05.24.73

20
Freedom from ··Forced Abortions The latest development in the Common- that hospitals, health facilities, doctors, hos- wealth of Massachusetts concerning the on- . pital staff persons and hospital employees be going abortion controversy is scheduled for protected in matters concerning abortions and de.:>ate in the House of Representatives on related matters.This legislation was referred Tuesday, June 5. to the Social Welfare Committee of the Mas- The members will consider the various pro- sachusetts legislature. posals drawn up by the Social Welfare Com- The Social Welfare Committee has amended mittee of the Legislature. the original proposals and has limited pro- The recent Supreme Court abortion deci- tection from compulsory anti-life activities sions greatly limit the power of a State to to hospitals and health facilities protect unborn human life by forbidding or said to be under the direction of a recognized restricting abortions. However, it should not religious order or group. be alleged that these cases hold that a woman has a 'constitutional right to fGrce a doctor, One of the dangers of such limited protec- hospital or the general public to provide her tion is that it omits any hospital or health with an abortion. To hold that State legisla- facility which might object to abortion and tures are limited in their power to forbid related anti-life activities for moral reasons abortions is not that same as holding that (as distinguished from' religious reasons). state legislatures are required to provide Opposition to abortion is not limited to the abortions. ten:ets of one religious faith. Recently Senate President Harrington and A further danger is the contention that these House Speaker Bartley proposed legislation. . contemplated revisions may place any hospital or health facility at the whim of a single anti- life member of its staff. The possibility exists, opponents of the proposed revision maintain, that such hospitals and health facilities will be deprived of administrative flexibility. Opponents of the' revision proposed by the Social Welfare Committee are asking right- to-life groups to register their objection to the Social Welfare proposals and to register their support of a bill which states that no hospital or health facility need be required to perform abortions, sterilization or engage in related anti-life procedures and which also gives protection to conscience whether formed because of religious tenets or moral principles. A redrafting of the Social Welfare proposals would achieve, proponents contend, self- determination for the individual hospital. or health facility. Each hospital or health facility would decide by vote of its governing body whether its policy would be to perform abor- tions or not. GOLDEN JUBILARIANS: Rev. Msgr. John A. Chippendale, Most Rev. James J. Ger- rard and Rev. Msgr. WilHam H. Harrington. Bishop. Gerrard, Two J.letired Pastors Observe Golden Jubilees Saturday Name. Zukowski As Bishop Stang Vice-Principal Robert Zukowski, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Zukowski of 180 Warren St., Fall River, has been appointed assistant principal of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth. A member of Stang facul- ty, he is· a member of. the Student-Fa'Culty Senate and has served as a member of the Pro- vincial Assessment Team for_the Sisters of Notre Dame who staff the diocesan high school. A graduate . of Bishop Stang High School, Mr; Zukowski teaches Spanish and Current Events in the Humanities Course. He taught at SS. Peter and pilUl 'Parish School for two years and has been on the faculty of Bishop Stang High for the past three years. The former Co-Captain of the Stonehill College Soccer Team, he is presently the Soccer Coach at the high school. Second in command at the di- ocesan high school which will also have a layman as principal, Mr. George A. Milot, Mr. Zukow- ski obtained his B.A. at Stonehill College and his M.A. at Provi- dence College. clear river. People strolling to- gether in the quiet haze of sum- mer or trudging through the deep winter· snows. A people intent on earning their daily bread, bas- ing their lives on the premise "live and let live," and the in-' creasing Catholic population journeying to Mass every Sun- day no matter how many miles they had to walk to get there. In 1873 a new parish was formed which included Weir Village, East Taunton, the Digh- tons and Myricks. Rev. Hugh J. Smith was the first pastor. Turn to Page Three Heart in Taunton Years Sunday olic Memorial Home, Fall River. Born .in New Bedford June 9, 1897, son of the late William and Elizabeth (Livesey).Gerrard, Bishop Gerrard attended St. James' parish school and Holy Family High School. He studied for the priesthood at St. Laurent Turn-to Page Six Sacred Marks 100- Excerpts from centennial booklet by Mary F. McDermott, a member of Sacred Heart Parish At the church of the Sacred Heart in Taunton, the celebration of a centenary is an exciting event, and means looking back into the past 100 years. What was Weir Vmage like a hundred years ago? Boats sailing up and down a d;The8 ANCHOR Vol. 17, No. 21, May'24, 1973 Price 10c $4.00 per year capacities; two are monsignori, one a bishop .. On Saturday, to- gether ·in their retirement as they were together on that morning years ago, Bishop James J. Ger- rard, Msgr. John A. Chippendale and Msgr. William H. Harrington will mark their golden jubilees in a quiet celebration at the Cath- Adult .Confirmation St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, . Pentecost Sunday, June 10 at 11 o'clock Mass. F,ifty years ago this Saturday, in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, three young re- ceived the sacrament of Holy Orders from the Most Rev. Dan- iel F. Feehan, second Bishop of the diocese. In the half century since that time they have served the Church in a multitude of Norton; Holy Redeemer, ham; St. Elizabeth" Edgartown; Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs; St. Joan of Are, Orleans; Holy Trin- ity, West Harwich. Blessed Sacrament, Espirito Santo, Our Lady of Health, Holy Rosary, Immaculate Conception, St. Anthony of the Desert, St. Elizabeth, St. John the Baptist, St. Joseph, St. Patrick, St. Stan- islaus, St. William, Fall River; Turn to Page Three Teletype Service In .. This Week WASHINGTON (NC)-A so- phisticated wire transmission. service operated by the National Catholic (NC) News Service be- gan sending news stories in- stantaneously to The Anchor and 77 other Catholic newspapers throughout the United States May 21. The wire system began oper- ation with a special blessing from Pope Paul VI, the "warm- est congratulations" of President Nixon, and the push of a button by Bishop James Rausch, gen- eral secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops Turn to Page Eight Appeal Nears $800,000; Closes Tomorrow Noon The 1973 Catholic Charities Appeal climbed to $791,882.68 today with many incomplete par- ish returns and special gift do- nations still to be reported. The official closing of the Appeal is 12 noon tomorrow. This should see mqre parishes exceeding their 1972 final totals. Appeal Headquarters in Fall River has issued the final' notice. Joseph H. Feitelberg of Somerset, this year's diocesan lay chairman, said: "All special gifts, priests' donations and parish contribu- tions must be at the office' by 12 noon tomorrow to be included in the final official 1973 tabu- lation. I urge that all retl,lrns be made in person to insure proper accreditations. The final Appeal total will be published in next week's edition of The Anchor. I hope all the parishes will be "over the top" by tomorrow." 53 have surpassed their 1972 final totals in this year's Ap- peal. These parishes are mem- bers of the Honor Roll. The new members added to the Honor Roll are: Holy Ghost, Attleboro; St. Mary, Seekonk; St. Mary,

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TeletypeService In.. Operati~n This Week GOLDEN JUBILARIANS: Rev. Msgr.John A. Chippendale,MostRev.JamesJ.Ger- rard and Rev. Msgr. WilHam H. Harrington. Adult .Confirmation Vol. 17, No. 21,May'24,1973 Price 10c $4.00peryear St.Mary'sCathedral,FallRiver, .PentecostSunday,June 10 at 11 o'clockMass.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 05.24.73

Freedom from ··Forced AbortionsThe latest development in the Common- that hospitals, health facilities, doctors, hos­

wealth of Massachusetts concerning the on- . pital staff persons and hospital employees begoing abortion controversy is scheduled for protected in matters concerning abortions andde.:>ate in the House of Representatives on related matters.This legislation was referredTuesday, June 5. to the Social Welfare Committee of the Mas-

The members will consider the various pro- sachusetts legislature.posals drawn up by the Social Welfare Com- The Social Welfare Committee has amendedmittee of the Legislature. the original proposals and has limited pro-

The recent Supreme Court abortion deci- tection from compulsory anti-life activitiessions greatly limit the power of a State to to ~hose hospitals and health facilitiesprotect unborn human life by forbidding or said to be under the direction of a recognizedrestricting abortions. However, it should not religious order or group.be alleged that these cases hold that a womanhas a 'constitutional right to fGrce a doctor, One of the dangers of such limited protec­hospital or the general public to provide her tion is that it omits any hospital or healthwith an abortion. To hold that State legisla- facility which might object to abortion andtures are limited in their power to forbid related anti-life activities for moral reasonsabortions is not that same as holding that (as distinguished from' religious reasons).state legislatures are required to provide Opposition to abortion is not limited to theabortions. ten:ets of one religious faith.

Recently Senate President Harrington and A further danger is the contention that theseHouse Speaker Bartley proposed legislation. . contemplated revisions may place any hospital

or health facility at the whim of a single anti­life member of its staff. The possibility exists,opponents of the proposed revision maintain,that such hospitals and health facilities will bedeprived of administrative flexibility.

Opponents of the' revision proposed by theSocial Welfare Committee are asking right­to-life groups to register their objection tothe Social Welfare proposals and to registertheir support of a bill which states that nohospital or health facility need be requiredto perform abortions, sterilization or engagein related anti-life procedures and which alsogives protection to conscience whether formedbecause of religious tenets or moral principles.

A redrafting of the Social Welfare proposalswould achieve, proponents contend, self­determination for the individual hospital. orhealth facility. Each hospital or health facilitywould decide by vote of its governing bodywhether its policy would be to perform abor­tions or not.

GOLDEN JUBILARIANS: Rev. Msgr. John A. Chippendale, Most Rev. James J. Ger­rard and Rev. Msgr. WilHam H. Harrington.

Bishop. Gerrard, Two J.letired PastorsObserve Golden Jubilee s Saturday

Name. ZukowskiAs Bishop StangVice-Principal

Robert Zukowski, son of Mr.and Mrs. John Zukowski of 180Warren St., Fall River, has beenappointed assistant principal ofBishop Stang High School inNorth Dartmouth.

A member of th~ Stang facul­ty, he is· a member of. theStudent-Fa'Culty Senate and hasserved as a member of the Pro­vincial Assessment Team for_theSisters of Notre Dame who staffthe diocesan high school.

A graduate . of Bishop StangHigh School, Mr; Zukowskiteaches Spanish and CurrentEvents in the Humanities Course.He taught at SS. Peter and pilUl'Parish School for two years andhas been on the faculty of BishopStang High for the past threeyears.

The former Co-Captain of theStonehill College Soccer Team,he is presently the Soccer Coachat the high school.

Second in command at the di­ocesan high school which willalso have a layman as principal,Mr. George A. Milot, Mr. Zukow­ski obtained his B.A. at StonehillCollege and his M.A. at Provi­dence College.

clear river. People strolling to­gether in the quiet haze of sum­mer or trudging through the deepwinter· snows. A people intenton earning their daily bread, bas­ing their lives on the premise"live and let live," and the in-'creasing Catholic populationjourneying to Mass every Sun­day no matter how many milesthey had to walk to get there.

In 1873 a new parish wasformed which included WeirVillage, East Taunton, the Digh­tons and Myricks. Rev. Hugh J.Smith was the first pastor.

Turn to Page Three

Heart in TauntonYears Sunday

olic Memorial Home, Fall River.Born .in New Bedford June 9,

1897, son of the late Williamand Elizabeth (Livesey). Gerrard,Bishop Gerrard attended St.James' parish school and HolyFamily High School. He studiedfor the priesthood at St. Laurent

Turn -to Page Six

SacredMarks 100-

Excerpts from centennialbooklet by Mary F. McDermott,a member of Sacred HeartParish

At the church of the SacredHeart in Taunton, the celebrationof a centenary is an excitingevent, and means looking backinto the past 100 years. Whatwas Weir Vmage like a hundredyears ago?

Boats sailing up and down a

d;The8ANCHOR

Vol. 17, No. 21, May'24, 1973

Price 10c $4.00 per year

capacities; two are monsignori,one a bishop..On Saturday, to­gether ·in their retirement as theywere together on that morningyears ago, Bishop James J. Ger­rard, Msgr. John A. Chippendaleand Msgr. William H. Harringtonwill mark their golden jubilees ina quiet celebration at the Cath-

Adult .ConfirmationSt. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River,

. Pentecost Sunday, June 10 at 11o'clock Mass.

F,ifty years ago this Saturday,in St. Mary's Cathedral, FallRiver, three young prie~ts re­ceived the sacrament of HolyOrders from the Most Rev. Dan­iel F. Feehan, second Bishop ofthe diocese. In the half centurysince that time they have servedthe Church in a multitude of

Norton; Holy Redeemer, Chat~

ham; St. Elizabeth" Edgartown;Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs; St.Joan of Are, Orleans; Holy Trin­ity, West Harwich.

Blessed Sacrament, EspiritoSanto, Our Lady of Health, HolyRosary, Immaculate Conception,St. Anthony of the Desert, St.Elizabeth, St. John the Baptist,St. Joseph, St. Patrick, St. Stan­islaus, St. William, Fall River;

Turn to Page Three

Teletype ServiceIn ..Operati~nThis Week

WASHINGTON (NC)-A so­phisticated wire transmission.service operated by the NationalCatholic (NC) News Service be­gan sending news stories in­stantaneously to The Anchor and77 other Catholic newspapersthroughout the United StatesMay 21.

The wire system began oper­ation with a special blessingfrom Pope Paul VI, the "warm­est congratulations" of PresidentNixon, and the push of a buttonby Bishop James Rausch, gen­eral secretary of the NationalConference of Catholic Bishops

Turn to Page Eight

Appeal Nears $800,000;Closes Tomorrow Noon

The 1973 Catholic CharitiesAppeal climbed to $791,882.68today with many incomplete par­ish returns and special gift do­nations still to be reported. Theofficial closing of the Appeal is12 noon tomorrow. This shouldsee mqre parishes exceedingtheir 1972 final totals. AppealHeadquarters in Fall River hasissued the final' notice. JosephH. Feitelberg of Somerset, thisyear's diocesan lay chairman,said: "All special gifts, priests'donations and parish contribu­tions must be at the office' by12 noon tomorrow to be includedin the final official 1973 tabu­lation. I urge that all retl,lrns bemade in person to insure properaccreditations. The final Appealtotal will be published in nextweek's edition of The Anchor.I hope all the parishes will be"over the top" by tomorrow."

53 have surpassed their 1972final totals in this year's Ap­peal. These parishes are mem­bers of the Honor Roll. The newmembers added to the HonorRoll are: Holy Ghost, Attleboro;St. Mary, Seekonk; St. Mary,

Page 2: 05.24.73

/

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973

ST. PATRICK CENTENARY: Mrs. Louise Bessette, cook at the' St.John's Day Nursery for the past 25 years is introduced to Bishop Croninby Msgr. John E. Boyd during the PontificalConcelebratt~d Mass cele~brating the centennial observance of the Fall River parish. Right; Jubilananprelate, ,newly ordained priest, seminarians and altar boys join in the ob-

servance. _Left to right: Jay Darcy, SMU '73 graduate entering seminary;Bruce Neylon, theology student at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore;recently ot'da ned Rev. Horace Travassos; Auxiliary Bishop James J.Gerrard; al'~ar boys Paul St. Pierre and Sean Jagmin. "

9,948.50

,6,858.00

J""""""""",,,,,,,,mllu""""""l1ll'''''UlI'.l,'I,,,i,1""""IIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIII1l'lllmll"111

~

VA 4·5000

DOLAN-SAXON

Funeral Home,123 BroadwayTAUNTON

Funeral ServiceEdward F. CarFley549 County Street

New Bedford 999.6222S~rving the area since 192.1

'~VIichael C. AustinInc.

Priest CelebratesMother's Mass

Rev. (Maj.) James F., Greene,USAF Chaplain, was the prmci­pal celebrant of a Mass of Chris­tian Burial for his mother, Mrs.Anne K. (Reardon) Greene, wid­ow of the 'late Frank B. Greene,who died in Tokyo after a briefillness. ,

, A feacher in the Newport and'Fall River Public School Sys­tems, she has accompanied herson in military tours that tookher to Missi~sippi, Montana,Greece, Washington, D. C. andJapan.

She is survived by FatherGreene, her only son, who of­fered Mass in OUr Lady ofFatima Church, Swansea,' herformer parish. Most Rev. DanielA. Cronin, STR, presided at theMass and performed the finalcommittal rites.

4,092.00\

3,729.00

7,104.00

8,907.009,884.007,190.00

13,626.903,333.101,275.002,956.00

1,499.001,499.00

12,159.25Baptist 7,589.00, 9,524.35

3,565.0017,274.00

9,765.003,966.00

FALL RIVER

St. HedwigSt. HyacinthSt. JamesSt. John theSt. JosephSt., KilianSt. LawrenceSt. MarySt. Theresa

Acushnet-St. Francis Xavier

Fairhaven-. St. Joseph

St. Mary,Sacred Hearts

Marion-St. Rita"Mattapoisett- ,

St. AnthonyNorth Dartmouth­

St. JulieSouth Dartmouth-

St. MaryWartham-St. PatrickWestport-St. George "

Taunton AreaTaunton---' : Father LeDuc

Holy Family 7,098.50Holy Rosary 2,823.00 Rev. Roger' LeDuc, assistantImmacul. Conception 5,134.50 .pastor at St. Joseph's parish,Our Lady of Lourdes 3,128.00 New Bedford, has been namedSacred Heart 7,984.85St. Anthony 6,163.92 to the executive board of MobySt. James 3.94KOO Dick Council, ~oy Scouts ofSt. Joseph ,6,756.00 America. He took office at theS't. Mary 11,438.50 council's annual meeting, heldSt. Paul 6.033.00 at Southeastern Massachusetts

Dighton-St. Peter 2,030.00 I University.North Dighton-

St. Joseph 4,745.50

North Easton-Immacul. Conception 7,485.00

Raynham-St. Ann 5,109.00,

South Easton-.-Holy Cross 4,280.00

New p'hone Numbers

679-5262679-5263679-5264

6,325.5,017,232.0GI

10,547.00'

Fatima 6,991.70'5,885.00

France' 6,113:501

Espirito Santo 3,077.00Holy Cross 1,817.001Holy Name 25,021.001Notre Dame , 7,140.001Our Lady of, the Angels

13,725.001Our Lady of Health 3,802.75Holy Rosary 4,052.001Immaculate Conception

6,154.71Sacred Heart 12,302.001St. Anne 6,351.001St. Anthony of Desert 2,825.001St. Anthony of Padual 2,799.501St. Elizabeth 1,806.001St. John the Baptist 3,365.001St. Joseph 6,533.001St. Louis 4,643.001

, SC Mathieu 2,142.501St. Michael 5,387.501St. Patrick 6,169.0lJJSS. Peter & Paul 5,666.0lJJSt. Roch 2,699.001St. Stanislaus 5,490.001St. William 5,620.0lJJSarito Cry-risto 3,771.35

Assonet-St. Bernard 2,750.001

Central Village-St. John Baptist 3,713.001

North Westport-Our Lady of Grace 5,644.0J'·

Ocean Grove-St. Michael 3,563.25,

Somerset-'-St. John of GodSt. PatrickSt. Thomas More

New Bedford ,~rea

New Bedford-'-Holy Name 9,854.35

, Assumption 2,012.1::1

Immaculate Conception7,588.00

Mt. Carmel ,21,329.86Our Lady of Fatima 4,713.pOOur Lady of Perpetual

Help 1,602.00Our Lady of Purgatory 867.00Sacred Heart 3,965.50

St. Anne 2,168.50St. Anthony of Padua 3,690.00St. Boniface 505.00St. Casimir 1,157.50St. Francis of Assisi 1,791.00

Swansea­Our Lady ofSt. DominicSt. Louis of

PARISH T01rALS

8,868.0014,660.953,533.009,226.809,407.005,447:008,273.00

3,622.5010,272.00

Attleborc» AreaATTLEBORO

Holy GhostSt. JohnSt. JosephSt. Mark, ,St. Mary (Seekonk)St. StephenSt. Theresa,

MANSFIELDSt. Mary ,10,069.50 ,

NORTH ATTLEBOROSacred Heart :'St. Mary

NORTON .St. Mary

SEEKONKMt. Carmel

Cape & Islands 'AreaBrewster-

Our Lady of the Cape 4,523.00Buzzards Bay-

St. Margaret 7,318.00Centerville-Our Lady of Victory I 8,873.95.Chatham--

Holy Redeemer &,806.50East Falmouth-

St. Anthony 3,143.00Edgartown-

St. Elizabeth ' 2,200.00Falmouth-

St. Patrick' 11,410.00Hyannis-

St. Francis Xavier 15,363.00. Nantucket-

Our Lady of the, Isle 3,416.00Oak Bluffs-

Sacred Heart 2,432.00Orleans-

St. Joan of Arc ;; 3,197.50Osterville-

\Assumption 9,178.00Pocasset-St. John ' 4,545.75Provincetown-St. Peter 2,939.00Sandwich,-

Corpus Christi 9,590.00South Yarmouth-·

St. Pius X 14;816.50Vineyard Haven-

St. Augustine 2,501.00Wellfleet-

Our Lady of Lourdes 2,716.00West Harwich-

Holy Trinity 8,318.00Woods Hole-

St. Joseph 4,010.00

Fall Rivelr AreaSt. Mary's Cathedral 12,614.00Blessed Sacrament 1,741.50

THE ANCHORSecond Class Postage Paid at Fall River.

Mass. Published every Thursday at 410HiRhland Avenue. Fall River. Mass. 02722bv the Catholic Press of the Diocose of FallRiver. Subscription price by mail, postpaidM.OO per year.

.'.......""'m...""""III''''II''''''III'''''''III''"IIII''..''''''''''"'''II'''III''''''''''..._

Church LeadersCall for ProbeOf Labor Pact

LOS ANGELES (NC)--E,ightyreligious leaders have cal1edupon Congress to investigatecharges that grape owners madepayments to the Teamsters Un~

ion as part of a conspiracy todestroy Cesar Ohavez' UnitedFarm Workers.

The statement was releasedoriginal1y in New York '~y Protes­tant clergymen meeting there,They later sought the signaturesof Catholic and Jewish ,religiousleaders to give the statementmore ecumenical impact.

The church leaders expressedtheir outrage over lahor con­tracts signed by the growers and,the Teamsters in the' Coachel1a,Calif., table-grape vineyards.

'Based on Racism'"Seasonal and migrant farm

workers organized under theleadership of Cesar Chavez, sac­rificed and'struggled non..violent­ly for five years to build the be­ginings qf their own union," thestatement said.

"Now in 1973, with one strokeof the pen, grape growers andTeamster leaders have conspiredto steal the grape contractsaway from the workers."

The statement chargc}d thatthe Teamster-grower alliance "isbased on the racism of powerfulwhite leaders who refuse to treatbrown and black workers as 'ful1human beings." .

Necrolc)gy,JUNE 4 '

Rev. Jose P. d'Amaral, 1949,, Pastor, Santo Christo, Fall River.

Rev. Louis J. Terrien, O.P.,1920, Dominican Priory, Fal1River..

JUNE 5Very Rev. Thomas J. McLean,

1954; Pastor, St. Francis Xavier,Hyannis.

Rev. Msgr. Louis Prevost, 1'970,Pastor Emeritus, St. Joseph, NewBedfqrd.

Page 3: 05.24.73

Centenary of T~unton Parish 3

7,485.007.098.506,756:00

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 24, 1973

LEADING AREAPARISHES

Attleboro AreaSt. John, Attleboro $14,660.95St. Mary, N. Attleboro 10,272.00St. Mary,. Mansfield 10,069.50Mt. Carmel, Seekonk 9,948.50St. Mary, Seekonk' 9,407.00

Cape & Islands AreaSt. Francis Xavier,

Hyannis . .15,363.00St. Pius X, S: Yarmouth 14,816.50St. Patrick, Falmouth 11,410.00Corpus Christi, Sandwich

9,590.00Assumption, Osterville 9,178.00

Fall River Area.Holy Name, Fall River 25,021.00Our Lady of the Angels

Fall River 13,725.00Cathedral 12,614.00Sacred Heart, Fall River

12,302.00St. Thomas More

Somerset 10,547.00

New Bedford AreaMt. Carmel, New Bedford

21,329.86st. Lawrence, New Bedford

17,274.00St. Joseph, Fairhaven 136'.6.90St. James, New Bedford 12,159.25St. Patrick, Wareham 9,884.00

Taunton AreaSt. Mary, Taunton 11,438.50Sacred Heart, Taunton 7,984.85Immaculate Conception

North EastonHoly Family, TauntonSt. Joseph, Taunton

Charities AppealContinued from Page One

St. John of God, St. Patrick, St.Thomas More, Somerset; St.Louis of France, Swansea.

Mt. Carmel, Our Lady of Fati­ma, St. Boniface, St. Hedwig, St.Hyacinth, St. Mary, New Bed­ford; St. Mary, Sacred Hearts,Fairhaven; St. Julie, North Dart­mouth; St. Patrick, Wareham, St.George, Westport.

Holy Rosary, Sacred Heart, St.Mary, St. Paul, Taunton; St.Joseph, North Dighton; Immac­ulate Conception, North Easton;Holy Cross, South Easton.

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Among those reasons, he said,are the high priority. the Church.must give to encouraging voca­tions to the priesthood and the"indication that the percentageof its alumni continuing in ad­vanced studies for the priesthoodis increasing."

Percentage IncreasingThe 'bishop said that "while

the -number of young men inadvanced studies for the diocesanpriesthood is much smaJler thanwe would like," 33 of the 84men from the diocese who are"now in college seminaries ortheological studies attended theseminary. This, he said, "mustbe a major consideration forkeeping St. John's open."

ProtestHeeds

SACRED HEART CHURCH - TAUNTON

Bishop Listens to' Parents; RejectsAdvice to Close Seminary

RICHMOND (NC)-Bishop JohnJ. Russell has rejected the sug­gestions of his official advisersin favor of the pleas of a laygroup and decided to keep theRichmond diocesan high schoolseminary open.

Bishop Russell said St. JohnVianney Preparatory Seminary,located near Richmond, is a"vital part of our program ofseeing that our people have suf­ficient priests to meet theirpastoral needs in the yearsahead."

Both the diocesan consultorsand the Council of Priests hadadvised the bishop' to close theseminary, with the council recom­mendating it be closed in June.

The Council of Priests' actiondrew strong protest from theseminarians' parents who heardof it in a letter from FatherThomas F. Shreve, seminaryrector, who had said it was "un­realistic to think that the bishopwill not follow this recom·mendation."

Parents held protest meetings,wrote and phoned the bishopand even sent telegrams to PopePaul VI urging that the sem­inary be kept open.

General Criticism

. Reasons given for closing theseminary included the relativelysmall number of graduates whoeventually reach the priesthoodfrom high school seminaries, themounting cost, and general criti­cism of the concept of highschool seminaries.

Bishop Russell, who foundedSt. John Vianney in 1960, ack­nowledged that when he beganconsidering the possible closingseveral weeks ago, "there seemedto be valid reasons for discon-tinuing it." I

"Then as things developed," hesaid, "it became apparent 'to methat. reasons for keeping theseminary open far outweighedthose for closing it."

Papal GiftVATICAN CITY (NC)-A pa­

pal envoying bearing a valuablepapal gift was present for theopening of a Christian museumat Esitergom, Hungary, that wasrestored to its early splendorwith funds provided by theCommunist Hungarian govern­ment, the Catholic Church inHungary and the Vatican.

pended by the Korean War.June 14, 1954: the corner stone

was laid for the parish schoolwith Fr. McKeon as the "Clerkof the Works" to insure that theparishioners would get theirmoney's worth."

June 18, 1961: first commence­ment exercises 'at Sacred HeartSchool.

Oct. 30, 1961: Fl'. McKeon be­comes a Monsignor.

Regis and TrinityWith the help of John Q. Dil­

lingham of Berkley and JosephRose together with many parish­ioners, Fr. McKeon was able tofound River Ridge Ranch on theTaunton River. and to provide aplace for recreation for parish­ioners.

The Regis and Trinity Clubswere formed under him and in1937 the "Sacred Heart Players"began ,its many successful plays.Till this day these groups haveshown their 'love for Fr.. Mc­Keon by financing and contrib­uting each' year-in his name­a scholarship to some worthystudent.·

The imported Italian marblestatue of the Sacred Heart atSomerset Ave.· and First St. waserected by ·Fr. McKeon and thepractical parking lot was laidout.

After 35 years of servke inthe parish, Msgr. McKeon retiredfrom :the active parish ministryin Sept. 1969.

Rev. William A. Galvin waspastor to 1971 and during thattime restored the interior of thechul'Ch and implemented thechanges sought by the SecondVatican Council.

On Oct. I, 1971, Rev. WalterA. Sullivan succeeded Fr. Galvinwho had retired and after a bit­ter struggle and the untiringefforts of parishioners had to seeSacred Heart School close due tolack of teachers.

Some of the priests whowere a great help to the men­tioned pastors should also benamed: Rev. Joseph Delaney(1960-1966) now the Co-Chancel­lor of the Diocese of Bronws­ville, Tex.; Rev. Brian Harring­ton (1966-1970); Rev. FrancisConnors (1959-1970); Rev. PaulF. McCarrick (1971-1972).

One layman has won the spe-- cial respect of parishioners over

the past 45 years: John Nichols.His physical care of the parishbrought him the Marian Medal.

On call 24 hours a day for thechurch, school, convent and rec­tory, he has also been the god­father for many baptisms, bestman for weddings and an activemember of the St. Vincent dePaul Society.

Observance of the centennialwill 'begin with the 4 o'clockMass Sunday afternoon, concel­ebrated with Bishop Cronin. Abanquet and ball are slated forFriday, June 8, at Venus di Mill)Restaurant in Swansea, and aFamily Day and Picnic will beheld on Sunday, June 24, at OutLady of the Lake Camp in Free­town.

Continued from Page OneUntil Nov. 1874, the parish

church was in "Staple's Block"at the Weir, corner of WestWater St. and Staples Ave. Thefirst church, formerly the "dis­trict school" was used until 1903.

Fr. Hugh J. SmithA new church was built under

the direction of Rev. Hugh J.Smith and was dedicated inMal'Ch 1912. It was a splendidRomanesque building decoratedby Ramblusch & McBride of NewYork. ,

It was' left to Rev. JamesBeaven; the second pastor, to'build the rectory in 1884.

Rev. Joseph McDonough be­came pastor in 1886 and boughta little school house in Dightonwhich became a mission ofSacred Heart together with HolyFamily Mission in East Taunton.He was succeeded by Rev. JamesL. Smith in 1892.

Through Fr. Smith's effortsthe parishes of South Dightonand Seekonk came into being,the latter still displays thestained glass windows that hadbeen a part of the first SacredHeart Church.

Though he was pastor for 18years, ,he did not live to see hisproject ofa new church com­pleted although 'the basementwas used in 1904.

It was Rev. Thomas Magee,D.D., a brilliant scholar and au­thority in Canon Law, who c0l1'!­pleted the church. Only twoyears later, however, he died onSept. 3, 1912.

Rev. James H. Looby fromEaston became the new pastor in1912 and he quickly became aleading figure in the district.Sacred Heart prided itself inhaving the only sanctuary boys'choir in the city-40 boys up tothe age of 18.

The debt was cleared underFr. Looby and the interior of thechurch was embellished. A par­ish honor roll was erected duringWorld War I cont,aining 131names, 12 of whom gave theirlives.

In 1924, it was Rev. Edward J.Moriarty who succeeded the uni­versally mourned pastor. He pur­chased the Briggs and Staplesproperties and began ser,iousplans for a school. However, histransfer to St. Patrick Parish inF'all River and the depression to­gether with World War II halteda'll plans.

Holy HourRev. Francis McKeon came to

Sa,cred Heart Parish in 1934 andsaw 245 parishioners leave forthe war with ten of them to bekilled in the fighting.

On New Year's Eve, 1942, aHoly Hour was held from 9 to10 o'clock to pl'ay for the safereturn of everyone in the war.The holy hour was held nightlyin the church uninterruptedlyuntil Sept. 2, 1945.

No lights were a'llowed be­cause of black-out regulationsfor everyone feared an air raidon the East Coast.

Some important dates ,in Fr.McKeon's iong pastorate were:

Sept. 4, 1938: lightning struckthe church during Sunday Massand demolished a four foot crossatop the church without injuryto anyone.

June 1944: gigantic clothingdrive for "Clothes for Italy"brought 7,702 pounds of cloth­ing.

1950: Plans for the new schoolwere formulated but quickly sus-

Page 4: 05.24.73

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His Buddy"I'm the buddy of Christ," pro­

claimed a Somerset first commu­nicant after Mass on the greatday. "So are you, Mom." ,

"Well, I guess so," said Mom."But where did you get thatidea?"

"That's what the priest toldeverybody this morning," re-'sponded the lad. "When he -gaveus Communion, that's what hesaid-'Buddy of Christ.'"

Prime MinisterVisits Pope Paul

VABCAN CI1Y (NC) - Lessthan a monihafter Australia andthe Vatican agreed to establishfull diplomatic relations, Austra­lian Prime Minister Gough Whit­lam paid a courtesy call on PopePaul VI.

The premier, accompanied byhis wife, visited the Vatican andmet privately with the Pope formore than 30 minutes. Becausethe vi<;it was private, there wasno official ceremony of state.However, he was greeted withred-carpet treatment once insideVatican City and Pope Paul alsoreceived Mrs. Whitlam andothers accompanying the primeminister after ,the private meet­ing.

No details of the conversationbetween the prime minister andthe Pope were disclosed. How­ever, it was considered certainthat the unsettled conflict inSoutheast Asia was 'among thetopics discussed.

The opening of full diplomaticrelations between Australia andthe Vatican was announcedMarch 27 as a means' of "pro­'moting mutual frie'ndly rel'a­tions." The agreement providesthat AustraHa will name an am­bassador to represent it at theVatican, and the Vatican will berepresented by a pronuncio inAustralia. To date neither sidehas nominated candidates forthe new posts. '

Whitlam flew into Rome after-a week's visit in London. Just be­fore leaving London, the Austra­lian prime minister told news­men that his country and New,Zealand planned to appeal to theInternational Court, of Justice ifFrance contfilUes to" carry outplans for new nuclear tests inthe Pacific.

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Says Biblical LawsDifficult to Apply

ATLANTA (NC) -'EvangelistBilly Graham said he is studyinghow ~ar a m'inister can, go inapplying old biblical laws thatare no longer compatible in mod­ern secular society.

"In the Bible, people 'werestoned to death for kidnapping,murder, fornication, adultery anda number of other crimes. I amsure no person today would saythis is what we ought to do,"Graham told a news' conference.

It would be easy to apply bib­lical teachings in the governing::If a Christian society, Grahamsaid, then added that he knew'of no town in America where themajority' -of people were "real,believing ChrIstians."

"And I make a distinction be:tween believing Christians and:::hurchgoers who go to churchfor social, business or familytradition reasons."

summers he was acting chairmanof the department of theologyat the Boston College summersession, and he also taughtAmerican Studies and theologyat the College of St. Augustine,San Juan, Puerto RIco, in thesummer of 1968. He completedstudies for the priesthood atWeston College School of Theol­ogy, Cambridge, Mass., and Bos­ton College, earning a degrez ofMaster of Religious Education.

After ordination, Father Mc­Manus,will return to Bishop Con­nolly High School as Director ofReligious Studies and Education.He will 'also continue as Secre­tary of the New England liturgi­cal Committee and member ofthe National Liturgical Confer-ence. '

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in the maritime industry has longsince been replaced with thehiring hall, and they wouidn'teven dream of trying to undercutthe maritime unions on this issuefor fear of being clobbered in theprocess. The fact that they areso recklessly determined to dou­blecross the Farm Workers Un­ion on the same issue marksthem down in my book as abunch of bully boys and, .worsethan that, a bunch of finks.

Archbishop CarrollGets Stout Award

MIAMI (NC) - ArehbishopColeman Ca.,rroH of M:iami re­ceived the St. George' Emblem,highest honor in Catholic Scout­ing,' during ceremonies in theCathedrall of St. Mary.

Archbishop Carroll, a BoyScout during his youth, becameinvolved in scouting at almostevery level and after ordinationto the priesthood served as aScout chaplain in his nativePittsbul1gh..He is a past episco­pal moderator of the NationalCYO federation.

Former Connolly HighPlan First Masses in

Rev. Raymond R. 'lagesse, ofthe Society of Jesus, son of Mr.and Mrs. Ernest R. Lagesse, 51,Berkley St., North Dartmouth,will be ordained to the priest­hood at 11 AM. Saturday, in thechapel of the College of the HolyCross, Worcester, Mass. The or­daining bishop will be Most Rev.John J. McEleney, S.J., retiredArchbishop of Kingston, Jamaica,W. I. Father Lagesse will cel­ebrate a Mass of Thanksgivingat 3 P.M. Sunday in the ,Churchof St. Julie Billart, North Dart­mouth.

After graduating ffOim HolyFamily High School, New Bed­ford, and studying two years atHoly Cross College, Worcester,Father Lagesse entered Shadow­brook, the Jesuit Novitiate illLenox, Mass., in August of 1962.He earn'ed a B.A in Philosophy REV. RAYMOND R. LAGESSEfrom Boston College in 1967 andan M.A in French from FordhamUniversity in 1968.

Father Lagesse then taugh~

for two years at Bisho.p ConnollyHigh School, Fall River. Afterordination, he .will join the fac·ulty of Boston College HighSchool, teaching French and The­ology arid working in an adulteducation, program.

At Connolly HighAlso a member of the Bishop

Connolly High School facultywas Rev. Francis J, McManus,S.J., to be -ordained at 2 P.M.Saturday, June 9 in St. Joseph'sChurch, ProviOence, by MostRev. Louis E. Gelineau, D.D.,Bishop of Providence. The sOl:of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Mc­Manus of Cranston, 'R. I., wiI:7elebrate a Mass of Thanksgiv­mg at 11:30 AM. Sunday, June10 at Connolly High Scbool.

,Father McManus was grad­uated from LaSalle Acadesmy iI:Providence in 1959 and that sum­mer entered the Jesuit novitiate,Shadowbrook, in Lenox, Mass.He received bachelor's degrees iJ:philosophy and history fromWeston College School of Phil­osophy, Weston, Mass., and Bos­ton College, Chestnut Hill, Mass.,in 1966.

From 1966 to 1969 he was amember of the founding commu­n!ty of Connolly High, teachinghistory and theology. During hiS

THE ANCHOR-I)iocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973

By

GEORGE G.

4

Farm WOfrkers Union HatesLabor Contracting Set-up

The two questions I h~ve been asked mo'st frequentlyabout the current fann labor crisis in the Coachella Valleyin California are these: Why did all but two of the grow­ers in the Valley. sign with the Teamsters despite the factthat they had been under .contract with the Farm contractors, after aU;- were aWorkers Union since 1970? known quantity, and not likelyAnd what are the Teamsters to rock the boat. But a contrac"

tot: is an employer, and underdoing in the Coachella Valley in California law, any associationthe first place? - financed or directed even in

The second of these questions part by an employer cannot bewill be taken up in the next re- Construed as a labor organiza­

tion. Thus the Kern-Tulare Inde­pendent Farm ,Workers came toan early end."

CoUrting Trouble

W:hen the growers, who hadbeen hurt badly hy the grapeboycott, decided in 1970 to set­tle with Chavez' union, they heldout against the hiring hall sys­tem until the bitter end, but fi­nally had to agree to it as the

lease of this column. With regard price of getting a settlement.to the first question, I am satis- Their indecent haste in ditch­fied,in my own mind that the ing the Farm Workers Union se­growers' opposition to the hiring eral weeks ag!> in the Coachella

. hall was the determip.ing factor VaHey and secretly settling within their decision to break away the Teamsters would"\eem to in­from the UFWU and'settle with dicatethat when they eventuallythe Teamsters. Time magazine agreed to the hiring hall in 1970,has reported (May 7, 1973) that they did so with their fingers"most growers are eager to get crossed and with the forlornrid of the UFW at nea"ly any . hope of getting out from under itprice." Why? Why did the grow-. as soon as possible. They areers doublecross the Farm Work- currently trying to do just that,ers Union and hastily sign con- but I think they are wastingtracts with the Teamsters ~'a.fter their time, and are court'ingonly a single day of formal bar- nothing but trouble.gaining" during which, Chavez Chavez, for his part, is stillcharges, no genuine farm work- fiercely committed to doingers sat at the negotiating tableT' away with the labor contracting

The answer is obvious: Not set-up and replacing it with theonly because the supposedly aU- hiring hall. He considers this apowerful Teamsters were willing non-negotiable issue. I complete­to settle for a smaller economic ly agree with him in this regard.package. But because the Team- To be sure, the present UFWUsters as T'ime has put it, ':also . hiring hall system has someallowed growers to bring b,ack kinks in it as undoubtedly canthe labor contractors who hhd- be-and, in fairness to the grow­pick groups of workers for a ers, should be-made to operateday's labor," whereas Chavez' more ~ficiently. ,It's one :thing,collective bargaining contracts ,however, to improve the oper­had banned the contractors and ation of the hiring hall system,set up union hiring halls to sup- but something else again to abol­ply field workers to the growers ish the system at this late datein an orderly way and on the and return to the labor-contract-basis of seniority. ' ing set-up.

Phony Organization Teamsters Deal DisgracefulChavez wili never agree to go

The labor contractors (with the latter route. He and hiswhom the Teamsters, to their members know frpm bitter expe­shame, have recently signed a rience that the labor contractingmaster agreement) and with few system has always operated atexceptions, the growers as- well, the expense of the workers. Theyhave bitterly opposed the hiring hate the system with a passionhall system as a matter of prin- borne of personal suffering andciple. 'That's putting 'it very are determined 'to do away withmildly. John Gregory Dunne, au- it once and for all and replace itthor of one of the better books with a hiring hall system-evenon the history of Chavez' union if it takes them forever to do so.reported in ,1967, at the height of I am disappointed, but not toothe so-called Delano table grape surprised, that some of thedispute, that "throughout the(S.an 'Joaquin) Valley, contrac- growers are still opposing the

Farm Workers Union on thistors regarded Chavez as the anti- -issue.: On the other hand, I amchrist, because one of his stated more than surprised that theaims was to do away with the T,eamsters 'are opposing thewhole labor contracting setup." hiring hall. I think it is abso-

He also reports that the grow- lutely disgraceful that they haveers made an abortive effort to made what can only be describedbypass Chavez by negotiating as an unscrupulous deal with thewith a phony labor organization growers on this crucial issue. '(the Kern-Tulare Farm Workers) The Teamsters know as wellmade upexc1usivsly of labor as Chavez does that the laborcontractors. "Hoping to, eapital- contracting system, with all itsize on ... 'anti-Chaviz sentiment," injustices, simply cannot be rec­Dunne points out "the growers ondled with the basic principlesbestowed their blessing on the of sound trade unionism. TheyKern-Tulare Farm Workers; the, also know that a similar System

Page 5: 05.24.73

'VERITAS AWARD DINNER': Providence College Alumni of the Diocese of FallRiver honored Bishop Cronin with the 'Veritas Award' and presented a PC Scholarship'to a Durfee High senior. Left: Tom Gastall, first scholarship recipient; William F. Kaylorof Fall River, who presented the 'Veritas Award' to the Bishop; Very Rev. James M.Murphy, a.p., prior at the Dominican Community at P.C.; Bishop Cronin, guest speaker;Francis J. Devine of Fall River, who presented the scholarship award.

co .

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Hendrick's Pools, SeekonkSeekonk Oil CompanyRead's Dairy, Inc., SeekonkFrancis Farm, Inc., RehobothAttleboro & Plainville Coal CoA. H. Barrowman, Inc.

BPOE Attleboro Lodge No. 1014Donald T. & Robert C. BlissHolmes Restaurant ServiceCharles R. MasonRed Rock Hill Motor CourtTaylor Sheet Metal Co.

SURPRISINGLYGODNEEDSYOU

NEAR EASTMISSIONSTERENCE CARDINAL COOKE, PresidentMSGR. JOHN G: NOLAN, National SecretaryWrite: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc.330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017Telephone: 212/986-5840

o Only $8.50 gives our priests and Sisters inShertallay, south India, enough Dapsone 'mir.acle' tablets for 43 lepers for a yeijr!

o For only $3.50 a week ($14 a month, $168 ayear) you can make sure that an abandonedbaby has food, clothing, a blank'et and love.We'll send you a photo of the baby you .'adopt',tell you something about him (or her), and askthe Sister-in-charge to keep you informed.

D your stringless gifts in any amount ($5,000,$1,000, $500, $100, $50, $25, $10, $5, $2)will help the neediest wherever they. are - inIndia and the Holy Land, for instance•.

D Only you can make your will~and do it ,thisweek to be sure the poor will have ~our helpeven after you're gone: Our legal title: CATHOLICNEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. Also, our priestswill offer promptly the Masses you provide for.

This column's happiest readers are the men,women and children who know they're needed.The days we're busiest helping others are thehappiest days of our lives•••• Who needs youmost? Surprisingly, God needs you - for in·stance, to help an aoandoned orphan becomea God-loving, responsible adult•. Lepers needyou (there are still 15-million lepers in theworld), blind children need you, and so do we.••• Here in New'York we are your agents, tellingyou where the Holy Father says your help isneeded, and channeling your help promptly andsafely to the people in need•••• Want to feelgood right now? Do without something you wimtbut do not need, -and send the money insteadfor one of the needs below. You'll feel good,especially if your gift is big enough to meana sacrifice to you. This is your chance to dosomething meaningful for the world-it's God'sworld-while you're still alive.

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CITy STATE'__ZIP CODE'_

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973 5

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Page 6: 05.24.73

I

until December, 1924, when hewas transferred to St. Louisparish, Fall River. In 1930 he wasappointed as director of St. Vin­cent's Home, Fall River. In 1930he was appointed supervisor ofdiocesan charities, and in 1932director of St. Patrick's Cemetery ,in Fall River, a position he stillholds.

In 1949 he became the firstresident pastor ot' St. ThomasMore parish, Somerset, and wasinstrumental in developing theplant which now serves one ofthe fastest growing communitiesin Southeastern Massachusetts.In 1955 he was named pastor ofHoly Name parish, Fall River,and in 1961 was raised to therank of Domestic Prelate. AtHoly Name the prelate foundedthe parochial 'school and super­vised its building. The modernfacility opened in 1960.

Msgr. Harrington retired fromhis pastorate in 1967, 'but is stillactive daily in the administrationof St. Patrick's cemetery.

,Pope AppealsF'or Vocations

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopePaul VI has called on "the youngilind the not-so-young" to answerGod's invitation to accept reli­gious vocations.

In a message published in con­nection with the 10th World Dayof Vocations May 13, the Popestressed that Catholics are freeto choose a Religious life or toreject his call because God re­spects "tft1e freedom of his sons,whom he has created as free per-sons." ,

Pope Paul, said God's call toChristians to accept a Religiousvocation "has the force andsweetness of an invitation whichloses none of its divine powernor taIres anything away fromyour freedom." The Pope added:"You are free: therefore, decide.As Christ did." .

The Pope said:"We say to all of you, most

beloved sons, bot!h young andnot-so-young, you must not letpersons, ideas or events blockyour choices and your decisions.Why do you hesitate and wait?The image of this world mean­while is changing repidly. Othergroups of men are arriving onthis earth.

"The Gospel must be an­nounced to all. To the ranks ofthe poor of yesterday are beingadded those of, tomorrow. Thereare and there will 'be the hungry,,thtose who thirst; the imprisonedand those who are sick in bodyor spirit. These await you. InThem, Christ awaits you. Thereis work for all. There is a place,for you as well."

Indiscretion, .. Questions are never Indiscreet,

answers' sometimes are.-W'ilde

Heads ResearchBOGOTA (NC)-A Colombian

priest-scientist is co-directing alarge research project on earth­quakes in the Andean territory.Father Jesus Emilio Ramirez ofthe Colombian Geophysical Insti­tute and Thomas L. Aldrich of

• the Carnegie Institution in Wash­ington are heading the project-an ambitious operation by 100scientists, 70 seismological sta­tions and three oceanographicvessels--to investigate tremorsin the Andes and their "refrac­tion ,in the bordering submarineshelf.

(1,-""­, .. ,"-

ber by Bishop Cronin, who saidat that time, "No one in thisdiocese has done more for theclergy of the diocese, for thewelfare of the diocese, than theBishop ... who deserves a tre­mendous vote of thanks."

Msgr. ChippendaleMsgr. Chippendale is, a Fall

River n.ative, born July 16, 1895.He attended St: Joseph's paro­chial school in the see city, thenHoly Family High School, NewBedford. His seminary studieswere undertaken at St. CharlesCollege, Catonsville, Md. and St.Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. Heserved at Our Lady of the Isleparish, Nantucket, the summerfollowing 'his ordination, then inthe Fall of 1923 was transferredto St. Mary's Church, Mansfield.

At 5t. Mary's for 14 years,Father Chippendale was thennamed administrator of HolyRosary parish in Fall River, aposition he held from 1937 to1948, when he became pastor of'St. Patrick's Church, Wareham,where he served until his retire­ment in 1971, being named aDom'estic Prelate in 1967.

Msgr. Chippendale also served1S a pro-synodal judge on thejiocesan tribunal' and during hisyears in Wareham was a trustee)f Tobey Hospital. He is a mem­Jer of the 'board of Diocesan::::onsultors. He is warmly re­nembeied in Wareham and in:Ioly Rosary parish,' Fall River,'or the efforts he made in learn­ng Italian so as to better serveJarishioners of that nationality.

Msgr. HarringtonMsgr. Harrington was born in

!Fall River Jan. 21, 1889, son of;he late John and the late 'Brid­~et (Sullivan) Harrington. He~raduated from Boston Collegemd St. Bernard's Seminary,~ochester, N.Y.

With young Father Gerrard, he'Nas assigned to Sacred Heart)arish, Oak Bluffs immediately

:'ollowing his ordination. He reo:nained on Martha's Vineyard

. .' "

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SPRI1V(; SERMON

Three (;olde~] Jubilarians

«The ea roth

declares Godshandiwo,.~~,

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., .May 24, 1973

®rbeANCHOR

Communications

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FA.LL RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

41 CD Highland AvenueFall River, Mass. 02722 '675-7151

PUBLISHERMost Rev. _Daniel A. Cronin, D.O., S.T.D.

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGERRev. -Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Qev. John P. Driscoll~ Leary Press-Fall River

Continued from Page OneCollege, 'Montreal and at St.Bernard's; Seminary, Rochester.

The first assignment for youngFather Gerrard was to SacredHeart parish, Oak Bluffs, where'he served, the summer followinghis ordina~.}on. In October, 192(lhe went to St. Patrick's parish,Fall River, remaining there until

The campus scene is a difficult one these days. Just a June, 1932, when he becamefew years ago student rebels were protesting the 'appear- chancellor l and se:retary to Bish­ance on campus of representatives from large corporations. , op James ~..Cassldy, then Ap~s-

- . . tolic AdrrilOlstrator of the dlO-Now not only are the corporatiOn. represent~t1Ves a~s~nt .cese. When Bishop Cassidy be-from campuses and <:ompletely umnterested m recrUitmg came Ordinary, Father Gerrardbut the corporations themselves are turning around and remained in the diocesan ,posi­firing the fathers of the students, letting people go, cutting tions, als~ serving a~ a .memberout and cutting back on positions. of the DlQcesan Tnbunal from, 1930 tQ 1941.

Yes, there has been quite a change in a few years. . From 1939 to 1956, FatherStudents now graduate and actively seek places in Gerrard was rector of St:. Mary's

these corporations with the hope that they can influence' Cathedral, continuing to hoI{for the good from within. A college degree no longer. be- various diocesan offices. In 1951

h k h 'II . .. 'b h he was named Vkar General bycomes t e ey to t e we paYIng pOSItIon ut t ere must B' h Con'. II d' 1952 ". . h' - , is op no y an 10 wa"be Job-huntmg, t e selhng of oneself and one s talents, raised to the status of Domesticthe willingness to tal{e not quite the position desired in Prelate.order to get employment. In 1956 Msgr. Gerrard became

The h llenge of' college has' t ed into the chal- pastor of St. Lawr.ence parish,C a u~ New Bedford, and 10 1959 was

leDge of employment. . named auxiJ,iary ,to Bishop Con." And this is not all bad. Now graduates will go after nolly and Titular Bishop of For·

jobs instead of settling for jobs. Now they must translate rna. He was the first, n~tive of 'the vast store of information they have into the wisdom New Bedfo.rd to .be a Bishop of

. . the Fall River diocese and alsothat IS bemg sought. Now they must struggle to take a the first New England bishopplace in the world, not merely drift into a spot. named hy Pope John XXIII. HE)

was consecrated March 19, 1959iby Bishop Connolly. RichardCardinal Cushing was homilistfor the occasion and HumbertoCardinal Medeiros, then chancel­lor of the Fall River diocese, waSmaster of ceremonies.

In 1970, when Bishop Croninassumed leadership of the FallRiver diocese, he continuedBishop Gerrard as ,vicar Gen­eral. In retirement, the prelatecontinues in this capacity andremains active as auxiliary toBishop Cronin,' although he re­signed his pastorate of St. Law.rence parish last June when hereached th~ a'ge of 75. The resig.nation was accepted last Septem-

6

June 3 has been designated as World CommunicationsDay. The question asked is-What is the message of the'media? '

All must recognize that the media cannot survive eco­nomically unless they satisfy their audience.' And everyviewet is the audience. The one who reads, who listens,who sees-this is the audience who has, therefore, a re-

- sponsibility for what is produced.Vatican Council II has said: "All who of their own

free choice make use of these media of communications asr~aders, viewers or listeners, have special obligations. Fora proper choice demands that they fully favor those presen~

tations that are outstanding for their" moral goodness, theirknowledge and their artistic or technical merit. They ought,however, to avoid those that may be a cause ot occasionof spiritual harm to themselves, or that can lead others todangers through base example, or that hinder desirablepresentations and promote those that are evil. To patronizesuch presentations, in most instances, would merely rewardthose who use the media only for profit."

The obligation is on every person, then, to promoteand approve ~hat is a positive value in the media and toprotest and let one's voice be heard at what tears downvalues of decency and brotherhood and honor.

People must be critical in the right sense - askingwhat is positive and what negative, what promotes spir­itual values and what ridicules them, what is fact andwhat is opinion, what is truth and what is prejudice.People must discern what uplifts and what, brutalizes,what encourages and what degrades, what gives wisdomand what panders to unwholesomeness.

It would be wise for people to look around theirhomes, ask themselves aboiIt the reading material inhomes, the records being played, the television progra~ms

being watched, the topics being talked about at table,the movies older and younger members of families aregoing to see.

And then there might be some better idea of what massmedia - communications - are doing in and with and tothe family. '

Graduates

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-Randall

Strong ReligiousPress Is Vital

MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A strongreligous 'press is a vital, impor­tant part of the Amenican freepress, a former presidential sec­retary said.

In an interview, George Reedycalled strongly for efforts tomaintain and increase the diver­sity of newspapers in America~a theme he was to stress inhis talk to the joint conventionof the Catholic Press Associationand Associated Church Presshere.

Cont'l'ary to popular claims,the number of papers in Americahas not declined, although com­petition between papers in majormarkets has fallen dramatically,he sa/id.

This in turn requires the riseof a strong community press totake up the slack, according toReedy, former press secreta,ry tothe Ia1te President Lyndon B.Johnson and current dean ofMarquette University's School ofJournalism in Milwaukee.

Such community pa;1ers wouldinclude the religious pre3s, thelabor 'Press and other special in­terest publications, which givemany different views of crucialpublic problems, he sa·id.

Reedy said in some respectshe favors the return of "the par­tisan press" to re:>lace much ofthe blandness he now finds.

He sharply crH.icized the trendtoward "watered down" ej'itorialpages that tend to balance everysta/tement of opinion againstevery other one.

THE ANCHOR- 7Thurs., May 24, 1973

~.~--­Sentry -- Timer

Ham H. Harrington became thethird pastor of Holy NameChurch and soon began focus­sing his attention on anothercommunity need - a parishschool.

A successful parish drive washeld, imd September of 1959 sawground broken for the construc­tion of aT! eight-classroom school .with an auditorium and' kitchen-facilities. The, first students ofHoly Name School were accept­ed the following year with Sis­ters of the Holy Union of theSacred Hearts making up thefaculty.

The Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shal­100 was named pastor of HolyName Church in 1967 by theMost Rev. James L. Connolly up­on the retirement of Msgr. Har­rington.

Msgr. Shalloo, in the traditionof Holy Name pastors of ac­commodating the needs of theparishioners, supervised the in­terior renovations o~ the beauti­ful church that placed particularemphasis on simplicity.

The Parish also has developedinto one of the more active inthe Diocese with a range ofspiritual and social functions andendeavors that focus on servingparishioners of all ages.

Protect your home while away !

• Turns lights on and off automatically

• Discourages burglary and vandalism'

of Fall River OpensYear Next Week

shortly before the pastor's death,a large residence and propertyat the corner of Hanover Streetand President Avenue, two blockswest of the original church prop­erty, was purchased.

Fr. CoyleThe Rev. James A Coyle suc­

ceeded Father McNamee as pas­tor and in 1941 completed con­struction of, a white, woodenColonial edifice that was des­cribed by the famous Boston ar­chitectural firm of Maginnis andWalsh as one of the most beau­tiful ever designed. The sameaccolades are afforded to thisday.

The development of the HolyName Parish continued. In 1946,the Most Rev. Bishop James E.Cassidy blessed and dedicatedthe Holy Name Playground thatwas built by'the Holy Name So­ciety of the Parish. The Play­ground, called by Bishop Cassidy"a monument to the love andloyalty of the men of the Par­ish," was opened adjacent to theParish Hall, the original churchbuilding.

The Parish Hall in Septemberof 1952 opened its doors as akindergarten and pre-primaryschool staffed by the MissionarySisters of the Blessed' Trinity.

Msgr. HarringtonIn 1955, the Rev. Msgr. WiI-

HOLY NAME CHURCH, FALL RIVER

From a modest beginning in1923 when 400 members wor­shipp.ed in a tent, Holy NameParish in Fall River has growninto a proud and active com­munity of 1120 families.

The Golden Jubilee Celebra­tion of the Parish begins June 3with an 11:15 AM. AnniversaryMass with present and formerpriests of the parish and nativesons who have entered the priest­hood joining with the Most Rev.Daniel A Cronin, S.T.D., as prin­cipal celebrant and homilist.Bishop Cronin wilt meet withparishioners and offer his con­gratulations following the Massof Celebration. .

Following the Mass, refresh­ments will-be served in theschool auditorium.

On Memorial Day, Monday, at10 AM., a Memorial Mass willbe celebrated for departed ml;lm­bers of the Parish and the Clergyand Religious that served them.

The celebration continues onSunday, June 24, with a FamilyPicnic at St. Vincent De PaulCamp in Adamsville, and onSept. 30 a Golden Jubilee Ban­quet and Dance will be held atthe Venus De Milo Restaurantin Swansea.

Fr. McNameeWith a steady growth in the

number of Catholic families tak­ing up residence in the NorthEnd of Fall River, the Most Rev.Bishop Daniel F. Feehan estab­lished Holy Name Parish withthe Rev. George B. McNameeas the first pastor in June of1923.

Services originally were con­ducted in a tent erected on prop­erty acquired on Read Street. Fa­ther McNamee and the original400 who previously had attend­ed St. Joseph and Sacred HeartChurches immediately undertookplanning for the construction ofa permanent church.

Their endeavors reached fru­ition in 1925 when Bishop Fee­han presided at dedication cere­monies of the church and rectoryat Read Street and PresidentAvenue.

The new parish continued togrow under the guiding hand ofFather McNamee, and, in 1938,

Holy Name' Parish-Golden Jubilee

Gives $2 MillionTo Marquette

MILWAUKEE (NC)-A retiredMilwaukee industriadist has givenMarquette University $2 millionto build and equip a' gynasiumfor students at the Jesuit schoolhere.

T/he gift of Evan P. Helfaer, 74,former head of a drug firm here,means that Helfaer has donateda totall of $4 mill'ion to Mar-.quette, including $1.6 millionfor a theater.

The new gymnasium will beused largely for physical educa­tion and intramura'l programs,rather than intercollegia'te events,and it will include a swimmingpool, basketball, tennis, hand­ba11 courts and track facilities.

Oregon's DeathWith Dignity BinDies Quietly

SALEM (NC)-A "death withdignity" bill died quietly h~rewhen a legislative committee in­terrupted testimony and votedwithout dissent to table the mea­sure.

The action was almost anti-. climactic with opponents of theb'ill outnumbering supportingwitnesses by nearly 8 to 1. TheHouse legislative committeeheard a former Congressman,doctors, a registered nurse, alegislator and others characterizethe bill as unnecessary, impre­cisely drafted, pagan and poten­tial1y dangerous.

Dr. Rober Goldman, a Porto'land physician who specializesin the treatment of cancer pa­tients, told the committee thatno legislation is needed to in­duce terminally ill patients todiscuss with their 'doctor their'treatment at "the' end of, theline."

One of the first things his pa­tients do after learning theirillness is terminal is to requesthim not to extend their life atthe end, Goldman ·testified. Butas death approaches, "life be­comes more precious even undervery difficult circumstances,"and the pati(mt almost invariablyclings to life for every possibleminut,e, he said.

At this point, Goldman noted,the wishes of the patient maybe at odds with the wishes of hisfamily or others who-under theproposed law-would be legallyempowered to request that hisdeath be hastened. In this way,he said, the bill, if enacted, couldlead to the deprivation of thepatient's rights.

'We Never Know'Dr. Russ.ell Sacco, a Portland

physician, testified that doctorsroutinely diseontinL!e medicalprocedures as patients approachdeath. But this is done selective­ly and as is medically indicated,when the procedures are nolonger effective or when the pa­tient is no 'longer able to toler­ate them. It is not done to hastendeath.

Whether at any time a patienthas. a chance for recovery, hesaid,' "we never know."

Robert Oliver, appearing forGov. Tom McCall, said provi­sions of the bill concurred withthe governor's beliefs on deathwith dignity.

The bill would have author­ized individuals to execute adocument "directing that nomaintenance medical treatmentbe utilized for the prolongationof 'life at such time as he suffersa terminal· illness."

Page 8: 05.24.73

BALLROOM DANCING

Sat.-May 26, The Big Soundof Roland Marcotte & His

OrchestraYour Host-AI Tremblay

LINCOLN PARKRte. 6, No. Dartmouth

A.E.P. WaH, director andeditor-in-chief of NC News Ser­vice described the wire serviceas.a "signifkant new beginning"of "a renewal within Catholicjournalism that relates to the re­newal within the Church."

The eighth grade confirmationclass of St. Thomas More Parishat Hauppauge, Long Island col­lected some $1;000 from indi­viduals and businesses whichhad pledged to finance each milethe children walked.

'The proceeds were sent toCatholic Relief Services' projectsOperation Milkshake for morethan 50,000 V~etnamese children,and Operation Raise the Rooffor victims of the pre-Christmasearthquake in Managua, Nica­ragua.

Children's Walk-a-thonAids Hu-ng~y, Homeless

HAUPPAUGE (NC)-More than.300 eighth-graders marked Lentby staging a four-mile "walk-a­thon" for the hungry in Vietnamand the homeless in Nicaragua.

Attention School GroupsPLAN YOUR PICNIC, OUTING NOWSpeCial Arrangements for School Groups

FOR DETAILS, CAL~·,MANAGER-636.2744 or 999-6984

cedures, :but when stories haveteen fully edited, they are sentt:> a teletype room rather thana mimeograph room. Here tele­type operators transform thet Ylped stories to teletype tapest sing ·an electronic puncher.. Thetlpes are then fed into a tapet ~ansmitter imd transmitted viaa telephone line to the DowJones Co. office in New York.The NC transmissions wiH then'J::e combined with 17 other sig­r.als on a Dow Jones wire cap­able of transmitting 18 separatesignals simultaneously. The sig­nal will then be carried to DowJ :>nes offices in cities across thec:>untry.

Local telephone lines carry thesgnal to the office of the news­paper subscriber, where 'a devicellnown as a demolulator sep­arates the NC signal from theother 17 and sertds the signal toa nearby teletype printer. Thes~ory, transmitted in Washingtononly a fraction of a second be­fl Ire, is printed on the teletypemachine. It can then he ·editedby the local paper and immedi­a~ely pla~ed in the local paper.

Like It IsYou can't beat children for

tdling it 'like it ,is. Like a FallRiver' six year old asked,"What's abortion?" Her eighthg'ade sister replied, "It's whena lady's !pregnant and she getst1:e bahy taken out of her andk Hed."

"'¥tuck," was the tot's response.Yuck, indeed.

Teletype Serv oe In OperaNon. This Week

HONOR PILGRIM VIRGIN: Visitors to St. Anne's Shrine, Fall River, honor PilgrimVirgin, in. church for one-week stay. Statue travels' to homes and churches throughoutdiocese to promote devotion to Our .Lady of Fatima.

Continued from Page One(NCCB) and the United StatesCatholic Conference (USeC).

The new: system, whieh usessome of thk most advan<:ed ele­ments of electronics communi­cations equipment, r.eplaces· amail service which suppliednews to Catholic papers fo(morethan 50 years. While the mailservice took as long as two orthree days to get stories to somenewspape'rs; the wire service willsend stories instantaneously tonewspapersi as widely separatedas the Catholic Northwest Prog­~ess in Seattle Wash., and TheVoice in Miami, Fla.

A message from Pope Paul VImarking the beginning of thewire service' said it offered "anew opportunity for the intelli­gent dissemination of needed in­formation,for sharing thoughtsand rea,ctions, giving mutual sup­port and building up a spirit ofunity and charity in the Chris-tian community." .

Timely InstrumentCardinal John Krol of Phila­

delphia, president of the NCCBand 'usec, called the wire sys­tem "a timely instrument forcommunicating timeless truth,"and Bishop Rausch said it i~ anespecially dramatic symbol ofthe Chureh's growing commit­ment to use, the most up Ito datemedia of I communication fortransmitting the Good N,ews ofJesus Christ."

The National Catholic NewsService,'a division of the USCCwhich operates with editorial in­dependence,; has been supplyingnews to Catholic newspapers 'both in the United States and 1r·""~""'rT'~T"i''''~~~'''''T''i'_''''~~'''''~''''''''~'''''i'T';;:=;:9abroad since it was formed asthe National Catholic WelfareConference news service ill 1921.Throughout that period, newsstories have been prepared in thenews service's office here--based

. on dispatches from the service'sown Rome Bureau, its 200 cor­respondents around the world, aswell as its staff here-mimeo­graphed and mailed daily tomore than 400 ~ubscribers, in­cluding most diocesan news­papers in the United States.

Professional ProceduresThe wire' service follows the

same profes'sional editorial pro-

Holy N10me SeeksWomen Members.

LINDENWOLD (NC)-Inspiredmore by a survival instinct thanby the women's liberation move­ment, a Holy Name Society herein New Jersey is looking forwomen members.

The St. Lawrence parish .unitof the traditionally all-male na­tional organization is one of thefirst in the nation to accept wo­men members.

Father Patrick Madden, St.Lawrence pastor; said the policychange was a result of "neces­sity and survival."

"For the last several. years .theHoly Name Society here and inother parishes has been on the'decline," the priest explained,"and at St. Lawrence it has got­ten to the point.where we werefaced with two alternatives ­reactivate the society through re­direction, or dhiband it."

In making the change, the St.Lawrence unit was breakingwith tradition, b~t not canonlaw, and it was following a rec­ommendation made to the na­tional Holy Name Society' lastyear-but not accepted.

"The Holy Name Society is aconfraternity and, according tocanon law, bishops and pastorscan determine whether or notwomen may be members," saidFather Brendan Laren, directorof the National Association ofHolyName Societies. It has beenan organization for men only,by tradition, not because of by­laws excluding women.

Cardinal Timothy Manning ofLos Angeles told delegates tothe society's national conventionlast year that the Holy Name So­ciety would not survive withoutthe participation of women. Del­egates considered a motion toopen the society to women, buttabled it for further study.

garees, we 'must also face up tothe fact that a softer almostchambray type of denim makesup into very individualisticclothes, especially summer suits., One of the first denim suits l­ever saw was on Oleg Cassini, aname designer for years, whoreally made his name importantby designing for Jackie Kennedy.while she was in the WhiteHouse. A couple of springs ago

. we chanced upon Mr. Cassinistanding on 59th Street in NewYork clad in a pal~! blue denimsuit· top stitched in red. Two

- years ago it was an unusual fash­ion but this season such denimsuits are being shown in many ofthe better stores across thecountry. \

Check it; plaid sports jacketsare turning up in madras andany other subdued plaid imag­inable and like the '73 women'sfashions, which are contempo­rary, not garish, the men's stylesare classical, not stuffy..

But how do I talk my betterhalf into a plaid jacket even ifI can. convince him it's reallyconservative?

By

MARILYN

ROD1RICK

More Laymen InvolvedIn Mission Activity

TORONTO (NC)-Layrmm areparticipating .in forei'gn andhome missionary activity more'than ever before, according toFather John Lavoie, newlynamed executive director of theNational Missionary Council ofCanada.

"This has come about, he said,"because of the recognition bythe ministerial Church that thelayman has his own distinctivemandate by Baptism to teach,minister and lead in the name ofChrist.

"Without any kind of doubt,I can see a layman heading thismissionary council in the fu­ture," the seasoned missionarysaid.

Father Lavoie, a White Father,has served as a missionary in"Tanzania, Malawi and Rhodesiasince his ordination in 1945.

We've been talking of clothes as being elegant, under­stated, classic and finally smart looking without beingstartling. While most of these adjectives have been appliedto women's clothes they can be applierl\·-to men's clothesas well. The pendalum hasfinally swung back. from itswide arc-taken after the

.demise of the grey flannelsuit-and taste as well as colorare taking over men's wear.

While the color is not sobright or shocking as that which

we have almost gotten used toover the past few years, it is still

. not 'a return to the white shirtand dark suit l'Ook of the fortiesand fifties. Men are still going toattract as much attention aswomen with what they are wear­ing, but here too it will be asmuch for the cut of the suit orthe elegance of the tie as forthe brightness of the outfit.

Sportswear Important

Because leisure and the sportsthat we enjoy during it are avery important part of a man'slife, his wardrobe must includemore than just outfits for thework-a-<Iay world. Tennis. out­fitted whites will without adoubt be the best selling sports­wear for the coming season andeven year round, for this newlypopular sport now knows noseason. The white sweater .trim­med with red and white will bebought as part of the tennispicture, but Jt will also find itsway over slacks at night or evendenims during' the day.

Denims or just the' materialdenim will also he an importantpart of an eight to 80 male'sclothing outlook if he wants tobe comfortable and of course infashion.

While most of us admit freelythat 'we have had ,it with dun-

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973

Says Taste' Is Retu1rning·-To '73 'Stylte's for Men

Page 9: 05.24.73

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Install First LPNAs Nurses' Head

Miss Leslie McNulty has beeninstalled as president of theTaunton Council of CatholicNurses. She is the first licensedpractical nurse to hold the of­fice since inception of the organ­ization in 1953. A graduate ofTaunton High School and theTaunton Vocational School ofPract.ical Nursing, she has beenon the nursing staff of MortonHospital since 1964. She is atpresent stationed on the pedi­atric service.

Installed with Miss McNultywere Diane Cote, vice-president;Sister Mary Margaret and OliveGagne, secretaries; and Lois Ach­telek, treasurer.

Activities of the council forthe past year have included pre­sentation of gift baskets to needyfamilies; a Christmas party forMarian Manor residents; a whistparty for senior citizens and adance with proceeds benefitinga scholarship fund.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 24, 1973

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"Interaction is ne'eded-prayingtogether, group discussions to­gether, go'ing to Mass together.Young people need to becomeaware of family values "so thatthese will be clear when chal­lenges come from their highschool and coIlege environments.

Mrs. Gilmore, who representsthe laity of Region XII on theU. S. bishops' AdV'isory Council,also called on Church leaders tomake information available onthe risks of physical and emo­tional damage to younger girlsand women who use contracep­tive pills'over a long period oftime, and she asked for supportof the "biHings Method" of nat­ural family planning developedby two Australian doctors andcla'imed by them to be 100 percent efficient.

BrewsterOUR LADY OF THE CAPE

$50• Dr. & Mrs. John D. Seehan

Mrs. Thomas G. FreeleyMr. & Mrs. P. C. BatyPaul W. Sullivan

• $40Mr. & Mrs. Louis R. Carr,ier

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$25Mr. & Mrs. Peter L. McDowell,

Mary R. Nolan, Mr. & Mrs. Nich­olas J. Mazzoni, Elizabeth SheehyMr. & Mrs. Gerald T..O'Connell

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Northwest Bishops Told Church Must'Christ-Centered. Environment'

AWARD CEREMONIES: Philip L. Hemingway of St.James Parish, New Bedford, is congratulated by the Rev.Ernest J. Bartell, president of StonehiU College, after pre­senting Mr. Hemingway with the college's OutstandingAchievement Award. ,Mrs. Hemingway looks on duringceremonies at the Americana Hotel, New York.

1II11IItllllltllllltlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIUUllllllll""""""1II1t1111I1IIIIUllllIIIIIIIlUlIll1IUl"""

SPOKANE (NC)-The Church'stask in family life is "t6 create aChrist-centered environment," alay representative told the regionXII meeting here of the NationalConference of Catholic Bishops.. Mrs. Doris Gilmore was key­

note speaker on the topic,"Christian Marriage and FamilyLife" at the meeting, wh:ich drew80 partkipants, including laymen and women, Religious,priests and bishops of the statesof Washington, Oregon, Idaho,Montana and Alaska. It was oneof 12 such regional "consulta­tions" being held in place of for­mer national spring meetings ofthe National Conference of Cath­olk Bishops.

Recommendations from thesemeetings will be brought to theannual national meeting of U. S.bishops in November, for deci­sion-making and implementation.Mrs. Gilmore of Kennewick,Wash., observed that the role ofthe Church is not so much in thearea of structures as in buildinga "Chr>ist-centered environmentand fostering community inter­action and sharing."

Human beings "don't changeindependently," she said, "but in 'groups." Hence the importanceof concentrating on the devel­opment of a Christian environ­ment ,in the family, and of fos­tering strong values there.

"But just being a family isnot enough," Mrs. Gilmore said.

Catholic Black, WhiteSchools to Merge

PINE BLUFF. (NC)-:The stu­dent bodies of St. Joseph'sSchool, now predominantlywhite, and of St .Peter's School Hyannishere, now predominantly black,will be merged next fall. ST. FRANCIS XAVIER

Auxiliary Bishop Lawrence P. $100Graves of Little Rock, pastor of Mr. & Mrs. Raymond BourqueSt. Joseph's parish, said tenta- $80tive plans call for pupils in the John Vetorinofirst four grades to study at St. $75Joseph's School and for those in James F. Pendergast.grades five - through eight to ,. $50study at St. Peter's School. Mr. & Mrs. E. Deveney

Bishop Graves said in a Sun- Mrs. Anna F. Vetorinoday pulpit letter that Bishop An- Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Rileydrew J. McDonald of Little Rock Mr. & Mrs. John L. Marchildonhad ordered the merger. $25

Bishop Graves said "it's ob- Mr. & Mrs. Jose;:>h Gelinas,vious that the relationship be- John F. Dempsey, M. J. Coutetween black and white is a prob- Virgil M, Casey, Charles H.lem of our whole nation. And McGrath, Mr. & Mrs. M. Fruccithis might possibly give some J Thomas J. Moorehelp to solve that problem in the Mr. & Mrs. M. Lovelettefuture." Mr. & Mrs. Leo Gregoire

Bobbie -Loves

She's only six years old, yetshe's brought deep love to ourfamily, joy t,o the neighborhood,and, I believe, a greater under­standing of life to aU who havecome in contact with her.

Bobbie loves. Bobbie is unin­hibited. Her excitement over adish of ice cream gives moreinstruction in living than someof the deepest thoughts from themost learned professors.

Granted, she grows slowly"de­velops slowly ... and ,in so doinghas given me a greater aware­ness of a child's growth process,a better education than I couldget from a\'l the textbooks in theworld.

Thus, Bobbie is a teacher.She',)) probably never be a fellowof a great university, yet she hasalready taught more philosophy,psychology and theology thanthe world is ready to accept.

Possibly this is why some peo­ple are afraid qf ret,arded chil~

dren. The message they teach istoo powerful, too poignant, tooprofound for some to face.

Next week I'll tell you why Ithink Bobbie is such a happy per­son, and how I believe we can all,learn to ,be happy ... from her.

MARY

CARSON

By

Bobbie' Prov,esP,ossibl,e' wit,h

Newspaper PublishesAbortion Supplement

JEFFERSON CITY (NC)-TheCatholic Missourian has offeredto diocesan newspapers' and in­terested groups a four-page sup­plement on abortion entitled"How Far Did the SupremeCourt Go?" '

"The .supplement is designedto be educational and to have thewidest possible readership ap­peal," said Father Hugh Behan,editor of the Jefferson City dio­cesan weekly.

"The legal and medical factsare presented and moral view­points of Jewish, Protestant andCatholic leaders are included.Many people are not aware ofeven the legal and legislative im­plications of the Supreme Courtdecision," he said.

Ha·ppinessHandicaps

Roberta, the youngest of my eight children, is retarded.Shortly after she was born, there were different reactions .from friends. When told Bobbie was a Mongoloid, a well­meaning business associate of my husband's said, "Well,fortunately they usually ,don't live long. It's just as as the priest started to read thewell. They can't amount to Gospel.

She wrapped herself aroundmuch." It's true that many me,-snuggled her head into theMongoloids are born with phys- crook of my neck, completely re­ical defects that can shorten laxed. As Father finished thetheir lives. Some doctors recom- Gospel, Bobbie reaohed over mymend leaving such disorpers un- shoulder, extended her littlc

hand to the man in back of me,and whispered, "Peace." Shemay not understand the word,but she conveys the message.

Bobbie comes home fromschool' eX/uberant. "Yc'u knowwhat, Mommy? We had a birth­day Iparty!" Her elation is infec­tious.

The other day, one of ourneighbors called to her, "Hi, Bob­bie. How are you?" The neighborrather expected to be i'gnored.

,Bobbie caJled back, "I'm FINE!How are you?" She not only de­lights in being ... .but sincerelycares how other people are!

treated and allowing the childto die.

Tihese, doctors, anj my hus­band's well' meaning associate,equate happiness in life withachievement. ,\chievingwealth, social position, or pro­fessional status. Mongoloidshave Jittle capacity for achieve­ment. Because Bobbie will notachieve these things, they thinkshe cannot be a happy person.

As it happens, ,Bobbie hasproved these !predictions to bewrong!

A birth defect which thrzat,ened her survival when she wasan infant, (an opening in thewall of 'her heart) has healedspontaneously, without surgery.As far as any doctor can predictnow, she will live a normal life­span.

'But even more incredible, asa lively six-year-old, Bobbie isthe happiest -person I know!

Not ClutteredBobbie's mind is not cluttered

,with problems, or fears. Shedoesn't worry what others willthink; she never considers"what's ,in it for me?"

Lf she's -angry, she lets youknow ... and gets it out of hersystem. If someone teases her,she gives him a frown, and says,"Aw, come on ... CUT IT OUT!"That's as much grudge as she iscapable of holding; minutes laterher sunny smile returns.

Much of the time she over­- flows with happiness and affec­

tion. At Mass last Sunday shewas a bit weary. I picked her up,

Page 10: 05.24.73

303 IYANOUGH ROAD

HYANNIS, MASS.

TEL. 775-0081

MansfieldST. MARY

$100Fred FindlenMr. & Mrs. A. Caponigro

$85A Friend

ATWOODOIL COMPANY

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$50Mr. & Mrs. William MortonDr. & Mrs. Philip SiMiaDr. & Mrs. Anthony GassonMary & Alice Donoghue

$40Mr. & Mrs. John Cody

$35Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kane

$30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph SouzaMr. & Mrs. Anthony MelchiorriA Friend

$25Mr. & Mrs. Robert Davis, Mr.

& Mrs. Peter Farnum, Mr. &Mrs. John Capra, Mr. & Mrs.William Lawrence, Mr. & Mrs.Lawrence Jackson

Mr. & Mrs. Herbert BI·iss, Mr.& Mrs. John King, Mr. & Mrs.Kenneth Kingsbury, Mr. & Mrs.James Musto, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward Guillette

A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. PeterDeGirolamo, Mr. & Mrs. LouisTarsa, Frank Signoriello, Mr. &Mrs. Henry Werner

Mrs. Margaret Jordan, Mr. &Mrs. Malcolm Fales, A Friend,Mr. & Mrs. Michael Catalano,Mr. & Mrs. John Girard

Mr. & Mrs. E. P. Atwell, Mil­dred Hannon Mr. & Mrs. Da\"idD. Conley, Mrs. Gladys Morse,A Friend

Regular ,Savings

90-day Notice

NEW EFFECTIVEANNUAL

SAVINGS RATESWhen Savings and Dividends left on deposit

2 and 3 yr. Term Deposit Certificate. Now Yields 6.27%

1 to 2 yr. Term Deposit CertificateNow Yields 6.00%

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Bank by mail - it costs you nothing

bass river savings bank'307 MAIN sr.. SOUTH YARMOUTH, MASS. 02664

6%

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, !

NortonST. MARY

$300Kilburn Glass Industries, Inc.

$250Defiance Bleachery

$100Old Colony Rd. Nursing Home

(Mrs. Gatherine Devlin)Robert Devlin

·$50Mr. & Mrs. James CarneyMr. & Mrs. George MacielMr. & Mrs. Louis .Langelder

$36Mr. & Mrs. Francis Galligher

$35Mr. & Mrs. Donald Butts

$30Mr. '& Mrs. Frank MontisantiMr. & Mrs Frank J. Teixeira JrMr. & Mrs. Thomas Kelly

$25Anonyplous, Mr. & Mrs. Er­

nest Precourt, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Wicklan~; Mr. & Mrs.Charles McBarron; Mr. & Mrs.

- John Gomes & Family .Mr. & Mrs. Henry Yelle, Mr.

&: Mrs. John Pires, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas Bryant Sr., Mr. & Mrs.John Ribeiro

Mrs. Laura V. Pachico, Anon­ymous, David Rocha, Mr. & Mrs.Antonio Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs.Manuel Vital, Mrs. GeorgeS'abourin

. $35,Charlotte MadeirosMargaret and Mary 1. Ma­

deirosMr. & Mrs. George T. Silva. '$25 .

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Doyle, Mr.& Mrs. George Goulart, MarionHiggins, Mr. & ,Mrs. G. AlbertKent, Mr., & Mrs. Herbert MeI'­cier, Jr. '

Mr. & Mrs.. Arthur Metell, MrsPhilip J. Norton

.Vineyar.d 'Ha~,en

, ST. AUGUSTINE, $50

Beatrice PhilldpsMrs. Dean R. Swift

$35Mrs. Arthur Ouellette

$25Mrs. Benjamin C. Mayhew Jr.,:

George Mayhew, Mr. & Mrs.Theophilus Silvia Jr., Mr. & Mrs,Michael Fontes

Mrs. John T. HughesWlilli'am Maciel Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Geor.ge King

WellfleetpUR LADY OF LOURDES

, $200Cape Cdd Five Cents Savings

Bank$50

Mr. & Mrs. Ernest F. Rose~

Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop Bassett,Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Rose_ $35

Mr. & Mrs. George S. Dutra. $25 ~

Mr. Michael Botelho, Mr. &Mrs. Robert Dutra, Mr. & Mrs"Walter Doucette, Flora Peters,Mr. & Mrs. John Thomas

Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Silva, OurLady of Perpetual Help GuildNorth Rruto

EmpoweringNext 11:0' the assumpt'ion of

power is the responsibility of reoHnquishing it.-Disraeli

Edgartowl1lST. ELIZABETH

$50In'Mernory of Donald A. Benl·

beMrs. Corinne FournierMrs. Margaret O'NeilMr. & Mrs. Albert'K. Sylvin,

;/ Jr. .

DIOCESAN NURSES MEET: The Spring Plenary Meflti 19 of the Diocesan Councilof Catholic Nurses was held Sunday at the' Dominican Sisters Novitiate in Dighton.Left to right: Sr~ Helen, O.Carm., of the Catholic: Mem:Jlri.l1 Home, Fall River, newly.elected secretary of the council; Mrs. Thomas J.Fleming of Fall Fiver, council president;Bishop Cronin~ guest spea~er; Sr. Ascension, OP, vice-prO'Villcial of the Dominican sisterswho staff 81. Anne's Hospital, Fall River; Marian Manor,T,lUnton and Madonna Manor,No. Attleboro. '

SandwichCORPUS CHRISTI

$150Dr. & Mrs. Leo V. Monaghan

$75Mr. & Mrs. George Campbell

$60Lt. Cot & Mrs. Charles' F.

Brower, III$50

Mr. & Mrs. John F. BernardMr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Bazzi­

notti$35

I Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Mc­Eachen

$25Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Gallant,

Mr. & Mrs. Clement V. Horrigan,Mr. & Mrs. Patrick McDonnell,

'Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Tobin

Oak BluffsSACRED HIEART­

$400Reiiable Market .

$125Rev. James W. ClarkMr. & Mrs. Henry Corey

$50. Holy Name Society

Sacred Heart Women's Guild$25

Mr. & Mrs. Everett Rogers,'Allan Harl'ison

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Davis

Mr. & Mrs. Albert LeonardMr. & Mrs. Edwin Medeiros

$40Mr: & Mrs. John R. MartinMr. & Mrs. Raymond Knispel

$35Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop LumbertMr. & Mrs. John L. Maloy

$30Edward AugustyniakGertrude A. Cl:!rroll.Mr. & Mrs. John DeMello, Jr.

$25LaWrence C. Antonellis, Jr.,

John J. Burke, Mr. & Mrs. CarlGable, Col. & Mrs. Norman La­Forest, Dr. & Mrs. John Lee

Mrs. Anne C. McNelis, Mr. &. Mrs. Charles O'Hara, Mr. & Mrs.

David Peterson, Mrs. Mary Shep­ard; Mrs. Antone' Souza

William Souza, Mrs. MaryShepard, Dr. & Mrs. NormanStarosta, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardStudley, Mrs. John P. Sylvia, Jr.,Harold C. Wilson

THE ANCHO~-~

Thurs., May 24, 197310·

ChathamI-IOLY REDEEMER

$100James F. Gormley'

$50Mrs. CHarles A. Connors, Sr.

$40Mrs. Orick D. Young

$35Joseph E. Geser

$25Lawrence Burbine, JOhn J. Pat­

ten, Frank Dresser Jr., Wm. A.Bodden

$100Mr. & Mrs. William DaceyMr. & Mrs. Rene L. PoyantMr. & Mrs. Joseph Reardon

$60Mr: & Mrs. Francis E. GreenRobert Little .

$50Mr. & Mrs. Joseph CairnsHelen T. CallahanD<:>rothy FawcettMargaret FawcettMr. & Mrs. Armand GouletDr. & Mrs. J. H. Johnson Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. MaherMr. & Mrs. Kevin O'NeilMr. & Mrs. Frank S. Ormon

J~ •

Mr. & Mrs. Richard RougeauMarea SeHonMrs. Thomas J. Kennedy

$40Mr. & Mrs. Thomas MonaghanMr. & Mrs. John Murphy

$35Mr. & Mrs. Bento Correia

$30Kalliope G. Garoufes

$25Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bearse,

Mary A. Cadigan, Mr. & Mrs.James Clancy, Mr. & Mr!>. Leon­Clifford, Mr. & Mrs. William J.Conins

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Conlon.Mr. & Mrs. Harry Davidson, Mr.& Mrs. Anthony DeCrosta, Mr.& Mrs. Ruben Deveau, Mr. &Mr;;s. Harry C. Dever

Mr. & Mrs. Milton' Donavan,Mr. & Mrs; Fred Dugan, Mr. &Mrs. James Erwin, Mrs. Mat­thew Finn, Mr. & Mrs. ThomasHersey

Mr. & Mrs. W. Hetterman,Mrs. Arminda Keyes, MargaretKilroy, Mr. & Mrs. John Lebel,Mrs. Arthur Linnell

Mrs. Wray Lockwood, Mr. &Mrs. Robert L. McCaffer)t, Linus

_J. Mullaly, Mr. & Mrs. HowardMunroe, Mr. & Mrs. Himry L.Murphy Jr. ' .

Mr. & Mrs. thomas F. Murphy,Marcel R. Poyant, Mr. & Mrs.H. Neil Radford, Mr. & Mrs.George Smith, Mr. & Mrs. JohnF. Sweeney .

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Terry, Mr.& Mrs. John Willet·t

Mr. & Mrs. Edward F. ActonMr. & Mrs. Daniel T. GalvinMrs. George GaroufesMrs. Josie S. Sheaffer

FalmouthST. PATRICK

$100Mrs. Lawrence C. AntonellisMr. & Mrs. Allan F. Ryan

$85Mr. & Mrs. Paul Champagne

$60Mrs. William Veary

$50Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Bardelis.Atty. & Mrs. Leo DelaneyMr. & Mrs. Paul Olenick

Cent~ryille

OUR LADY OF VICTORY

Page 11: 05.24.73

MARK JUBILEES: Marking silver jubilees in the re­ligious life this month are Sister Lucille Robida, C.S.c. deanof students at Notre Dame College, Manchester, N.H. andRev. Raymond Robida, M.S., superior of La Salette Sem­inary, East Brewster. They are the daughter and son ofMrs. Clara Robida, 18 Chatham St., New. Bedford, andthe late Ludger O. Robida. Born in New Bedford, both at­tended St. Anthony parochial school and have served inmany houses of their communities since entering religiouslife in 1948. A sister is Sister Yvonne C. Robida, C.S.C.,principal of St. Anthony High School, New Bedford.

"..

All TEN bankswill be open

with ,full service

ST. ANTHONY

$100Mrs. Mary E. Enos

$30Nunes Family

$25Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. AmaralHenrietta CarvalhoMr. & Mrs. Manuel CostaMr. & Mrs. Fernand MedeirosAntonio ReisMr, & Mrs. Manuel Silveira

ST. JOSEPH

$100Mrs. Joseph H. Martin

$30Mr. & Mrs. William MonizMr. & Mrs. John Santos

$25"Doris Bartone, Joan Frazier,

Patricia Frazier, P. Frank Leddy,Mary McNearney, Peter Shea

Mr. & Mrs Richard ArcikowskiMr. & Mrs. Roland Chase, Mr. &Mrs. Donald M. Lewis, EstellaMargarido

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph MGKennaMr. & Mrs. Edward Nixon

. ST. PAUL

$100St. Paul's Holy Name SocietyMr. & Mrs. Clayton Rennie

$50S1. Paul's Women's Guild

$35Mr. & Mrs. Salvatore SpinelliErnest Prado

$30Dr. & Mrs. William Fountain

$25In Memory of John & Mray

DruganMr. & Mrs. Waldo G. WitherellRaymond D. RestoMrs. Raymond D. RestoMr. & Mrs. Lyman TaylorMr. & Mrs. Gerald MittonMrs. Walter CampbellMr. & Mrs. Paul SilvaMr. & Mrs. Walter FitzgeraldMr. & Mrs. James ColeMrs. Cora Smith

THE ANCHOR- 11Thurs., May 24, 1973

10 CONVENIENT BANKS LOCATED IN • fAll RIVER. SOMERSET. SWANSEA. WESTPORT. ASSONET

MEMBER. Federal DepOSit InsurJnce Corp~~tlon • Federal Re)E;rve. System

Fall RiverTrust Co.

All TEN bankswill be open

from 9a.m.to 4p.m.

I

The Fall Ri\€ri'ust brings you

Saturllay~ITU~ITU@WITH A DIFFERENCE

TauntonHOLY ROSARY

$25Mr. & Mrs. Mieczyslaw KuszajAdolph & John LinekMr. & Mrs. Robert BentleyRichard Januse

$40Mrs. Joseph Lyons

$30Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Gomes

$25Mary Coughlin, Mr. & Mrs.

Frank J. Reynolds, Mr. & Mrs.Frederick Wilde Mr. & Mrs. JohnMarshall, Miss Mary K. Linehan

William J. Lahey, Mr.' & Mrs.Carl Chace »

North DightonST. JOSEPH

$250 ./Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Murray

$75Mr. & Mrs. Robert Secatore

$50Mrs. James Williams

$35Walter Scanlon

$25Mr. & Mrs. Arthur EnnesMr. & Mrs. Robert HebertMr. & Mrs. Norman LaFranceMr. & Mrs. Harold MendozaMr. & Mrs. Anthony ProcopioMr. & Mrs. Harold J. RobertsMrs. Raymond SimmonsMr. & Mrs. George W. Rodgers

DightonST. PETER

. $100Mr. & Mrs. James B. Murphy

$50I. C. I. America, Inc.Mr. & Mrs. Leo J. DeslauriersMr. & Mrs. John Cassidy

$25Mr. & Mrs. Norman A. RossDr. & Mrs. Charles SouzaMr. & Mrs. Clinton Rose

$50.Clement Coughlin

, North EastonIMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$500Rev. Joseph F. O'Donnell

$100From a FriendDr. & Mrs. Howard F. Car­

penter

RaynhamST. ANN

$50Joseph ScanlonJoseph NardozziAlmon Turner

$40Edward Barry

$35Joseph Mador

$25Robert Gilmore, J. W. Latimer,

Thomas .W. Whalen, Thomas J.Whalen, Ron Teofilo

Manuel Gomes, Mrs. SidneyRoberts, Virgil Grignon, ElmerSargent, George Boucher

Arnold Colpitts, -Arthur Souza,William Rodgers

South EastonHOLY CROSS

$25Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Dempsey.Fernandes Lumber Co.Mary LaPlanteMr. & Mrs. J. Laurence PhalanMatt Welch Electric Co.

HOLY GHOST$800

Mr.· & Mrs. Manuel O. Castro$50

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Tansek$38

Mr. & Mrs. John Bergeron$30

Mr. & Mrs. Francis BroganMr. & Mrs. John B. King

$25Mr. & Mrs. Charles Cartier Jr.

ST. JOSEPH

$30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph McGee

$25Mr. & Mrs. Arthur MullinsMrs. William WeberLeonard PinaultMr. & Mrs. Henri ParadisMr. & Mrs. George Stafford

ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST

$100Mr. & Mrs. Frederick V. Mur­

phy Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John W. McIntyreMr. & Mrs. William Flynn

$50Mr. & Mrs. Harry Flynn

$30 'Mr. & Mrs. George E, Fre­

detteKevin Lawless

$25Mr. & Mrs. Henry FlynnMr. & Mrs. Wilfred CardinMr. & Mrs. Henry GagneMr. & Mrs. Michael O'HaraMr. & Mrs. John PicciRuth Nihan & Vincent NihanMrs. Mary B. LeggeeMrs. Mary GrimesMrs. PhHip DavignonMrs. William BowenCatherine McCannMary WilhelmCelestine WhalenAlyce O'KeefePeter SilV'ia

Manlio Frova, Mr. & Mrs. Don­. aid Harkins, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardMcGoran, Mrs. Irene Pitas

Mr. & Mrs. Hector B'enoitMr. & Mrs. William Cauley &

Family -Mr. & Mrs. Joseph LamoureuxMr. & Mrs. Thomas ReillyMr. & Mrs. George TedinoMr. & Mrs. Lucien Viens

ST: MARY

$35Mr. & Mrs. Robert Voyer

$25Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Begin,

Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Braga, Mr.& Mrs. Raymond Cosgrove, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Marcinkwicz, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Ringuette

ST. MARK

$75James Murphy

$50Michael D. Nolan'

$40William T. Whelan

$30Albert O. GingrasEmilio Guartieri Jr.Robert Seguin

$25John Ross, John Prest, Ed­

mond RiCe, Earl J. Lavin. JosephDias

David Campbell, Joseph B.Furtado, Evelyn Wallace, RichardDunn. Mrs. Etta Ryder

Philip Lindstrom, Henry Col­lins, George McGee -

North AttleboroSACRED HEART

$75Mr. & Mrs. Robert McCall

$60Ann M. Hill

$50Joseph Bressette,

$40Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Dargis

$30Mr. & Mrs. Roger Pinsonnault

$25Mr. & Mrs. Ovila Ouellette

ST. MARY$300

Josepjh J. WrightVeroniea R. Wright

$225Nelson J. Gulski

$100Mr. & Mrs. John Donley'Mr. & Mrs. Louis DonleyMrs. Julie M. HammondMr. & Mrs. C. O'MalleyIrene M. O'Malley

$50Mr. & Mrs: Henry Beach Jr.Blackstone Acoustical Ceilings

Inc.Marjorie L. Shea

$35 .Mr. & Mrs. August· Funke

$30Mr. & Mrs. Austin P. ButlerRichard E. Quinn Jr.

$25Mr. & Mrs. A. Boisvert, Mr.

& Mrs. J. Burda. Nancy J. Burns,Mr. & Mrs. Leon Campbell, Mr.& Mrs. Daniel J. Cavanaugh

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J.' Ciolfi,Mr. & Mrs. Henry De Meo, Mr.& Mrs. JuHano m Renzo, Mr. &Mrs. Thomas Hoey, MacDonald'sMobile Homes

Mr. & Mrs. G. Howard MorseJr., Mr. & Mrs. Anthony G. Na­deem, Julia Riley, Mr. & Mrs. E.T. Schmidt, Raymond Simoneau

Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Snell, Mr.& Mrs. Walter J. Szewczykow­ski, Thomas G. Welsh, Mr. &Mrs. Robert W. Zachman

SeekonkMOUNT CARMEL

$100Mr. & Mrs. Leo William Tasca

$50Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. Briggs

$40 .Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Olean

$25Mr. \& Mrs. Raymond Noelte,

Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Mulholland,Ruth Ann Santos, Mr. & Mrs.Manuel . Hendr,i~ks Jr., Mr. &Mrs. William Dolan

Mrs. Joseph SmithMr. & Mrs. John CornellMr. & Mrs. Joseph LyonsEmily Medeiros

AttleboroST. THERESA

$75Mr. & Mrs. George Lebeau

$50Mr. & Mrs. George BoydMrs. Richard May

$35Mr. & Mrs. Louis LaCivita

$25Mr. & Mrs. John Case, Mr. &

Mrs. George Duquette, Mrs.

Closed MeetingsMINNEAPOLICS (NC) - Fif-

•teen Catholic journalists protest­ed here that some U. S. bishopsregional meetings this springwere closed to the press. Thestatement "hailed with enthusi­asm" bishops who opened theirmeetings to the press and noted';with disappointment" that somemeetings were closed.

Page 12: 05.24.73

699 Bellville AvenueNew Bedford

S.E. Massachusetfs

Finest Food Stores!

New BedfordST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI

$35Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Morelli

$25Mr. & Mrs. Domenic CatalanoMr. & Mrs. Armand CoelhoGhilardi FamilyMr. & Mrs. Laurent GuilletteMr. & Mrs. Henry K. Healey

ST. JAMES

$450Rev. Thomas F. Daley

$100Mr. & Mrs. Robert TaberMr. & Mrs. Arnold Parsons

$50Mr. & Mrs. Perry CoholanMr. & Mrs. Vincent Cotnoir

$35Mrs. Leo M. SullivanMr. & Mrs. Francis RoachMr. & Mrs. Vincent Worden

$30Mr. & Mrs. Edward KenneyMr. & Mrs. James .GiblinMr. & Mrs. Raymond FontaineLouis RitaDorothy Baldwin

$25Mr. & Mrs. Freddie GrovesMr. & Mrs. John C. MartinMr. & Mrs. Arthur· MurdockMr. & Mrs. Francis MottaMr. & Mrs. James BoltonJohn QuinnHelen CrowleyMr. & Mrs. Norman MurphyMr. & Mrs. Lionel' Sears .Mr. & Mrs. Andrew O'Neil·Mr. & Mrs. John SylviaMrs. Armand Langis & Jane

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

$100Rev. Ronald SylviaRev. Jose A. F. dos Santos CM

$75Mr. & Mrs. Frank Martin

$50Dr. & Mrs.. Manuel DeMelloMr. & Mrs. Harry' DunhamMr. & Mrs. Joseph Vera

. $30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph FerreiraFernando Tavares

$25In Memonry of Mary C. &

Gilda P. ArrudaMr. & Mrs. Frank Edwards, Mr

& Mrs. John Felix, Rosalie Fer­reira, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Freitas,Gracia Toyota Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Grota, Mr.& Mrs. Celestino Macedo, Mrs.Evelyn Mello, Mr. & Mrs. Wal­ter Oliver, Mr. & Mrs. RichardPerry, Eva L. Sylvia

Contractors Sfnce1913./

JEREMIAH COHOLANPLUMBING & HEATING

$100Dr. & Mrs. Robert GaudreauSt. Vincent de Paul Society

$60 'Mr. & Mrs. Charles Ehmann

$50Mr. & Mrs. Ernest LaurendeauJoan EhmannMr. & Mrs. Matthew Hart

$45Dr. Denis D. Brault

$32Allua FamilyMr. & Mrs. Antone Costa Jr.

$30Mr. & Mrs Weber R. Torres Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John Wojcik

$25Anonymous, Mr. & Mrs. John

Botelho, Mr. & Mrs. Herman Car­reiro, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph CataldoJr., Mr. & Mrs. Lucien Dlugosin-ski '

Mr. & Mrs. Alex GOlJsalves,Mr. & Mrs. Leo R. Grenon, Mr.& Mrs. Albert L. Labrie, Mrs.Stella M. Pacheco, Mr. & Mrs.Edward Bouley

ST. JOSEPH

$50Fairhaven Mortuary Inc.

/ $35Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Walsh

$30 .Mr. & Mrs. Louis Doucette

$26Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Barton

$25Mr. & Mrs. Dennis HoganMrs. Lucy StevensonM~.. & Mrs. Arlindo Dias Jr.

ST. HEDWIG$35

Mr. & Mrs. Frank Kulesza &Son

New BedfordST. THERESA

$100Mr. & Mrs. Eugene LemieuxSt. Vincent de Paul Society

$50Mr. & Mrs. Aldege Cote

$25Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Bonneau

AcushnetST. FRANCIS XAVIER

$75

$25Mrs. Priscilla BatesAnonymous (2)

ST. HYACINTH

St. Vincent de Pilul Society$25

Valmore Bara~e

A Friend$50

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Gronlund$45

Anonymous1$25

Mr. & Mrs. Rodolphe Arcou­ette Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Raymond A.Bosse, Mr. & Mrs Romeo ComeauMrs. & Mrs. LEio N. Coons, Mr. &Mrs. Manuel Jardin &·Amelia E.Leconte

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Robert, Mr.& Mrs. Rofand Robillard, Mr. &Mrs. Bernard Rossi, Mr. & Mrs.William J. Ve"ary

FairhavenST. MARY

$125Mr. & Mrs. Roland Bourgault

$105 ' -James Finn'

WarehamST. PATRICK

$35Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Geagan

~ $30 _Desmond Mnrnhy

$25Mr. & Mrs. John Maloney

NCCS AppointsNew Directolr

WASHINGTON (NC) - AlioeCollins, who has made a careerof serving U. S. armed forcespersonnel, has been named exec­utive director of the NationalCatholic Community Service.

Miss Collins succeeds MichaelE. Menster who was recentlynamed acting National ExecutiveDirector of the United ServiceOrganizations, Inc. (USO).

The appointment was made bythe NCCS board of trustees andannounced by the organization1sexecutive, committee..

The National Catholic Commu­nity Ser,vice, established by theCatholic bishops of the UnitedStates in 1940" .is one of thefounding sponsors anQ memberagencies of the USO. It suppliesdirectors and professional staffworkers for USO operations in ­nearly 100 communities in theUnited States and overseas.

Before :joining the nationalheadquarters staff of the NCC$in Washington last July, Mis,sCollins was a USO. director andassociate director in five statesand two European countries. Shewas usa director in Rome from1964 to 1972.

In her NCCS assignment dur­ing the Pilst year Miss Collinshas been responsible for the de­velopment of new programs. Shealso represented NCCS on usOinter-agency committees, andwas edito~ of Program hy Pros,the usa professional journal.

ALICE COLLINS

North DartmcluthST. JULIE

$200Rev. John F. Hogan

$50Mr. & Mrs. Charles ToomeyMr. & Mrs. Emmett P. AlmondMr. & Mrs. M. Gonsalves

$35Mr. & Mrs. Edmond Kelley

; $25Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Souza,

Mr. & Mrs.. Dennis Wong, Mrs.A. C. Wobecky, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward Hill, Mr. & Mrs. Robert J.Sullivan

Mr. & Mrs. Rene L. Bouchard,Dr. & Mrs. Philbert Silvl~ira, Mr.& Mrs. James Sherrington Jr.

MarionST. RITA

$125Mr. & Mrs. John L. MacNeil

""""""""""""""'lIl'''''''''''"II;ltItlllll''''''',,,,,,,,,"""'''lI''''''''''''''''''''I''''''''''

WestportST. GEORGE

$300George Considine

$100Potter Funeral ServiceMr. & Mrs. Thomas Wilcock

$50Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Loranger

$40Mr. & Mrs. David Buckley

$35, St. Vincent de Paul Conference

St. George Church$25

Mr. & Mrs. Alford Dy-son, Mrs.Alice Harrison, Holy Name SoCi.ety, St. George Women's ·Guild

St. George Couples' Club, Mr.& Mrs. Oscar Stebenne, WilliamRodgers

says, "Oh, mother," .when shcreally means: "How' dumb." .

A mother is someone whosays "We'll see," when she reallymeans, "No." ,

A daughter is someone whoseroom is a disaster area, who'stwo weeks behind in piano prac­ticing, and who says, "There'snothing to do."

A daughter is someone whopretends to hate brothers, frogsand' horror movies but reallyloves them.

A mother is someone whosedesk is a disaster area,' who'stwo weeks behind in her ironingand who says, "Sure, we'll beglad to do it."_ A mother is someone who pre­tends to hate whiskers, chocolatecandy and giggly girls but rea,))yloves them.

Forgetful'A daughter is someone who

writes urgent notes like, "Mom,don't let me forget to take mylibrary boo\( tomorrow. Don'tforget!!!" And then she forgets toput the note on her mother's pil­low.

A daughter is someone whobrings her mother hems to belowered, tears to be kissed away,and hours of unforgettable joy.

A mother is someone whobrings her daughter dishes to bewashe-d, worries to be laughedaway, and hours of unforgettablejoy.

South DartmouthST. MARY

$75Mrs. 'William Loughlin

$50Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. HicksDr. & Mrs. John DiasDr. & Mrs. Peter Horan

$30The Misses Helen & Margaret

Gamble$25

Mr. & Mrs. Charles OliverMr. & Mrs. Harry O'NeilMr. & Mrs. John SaundersSt. Mary's GuildMrs. Louis VieiraMr. & Mrs. John W., Saunders

By

DOLORES

CURRAN

L. Grosso

12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fpll River-Thur., May 24, 1973

Daughters Resemble MomsDespite Generation Gap

Last year, I was asked to address a mother-daughterbrunch and, since my' daughter was invited, I asked herif she would like to speak on behalf of the daughters. Sheagreed and togethe'r we ·worked out the following defini­tions. I wrote the -definitionas the mother sees it andSarah read it and -did thefollowup as the daughtersees it. It was a lot of fun and Ioffer it to you mothers to trywith your children.

A daughter is someone who

eats pe,!-nut ;butter on her toastfor breakfast, peanut butter andjelly sandwiches for lunch andthen, when she goes to a restau­rant for dinner, she asks, "Doyou have' anything with peanutbutter here?"

A mother is someone who eatsdiet food all day so she can eatpopcorn and pie all night.

A daughter is someone whocombs and combs her hair andwhen it is just perfect, she goesoutside and hangs upside downfrom the trapese.

A mother is someone who goes'to the beauty shop to have herhair frusted so the grey won'tshow.

We'll SeeJ\ daughter is someone who

TauntonOUR LADY OF LOURDES

$125 .Rev. Msgr. E. S. de Mello

$55The Mattes Family; 1

$50Mr. & Mrs. James P: Silvia

$30The Silva Family

$28Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Pimental

$25 . j

Mr. & Mrs. Albert MoitozaMr. & Mrs. Joseph CambraMr. & Mrs. Francis CutnerMr. & Mrs. Robert MendesMr. & Mrs. Henry R. ,BragaAntone Gray

SACRED HEART

$100Rev. Edward J. Byington

$50Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. Rose

$30Mr. & Mrs. Raymond HarrisonMr. & Mrs. Evans Lava.Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Barboza

$25 I

Mrs. Mary Brown, The CronanFamily, The Welch Family, Mr.& Mrs. Harold Rose, Mr. & Mrs.Robert Dewey

Mr. & Mrs. WaIter WaItman,Mr. & Mrs. Stanley J. BrezinskiMr. & Mrs. Bruno Alegi

HOLY FAMILY

$30Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Brassard

$25

/..,!prlllliMnlitlZ0;t1di@ '1

_....

Page 13: 05.24.73

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur:, May 24, 1973 13

We Pay Tribute to Those

with gratitude and respect . . .

Today we pause to remember

of devotio~."·Today let's p'ledge ourselves

-

•••

to just and lasting peace.

we also consider their cost.

Abraham Lincoln:

and dignity.

Today we count our blessings;

arms and lost their own lives

so that we can live in freedom

Nobody ever said it better than

history who answered the call to

~he men throughout this nation's

Lives

which they gave the last full measure

II ••• from these honored dead we take

increased devotion ... to that cause for

.....:-;.......,'.~....~

Gave TheirWho

This Message Sponsored by the Following Individuals and Business ConcernsIn The D'iocese of Fall River

Cape Cod and The IslandsBASS RIVER SAVINGS BANK

Fall RiverBUILDING MATERIALS, INC.DURO FINISHING CORP.

TOM ELLISONQUALITY MEN'S APPAREL

THE EXTERMINATOR CO.

FALL' RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.FALL RIVER TRAVEL BUREAUGLOBE MANUFACTURING CO.

MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS

MacKENZIE AND WINSLOW, INC.

R. A. McWHIRR COMPANY

SOBILOFF BROTHERS

STERLING BEVERAGES, INC.

New BedfordPAUL G. CLEARY & CO., INC..

GEORGE O'HARA CHEVROLET, INC.

STAR STORE

...

r ..

Page 14: 05.24.73

.14 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973

'Our Heating

Oils Make

Warm Friends'

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beliveauand Mr. and Mrs. Russell Jen­nings will conduct a MarriageEncounter £,peakers' night at 8P.M. Sunday, June 10 in theCCD hall. All area married cou­ples are invited to attend. Theprogram is nondenominational.

NOTRE DAM~,

FALL RIVERThe parish choir has elected

the following slate of officersfor the coming year: CharlesLavoie, president; Mrs. AlbertPetit, vice-president; Mrs.Nor­mand Caston~uay, secretary­treasurer; Alcide Desmarais, li­brarian.

Brother David J. Touchette ischoir director and Mrs. Oscar .T.Barnabe, organist.

OUR LADY OF FATIMA,SWANSEA

A Marriage Encounter speak­ers' night will be held at. B P.M.Sunday, June 3 in the parish hf\11.Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beliveauand Mr. and Mrs. Russell Jen­nings will explain the nondenom­inational Encounter movement.All area married couples are in­vited to attend.

ST. BONIFACE,NEW BEDFORD

ST. MARY,SEEKONK

The Women's Guild announcesa Maybasket whist for 8 Satur­day night, May 26 in the schoolbasement. Ms. Mary Swift ischairman.

ST. JO~EPH,

AITLEBORO

Parish council elections will-be conducted 'by secret ballotat all Masses on the weekend ofJune 2 and 3.

CYO members will hold a cakesale after all Masses this week­end to defay expenses of theiractivities.

Knights of the Altar, togetherwith 12 of their fathers willspend this weekend at LaSaletteSeminary, Enfield, N. H.

ST. PATRICK,SOMERSET

Volunteers are needed for thelector and reader programs ofthe parish. They may -contactRev. Robert McGowan or LeoCreamer for further information.

ST. KILIAN,NEW BEDFORD

The Pilgrim Virgin statue willbe at the chUl'ch from Saturday,May 26 through Saturday, June2. Mass will be celebrated dailyat 4:30 P.M., together withMarian devotions.

Arrangements for the statueare. in' charge of Brother WilliamKeene, SS.CC. and the Men ofthe Sacred Heart.

MotherI regard no man as poor who

has a godly mother.-Lincoln

7 PerryAvenue

TauntonMass.

822-2282-

$25Mrs. Vivian WegrzyniakMrs. Rose Harria

Publicity chairmen of parish organizationsare asked to submit news Items for thiscolumn to The Anchor, P. O. Box 7, FallRiver 02722. Name of city or town shouldbe Included, as well as full dates of allactivities. Please send news of future ratherthan pa~t events.

NASON OIL (OMPANY

A Friend

Mrs. Robert Levasseur & Fam-ily

Mr. & Mrs. Leon PoyantMr & Mrs Edward L. RaymondMr. & Mrs. Donat CormierMr. & Mrs. Robert MasseMr. & Mrs. Ernest BernierMr. & Mrs. R. St. GelaisMr. & Mrs. Wilbrod DufourMr. & Mrs. Stephen YatesMr. & Mrs. Leo Pelletier

ST. MARY$1000

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Duchaine$100

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Boldiga. $35

Mr. & Mrs. John Maguire$30

IlmllUmmlllllrlttllllllll!lIlmmllllllllltll1,'UllllIlUlllUm,ummllllllllllll'lIl1IUllUlllllll

The Parish Parade

Masses "for Ascension Thurs­day will be celebrated at 4 P.M.and 7 P.M. Wednesday, May 30and at 7 A.M., 9 A.M., 12:15P.M., 4 P.M., 5 P.M. and 7 P.M.Confessions will be heard be­fore each' Mass.

The. feast of Espirito Santowill be celebrated the weekendof June 1 through 3.

The Holy -Name Society willmeet at a Communion breakfastfollowing 8 A.M. Mass Sunday,June 10: The unit will sponsora baseball trip to Boston Sunday,June 24. Tickets are now avail­able from Manuel· Faria andTony Michaels.

Children of Mary will markFathers' Day with a breakfastfollowing 8 A.M. Mass Sunday,June 17.

Holy Rosary Sodalists an­nounce a penny sale for 7 P.M.Friday, June 22 at the parish hall.

The annual blessing of autoswill take place at 1 Sundayafternoon in the church ,parkinglot.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER

OUR LADY OF VICTORY,CENTERVILLE

The Women's Guild will holdits annual Communion banquetat Cummaquid Inn Monday, June11 with ·Rev. George Coleman asfeatured speaker.

New officers will be installedat the June meeting. They areBarbara Murphy, president; Mrs.Jeanne Duane, first vice­president; Mrs. Dorothy Silves­tri, second vice-president; Mrs..Cathy McAlessse and Mrs. DianeDupont, secretaries; Mrs. CarolTenaglia, treasurer.

The unit has contributed toBirthright of Cape Cod.

FR. JOSEPH GALLAGHER

$65The Leblanc Family

$50Mr. & Mrs. Laurier CormierMr. & Mrs. Hilaire Tremblay

$40The Raphael Beaulieu Family

$30Lorraine R. C. Roy

$28Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Girard

$26 .Mr. & ~rs. Armand Lafond

$25Mr. & Mrs. Rene DufresneMr. & Mrs. George CoteDr. & Mrs. Gerald CarrierMr. & Mrs. Alfred Sylvia Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Roger QuintinMr~ & Mrs. Maurice Robillard

,Mr. &- Mrs. Isidore ViensMr. & Mrs. Gordon BarberMr. & Mrs. Raymond MethotMr. & Mrs. Joseph BeginMr. & Mrs. Herve CoutureMr. & Mrs. Frank BragaMrs. Sylvio LecomteMr. & Mrs. R. L'Heureux

111"'IIIIIIIIIIUIl""lIImtllll~I'IIIIIIII1IIIII1IIIIII""111l"mlllll1I11111111I"'UII''''WIW1,,,j;••

Leadership .A leader has two important.

characteristics: first, he -is go'ing'somewhere; second, he is ableto persuade other people to gowith him.-Robespierre

Priest PublishesBook of POe.,ns

NEW YORK (NC) - A priestknown throughout much of thzEnglish-speaking world as thetranslation editor of "The DOCLl'ments of Vatican II" has com,pleted a ~ook of 'poems.

The poet is Father Joseph Gal-- lagher of Baltimore, whose

"Painting on Silence: An Orches­tra of Poems" will be publishedJune 5' by Exposition Press inNew York.

Father 'Gallagher served forsome years as consulting editorand later .as executive editor ofThe Catholic Review in Balti­more. He: now teaches literarysubjects at St. M'lry's Seminaryand University in Baltimore.

His translations for. "The Doc­uments of Vatican' II" broughthim the National Catholic BooltAward. His other books includ.e"The Christian Under Pressure"and "The Story of Baltimore'sNew Cathedral."

He has written widely for ency­dopedias, ,magazines and news­.papers. ,

His new book of 112 pageswas descrJbed by JosephineJacobsen, a poetry consultant fO.rthe Library of Congress, a heart­warming 'and p!,!rfectly delightfulexperience, in which skill, witand insrght form a highly excep­tional whole. The book is funny,sad, and in its variety and hu­manity, truly exhilarating.

Be Exact

cookbook, read it carefully anddon't get discouraged at failures.I'm sure even Julia Childs hasher off days."

Anot'her important ingredientin learning to cook is to fo\low arecipe exactly. There will beplenty of time later on to getcreative but unless you have asolid' foundation of facts andtechniques behind you, constantfailure. will discourage even themost creative.'

For those women who have amother or mother~in-Iaw whocooks some dishes very well, Iwould adVise them to swallowtheir. pride and ask for somepointers. I suffered more crustfailures than I would care tomention until I got smart enoughto ask my mother-in-law (whohas a magic touch when it comesto ·pastry). Why not learn 'fromthose around you?

Enjoy cooking! It can be fun,it's creative and it's somethingyou're faced with almost everyday in the week, so why makeit drudgery?

This is a recipe I've had solong it's turning yellow with age,but it's still a very good one.

Scallops Broiled in Garlic Butter

2 ·Iarge doves garlic, peeledand spJ.it

% 'pound butter or mal'garine1%Tablespoons minced chives

or onions2 Tablespoons chopped pars-

ley% teaspoon dried tarragon% teaspoon salt)~ teaspoon pepper2 pounds scallops :1) Brown garlic in butter and

then'remove. Add onion and allthe seasonings.

2) Wash and rain the scallops.Place in a flat ovenproof dishand pour the seasoned 'butter,over them.

3) Preheat broiler and thenbroil about 3 minutes on eachside or until brown and bubbly.

New BedfordST. ANNE

$30Mr. & Mrs. Henri Constant

$25Mr. & Mrs. Arthur FontaineMr. & Mrs. Victor MorencyMr. & Mrs. Arthur PowellST. ANUiONY OF PADUA

$25Alfred GauthierDavid DumaisAlma Dufour

ST. JOSEPH$300

. Mr. & Mrs. Francis 'Sullivan$250

Mr. & Mrs. Marcel Roy$135

Mr. & Mrs. Francois Bouchard$100

Mr. & Mrs. G. Albert Roy &Family

Mr. & Mrs. Ernest DionneLaura Denault

Says It's Simple Proces\sTo Layer Azalea, Bushes

By Joe and Marilyn Roderick

The' time of y~ar has come when azaleas are in bloom;and they are something to see. There is no flowering shrubwhich has such an overall effect; azaleas supply a-burstof color which is delightful in early Spring. Most of theazaleas can be easily repro­duced from healthy motherplapts by layering. We havesuggested that people re­produce their azaleas but we areconstantly told that they haveno idea how to go about it. Theprocess cannot be simpler andis one which is relatively fool­proof. This works with low­growing, hushy varieties that canbe rooted in the ground while.still attached to the mother plant.

Takes Year or Two

Merely take a 'branch growJngclose to the. ground and awayfrom the front of the bush andbury it in soil an inch or twobelow the surface. Mound goodgarden soil over it and place alarge rock over it to anchor itin place. Leave it in this positionfor a year or two and then testit by pulling it up slowly to seewhethE;)r or not it is rooted.

If it is, it can be cut from themother plant and moved to itsown location in the gal'den. Abetter method, but one which Ifind unnecessary, is to make athin incision in the branch youselect for ·rooting, add a dab ofrooting hormone and mound itunder soil as in the above.

Using this m~thod, my fatherand I have managed to reproducealmost every variety of azaleawe have purchased. I have neverattempted to down even myazaleas, but they require air­layering which is another pro­cess altogether. The value of be­ing able to reproduce yourazaleas cannot be overstressed.Not only do you save money butmore importantly you are able tocoordinate colors of the samevarieties for a greater effect inthe garden.

In the Kitchen

It doesn't seem possible thatit was only 15 years ago that Iventured forth ,into the kitchento learn how to boil more thanwater. My mother was and is ahousewife who didn't encourageher daughter to spend her sparetime cooking. Probably, as Ilook back now, she realized thatI would have many years aheadto spend at that. hot stove.

But my husband who encour­aged me to learn cooking andatempted to down even myworst concoction, and thathelped me start on my kitchenduty with an open mind and aneagerness to .Jearn. This; coupledwith a natural' love of cookingthat I didn't know I had, mademe turn on to the Kitchen ratherthan turn off.

There'll be a large number ofgirls facing just this experiencewhen June rolls around and tnemonth of brides brings forth awhole new batch of' first-timecooks.

If I had any "less than sage"advice for these young femalesjust starting out in the kitchenI would say "Get yourself a &ood

...

Page 15: 05.24.73

Send, your gift to:

The Society for the Propagation of the Faith

.. •

o:c::

15

ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE

$35Walter Shoemaker Family

$25Joseph A. Duquette, Joseph H.

Belahger, Michael Kirkham

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 24, 1973

Swansea.ST. DOMINIC

$100Mrs. S. C. Walters

$35Mr'. & Mrs. Thomas Ryan

$30Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Paivao

$25Mr. & Mrs. Donald Souza, Mr.

& Mrs. Robert Evans, Mr. & Mrs.Lawrence Ferreira

Mary McLeodSt. Dominic's Women's Guild

The Rev. Monsignor Raymond T. ConsidineDiocesan Director368 North Main StreetFall River, Massachusetts 02720

Please give some love away today

OR

Because I love others, especially the poor in themissions, I enclose my special gift of $, _to be shejred with those who are the neediest.

p--_._-----------------IIIII

City State Zip _

remember the Society for the PropagationI of the Faith in your will

L ANCH-S-24-73 ...---------------------

ST. THOMAS MORE

$30Mr. & Mrs. John O'BrienJohn O'Neil

$25John Clorite, Mr. & Mrs. Gil·

hert LeonardMcClellan Fuel Company. Inc.

.$50Mr. & Mrs. Frank V. Medeiros,

Jr.$25

Mr. & Mrs. Gerard A. BoucherMr. & Mrs. Arthur Furtado

ST. PATRICK

$50Carleton D. BoardmanVincent J. Riley

$35In Memory of Patrolman Roy

L. Stout$25

Mr. & Mrs. John J. Ferry, Ar­mand Forand, Edward J. Leonard

Most Rev. Edward T O'MearaNational Director

Dept. C., 366 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10001

Ocean GroveST. MICHAEL

$80Rev. Edward J. Sharpe

$30Mr. & Mrs. John Szuba

$25Catholic Women's ClubE. I. CreamerJohn FallonMr. & Mrs. Edward Thompson

WestportOUR LADY OF GRACE

$50Rev. Rene R. Levesque

$25Marjorie Morin

Your "mission money" can't buyhappiness either, but it doesprovide the dailV needs of over135,000 missionaries serving

• the many needs of the world'spoor. It provides even thesmall services like newboy-sized crutohes for amissionary's friendwith polio.

Missionaries can't buy happiness forothers; they can only give it away

by,loving and serving.

His happiness Is themissionary's reward. Whenyou share In a missioner's

work - you shareIn his reward!

SomersetST. JOHN OF GOD

St. Vincent de Paul Conference$100

Judge & Mrs. Milton R. SilvaHoly Name Society

OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION

$100Mr. & Mrs. Robert GarrisonMrs. J. R. Smith

$40OLOA Holy Name Society

$35Joseph M. Ramos

$31Mrs. Palmira Silva

$25Mr. & Mrs. Antonio M. DaCruzMr. & Mrs. Antone GibauMrs. Charlotte F. PenaDorothy Lopes

HOLY NAME

$120George Rogers

$100Dr. & Mrs. Frank Leary

$25In Memory of Adams & Whit-

mer FamilyWilliam & Mary DemskyMr. & Mrs. Robert DoyleMr. & Mrs. Arthur FonsecaIn Memory of Mrs. Alice HillMr. & Mrs. Romeo J. B. Mag-

nantMr. & Mrs. Thomas MullarkeyEdward Smith Jr.Mrs. Francis s. Sullivan

Aluminum or Steel944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.992·10618

Central VillageST. JOHN BAPTIST

$300Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill

$50Dr. Peter Piccinini

$25St. John's Ladies' Guild

CONRAD SEGUINBODY COMPANY

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL

$100Mrs. Maria C. Ferro .1V!:t. Carmel Women's ClubMr. & Mrs: Virginio Macedo

$50Mr. & Mrs Hildeberto P. SousaMt. Carmel Conference of St.

VincentMr. & Mrs Lucilio M. Machado

$35Mt. Carmel Troop II Scouts &

ParentsMrs. Madeline Estrella

$30Edward JosephMr. & Mrs, Antonio Carvalho

de DeusMr. & Mrs. Jose PereiraMr. & Mrs. John Silvia Jr.

$27Mr. & Mrs. Lauran Silva

$26Antone Felix Jr.

$25Mt. Carmel Parent Teachers

Association, Mrs. Priscilla Melo,Mr. & Mrs. Peter Vincent, Mr.

& Mrs. Arthur Caetano, Kath·leen M. Bettencourt

Mr. &'Mrs Raymond MedeirosMr. & Mrs. Emidio Raposo, Mrs.Bertha Perry, Mr. & Mrs. ManuelTavares, Mr. & Mrs. KennethKing

Mr. & Mrs. Jose Sousa, CharlesFrates, A Friend (2), Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Felix, Mrs. Evelyn Raposa

Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Ventura,Aristides Medeiros

TactThe general story of mankind

will evtince that ,lawful and set­tled authority is very seldom reosisted when it is well employed.

......Johnson

New BedfordST. LAWRENCE

$150Dr. & Mrs. William O'Donnell

$100Dr. & Mrs. Joseph BuckleyA FriendRev. Thomas E. O'DeaDr. & Mrs. Robert DurantIn Memory of Rev. William R.

JordanDr. & Mrs. Stanley KoczeraMary DowneyDr. & Mrs. Robert Small

$75Ruth B. McFadden

$70Mr. & Mrs. George McGovern

$60Mrs. Mary B. Wheaton

$50Mr. & Mrs. John TierneyMargaret AustinMr. & Mrs. Arthur KirkwoodCol. S. Ross LangloisMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. LongMr. & Mrs. Frank MahonHope McFaddenHelen & Elizabeth O'ConnorMr. & Mrs. Joseph V. SmithMr. & Mrs. John TierneyA Friend

$35Mr. & Mrs. Albert AndersonMr. & Mrs. Nelson DumaineMr. & Mrs. Willis GoodwinMr. & Mrs. Harry HuntMr. & Mrs. James RyanMr. & Mrs. Thomas RyanMr. & Mrs. Edwin SilveiraMr. & Mrs. Charles Phelan

$32Mr. & Mrs.. David Bancroft

$30 .Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. BurkeMr. & Mrs. Walter LoveridgeMr. & Mrs. Manuel MacedoMr. & Mrs. Paul CurryA Friend (2)Mr. & Mrs. Charles BurkeM,rs. Edward Lyons

$27In Memory of Alan Moriarty

$25'Mr. & Mrs. Harold Barton,

Mary Brimley, Laura Culhane,Ellen Downey, Margaret Downey

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Duffy,Mary Duffy, D. L. Hathaway & .Sons, Mr. & Mrs. John Hughes,Mr. & Mrs. William H. King

Paul LeBouf, Mr. & Mrs. PeterLemos, Joseph Meggison, Mrs.Bernard Murphy, Ellen A. Sul­livan

Mrs. Amrose Smith & Family,Mr. & Mrs. John Sullivan, Mrs,George Breen, A Friend (2)

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Fredette, Mr.& Mrs. James Gaughan, HelenF. Moore, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Per­ry, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Touhey

SACRED HEART$50

St. Vincent de Paul of SacredHeart Parish

$35Mr. & Mrs. Pierre Seguin

$25Mr. & Mrs. Donald DesautelsMr. & Mrs. Francis O. GrenonMr. & Mrs. Robert G. PeckhamMr. & Mrs. Arthur Trahan

OUR LADY 0J0" FATIMA$100

Rev. LeQnard M. Mullaney. $25Mr. & Mrs. Leo DoyonMr. & Mrs. Roland Gaouette JrMr. & Mrs. Edward GenesteMr. & Mrs. Roland PoirierMr. & Mrs. Francis Schellen-

berger

Page 16: 05.24.73

FAITHYOURKNOW16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973_________~---_--------------.IOl-~--------------------

.. ,1;.

valved ·in allowing a jury orjudge to sort through the evi­denceand pass judgment.

If divine Judge and judgmentmean anything, they mean noneof these things. As Judge, Godis the final and only aI1biter ofright and wrong, true arid false,law and disorder. More impor­tantly, he 'is the creator of theright, truth and law on whiohjustice <is decided. But he ismore than aJudge too.

Self-KnowledgeHe is the transcendent master

of this world, the loving saviorof men, and our shepherd andFa'ther. If Judge "counterbal·ances" these truths to suoh anextent that they are cancelledout or erased, then our under­standing of this Judge is faulty.If he is, then our response to himhas to be one of gratitude andjoy-not fear and trembling.

What is dear from this v,iewof God as Judge is the partplayed by man. Guided by con­soience or the demands. growingout of faith, man really knowswhere he stands with this Judge.Such knowledge of innocenceand guilt, of course, is possibleeven in our human courts, butfor various reasons men will in­sdst on their 'innocence and doeverything to avoid being found

Turn to Page Seventeen

fearful rimage of God to her earlyreligious education, but Who cansay where the seeds of fear wer.esown.

In any event her situationmade me reflect on how we pre­sent God as a judge to children,adolescents, and adults ,in thevarious forms of catechesis.

. There is no avoiding the factthat the Judaeo-Christian tradi­tion-incl'Uding the teachings ofJesus .lin the Gospels - portrayGod as a judge. He is always de­scrIbed as a "just" judge, whosepassion for justice is temperedby his compassionate mercy.

Matthew's GospelThe religious educator cannot

hedge on this. God, the. Fatherof Jesus, 'is the judge of the liv­ing and the dead. The serious­ness of thris judgmental role issensed in the dramatic descrip­tion of judgment found in Sot.Matthew's Gospel, Chapter 25.The good are separated 'from thewicked and· sent to unendinghappiness or horror.

Perhaps the key to presentingGod as judge without instillingirrational fear of him lies inpointing out that judgment isreally made by oneself, by one'spersonal moral choices. God of­fers love, forgiveness, seventimes seventy chances. But eachperson has the capacity to blockoff Gael's offer of love throughsin: through selfishness. God willnot force man's freedom. His at­titude is constantly open, posi­tively trying to share himselfwith man.

Turn to Page Eighteen

Just JQdge•IS aGod

-As I was packing up my notes

aJ ter most of the teachers hadIe ft the auditorium, a middle­aged woman came up to me. Shehud tears in her. eyes, and h!1dohviously waited until almoste1'eryone had gone.

"F,a'ther,", she said, "your de­sc ription of God was very beau­ti'uI. But I can only feel feartc ward God. I know with mymind that he is good, but myfeelings react to him orily as ajudge who is watching my everym:>ve."

The pain she so obviously. felttcuched me deeply. For what­e\ er reasons,God was to her01' Iy a judge, and a demandingju1ge at that. She attributed her

By

FR. CARL J.

PFEIFER, S.J.

By

The reaotion to the idea ofGod's judgment has been and1 till remains rather gI1im andfrightening. For many preachers1hroughout the ages, it has beenthe 1:ruth introduced by God andfaith to "counterbalance" an ex­(essive optimism or smugness, bout being saved. And for manyChristians, unfortunately, thelinage of God the Judge is bestr ut off until tomorrow or forgot­t3n altogether.

In some ways, however, werlUst deal wHh the idea of a di­\ ine Judge. The immediate im­J: ulse is to associate him with theciy.il courtroom, the agonizingJ: rocess of prosecution and de­.f~nse ane!- th~ uncertarinty in-

"He will come to judge the.,iving and the dead." With these

.Jr like words, Christian creedsjirect our faith to the final ac­)ion of Jesus Christ in the mys­;ery of salvation.

God~-The Judge!'

BRO. JAMES P.

tLiFTON

. I had just finished a lectureon "God." It was part of a teach­e: training program for volunteerc Itechists. My talk tracedt lrough the Bible and later tra­d itJion the fundamental Judaeo­Christian conv.iction that God isa God of 'loV'e, compassion, andc Ire. I had explored traditionals: rmbols that suggest God's good­n ~ss toward all that he creates:" 5hepherd," "Father," Brkle­g·oom."

Shun FearAs Luke· i21 puts it: "When

these things begin to take place,'look 'Up and raise your heads, be­cause your redemption is draw­ing near." i

How is all this -possible? Isjudgment then not really a "dayof wrath, a dreadful day" as weused to. hear sung at funeralMasses? "Ev¢n the just shall fearthat day" according to the DiesIrae.

According' to the New Testa­ment, God does not wa:nt the

Turn to Page Eighteen

idea come's out even moredearly, bec1iuse,as John's Gos­'Pel puts it: i'the Father judges no

. one, but has given all judgmentto the Son" (John 5, 22). Godwill judge us only throughChrist, and Christ is our Savior.He will judge us only throughbis Son, but "God sent the Sonrinto the world, not to condemnthe world, 'but 'that the worldmight be saved through him"(John 3, 17).

That is Why the New Testa­ment attitude, 100kJing f.:>rward.to the reaHty of judgment, isnot fear and terror, but longingand hope. The Book of Revela­tion describes how the last dayswill shake all the powers of thisworld. In the last chapter of thebook, Jesus i says: "Behold ,I amcoming soon, bringing my rec­ompense, 1:0 repay every one ac-

,cording to his works." And theproper response of the Christianfollows at ronce: "Come,. LordJesus."

SHARING OF JOY: "Then shall all the. trees of the woodsing for joy before the Lord, for he comes, ..." A motor­cyclist rears up joyfully among trees which seem to sharehis happiness. NC Photo.

the Lord, for he comes, for hecome to judge the earth.

"He will judge the world withrighteousness and the peopleswith his truth." (Psalm 96, 11-13)

Judgment: Hope

In the New Testament this

I have tried throughout to'combine theory and practice, theabstract and the concrete, whatought to be and what aotually is.To achieve this and to ,insure acertain variety of approach, mycolumns' fall into several cate7gories. .

-Renewed Liturgies-A descrip~ion of rites and de·

crees from official sources. These·important texts gene'rally makepretty dull newspaper reading,but they do exert a significanteffect upon Roman Catholic wor­ship in the United States. To·~eep readers informed and espe·cially to give priests and allothers actively involved in plan­ning or executing par,ish liturgiesan easily available, popularlywritten source' of such informa­tion, I include as the occasiondictates a digest of recently is..:sued documents.

Over the past five years wehave seen many of these revisedrituals published by the Holy Seeand author.ized in an English ver­nacular version by our American

Turri to Page Seventeen

An Overall View

By

The paragraphs which followwm attempt to do that. It seems,incidentallY,an appropriate timeto stop and offer a long range,general view of this columnwhich seeks to link worship andthe world, liturgy and life. I saythat because it began in Decem­ber, 1969, has run for nearly 200weeks and next week heads into·a new summer s~ries.

FR. QUENTIN

QUESNELL, S.J.

God Judges With Love

All the other titles we havelooked at so far have turned outto be facets of God's love. ChI1is­tians often forget that fhe sam~

thing is true of God our Judge.His justice and his judgmentneed not be frightening things,they too are one more side of hisall-encompassing love. God ourJudge is the same God we haveknown as Shepherd, Bridegroomand Father.

Even in the Old Testament, theday of judgment to come is not atime of terror for God's people.Israel looks forward to it as to atime of vindicat,ion. Those whohave trusted in God will not beconfounded. All the world willsee that they were right~their

God is King, and he· will showhimself faithful to those he has.chosen.

"Let the heavens be glad andlet the earth rejoice; let the searoar, 'and all tha't fills it; let thefield exult and everything in it!

"Then shall all the trees ofthe wood sing for joy before the

By

We know that God will be ourJudge. That may not sound likea very happy thought with whichto bring to an end this seriesof meditations on God's titles.But it is very true. And it is,after all, the truth with whichour lives will end. It is just aswell to face it.

Charles Mahon, editor of theCatholic Virgin'ian, a diacesannewsp~per subscribing to theKnow Your Faith religious edu­caNon series, suggested to methe other day that an articlegiving the overall "raison d'etre"for this column on the liturgywould be helpful to readers.

!

FR. JOSEPH M.

CHAMPLIN

Page 17: 05.24.73

..

17THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 24, 1973

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God JudgesContinued from Page Sixteen

guilty. In their hearts, they knowwhether or not they are innocent.Before God's judgment seat, thisself-knowledge is all that willcount.

ProcessDivine judgment, is, first of

all, a continuing, ever-presentprocess. Through conscience andfa'ith, we place ourselves underour own and God's judgment ofour infidelity to what is deman­ed of us. The fiinal judgment willnot be a surprise, and we are notmeant to live in dread of sur­prise or hidden evidence that willtip the scales of God's judgment.

Secondly, for those who sin­cerely commit themselves to thisJudge who wishes to show mer­cy rather than punishment, thejudgment is one of vindicationand salvation. We are not crim­inals fearful of the crushing ver­dict of the divine judge. We arehis servants, loved ones, sheep,children.

Only those who refuse theguidance of conscience and faith

"have ,to fear God. But again thejudgment 'is already present; thesevere sentence of the just Judgewill come as no surprise. Thissomber side to reality and toman's choices about his relation­ship with .God ~s not one thatshould instill fear in us, not dfcur fidelity is sincere and con­stant. But it is a reminder thatchoice Hke judgment is a cont,in­ual reality. It also makes com­passion and efforts for the con­verslion of sinners more than apious platitude.

both the very young and matureadult, I am convinced more thanever that the story, for example,the flesh and blood illustration isneeded in class to hold interestand communicate a principle un­der discussion. Regular followersof this column will, I am sure,testify that I observe a similarapproa,ch in my writing.

Call the ColumnistPeople normally enjoy hearing

about specific instances of goodliturgies. They want to know ofworship experIences which actu­ally "worked." From these suc­cessfully creative efforts, theycan gain ideas and ~nspiration

for their own parish, convent orschool situation.

Fortunately, those responsiblefor such fruitfiul programs havebeen most generous lin sharingthese with me over the past fouryears. On trips for lectures ormeetings throughout the nationI am always on the lookout, hop­ing to discover a unique worship­ing community or learn of a par­ticularly powerful liturgy whichI can later describe to readers.

At this time I would like to in­vite 'letters from persons whofeel they have a liturgical event,progr.am or approach whichmight prove beneficial to other·s.Drop me a note at Holy FamilyRectory, 45 West Fourth Street,Fulton, N. Y.· 13069. Please in­clude details and your telephonenumber. In this way I can followup more easily the especiallypromising suggestions orexperi­ences.

An Overall ViewContinued from Page Sixteen

bishops. To cite a few of themajor texts, we presently use areformed Order of Mass, lection­ary, rite for Baptism, marriage,funerals and Confirmation.

This year Catholics in ourcountry will 'also witness the in­troduction of renewed litur,giesfor the Christian intiation ofadults, anointing of the sick and,possibly, the sacrament of Pen­ance. This column hopes to keep'readers informed about these de­velopments.

.Work of SharingA report on activities here at

Holy Family. I would not want togive the impression of maintain­ing that our parish here in Fultonserves as a mod·el for others orthat our Sunday and special oc­casion liturgies have an extra­ordinary character about them.

Our church in fact is beautiful,the parishioners magnificent,and our celebrations, carefullydone; praye11fiul, peaceful, re­laxed, often very moving. But weform a quite ordinary Christiancommunity, struggling like ev­eryone week after 'Yeek to deep­en our fa,ith and lintensify ourlove for the Lord and for all per­sons. When something "works"for us, I like to share this withreaders, trusting they may findencouragement in the sometimessuccessful· efforts of a typicalparish liturgy program.

-A report on successful andimaginative liturgical celebra­tions in the United States. After17 years of teaching religion to

YOUTH LECTOR: "After 17 years of teaching religion. to both the very young and the mature adult, I am moreconvinced than ever that the story, for example, the fleshand blood illustration is' needed in class to hold interestand cc;>mmunicate. a principle under discussion." A teacherin Louisville uses a live example to show children howto read Scripture at an upcoming Mass for First Communi­cants. NC Photo.

Will KeepAlive

But ·if younger Jesuit scholarswish to fallow the academicfashions of a couple of years ago,they will not cease to be Jesuitsor part of the Jesuit tradition forthat reason. The real problem forthe Society-or so it seems to anuninvited outsider - is whetherit can become more pluralistic,more flexible, more sophisticated.in meeting the challenges of ,thecontemporary era without at thesame time condemning, muchless losing, traditions that haveheld ,it together and made such aglorious contribution to theChurch and to humankind.

Education A!,ostolatc

I didn't become a Jesuit most­ly because I didn't want to be­come a high school or collegeteacher (and the Lord God Yah­weh is probably still !Iaughing atthat!). But I had no doubt thenand less now that the education­'al apostolate of the Jesuits in theUnited States was an extraordi­narily generous, imaginative, cre­ative, and successful enterprise.If that apostolate is to be mod- \ified to meet the needs of chang­ing. ciroumstances, I shall notcomplain; but if that apostolateis eliminated, and eliminated par-

. ticularly on the grounds that itwas worthless, then I am sorry,my Jesuit brothers, ,I shall bevery angry at you.

What's more if Jesuits movemore and more into the fine andlively arts, I shall clap my handswitJh enthusiasm and mutter sot­to voice, "I told you ten yearsago that you should be doingjust that." But if they forget thatfor several decades AmerkanCatholic intellectualism was vir­tua11y indistinguishable from theSociety of Jesus, and if theyabandon that element of theirtradition that was so brilliantlyrepresented by John Murray andGustave Weigel, and JosephFlichter, I for. one will be' .hop­ping mad.

'J1he Time t8rticle suggests thatin the midst of all the filuidityand the friction, the spirit of St.Ignatius of Loyola is still' aliveand well. I certainly hope so. TheIgnatian tradition is 'not mine,but it is one that I value andrespect, and I think the Churchwould be poorer without it.

© 1973, Inter/Syndicate. ,

By

REV.

ANDREW M.

GREELEY

Hopes JesuitsIgnatian Tradition

Gary Wills' notorious Playboypiece (which many say led to theclosing of Woodstock College­one supposes that Mr. Wills ishappy for at least hav,ing gottenhis revenge on his novice master).In Time, the complexity, the plu­ralism, the conflicts, the prob­lems, the possibilities of contem­porary Jesuit life were, ,I thought,treated in a sophisticated andbalanced fashion. I'm an outsider,of course, and couldn't say forsure, but most of the Jesuits Iknow were satisfied and evenpleased with fhe article.

'New Jesuits'

I like Jesuits; I studied willithem for seven years, and wasnever particularly tempted tobecome one of their number, yetI always had a profound respectfor their spirIt and their work.I have watched with dismay thecrisis the Society has gonethrough in the past decade, andread with sinking heart the vari­ous articles by the "new Jesuits,"descr,ibing what being a Jesuitmeant to them, articles whichwere generally written just be­fore the Jesuit in question an­nounced his intention to leavethe pries~hood and get married.

I have always been shaken upby the periodic stories in TheNew York Times about Jesuitsbecoming interior decorators,sta1ge designers, directors of un­derground movies or politicalcandidates. I don't mind partic­ular priests or Jesuits engagingin that sort of activity; whattroubled me was that ~any ofthe priests in question seemedgl.ib and facile in writing off thework that had been done bytheir predecessors.

It was not merely that noone wanted to be a high schoolteacher any more. It seemed thatno one respected the work thatthe high school teachers used todo-and of course that somecontinue to do. Cavorting aroundtown playing Harlequin was"witJh it." Being in a classroo!llall day with adolescents waspasse. One would like to thinkthere was room for both. .

Glorious Contribution

Then there ,are the youngerJesuit scholars at the so-calledCenter for Concern. That they

The Time cover story on the Jesuits was one of thebetter pieces ,of religious journalism that has emerged inthe popular press in the last decade-though since MayoMohs took over as religion editor of Time that journal hasbeen remarkably free of the .stereotypical cliches about are "concerned" is obviouschanging Catholicism, which enough; they' certainly tell us

that tn every one of their presshave become part of the releases. It is much more diffi­,journalistic conventional wis- cult, as a Jesuit sociologist re­<10m. marked to me somewhat cynical-

One' need only compare the Iy, "to tell what it is that COli­

Time article on the Jesu.its with cerns them."

One thing that does not seemto be on their list of priorities,alas, is concern for responsible,careful, and dispassionate schol··arshi<p. Gary Wills tells us thatJohn Courtney Murray is pass::!~indeed, more than that, he wasthe "theologian of the cold war."No doubt about it, John Murraywould have had no place at theCenter for Concern.

Page 18: 05.24.73

18 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 24, 1973.

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Caring Father.

God, the judge of all mankind,is not an angry tyrant hurlingpoor sinners into the fires ofhell. He is rather a deeply caringFather who respects each per-·son's freedom.

As judge, God prouounces sen- ­tence in the sense that he rati­fies a person's free choice - afree ohoice God"himself respects.Judgment reveals how seriouslyGod respects' human freedom.

God·..·The JudgeContinued from Page Sixteen

just to fear that day. He wantsthem to know and to rememberthat as he h'ascreated them outof love, so he will judge themout of love.

"Work out your salvation withfear and trembling," says St.Paul (Philippians 2, 12). Hewants us to he conscious of our'weakness, eager for the gift ofGod's grace, "solicitous for everygood work."

Pauline View

But' when we have done whatwe could, when the past is t'e­'hind us and God's judgment lliesahead, then Paul reassures us:"There is, now no condemnationfor those who are in Ghr.ist Jesus. .. If God is for us, who can bea'gainst us? .. Who shall bI'lingany charge aga'inst God's chosenones? God, who justifies? Whoshall condemn them? Christ Je­sus? He who died, who wasraiS'ed up, who ·is at 'the right

'hand of God and who intercedesfor us?"

Then he wants us to go toj'Udgment say;ing "I am certainthat ,neither death nor me,neither 'angels nor principaH­t'ies, neither the present nor thefuture, nor powers, neitherheight nor depth nor any other"creature, will be able to 'sep"arate us from the ,love of God,tha't comes to us in Christ Jesus,OUf Lord" (Romans 8,1.32-3538f.)

C;od is a' Just Judgeopened their hearts to God by Knowing our own weakness, andreaching out to the needy.' know.ing God's deep care for us

through J€SUS Christ, we need tohelp others 'grow dn an awareness'of God as wholly good, totallycommitted to our hapoiness, butprofoundly honest in respectingman's deepest free moral choices.

TAUNTON SERRANS HONOR BISHOP: Principals at the annual Bishop's Nightconducted by the Taunton Serra Club were: Mr. & Mrs. John Pereira, president of theTaunton Serra Club; Bishop ( ronin and Rev. James F. Lyons, pastor of St. Mary's Parish,chaplain.

""I""'lllllll1l1lmmttl"!"IlI"IIIIII,'IIII'IlI11I!l!lIIll1llltlflllllll1IIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIUlllll1ll':l'.~

Brian Casey fascinates andbaffles th'e reader quite as muchas' he does Sam Perkins. He has

I .the tang of reality and the lutl:1of mystery. There are only hintsof ah explanat,ion, and the read.er is Hk,ely to keep worryin·gthese long after he h'as finishe<Sreading this distinctive, superblywritten, publishing book

, 'George M'John McCabe, the perceptive

author of George M. Cohan: TMMan 'Who Owned liIroadw8l1(Doubleday, 277 Park Ave., NewYork, N. Y. 10017. $7.95. mus·trated), says that the :invariab;einclusion: of an element of mys·tery in <I:ohan's plays accountsfor the popularity of these light.weight, hastily dashed off butartful theatrical vehicles.

Cohan i::tied more than 20 yearsago, and. his day of glory hadthen long since passed. Yet tlj)was a phenomenon worth re­memberirig, and the author sug­gests that his best work could b~

profitably revived. I wonder.His plays, ,if insubstanWll,

were notable for his apt use ofthe vernacular; their speech wMdirect, un:adorned, with a homelyring. They were skillfully paced.He was an eX'traoidinaJ:ily giftedprofessio~al, and .he workcehard. I •

Mr. McCabe's book is no nos­talgk puff, but a serious analysisof a magic which seldom fa'i1cdwhen the master was in form. Ithas vanished beyond retrieval orimitation.

Continued from Page SixteenWhen, ~hro.ugh fully deliberate

serious sin, man rejects God'sgradous ~ove, he ·condemns him.self,to the ceaseless hell of aliCll'l·ation of lbneliness, of pain. God,the judge; can only confirm thajudgment already arr.ived at i11Jthe heart of each one. As Jesusdescribes the judgment, the judgebrings to 'light what has alreadybeen accomplished-some livedas if only they mattered, closingtheir hearts to the sick, lonely,poor, and thus closing the:rhearts to Christ himself. Others

in simuIa't'ion and dissimulation,and clever in establishing a pub­lic image at odds with the actu­ality.

There has always been specu­lation concerning the Rooseve!.!s'

. attitude to AI Smith, the manwho induced Franklin Rooseveltto run for the governorship ofNew York in 1928. EUiotl Roose­velt's testimony is that his fatherhad little if any ,real regard forSmith, who is here characterizedas a "cigar-che.....,:ing Catholte."Can you imagine anything worse?

On ,the basis of this outing.Elliott Roosevelt will get no highmarks for piety. His protests of'delicate concern for veracity and"the American tradition of logcabin democracy" sound hollow.But he does give us at least somescraps of informaotion whichmodify the popularly receivedpicture.

Always Be KindA polio victim who runs for

the presidency and -is defeated, asthe principal chara.cter in WilfridSheed's novel People Will 'AI·ways Be Kind (Farrar, Strausand Giroux, 19 Union. Square,West, New York, N. Y. 10003.$7.95).

This is not a book for thesqueamish or the suggestible. Itsdialogue, its sexual passages, itsabrasiveness are I·ikely to giveoffense to anyone not acclimatedto the style of contemporaryfiction. .

There are two sections, the,first called "Backgrounder," thesecond "The Per~ins Papers."

In the first, an ebullient IrishCatholic New Yorker, BrianCasey, aged 16, is stricken with.polio. He is deterinined to over­come Jts' effects. Home therapyfails. He insists on going to asouthern hospital reputed' towork wonders. It· proves to bea nightmarish fraud. He then de­mands to be sent to Lourdes; thetrip does not materialize.

He adjusts, more or less rag­ingly, to his extensive disability,returns to high school, goes onto Columbia, where he gets intocampus 'Politics.

Contradictory QualitiesMany years haVE! passed before

the beginning of "The PerkinsPapers," supposedly the work ofSam Perkins, just out of Harvard.By this time, Brian Casey is U. S.Senator from New York, and a.candidate for the· Democraticpresidential nomination. Perkinsjoins his staff as a speechwriter .and campaign biographer.

He is fascinated. by Casey, byhis charm and his ,guile, his skep­ticism and his f,aith, his cynicism_and his ideaHsm, his discernment·and hi~ brutality. Casey is a baf-.ling mixture, of contradictoryqualities, always taking oue bysurprise, showing an unexpectedfacet.

In his try for the nomination,and then his bid for the presiden­cy, he'seems a combination of atleast two recently prominentDemocrats, but with qualitiesdisUinctly his own, and of coursewith some echoes of FranklinRoosevelt.

By

RT. REV.

MSGR.

JOHN S.

KENNEDY

Elliott Reveals UntoldStory of The Roosevelts

In An Untold Story: The Roosevelts of Hyde Park (Put­nam, 200 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. 10016. $7.95.Illustrated), Elliott Roosevelt, assisted by James Brough,is not sounding a paean to his parents, Franklin and EleanorRoosevelt On the otherhand, the much tQutedscandalous features of thebook are hardly mo"re thanincidental.

Mr. Roosevelt asserts that, inwriting this book, he -is moti­vated by an anxious regard for

the truth. He wants to set therecord straight, and thus. servehistory. The President was not"unbelievably great," his wifewas not "unfailingly gracious:'They were "two real human be­'ings." Well, that's mighty goodto know.

The marriage, opposed by theformidable Sara Delano Roose­velt, was not for long a happyone. After 1918, says EniottRoosevelt, it was a marriage inname only. Franklin Rooseveltwas attracted to other women,and had long-term affaIrs withtwo of these, both Oatholic.

,In some ways, the most impor­tant rela,tionship in Franklin Roo­sevelt's life, according to his son,was that with Louis M. Howe,the ugly, unkempt former news­paperman who plotted Roose­velt's course ,toward the pres- .idency. Howe had a principalpart, too, in pointing EleanorRoosevelt to 'Public life and pre­pa,ning her ,for it..

Polio SiegeElJ:iott Roosevelt maointains

that his father and Howe wereaiming for the presidency for 20years before the successful effortof 1932. They never consideredthat Franklin Roosevelt's severecrippling by polio in 1921' hadended or would even delay thisque~t. In fact, their scenario wasspeeded; the year they had inmind all along was 1936.

As for the polio siege, thebook declares ,it a myth that "insome mysterious fashion,polio

.completely 'changed (FranklinRoosevelt's nature) ... Through­out his adult life, his was theSaJITle, consistent personality ...There was just one, purely 'Phys-.icaldJifference: After 1921 hecould not walk."

"Another legend, which per­sists to this day, had it that adevoted wife, with virtually nooutside help, nursed her spi,ritlesshus~nd )hrough the rav,agingdisease;" Not so. And EleanorRoosevel,t is taxed Wlith spread­ing an illusion about the circum­stances of her husband's illness;

Eager for Pow_el'Indeed, the book is harder on

her than on Franklin Roosevelt.She is chal1ged with being consis­tently cold to her children; eagerfor power (the euphemism for~hich is "public serV'ice"), expert

..

Page 19: 05.24.73

FOLK PROGR~S: Rev. Andre Patenaude, M.S. with Folk Group of St. Patrick'sparish, Somerset. Father Patenaude will appear with the group at St. Anne's School,Fall River, tomorrow night, and members will participate in a folk festival he is direct­ing Sunday at La Salette Shrine, Attleboro.

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S.M.U.'s track in North Dart­mouth will be the scene of thesecond annual C.Y.O. DiocesanTrack Meet scheduled for 1o'clock on Sunday afternoon,June 17. New Bedford AreaC.Y.O. will be the host for theevent.

Entries will be accepted fromthe Fall River, Attleboro, Cape,Taunton, New Bedford, andSomerset-Swansea Areas. Con­testants will ,be chosen by ·areaC.Y.O. directors and coaches.Any performer born after Jan­uary I, 1954 will be eligible.. Running events include the100 yard dash, the 220, the 440,the 880 relay, the mile, and thetwo mile.

IField events include the discus,the long jump, the triple jump,the shotput and the high jump.:

Awards will be presented tothe first three in each event andthe winning relay squad.

A special trophy will heawarded to the outstanding per­former of the meet and theBisho;> Daniel A. Cronin Trophywill be won by the area with thehighest point total.

Area entries for Fall Rivermust be received by Rev. PaulF. McCarrick, Diocesan C.Y.O.Director, by June 11 tho

The same date applies for allareas.

AtNeboro Area: Father Don­old Bowen, St. Mary's, Norton.

FaIl River: Durfee Cooch Reg­inald }lela,gio.

New Bedford Area: N. B. HighCoach John Pontes.

Cape Cod Area: Coach JohnCarroll of Lawrence High, Fal­mouth.

Taunton Area: Dr. MichaelMcCarty, Coyle-Cassidy coach.

Somerset-Swansea Area: CoachRobert Lane, Somerset High.

THE ANCHOR- 19Thurs., May 24, 1973

eyo Track M'eetJun'e 17 at SMU

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Father Patenaude was assignedto the La Salette Shrine in At­tleboro as Music Director. Sincethen he has heen actively in­volved in the prayer and songprograms at the Shrine. He hasalso sponsored Folk Festivals inAttleboro anq ,Enfield, N. H., haslectured extensively to Confra­,ternity of Christian Doctrinegroups and has provided musicfor ecumenical and other com­munity and religious events inthe area.

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Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Camara,Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Sardinha

the ecumenical festival as ane~position of contemporary folkmusic used today in all ·faiths.He says, ",Folk music is terriblyhonest and, therefore, meaning­ful if one takes the .time tostudy the words and absorb theirmeaning." ,

A native of Fall River, FatherPatenaude is the son of Mrs.Jeannette and the late ArmandPatenaude. His mother still re­sides in the city.

After his ordination in 1969,

Schedule

Women's

$30A Friend

$25St. Jean-Baptiste

Guild, A Friend

ST. ELIZABETH$250

Rev. Daniel L. Freitas$35

St. Vincent de Paul Society$25

Anthony Rodrigues & Family,St. Elizabeth's Guild, St. Eliza­beth's Holy Name

ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT

. $100Dr. & Mrs. Andre Nasser

$75Rev. Norman J. Ferris

. $50Dr. & Mrs. Amine MaaloufAnonymous

$25Lt. Col. & Mrs. J. Abdullah,

Mrs. August Badway, Mrs. LouisBadway, Mr. & Mrs. Salli Shaker,Mr. & Mrs. Mitchell Sweet

Mrs. Viola Badwey

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE$50

St. Vincent de Paul StoreA Fl1iend

It will he a busy weekend forRev. Andre Patenaude, M.S. ofLa Salt;!tte Shrine, Attleboro. At7:30 tomorrow night he willappear with the Folk Group ofSt. Patrick's' parish, Somerset,in "An Evening with Father Pat"at St. Anne's School auditorium,240 Forest St., Fall River. Themultimedia presentation. will fea­ture compositions by FatherPatenaude as well as by Reneand Louis Lepage, directors ofthe Somerset group. Proceedswill benefit St. Anne's School,and tickets will be available atthe door.

On Sunday the young La Sa­lette missioner will direct thefourth annual Hillside Folk Fes­tival at the Attleboro shrine,'beginning at npon with a folkMass. The Somerset group willalso participate in this event.

Meaningful MusicFather Patenaude has planned

SANTO CHRISTO

$200'-Rev. Antonio C. Tavar~s

$100In Memory of Mr. & Mrs.

Just'ino Simoes$25

Mr. & Mrs. Henry Archam­bault, Jesse Carvalho, AnLbal G.Lage, Mr. & Mrs. Louis S. Ma­chado, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel F.Martins

Mrs. Herculana· Raposa, Mr.& Mrs. John F. Victor, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Vioak

Fall RiverSA'CRED HEART

$225Dr. Daniel L. Mooney

$100Elizabeth M. TrainorMr. & Mrs. H.'Frank ReillySacred Heart Women's Guildin Memory of May H. Healey

$75Leonard J. Hughes

$50Edward J. DelaneyMr. & Mrs. Antone F. Feno Jr.Crace L. MartinGeorge DriscollMargaret Morris

$45Mr. & Mrs. Manuel J. Soares

$40In Memory of Mary C. DowdMichael J. CoughlinMrs. Francis Dolan

$35Catherine O'Neiljohn T. O'NeilAnna G. McCarty

$30The Coughlin Family

• $25William F. White Jr.Letetia A. Lynch, Mrs. John

P. Fleming, Margaret Maynard,Mr. & Mrs. Omer Boucher, Mrs.Ruth Cutting

John F. Coyle, Elizaeth Crow­ley, Mary Grandfield, Mr. & Mrs.James W. Steele, In Memory ofHorace Hall

Kathryn & Lillian Madden,Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Beland, Dr.Edward J. Steinoff, Margaret F.Lenaghan .

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Coogan,Mary Louise O'Sullivan, Geral­cline O'Sullivan, In Memory ofMrs. Mary E. Gingras, Mr. & Mrs.Arthur Donovan

Mr. & Mrs. John Patota, Mr.& Mrs. ~homas J. Dolan, Mr. &Mrs. Kenneth Leger

ST. ANNE

$250Oominican Fathers

$100St. Vincent de Paul Society

(St. Anne's Conference)$35

Dr. & Mrs. Alphonse V. Poirier$32

Mr. & Mrs. Reginald BeIlerive$30 .

The Gauthier Family$26

Mr. & Mrs. Benoit Canuel$25

. Aime Gamelin, Mr. & Mrs.Wilfrid Pare, Mr. & Mrs. AndrePI'ante, Mr. & Mrs. Roland Sorel,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Toole

Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Travers,Mr. & Mrs. Rene Tremblay

Mr. & Mrs. Edward C. BerubeMr. & Mrs. Ernest DupreMr. & Mrs. Manuel BotelhoMr. & Mrs. Robert HamelMrs. Blanche LapointeThe Martineau. FamilyImelda St. GeorgesMr. & Mrs Bernard G. Theroux

Page 20: 05.24.73

A Friend

*

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~1ade from rustic California Redwood and5:> rugged it will last for years and years. Allcushions are vat dyed, mildew-resistant andv!ater repellent. Individual pieces may be~ urchased separately.

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P L Iy M 0 U T H A V E. A T R q D MAN 5 T. F ALL R I V E R

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GROUP C -!Handsome Setteewith 2 matching loungeChairs and End Table fl)r porch

or lawn:

_. - •.• ,._ ~,~,_" ..J..,

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 24, 1973

20

A FriendMr. John Mantez '

$25In Memory of Antone Ferreira,

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Almeida, Mr.Joao Borges Jr., Lucille. LeVas­seur, Mr. Seraphim Machado

Mr. Joseph Mantez, Mr. &Mrs. Jeremias Rego, Mr'. & Mrs.Francisco Silvia, Mr. AgostinhoViveiros

Our Lady of Health Young,Mens Association, Mr. & Mrs.John Medeiros

IMMACULATE CQNCEPTION

$100In Memory of Thomas W.

Newbury Sr. & Robert E. New­bury ..Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Doyle

$50Immaculate Conception Men's

Club$32

$100Mr. Jose AntunesOur Lady of Health Holy Spir­

il~ ConfraternityOur Lady of Health Holy

Name Society. $50In Memory of Rose Freitas,Our Lady of Health Holy Ro-

sary ,Our Lady of Health Ladies

GuildSt. Vincent de Paul Society

$30

Fall RiverHOLY NAME

$200Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Driscoll

$175John J. Burke

$125Mr. & Mrs. William E. Crow­

ther$100 _

Mr. &' Mrs. Raymond CheneyDr. & Mrs. Andre Nasser·John RuaneMr: & Mrs. George Bolger

$75In Memory. of Mr. & Mrs Louis

B. Devine$60

In Memory of John & MargaretMcDermott

A Friend__$30

Henry Lajeunes'seMr. & Mrs. Paul. Hamel

$25Atomic Fence Corporation,

Mrs. Gladys Gonsalves, EdwardHennessey, Jeanne Lajeunesse,Charles B. Ney

$50Antonio R. Luongo Jr.Mrs. Michael ReganMr. & Mrs. Pierre Picard

$35Mr. &' Mrs. George FlanaganJoseph M. Reilly

$30Grace SullivanMr. & Mrs. Herman R. Menu

$25The L'Archevesque Family, Mr

'& Mrs. James Mulcahy, HelenaKelly, John T. Crowley,' Mr. &Mrs. Daniel Kelly

Mr. & Mrs. John F. McMahon,Mr. & Mrs. P. Henry Desmond,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Danis, Mr.& Mrs": Joseph Ryan, Mrs. AlbertDavis

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Ham­mond, .Mr. & Mrs. William C.Furze, Mr. & Mrs. Roland Gag­non, Mrs. Fred Brissette, Mr: &Mrs. John Kirkman '

OUR LADY OF HEALTH

$200