04.10.69

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Appeal Kick-Off Tuesday Falmouth Lay- Chairman Expects Greatest .Response Ever Over 800 members of the clergy and the laity of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River will be present at

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ANCHOR Vol. 13, No. 15, Apr. 10, ,1969 ~rice 10c $4.00 per Year © 1969 The Anchor

the opening meeting for the 1969 Catholic Charities Appeal campaign scheduled for Tuesday night, April 15 at 8 in the', auditorium of Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River.The Special Gift phase of the Appeal will be conducted from April 21 to May 3. The Parish house-to-housecampaign is set for May 4 to May 14. Atty. James H. Smith of Falmouth, 1969 Lay Chairman of the Appeal, will direct his talk to the large number of laymen and laywomen to be present at the session. Atty. Smith said, "We must appeal to the laity of the diocese. The heart and

the success of the Appeal is in the parish and with the laity." Thirty-one agencies, contributing services to the community, benefit from the funds collected from the Appeal. Most Reverend James L. Connolly, Bishop of' Fall River and Honorary Chairman of the Appeal, will give the keynote speech of the evening in the twenty-seventh year of the Catholic Charities Appeal fund drive. The community services given to the southeastern Massachusetts area by the 31 agencies presently serving all peoples from infants to senior citizens, Turn to Page Three ~1II111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111III III11II11111111IUIII1111111111111111111III11111111111111111111111111111111111III III IE

Edward B. Hanify Chairman Of Human Life Foundation WASHINGTON (NC)-The independent, non-profit Human Life Foundation has been organized to sponsor and stimulate research into and carry out educational programs related to medical, psychological and sociological aspects of human reproduction. The National Conference of Catholic Bishops at its November, 1968, meeting decided to launch such a foundation as a response to Pope Paul VI's encyclical on birth control, Humanea Vitae, in which he said: "It is particularly desirable that, according to the wish already expressed by Pope Pius XII, medical science succeed in providing a sufficiently secure basis for the regulation of birth, founded on the observance of natural rhythms." Chairman of the foundation's 12-member board of directors is Attorney Edward B. Hanify of Boston, a Fall River native, who explained that the Human Life Foundation will be initially financed by the bishops, who pledged $1 million for the purpose last November and added that other sources of income are also being sought. Hanify is a director of the American TeleTurn to Page Six

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I I-/esburgh Praises Changes DETROIT (NC) - The president of the University of Notre Dame said recent structural changes in Catholic colleges and universities have assured that faculty' members are no longer "second-class citizens, the hired hands who did the work, but made' none of the decisions." Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., told the 66th annual con· vention of the National Catholic Educational Association that the changeover from clerical to lay governance at such universities as Notre Dame and St. Louis is one of the most significant basic changes in Catholic institutions of higher learning. "The important point is not that these changes were a long time coming, but that they are here and that our institutions

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are immeasurably better and ties, Father Hesburgh cited' the and stronger," he added. growth of documents which de"Our lay trustees have given lineate how the faculty exercises great strength and dedication to its decision-making power in the our institutions," Father Hes- academic area, such as appointburgh said. "They are no less ments, promotion, tenure, curricCatholic than we; sometimes pos- . ulum, academic freedom and due sibly more so. We have more process. freedom for good and honest "All this," he admitted, "will intellectual endeavor than ever sound strange to other institubefore. We have more moral and tions who so legislated their affinancial support. fairs several decades ago, but "Our special juridical and in- again, this must be seen against stitutional status is much more the background of change in the visible and clean-cut vis-a-vis the Church and its institutions. Church and the state. We have "The important point now is more freedom for untrammeled not that these changes were a priestly and religious service long time in coming, but that * * * Professionalism is the new they are here ':' * * and that our emphasis, not blind and often institutions are immeasurably uncomprehending or mechanical better and stronger because of or unmotivated obedience." this basic structural change." Turning to the new-found Father Hesburgh noted that status of faculty members at convincing others of the freedom Catholic colleges and universiTurn to Page Two

Fair Winner Carol Vasconcellos of Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River, Places First Among 200 Contestants EDWARD B. HANIFY .

Diocesan Priest Attending Holland Liturgy Conclave Rev. Kevin F. Tripp, assistant pastor of S1. Patrick's Church in Fall River, is participating in an invitational symposium on pastoral theology at John XXIII Seminary, Heerlen, Holland. Fr. Tripp will be one of 45 participants from 17 nations invited to the symposium sponsored by the butch, English and French Catholic hierarchies and the

REV. KEVIN TRIPP

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World Council of Churches. The participants include academic theologians, ministers involved in pastoral work and people involved in seminaries. The symposium is intended to help build new models for pastoral structure and to help reform ministerial training in the p-erspective of the new models. The symposium will hear reports from the various nations about experiments being carried on there. Turn to Page Two

. A sophomore at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, topped 200 students from 15 communities to win the annual Massachusetts Region III Science Fair, held last weekend at the Dwelly Street Armory in Fall River. Carol Vasconcellos, with 29 other award winners, will represent this area at a state science fair to be held this month at MIT. Her winriing project was a study of plant cancer and the relationship between sap and .tumor proliferation in carrots. She received a $100 scholarship award. Noteworthy, said Sister M. Albertus, R.S.M., an awards di~­ tribution chairman and member of the science faculty at Mt. St. Mary, were the many science fair participants from diocesan schools and the excellence of their exhibits. She also said that judges commented favorably on the high level of enthusiasm among the students. 'Other winners from the diocese . were Paula Hamel, who merited a' $50 bond from the . Bristol South District Medical Society; and Diane D~smarais,

Mt. St. Mary and Eileen Anderson, Bishop Feehan High, Attleboro, who received $50 and $25 bonds, respectively, from the Dental Society. A Dental Society bond winner in the junior division was Deborah Boulay,

CAROL VASCONCELLOS

Dominican Academy, Fall River. Jeannine Letendre, Dominican, was a winner of a Fall River Teachers' Association award; and Elizabeth von Trapp, also Dominican, received the Dr. Levine Trophy for her project, "The Lonely World of the Deaf." A plaque from the Women's Auxiliary to the Massachusetts Veterinarians' Association went to Kathleen Sedlak, St. Mary's School, North Attleboro. Other regional representatives at the MIT fair will be Cynthia O'Connell, Mount; Patricia Leduc, Dominican; Jeannine Dore, Dominican; Thomas Burda, Feehan; Mary Sedlak, Feehan; Anne Bibeau, Mount; Jane Charette, Mount; Dawn Hannafin, Mount. Also Suzanne Paquette, Mount; Susan Ealin, Dominican;, and Sharon Woyciechowski, Mount. In addition to Sister Albertus, Sister Louise D. Synan, O.P. served as an awards chairman. Over 100 teachers, research workers and business men were judges for the fair, which covered the fields of biology, physics, chemistry, earth science, mathematics, biophysics and biochemistry.


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04.10.69 by The Anchor - Issuu