined to form what

Chaplain May Lose Lady of Fatima Parish in the some describe as the openinHough Area scene of violent to the left

Use of A~ms Legs riots two years ago SALEM (NC)-Father Walter Support also came from the

Driscoll 40 Navy chaplain serNshyDiocese Senate of Priests headed ing with the Marines in Vietnam by Msgr - William Cosgrove

lose his arms Msgr Cosgrove is pastor of Stmay use of and legs as a result of battle wounds Henry parish wheIe many St his brother disclosed here Luke strikers (most of them

Negro) live Father Richard Driscoll cUIate The Senate of Religious Woshy

Con c e p t ionat Immaculate men representing 41 Sisters church said shrapnel inflicted a communities in this diocese al shysevere injury to the upper part so came to the aid of the strikers of his brothers back and theres with resolutions food and testi shya question whether hell be able mony before a Cleveland City

to have use of his limbs Council committee urging enshy]father Walter Driscoll a lieushy actment of municipal laborshy

tenant commander was injured management law while helpin-g wounded awaiting evacuation from Khe Sanh durshy

bull

bull TELEPHONE 675-7992

454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

GERALD E McNALLY Consfrucl~ori Co~ Inc

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ing mortar fire in the area He was taken to a station hospital I LIVE JUMBO iin Da Nang and will be returneltJ shortly to the United States = =I 89c Ib~ I

Favors Study 10 LBS AND UP TRENTON (NC) -The New I WHILE THEY LAST Jersey General Assembly has

unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a nine-member study commission to examine the states existing laws on abortion and to recommend IUN~~~A~~F~~N T~ 97-351 ichanges If the decision is that the at Portland State next Fall ~111I1II11111111111IIIIIIUlllllllliIlIlIlIIlIIlIllIIlJlJIImmllIIII1UIUIIIIIIII11II11I11IJ1J1II11~

Prelate rn2q~nins

[p~)(~~ rP~oGon

O~ ~~o0o~[Lfi) BOSTON (NC) - Archshy

bishop Igino Cardinale aposshyoolic delegate to Great Britmiddot ~in told an audience here (lhat Pope Paul VI did not mean ~ include conscientious objecshytors in a criticism of pacifists lle made last Dec 8

Addlessing participants in the evening session of a Boston College symposium on the Vatshy~n and Peace Archbishop Carshydinale speaking of the Dec 8 talk said

In the same message Pope Paul distinguishes peace from llJacifism It is obvious that it is not his intention to condemn pacifism as such but particular lIonns of pacifism such as he desclmiddotjbes which encourages citizens to shrink from their etivic responsibilities through oowardice or lack of due conshyoorn

Paul was well aware of what Vatican II had declared with regard to conscientious objecshy~ors that it seems right that laws make humane provisions for the case of those who for reasons of conscience refuse to bear arms provided however ~hey accept some other form of oervice to the human commushyllIlity

Important Pari

The papal message wi4ely repol-ted around the world eaused an uproar when it apshypeared Many felt that Pope Paul had betrayed the spirit of the Second Vatican Councils otatement on conscientious obshyjectors while others used the papal remark as an indication that pacifism could not coexist with Catholicism

Emphasizing his explanation ~ the remark by notifying reshyporters that half-page was one of the most important parts of his 36-page addres~ Archbishop Caldinale pointed out that few men could match Pope Paul in the earnestness of their search iilor peace

Prelate Continues Ban on Festival

JAFFNA (NC)-The bishop of laffna has declared that church

festivals on a tiny Indian Ocean island claimed by both India snd Ceylon will not be resumed until the local government solves the problem of illegal immishy(frants

Bishop Emilianus PilIai OM I said that the St Anthonys festival celebrated annually in March on the Kachativu island bad been suspended officially lor the past three years

The statement was the first Catholic reaction since Ceyshyionese church jurisdiction over the 105OOO-square-yard island located midway between the two eountries was cited in support of Ceylons ownership of it

Missouri See Plans Social Action Unit

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Bishop Charles H Helmsing of Kansas City-St Joseph has named Fashyther Vincent J Lovett pastor of St Stephens church here as chairman of an ad hoc comshymittee to set up a human relashytions or social action department ~r the diocese as called for by the diocesan synod

Father Lovett described his preliminary work as a factshyfinding process to collect inshyformation and ideas on the work of swh a department Other 4M)mmittee members havf not 1Ieen named he iaid

SMAlL UN Almost any Sunday at Regina Pacis Center New Bedford one is apt to meet the makings of a miniature United Nations On a typical Sunday worshippers include from left front Joaquim Desousa Cape Verde Islands Miss Ayaka Miyata Jashypan Rev Coleman Conley SSCC pastor rear Mrs Domingo Lopez and Mrs Amelda Hernandez Puerto Rico Miss Alicia Rodriguez Mexico

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs April 4 1968

sectU[]regS)~regS) ~~~regreg

~~reg OmJ ~01fOreg~ DENVER (NC) - The presishy

dent of Boston College said here Catholic liberal arts colleges must transforlTI themselves inshyto organic participating cells active in the struggle to improve the cities health with all the educational resources at their command

Father Michael P Walsh SJ speaking at Regis College here said this is one of the chalshylenges facing Catholic liberal arts colleges in the nation today The modern Catholic college he asserted has growing awareness of the new challenges facing it

Father Walsh said every school in a modern metropolis must not merely be open to the community in which it lives but each must actively reach out into city life in a genuinely helpshyful way And as it reaches out not only will its relationship to the community change but the nature of the college will change

Father Walsh was the princishyEnthusi(Jt3tlll~Sacred Hearts Father Sparks pal speaker at installation cereshymonies for Father Louis G MatshyActif1)iitiies at Regina Pacis Center tione SJ new president of Regis College

The Rev Coleman Conley SSCC helpeq write an Enlish language liturgy for use bv mi~sionaries before he left Japan five months ago The first time it was used with Press Continues 20 )nests concdebrating the Mass at Communion time the people were laughing and cr~ring at the same time When we left the altar they stood up and cheered for joy In Toils of Law

To Father Coleman 37 MADRID (NC)-The difficulshyvhill pro ve s the value of His 10 years in Japan were says Thats ~hat they wanted ties of Spanish Catholic publi shyto the enthusiastic priest a decshy Japan is Americanizedblinging Mass to the people cations with the government

ade of happiness in many ways Frequently Father ColemanA native of Belmont the continue unabated in a seemshyHo taught English at the Unishy the only Western within an hournearly six-footer now is direcshy ingly intenninable series of seishy

versity of Ibaraki several days and a half drive would invitetor of Regina Pacis Center in zures and denunciations a week Ibaraki he explains was his Christian and non-ChristianNew Bedford a center estabshy The Bulletin of HOAC theabout a three quarter of an hour neighbors alike to a barbecuelished by the Fall River Diocese national commission of thedrive from his parish in Tsushy He noticed one night that onein HI61 to help adjust a growing Workers Brotherhood of Cathshychiura guest was not eating olic Action has again felt theinflux of Puerto Rican families Tsuchiura itself he adds was Dont you like it Father heavy hand of the governmentt(l thei I new city and new way a city of about 180000 We had asked the man The ministry of Informationof life 40 Catholic families I think it is very good the has confiscated all copies of theToday the neighborl1ood surshy Why the low ratio man replied But I cannot eat latest edition of the Bulletinrounding the Center - which because my heart is fullNot a Package The reason given for thetechnically is part of St James

Because for too many years Mine was too when I heard latest confiscation is delictiveParish-is seeing a new flood that Father Coleman recallshe theorizes missionaries tried material or contents In violashyof newcomers pour in this time He learned another Japaneseto tie Christianity and Western tion of the countrys laws Thefamilies of Portuguese extracshy tradition by mistakeculture together in a package specific material in questiontion And they arent a package He was conducting a Requiem was an article entitled ChrisshyFather Coleman however

He also was principal of a Mass for a parishioner one day tianity and Revolution byemphasizes that regardless of s eve n - teacher kindergarten in a home in a small village Father Jose Maria Gonzaleztheir nationality his new parishshywhere J a pan e s e youngsters After he got the small altar Ruiz of Malagaioners are Americans first He learned English at an astoundshy set up Father explains I wash- The current Spanish pressdoesnmiddott let them or anyone else ing pace ed my hands in a bowl of water law permits the government toforget it

We visitors from the The crowd filling the room confiscate any published mateshyhadSince he took over the Cent~r Embassy one day he recalls had been chattering and laughshy rial that is presumed to be

a month ago its momentum has witti a grin ing When Father finished washshy delictive and subject to judgshy

picked up ment by a courtThe ambassadors wife walkshy ing his hands however and beshyHomeworkSession The government has also cooshyed in and was greeted in Engshy gan the Mass there was dead si shyFather Coleman has establishshy fiscated some editions of thelish by a little girl lenceed tutorial classes for youngshy Juventud Obrera organ of theWelcome and how are you Later a friEnd explained itsters who have completed the Catholic Young Women Workshyshe asked In Japan he said you washnon-English speaking program in ers organization It has alsoFine thank you the ambasshy your hands to get your heartthe ci ty schools and now are seized the latest edition of thesadors wife replied And how readymoving into regular classes shy review He has organized a homeshy are you Eventually Father built a

work session to give neighshy Fine think you we are too small water font in front of the borhood children help with the child answered church Parishioners attending ANTONE S FEND JRThats good said the ambasshy Mass would stop there to wash them the value of education school work and to impress on

DISPENSING Unfortunately Father Coleshy ing by also would stop for a

sadors wife their hands Non-Christians passshyOPTICIAN

man says that wasnt what she hand-washing session His staff is comprised of volshy

Prescriptions was supposed to say so our

un teer teachers including nuns for Eveglonelfrom St Anne School Then they would bow toward

Filledprize student was stymiedHe celebrates MasS at the the church and clap their hands Office HourAt first when English lessonsCenter on Sundays and on Wedshy before continuing on their way

900- 500nesday nights My first Sunshy This says Father is the way excopt Wedbegan he explained we hadda~ there were 23 people Last you learn things Fri Eve lIy Apptjust 10 minutes But they pickedSunday it was up to about 150 5alurday-9-3After 10 years in his Japaneseit up so fast we went to 35He is seeking some kind of a 191 BANK ST COR PURCHASE SImission Father Colemans heartminutes OPP F R TRUST PARKING LOT 618-0412work training program that will is with his Japanese peopleWe used a lot of gimmicksinsule jobs for heads of houseshy

broke it up every few minutes So M~my Thingsholds with songs They could sing 20 Currently however he doesIn between times Father ColeshyAmerican songs when I leftman studies psychology amiddott SMTI not have time to acutely miss DEBROSS OIL

and goes out meeting people At Hot Dogs them because he is too busy the moment hes trying to find To help speed the Englishshy helping his new parishioners co someone with $10000 to repair learning process the mother of There are so many things to a section of wall in the old each kindergarten had to come be done he mutters as he zips Heating Oils building that peeled off a week for an hours English lesson from one project to another with ago once a week so she could conshy an overpowering energy and Burners Being at Regina Pacis is not tinue English at home He has been at Regina Pacis a novelty for Father Coleman The mothers however got only a little more than a month 365 NORTH FRONT STREETRis parish in Japan where he more enjoyment out of Father Already things have changed started in a Quonset hut and Colemans cooking lessons there What will it be like after NEW BEDFORD after 10 years had a new church I built a barbecue pit and he has had a year to straighten

992-5534also was called Queen of Peace- taught them to barbecue hamshy out things 01 Regina Pacis burgers and hot dogs Father Only the Lord knows

6 THE ANCH9R-Dioceseo~ Fall River~ThursApriJ 4 19~

Priests Who Leave The National Association for Pastoral Renewal has

issued a report saying that 228 priests left their priestly work in 1966 and 480 in 1967

Several ~omments may be made on this survey

It is presumed that the report is correct There is no point in bringing this up except for the fact that the Association has not always presented itself in the best light At a Notre Dame meeting a year ago one of its priest-members argued for the removal of celibacy from the priesthood Then it was announced some weeks later that this priest had already been living in a marriage for a year The objectivity of his argUInentation could thus hardly be taken for granted In another case several priests reported to their bishop-one far removed from this locale -that their names had been listed as members of the Asshysociation while in fact they never belonged

But let it be assumed that the report is correct Itmiddot ineaps that less than one~half of one per cent of the na tions priests left their work in 1966 and that slightly more than one-half of one per cent left in 1967 While each priest is an individual and each leaving of the priest shyhood involved personal tragedy and some amount of shock to the community the number of those who leave must always be seen against the background of the vast the

overwhelming majority of those who are doing their work as priests

Further while it is quite possible to understand that an ordained priest might come toa decision to leave his priestly work there are ways this can be done without shock to the people of God for whom there must always be concern Calling a press conference decrying the hardshyheartedness ofmiddot bishops throwing darts of malice at other priests attacking the Church work and age~cies that are being sincerely carried on by others-all this smacks more of the childs kicking down someone elses sand castle than the grave decision of a mature man If a priest feels that he can no longer do the work of the priesthood lie can approach his bishop with this decision - and there is no bishop in the country who would not be made fearful and become helpful confronted with such a decision and such a man Arrangements can be made for the priest to leave his work and an appeal made to the Holy Father for this mans laicization This can all be done with dignity and with due concern for the people of God The tabloid-type treatment can upset people to such a degree that they can begin quesshytioning faith and the basic spiritual values of life Maybe they should not make such an unwarranted jump from one mans action- to their~ own spiritual equanimity but they do And it would bea poor observer o~ human nature who would say otherwise

A priest should not be self-centered even whEm he deshycides to leave or else he becomes unmindful of those whom his action can seriously hurt He should not project his personal problems onto the majority of the priests who stay to d9 Gods work - he should speak for himself alone And he should not as Father Greeley has observed expect to be treated like a folk hero of the American Church He should be treated with the kindness and understanding due a man who feels he has made a mistake in being a priest and wishes to chal1ge his status A problem yes a tragedy many times yes a cause for concern and help by all means yes

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James l Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll - MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J Golden

~fliIl ~~

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IJJCRIMIIArION ANI) SEGIU()Aro TNIUTEN rHG FUrtliE orEYEAY AAfeIMiAN II

N710I CMISfDN OJV CIVIL ()SOU)GRS

the mOOQlnq Rev John F Moore St Josephs Taunton

BA MA MEd

Vocations

09 Som~thing New Lets stop the old idea of recruiting This approach to vocations is archaic Young people

today hear enough about recruitIng from their local doraft board They also have had their fill of the trite and r~

diculous Yet in the field of vocational promotion to the priesthood and the reshyligious life the trite and the ridiculous still seems to excel

No wonder that there is a shortage of vocations

Lets take a couple of ex amples Have you read any of our catholic magazines recently If it wasnt for religious voshycational advertising many of these magazines would not be able to go to press bull bull bull And what ads

In most cases they are tasteshyless and so poorly done that any response to such an advertiseshyment woud be a miracle of the first order In this day and age why do we still encourage such

an attitude tThe idea that we can encourage vocations by~such faded Madison Avenue propashyganda methods boarders on the iidiculou1l American youths are

I bull

not stupid They can see through this retarded approach and view the sponsors of the ads in the light that they deserve

Another rather galling gimshymick is the trip to the semishynary routine This vocational promotion provides entertainshyment for the parish high school altar boys This is the extent of its influence

In s~ch a trip the highlights of seminary life are enthuiasti shycally indicated-such as recrashytion facilities beautiful buildings and sweet smiling seminarians What a picture

The idea of total commitment seems relegated to the locker room the pool table and the uniform In todays church how can we still lead our youth down such a primrose path Yet there are many who still view vocations through such rose colored glasses

Creating Atmosphere for Grace of God

~ Silicide Tendency First Obvious To Clergy

PARAMUS (NC)-Clergy- men may be among the first people to become aware- of suicidal tendencies in others a Baptist minister from New York told clergymen of an faiths at an institute here in New Jersey on clergy attitudes toward suicidal persons

The Rev Harry Warren III of the Richmond Hill Baptist Church said statistics show that 50 per cent of people witli suicidal tendencies consult a minister at some time or other

He said clergymen should b~

alert to such tendencies an(i also urged them to help educate the communnity about the problem Society he said noW tends to shut out people who have attempted suicide just as it shuts out the~ alcoholic the divorcee

Another speaker at the insUshytute held at Bergen Pinee County Hospital here was Dr John H Chilman of St Josephll Hospital Paterson He said that for a person considering suicide the attitude taken by a clergyshyman could mean the differetice between life and death

Dr Chilman a psychiatrist told the priests ministers and rabbis attending the one-day program that they can help the disturbed person by binding him to yourself

Other speakers discussed the behavioral patterns leading up to suicide attempts the legal attitudes toward persons who attempt suicide and the incishydence of suicide among varioUllJ groups

Refuses Request To Say Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) - The archdiocese of Washington has turned down a request from the Catholic Traditionalist Society for a Mass to be celebrated in a Washington church by the societys president Father Gom- mar DePauw

The refusal was made in a letter to William O Collins president of the societys Washshyington chapter from Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington

Bishop Herrmann said that permission was refused because of Father DePauws status Father DePauw has refused orders by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore to return to his archdiocese and accept II pastoral assignment

Bishop Hermann also noted that Masses are celebrated in Latin at three Washington churches The parishes were the only ones of the some 130 in the archdiocese to accept an offer made by Patrick Cardinal OBoyle last Summer to hold bull Latin Mass on Sunday if the parishioners so desired

Form Apostolatemiddot BUFFALO (NC) -Fourtees

inner-city parishes-12 in Bufshyfalo and two in Lackawana

have been incorporated into If we desire mature and sinshy A vocation is a grace 10 be inner-city apostolate middota new

cere candidates for the priest shy accepted or rejected The job of diocesan effort to meet the hood and the religious life our fostering vocations is one of needs of predominantly NegNl approach must be sincere and creating an atmosphere in wbich neighborhoods in the Buff mature The youth of today will the grace of God will be respond- diocese not follow the road of artless middoted to This indeed is a very inshyand juvenile schemes Such tacshy direct and subtle approach if tics they reject and rightly so you will llUt itis constant and life To foster vocations is

When young men and women effective The work of Gods foster the life of the Christian are ready to lend a helping hand ChurclI will be carried out in It is Christ who will have It to their fellow man it is truly the light of Gods grace To so He desires to work througll tragic to see so-called religious take any other view is to miss men In turn men must work leaders consider them as a group completely the entire point through God of idiotic hippies Most priests and religious will In this mutual rapport 1Ibe

We must begin to completely be the first to indicate the en-Church always will have fhepo reconsider the entire approach vironment of theJr persoJlal life herds for the flock and harveAshyto religious vocations was the seed of their vocational ers for the harvest

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

WEAR Shoes That Fit

THE FAMILY SHOE STORE

Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

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I SYSTEMATIC550 year SAViNGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

a INVESTMENT500 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS

a REGULAR450 shy

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Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We P~y The Postage

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~ ~- -

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

11I11111111I1111I11I11111111I11I111I111I111I11I1111I111I11111I11I111111111I11I11I11111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I11I11I11111111111I11I11I111111

lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

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But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

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action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 4: 04.04.68

4 THE ANCfiOR--Dioc~se of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

The Parish Parade ST JOHN BAPTIST OUR LADY OF ANGELS CENTRAL VILLAGE FALL RIVER

Easter holy water bottles willThe Ladies Guild announces be available Holy Saturdaya rummage sale from 9 to 1 and Easter SundaySaturday morning April 6 in

The Children of Mary anshythe parish hall Mrs Jeanne nounce a penny sale for FridayBibeau is chairman April 26

HOLY NAME Lenten services inc Iud e FALL RIVER Masses at 7 each morning and

4 and 7 in the evening StationsA Christian Living Series Qn of the cross are held at 345 Fri shycurrent events will be held in day afternoons and 645 Fridaythe school hall Tuesday nights eveningsApril 16 23 and 30

Palm Sunday Masses will beA Spring dance sponsored by~ celebrated from 7 to noon onthe Holy Name Society will the hour and at 5 Sunday aftershytake place Friday 1ight April noon Palms will bf blessed at19 at Whites restaurant 7 oclock Mass and there willThe parish council will meet be a solemn blessing arid pro-Thursday night April 18 cession at 11 oclock

ST JOSEPH Parish societies will partici shyFALL RIVER pate in adoration Holy Thursshy

The parish council meets at day night Children of Mary from 8 to 9 CYO 9 to 10 Holy730 tonight

CCD executive board memshy Rosary and Council of Catholic bers will meet in the rectory Women 10 to 11 Holy Name following 930 Mass Sunday 11 to midnight

Solemn liturgical services willmorning April 7 take place at 4 Good FridayA lecture on Parental Apshy

proach to Sex Education will afternoon and Easter Vigil ser vices will be held at 8 Holybe heard at 730 Sunday night Saturday nightApril 28 in the school hall

Speakers will be Dr and Mrs STANTHONY OF PADUAEmile Mohler FALL RIVER ST JEAN BAPTISTE A few seats remain - for a one FALL RIVER day bus trip to New York City

to be sponsored Saturday AprilThe Council of Catholic Women 6 by the Council of Catholicwill hold election of officers at Women Information may be730 Monday night April 8 in obtained from Mrs Mary Silviathe church hall A bunny whist at 674-7528 She announceswill follow the business session that the bus will I e a v e for members and for other at 6 Saturday morning from women of the parish Mrs the church hall on 17th StreetLionel Deschenes is chairman and will leave New York at 9aided by Mrs Leo Patenaude Saturday night Participants

ST FRANCIS ASS lSI will be free to plan their own NEW BEDFORD activities in New YOlk

The League of St Francis will ST GEORGE sponsor a cake sale on Sunday WESTPORT April 28 after the 9 oclock and A whist party will be held at 11 oclock Masses 8 Saturday nigl)t April 6 in

The League presented Conshy the school hall on Route 177 firmation certificates to the with proceeds benefiting the class following the reception school fund Priies will be of the Sacrament on last Sunshy awarded and there will be day special attendance awalds

Oregon Archdio~ese to Support middotTwo Progra~s for Seminarians

PORTLAND (NC)-The Port- student should enroll at Portshyl~d archdiocese has decided to land State College he will have support two seminary programs th~ option of any general major ~an updated program at Mount related to his theologicalstudies

Angel Seminary at the Mount It could be philosophy sociology Angel Benedictine abbey and a psychology history or other of House of Studies at portland the humanities State College here Scholastic philosophy and ad-

After receiving college de- vanced Latin subjects usually grees House of Studies students not taught at non-seminary colshywill go directly to seminaries leges will be offered the semishy

for the remaining four years of narians at PSC at special classes study required for ordination arranged by the House of Stud-

The program is the result of ies 1his will qualify them for two years of study by the arch- admission to most seminary theshy

diocese and has been approved ology courses by the Archdiocesan Vocltltions

Spiritual DirectorCommittee and by the bishops of the Province of Portland Requests for transfers into the which includes the dioceses of House of Studies program fr~m Baker Ore Boise Idaho Hel- traditional seminaries will be o erta Mont and Great Falls handled on an individual basis Mont as well as the Portland Although middotthe House ~f Studies

archdiocese will be under the immediate As developed to date by the guidance of a spiritual director

archdiocese this is how the proshy house rules will be developed gram will be conducted and implemented by studies in

a fraternity-like setting HowshyMajor Optional ever members of the House of

Entrance requirements for Studies will be expeCted to live Mount Angel Seminary as in as ecclesiastical students the past will be set by the Beneshy No hard and fast rules have dictine Fathers Criteria for ac- been drawn up-nor will they ceptance of applications for the be until the students have been House of Studies will be develshy selected and consulted but stushyoped by the archdiocesan semishy dents will participate in mixed nary committee Young men who groups in study and at times wish to study for the priest shy recreation but not on a oneshyhood will be assisted in making to-one basis application to the proper semishy Ten or 15 students are expectshynary by the seminary admissions ed to begin their college courses

committee in the House of Studies program

CONVENT ENTRANCE The gaping hole was blown by attacking Viet Congo Through it they entered the conshyvent and school of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Vinh Long just as the last pelicopter load of Sisters children and guards took off Pacific Stars and Stripes photo by Gerard Forken NC Photo

Je~uit Explains Vatcceunl Relation To Communism

BOSTON (NC) - A Jesuit priest currently helping tc edit the official papers Cllf Pope Pius XII rejected the

idea that the Vatican is openshying to the left in a talk givelli to delegat~ at a Boston College conference on the Vatican and Peace here

-Father Robert A Graham SJ a Californian working afI the Vatican told his audiencea

It is a common error t6 imagine that the Holy Sees opshyposition to the Soviet system iD systematic and a priori datinC from the very first days of the Bolshevik revolution of 1911 Few are aware of the various desperate tries in the first d~cshyade and a half to awaken somiS toleration on the part of the Soviet authoiities They all came to nothing as Soviet inshy

transigence manifested itself1lI

New Warmth

AIl a result of this Father Graham explained the new warmth between the Vatican and the communist countries i8 not so much a Vatican opening to the left as increased comshymunist willingness to d ialogueStrike Settledmiddot with the Holy See

Nevertheless the Jesuit ed Methodist Hospital Recognizes Union tor added there have been some

definite steps taken by theCatholic Institutions Next in Line Vatican to encourage commlP nist response Among these b()

CLEVELAND (NC)-The St no-strike pledge in return for listedLuke (Methodist) Hospitalstrike union recognition some six

The Vaticans willingness tcof more than 10 months was months ago The hospital trusshydiscuss issues that formerlysettled here when hospital trusshy tees then refused were considered closed such aDtees agreed to union recognishy On strike were some 350 nonshyCatholic school subsidiestion and the union agreed to a professional employes

no-strike pledge With settlement of the St Pope John XXIIIs own pershyLuke strike five Catholic hosshy sonal warmth

Wages and other conditions pitals in this area are expected The Vaticans ability to recshysuch as grievance procedures ognize the collapse of the monshyto be next in line in the union are still to be worked out in olithic communist bloc that exshyorganization drivecollective bargaining sessions isted under Stalin and willingshyThe Ohio Catholic HospitalIt also was agreed that unreshy negotiate localAssociation last year had a conshy ness to with solved issues would go to bindshy leadersference devoted to finding waysing arbitration of keeping out unions Summarizes Role

The settlement was announced Get Senates Supportby Carl Stokes Clevelands The growing awareness ~ During the S1 Luke strikefirst Negro mayor after a conshy the Vaticans part that the

Father John J Humenskyference with the unions Joseph worlds social and economieCleveland diocese director ofE Murphy and C Colin Baldshy problems demand worldwidehospitals said that Cathoiicwin president of the hospitals effortS at solutionhospWils (and their employees)board of trustees During his The second Vatican Councilhad no need for unions TheNovember campaign for mayor FatherS deliberate refusal toemployees havent been heardStokes had promised to settle the condemn communism despitefrom y~tstrike the wishes of some 400 of the

The S1 Luke strikers had wide bishops presentThe union Local 47 of ihe support from community leadshy All of these considerations

-Building Service and Maintenshy ers and organizlltions Among coupled with the increased arne workers had offerejl the them were Father Albelt Koshy willingness to dialogue found iJa

kolwsky Clevelands voice of many communist countries the slums and pastor of Our have combined to form what

Chaplain May Lose Lady of Fatima Parish in the some describe as the openinHough Area scene of violent to the left

Use of A~ms Legs riots two years ago SALEM (NC)-Father Walter Support also came from the

Driscoll 40 Navy chaplain serNshyDiocese Senate of Priests headed ing with the Marines in Vietnam by Msgr - William Cosgrove

lose his arms Msgr Cosgrove is pastor of Stmay use of and legs as a result of battle wounds Henry parish wheIe many St his brother disclosed here Luke strikers (most of them

Negro) live Father Richard Driscoll cUIate The Senate of Religious Woshy

Con c e p t ionat Immaculate men representing 41 Sisters church said shrapnel inflicted a communities in this diocese al shysevere injury to the upper part so came to the aid of the strikers of his brothers back and theres with resolutions food and testi shya question whether hell be able mony before a Cleveland City

to have use of his limbs Council committee urging enshy]father Walter Driscoll a lieushy actment of municipal laborshy

tenant commander was injured management law while helpin-g wounded awaiting evacuation from Khe Sanh durshy

bull

bull TELEPHONE 675-7992

454 MAIN STREET SOMERSET MASS

GERALD E McNALLY Consfrucl~ori Co~ Inc

~QIIIIJlJJlJlllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJlJIIIIIIIIIIIIIJlJIJlJllllllllllltIII11J1JJlJIIIIJlIII~

ing mortar fire in the area He was taken to a station hospital I LIVE JUMBO iin Da Nang and will be returneltJ shortly to the United States = =I 89c Ib~ I

Favors Study 10 LBS AND UP TRENTON (NC) -The New I WHILE THEY LAST Jersey General Assembly has

unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a nine-member study commission to examine the states existing laws on abortion and to recommend IUN~~~A~~F~~N T~ 97-351 ichanges If the decision is that the at Portland State next Fall ~111I1II11111111111IIIIIIUlllllllliIlIlIlIIlIIlIllIIlJlJIImmllIIII1UIUIIIIIIII11II11I11IJ1J1II11~

Prelate rn2q~nins

[p~)(~~ rP~oGon

O~ ~~o0o~[Lfi) BOSTON (NC) - Archshy

bishop Igino Cardinale aposshyoolic delegate to Great Britmiddot ~in told an audience here (lhat Pope Paul VI did not mean ~ include conscientious objecshytors in a criticism of pacifists lle made last Dec 8

Addlessing participants in the evening session of a Boston College symposium on the Vatshy~n and Peace Archbishop Carshydinale speaking of the Dec 8 talk said

In the same message Pope Paul distinguishes peace from llJacifism It is obvious that it is not his intention to condemn pacifism as such but particular lIonns of pacifism such as he desclmiddotjbes which encourages citizens to shrink from their etivic responsibilities through oowardice or lack of due conshyoorn

Paul was well aware of what Vatican II had declared with regard to conscientious objecshy~ors that it seems right that laws make humane provisions for the case of those who for reasons of conscience refuse to bear arms provided however ~hey accept some other form of oervice to the human commushyllIlity

Important Pari

The papal message wi4ely repol-ted around the world eaused an uproar when it apshypeared Many felt that Pope Paul had betrayed the spirit of the Second Vatican Councils otatement on conscientious obshyjectors while others used the papal remark as an indication that pacifism could not coexist with Catholicism

Emphasizing his explanation ~ the remark by notifying reshyporters that half-page was one of the most important parts of his 36-page addres~ Archbishop Caldinale pointed out that few men could match Pope Paul in the earnestness of their search iilor peace

Prelate Continues Ban on Festival

JAFFNA (NC)-The bishop of laffna has declared that church

festivals on a tiny Indian Ocean island claimed by both India snd Ceylon will not be resumed until the local government solves the problem of illegal immishy(frants

Bishop Emilianus PilIai OM I said that the St Anthonys festival celebrated annually in March on the Kachativu island bad been suspended officially lor the past three years

The statement was the first Catholic reaction since Ceyshyionese church jurisdiction over the 105OOO-square-yard island located midway between the two eountries was cited in support of Ceylons ownership of it

Missouri See Plans Social Action Unit

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Bishop Charles H Helmsing of Kansas City-St Joseph has named Fashyther Vincent J Lovett pastor of St Stephens church here as chairman of an ad hoc comshymittee to set up a human relashytions or social action department ~r the diocese as called for by the diocesan synod

Father Lovett described his preliminary work as a factshyfinding process to collect inshyformation and ideas on the work of swh a department Other 4M)mmittee members havf not 1Ieen named he iaid

SMAlL UN Almost any Sunday at Regina Pacis Center New Bedford one is apt to meet the makings of a miniature United Nations On a typical Sunday worshippers include from left front Joaquim Desousa Cape Verde Islands Miss Ayaka Miyata Jashypan Rev Coleman Conley SSCC pastor rear Mrs Domingo Lopez and Mrs Amelda Hernandez Puerto Rico Miss Alicia Rodriguez Mexico

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs April 4 1968

sectU[]regS)~regS) ~~~regreg

~~reg OmJ ~01fOreg~ DENVER (NC) - The presishy

dent of Boston College said here Catholic liberal arts colleges must transforlTI themselves inshyto organic participating cells active in the struggle to improve the cities health with all the educational resources at their command

Father Michael P Walsh SJ speaking at Regis College here said this is one of the chalshylenges facing Catholic liberal arts colleges in the nation today The modern Catholic college he asserted has growing awareness of the new challenges facing it

Father Walsh said every school in a modern metropolis must not merely be open to the community in which it lives but each must actively reach out into city life in a genuinely helpshyful way And as it reaches out not only will its relationship to the community change but the nature of the college will change

Father Walsh was the princishyEnthusi(Jt3tlll~Sacred Hearts Father Sparks pal speaker at installation cereshymonies for Father Louis G MatshyActif1)iitiies at Regina Pacis Center tione SJ new president of Regis College

The Rev Coleman Conley SSCC helpeq write an Enlish language liturgy for use bv mi~sionaries before he left Japan five months ago The first time it was used with Press Continues 20 )nests concdebrating the Mass at Communion time the people were laughing and cr~ring at the same time When we left the altar they stood up and cheered for joy In Toils of Law

To Father Coleman 37 MADRID (NC)-The difficulshyvhill pro ve s the value of His 10 years in Japan were says Thats ~hat they wanted ties of Spanish Catholic publi shyto the enthusiastic priest a decshy Japan is Americanizedblinging Mass to the people cations with the government

ade of happiness in many ways Frequently Father ColemanA native of Belmont the continue unabated in a seemshyHo taught English at the Unishy the only Western within an hournearly six-footer now is direcshy ingly intenninable series of seishy

versity of Ibaraki several days and a half drive would invitetor of Regina Pacis Center in zures and denunciations a week Ibaraki he explains was his Christian and non-ChristianNew Bedford a center estabshy The Bulletin of HOAC theabout a three quarter of an hour neighbors alike to a barbecuelished by the Fall River Diocese national commission of thedrive from his parish in Tsushy He noticed one night that onein HI61 to help adjust a growing Workers Brotherhood of Cathshychiura guest was not eating olic Action has again felt theinflux of Puerto Rican families Tsuchiura itself he adds was Dont you like it Father heavy hand of the governmentt(l thei I new city and new way a city of about 180000 We had asked the man The ministry of Informationof life 40 Catholic families I think it is very good the has confiscated all copies of theToday the neighborl1ood surshy Why the low ratio man replied But I cannot eat latest edition of the Bulletinrounding the Center - which because my heart is fullNot a Package The reason given for thetechnically is part of St James

Because for too many years Mine was too when I heard latest confiscation is delictiveParish-is seeing a new flood that Father Coleman recallshe theorizes missionaries tried material or contents In violashyof newcomers pour in this time He learned another Japaneseto tie Christianity and Western tion of the countrys laws Thefamilies of Portuguese extracshy tradition by mistakeculture together in a package specific material in questiontion And they arent a package He was conducting a Requiem was an article entitled ChrisshyFather Coleman however

He also was principal of a Mass for a parishioner one day tianity and Revolution byemphasizes that regardless of s eve n - teacher kindergarten in a home in a small village Father Jose Maria Gonzaleztheir nationality his new parishshywhere J a pan e s e youngsters After he got the small altar Ruiz of Malagaioners are Americans first He learned English at an astoundshy set up Father explains I wash- The current Spanish pressdoesnmiddott let them or anyone else ing pace ed my hands in a bowl of water law permits the government toforget it

We visitors from the The crowd filling the room confiscate any published mateshyhadSince he took over the Cent~r Embassy one day he recalls had been chattering and laughshy rial that is presumed to be

a month ago its momentum has witti a grin ing When Father finished washshy delictive and subject to judgshy

picked up ment by a courtThe ambassadors wife walkshy ing his hands however and beshyHomeworkSession The government has also cooshyed in and was greeted in Engshy gan the Mass there was dead si shyFather Coleman has establishshy fiscated some editions of thelish by a little girl lenceed tutorial classes for youngshy Juventud Obrera organ of theWelcome and how are you Later a friEnd explained itsters who have completed the Catholic Young Women Workshyshe asked In Japan he said you washnon-English speaking program in ers organization It has alsoFine thank you the ambasshy your hands to get your heartthe ci ty schools and now are seized the latest edition of thesadors wife replied And how readymoving into regular classes shy review He has organized a homeshy are you Eventually Father built a

work session to give neighshy Fine think you we are too small water font in front of the borhood children help with the child answered church Parishioners attending ANTONE S FEND JRThats good said the ambasshy Mass would stop there to wash them the value of education school work and to impress on

DISPENSING Unfortunately Father Coleshy ing by also would stop for a

sadors wife their hands Non-Christians passshyOPTICIAN

man says that wasnt what she hand-washing session His staff is comprised of volshy

Prescriptions was supposed to say so our

un teer teachers including nuns for Eveglonelfrom St Anne School Then they would bow toward

Filledprize student was stymiedHe celebrates MasS at the the church and clap their hands Office HourAt first when English lessonsCenter on Sundays and on Wedshy before continuing on their way

900- 500nesday nights My first Sunshy This says Father is the way excopt Wedbegan he explained we hadda~ there were 23 people Last you learn things Fri Eve lIy Apptjust 10 minutes But they pickedSunday it was up to about 150 5alurday-9-3After 10 years in his Japaneseit up so fast we went to 35He is seeking some kind of a 191 BANK ST COR PURCHASE SImission Father Colemans heartminutes OPP F R TRUST PARKING LOT 618-0412work training program that will is with his Japanese peopleWe used a lot of gimmicksinsule jobs for heads of houseshy

broke it up every few minutes So M~my Thingsholds with songs They could sing 20 Currently however he doesIn between times Father ColeshyAmerican songs when I leftman studies psychology amiddott SMTI not have time to acutely miss DEBROSS OIL

and goes out meeting people At Hot Dogs them because he is too busy the moment hes trying to find To help speed the Englishshy helping his new parishioners co someone with $10000 to repair learning process the mother of There are so many things to a section of wall in the old each kindergarten had to come be done he mutters as he zips Heating Oils building that peeled off a week for an hours English lesson from one project to another with ago once a week so she could conshy an overpowering energy and Burners Being at Regina Pacis is not tinue English at home He has been at Regina Pacis a novelty for Father Coleman The mothers however got only a little more than a month 365 NORTH FRONT STREETRis parish in Japan where he more enjoyment out of Father Already things have changed started in a Quonset hut and Colemans cooking lessons there What will it be like after NEW BEDFORD after 10 years had a new church I built a barbecue pit and he has had a year to straighten

992-5534also was called Queen of Peace- taught them to barbecue hamshy out things 01 Regina Pacis burgers and hot dogs Father Only the Lord knows

6 THE ANCH9R-Dioceseo~ Fall River~ThursApriJ 4 19~

Priests Who Leave The National Association for Pastoral Renewal has

issued a report saying that 228 priests left their priestly work in 1966 and 480 in 1967

Several ~omments may be made on this survey

It is presumed that the report is correct There is no point in bringing this up except for the fact that the Association has not always presented itself in the best light At a Notre Dame meeting a year ago one of its priest-members argued for the removal of celibacy from the priesthood Then it was announced some weeks later that this priest had already been living in a marriage for a year The objectivity of his argUInentation could thus hardly be taken for granted In another case several priests reported to their bishop-one far removed from this locale -that their names had been listed as members of the Asshysociation while in fact they never belonged

But let it be assumed that the report is correct Itmiddot ineaps that less than one~half of one per cent of the na tions priests left their work in 1966 and that slightly more than one-half of one per cent left in 1967 While each priest is an individual and each leaving of the priest shyhood involved personal tragedy and some amount of shock to the community the number of those who leave must always be seen against the background of the vast the

overwhelming majority of those who are doing their work as priests

Further while it is quite possible to understand that an ordained priest might come toa decision to leave his priestly work there are ways this can be done without shock to the people of God for whom there must always be concern Calling a press conference decrying the hardshyheartedness ofmiddot bishops throwing darts of malice at other priests attacking the Church work and age~cies that are being sincerely carried on by others-all this smacks more of the childs kicking down someone elses sand castle than the grave decision of a mature man If a priest feels that he can no longer do the work of the priesthood lie can approach his bishop with this decision - and there is no bishop in the country who would not be made fearful and become helpful confronted with such a decision and such a man Arrangements can be made for the priest to leave his work and an appeal made to the Holy Father for this mans laicization This can all be done with dignity and with due concern for the people of God The tabloid-type treatment can upset people to such a degree that they can begin quesshytioning faith and the basic spiritual values of life Maybe they should not make such an unwarranted jump from one mans action- to their~ own spiritual equanimity but they do And it would bea poor observer o~ human nature who would say otherwise

A priest should not be self-centered even whEm he deshycides to leave or else he becomes unmindful of those whom his action can seriously hurt He should not project his personal problems onto the majority of the priests who stay to d9 Gods work - he should speak for himself alone And he should not as Father Greeley has observed expect to be treated like a folk hero of the American Church He should be treated with the kindness and understanding due a man who feels he has made a mistake in being a priest and wishes to chal1ge his status A problem yes a tragedy many times yes a cause for concern and help by all means yes

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James l Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll - MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J Golden

~fliIl ~~

~ltf~~

IJJCRIMIIArION ANI) SEGIU()Aro TNIUTEN rHG FUrtliE orEYEAY AAfeIMiAN II

N710I CMISfDN OJV CIVIL ()SOU)GRS

the mOOQlnq Rev John F Moore St Josephs Taunton

BA MA MEd

Vocations

09 Som~thing New Lets stop the old idea of recruiting This approach to vocations is archaic Young people

today hear enough about recruitIng from their local doraft board They also have had their fill of the trite and r~

diculous Yet in the field of vocational promotion to the priesthood and the reshyligious life the trite and the ridiculous still seems to excel

No wonder that there is a shortage of vocations

Lets take a couple of ex amples Have you read any of our catholic magazines recently If it wasnt for religious voshycational advertising many of these magazines would not be able to go to press bull bull bull And what ads

In most cases they are tasteshyless and so poorly done that any response to such an advertiseshyment woud be a miracle of the first order In this day and age why do we still encourage such

an attitude tThe idea that we can encourage vocations by~such faded Madison Avenue propashyganda methods boarders on the iidiculou1l American youths are

I bull

not stupid They can see through this retarded approach and view the sponsors of the ads in the light that they deserve

Another rather galling gimshymick is the trip to the semishynary routine This vocational promotion provides entertainshyment for the parish high school altar boys This is the extent of its influence

In s~ch a trip the highlights of seminary life are enthuiasti shycally indicated-such as recrashytion facilities beautiful buildings and sweet smiling seminarians What a picture

The idea of total commitment seems relegated to the locker room the pool table and the uniform In todays church how can we still lead our youth down such a primrose path Yet there are many who still view vocations through such rose colored glasses

Creating Atmosphere for Grace of God

~ Silicide Tendency First Obvious To Clergy

PARAMUS (NC)-Clergy- men may be among the first people to become aware- of suicidal tendencies in others a Baptist minister from New York told clergymen of an faiths at an institute here in New Jersey on clergy attitudes toward suicidal persons

The Rev Harry Warren III of the Richmond Hill Baptist Church said statistics show that 50 per cent of people witli suicidal tendencies consult a minister at some time or other

He said clergymen should b~

alert to such tendencies an(i also urged them to help educate the communnity about the problem Society he said noW tends to shut out people who have attempted suicide just as it shuts out the~ alcoholic the divorcee

Another speaker at the insUshytute held at Bergen Pinee County Hospital here was Dr John H Chilman of St Josephll Hospital Paterson He said that for a person considering suicide the attitude taken by a clergyshyman could mean the differetice between life and death

Dr Chilman a psychiatrist told the priests ministers and rabbis attending the one-day program that they can help the disturbed person by binding him to yourself

Other speakers discussed the behavioral patterns leading up to suicide attempts the legal attitudes toward persons who attempt suicide and the incishydence of suicide among varioUllJ groups

Refuses Request To Say Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) - The archdiocese of Washington has turned down a request from the Catholic Traditionalist Society for a Mass to be celebrated in a Washington church by the societys president Father Gom- mar DePauw

The refusal was made in a letter to William O Collins president of the societys Washshyington chapter from Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington

Bishop Herrmann said that permission was refused because of Father DePauws status Father DePauw has refused orders by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore to return to his archdiocese and accept II pastoral assignment

Bishop Hermann also noted that Masses are celebrated in Latin at three Washington churches The parishes were the only ones of the some 130 in the archdiocese to accept an offer made by Patrick Cardinal OBoyle last Summer to hold bull Latin Mass on Sunday if the parishioners so desired

Form Apostolatemiddot BUFFALO (NC) -Fourtees

inner-city parishes-12 in Bufshyfalo and two in Lackawana

have been incorporated into If we desire mature and sinshy A vocation is a grace 10 be inner-city apostolate middota new

cere candidates for the priest shy accepted or rejected The job of diocesan effort to meet the hood and the religious life our fostering vocations is one of needs of predominantly NegNl approach must be sincere and creating an atmosphere in wbich neighborhoods in the Buff mature The youth of today will the grace of God will be respond- diocese not follow the road of artless middoted to This indeed is a very inshyand juvenile schemes Such tacshy direct and subtle approach if tics they reject and rightly so you will llUt itis constant and life To foster vocations is

When young men and women effective The work of Gods foster the life of the Christian are ready to lend a helping hand ChurclI will be carried out in It is Christ who will have It to their fellow man it is truly the light of Gods grace To so He desires to work througll tragic to see so-called religious take any other view is to miss men In turn men must work leaders consider them as a group completely the entire point through God of idiotic hippies Most priests and religious will In this mutual rapport 1Ibe

We must begin to completely be the first to indicate the en-Church always will have fhepo reconsider the entire approach vironment of theJr persoJlal life herds for the flock and harveAshyto religious vocations was the seed of their vocational ers for the harvest

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

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10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

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THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

11I11111111I1111I11I11111111I11I111I111I111I11I1111I111I11111I11I111111111I11I11I11111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I11I11I11111111111I11I11I111111

lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

r--------------------------- L FIVE CONVENIENT ~FFICES to SERVE YOU ONE~Srop BANKIHG iL middot~FJRSTMACH(ImiddotNI STS

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Imiddot OF JTAUNJON t Norto~ W Main middotSt-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main Stbull North Disihto~ Spri~gSt-NorthmiddotEastoMain5t

Member rFederall~poSitInsurance Corporation L~ ~shy---

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(GfNfRIL (ONJRlaORS )shy and ~fl6INEERS

JAMES M COLLINSCE res ReglsteredCiVil ancPStructuraIEnginee

Member NationaimiddotSociety Professi~cilEngineers

fRANCIS c1 lCOLUNS rJR cTreas THOMAS ~K (COLLINS Seq

ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN STREET

Fall River 675-7497

NEW BEDFORD

1001 Kings Hwy Open Evenings

Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 5: 04.04.68

Prelate rn2q~nins

[p~)(~~ rP~oGon

O~ ~~o0o~[Lfi) BOSTON (NC) - Archshy

bishop Igino Cardinale aposshyoolic delegate to Great Britmiddot ~in told an audience here (lhat Pope Paul VI did not mean ~ include conscientious objecshytors in a criticism of pacifists lle made last Dec 8

Addlessing participants in the evening session of a Boston College symposium on the Vatshy~n and Peace Archbishop Carshydinale speaking of the Dec 8 talk said

In the same message Pope Paul distinguishes peace from llJacifism It is obvious that it is not his intention to condemn pacifism as such but particular lIonns of pacifism such as he desclmiddotjbes which encourages citizens to shrink from their etivic responsibilities through oowardice or lack of due conshyoorn

Paul was well aware of what Vatican II had declared with regard to conscientious objecshy~ors that it seems right that laws make humane provisions for the case of those who for reasons of conscience refuse to bear arms provided however ~hey accept some other form of oervice to the human commushyllIlity

Important Pari

The papal message wi4ely repol-ted around the world eaused an uproar when it apshypeared Many felt that Pope Paul had betrayed the spirit of the Second Vatican Councils otatement on conscientious obshyjectors while others used the papal remark as an indication that pacifism could not coexist with Catholicism

Emphasizing his explanation ~ the remark by notifying reshyporters that half-page was one of the most important parts of his 36-page addres~ Archbishop Caldinale pointed out that few men could match Pope Paul in the earnestness of their search iilor peace

Prelate Continues Ban on Festival

JAFFNA (NC)-The bishop of laffna has declared that church

festivals on a tiny Indian Ocean island claimed by both India snd Ceylon will not be resumed until the local government solves the problem of illegal immishy(frants

Bishop Emilianus PilIai OM I said that the St Anthonys festival celebrated annually in March on the Kachativu island bad been suspended officially lor the past three years

The statement was the first Catholic reaction since Ceyshyionese church jurisdiction over the 105OOO-square-yard island located midway between the two eountries was cited in support of Ceylons ownership of it

Missouri See Plans Social Action Unit

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Bishop Charles H Helmsing of Kansas City-St Joseph has named Fashyther Vincent J Lovett pastor of St Stephens church here as chairman of an ad hoc comshymittee to set up a human relashytions or social action department ~r the diocese as called for by the diocesan synod

Father Lovett described his preliminary work as a factshyfinding process to collect inshyformation and ideas on the work of swh a department Other 4M)mmittee members havf not 1Ieen named he iaid

SMAlL UN Almost any Sunday at Regina Pacis Center New Bedford one is apt to meet the makings of a miniature United Nations On a typical Sunday worshippers include from left front Joaquim Desousa Cape Verde Islands Miss Ayaka Miyata Jashypan Rev Coleman Conley SSCC pastor rear Mrs Domingo Lopez and Mrs Amelda Hernandez Puerto Rico Miss Alicia Rodriguez Mexico

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs April 4 1968

sectU[]regS)~regS) ~~~regreg

~~reg OmJ ~01fOreg~ DENVER (NC) - The presishy

dent of Boston College said here Catholic liberal arts colleges must transforlTI themselves inshyto organic participating cells active in the struggle to improve the cities health with all the educational resources at their command

Father Michael P Walsh SJ speaking at Regis College here said this is one of the chalshylenges facing Catholic liberal arts colleges in the nation today The modern Catholic college he asserted has growing awareness of the new challenges facing it

Father Walsh said every school in a modern metropolis must not merely be open to the community in which it lives but each must actively reach out into city life in a genuinely helpshyful way And as it reaches out not only will its relationship to the community change but the nature of the college will change

Father Walsh was the princishyEnthusi(Jt3tlll~Sacred Hearts Father Sparks pal speaker at installation cereshymonies for Father Louis G MatshyActif1)iitiies at Regina Pacis Center tione SJ new president of Regis College

The Rev Coleman Conley SSCC helpeq write an Enlish language liturgy for use bv mi~sionaries before he left Japan five months ago The first time it was used with Press Continues 20 )nests concdebrating the Mass at Communion time the people were laughing and cr~ring at the same time When we left the altar they stood up and cheered for joy In Toils of Law

To Father Coleman 37 MADRID (NC)-The difficulshyvhill pro ve s the value of His 10 years in Japan were says Thats ~hat they wanted ties of Spanish Catholic publi shyto the enthusiastic priest a decshy Japan is Americanizedblinging Mass to the people cations with the government

ade of happiness in many ways Frequently Father ColemanA native of Belmont the continue unabated in a seemshyHo taught English at the Unishy the only Western within an hournearly six-footer now is direcshy ingly intenninable series of seishy

versity of Ibaraki several days and a half drive would invitetor of Regina Pacis Center in zures and denunciations a week Ibaraki he explains was his Christian and non-ChristianNew Bedford a center estabshy The Bulletin of HOAC theabout a three quarter of an hour neighbors alike to a barbecuelished by the Fall River Diocese national commission of thedrive from his parish in Tsushy He noticed one night that onein HI61 to help adjust a growing Workers Brotherhood of Cathshychiura guest was not eating olic Action has again felt theinflux of Puerto Rican families Tsuchiura itself he adds was Dont you like it Father heavy hand of the governmentt(l thei I new city and new way a city of about 180000 We had asked the man The ministry of Informationof life 40 Catholic families I think it is very good the has confiscated all copies of theToday the neighborl1ood surshy Why the low ratio man replied But I cannot eat latest edition of the Bulletinrounding the Center - which because my heart is fullNot a Package The reason given for thetechnically is part of St James

Because for too many years Mine was too when I heard latest confiscation is delictiveParish-is seeing a new flood that Father Coleman recallshe theorizes missionaries tried material or contents In violashyof newcomers pour in this time He learned another Japaneseto tie Christianity and Western tion of the countrys laws Thefamilies of Portuguese extracshy tradition by mistakeculture together in a package specific material in questiontion And they arent a package He was conducting a Requiem was an article entitled ChrisshyFather Coleman however

He also was principal of a Mass for a parishioner one day tianity and Revolution byemphasizes that regardless of s eve n - teacher kindergarten in a home in a small village Father Jose Maria Gonzaleztheir nationality his new parishshywhere J a pan e s e youngsters After he got the small altar Ruiz of Malagaioners are Americans first He learned English at an astoundshy set up Father explains I wash- The current Spanish pressdoesnmiddott let them or anyone else ing pace ed my hands in a bowl of water law permits the government toforget it

We visitors from the The crowd filling the room confiscate any published mateshyhadSince he took over the Cent~r Embassy one day he recalls had been chattering and laughshy rial that is presumed to be

a month ago its momentum has witti a grin ing When Father finished washshy delictive and subject to judgshy

picked up ment by a courtThe ambassadors wife walkshy ing his hands however and beshyHomeworkSession The government has also cooshyed in and was greeted in Engshy gan the Mass there was dead si shyFather Coleman has establishshy fiscated some editions of thelish by a little girl lenceed tutorial classes for youngshy Juventud Obrera organ of theWelcome and how are you Later a friEnd explained itsters who have completed the Catholic Young Women Workshyshe asked In Japan he said you washnon-English speaking program in ers organization It has alsoFine thank you the ambasshy your hands to get your heartthe ci ty schools and now are seized the latest edition of thesadors wife replied And how readymoving into regular classes shy review He has organized a homeshy are you Eventually Father built a

work session to give neighshy Fine think you we are too small water font in front of the borhood children help with the child answered church Parishioners attending ANTONE S FEND JRThats good said the ambasshy Mass would stop there to wash them the value of education school work and to impress on

DISPENSING Unfortunately Father Coleshy ing by also would stop for a

sadors wife their hands Non-Christians passshyOPTICIAN

man says that wasnt what she hand-washing session His staff is comprised of volshy

Prescriptions was supposed to say so our

un teer teachers including nuns for Eveglonelfrom St Anne School Then they would bow toward

Filledprize student was stymiedHe celebrates MasS at the the church and clap their hands Office HourAt first when English lessonsCenter on Sundays and on Wedshy before continuing on their way

900- 500nesday nights My first Sunshy This says Father is the way excopt Wedbegan he explained we hadda~ there were 23 people Last you learn things Fri Eve lIy Apptjust 10 minutes But they pickedSunday it was up to about 150 5alurday-9-3After 10 years in his Japaneseit up so fast we went to 35He is seeking some kind of a 191 BANK ST COR PURCHASE SImission Father Colemans heartminutes OPP F R TRUST PARKING LOT 618-0412work training program that will is with his Japanese peopleWe used a lot of gimmicksinsule jobs for heads of houseshy

broke it up every few minutes So M~my Thingsholds with songs They could sing 20 Currently however he doesIn between times Father ColeshyAmerican songs when I leftman studies psychology amiddott SMTI not have time to acutely miss DEBROSS OIL

and goes out meeting people At Hot Dogs them because he is too busy the moment hes trying to find To help speed the Englishshy helping his new parishioners co someone with $10000 to repair learning process the mother of There are so many things to a section of wall in the old each kindergarten had to come be done he mutters as he zips Heating Oils building that peeled off a week for an hours English lesson from one project to another with ago once a week so she could conshy an overpowering energy and Burners Being at Regina Pacis is not tinue English at home He has been at Regina Pacis a novelty for Father Coleman The mothers however got only a little more than a month 365 NORTH FRONT STREETRis parish in Japan where he more enjoyment out of Father Already things have changed started in a Quonset hut and Colemans cooking lessons there What will it be like after NEW BEDFORD after 10 years had a new church I built a barbecue pit and he has had a year to straighten

992-5534also was called Queen of Peace- taught them to barbecue hamshy out things 01 Regina Pacis burgers and hot dogs Father Only the Lord knows

6 THE ANCH9R-Dioceseo~ Fall River~ThursApriJ 4 19~

Priests Who Leave The National Association for Pastoral Renewal has

issued a report saying that 228 priests left their priestly work in 1966 and 480 in 1967

Several ~omments may be made on this survey

It is presumed that the report is correct There is no point in bringing this up except for the fact that the Association has not always presented itself in the best light At a Notre Dame meeting a year ago one of its priest-members argued for the removal of celibacy from the priesthood Then it was announced some weeks later that this priest had already been living in a marriage for a year The objectivity of his argUInentation could thus hardly be taken for granted In another case several priests reported to their bishop-one far removed from this locale -that their names had been listed as members of the Asshysociation while in fact they never belonged

But let it be assumed that the report is correct Itmiddot ineaps that less than one~half of one per cent of the na tions priests left their work in 1966 and that slightly more than one-half of one per cent left in 1967 While each priest is an individual and each leaving of the priest shyhood involved personal tragedy and some amount of shock to the community the number of those who leave must always be seen against the background of the vast the

overwhelming majority of those who are doing their work as priests

Further while it is quite possible to understand that an ordained priest might come toa decision to leave his priestly work there are ways this can be done without shock to the people of God for whom there must always be concern Calling a press conference decrying the hardshyheartedness ofmiddot bishops throwing darts of malice at other priests attacking the Church work and age~cies that are being sincerely carried on by others-all this smacks more of the childs kicking down someone elses sand castle than the grave decision of a mature man If a priest feels that he can no longer do the work of the priesthood lie can approach his bishop with this decision - and there is no bishop in the country who would not be made fearful and become helpful confronted with such a decision and such a man Arrangements can be made for the priest to leave his work and an appeal made to the Holy Father for this mans laicization This can all be done with dignity and with due concern for the people of God The tabloid-type treatment can upset people to such a degree that they can begin quesshytioning faith and the basic spiritual values of life Maybe they should not make such an unwarranted jump from one mans action- to their~ own spiritual equanimity but they do And it would bea poor observer o~ human nature who would say otherwise

A priest should not be self-centered even whEm he deshycides to leave or else he becomes unmindful of those whom his action can seriously hurt He should not project his personal problems onto the majority of the priests who stay to d9 Gods work - he should speak for himself alone And he should not as Father Greeley has observed expect to be treated like a folk hero of the American Church He should be treated with the kindness and understanding due a man who feels he has made a mistake in being a priest and wishes to chal1ge his status A problem yes a tragedy many times yes a cause for concern and help by all means yes

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James l Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll - MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J Golden

~fliIl ~~

~ltf~~

IJJCRIMIIArION ANI) SEGIU()Aro TNIUTEN rHG FUrtliE orEYEAY AAfeIMiAN II

N710I CMISfDN OJV CIVIL ()SOU)GRS

the mOOQlnq Rev John F Moore St Josephs Taunton

BA MA MEd

Vocations

09 Som~thing New Lets stop the old idea of recruiting This approach to vocations is archaic Young people

today hear enough about recruitIng from their local doraft board They also have had their fill of the trite and r~

diculous Yet in the field of vocational promotion to the priesthood and the reshyligious life the trite and the ridiculous still seems to excel

No wonder that there is a shortage of vocations

Lets take a couple of ex amples Have you read any of our catholic magazines recently If it wasnt for religious voshycational advertising many of these magazines would not be able to go to press bull bull bull And what ads

In most cases they are tasteshyless and so poorly done that any response to such an advertiseshyment woud be a miracle of the first order In this day and age why do we still encourage such

an attitude tThe idea that we can encourage vocations by~such faded Madison Avenue propashyganda methods boarders on the iidiculou1l American youths are

I bull

not stupid They can see through this retarded approach and view the sponsors of the ads in the light that they deserve

Another rather galling gimshymick is the trip to the semishynary routine This vocational promotion provides entertainshyment for the parish high school altar boys This is the extent of its influence

In s~ch a trip the highlights of seminary life are enthuiasti shycally indicated-such as recrashytion facilities beautiful buildings and sweet smiling seminarians What a picture

The idea of total commitment seems relegated to the locker room the pool table and the uniform In todays church how can we still lead our youth down such a primrose path Yet there are many who still view vocations through such rose colored glasses

Creating Atmosphere for Grace of God

~ Silicide Tendency First Obvious To Clergy

PARAMUS (NC)-Clergy- men may be among the first people to become aware- of suicidal tendencies in others a Baptist minister from New York told clergymen of an faiths at an institute here in New Jersey on clergy attitudes toward suicidal persons

The Rev Harry Warren III of the Richmond Hill Baptist Church said statistics show that 50 per cent of people witli suicidal tendencies consult a minister at some time or other

He said clergymen should b~

alert to such tendencies an(i also urged them to help educate the communnity about the problem Society he said noW tends to shut out people who have attempted suicide just as it shuts out the~ alcoholic the divorcee

Another speaker at the insUshytute held at Bergen Pinee County Hospital here was Dr John H Chilman of St Josephll Hospital Paterson He said that for a person considering suicide the attitude taken by a clergyshyman could mean the differetice between life and death

Dr Chilman a psychiatrist told the priests ministers and rabbis attending the one-day program that they can help the disturbed person by binding him to yourself

Other speakers discussed the behavioral patterns leading up to suicide attempts the legal attitudes toward persons who attempt suicide and the incishydence of suicide among varioUllJ groups

Refuses Request To Say Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) - The archdiocese of Washington has turned down a request from the Catholic Traditionalist Society for a Mass to be celebrated in a Washington church by the societys president Father Gom- mar DePauw

The refusal was made in a letter to William O Collins president of the societys Washshyington chapter from Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington

Bishop Herrmann said that permission was refused because of Father DePauws status Father DePauw has refused orders by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore to return to his archdiocese and accept II pastoral assignment

Bishop Hermann also noted that Masses are celebrated in Latin at three Washington churches The parishes were the only ones of the some 130 in the archdiocese to accept an offer made by Patrick Cardinal OBoyle last Summer to hold bull Latin Mass on Sunday if the parishioners so desired

Form Apostolatemiddot BUFFALO (NC) -Fourtees

inner-city parishes-12 in Bufshyfalo and two in Lackawana

have been incorporated into If we desire mature and sinshy A vocation is a grace 10 be inner-city apostolate middota new

cere candidates for the priest shy accepted or rejected The job of diocesan effort to meet the hood and the religious life our fostering vocations is one of needs of predominantly NegNl approach must be sincere and creating an atmosphere in wbich neighborhoods in the Buff mature The youth of today will the grace of God will be respond- diocese not follow the road of artless middoted to This indeed is a very inshyand juvenile schemes Such tacshy direct and subtle approach if tics they reject and rightly so you will llUt itis constant and life To foster vocations is

When young men and women effective The work of Gods foster the life of the Christian are ready to lend a helping hand ChurclI will be carried out in It is Christ who will have It to their fellow man it is truly the light of Gods grace To so He desires to work througll tragic to see so-called religious take any other view is to miss men In turn men must work leaders consider them as a group completely the entire point through God of idiotic hippies Most priests and religious will In this mutual rapport 1Ibe

We must begin to completely be the first to indicate the en-Church always will have fhepo reconsider the entire approach vironment of theJr persoJlal life herds for the flock and harveAshyto religious vocations was the seed of their vocational ers for the harvest

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

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NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

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THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

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lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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NEW BEDFORD

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 6: 04.04.68

6 THE ANCH9R-Dioceseo~ Fall River~ThursApriJ 4 19~

Priests Who Leave The National Association for Pastoral Renewal has

issued a report saying that 228 priests left their priestly work in 1966 and 480 in 1967

Several ~omments may be made on this survey

It is presumed that the report is correct There is no point in bringing this up except for the fact that the Association has not always presented itself in the best light At a Notre Dame meeting a year ago one of its priest-members argued for the removal of celibacy from the priesthood Then it was announced some weeks later that this priest had already been living in a marriage for a year The objectivity of his argUInentation could thus hardly be taken for granted In another case several priests reported to their bishop-one far removed from this locale -that their names had been listed as members of the Asshysociation while in fact they never belonged

But let it be assumed that the report is correct Itmiddot ineaps that less than one~half of one per cent of the na tions priests left their work in 1966 and that slightly more than one-half of one per cent left in 1967 While each priest is an individual and each leaving of the priest shyhood involved personal tragedy and some amount of shock to the community the number of those who leave must always be seen against the background of the vast the

overwhelming majority of those who are doing their work as priests

Further while it is quite possible to understand that an ordained priest might come toa decision to leave his priestly work there are ways this can be done without shock to the people of God for whom there must always be concern Calling a press conference decrying the hardshyheartedness ofmiddot bishops throwing darts of malice at other priests attacking the Church work and age~cies that are being sincerely carried on by others-all this smacks more of the childs kicking down someone elses sand castle than the grave decision of a mature man If a priest feels that he can no longer do the work of the priesthood lie can approach his bishop with this decision - and there is no bishop in the country who would not be made fearful and become helpful confronted with such a decision and such a man Arrangements can be made for the priest to leave his work and an appeal made to the Holy Father for this mans laicization This can all be done with dignity and with due concern for the people of God The tabloid-type treatment can upset people to such a degree that they can begin quesshytioning faith and the basic spiritual values of life Maybe they should not make such an unwarranted jump from one mans action- to their~ own spiritual equanimity but they do And it would bea poor observer o~ human nature who would say otherwise

A priest should not be self-centered even whEm he deshycides to leave or else he becomes unmindful of those whom his action can seriously hurt He should not project his personal problems onto the majority of the priests who stay to d9 Gods work - he should speak for himself alone And he should not as Father Greeley has observed expect to be treated like a folk hero of the American Church He should be treated with the kindness and understanding due a man who feels he has made a mistake in being a priest and wishes to chal1ge his status A problem yes a tragedy many times yes a cause for concern and help by all means yes

rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James l Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER

Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll - MANAGING EDITOR

Hugh J Golden

~fliIl ~~

~ltf~~

IJJCRIMIIArION ANI) SEGIU()Aro TNIUTEN rHG FUrtliE orEYEAY AAfeIMiAN II

N710I CMISfDN OJV CIVIL ()SOU)GRS

the mOOQlnq Rev John F Moore St Josephs Taunton

BA MA MEd

Vocations

09 Som~thing New Lets stop the old idea of recruiting This approach to vocations is archaic Young people

today hear enough about recruitIng from their local doraft board They also have had their fill of the trite and r~

diculous Yet in the field of vocational promotion to the priesthood and the reshyligious life the trite and the ridiculous still seems to excel

No wonder that there is a shortage of vocations

Lets take a couple of ex amples Have you read any of our catholic magazines recently If it wasnt for religious voshycational advertising many of these magazines would not be able to go to press bull bull bull And what ads

In most cases they are tasteshyless and so poorly done that any response to such an advertiseshyment woud be a miracle of the first order In this day and age why do we still encourage such

an attitude tThe idea that we can encourage vocations by~such faded Madison Avenue propashyganda methods boarders on the iidiculou1l American youths are

I bull

not stupid They can see through this retarded approach and view the sponsors of the ads in the light that they deserve

Another rather galling gimshymick is the trip to the semishynary routine This vocational promotion provides entertainshyment for the parish high school altar boys This is the extent of its influence

In s~ch a trip the highlights of seminary life are enthuiasti shycally indicated-such as recrashytion facilities beautiful buildings and sweet smiling seminarians What a picture

The idea of total commitment seems relegated to the locker room the pool table and the uniform In todays church how can we still lead our youth down such a primrose path Yet there are many who still view vocations through such rose colored glasses

Creating Atmosphere for Grace of God

~ Silicide Tendency First Obvious To Clergy

PARAMUS (NC)-Clergy- men may be among the first people to become aware- of suicidal tendencies in others a Baptist minister from New York told clergymen of an faiths at an institute here in New Jersey on clergy attitudes toward suicidal persons

The Rev Harry Warren III of the Richmond Hill Baptist Church said statistics show that 50 per cent of people witli suicidal tendencies consult a minister at some time or other

He said clergymen should b~

alert to such tendencies an(i also urged them to help educate the communnity about the problem Society he said noW tends to shut out people who have attempted suicide just as it shuts out the~ alcoholic the divorcee

Another speaker at the insUshytute held at Bergen Pinee County Hospital here was Dr John H Chilman of St Josephll Hospital Paterson He said that for a person considering suicide the attitude taken by a clergyshyman could mean the differetice between life and death

Dr Chilman a psychiatrist told the priests ministers and rabbis attending the one-day program that they can help the disturbed person by binding him to yourself

Other speakers discussed the behavioral patterns leading up to suicide attempts the legal attitudes toward persons who attempt suicide and the incishydence of suicide among varioUllJ groups

Refuses Request To Say Mass

WASHINGTON (NC) - The archdiocese of Washington has turned down a request from the Catholic Traditionalist Society for a Mass to be celebrated in a Washington church by the societys president Father Gom- mar DePauw

The refusal was made in a letter to William O Collins president of the societys Washshyington chapter from Auxiliary Bishop Edward J Herrmann of Washington

Bishop Herrmann said that permission was refused because of Father DePauws status Father DePauw has refused orders by Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore to return to his archdiocese and accept II pastoral assignment

Bishop Hermann also noted that Masses are celebrated in Latin at three Washington churches The parishes were the only ones of the some 130 in the archdiocese to accept an offer made by Patrick Cardinal OBoyle last Summer to hold bull Latin Mass on Sunday if the parishioners so desired

Form Apostolatemiddot BUFFALO (NC) -Fourtees

inner-city parishes-12 in Bufshyfalo and two in Lackawana

have been incorporated into If we desire mature and sinshy A vocation is a grace 10 be inner-city apostolate middota new

cere candidates for the priest shy accepted or rejected The job of diocesan effort to meet the hood and the religious life our fostering vocations is one of needs of predominantly NegNl approach must be sincere and creating an atmosphere in wbich neighborhoods in the Buff mature The youth of today will the grace of God will be respond- diocese not follow the road of artless middoted to This indeed is a very inshyand juvenile schemes Such tacshy direct and subtle approach if tics they reject and rightly so you will llUt itis constant and life To foster vocations is

When young men and women effective The work of Gods foster the life of the Christian are ready to lend a helping hand ChurclI will be carried out in It is Christ who will have It to their fellow man it is truly the light of Gods grace To so He desires to work througll tragic to see so-called religious take any other view is to miss men In turn men must work leaders consider them as a group completely the entire point through God of idiotic hippies Most priests and religious will In this mutual rapport 1Ibe

We must begin to completely be the first to indicate the en-Church always will have fhepo reconsider the entire approach vironment of theJr persoJlal life herds for the flock and harveAshyto religious vocations was the seed of their vocational ers for the harvest

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

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10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

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THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

11I11111111I1111I11I11111111I11I111I111I111I11I1111I111I11111I11I111111111I11I11I11111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I11I11I11111111111I11I11I111111

lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

r--------------------------- L FIVE CONVENIENT ~FFICES to SERVE YOU ONE~Srop BANKIHG iL middot~FJRSTMACH(ImiddotNI STS

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Imiddot OF JTAUNJON t Norto~ W Main middotSt-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main Stbull North Disihto~ Spri~gSt-NorthmiddotEastoMain5t

Member rFederall~poSitInsurance Corporation L~ ~shy---

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(GfNfRIL (ONJRlaORS )shy and ~fl6INEERS

JAMES M COLLINSCE res ReglsteredCiVil ancPStructuraIEnginee

Member NationaimiddotSociety Professi~cilEngineers

fRANCIS c1 lCOLUNS rJR cTreas THOMAS ~K (COLLINS Seq

ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN STREET

Fall River 675-7497

NEW BEDFORD

1001 Kings Hwy Open Evenings

Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 7: 04.04.68

7 middotFr OraisoIJs B~ Offer$ New Approach to Morality 1 ) By RtRev Msgr John S Kennedy t Father Mare Oraisons latest book is calkd MOrality 1br OUf Time (Doubleday 501 Franklin Ave Garden City HY 11531 $ 395) Arent those fighting words Which -ones Well Father Marc Oraisolll to begin with Their eonnotation is controversy thing virtues sins faculties because previous books by have become things in themshytthis prieampt-physician have selves to be meditated upon as been severely criticized as so many pieces in an intellecshydoubtfully orthodox And then tual game An impossibly inshy-morality for our time Dont tricate legalistic game one ilhey suggest the might add rege rap pin g What is the alternative Sit-Oi permanent uation ethics Is this what qIDjective norms Father Oraison is advocating ond the fabri- Not at all He summarily dis-

I ~tion of a new pUsses situation morality but rnoralitymaking interestingly he contends that eawardly conces- such morality a flight from aU ISions to the un- responsibility results from exshyIeasonable de- treme and inevitable reaction

liWlnds of a to the nimble abstract reasonshycelf _ indulgent iog we call casuistry age If this is Gives EX8IIlpies anyones initial No the alternative is an aushyeeaction to author and title we thentic Christian morality a ~ only say Please give the dynamic mode of behaviour that JWln a hearing flows from that view of the

Please read the book With- world w hie h revelationshykold judgment until you have achieved in Christ-can give us

learned and weighed what he bull ltII No one can know what bas to say Christian morality is without

If this is done one cannot referring explicitly and essenshyIlelp being greatly impressed tiallly and constantly to what

I Jlerhaps one will not agree with Christ Said and did everything contained in these Beautiful words What do

pages But Father Oraison does they mean in the concrete make a cogent case for a new Fatber Oraison shows us what lIPproach to moral theolo~ they mean in the well develshy

Why a new approach Has oped closely argued section of ilhe moral law or human na- biB book lture changed Certainly our Christian morality he holds knowledge of human nature has should teach us the positive deshyebanged thanks to the discov- mands of the situations in which eries of science There are the we find ourselves and should findings of anthropology the promote interpersonal progress findings of psychology to be in Christian charity He gives

taken into consideration specific examples in terms of our own experience

Because of these man as he Its is far better understood than Unfolding of Truth ever before For exampleit is But what of the law Is it

-dear that man engages in re- done away with ignored Not ilationships not with law but at all Its force and workiJlgs ~ith persons-with God lnd are demonstrated in incisive ~ith others CQlwnentary on the teachings of

Necessity to Love st Paul Sin and guilt are illushy minatingly discussed The heaishy

Christianity is not a philoso- log and constructive use of the phy riot III morality but a rell- sacrament of Penance is indishygion says Father Oraison And cat~

lfeligion is a relationship or a All this is not revolutionary oot of relationships Man is as some will contend but evoshy

ealled upon for a response to lutionary ie the unfolding of Sod The definitive encounter truth as better understood in

(Is achieved finally in Christmiddot the light of contemporary And in Christ we see that the knowledge moral law is an indicator of the The translation by NeysampeCessity to love Challe is eXlellent The French

What has been designated as original has been expertly put morality has been in many in- into idiomatic English mances merely moralism that lEmergent SeM ta moral speculation gradushyoly disassociated 0 0 0 from the Adrian van Kaam Bert van context of human acts (and) Croonenburg and Susan Anshydrastically depersonmJizedamplso nette Muto have collaborated in disassociated from the Gospel the preparation of The EmershyWhose morality is always that gJent self (Dimension Books ~ personal encounter 303 W 42nd Street New York

Father Oraison is certainly N Y 10036 Four volumes $795 lrlght in saying that the nlOrality the set) Each chapter they qn the old manuals was defined tell us flows from a question

and worked out without refer- about the meaning of life in re-

CONTRAST Framed by barbed wire a statue of the Blessed Virgin stands in front of the cathedral in Saigon Th~ barbed wire which is used to close oft the street at night in the daytime is gathered in the flquare fronting the cathedral where Masses are usually packed it is reported NC Photo

Plan Corisultation Catholic Protestant Agencies Pledge

C(i)operative Efforts BETHESDA (NC)-We have white racism and help meet the

pledged that we will never un- urban crisis dertake a major project in reli- The day-long meeting beshygious education without first tween NCC officials and represhy

conslilting the other to see if it sEmtatives of Catholic agencies can become an ecumenical proj- was held at Villa Cortona Aposshyect valuable to both tolic Center Catholic agencies

The comment by Msgr Rus- represented included the Youth sell J Neighbor director of the Department of the UnitedStates National Center ofthe Confra- Catholic Conference the Nashyternity of Chrlstian Doctrine tional Council of Catholic Men (CCD) summed up the resultsmiddot of a Consultation on Christian Education jointly sponsored here in Maryland by CCD and the Department of Educational Development of the National Council of Churches (NCC)

The consultation the first of its kind marked an initial step by the Catholic and NCC agenshycies to work together on a vashyriety of educational projects ranging from joint training of religious educators and preparashytion of curriculum materials to a pooling of efforts to overcome

0 H I araO OSPltO S

Cnce to God acting as a person lation to the self the self and PIan amp0 Mrge others the self and community 11

In those manuals the S~riptursmiddot and the self and reality KENDRA (NC)-St Josephswere not considered In theIr

The work is meant for re- Hospital administered by theIntegrity but were dismem-iaxed~ recurrent reading with Sisters of Charity of Providence lbered fragmentary texts which the reader participating in a and Kenora General Hospital were used as proofs of abstract dialogue with the authors will merge to form a single inshy~atements

Tbe subjects treated are fa- - stitution here about May 1 The Legalistie Game miHar and homely In the main merger of III Catholic and non-

Indeed the author goes far- the- style is simple But iii Catholic hospital is believed to eter and sees much moral the- wealth of psychological knowl- be the first for Ontario ology as radically departing edge underlines the text One A bill to create the Lake of from the vital and audacious who goes through these vol- the Woods District Hospital from thinking of St Thomas Aqui-middotmiddot lImes attentively and reflective- the two existing institutions Is lIlas and representing a sub-IJtitution of pagan thought for ~e religious view

Thus according to him -morality becomes a rationalshylistie melange of Aristotelianism Platonism and Stoicism - - fteological thought has been lIterilized by the long abnor-IIDal development of pure reashylea Everythin baa become a

ly is sure to be given every in- currently under study in the centiveto matu~ity and plenty of specific help toward it

One wonders however why the work is published in four volumes of some 90 pages apiece and at a price which puts it beyond many people who would benefit by an opshyportunity to read and re-read it at leisure

provincial parliament where it is expected to be approved

The two hospitals have exshyisted side by side for 75 years Two years ago the Ontario Hosshypital Services Commission reshyjected St Josephs application to erect a new general hospital on the existing site because of its proximitlY to KenOl-a GeneraL

the National Council of Catholic Women the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate and the National Catholic Educashytional Association

Following are the chief coopshyerative ventures agreed on at the meeting

Joint preparation of curricushylum materials for use by local church groups One first step will be the participation of Catholic educators in the prepshyaration of the Audio-Visual Reshysearch Guide published by NCC and the inclusion of Catholic materials in the guide

Sharing of research findings through joint meetings of Protesshy-tant and Catholic experts in reshyligious education and the beshyhavioral sciences The first such meeting is scheduled to take place next October

r

THE middotANCHORshynwno April ~ 1968

Viet Cong Kill French Priests

SAIGON (NC)-Two French Benedictine priests whose capshyture by the Viet Cong near Hue was reported earlier have been killed by them acording to word received here

The body of Father Urbain David OSB was found in a common grave with six others Ail were bound and in a standshying position Father Davids body was later reburied by Benedicshytine priests and brothers

Father Guy de Compiegne OSB wasmiddot shot by the Viet Cong according to villagers His body has not been found yet

Both priests wearing their black religious habits left their monastery at Thien An about four miles south of Hue when heavy bombardment forced the entire community and the refshyugees they were sheltering to disperse and flee Viet Cong soldiers firing from inside the monastery including its church had drawn US artillery fire on the building

Two other Benedictine priests were wounded Fathers Camaign a frenchman and Thaddeus a Vietnamese The monastery and its installations and equipment were destroyed

Says President Has Vietnam Answer

BOSTON (NC)-Interviewed at an informal press conference here minutes before he spoke at a Boston College symposium on the Vatican and Peace Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Eugene Rosshytow told newsmen that no presshyidential candidate couid offer a workable alternative to Presshyident Johnsons Vietnam policy

Rostow added that assuming that the nation disregards supshyporters of outright surrender or all-out war no candidate ofshyfered as good a chance for real peace in Vietnam as did Presishydent Johnson

Later in the course of a pubshylic question-and-answer period Rostow supported the present course of American activity in Vietnam He said that the decishysion whether or not the war was costing more than it was worth must be left to the South Vietnamese

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

WEAR Shoes That Fit

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Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fall River OS 8-5811

I SYSTEMATIC550 year SAViNGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

a INVESTMENT500 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS

a REGULAR450 shy

year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We P~y The Postage

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~ ~- -

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

11I11111111I1111I11I11111111I11I111I111I111I11I1111I111I11111I11I111111111I11I11I11111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I11I11I11111111111I11I11I111111

lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

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Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 8: 04.04.68

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968

Husband Manages Surprise Party with 18 Guests

By Mary Tinley Daly

Ill this day af do-it-yourself analysis a common quesshytion iB Are you sUlJgtrise~prone or surprise-allergic 7

To the surprise-allergic with their rather rigid selfshyconsciousness the very thought of having people descend without advance notice would e a use consternation and foHowed by an enormous bilthshy0 V e r w h elm i n g embar- day cake made by Paul~ Burke rassment particularly for a (Tim is not yet a pastry coo~) woman Such people miss an Day by day for a -weelr durshyawful lot of fun In the ne~ ing his hinch hour Tim stopped

bull Emily Post book by his mothers house and work- of e t i que t t e ed on the step-by-step elaborashyvarious surprise tions of his beef burgundy mar- parties are de- inating the meat chopping and scribed for spe- sauteeing garlic onions mushshycial occasions rooms preparing the sauce fi shya r r i v i n g by nally baking then freezing the surprise at a finished produot pending its friends house in triumphant on-stafle entrance eager hope that Day of Parly it will really be a surpriselWarn- Actual day of the party-a Ing is given though against thi~ Saturday-Tim offered to babyshykind ofcelebration for a goldeJl sit with little Tim Tara and 9shywedding anniversary If bride month old Maureen (I have and groom are young for their nothing else to do) while Mary ages it is possible that th~y and out Ginny went to the beaushywould enjoy this type of party ty parlor followed by a GinnyshyBut if they were nofmarriedin prolong~ tour of nearby shop their earliest Y9uth the qisturb- ping center ance of too great a surpri~ MarY almost caught me Tim

might very well have the ~ laughed afterward ~Tim and posite O happy results Tara were helping me with the

However when two young salad and the hors deouvres in ilappy-go-Iucky surlgtrise-prone the basement when we heard people are married to each other Marys key in the door With a and one plans and executes a flying leap we dashed upstairs eomplete surpJise party for the and onto the couch pretending 4gtther tis the acme of hospitality wed just awakened from a nap Certainly iJt demonstrates love We were all breathless but Mary ingenuity and that infinite ca- didnt seem to notice pacity for taking pains Toward evening the plot realshy

Such was the case when sonshy ly thickened By prearragement in-lay Tim Gorman planned a I was to telephone Mary Sayshybirthday party for Mary-a dinshy ing Ginny coudnt possibly stay ner for 18 young people no less to babysit while Mary and Tim

were to go out to dinner By impossible Pr~ject this time Mary was thoroughly

Personally we thought the incensed at both Ginny and me llIroject beyond the realm of posshy -but at least Marys driving sibility when Tim first told of Ginny home got the birthday girl bis plan Clean and pretty up the out of the house while guests asshyhouse get out dishes glasses and sembled silver and cook for that many Did the surprise go over Onepeople along with the routine of hundred pereeilt Though aearing for three sman children wise man is never surprisedAnd keep Mary in the dark while Mary was far from wise to thesuch perparations were undershy whole happy situation and inway the words of Richard Brinsley

Impossible or so it seemed Sheriian confessed she was but as the proverb has it -struck all of a heap Nothing is impossible to a So if you are surprise-pronewilling heart and lucky enough to be married

Our own part hi the -plot had to another surprise-proner go nothing to do with cooking along with it cleaning or any of the mundane And have fun tasks Ours was simply a series of elaborate ruses to throw Mary off the track of suspicion as to what was afoot

After Tim had issued his inshyvitations came the nitty-gritty of preparation Piece de resist shyance of the menu was to be beef burgundy served over noodles and accompanied by peas rolls and a mixed salad

New Bedford DCCW New Bedford District Counshy

cil of Catholic Women will hold an open meeting at 8 Monday night April 8 at St Patrick parish hall H1gh Street Ware ham~ Members am~ guests will participate in a dramatic re enactment of the Paschal Meal the ceremonial -supper at which the Eucharist was instituted Mrs John BarreU district chairmai-J of church commisshy

sions is program chairman and Mrs Joseph Moore will make preparations for the meal Mrs Leslie Braley is chairman of the refreshment committee consist shy

Sister Superiors- Form

HELpmiddotED BY K OF C Father Robert Crawford CM talkswith sorneof the Vietnamese families whoberi~fiiteq from a oontribution af money collected by the management 8IIld employees of the Knights of Columbus home affice in New Haven ~onn NC Photo

This season its the little things that add up those little extras that make the difference

-between looking like a streamshylined 68 or looking like last years model This year will certainly go down in the history books as the year of the big eiection but on the fashion scene it- will be writfen up as the year of the accessory the year when the Ii til I e black d-ress can be worn from dawn to dusk with just a few aftershydark extras -to give it chutzpah

A smashing navy red and white designers scarf a rope of cultured pearls or an Op-Art watch added to a basic costume

-rgive a gal a completed look Romance returns to the accesshysory scene with lace jabots and

ruffly baste-oil cuffs that transshyDio~esan Co~ference form a simple sheath into an WORCESTER (NC)-A conshy after-five delight

ference of major superiors of One large white organdy colshywomen Religious was formed in lar sketched in a recent edition the Worcester diocese in reshy of the New York Times would sPonse to a proposal made at transform a tired tailored last Summers meeting of the working girl into an after National Conference of - Major hours romantic southern belle Superiors of Women which sugshy for something like $1095 Such gested that prototypes be estabshy a collar could give a completely lished in every diocese in the new look to that dark dress US that youve kept in your closet

because it was too good toThe conferences aim ~ill beshydiscard yet not interestingto help individual Religious enough- to wear communities fulfill -their purshy Even the younger set isnt poses more adequately to foster negllected when it comes tomore successful coope~aiion oii frilly extras A dress- Im mak- behalf of the Church to dis ing for my eight year old has

trlbtiie wrirkers in Il giv~n tershy directions for makingmiddot a detachshyritorY more advantageously and able neck ruffle and frilly euffs

-to work on affairs of common shy included in the pattern~ oo~cern to Religi~us conrmuni7 Shiny Hardwareties

Clanking shiny hardware is The day-long organizational still very much a part of the

meeting was attended by the total look with even gloves major superior or provincials of fastening with zippers aild

evidence on the new sporty handbags that have a luggage appearance I bought one of these tailored bags recently in a bright yellow leather It has two large outside buckle-closshying pockets that arll peect for keys or change or any of the other small items that you hate to dig through your _bag to find and if your handbag is anything like mine you have to do plenty of digging

Sunglasses are an accessory that all glamour magazines and fashion reports stress a well shydressed gal should never be without This season they have

a really new appearanceshytheyre tinted in various shades of pastel colors and many are rimless or banded by very narshy

row gold or silver rims

The frameless ones come in a variety of shapes as well as colors from ovals to squares so that you can choose a differshyent pair to wear with each mood or costume For dull dreary days try a pair with rose-tinted lenses They always say that the world looks better through rose-colored glasses-shywell 1968 is the yeu when you can test that theory

Urges Minimum Teacher Salary

ATLANTA (NC) -The M lanta archdiocesan board of ~

ucation has issued a policy statementrecommending a minshyimum salary for teachers smaller classrooms and affiliashytion with the Southern Associashytion of Colleges and SchoOls accrediting agency for the comshying school year

Father Daniel J OConno executive secretary for tne board and secretary for Cat~

olic education said the stateshyment is the firSt policy the board has made to set tht course of archdiocesan and parochial schools

Essentially the policies lMlfi the same as they were wh~

originally sent to pastors anell principals in January he stated However the policy concerning affiliation with the Southern Association is new and the policy on minimu~

salaries for lay teachers w~

-completely revised The priest said affiliation oi

Catholic schools with the Southern Association will be

the first step toward systemshywide accreditation by an indeshypendent regional accrediting agency

It is a way of systematica_ upgrading all of our schools to the pOint where each can indi- vidually see k accreditatioil when it -is reedy 1iatheio OConnor explained

Some schools desire to be accredited next year and ate ready for it others would preshyfer to extend their upgradin over the four-year period until the 1972 deadline

Urges Romans Support Church Construction VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI appearing at his winshydow above St Peters Square forhis regular Sunday blessing recalled that the day was ded~

cated to the construction of new churehes in Rome and asked Roshy

mans to get behind this effort This is ll serious problemJIl

he began It is a problem that deserves

above all intelligent comprehenshysion The construction of the church as a house of God and the house of the people in a new

quarter-and there are so many new quarters--means to respond

10 the spiritual needs of the population bull bull Certainly It

is a problem with practical difshyficulties beCause it demands SO many means That -is it awaits your help your sympathy andmiddot your prayer

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bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

WEAR Shoes That Fit

THE FAMILY SHOE STORE

Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fall River OS 8-5811

I SYSTEMATIC550 year SAViNGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

a INVESTMENT500 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS

a REGULAR450 shy

year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We P~y The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull )ENNISPORT ~ST~RVILLE

~ ~- -

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

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lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

r--------------------------- L FIVE CONVENIENT ~FFICES to SERVE YOU ONE~Srop BANKIHG iL middot~FJRSTMACH(ImiddotNI STS

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Imiddot OF JTAUNJON t Norto~ W Main middotSt-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main Stbull North Disihto~ Spri~gSt-NorthmiddotEastoMain5t

Member rFederall~poSitInsurance Corporation L~ ~shy---

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(GfNfRIL (ONJRlaORS )shy and ~fl6INEERS

JAMES M COLLINSCE res ReglsteredCiVil ancPStructuraIEnginee

Member NationaimiddotSociety Professi~cilEngineers

fRANCIS c1 lCOLUNS rJR cTreas THOMAS ~K (COLLINS Seq

ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

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Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

LEMIEUX PLUMBING ~ HE~TING iNC

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

offering CITy STATE__ZIP COOE_

~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 9: 04.04.68

bullbull 9 Spring Chores Begin Now For Gardening Fraternity

By Jos~ph and Marilyn Roderick

Spring is here the birds have already begun appaarshymg here in the North ~he crocus are in bloom tlle pptshyholes in the ci-ty Sitreets are being filled Bald my ChrIstmas tights have finally been put away another year Already we are venturing out into the

~1 rt d especially Greece where suckshygarden to Wleclr t~e amage ling lambs arein abundance at done by the winds snow and this season In this country oold and we are beginning to however I would feel free to become awaremiddot of the sudden wager that ham has become growth of perennials the more popular meat

The tools have to be prepared Because Christ died at the fences mended a fresh coat of Passover season the paschal paint applied to the rose ar- lamb (the lamb that God told bor middotthe grape vine has to be Moses to roast on the first pruned before the sap begins Pasch which became the trashy10 flow and so the work begins ditional meat of the Passover mot to end until November One season thereafter) has become a f my first jobs will be to symbol of this Christian feast It ltcheck the greens for Winter is said that lamb has long been damage and to do some pruning the most important dish on the and shaping where necessary table at the Popes Easter dinshylhis is a task which seems to n~r and in countries such as bother the beginning gardener Italy Albania Greece Yugoshybecause he doesnt know h01V siavia Romania Bulgllria and much to cut off the green which Armenia the blessing of the Is taking over his path Dr Easter lamb is-pact and parcel foundation middotplantings of thefr Easter celebration

How 10 PruDe Ham forEaster Why in this CQUll1try and In

Pruning greens is largely parts of west~ Euro~ ham matter middotof whethermiddot you want 11 has replaced lamb as the meat formal plant that is one that to set befdre your Easter guest is blockoshapeQ perfectlY con- middotwe d9~q)V kno- leal etc or an informal shape In our household this Easter pretty much determined iby the 1 plari ohserving ham but this natural growth of the plant Ifmiddot middotd~es not mean that lamb wont Ia formal shape isdeSireti try middotfind its way to our tlble during flo shape the bush in your mind Holy Week I would like to try and then begin clipping two or amiddot real Passover supper on Holy ~ree inches off the loose outer Thursilay with roast lronb bit shygrowth until it begins to take ter herbs matloh and the chashyehe desired sbape roset (the mixture of raisinli

You can safely cut back a nuts and cinnamons that apshyplant until the stems you are pears on every Passover table) pruning are about an eighth of We did this once before with an inch in diameter on a small the children I must admit it bush or a quarter of an inch wasnt an overwhelming sucshyon an older plant If you are cess but -this year theyll be a in doubt prune off a small bit older and perhaps a bit amount say two or three inche3 more receptive of the ends of the stems then This Tecipefor b al1 a n a let them rest two or three rum Pie was in the April issue weeks then do some more of one lJfthe home magazines pruning and the picture of it looked

I prefer to let sluubs grow just serumptious After making more naturally and therefore the recipe I can state that it ilhe Pruning I do ccould realb tasted even better than it be cOl)sideredthinning When leolted the gr~n shows slgns of be- BananaRlIImPie eoming oyergrown I pick old 1 3 or 31h ounce package of lilever~l unnecessary stems and vanilla pudding mix eut th~E1O baek tothe mainstem 1 emreIQpemiddotunfavored gelatin Chereby thinning without losing jty cups cmilk the shaije of the bush 1 package fluffy white tr05-

Greens do have awU Of lng mix taking over the propertyso it lV- teaspoonsllUm filtvodng or lis advisable to get some infer- 2h teaspoons TUlXl mation as to theeventual size Dash salt of that mtle bush you are Dash nutmeg buying before you decide to 3 bananas plant it otherwisl you mampt 1 middot9 inch baked pie shen find yourself in the position of 1 square semisweet chocolate living in the little house with 1 Tablespoon butter or mar-II1J those bushes growIng over garine iL 1) lri Q medium saucepan

middotcombine the pudding lJlix andIII the KItchen the gelatin (I had hought inshyAbout tbetime youD be stant pudding mix by mistake

leading this calwnn the newsshy but I used it as lif it were the papers will be filled with adshy regulGr kind and it came Qltt leIttiseDentsOfthe market speshy fine) Add the lDilkto rthe als on meats for Easter Ham pudding mimiddotx and dltelatinand will probably be king butlamb middotcook over medium heat -stirring and even some chicken and censtanUy until mixture begins turkey will also be featured to boil gently Because Easter is a SpriI)g holy 2) Remove from heat cover day it is only natural that lamb with wax paper and set aside mould become the featured dish middotto cool a bit a someeountries (if Europe 3) Prepare frosting mix acshy

cording to packlge directions middotStir in rum flavoriJJg or rumPellnySale salt and nutmeg Fold hot pudshy

St Cecilias Mission middotmUb ding into frosting until moSt willi sponsor a public penny white streaks are blended in nte at 7 Saturday night ~ 4) - Slice one banana into e at 196 Whipple Street Fall baked pastry shell cover with River Mrs Mary Felix and half of filling Repeat with secshyMiBs Delia Pereira co-chairshy ond banana and remaining fill shylDen announce that giftsfor -jng Chill 3 to 4 hours the sale may be left at the ~) Just before servingmelt Second Street convent Of the middottogether the chocolate and butshyFranciscan Missionaries of Mary tel or margarine and dribble or at the hall on the day of the over remaining banana that has nle Proceeds will benefitthe middotbeen arranged ~n fche top of Bianciscan Missionaries the pie

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Little Sisters Serve Needy

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-More than 10100 hours of service to

J families in need were provided by Philadelphias Little Sisters of the Assumption last yearlbmiddot

middotf~ Little known to most PhilashyIf delphia families because they

are involved in social serviceI work rather than in education the Little Sisters of the Asshysumption-have--for more than 50 years in this city-providedI

I

1 care for the children of hospishy

SISTER 1lARIA DE SAO BE~O

I

1

L~~ Diamond Jubilarian

franciisnanMissionary ofMary R~views

over 5i~ty Years in God~s Service Sixty years ago two Franoiscan Mi)~o~arj~~IofMary

visited the Portuguese countryside near Lisbon There was no Convent at which they couldmiddot say 80 fora week they were guests of an area familyrhe 16 year old da1ghlferuf the family had never aeenSisshytelS before but during th8Jt

week she ~eClded th~t theIrs was the life she wlsned to follow Last Sunday Sister Mashyria de Sao Bento looked back over those 60 years with deep satisfaction All I have doneJ

I have done for Him she deshyclared After she left her home at the age of 15she recalled she never saw hermother againShe also left behind her 6 and 9 year old brothers and a 12year old sister She has never again

seen the 6 ~ear old who later

emigrated to Bradl and it was only last Summer that she was reunified with her sister and other brother when she made her firSt home visit in all those -00 years There were many changes she commented

Sister Bento is sacristan at ~the convent of the Franciscan Missionaries df Mary on Second Street in Fall River Although shehas selved in many places middotduring her long -religious li11e she has spent JDoretime in the Fall River convent than anyshywhere -else It is my favorite

spot excluding POItugual she admitted

Came to Fall River Sister Bento was forced to

leave Portugual as a 17 year old novice when persecution caused hundreds of religious to ilee the country She lpent four years iff Paris middotand was then assigned middotto Belgium where She served hroqghout the first world war and for severalYears thereafter

In 1922 the jubilaiian came to -Fall River and the Second Street convent She devoted herself particularly to work amo~g

Port~guese immigrants teachshying catechism at st Michaels and St Antho~y of Padua parshyishes and caring for sacristies jn various area churches In those days she reminisces we middothad to travel everywhere ly bus

In 1935 Sister Bento left Fall River for assignments in Provishydence Orient Heights Boston and Brighton 1n Brighton she was among the middotfirst group of Sis- ters staffing the Kennedy Meshymorial Hospibd One of her duties she said was repairing the Sisters shoes and she was known as ~the little shoemaker to Cardinal Cushing who preshy

Slde~ at he~ golden Jubilee ce1eshybration D 1958

With equal aptness Sister Bento is known as the little sacristan in the Fall River conshy

vent Barelyfour and a half feet taU she has to reach up to the altar she has cared for since her return to Fall River in 1964

Her diamond jubilile celebra tion included a Mass of Thanksshygiving celebrated by Rev Gashymiddotbriel Blaine OP with Rev Laureano C dos Reill as preachshy

~I A festive banquet was at shymiddottended by Mother Charlotte provincial superior of the Franshyciscan Missionaries and by Mother Mary of St Gistilian former Fall River superior At a reception followiQg the banshyquet ftlends and former cateshychismpupils came ~o pay their respects to the little sacristan who thanks God for her good ~ealth at the ~e of 75 and whose plans for the future are but a continuance of herpast-to live always for the love of God and respond to His love in all Ido

Fund Raising St Catherine Fund Raising

Committee of Dominican Acadshyemy Fall River will sponsor a spaghetti supper that will be served from 5 to 7 on Saturday night April 6 in the Dominican Convent hall

Following the supper the opshyerettta entitled The Happy Scarecrow will be -presented at Bin the Convent hall The opshy~retta will also be Tlaquougteated on Sunday night at 8 in the same hall

Pupils of SrRita of the Rosshyary -will have the -roles in the play

I

talized mothers and home nursshying assistance for the elderly

In the first annual report published by the congregation statistics reveal that the local staff of nine offered care to 337 persons last year 128 of them children iltlore than half of those served were adults over 65

Nationally thesix convents of the community-in New York Lynn and Worcester Mass Charlotte and Durham N C and Philadelphia - served 597 families comprisingmiddot 2245 pershysons including 951 childrenbull The tQtal American staff numshybers 60

Worldwide the Little Sistem are found in 25 nations ana have a total membership Of 2l 600

The oare ofiered by the Sisshyters often goes beyond the imshymediate physical needs of the families involved

Pound Cut Devalues

Holy Week Ceremony SEVILLE (NC) - One of the lesser-known victims of Great Britains devaluation of the pound last November will probshy-ably be the traditionally colorshyful ~oly Week ceremonies pershyformed by the 52 potential conshyfraternities of this Spanish city

Short of money because of the economic recession affecting the area and because Spains currency was devalued at the

same time as the British the penitential groups will either have middotto call off the ceremonies or reduce them

The ancient ceremonies care marked by parades and processhysions tQrough the city A great tourist attraction the ceremoshynies feature ooloIful and exshypenshre costumes and props middotMany of the components Of the ceremonies are replaced every yeaJ meaning new purehasea must be made annually

~BLUERJBBON

LAUNDRY 23 CENTRAL lAVE

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

~ ~

1 r

AND ATTLEBORO

4 on all Savings Accounts

4 on Time Certificates Attleboro - New Bedford

First Federal -Savings LOAN ASSOCIATION OF

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

WEAR Shoes That Fit

THE FAMILY SHOE STORE

Johns Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fall River OS 8-5811

I SYSTEMATIC550 year SAViNGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

a INVESTMENT500 year SAVINGS NOTICE ACCOUNTS

a REGULAR450 shy

year SAVINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We P~y The Postage

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA

bull SOUTH YARMOUTH bull HYANNIS bull )ENNISPORT ~ST~RVILLE

~ ~- -

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

11I11111111I1111I11I11111111I11I111I111I111I11I1111I111I11111I11I111111111I11I11I11111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I11I11I11111111111I11I11I111111

lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

r--------------------------- L FIVE CONVENIENT ~FFICES to SERVE YOU ONE~Srop BANKIHG iL middot~FJRSTMACH(ImiddotNI STS

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Imiddot OF JTAUNJON t Norto~ W Main middotSt-Raynham Rte 44-Taunton Main Stbull North Disihto~ Spri~gSt-NorthmiddotEastoMain5t

Member rFederall~poSitInsurance Corporation L~ ~shy---

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

LEMIEUX PLUMBING ~ HE~TING iNC

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 10: 04.04.68

10 THE ANCHOR~ Stop Dr KingmiddotThurs April 4 1968 Holy Family High School $enio17IsNamed

Say Senators WASHINGTON (-~C) - Two

- senators reacting to the outshybreak of rioting In14e~phis

Seeks to Bar Massacllusetts Homemake~ of Year I Ave Ma riejJ Margaret-Mary McIntyre 17 a Senior at Holy Family High School in New Bedshy

ealled for federal action to bloekford is floating three feet above ground these days Its easy to understand why the Rev Dr M~mn LuthefIn Concert Last week Margaret-MarY was notified of her selection as Betty Crocker Home- Kings plamied Poor Peopl~s DAYTON (NC) - Petit- maker of the year in Massachusetts Along with the title she drew a $1500 scholarshy March on the nations capital

ions said to bear 2~10 sig- ship a trip with other state natures of Ohio residents finalists to Wa~hington Wilshyobjecting to inclusion of liamsburg and Min1eapolis Ave Maria in a statewide mu- and a deluxeset of Ency~loshysic competition were presented pedia Britannica for her school to two members of the Ohio Mu- I still dont believe it says- sic Education Association the five foot five studenfwlth

Leslie C wattenburger Day- gamin hairdo and sparkling eyes ton area spokesman for Amer- Daughter of Mr and Mrs Ed icans United for Separation of ward K McIntyre of 61 Parker Church and State (POAU) Street Margaret Mary has two called the Virgin Mary sisters and three brothers on peculiarly and uniquely the whom to practice her homeshysymbol of theChurchof Rome making teachniques and contended that because of Her older sister Frances 18 US Church State separation a Freshman math major ~t Ave Maria should not be Stonehill College preceded Mar among the 36 songs in this years garet Mary as Betty Crocker Ohio high school music comiJeti- school finalist last year Everyshytion body said it couldnt happen

The petitions were presented twice Margaret Mary grins to Robert Griep a music teacher Others in the family are Edshyat Fairview High School and ward Jr usually known as TedshyMrs Carol Gillette teacher at dy 14 a Freshman at Holy Colonel White High School both Family Mark 13 a 7th Grader members of the Ohio Music Ed- at Holy Family School Joseph ucation Association 10 a 5th Grader and Regina 8

Preposterous Argument a 3rd Grader at Holy Family Griep termed Wattenbergers Pet of the entire family is

contention absolutely asinine Robert8 months who looks like Wattenbergers petition claimed ail angel until a stranger hoves singing the song would be a into sight threat to religious freedom and Part-Time Job a violation of the FiJ~st Amend Active on the school debating ment team the high school Hone-

Griep said it is not a matter maker of Massachusetts also has of teaching words but music~a~part-time clerical job after The song stands on it ~wn as sehool She got it before she a piece of music he commented middotfinished her typing coufseat adding that students dont even New Bedford High summer ~riow the meaning of the Latin school but I managed anyway text Griep said only 35 per cent She enjoys reading and does ~f~)~e 98000 s~udents paltiCi- hel share of household chores pating in the contest last year including washing the dishes sang the song We dont really have a divi-

An editorial in the Dayton sion of labor she admits we JournabHerald said Ccmtro- just do whatever comesllp when versy about Catholicism simply we walk in the door at the isnt relevant to the music com- right time petition~ It termed the argli Although Holy Family has no ritent that inclusion of the song home ec department Senioris a threat to religious freedolTI girls doiake the written test prePosterous that is the basis for selection of

the ten state finalists The test she says isnt reallyVenezuelan Wealthy

anythingyou can teach someone Aid Poor Neighbors The questions are jusUhings you

pick up through reading or exshyCARACAS (NC) ~Maryknoll perience So youre not handi-priests here have Succeeded in capped if you dont have a homechanneling the resources of a ec course relatively rich new Venezuelan

Mrs McIntyre has taught herparish into one of the citys daughters how to cook and mypoOrest neighborhoods grandmother (Mrs Edward K

It is not mere aid These McIntyre of 150 Shawmut Avepeople are also giving themselves New Bedford) gave us a Fannyto this work said Father Vinshy Farmers cookbook She had one ~ent T Mallon MM rector of when she was married and likedAscension parish at Prados del itEste a suburban development of Thats where my spaghettiaffluent Venezulenn alid foreign recipe came from The spaghettifamilies about 14 miles east of _recipe is a household favorite Caracas How gooda cook is his daugh-

At the receiving end is Catia ter a heavily populated hilly sector Pretty good in her OWl) waywhere slums mix with low and Mr McIntyre admits middle-class family homes Now Margaret-Mary says Maryknollers have wOIked My mother is teaching me how

vrith the poorest ofthe poor in to sew Shes always sewn a lot Latin America but at a recent top-level conference of OUI soshy ciety it was decided to tend to Court Voids State the rich this time They have the Sunday C 10slOngmeans and the influence to make changes aqd get some action in ST PAUL (NC)-The Minshysocial betterment once they acshy nesota Supreme Court held unshyquire a social mind Father constitutional because it was Mallon said vague and uncertain this

It is a work of patient pershy states seven-month-old Sunday suasion but it produces good reshy closing law sults he added The courts 30-page unanimous

opinion said the law did not give clear warning of whichSend Blessings types of retail sales could re-

STUTTGART (NC) -In the sult - in severe penalties Apshyrecent controversy over the acshy proved by the 1967 LegIslature tivities of President Heinrich the law was written to prohibit Luebke during the nazi regime Sunday sales of 25 broad cate- the German bishops extended - gories of merlthandise unless a

to the PJesident their hig~esi store agreed to clQ1le all day esteem and blessinJ1~ Saturday

for us She made tfiis dress This dress isan attracti ve

off-green velvet Margaret-Mnry herseii can makeshorts and some4resses If its a difficuh pattern or unusual material my jnother helpa

He father reports that Marshygaret-Marys housekeeping techshyniques also learned at home are very good for a teen-ager

-Starts April 21

Margaret-Marys winning trip begins April 2~ To add to the excitement her flight to Washshy

middotington will be her first plane trip She will be accompanied b~ Sister Maris Stella Senior home room teacher at Holy Family A national finalist dinner will

be held in Minneapolis April 26 at which the national high school homemaker of the year will he named

Margaret-Mnry has to send her formal gown to MinneapoIis by April 10 so that it will be pressed and ready fOF when she arrives

Meanwhile Sister Maris Stelshyla and Margaret-Mary will be

investigating the sights of Washshyington and Williamsburg She has been to Washington on a deshybating trip Margaret-Mary says but we debated Fridly night

New Jersey Studying Families l Relocation

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey Department of Commu nity Affairs has under study a proposal from the Mt Carmel Guild to upgrade and resettle 75 poverty families

The families - the majority either Negro or Spanish-speakshying-would be selected on the basis of need from among the first group of families to be disshyplaced this Spring when conshystruction starts on the New Jershysey Medical School in Newnrk

Controversy over relocation of families and the schools deshymands for land were among the proximate causes of rioting in Newark last Summer

Shortly after the Mt Carmel Guild annou~ced it would enshytel the holising field on a mnsshyive1lcaie one of jts aim~ being to upgra(je family life by makshying available the full range ot

its resources

MARGARET-MARY MciNTYRE

and Saturday and Sunday molllshying and left Sunday nfternoon We drove by the White House but th~ts about all we saw ~

Parents Are Teachers Next year the vivacious teenshy

ager-who has picked up an amazing amount of composure from her debating trips-hopes 10 go to Stonehill

Id like to major in history or English and then teach while

I study political science she says

When Frances McIntyre won the school title last year Mr McIntyre comments we thought the secret of her success was her part-ti~ejob as a cashiclJ in a supermarket Theres no secret to mysucshy

cess Margaret-Mary announces jubilantly its just unbelievshyable

J~ takes a stranger to disshycover the real secret-a home in which young people are loved

nnd trained a home in which they absorb a way of Ii fe from the most important teachers they will ever have their parshy~nts

Reservists Receive Mass Privilege

PORTLAND (NC)-Membels of the Maine Reserve and Na- tiona( Guard have been givel1 permission to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation on Saturday evening while on duty

The permission granted by Bishop Peter L Gerety apostol- ic administrator of Portland may be exercised at the discreshytion of the Reserve or National Guard uriit chaplain

fairlou5 for QUALITY and

SERVICE

Sen Robert C Byrd of West Virginia chairman of the Disshytrict of Columbia Appropriashytions Subcorillnittee charged on the Senate floor that Dr King jmends to build a powder keg in Washington when he leads demonstrations here late in April If thisself-seekiilg rabble rouser is allowed to go thrbugh with his plans here Wllshington may well be treated to the snme kind of violence destruction iooting and bloodsh~d as Memshyphis Sen Byrd said Sen John C Stennis of -lVOsshy

siSsippi said Washington would do well to study the Memphis riots

Sen Stennis said Dr King should be allowed to lead only a small contingent of his marchshyers to Capitol Hill to symbolishycally present their case

Dr King and his supporters have talked of bringing tens cgtf thousands of demonstrators to Washington The campaign has been scheduled to begin April 22

Sen Byrd said the government should seek a court order to block the march Dr King meanwhile postshy

poned plans to visit Washington to organize community leaders for his capital demonstration A spokesmart for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference said Dr King had decided to Te main in Memphis for a while to deal with the situation there

Lay Teachers Get $500 Pay Raise OMAHA (NC)-Lay tenchers

in Catholic schools in the met ropolitan Omaha area will reshyceive a $500 across-the-board salary increase in September

Elementary teachers with a ~tandard certificate and bachshyeior of arts degree will stnrt with a base pay of $5300 secshyondary teachers with a base pay of $5700 The new schedule will be in

effect for one year and will be reviewed later to bring the schedule into line with neighshyboring districts

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THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

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lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

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12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

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Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN STREET

Fall River 675-7497

NEW BEDFORD

1001 Kings Hwy Open Evenings

Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 11: 04.04.68

THE ANCHORshyReports Vatican 1968 J Thurs April 4Dismas Week Marks Break in --RoutineStudies Possible Split of Sees ~J At New Bedford House of Correctio~ Prelate Praeses

TUCSON (NO) ~middot Mie By Patricia Francis Home Missioners Vatican has launched a study CINCINNATI (NC) - Theof the possible division of the For the fltJourth year in a ~w a good thief brought some unexpected ~ to work of the Glenmary Home Tucson diocese andmay be mmates of the Bristol Ogtmty House of Correction in New Bedford The thiefs name Wag Missioners is in total accord planning to split several other with the ideals of missionaryDismas He died cr)ng ago ona cross at Ca lvary next to that on which Christ died Tw()AmerJcan sees according to the work spelled out by the SecshyArizona Register newspaper of thieves died with Jeslis One curesd and railed at fate Diamas asked for forgivene88 ond Vatican Council the Tuscon diocese HlJhis day thou shalt be

Father Jam~ T Stapleton with me in Paradise Christ editor of the paper ~aid in a promised Dismas Since then fronJt-page story that Bishop the good thief has been theFrancis J Green of Tucson has

patron saint of middotprisoners everyshysubmibted an extensive r~port whereon the diocese to the Apolt-oIic

Shortly after Sheriff EdwardDelegate in the United Stlt~s K Dabrowski took over at theArchbishop Luigi Raimolld House of Correction in 1964shyHe also said the Tucson)s Qne after running into a series ofof many dioceses in the U1lited problems related to operationstates undel examination ~ith of the institution - he begana view to the best possible use thinking -of Dismasof personnel and resources for

There was little joy amongthe overall benefit of the the prisoners in those daysChurch There was little faith littleThe report to the Apostolic hopeDelegate - apparently undertakshy

I tlought if we could helpen at the request of the Delegate these men associate religionshyor the Holy See itself-includes any religion - with somethingsuch information as population pleasant it might help themconcentrations the number and he saiddistlibution of priests and Sisshy

The thought was father to theters the institutional facilities actionand a county-by-eounty breakshy

Because of Dismas prisonersdown of the economic strength had a break in their normaland profected glowth in the routineentire state

Father Stapleton also reportshy Dismas WeeIv ed that Bishop Green has ordershy The Rev AlQert F Shovelton ed the diocesan Priests Senate of st Marys Home Catholic to undertake an opinion pol1 chaplain at the House of Corshyamong priests to determine rection celebrated Mass there their views of the possible divishy at 9 AM sion The Dismas joy extended Bishop Green told the Regisshy through the whole week as it ter that I honestly do not know did for the first time in 1964 at this time if and when a divishy Prisoners are being allowed sion will occur 1 have submitshy visitors every day instead of ted the repolt to the Apostolie once a week Delegate as have many of the Eaeh man was given 50 cents I)ishops in the United States from the institution canteen

fund iSO no one is withoutIn Interest f)f People candy~ or cigatettes Dabrow-

He called the studY a natural ski says outgrowth of the Second Vati- Dismas Week at the House of can Council which urged all Correction does not make the bmiddotishops to reexamine existing institution less a jaiL Theie stillterritories 0 0 0 are bars on the middotwindows

But he said that the situation There still are guardsin Arizona is unlike most dio But because of the humility eeses in the country Our p0lnishy of a man named Dismas longlation figure sounds impressive ago on Calvary life at the and in fact puts us on a level House of Correction has been a with places like St Louis But little brighterwhen you examine it you find There was hope for the fushythat approximately half of middotthat ture too ngUlC is unable to support the Last year for the first timework of the Church iii Arizonil the New Bedford Jaycees inaushyand is in fact being subsidized gurated their own help proshyby the other half gram for mel1 confined behind

We have over 400000 Cath- bars olics spread over an area of The Jaycees conducted a 52369 square miles with a used clothing drive to outfit heavy concentation in two men when they arc released large cities Phoenix and Tucson back into the world outside Are andour resollrces pe sonshy This year the clothing dlive nel being deployed to the best was conduCted again undel the possible advantage keeping in chairmanship of Jaycee John A mind that half which represents Newby Jr and the close coopshy]ight now an obliation to the other half 01gt would they be bettel deployed by dividing Protestant Leaderthem ~ ) O

The practical deciding factor Missing in Cuba he said will be the best intershy MIAMI (NC) -- Samuel IVIe- ests of the peopie of Arizona niondo Garcia acting head of

members of the Gedeon Evanshygelical Church in Cuba upon arshyGoan Leader Scores rival here said their director

Misionary Schools the Rev Arturo Rangel Sosa has been missing for a ~ear

PANJIM (NC) - The chief Meniondo arrived hen~ onminister of Goa has attacked

Freedom Flight from Havanaforeign-aided missiona y schools His statement was backed byin some parts of this former another refugee on the samepOImiddottuguese-governed te itolmiddoty as

a dange to nationql integrashy flight Ernesto Tomas Garcia tion who added several of the Protshy

estant churches have been deshyOn a legislative debate with stroyed b y fire under mystershythe Catholic-oriented United Goshy

ans opposition party chief minshy ious circumstances and many of ister D~lyanmd B Bandodkar the pastors have been sent to the charged that missionary schools i labor camps of the Military ale subjecting students to reli- Auxiliary Units of the- Revolushy

tion (UMAp)gious and foreign influence Hc said the United Goans Bothsaid the Rev Mr Sosa

party owes its existence kgt I a well~known religious writer Christian missions and so does disappealed lat~ in 1966 from nothing to cheek the dangeimiddotous his home at Baracoa Beach near lFcnd Havana

I i

ST DISMAS BRIGHTENS UFE Officer John Thompshyson director of education at the Bristol County HOllse of Correction New middotBedford distributes clothing to an inmate on the occasion l)f honoring the Good lhief

eration 01 John Thompson a guard at the institution

Littne 1hings Little things mean a lot when

you have very little Ice cream at meals this week

A clean and well pressed sports jacket and slacks when you are released from behind prison bars Visitors to break the moshynotony of long days

Because of the Good Thief

Court Rules Sunday Closing Law Invalid ST PAUL (NC)-The stateshy

wide Sunday closing law en- acted by the 1967 Minnesota legislature has been ruled unshyconstitutional by the state Sushypreme Court which said it is so vague and uncertain that it violates due process of law

The laws detailed listihg of items that cannot be sold on Sunshydays leaves room for a seller to doubt whether a particular item might fall under the proshy

hibition according to the court and thus the law does not afshyford clear warning to apotential defendant of conduct which may result in severe penal sanctions

The court in its opinion writ shyten by Associate Justice C DonshyaId Peterson rejected other crit shyicisms of the law among the one made by the Minnesota Civii Liberties Union (MCLU) in its friend-of-the-court intervention The MCLU had claimed Sunday closing laws are religious in orshyigin and intent and that they violate the First Amendment of the US Constitution by prefershyrilg some religions over others

Herr Keynoter NEW YORK (NC)-Daniel J

He~l pu])lishing executive and wlHer will be the keynote speaker May 15 at the 58th anshymilll Catholic Press Association c~nyention in Columbus Ohio

life is brighter for a spell for men who have broken the rules of society

The brightness hopefully will be remembered when the men are back in the world

Thats what Sheriff Dabrow~

ski hopes

Red Paper Scores Church in Peril

BONN (NC)-Glos Pracy a Polish communist newspaper published in Warsaw has criti- cized the Polish bishops desigshynation of 1968-60 as The Year of the Church in Peril

Describing the bishops plan for monthly observances dedishycated to special problems facing the Church as a throwback to the spiritof the Inquisition the

Msgr Edwrad T OMeaJa national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith paid this tribute to the Glenshymary Fathers at the 24th annushyal dinner of the Cincinnati Glenmary Guild

Msgr OMeara said their work was of singular imporshytance because so many of our fellow Americans have not heard in any meaningful way the teaching of Christ Reporting on the progress ox

the Glenmary Home Missioners Father Robert C Berson supeshyrior general said the society has III men fully engaged in this very specialized apostolshyate He also noted that 60 more arc preparing for careers with Glenmary and that six young men are expected to be ordained within a few weeks

Although 17 are scheduled to enter the novitiate this year he acknowledged that we are heading for some lean years as religious vocations generally llle declining

In the past year the society hilS opened three new missions -two in south-central Tennesshysee and one in southern Georshygia And in Georgia last year we achieved the societyS ulti shymate aim Father Berson said when the Savannah diocese and the Glenmary officials agreed that their Statesboregt mission was ready to be taken over by the diocese

Saves Indian Girls From Being Sold

AGRA (NC)-Two young girls waiting here to be sold in the girl market were saved by the mother superior of the loshycal Franciscan convent

The superior Mother Teresl1l discovered one evening recently that the father of the girls aged 16 and 15 was about to seH them for $40 to a professionai girl-buyer from Delhi

She phoned the police had the prospective buyer arrested and within a week found a match for the elder girl who then married according to Hindu rites

The father a janitor in the convent who had run away l1It the arrival of the police return cd in time to bless the maniage

papers editors said the obsershyvances contradicted the spirit of TIU CITY the Second Vatican Council and amounted to a new declaration BOILER REPAIR CO of war on atheism SLAB BRIDGE ROAD

The Polish bishops announced IlSS0NET MASS 02702 at the beginning of February Tel 644middot5556 that the period from May 1968 BOILERS RETUBED to May 1969 would be devoted TUBES REPLACEDto special prayers and services 24 HOUR SERVICEto combat dallgeis facing Chlisshy FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE tians in the modern world

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lllANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

01 BRISTOL COUNfY

90middotDAY NOTICE TIMENOW OPEN

ACCOUNT bull lit bull PAYS Interest Compounded

Quarterly

Offices i~

NORTH ATTLEBORO MANSFIElD ATTI~nRO FALLS

middotIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II111IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllilllllllilllllllllllllllllll

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 12: 04.04.68

12 rHE ANCHOR-Diocese(OfF-OIIRiver~tnuls ~prn 41968

Askl~~~sl(tion to -Plrotect Workregf~ Health Safety

By Msg~George GHiggins Plans are under way at the present time to-establiSh

4 joint Committee on Occupational Safety and Health made I up ofrepreserttatives of some 50 national organizations inshycluding the NationalCouncils of Catholic Men-and Women and the SociaLAetionmiddotDepart- Bureau of Labor Standards mas ment of ltheUS Catholic established _ with advisory Conference It will be the powers only-duringthe New purpose of this ad hoc Com- Deal mittee to work for the enact- Other middotthan this federal legisshy

pationa1 safety _and health Un- support It enacts no needless HARRY MINOR til such staniiaIds are written 91 particular onerous burden into law~ the~ wilLbe atendenOonany employer llt sinngt~yre- U as 111middot - ey in the ~tatesand in indUs- quires aU en~geQ in jrtterstateRea IlnlYer5Ity middottry to compete at the expense commerce 10 meet ~asonali1e degmpound tahd~~ulaa te ~tehalth anaa~dafeont-Y standarilpt~at Will prdtect the 5tudent lBoamiddotv

t l17 p ~ eJm~e n lives tthe~irlifetYaniithe ihealtb 17 construcbo~ ~lt~S Ce~l~lYI of their employees BE1R01T (NC)-HarI7Y 1Vfi-

major bodl~Y lqJUQ chemlcal 111 dd d middotte r nor 21 of Washington DC is potsoning anddeathshotilii notmiddoti t wI gINea ~ Proc Ion the jirstrN~roelectedJPresideIit

mentof a federal occupatianal sa f e t y and health act durshying the present session of the Congress The groups associshyated with the committee are a g r e e d that federal standshy

I ards make parshyticularly goo d sense in the field llf occushy

be paitners ~th US lndustry Industrial Casualty LisI

Secretary of Labor w Wil- lard Wirtz has pointed out thatmiddot the industrial casualty list _ like yesterdays and tomorrow~s and eveI7Y wotkiJ1g daY~ week after month after year-will be 55 dead 8500 dis~bled and 21~ 200 injured

This tellS only a part af the story While middotthere are no finn figures on occupational disease and illness those available middottell a middottale of massivehuman misshyery and needless economic waste

Investmentln -safety and health pays middotoff fforindustw and middotthe-NationalSafety Counshyeil has figures to-prove itahese figures prove thatmiddotwherea conshyeerned middotemplQ-yer devotes sigrUshymiddotficant attention to maintaining safe and healthful wotking con ditions the accident casualty and occupational ri1lness mtes aresignificanty belowthose gtin establi~hInentswhelehealth and safety are Conside~ -an e~pens~ve luxwy

On~theJobAccidents The tragedy of Jhe Louisiana

salt min cave-in middottbat middottook place several weeks ago itlusshy

trates the need for laws The company in middotquestion had been informed of the need for new safety -equ~pment six months before the accident But no steps wele ~taken becaUse of

inadequate middoteJifonement While we have come a long

w~y since tbe TriangleShrit shywaist Fire in lNew York Clty in 1911 the leIltile issue of

middothealth and safetyLOll the ~job has lain rdormant clilmost -Since that day

In 1913 a law was middot-passed middotto belp prevent the injurious -efshy

middotfects of the manufacture ef pb~phorous matchesbullAndthe

Guidance counseloJ$ To Meet in Detroit

DETRQ1lI (fiC) -More than 5000 delegates are expe~ted

middothere for the ~twO-day Natianal Catholic Guidance Conference convention which ~opens Saturshyday April -6

The delegates will attend middoteleshymentary secondary and collegeshylevel workshops dealing with the use of testing -and counselshying in a religious formation program

lation has all but ignored the question shy Yet on-thejob accidents- reshysultin the slaughter of between 14000 and 15000 workers a year and seven million more are irijuredat work More than $5 billian Inproauction -was lost in 1966 because of an-the-jab accidents

_Of Major Concern The bill befare the Congress

now~the 0ccupational Safe~y and Health Act -of 1968 -isa comprehensive law that merits

00 s0ftle9 mI1hon ~wo~~s orthe Stuaent government at EmPlq(rs alre~i-Y p~II~mgthe University of ~Detroit here sae ana h~altlifulconait~ons wIll not be affected -Under the law the Secretary of ~a~r may mdeed cede Junsdlcbon to any state ~hat alreadyenshyforeesappropnate standards

OCc4pationai health and safeshyty like clean meat is a matter of major concern middotto allmiddotthe peoshypIe of the United8tates It is an issue that cgoes beyond orshy

- ganized labor although our unio~ naturally are deeply concerned about It

It is middota Jilatter affecting every man -woman anll chUdin lthe United States Imiddott is too timporshytaot to remain part of the unshyfinished business of America shypI o ~ Of an rnO~le middoton ~bull e QfP~pe ~dhn XXilU

NEM YORK (NC)-A motion picture [of the llife tof Rqpe John JOaII middotis planned ~y ttheNashytional Catholic Office ~forMoshytion cPictures (Snd the National

Catholic OHice middotfor Radio and Television

Announcement of Itbe ~-prqjeCt was madeQy iEather joPatriok Sullivan 8J director of NC0MPand ICharlestReiUY exshyecutive director 0fNCORT

The PontificalCommissiongtfor Social Communications in Vati shycan City and many IOJi the late Pontiffs iaides and associates are jParticipatiqg Jin Ithe PlQiect

Thepoundilm is planned for theshyatrical distribution with subshysequent ielease middotto ~levision

1=-01 Ratar-ded P-arentsand friendsOf the

mentally retarded of allfaiths are inNited to the first annual Religious Nurture Conference

-of the Massachusetts -Associashytion for Retarded IChildren middotto be rheld Saturday and Sundar April 20 and 21 at The Cenacle Brghton Mass Among partici shypan~ w~ll be Sister Lolettamiddot Fdrd iRC of The Cenacle and Bey John R Crispo ltCathOlic c~plain of the Walter E Fershynald State School The program will include group meetings private counseling sessions ~ith parents and others and denGmshyinational demonstrations on the Biblical formation of the IJ shytarded child

B~fore ~he~oting Mino~ Il

junior in the college 6f attsand sciences was convinced he would be defeated He said I aont stand a chance of winning You cant beat the fraternitymashychine

Minor didnt attend the elecshytion returns meeting goinginshystead to a class in psychology

his major subject After class Minor gave a lecture at -Kappa Beta Gamma sorority He middotmiddotwas astounded when middothe learned middotthat he -pOlled middottwice as maIy votes middotas his two opponents combined

Less thari dive per centof the more than 10000 students at the Jesuit luniversity are Negroes

Minors vice presidential runshyning mate was Michael Craine

123 a wrhijih~ stu dein t son of Mrand Mls C~ydeP Craine

middotof BArminghamMich Craines father is professor-of English at theuniversity

Active in studerit ~irsbull Mishy

nor ~rites a column for Varshysity N~ stupertt newspaper

i~~~~~v~~t~d ~fv~~~i~~~~v~h~ffs~~So~f~~ ~and ltMrs lIfarry Minor Of Washshyington middotwhere he attended ~Nashytivitr elementary schooland st lohns High -School

IMissOUli Minister SerVlloe lDirector

WASHINGToN (NC)B 3 Roberts 6f ~ansas ~City Mo is the new national director Gf loint Action in CommUliit Service Inc

~inning April 1 Robe~ the 42-year0Id minister inthe Unitarian Association willhea4 the private nonprofit ltcorporashytion which is ~nder middotcont~ct ~to the Job Cops tIt has recruited more than 5000 volunteers dur- ing the past year to provide asshysistance to returning Job Corps trainees in some 500 towns and citiesmiddotacrQSS the country

Roberts who succeeds Dr Roger middotL Burgess a Methodist layman hasOOen directing opshyerations in lJ1 rNorth CentrBl states from Ithe Kansas City office since May 1967

lls You Love Showing Christian witness Is the charity of Christ maile incarnate

~na operative in all areas of life andbuman endeavor middotItis the principal element in the threefold nature of missionaryaciivity Mission middotmust be first of aU a sign of the presence of Gods universal redemptive love This makes it all important that the missionary himself be the embodiment of the charity of Christ to men Only then can be open their minds middotto Christ and show them the Church as the sign 9~ Christ among men

1n the Incarnation Christ embraced -the world and human valshyues not IY superhJ1postngHimself upon them but rather by insert shying Himself into their midst Men respected and valued for themshyselves are maqe perennial~y open and salvation isstirringTh~y are made aware of a presence and salvation is beginni1)g The Ii$sio1)ary must be willing -not only to impart butto learn and to listen People legitimately fear the loss of what is rprecious and distinctive in their own -heritage Each nation must develQp the abily ~eJpress Chdsts message in its oWn way The task middotof misshysionary witness then is not middotthemiddot~sheerforce of charity or numbers alone but rather middotto middotelevate to challenge~ and to meet love tfor IQve withth~ ove-lpoweringpresenceof lGOd

bull bull I

But witness is not task ot themlsSionarY alone ~ bull wheN middotth~ live aUChristians are bOund to l-sbow ~olth by means ofmiddot their Jlives and bythe witn~middotof thelmiddot sPeech that new man which they 1Put on at Baptism (De~ree on Missionary Activity) As ~me~ber of theChurehbesholild s~e)docon- tribute to middothermissionary apostolate by his -own underStanding enthusiasm talents prlloYersand matedal resources Some will becalled by divinegrace to goabroad3slay mlssionatiesOthers fulfilling their individual vocationsin ~the home in professions in the ~usiness world can bear witness by the example of middottheir personal and professionallives -as weli as theiractive pariicipashytion~inchurchfunctions As members of tbe Mystical Body your spiritual gifts differ Each must perfom his own task well To be a true and effective witness means that your love must be a sincere love one that not only fbids roomin your hearifor aU men but one thatshows U

If you have ilebthis Lent slip by without thought of sacrifice do not let the Jprecious ~daysOf Holy Week remain elJpty Your personallmaterial sacrifice for the assistance of our misSionaries is witnessiJ1g to Your faith and a true sign Of your love

iSALV~TlON middot1ND SERVICEare ~e work cOt De soclet~

tor the PropagationOf the Faith Please cut out this columnand send Four oUedng middotto -Right Reverend dldward T~ 0~Meara Nashytional Director 366 FifthA-veDue New York NYbull-10001 cor

directly ltto your loeal DiooesancDireetMpoundLRev middotMagr RaYnumd T CoDsidine 368 North Main Street Fan ~iverMassacihuseUS UIfaO

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ACADEMY BUILDING FAll RVER MASS

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

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Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR 806 NO MAIN STREET

Fall River 675-7497

NEW BEDFORD

1001 Kings Hwy Open Evenings

Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 13: 04.04.68

Ask Broad Study Of Newmon Role

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A comprehensive study of the role of the Newman apostolate on secular campuses throughout Texas was recommended at a seminar here attended by more than 100 Newman leaders

The chaplains professors and students voted to ask the Texas Catholic Conference that a comshyprehensive statewide study be made by competent sociologists and educators to determine the needs and attitudes 00 students administrators and faculties on the secular campus what the Church can contribute to the secshyular college or university and how it can best serve both the students and the institutions themselves

The recommendation acknowlshyedged that such a study may be difficult but added Without it the Newman apostolate is working in the dark at a loss to know what it should be doing for the more than 32000 Catholic students at secular colshyleges in Texas to say nothing of some 241000 non-Catholic stushydents atthese colleges

The resolution also noted that there is general agreement only on t1e proposition that the Newshyman clubs of the past are of little or no value today and that existing programs conducted by Newman centers-even the best -are woefully hiadequate

The resolution was endol1led enthusiastically by Father Alois Goertz chaplain of the Antonio College Catholics Students Censhyter which hosted the meeting

CYO-middot Schedules Oratory Contest WASHl~GTON (NC) - The

National Catholic Organization Federation will hold its annual national oratorical contest here April 15 and 16

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishyrector of the Youth Department United States Catholic Confershyence announced that all dioceses affiliated with the National CYO Federation and national affili shyated organizations are eligible to send contestants

Philomena Kerwin excutive secretary of the National CYO Federation who is the general chairman of the contest said there are two categories for conshytestants this year-the teenage boy and the teenage girl divishysions The prizes are a four-year tuition college scholarship to the first place winner in each divishysion and cash prizes to the secshyond winners

Judges for the contest will be members of the National Cathoshylic Forensic League and instrucshytors of speech or debate in colshyleges and high schools The prizes will be presented at an awards luncheon April 16 at which the Catholic War Veterans of the United States will present special trophies to the winners

Seminarians Favor US Policy Review

WASHINGTON (NC) - A group of seminarians fro m Woodstock (Md) College conshyducted by the Jesuits has deshylivered a letter to Senate Mashyjority -Leader Mike Mansfieid calling for full Congressional reshyview of US south~ast Asian policy I

The Jetter signed tiy 104 stushydents who represent 64 per cent of the student college body askshyed that the review takemiddot place before President Johnson makes future policy changes

The signers said that their

THE ANCHOR- 13 Thurs April 4 1968

Minn ~eli~~ous

ExprEss Ce1cern MINNESOTA (NC)-A dozen

Sisters from various Minnesotlil communities have signed a let shyter to Archbishop John F Dearshyden of Detroit president of the National Oonference of Cathshyolic Bishops expressing concern over the implications of the rulshying by the Vatican Congregashytion for Religious on the renew~

al activities of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary 0

The letter circulating among 48 convents in southwestern Minnesota written by seven Sisshyters in the New Ulm diocese says

We are gravely concerned and puzzled by the recent communishycation from the Congregation for Religious to the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary regarding their attempts at reshynewal

Reflecting Study

Many religious communitiell tqroughout the country are unshydergoing a process of updating not unlike that of the IHlVls This ruling makes us concerned not only for the future of the IHM community but for the fushyture of religious life in the United States

The letter notes in the spirit TEENAGE ORATORS The 14th annual OMtoriCal oontest sponsored by the Nashy of Vatican Council II commushy

nities have been attempting ~tional CYO llederation will draw 40 teenage orators from across the country to Washshyrenew from within and thatington DC o~ Monday and Tuesday April 15-16 The boy and girl first place winners all changes have been made witln

will each receive a 4-year college tuition scholarship Limiddotnda Pernice 17 and John Megna reflective study on the Gospebl15 who will represent the Brooklyn NY federation talk with Father Martin P Banshy and the decrees of Vatican n n~n director of Brooklyns CYO NC Photo

Archdiosectese Ba~ks

Reigious Programs Lose Older Audiences Urban Coalition PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Fulll

support for the principles goawChanging Faster Than Chu~ch Jesuit Says and commitments of the Philashyd~lphia Urban Coalition waG

ST LOUIS (NC)-The direcshy which listens to Sacred Heart many social problems involving pledged by archdiocese oj[the tor of a world-wide raido pro- Program and to determine if the civil injustices poverty war and Philadelphia this week ram said here that older listeners program is responding to its labor It is concerned about In a letter to Mayor James Hehave been turning out proshy needs The 30-year old program family problems centering on

J Tate Auxiliary Bishop Gerald grams and publications which which is broadcast on nearly relationships and difficulties in V McDevitt chairman of thehave changed format and conshy 900 radio and T V stations marriage relationships of parshy Cardinals Commission - Ecoshy

in an attract throughout world Emts and their children and Programtext attempt to the features nomic Opportunitiesyounger audiences since Vatican talks by knowledgeable diocesan epecially problems of communishy said We will continue to makeCouncil II and Religious pirests cations between adults and teenshy available the resources of the

agers he continuedFather Denis E Daly SJ adshy state of Religion archdiocese in the fulfillment ministrative director of the Father Daly said the study Personal Problems of the goals of the coalition Sacred Heart Program middotsaid oldshy revealed that the majoritymiddot of the middotAnd it is concerned with The Philadelphia Urban Coshy~embers of the Church tend audience are Catholic women personal problems particularly alition was launched at a convoshylO~feel that the religious comshy age 50 and older However 25 those involving loneliness disshy cation of community leadem munications media both broadshy per cent of the audience is male couragement abandonment and Feb 15 and 16 In its Declarashycast and print are changing too 40 per cent are between ages 30 getting along with others tion of Principles the coalition rapidly faster in fact than the and 50 and 20 per cent are not Father Daly said the Church stressed the need that therebe Ohurch itself As a result he Catholic should offer some direction in avaHable to everyone regardshyindicated they give up the battle Our majority audience and these matters He stated that the less of race creed or color Q bull to keep abreast I would venture to say our minshy Sacred Heart Program has al shy a purposeful job decent housing

ority audience is quite concernshyThe older group is cutting ways addressed itself to these in the place of his choice and shyitself off from sources ed about the state of religion toshy problems and will continue to the right to engage meaningfullythese of information even though the day F(lther Daly said In parshy do so in all of the communitys activishy

ticular our audience is anxious tiesinformation itself might be very middotHe acknowledged that as a reshyabout the many changes in the sult of changes in thegood for this audience and necshy Ohurch

essary for its religious growth Church many members of the Sacred It is also concerned aboutFather Daly said The dilemma Heart Program audience are

points up a basic problem now looking for a reasonable stance CORREIA ampSONS facing the Church and religious on the problems Church memshy ONE STOPCatholic lHospmtalscommunicators he added bers face today

SHOPPiNG CENT1RmiddotAt the same time this olderIt is imperative that religious Plan Convention group wants to be sure of beshy bull Television bull Grocerycommunicators identify their PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The ing guided in the right way byaudiences and prepare programs Catholic Hospital Association bull Appliances bull Furniture

in format and context that will will hold its 53rd annual conshy those understanding to t~e best 104 Allen St New Bedfo~of t~Elir ability what the Churchhave the greatest appeal Fashy vention in Philadelphia June

today is communicating to itsther Daly continued 11-14 997~9354people he saidThe priest based his observashy The principal address at the

tions on a recent study made to convention will be delivered by identify themiddot iype of audience Archbishop Thomas J McDonshy

ough of Louisville Ky who will speak on Religiousmiddot Comshy LINCOlN PARK~ BALLROOMSign Reiolution mitment to Effective Delivery

DAYTON (NC)-Aresolution of Quality Caremiddot Archbishop Rt 6-Between Feall River and middotNew Bedford-by Catholic clergymen asking McDonough is episcopal chairshy One of

Southern New Englandis Finest facilities Dayton and suburban municishy man of the National Conference palities to assure freedom of of Catholic Bishops Committee

J Now Available forhousing and to oppose dilcrimshy for Health and Hospitals ination in buying selling or Other general sessions will BANQUETS FASHION SHOWS ETC leasing property has been feature discussions of Why signed by 115 priests The signshy Church-Sponsored Health Facil shy FOR DETAILS CALLMANAGER

I L __--A=

action should not be construed ers represent more than 90middot per ities Planning for Compreshy 636middot2744 or 999-6984 as representative of the commushy cent of the priests in the Dayton hensive Health Care and Cost nity or of the oolleBe area Controls and Quality Cnre

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

YOUR OILHEATI WYmanlaquode 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEIDFORD MASS

7

rOffjf1kft(illWltJ1 OWD~ sect sect30copyJ C] sect e MSGRbullJ0HN G NOLAN National SecretaiY

Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

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~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 14: 04.04.68

THE ANC~Q~--Di~ Gf~ft~~~prit~f~~middotmiddot - - ~

Prospect Street Pi~yers atS~HA Prepare iBoyFrie~d Production For Presentation in Ma

Upcoming at Sacred Heart8 Academy Fall River is a production of The Boy Friend a musical amppoof on the roaring Twenties Itll be the work of the Prospect Street Players the academys new drama club moderated by Sisshyter John Alicia SUSC and n bAM G A language program which was~ed y nne c Ulre nne presented to an SRO audience Is stage ma-nager for the mu- of parents and friends A playshyBical and the lead role of let singing and dancing were Polly will be played by Kerry Included in the show whose

lOyency Supporting players in- cast included SHA alumnae~ ~de Marybeth Conlon Bever- Spanish Club members juniorJlY Moniz Joanne Gleason high school students and Holy Christine Mulveny Conriie Ve- Union Pre-School tots wnaGlenda Medeiros Jackie Congratulations to Sharon

McCarthy Ann Fennessey and Andrade Do m r n i can AcadshyKathy Cohroy emy senior wlios received

PREVOST GLEE CLUB Glee club offi~ers at Prevost High School Fall River are front from left Donald Bouchshyervice-president Donald Corriveau president rear Roger Yokell treasurer Earl Flynn secretary

Male talent from surrounding - achools has alsO- been drawn on

Prevost High has contributed Wilfred Michaud Durfee GershyaId Cowell and Rene Covel Connolly Paul Dominiqu~ Chris lDErrico Ralph Martin Paul Hughes Providence College Arthur Belanger and Bristol

Community Edward Wallbank and Rickie Waring

Friday May 24 and Sunday May 26 are the dates set for the middot eurtain to rise on this ambitious fairs

project Retreats Planned Guidance Program

Prevost High in Fall River will have an expanded guidance program from here on in

-Twelve area priests are making ihemselves available for stushydent consultation and at least one of the 12 will be on hand

middot daily for the remainder of the lJChoolyear

Also at Prevost the 11th an- mual alumni reunion will take place Sunday May 19 at Whites restaurant Co-chairmen are Norman E Ouellette 49 and JRobert N Landry 50 Members of the class of 48 will be espeshydally honored on the 20th anshyllliversary of their graduation Can it be that plans for next academic year are already shapshy

ing up Yes it can At Mt St MarY Academy in Fall River cently at both SHA and Mt St

tile literary staffs for 68-69 Map At SHA semor art and have been named Editor in

ehief of the Mercian school paper will be Anne Hefko Her page editors are Carol Costa Mary Crosson Kathleen Mcshy

Cann and Monica Grace In eharge of business mattersGail Moniz and Colleen McDonald Art editor will be Nancy Marshy

middot tel and Jean Flanagan will hanshy~le fashio~ Sports will be the domain of Maureen Janick and

Patricia Golden while photo ~ditors will be Denise Ouellette iBlld Maureen Cassidy

Newly appointed editor of middot Mercycrest the Mount yearshymiddot~ook js Mary Tyrrell Associate editors are Ann Bibeau Cheryl

Furtado and Suzanne Paquette and the literary staff YBI inshyelude Mary Jane Newbury

Suzette Santerre Colleen Gilshylick and Christine~albot

Photography editor is Jane McDonald and- her staff will at the Greater Fall River Artts glory all the way for SHA eonsistof Ghristine Wilding

Patricia Talbot and Deborah Quentabl liane Lavoie is the

middot Ile~ usmeJS m~nagel and ~orkmg wth ier Will be SImone Gagnon Demse Vezma iBlld Margaret Comeau

Consumer Education Consumer Education ~tud(mtsmiddot Joan Roberts Charlene Calvey Sch~ls to Close

Iltt Bishop Cassidy High in ~ristol euroommunity Joanne Taunton have attended a seriesOrtechouski~ Taunton Yoke DODGE CITY (NC) -Three Qrf lectures on credit and fi- LPN Ann Leonard Frances parochial schools in the Dodge Dance Speakers represented the Rheaume Eileen Doherty Bet- --City diocese will close at the New England Telephone Co the ty Laffan Janice Gubala SMTI end of the 1968 school year The Taunton area Chamber of CQm- Kathleen Hanna Curry College decision was made after study

a four year renewable scholarshyship to Eminanuel College H~r high_school activities have inshyeluded class presidency and stildent council membership for the pastthree years and coshyeditorship of the schoolmemory book Shes a member of the ~ality Newsette staH and math FreDlh and athletic assoshyciati~ns Last year IDe was a school representative at the reshygional and Mass state science

Association athletes Theyre Bristol CountyGirls League champs in volleyshy

- National Merit ball for the third straight year Donna Cole Cassidy senior and basketball champs for the

has been named a National second year Merit Scholarship finalist and Passion Play also at the Taunton school ac- The YCCL of Prevost is for ceptances include Janice Cor- the second year presenting a naglia BU Loretta Bedard

mUSiC students presented a Look-Li9ten AmerIcan ~usic ~nd Art survey as an assembly p~gram By means of colored slides art s~udentsshared reshysuIts of theIr research on the evelopm~nt of ~~rican paintshymg from Its begmnmgs to 1913

~hen contemporary art made its appearance

In a parallel presentation music students traced American composers from early times to the 1900s Giving background

to their studies music students spent a New York weekend at

concert and ballet performshyances while art students visited Boston and Cambridge museums

in a crowdedrewarding day Meanwhile Mounties heard

an address by Richard Ballou on the effect of the industrial

revolution upon art The speakshyer recently had an exhibition

Dominican seniors will start their annual retreat tomorrow at La Salette Theme will be at UMass and a full scholarship Awakening Mt St Mary to ~~manu~l

underclassmen had a day of Jumor hlstory students at recollection per class this week also at La Salette Freshshymen went Tuesday sophomores yesterday and freshmen today

French NIgt IS planned for

Sunday April 7 at Prev~ and Career Day IS ~pCOmig

vhistn~xt Tuesday A semor Will take place Saturday ~llght A~gtrll 20 and Prevost M~thers WIll meet Thursday AprIl 25Th 11 b J M S

ere ea umor lXer unshyday Apnl 28 and Sunday May5 IS the date planned for a glee

cl b t t SHAF 11 R u concer a ~______ iver Art held the spothght re-

S~middot deCided to mark ~he 100th anmversary of the impeachshymentof Andrew ~a~kson by ~ debate on the tOPiC Resolved That Andrew Jackson Should Have Been Ousted The affirmshyative upheld by Bethany Stike and Amie Marie Charette won the debate Opposed were

Maureen Faria and Diane DeshyVillers Jayne Darcy was de- River area Director is Jimb t ha a Forda e c Irm n

At Mt St Mary Jeannine Twenty Stang students are Dubois has posted a perfect

participated in a Taunton Cashymiddotreer Day by visiting various inshy

dustries and utilities while sodalists enjoyed a trip to Bosshyton to view A Man and a

Woman Cassidys National Honor Soshy

ciety chapter held induction ceremonies with William Casey Tauntons assistant superintendshyent of schools as guest speaker Christine de Fumichon a for-~ eign student at Cassidy for the

year was inducted as an honshyorary member and 15 9Ophoshymores were admitted as probashytioners

Sports Triumphs I

score m the annual Admimstrashytive Management Society Arithshymetic Program This is a test that evaluates business arithshymetic skills

And today at the Mount 21 seniors will take a cOInpetitive scholarship test sponsored by tpe AFL-CIO and dealing with the history of middotlabor

Business students at Cassidy

Passion Play This years proshyduction greatly expanded from

last year was first shown Monday for St Annes Gramshymar School It will be staged tomorrow for the Prevost and Notre Dame Grammar Schools and on Monday April 8 for the public at St Louis de France Hall Swansea A second pub- lic performance will be offered Wednesday April 10 at JesusshyMary auditorium for the Fall

competing in that AFL-CIO e~am today and on Sa~urday

Paul Franco Robert Duquette andJohn Martin willpartici shypate in -the Mass State Music FestIval at Springfield

Viet Aid Continued 4ltgtm Page One

free the Catholic agency staff and supplies for work among

refugees CRS stated The increasing thousands of

refugees who need from us the kind of help they cannot get from others coupled with the

firm assurances we have reshyceived that after June 30 the families of the Popular Forces will not go hungry have led us to make this decision said Bishop Swanstrom

In implemeQting our extenshysive program of assistance to vietnamese refugees we will of necessity work in close coshy

operation with both American and Vietnamese authorities with Write or Phone 672-1322

whom I trust we will continue to enjoy the same excellent re-

lationships we have had in the 234 Second Street - Fall River past the bishop stated

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FRIGIDAIRE =_~==REFRIGERATION

NewYorkSc~1 ~) 1 I ~ t bullbull l

Head Advocates -

~ystem Chang~ DEMAREST (NC)-The American people cannot at shyrom the tragedy of the passshying of an educational reshysource as important as that of the Catholic school opines a Catholic educator

But at a time when those schools are most needed Cathshyolics are engaged in a debate over whether they should be continued Msgr William M Roche Rochester diocesan sushyperintendent of schools told the annual Spring symposium sponshysored by the Bergen County Catholic Education Association here in New Jersey

It would be imprudent in the extreme to allow Catholic and other non-public schools to be forced out of existence the New York State prelate said

Meaning ~ Change Asmiddot for the debate oyerCathshy

olic Schools Msgr Roche feels the chief trouble is that those who ~ppose them begin the deshy~bate with the words Since ~e Can middotno longer afford Catholic sChools IS if this was alreaiy a proven fact

- What is needed Msgr Roche believes is reorganization and change within the Cathloic school system

As society changes so must palish and pastoral outlook he said Those who devote themshyselves to the preservation of existing institutions which were formed in years past for differshyent purposes are doomed to

failure Instead we must direct the

change to give current meaning to changing institutions

laymen Urge Halt In School EXpansion

CLEVELAND (NC) - The Cleveland Conference of Layshymen asked the superintendent -of Catholic schools Msgr Richshy

ard McHale to halt construcshytion and expansion of Catholic high schools for at least two

years The laymen also requested

the permission of building fund contributors to invest the $14 million collected and to use tbeshyinterest as a temporary source of income for higher teacher

salaries in the 38 Catholic high schools in t~e diocese

A10tJifHlY(MURCH BUDG~T ENVElOPES

PRINTED AND MAILED

merce and the Taunton Credit Mania Malewicz Massasoitmiddot and consultation by the diocesan Bureau JUnior College Mary White school board an overwhelming

After fiesta comes siesta So Katharine Gibbs Anne Marie vote by parents to discontinue 88) senioritas at SHA Fall Sullivan Dianne Quigley ~ary the schools and acceptance of River who feel entitled to a Fenton Emmanuel Mary Fen- the school board recommenda- little relaxation after their ton New Rochelle Linda Gull- tion ~ Bishop Marion F Forst 1363 SE~~~~~I~~~~~~MASSI-ormously successful Spanisb- lemette Advanced Placement of Dodge City

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i

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 15: 04.04.68

Lutherans Meet With Catholics

NEW YORK (NC)-Lutheran and Catholic theologians meetshying here on the subject of intershycommunion declared at the close of their conversations tnat any consensus on the controshyversial issue must await a deepshyer study of the entire problem of the ministry

A joint statement issued by the conferees said intercommushynion was chosen as the topic of the consultation because an earlier -report drawn up by the group on the Eucharist acshyknowledged intercommunion to be one of the pressing and as yet unresolved problems deshymanding further discussions

The talks marked the beginshyning of the fourth year of theoshylogical discussion between memshybers of the two churches Coshysponsors of thji conversations are the National Committee of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and the Catholic Bishshyops committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs (BCEIA)

Twenty - three participants took part in the conversations including first-time delegate Father Bernard Law new dishyrector of the BCEIA The sesshysions were cut short a day beshycause one of the four scheduled position papers was not delivshyered

In their six meetings over the past four years Lutheran and Catholic theologians have deshyvoted a total of 16 days to docshytrinal discussions on the Nicene Creed Baptism the Eucharist and intercommunion

Rabbi Leaments Prelates Death

NEW YORK (NC) - Rabbi Marc H Tanenbaum interreli shygious affairs director of the American Jewish Committee expressed his grief here on the death of Archbishop Paul J Halshylinan of Atlanta

The rabbi said in a statement that the death of Archbishop Hallinan fills us with a proshyfound sense of grief The Amershyican Jewish Committee had been privileged to be associated with Archbishop Hallinan in a numshyber of projects devoted to the advancement of Jewish-Christi shyan understanding and had come to know him as a great and warmhearted human being

His personal leadership at Vatican Council II in support of the declaration on non-Chrisshytian religions and other progresshysive causes both in the Catholic Church and on the American scene have won for him the inshydelible reputation of a courashygeous and prophetic spirit whose memory will be forever cherishshyed by those who were privileged to know him

The greatest tribute that we ean pay to his memory is to continue to devote ourselves to the realization of the objectives of universal peace freedom and justice for which his whole life etood as a brilliant testament

California Cardinal Commends K of C

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Knights of Columbus consti shytute a bulwark of strength on the part of laymen in promoting and cultivating the -practice of true Christian principles by all men JameJ Francis Cardinal McIntyre said here in connecshytion with California K 01 e Week

The cardinal praised the long established and admirably eonducted services the Knights of Columbus have rendered to ampbe Church

CANCER CRUSADE President Lyndo n B Johnson greets Mrs Roy D Woodward of Dallas Tex at the White House Mrs Woodward who has been cured of cancer was presented to the President by Lawrence Welk band leader and TV entertainer who is chairman of the American Cancer Societys 1968 crusade NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 Thurs April 4 1968

Cautions AgainstI

Cynica$mJaoDespair WASHINGTON (NC) - A

prominent Anglican theologian said here that modern manll basic problem is to face the facts of his situation honestly without falling into cynicism or despair The man who knows that he is made by God and reshydeemed by Christ he said can confront the facts without fear

The Rev Eric L Mascall proshyfessor of historical theology at the University of London spoke on The Theology of the Secushylar at the Catholic University of Amerilta here

Dr Mascall Who is a member of the Anglican Oratory of the Good Shepherd London said

it is undeniable that the preshydominant mood in the technoshylogically advanced communities today is secularist 0 cent ltIgt it ill broadly true that the modern world not only exhibits a vast proliferation in the realm of the secular but has in addition a thoroughly secularist outlook and behaves on thoroughly secularist assumptions

It organizes itself he said in a way that takES no account of any other reality than that of this world and this life

In a subsequent address on The Task of the Theologian Dr Mascall said he did not beshylieve the task of the theologian today is differentCuban ~efugees Resettled in 50 States essentially from his task in any other epoch It is he said to helphuHux Continues at 4OOO-a-Month Rate the Church to acquire a deeper understanding of the ChristianWASHINGTON (NC)-Some tIed in 26 other countries beshy ing to a US Department of faith and to mediate interpret370000 Cubans approximately sides the U S Health Education and Welfare and commend that faith to theone out of every 21 Cubans in The influx continues The Bulletin The figure for New contemporary worldCuba have applied for refuge flow is so steady in fact that York was 457343 refugees reshy

in the United States since the the Freedom Flights arriving settled Communist take-over in that in Miami and the Freedom Next in order were New Jershycountry Tower Refugee Center there sey 28200 California 19499 Jews to Join

The Department of Immigrashy handle approximately 4000 Cushy Illinois 12221 Massachusetts tion United States Catholic ban refugees each month 5244 Louisiana 3837 Texas Ghetto March Conference one of the leading Outside of Florida the point 3690 Pennsylvania 2720 Conshy NEWARK (NC) -Two Jewshyagencies in the refugee field of entry into the U S New necticut 2074 and the District ish groups here announced theyrecently resettled the 112000th York State has received the of Columbia (Washington D will support a church-sponsoredCuban refugee Other volunteer largest number of Cuban refshy C) 1897 Walk of Understanding throughagencies engaged in resettleshy ugees for resettlement accord- Other states with more than the streets of Newarks ghettoment work are the United HIAS 1000 Cuban refugees resettled Sunday(Hebrew Immigrant Aid Socishy include Ohio 1752 Michigan The support came from theetygt Church World Services Reds Plan Drive 1648 Virginia 1462 Georgia American Jewishmiddot Committeeand the International Refugee 1382 Colorado 1115 and and the Anti-Defamation LeagueCommittee Against ChulIch Ihdiana 1031 of Bnai Brith

Steady Flow Praises RefugeesBERLIN (NC)-A communist The New Jersey Council of These facts are recalled by organization in the Croatia reshy One Cuban refugee was reshy Churches had called off a demshy

the governments publication of gion of Yugoslavia has decided ported resettled in Alaska Idashy onstration of its own earlier to a table which shows that Cuban to launch a drive against what it ho had 7 according to the reshy support the walk refugees who came to this calls the political activities of port Utah 15 Wyoming 16 The walk is being sponsored country between January 1961 the Catholic Church and Maine 27 by the Christian Communityand January 1968 have been The Croatian Socialist Alliance In all the refugees have been Movement an organization of resettled in all 50 states of the plans to apply appropriate resettled in more than 2300 city Negroes and suburbanUnion the District of Columbia counter-measures against the cities in this country whites headquartered at QueenPuerto Rico and the Virgin Catholic Church charging that John E McCarthy director of Angels parishIslands They have also reset- although they are formally of said here that the resettlement

an ecclestastical character in work of the USCC Departshyreality they have strong political ment of Immigration had been ELECTRICALBishop Aslks Action overtones and have increased accomplished through the tireshy Contractors since the signing of agreements less effort of a network of diocshyOn Racial PlIoMems between Yugoslavia and the Va- esan resettlement directors and

CHERRY HILL (NC) - The tican their concerned Catholic comshynation must give thorough study munities The alliance termed Catholicto the report of the National These Cuba~s who haveAdvisory Commission on Civil Activities an offensive of freshy given up everything in theirquently decisively political charshyDisorders in order to detershy sea r c h for freedom haveacter which aims at the extenshymine whether all or just which through their courage initiativesion of the activities of therecommendations should be and resourcefulness become inshypromptly implemented accordshy church to areas definitely withshy tegratep and productive me~shyin the competence of the soshying to Bishop George H Guilshy bers of their new communities 944 County Stcialist statefoyle of Camden NJ he added in praise of the refshy New BedfordThe statement said that even large part of them must be unshy in the ecclesiastical press the dertaken We cannot procrasti shy aims of the Church can be easily

HI think he said that a very ugees themselves

detected to gain a larger field bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullnate-we must not neglect our duties moral and civic toward for maneuvering the further exshyour less fortunate fellow citi shy pansion of political activity ANDERSON amp OLSENThe socialist alliance declared

that the Catholic Church in zens

INDUSTRIAL and DOMEST~CCroatia has entered the field

Save Human life in many matters especially in HEATING-PIPING andROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) those areas where there hasmiddot -Bishop Walter P Kellenburg been a lack of initiative on the of Rockville Center has re-emshy part of the progressive socialist AIR CONDRTBONING phasized his opposition to forces or where these forces broadening New Yorks aborshy were too weak- CONTRACTORS tion law stressing the need for In Zagreb the alliance com-

312 Hillman Street 997-9162 New Bedfordpositive stePs to preserve hushy plained the Church distributes man life daily 3000 meals to the needy ~bullbullbull

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Sunday Canadians to DirectThe quintet with short hairshycuts are seminarians in the Center at FatimaMontfort Missionaries They are WEBB OIL COMPANYWASmNGTON (NC) -Theseniors at St Louis University

Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

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Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 16: 04.04.68

THE ANCHORshy-16 Thurs April 4 1968----------- shyA~~orrureg [En~rtllcopyJregltdl

B=ll ill ~ 0[]1) ~ [freg ITm1 CLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop

Clarence G Issenmann of Cleveshylland has urged the Cleveland

City Council to expand the leased housing program ~or modshyest-income families to all areas the city

At present Cleveland restricts Ilhe program to urban renewal areas Bishop Issenmann said WInless the reStrictions are lifted Cleveland could lose as much as $250000 in federal funds already pledged to the program

Baltimore is the only city that restricts this progarQ to urban llenewal areas Clevelands Mayshyor Carl B Stokes said With the area restriction only a few eldshyecly tamilies have been able to lUnd housing under the progam The plan permits the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority to lease 400 units and rent them W families with modest incomes

In a letter to city councilmeJl Bishop Issenmann said the mayshyor the council the housing aushythority must take leadership and all Cleveland must support them --if we are higt solve the housing problems of our low-income families

Mayor Stokes said that he will ask fora legal opinion on whethshyer the housing authority can llease housing outside the urban

renewal areas If the opinion is megative Stokes said then he

wili press for changes in legisla- ion

legion of Mary Repo~ts Results

PHILADELPHIA (Nt) - Alshymnost 44000 -hours of apostolic work were contributed last year by the nearly 1600 active memshybers of the Legion of Mary in centhe archdiocese 0pound Philadeilphia according to the legions annual IOOport

Among the tangible results lFeported by area Legionaries were contacts which led to the baptism of 337 adults and 214 lllhildren and to the confirmatiorl lion of 117 adults and 46 chil- Grmiddoten Legionaries also arranged ~atechetical instruction for 527 ehildrell attending public school ~nd arranged the transfer of 00 ehildren toparochial schools

Visits by Legionaries were made to the homes of almost

13000 non-Catholics in the Philadelphia area to extend inshyvitations to parish classes and 00 distribute Catholic literature

More than 25000 visits were made to the homes of Catholics most of them parish census calls or visits to encourage membershipin parish societies or as auxiliary member of the legion

Churchmen ElI1dorse 1P00r Peples Plan

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Interreligious Committee on Race Relations here in the nashycentions capital has endorsed the goals of Dr Martin Luther Kings Poor Peoples Campaign which will start here April 22

The committee is the first mashyjor predominantly white organshyization to support the Nobei Prize winners campaign which will bring more than 3000 poor people into the city in an efshyfort to make Congress paSs sigshynificant anti-poverty legislation

The committee chairman is Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord Patrick Cardinal OBoyle of Washington is a founder anei former chairman Auxiliary Bishop John S Spence is now II oo-chairwan

MARYKNOLL IN JAPAN Father Thomas Mantica MM is big brother and babyshysitter all in one for _these Japanese eta youngsters at Hope House in Kyoto The eta are fifth-class- citizens in Japan ostracized from community life by centuries-old cusshytom At Hope House the Maryknoll pries t is trying to instill dignity and prIde in the eta community through education religion and friendship NCPhoto

Co~~eges ~robing

lfBc~HruOfrreg Pla~ LAKE FOREST (NC)-Barat

College of the Sacred Heart here in Illinois will study the feasibility of relocating on the campus of the University of Notre Dame in South Bend acshycording to Mother Margaret Burke president

Barat College about 30 miles from Chicago is operated by the Religious of the Sacred Heart Barat representatives after a meeting with officials from the University of Notre Dame and St Marys College which adjoins Notre Dame deshycided to seek a private corporashytion grant to study the proposed reciprocating and tri-partite relationship

In the proposed academic merger the girls colleges would retain their own adminshyistrations but would share fac- ulty classes and facilities with

Notre Dame MotherMargaret Burke said

a non-Catholic college has al shyready indicated an interest in buying the Barat campus and property However she said a move to the Notre Dame campus in neighboring Indiana would not come before September 1970

Minnesotans React To Disorder Report

ST PAUL (NC)-The Urban Affairs Commission of the St Paul and ~inneapo1is archdioshycese is distributing summaries of the report of the National Commission of Civil Disorders to all parishes and educational institutions in the archdiocese Parish and school groups win

devise a plan of action to meetmiddot the problems confronting the nation after they have studied the report in its entirety Sershymons too will be preached

Archdiocesan Com m iss ion Chairman Camillo DeSantis beshylieves the Twin City See plan will be the first attempt at imshyplementing the riot report recshyommendations

Where A Seminarians Break Into Show Businessshy GOOD NAME DegCII Fooli~g Around With -Guitars Means A

NEW YORK (NC)~It wasnt wi til guitars and folk songs Today we are trying to inshyliIO hald We just came to New They have been singing toshy terpret his ideas intO the 20tb GREAT DEAL York and knocked on a few gether for three years in high century meaning Brother John doors One lead led to another_ schools on street comers and explained And we are trying We made a record we got an for bar mitzvahs They have to get engaged in as many new agency General Artists Corporshy been on TV ~fore on the Merv and good ideas in oommunicashyation a manager William Purshy Griffin Show and the Mike tion as possible~ To keep up GEO OHARA cell and Milt Okun as musical Douglas Show with changing times we cant dilector and Mary (of Peter Today along with 45 other just use the same tools used in Paul and Mary) to do 1Il guest Montfort Brothers they live in the past shot with Us We signed a conshy four shabby flats in the slums tract with Warner Brothers and of St Louis They commute to CHEVROLETsoon are releasing a new record classes at the university but on their Reprise label spend the rest of their time

This brief success story is a elping the poor living as young mans description of how neighbors available when II glOup of five seminarians needed-and singing from St Louis known as the They are following in the Montfort Singers broke into footsteps of their founder St show business Louis de Montfort who was a

Shori Haircuts singer and song writer himself They were in New York not and who 200 years ago worked

to knock on doors but to reshy with the poor and was involved hearse for their appearance on in communication_ the Ed Sullivan Show on Easter

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Canadian Oblate Missionaries ofand they are all under 23 ex- TEXACO FUEL OILSMary Immaculate will take over cept for one venerable Navy management of the Internationalveteran of 26 Center of the Blue Army of-Our DOMESTIC amp HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSIn Founders Footsteps Lady of Fatima PortugalThe three songwriters John

OReilly Paul Baker the soloshy The center also known as Sales Service-Installation ~ ist and Joe Valentine met Jack Domus Pacis or Housemiddot of Peace

MAIN OFFICE -10 DURFEE STREET FALL RIVER Middendorf while novices in throughout the world during an Indiana In their own words international seminar from July

Coyne and ex-Navy man Don will accommodate priests from

Phone 675-7484 they beganmiddot fooling around 16 to 23

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

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Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

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20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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Page 17: 04.04.68

17 Board of Education Report Continued from Page One

equal to the actual cost of opshyerating the school Tuition for non-parishioners must be highshyer it was felt but since a highshyer cost would be absorbed by the parents alone-and lIlot by the parish sending the children -a higher tuition would disshycourage non-parishioners

It was felt that non-parishshyioners should pay the same tuishytion as parishioners with their parishes paying the balance of of the per pupil cost to the school

Thus parishes without schools would be spbsidizing the educashytion of their children just as parishes with schools do ltllt present

Special Collections Various approaches to special

collections for the support of the schools have been attempted There was considerable success here with the education of chil shydren looked upon as the finanshycial responsibility of the entire parish rather than of thc parshyents alone

Paying Ability There was consider3ble disshy

agreement among the pastors as to the ability of their parishshyioners to pay tuition Some pastors who were charging little or no tuition fclt that if they were to institute a system of paying tuition a large numshyber of students would withdraw

Others felt that this is not the case but that the people have to be sold the value of Catholic education as something worth paying for In general people will begin to believe they are poor if they are conshystantly reminded of it it was P9inted out

One pastor expl3incd that he does not believe in an automatic reduction of tuition for several children in a family but gives

this only to families who ask for it or who obviously need it

There was no correlation beshytween the pastors views on the acceptability of tuition and the relative wealth of the area served by the parish Considershyable discrepancies exist beshytween neighboring or overshylapping parishes The practice of charging tuition seemed to be more a matter of personal opinion with the pastor than of the actual condition of his parish

It was pointed out that schools which serve a majority of poor people cannot depend entirely on the parish for supshyport but must receive some support from the entire Cltholic community

TEACIIERS

the slllgie the

Lay Teachers Many pastors indicated that

greatest cost 111 f th h I

Catholic education and a deshysire to maintain it at practically any cost

Financial System One manual for school acshy

counting should be used by all so as to better analyse school costs compare costs with other parishes and generally establish the actual cost of opshyeration ~

Uniform Support One half of the operational

cost of the school should be supplied by tuition frilm indishyvidual students and the other half of the school costs should be borne by _parish income

No child should be excluded from a Catholic school because of finances Therefore certain adjustments in tuition will have to be made for large families and poor families but the basic standard of a tuition of $50 per student should be established as soon as possible

NOIil-Parish Studelllts Children from neighboring

parishes without schools should be expected to pay no more than the established $50 tuition The difference between this fee and the actual per pupil cost of operating the school should be paid directly to the school by the parish from which the child comes For the present the parshyish without themiddot school should be expected to pay $50 per parishioner-pupil to the parish operating the school

Poor Children Where the parish has a mashy

jority of poor families and itself is unable to pay $50 per child the parish should be able to draw from a sizable diocesan fund for the education of poor children The fund should total about $50000 annually and be raised by assessing each parish in accordance with its income

The funds would be distribshyuted to the schools on the basis of the number of children in the school whose families fulfill the current U S Office of Economshyic Opportunity definition of a low income family

Lay Involvemlmt

Each parish should establish a parish school board according to the guidelines recommended by the NCEA it should funcshytion under the direction amI overall budget established by the parish council but would be solely concerned with policies and functions of the parish school

DioeesaJll Plan Within the next few years it

may be necessary to combine several schools establish junior high schools for given areas middotshare faculty members among

ho 1 Itmiddot t t th tsc 0 S IS Impor an 3 operatIon 0 elr s~ 00 s was - pastors meet together and with the payment of s31anes for lay the Diocesan Board 0( Education teachers They expr~ssed grave so that these decisions can beconcelll at the pOSSIble loss of Sisters in the future and the foreseen and pre)ared ~o~ need for hiring additional lay srl~ttuhaetrlonthan faced In a cnsls teachers It 1 tmiddot

Religious Identity IS a ong range a~su~J IOn that there WIll be slglllflcant8 t I dome pas ors a so expresse bl C

the feeling that if the number pu IC aId for at~o1J~ schoo~s of Religious teachers be re- ~y 1975 Extraordln~IY sacnshy

middot flces should be made 111 the 111- _duced much further the re11- bull _ bull d ftod th h 1 tervemng yeals so as to malll shy

glOUIS ~ e y e sc 00 tain a position of excellence ind wou os I t pt-eparation for possi ble publicay nvo vemen d

Several pastors indicated that 31 If b 1975t is evident that they had received a good del such JUbliC ai~ is not immedishyof ~elp from ay people on their ately forthcoming then the pansh councIlor othcr school related organizations in the ~lOces7 should defIllltely reconshy

Sider Its long range plan forplan1l1l1g for theIr school When C th l d t involved the laity appreciate a 0 IC e uca IOn the serious financial problems Rmiddotmiddot C bull related to the school and help e Iglous ontro to establish a stronger base of NAIROBI (NC)-The National support for the schools Lay Council of Kenyas Catho-

Value lics has objected to the new In spite of the sedous fi- governments education act

nancial problems experienced which gives the government by most schools the majority authority over all schools and of the pastors indicated a stmng it strictly regulates the quantity aluHeclation of the value of and quality of religious educa-

CONCERN FOR RETARDED Principals involved at a lecture concerning the exceptional child were Mrs Joshyseph Ryan program chairman Sr Maureen RSM )if

Nazareth Hall Fall River and Dr John R Eichorn direcshytor of Special Education and Rehabilation at BostonCollege guest speaker

10 Protestant Churches Expect Unity Plan Within Tw V~ars

DAYTON (NC)-The Consulshy tation on Church Union has agreed to submit a plan for unity among 10 Protestant deshynominations within the next two years

The plan-which would be the blueprint for uniting 10 deshynom-inations with a total of 255 million members nearly 40 per cent of American Protestants-- will be drawn up before the

-Consultation in 1969 or at least by the 1970 meeting_ The 90 COCU delegates - nine fromeach deriomination-unanimousshyly approved this timetable

The meeting here was the groups seventh since its formashytion in 1962

Two of the denominations at coeu have already worked out a unity plan The Methodist Church and the Evangelical United Brethren Church will join and become the United-Methodist Church on April 23 this year The two will have a membership of 11 million nearshyly as large as the memberships of the other eight churches inCOCU

Three Catholic observers at shytended the Dayton meeting

They are Father John Hotchkin

associate director of the U S Bishops Committee for Ecushy

menical and Interreligious Afshyfairs Msgr William Baum chancellor of the Kansas City-St Joseph diocese and past dishyrector of the bishops commit~ tee and Father George H Tavard AA of PennsylvaniaState University

Lords Prayer

The delegates here agreed on principles of faith that provide for usc of the Apostles Creed and Nicene Creed but have stipulated that the new church

11 t d d lt 1 tWI no eman 1 era accepshyance of these

The meeting also held an exshyperimental communion Bel-vice to work out differences in forms of worship The delegates lICshy

cited a new form of the Lords Prayer at the service Although the prayer like themiddot entire sershyvice was simply an experiment no delegates seemed to find it unacceptable

The union effort began with the Episcopal United Presbyshyterian and Methodist Churches with the United Church of Christ They have been joined ly the Disciples of Christ the Evangelical United Brethren the Presbyterian Church in the U S (Southern) the African Methodist Episcopal Church th~

African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

Honor Thomas LOUISVILLE (NC) - Entershy

tainer Danny Thomas has been named for the 1968 Bellarmine Medal of Bellarmine College here in Kentucky The presenshytation which will be made May 1 honors a person who exemshyplifies in a noble manner the virtues of justice charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and controversial probshylems

THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Busy S~~reg~ule

For ~~~reg flaul VATICAN CITY (NC)-Procfl

positive that Pope Paul VI ha~

thoroughly recovered from hi) surgery of last November wao evidenced by a Vatican anshynouncement that the Hol~

Father will take part in a full round of Holy Week ceremonieD in Romes four major basilicafl

The Pope will preside oveli six public ceremonies on fiv~

days between Palm Sunday and Easter including his traditionall Way of the Cross at the Colosshyseum Since his operation ho November the Pope has been conserving his energies anell audiences and public appeavshyances have been cut to a minj mum

Holy Week ceremonies begitl with major ceremonies in Sfgt Peters on Palm Sunday AprDl 7

On April 11 the Pope wilill preside over Holy Thursday ceremonies at St John LateranlJ Basilica and on Good Friday he will return to 51 JohnS which is his cathedral as bishop of Rome for the Liturgy amp1l the Cross At 9 PM the same night he will take part in the Way of the Cross procession ~

the Colosseum a public outdo08 ceremony in which Pope PlIil has taken part ever since raquoi~

election as Pope On Holy Saturday the Pope

will preside over ceremonies ~

St Pauls outside the Walls On Easter Sunday he willll

celebrate Mass on the steps of 81 Peters at 11 AM and then go up to the main balcony oR the basilica to give his traditionshyal blessing Urbi et Orbl-~

the city of Rome and to th world

The only change in the scheltUshyule from past practices is th2tl the Pope will not be going to D

poor Roman parish for early Mass on Easter

Organize Daocesan Postoral Council

SOMERVILLE (NC)A 300shymiddotmember pastoral council of the Trenton diocese to be known alIgt

the General Assembly has DeeJl organized here

It is composed of 10 pries~

28 nuns two Brothers 28 deleshygates from 1~ diocesan organiza- _ tions and 240 lay representashy

1ti ves from the 188 parishes )I the diocese appointed by Bishop George W Ahr of Trenton Members will serve in an adshyisory capacity with a consultashytive vote

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S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

LEMIEUX PLUMBING ~ HE~TING iNC

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Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

YOUR OILHEATI WYmanlaquode 3-6592

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254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

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7

rOffjf1kft(illWltJ1 OWD~ sect sect30copyJ C] sect e MSGRbullJ0HN G NOLAN National SecretaiY

Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

offering CITy STATE__ZIP COOE_

~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

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school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 18: 04.04.68

S THE ANCHOR--

Thurs April 4 1968 Catholic Schools

S IM~st erve ooriEdueator Says

11 PHILADELPHIA (NC) shy

-Xf we abandon the poor and underprivileged if we cease flo reach out to the Negro ~hild if we become more and more suburban and less and less iDner city then we ought to get out of an educational sysshytern Philadelphias archdiocshyesan superintendent of schools ~ld school officials pastors teachers and patents at a twoshyday seminar here in Penna on IChool financial planning

middotMsgr Edward T Hughes em-Father served as an assistant phasized at Our Lady of the Presentation

If we dont reach out to the Church in Brighton poor and neglected then we arent living up to our obligashytions

Pressures on Parents Referring to financial presshy

sures on Catholic schools and to rthe Philadelphia Sees tradition of a reiatively tuition-free sysshy~em Msgr Hughes noted Other dioceses have priced themselves and are pricing ilhemselves out of the reach of centhe poor

We have proportionately his ecclesiastical superiors -and more Negroe~ in o~r Catholic Rome Father Fitzgerald beganschools III PhiladelphIa than are the work for which he believes in the Cat~ol~c schools o~ any he has been trained--helping19t~er city III ~he country the priests to solve the problems Phlladelphla prela~e asserte~ they face in the modern world adding Yet our total enroll- His varied assignments in th~d I t f shyanent dec~ease ~s y~~r or priesthood he feels were Gods tile fIrst time m hIstory way of giving me a rounded

Part of the reaso~ for the d~-ehne~ he noted IS mcre~ed fi shyoanclal pressures on parents

Serve the Poor If we decline rapidly Msgr

Hughes stated pressure on state legislators to give us aid declines rapidly and quite frankly weve lost political levshyerage Also for any claim to IState aid we must continue to lIlerve the poor

Noting that capital expansion of the archdiocesan school sysshytern iscomplete for the foreseeshyable future Msgr Hughes otressed that Catholic schools still face serious financial difshyficulties

You are here Msgr Hughes atated not to find specific ari- IIlw~rs to concrete problems but I th d f I rea Ize e nee or ong range plannmg

Long Range Plannnng The seminar~was the first of

five such programs iniriaJor eities of the nation devoted to ~e question of long range finanCial planning lit Catholic eiemeritary and secondary edushycation _

Sponsored by the National eatholic Education Association and funded by a $60000 grant from the Ford Foundation the program is staffed by members of the Academy for Educational

lD eve lop men tof Denver which prepared the cOntrovershyoial 1965 report on Elements of a Master Plan for Higher Eliucation in Pennsylvania

Refuses to N(lmet I f Smiddot tHOSpl G or Gin

BOMBAY (NC)-TheMahashyrashtra state government has rejected dem~nds lor renaming 8l public hospital named after a

Christian saiilt The government said the

question of renaming St Georges hospital ~does not ariseunder a proposal to re-II a me government hospitals named after foreign dignitaries

When the long-awaited pershymission arrived Father Fitzshygerald entered the Congregashytion of the Holy Cross He served as a professor at Holy Cross Seminary in South Dartshymouth and superior of the Holy Cross Seminary in North Easton

During World War II he served in the Pacific as an Army chaplain

Helping lPriests In 1946 with the approval of

Father Fitzgerald Dedicat~sLife toA-id Of Brother Priests with Problems

The Rev Gerard M C Fitzgerald is a refreshing breeze in a world of change and confusion Gentle mannered-but with ideas that cannot be shaken-he is conducting a growing world-wide apostolate that had been his dream for years before he was given

ecclesiastical approval to begin it in 1946 It was a simple idea Priests have problems To him it was eminently logical that the field of

priestly problems be covershyed by priests trained to help

cope with them A native of South Framingshy

ham Father Fitzgerald was orshydained for the Boston Archdioshycese on May 6 1921 One of his classmates was Richard Cushing For 12 years while he sought permission from thc late William Cardinal OConnell

to enter a missionary order

knowledge of a priests life His first major benefactor

was the late Francis Cardinal REV GERALD M C FITZGERALD SP Spellman of New York who blessed his work and gave him Christ in helping serve souls markably like the probiems of a $10000 donatiori to start it in his priesthood in being con- other people The number one

In ~he last 20 years God has tent with his vocation problem is alcoholism Celibacy blessed our work says the Result of Wars still agitates a certain percentshyfounder and servant general of The problems that have age of the younger clergy the Servants of thE Paraclete erupted in the last 20 or 30 Changes bother others

Tltgtday he explains the order years Father Fitzgerald feels Each person reacts to stresses is headquartered in Rome We probably are the result of in il different way have 10 houses in the United wars A priest is a person- He too States and houses in Argentina We are living in an age will react differently than some England Scotland France Ar- when i~ is not as easy for any- otherpriest mig9-t gentina and the West Indies one priest or layman to abide The Servants of the Paraclete Priests of the order he feels with content in his vocation work particularly with those

have helped reunite brother Part of the trouble he says priests who have been unable priests with God with their is that perhaps unconsciously to cope with their individual bishops and with the world mel have accepted the philoso- problems

Not A Profession phy that science can do every- My six brothers found their Speaking last week at the thing Science cant-first there fulfillment in marriage FatherFt I Carmelite Monastery in South bas to be a fundamental belief I 2gera ~says I found mI~e Dartmouth where he conducted in God In the prIesthood If you are m I - conferences for tHe nuns Father He cites the current chaos in ove W~Ul Go~ you fmdfulfl1lshy

Fitzgerald 73 exuded an en- civil rights and international ment iit that~ thusiasm normally associated relations that almost are at the The pr~esihopd is exacting b t t f f

with much younger men explosive poin usa IS ym~ I you c~n acceptThe priesthood he says We can get to the moon but the bItter Wlt~ the sweet he

must be lived as a dedication when we do well have the and vocation-not asa profes- probiem of setting up some sion

Happiness in any vocation he feels calls for a totality of dedication If a married man is more interested in fishing or golf than he ismiddot in his family his family suffers So it is with a priest Unless he has total dedication to God and Gods work his priesthood suffers Today~aught up in the conshy

fusion that is the modern world -many priests have problems they find difficult to resolve

Despite newspaper stories and publicized actions and reshyactions of priests who have left tile ~hurch Father Fitzgelald

is not pessimistic shyThe basic need of a priest is

the same basic need that exists in every human being he says the necessity of adjustment to the vocation Providence has sethim up in

If a young man falls in love and gets married his probiem is finding happiness in adjustshy

method of self defenSe As long as men base solutions

to problems ona theory that leaves God out ~it wont work Thats why people today are so confused -

When Pope John XXIII opened the windows of the Vatican to the winds of change he says he was so anxious to see a World of unity that bishshyoPs bent over backward not to condemn change

In anxiety not to increase grounds for separation many things evolved that do not repshyresent the traditional teachings of the church-and truth is not transitionaV

All through his almost 47 in the priesthood Father Fitz- getaldsays I have found both commitment and fulfillmentin being just a busy priest

He admits- however that in the old days you could count

on a fixed position Today it is o FFS ET P~IT~RS ~ LEnERPRES$ more difficult1

indicates For thoo~ who ar~ overpowshy

ered byt~e bitter the Houses of the Paraclete are open

Three~Sunshine We i~se what we call

the three-sunshine approach Fattier explllins

He cites them as he sunshine of ~ature that mcludes ~ lovely 10catlOn co~ortable but not lUXUrIOUS livmg and the b~st food we can buy Coupled WIth that are the most modern

~ethods of therapy including Turn to Page Nmeteen

Color Process

Booklets

mittee for furtler study Huber an outspoken critic of

the bill made the motion tollowshying a two-hour caucus by Senshyate Republicans who reportedly voted 17-3 to send the bill to the Appropriations Committee

Whl th R bl 1 e e epu Ican caucus

was being held Gov Romney was e In newsmen 0 IS e ashytIl g f h I t th t th bll h d be Ion a e 1 a en~

ported out by the State Jffalr8CommIttee

senate DemocratIc -leaders were bitter over the acbontakel) by ~e Republlcanll who control the Senate by a 20-18 margin

LEMIEUX PLUMBING ~ HE~TING iNC

~ Sales andService

for tlomestic and Industrial

Oil Burners 995-1631

2283 ACUHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Year Books

Brochures

Press Inc

Plan Interfaith Passover Meal LEWISTON (NC) - Catholic

Jews and Protestants will parUshycipate in an interfaith Passover Meal on Wednesday April 10 which it is said will mark the first time this has happened in this country

This year the Christian Easter and the Jewish Passover fall on the same date and this will set the stage for the unusual ecu menical observance The Passshyover Meal will be served in the

vestry of the United Baptist church in this Maine city

Plans for the program were arranged by Brother Raymond Latour advisor to St Dominics Regional Christian Actiorl group the Rev John R Schroeder chairman of the Social Action committee of the LewistonshyAuburn Council of Churches and Rabbi David Berent of Beth Jacob Synagogue

The meal will be conducted according to the ancient ritual which vyith minor alterations has been observed since the time of Abraham

Cat hoI i c and Protestant churches have been invited to send a limited number of rePshyresentatives to the supper which will be served by women of the three participating faiths

DISh de oy OW ownOn Fa-r Hous-ng

LANSING (NC) - A showshydown on Gov George Romneysfair housing bill has beEll delayshy

edin the Michigan Senate while the fiscal implications of the proposal are studied

Supporters of the legislation scored a victory when the bill was reported out to the Senate floor on a 3-2 vltgtte by the State ffairs Committee

The controversial bill remainshycd on the Senate calendar for only 24 hours wh~n a motion was made by Sen Robert J Hushyber of Birmingham to refer the bill to the Appropriations Comshy

only ing to his wife in taking care Qo priests hav~ middotmore probshy 1-17 COffiN AVENUE ~-bull t bullJ The St Georges hospital is of his home andfamiiyin beinl lems tod~y than they oncedidt

named aftermiddota saint and not II a good father middotPerhaps So says Father Fitz~ New Bedford Masa foreoigndignitary the gOvern- For a priest it is under- gerald ~

ment declarecL standing his pllrtnership witla ~Blltth~ir problems ~re reshy

rWmiddotmiddot

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

YOUR OILHEATI WYmanlaquode 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEIDFORD MASS

7

rOffjf1kft(illWltJ1 OWD~ sect sect30copyJ C] sect e MSGRbullJ0HN G NOLAN National SecretaiY

Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

offering CITy STATE__ZIP COOE_

~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 19: 04.04.68

19 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs April 4 1968pltasze Unfair Advantage

Accepts Re~~~1tSome Area Schools Ponder Archbishop of Newark lE$fruJraquo~ishesChanging Sports Leagues Personnel Board for ~~O$ts

By PETER BARTEK NEWARK (NC)-A 12-memshy first assignments grievances

Norton High Coach ber personnel board has been transfers disposition of passhyestablished for the Newark torates special assignmento

Theres an adage which says where there is smoke archdiocese by Archbishop evaluation of personnel and reshythere is fire and this centuries-old proverb may presage Thomas A Boland lated problems Its decision will

Establishment of the board be subject to the approval ofan eruption and complete change in the alignment of severshyimplements a recommendation the archbishopal area schoolboy athletic leagues in the not-tao-distant made by the Senate of Priests The senate report provided

future Discontented parties The Senates report on the that assignments should be the at the moment are most reshy board had been accepted earshy result of consultation betw~en

several schools with ~mall boy lier by the archbishop The reshy the board and the archbishopluctant to discuss the subshy enrollments commenced with port provides that the board is that every priest has the rightject but the mot is th3lt they the return of New Bedford to select its own chairman and to approach either the ar~hshyare exchanging thoughts and High to the fold nominate one of its members bishop or the board independshyideas with others who are disshy HEADS AGENCY Presishy to serve full time in personnel ently and that no assignmentsatisfied nevershy We know before we start a dent-elect of the North Censhy work should be made without consulshyfootball season that we cannottheless while tral Association of Colleges According to the report the tation between the parties ponshypossibly hope to win over purshythere is the disshy and Secondary Schools is Fashy board is to concern itself witb eernedfee High of Fall River says ity that nothing tinct possibil shy

one close to the situation wlio ther Edward J Drummond will come of demanded complete anonymity SJ vice president of the St the quiet rumshy Durfee is one of the two or Louis University MediCal

three largest high schools in theblings they are Center It is the accreditingState It is just that obviouE1being heard and -agency for more than 400that Durfee has several times at any time The they could erupt AHDMEthe number of eligible boys that colleges and universities in

we have Welllre too small We 19 Midwest states NC Photo League whisshyBristol County

do not belong in Durfees class OF THEIR SMTr isn~t in UCLAS class perings among Fr Fitg~rald ONNContiilued from Page Eighteen

Suburban Population Expansion psychiatry psychology and Alshy

week Defeat after cohollcs Anonymousweek after ftamplIaLVATMampSIOW AIDTCtTHE DAIENTALCHUACHContinuing this conservative The second he refers to as but knowledgeable schoollioy defeat ruins team morale We tHe sunshine of fraternal charshysports attlIche observed are thinking iooking and ity Wi live with them as we shudder when we see them on lV the

Now the problem is com are thinkihglooking andweigl1- brothers families in India who have never lived IndOors They live in the streets painfully sleep huddled pounded New Bedford like ing the wisdom of change Tlte third is the sunshine of together on matting on tile sidewalks TheDurfee is much too big for lIamp This fimllnlf is not uinque to the Eucharist Wherever possi pennies they eambuy scraps of food andrags

We know before westalt a We Bristol- County League ble we have perpetual adorashy bullbull In caleutta alone they number 100000seasons pllly now that we are either Thelia am some in tJie tion $mI They are not drunkardsorttamps these families going to lose two of our nine Nhrraganseth competition who A priest who has been sopshy GEIiS All they need Is a chance bull bull rOT only $200 games Its the impossible Wink that some of the biggerr arated from God fiequently Ii (fOr materiaJs) we can giVe a family a homedream fOr us to expect an un schoolS belong ilT the stronger findS adoration the road backshy FAMILY writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattll from Ema defeated season The cards 8m Bristol County circuit and the It toOK Father- Fitzgerald a OFF ltulam Well provide the supervision our m~n stacked against us befOre we smallel7 BCL teams should be in longtime to reach the road be INDWS will do the work ffee-ofochargeo and the family start Yet our- boys l1ave the~ the Narry loop now travelS Hemiddot mows that fOr smEErs will own It outright once they prove they can same right to try to achieve anI They point to Somerset HigH some priests the path will be take care of It themselves Well start the work undefeated senson oUr only whose student enrollment has even longer immediatel) canyou imagine the happiness bull hope in two and perhaps three increased steadily ove the Butmiddot he and his brottier Parashy Home of their own will bring Heres your

chance to thank God for you~ family your home games is to try to keep the years Somersets boy enro11- eletes have hands outstretched your warm bed Archbishop Parecattlrwlll write score as close as possible Its ment is larger than some There is no condescensionj there you personally to say t1anks a moral victory if we do schools who participate in the is no strain

Concluding he commentedl Bristol County league A priest who has strayed a North Attleboro High had priest who is confused still is a

the right idea when it left the Agatn the rumblings are not Paracletes brother He is BCL It never should have concentrated in Bristol County treated that way That is why

Thinking of the months ahead why not send us switched from the Hockomock either as evidenced by the de- the order was formed JOur Mass nlquests right now Simply list the to the Bristol County in the cision of Old Rochester Re- Before he returns to Rome Intentions anlttmiddot then you can rest assured thefirst place But the authorities monal High in Mattapoisett to Father Fitzgerald will visit aU MASS Masses will be offered by priests In India thewere big enough to admit~ their return to the Narragan~ett the houses of his community FOR Holy Land 8Jld Ethiopia who receive no othermistake and finallycorrec1ed it League after- disappointing sue in the United States and then YOU Incomebullbull Remind us to sendyou Information

after their boys were outclassed cess in the Capeway Conference conduct a retreat in the West about Gregor-Ian Masses too You can arrange Indies noW to have GregorianMasSes offered for yoUflo

He is not young jut he ift self or fur another after death Cite Rhode slandArral1lgement eager to return to Gbdwhatmiddot Some in the more densely Some people dislike ch~nge G9d has given him Happinell8

populated areas within theter- Thereason for the unbalanced in his priestly vocation ritorial limits of the diocese leagues is no more tI~lln tradi-

have dismissed the Cape ~ tion Change just for tHe sake lightly Cape clubs play good of chang is wrong Tradition ball They are the equal of the iust for the sake of tradition more - heard - of Narragansett is also w~g

league Their leading track teams are as good as the BCL Brllstol COUl~tty SthOUd~d ~ave

basis one eague sp 1 In 0 IV1S ons on a yeart o-ye~ baSed upon eligible boy enroll-

Our an~nymous sourceaIso ment maybe with some refineshyrem ark e d that basketball ment for pastt performance It coaches do not cherish the works in neigHboring Rhode thought of leagUe cQmnetition Island Balanced leagues would out of their class They must arouse more interest Its worth win 70 per cent of their games a try in S~u~heastern Mass to qualify for the Tech tournashyment Our school plays the big names on a home-and-home ~ishcpli Ask Cause basis Thats four games and maybe six down the drain right Of V~~~tD~ns [hop away Our kids then have a MADRID (NC)-8pains Episshytough time trying to qualify copal Commission on SeminariesThey are entitled to a better seeking to find out why thenashybreak~ tions seminary population has

dropped 3000 in the last six years has published a questionshyGWlTIlfr frll) ltC~~reg~e and-answer analysis of the irob

LIVONIA (NC) - Madonna lem in its new magazine Testi College here in Michigan is monio slated to receive a $1 million grant from the U S Office of Criticizing those who blpme Education for construction of a the seminar-ies problems on the cultural center and physical ed- unrest caused by the SecondmiddotVashyucation building Sister M tican Council the Testhnpnio Dananthaj presidentj has an- article states that the problem nounced The college IS con- has root9 that go back sevarall ducted b~ the FellciliD Sisters years befOre Ute eounoil1 openeIL

~AVE MONEY ONI

YOUR OILHEATI WYmanlaquode 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEIDFORD MASS

7

rOffjf1kft(illWltJ1 OWD~ sect sect30copyJ C] sect e MSGRbullJ0HN G NOLAN National SecretaiY

Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc 330 Madison Avenue bull~ew York NY 10011 lelep~one 212YUkon G5840

_-__iIiiiiiiilIliIiJiiiiiiiiij- IIHEATING OIL ~

= To feed the hUn8ry in India helping yourself at the same time why not join this Association (and enroll your children nieces nephews and

i friends) right now Your dues will bUy ricgt -HElP wheat powdered milk in India where hunger IS

THEM a scourge Meanwhile the members you enron HELP will benefit from the Masses prayers and hard-

YOURSELF ships of all our priests and Sister Family memo bership $100 for life $10 for a year One permiddot sons membership $25 for life $2 a year Well send you (or the person you enroll) one of our new membership certificates

------------~----shybull CODear ENCLOSED ~EASE FIND $ ~ _ Monsignor Nolan FOR _

NAMEE -- _Please return coupon STREET -- _with your

offering CITy STATE__ZIP COOE_

~~A~ ~~sectlr

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull

Page 20: 04.04.68

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs April 4 1968

Open Daily 9 AM t~ to PMU5 SrruSJo~ue T-he Furniture Wonderland Including SaturdaY$ Counca~ Scores of the East

Bias in Po~and NEW YORK (NC) - The

~ynagogue Council of Amershyfica speaking as the united uaeligious voice of the largest tlkwish community in the world las accused the leaders of the tllOvernment of Poland of blatmt anti-Semitism and of the exshyIlltgtitation of traditional hatred ~ Jews in some segments of the olish_population fltgtr their own imternal purposes

The councils statement refershyied to the anti-Semitic campaign ~nied on in Polands press l)laming the recent student riots Iln the country on Zionists who mever forgave (Wladyslaw) (()shyllnulka (head of the Polish Comshyznunist party) for his condemshyIllation of Israel last June

- The Polish government has al shy00 dismissed six Jewish officials including the former minister of higher education Prof Stefan ~lkiewskiof Warsaw Univershyaity from government posts No reasons have been given for the qiljsmissals

Bishops Protest The student protests got their

atart two weeks ago when a play at the University of Warsaw was iIlosed down because it was cri shycal of the Soviet Union Stumiddotshyents demonstrating against the (JIosing were expelled This lIuought newand larger demonshyQtrations and finally open fightshyling between students and police Sympathy protests broke out in lleveral other Polish cities

The Synagogue Councilli atatement said

n No amount of slanderous anti shyI ~ionist rhetoric can hide from

ebe world the moral degradashyCion of a regime that would inshy()ke racial animosity in a maIlshyleI reminiscent of nazi tactics against a communitY of 20000 ~ws who represent the patheshyCic remnant of 3 million Polish

lews butchered by the nazis In a public statement read in

ltmurches in the countrys unishylJCrsity towns Polands bishops ltJriticized the violence that has Contemporaryshy New To-The-Floor Bedroom nnarked the demonstrations and Gmphasized that the brutal use (if fQrce disgraces human digshy CrClfted inmiddot Rich Brown- Cherry VeneersIlity

Eallier the five Catholic depshy1iBties in the Polish parliament~ bull Triple Dresser with lltembers of a group called Znak Framed Mirror I)rotestE~d against police brutality ONLYlin the suppression of the student bull Commodious Chest of ~monstrations Drawers

~ bull Queen Full or Twin Proposes Teachers Size Bed

$alary Increases Leading furniture designers are choosing soft-glow finish These fine woods are also STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Bishshy massive weightier flush to-the-floor stylshy accented with burnished brass and incised ~ John King Mussio of Steushy ing Of which this magnificient bedroom is a _paneiing -Interiors are dustproofed and aUbenville has asked diocesan Classic example Master craftsmanship is a~ drawers are dovetailed with center guidespriests for their opinions on twa parent throitghout combining authentic conshy A special factory purchase combined with ourproposals to increase salalies of Religious and lay teachers temporary design with superb ~o6struction low rent warehouse location makes this low Bnd to suggest possible alter- Specially selected hardwoods and beautiful price possible Buy now while selections are lllate plans to solve the educashy grained Cherry veneers are hand rubbed to a at their peak tional financial crisis in Cathmiddotshy(j)lic schools Our 50th Anniversary Features A Vast Selection of Golden ValuesRecently Mlther Francis de (Sales general of the Dominishy Shop Masons itor Everyday Savings on Quality can Sisters of St Mary of the Furniture Carpetingmiddot T-V and EJedric Appliances Springs Columbus wrote the Ohio ordinary asking that Sisshyters of her community receive FREE DELIVERY $1500 per year flr teaching This represents a 50 per cent mcrease over what they are receiving now

The diocesan school board si shyMultaneously recommended to the bishop that lay teachers in the system receive 95 per cent of the public school scale in the district in which the parochial

ANNIVERSARY

SPECIAL

New Englands Largest Furniture Showroomshy

school is located if they have standard state certification and 85 per cent if they have nonshystandard ceflttificationbull