05.25.67

Page 1

The ANCHOR !Fall Rivero Mass. q 'fIJuusday, May 25, ]961

Yol.

11~

No. 21

@) 1967 r 1he An<:hor

Climbing Appeal

Total Now·Is At

FR. McALOON

!FR. LANE

FR. MoCARTIHl¥

FR. KEEFE

Priestly Silver Jubilee

Congregation on Sept. 14, 1937 of Lourdes, Wellfleet, and as p:llli>­ in Fairhaven. He made perpet­ tor at St. Joseph's, Fairhavel11l. ual profession at ordination May Since 1964 he has' been counseloi' on the staff of the superior gen­ 28, 1942 in Washington, D. C. He served as a U. S. Navy eral in Rome. chaplain from 1950 to 1956 with Father McAloon, pastor oil versary of their ordination Sun­ Holy Trinity Church, West Har­ . the rank of Lieutenant Com­ day, May 28. They will mark the wich, since 1953, was born June mander. occasion with a Mass of Concel­ Father McCarthy received the . 23, 1912 in Lowell. He has served! ebration at 11 Tuesday morning, licentiate degree in Sacred The­ as assistant at Our Lady of May 30, ·in St. Joseph's Church, 'l'he 1967 Diocesan Cartholic Charities Appeal today ology from Catholic University Loul'des, Wellfleet, and at Holy <Jllimhed to within $35,119 of the 1966 final total of $741,117. Fairhaven. in 1947 and taught dogmatic the­ Trinity. The jubilarians are Very Rev. ology for some years following. Father Keefe was born June '1t'he current Appeal figure is incomplete, indicating that a Danel J. McCarthy, SS.CC.; Rev. He was a teacher at St. Mal'y's 23, 1912 in Boston. He served in JIDeW all-time record high is in the offing. Raymond U. Kel­ . Jerome Lane, 88.CC.; Rev. Fin­ College, Winona, Minn. fmm Hawaii from 1947 to 1951 and! !!iller, Lay Chairman of the St. Mary, barr B. McAloon, SS.CC.; and 1959 to July, 1963, when he be­ was an assistant at St. Mary's, Rev. James J. ~eefe, SS.CC. ]1967 Campaign, stated today came provincial superior. . North Fairhaven, from 1962 to North Attleboro 19,454.50 Father McCarthy is pro.vincial Father Lane, born in Roches­ 1963. He has been active in pro­ fihat "the theme of this St. John, Attleboro 16,936.00 superior of the United States. ter, N. Y. in 1913 was professed moting the work of the En­ 1iOOr's drive '$25 in com­ St. James, New Bedfol'd 14,047.00 Province. Born Jan.. 20, 1915 in Sept. 14, 1937 and ordained May thronement and the beatification memoration of the 25th year of Mt. Carmel, Braddock, Penn., he professed 28, 1942 in Washington. ·He h:!s cause of Father Damien, SS.CC.. ehe Catholic Charities Appeal' New Bedford 13,885.00 first vows as a member of the served as assistant at Our Lady the "Leper Priest." l'iDlllS certainly proved to be a St. Francis Xavier, well-received motif on the part Hyannis 12,527.50 <Ji people throughout the Dio­

St. Joseph, Fairhaven 12,383.5G

Clase.". ""It was proposed," he added, St. Joseph, New Bedford il,662.56 '"lilbat such a gesture serve as an ctpportunity of manifesting gl'ati­ St. Mary, Taunton 10,840.50 tlude to Almighty God for the Sacl'ed Heart, By Eva Maria Dane Messings the Diocese has re­ Fall River 10,535.00 Mved over the past qual·ter (tf St. Mary, Fall River On one of the most beautiful estates on Cape Cod Bay a gt;OUP of boys prepall'l8 10,321.15 lJJ oontury." St. Patrick, Falmouth 10,271.50 for a life of joyful denial of self in the service of others. Scene of their training is the lRFTlmN LEADlING PAlltllSJllIiES St. Pius X, former Roland Sears Nickerson family holding, whose 1,750 acre deer park on the op­ So. Yarmouth 9,788.00 posite side of the shore road is now' a state camping site in East Brewster. Heirs solcl ~. Lawrence, New Bedford $23,544.50 St. Mary, So. Dartmouth 9,704.00 the rustic chateau and sur­ . i y Name, Fall River 20,905.21 Mornings are taken up with Turn to Page Tw@ rounding farmland to the La­ Our Lady of LaSalette have taken a vital part in the affairs religious instruction, afternooniil Salette Fathers in 1944. First . of the surrounding' communities. with maintenaince of the build­ a novitiate, then a junior Rev. Maurice Proulx, M.S. ings and grounds; in the evening college for aspirant missionary the Superior-Director spent his vocational training is pursued. priests of the congregation, the seminary years here and helped Lay brothers at East Brewstei' Seminary now receives postu­ build St. Joan of Arc School in have chosen a quiet road to serve lants for a year and junior nearby Orleans, the first pam­ . God and their fellowmen. They bl"Others who spend the last year chial school on Cape Cod. do not teach, preach or adminis­ before professi'ng their .vows His brother, Rev. Armand ter the sacraments but their work RACINE (NC) - A complete restructuring of the. here. The intervening novitiate Proulx, M.S., was director of in the background alleviates the ~rjshO school system, new approaches to teaching religion .years are spent at Center Harbor, students during the period the task of the LaSalette priests. l:bllUd greater emphasis on adult education were among in­ N.H. Seminary served as a junior col­ Turn to Page Six Always the futute servants of lege. At that· time students sang Mvations in Catholic education called for at a panel dis­ at special Mass celebrations in etJIssion in this Wisconsin . area parish churches and pro­ l~turgy city. Panelists included: Fr. Since the old idea of parish Bi~~opS' duced morality plays for public structure is "absolutely dead," ©:. Albert Koob, O.Praem., instruction and entertainment. must be motivated to talk executive secretary of the pastors 'The brothers, whose formal to each other.' National Catholic Educational education is less demanding, are Steps must be taken to share Association; Father Neil G. Mc­ able to play an even greater classes through team teaching. role in the life of the Cape Cod auskey, S.J., James M. Lee, ed­ TAMPA CNC)-LiturgicaU towns. llUiation department of the Uni­ VATICAN CITy (NC) Father McCluskey told the renewal has not really takeJnl 'i1Iersity of Notre Dame; and audience that the same pressures The coming synod of bishops -Eo1d because it has not af­ Michael E. Schlitz, senior study that caught up to the public to be held in Rome beginning }ected minds, hearts and! liiirectol', National Opinion Re­ schools 10 years ago have noW" wills in creating a bond of unity, ~rch Center. caught up to the Catholic schools. Sept. 29 will be attended by Auxiliary Bishop Joseph L. Ber­ 1m expected 193 participants rep­ lFather Koob called for a re­ "Out of all this emerged 81 nardin of Atlanta said here. mucturing of the Catholic school much stronger and finer school resenting the Church throughout the world. . "If we are really honest with IiYstem but noted this would not system," he explained. "I would ourselves, I think we must admit Bishop Ladislaus RUbin, per­ mean closing elementary schools. hope that all of us would open CINCINNATI (NC)-Cler­ that the liturgy has not had the manent· secretary of the synod, He said that grade schools may our minds a little b,it wider • • • gymen oj three faiths joined' full effect it is intended 'to oomehow be "tied together'~with but we're open minded only to at in a press conference said it was his personal opinion that the Ildult education programs. here in deploring lavish flJl­ have," the bishop told the Coun­ certain point. Change is going on cil of Catholic Women of the St. fin~t meeting, scheduled tenta­ Father Koob also said: evel'ywhere' except in our schools neral services in a discussion Augustine diocese. Catholic schools must JOllll • <) <) We have failed to innovate." tively to close Oct. 24, will re­ on "Simple Burial and Our Re­ quire more time "at least a. "There is still too much of :n dUrces to follow public schools The Jesuit priest said the key month or five weeks, to finish ligious Traditions." gap between what we do im IlJy i n t I' 0 d u c i n g instruction­ Speakers included :Father Tim­ to the whole problem is that ed­ discussion of the five subjects church on Sunday and what we ud methods through the use oil othy Leonard, assistant at St. do t: e rest of the week," .he said. ucation is a much larger term now on the agenda." ClOmputers. . "The proof of this is that, at a The largest group of represen­ Peter in Chains Cathedral, Rabbi Although 72 per cent (til' than has .been discussed. "We get education in school," tatives will be the bishops Stanley Brav of Temple Sholom, time when church-going is S3 @l:IllJlrch income goes into educm­ he noted, i'but somewhere along elected by the .various national and Rev. Ronald Payne, pastor prevalent and. fashionable, OUI[' Oio«n , finances are still III primary country is deeply troubled by the way some formative values bishops' conferences, which at of Northside Methodist ChUl"ch. )problem. "We live, unfortunately, in :II hatreds and injustices of aIIlI Mot'e consideration mwt he were squeezed aside C I) II< such present total 132. The Eastern (Ji<ven to provide religious in­ things as lovp. of the liturgy anell Rites will be represented by 13 milieu in which spiritual values kinds. are deflated," Rabbi Brav said. "At a tim~ when the Churclln prelates, including six patriarchs. atruction for Catholic pupills fum an intrOduction to parish life." Turn to Page Six . Turn to Page Six Turn to Page Twen~,. Turn to Page SiR: l)l.<bHc schools.

Four priests of the Con­ gregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary will observe the 25th anni­

$7059 998 Mark

Brothers of LaSalette· Follow Vocation At East Brewster on Cape Cod, Bay

Catholic Education

Must Stress Adu~t

Assert$ fails to Attaan

Synod

Will Call 193

Full Effect

To Rome

Emphasize Hope In Funeral Ritual

c


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05.25.67 by The Anchor - Issuu