'122Enter
New Boys'
School Jesuits Staff Connolly High
In Fall River A total of 122 boys, repre senting approximately 40 parishes, c;ompi'ise the first Freshraan Class which stud
GOLDEN JUBlLARIAN: Sister Stanislaus Joseph, iI.U.S.C. receives congratulations from Msgr.James J. Dolan, pastor .of St. Miiry's Church, Taunton, as she m~rks . ~ years in relig-ious Jif~.' She' entered the H~ly ,Uniol1.FaJI 'iver novitiate· ye~r8 today . a~d spe~t 'Ip.os~ ',of her re £igious life on the faculty of St. Mary's High School, 1'aun~ ~n, moving with, the school into, Bishop CaSsidy, High ~3. She is.amembe'r of the Ca8~idy mathematics depart-_ 1JIlent.
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The
ANCHOR
A.. AftoMr of tA, ~. ,... .,..' ,." II.
IT.
PAUL
!Fall Rivell'u' Mass., Thursday, Sepit. 8, 1966
Vol. 10, M@o 36 ©
19M The Anchor
$4.00
per
ies today at the new Bishop Connolly High School - the fourth diocesan regional high school. Rev. John G. Corneilier, S.J., is principal of the new school which is staffed by eight Jes~it priests. Classes temporarily are being held at the new CCD Center at St. William's parish in Fall River. Meanwhile, work is speeding ahead at the permanent school v Turn to Page Twelve
Commu.,iJy Here 'P~ays for.' Nuns, "
Ousted by Reds' Franciscan ;Missionaries of Mary in Fall River are join ing their prayers to those of other members 'of their
Y_
State Is Servant of f~mQ~Y
PRICE IOc '
... '.' The convention had a particularly international flavor' with representation fro m Canada, Mexico, Argenti'na, Peru, Chile, Japan; and Spain~ 1\ sizea?le' Turn to Page Seven
"
Thanksgiving Mass A high Mass of thanksgiving will be .celebrated at 4) :45 tonight at Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton, llU. Rev. Msgr. James DOlan, P.A., pastor of St. Mary's Church, Taunton, has at1l1ounced. Present and past stu ~ents and their parents are invited to attend the ser Cassidy school ca<feteria. The vices. Next Sunday, Msgr. Sll.pper is in honor of the golden , Dolan will be host to all Holv jubilee of Sister Stanislaus Jo Union nuns in the Great~1l." Taunton area at a buffet supper ~ich will be served :in the
Jj~~hop W[fO~~li' Em~~@~a~®~
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'l'he laymen's role in the renewed Church and self criti , eism were centr.al themes of the eighth national convention ~f Cursillos in New York. The Cursillo Movement is a most ~rovidential instrument in the hands of God and a most ~ f fee t i v e instrument for Christian renewal, the Most Thomas Lawton, C.S.C., direc Rev. Joseph Green, Bishop of tors; respectively, of the La and Ston'ehill Cursillo' lLansing, Michigan and Epis Salette Ce~ters. . GlOpal Moderator of the Cursillo Movement, told the .1,200 con 'rention delegates. Attending the convention were n persons from the Fall River IDiocese, including the Rev. Giles
Genest, M.S. and the Rev.
Sees, U.S~ Catholic Schools Entering Seco~ ,Phase
worldwide community for eight of their Sisters expelled eight SAN DIEGO (NC)-The traditional approach to Cath4 days ago from Red .Ch,ina. oli<;: education must change if Catholic schools are to con Mother Mary' of St. Gistilian, superior of St. Anthony's Con tinue to be a vital factor in th~ United States, the superin vent at 621 Second Street in Fall tendent of 'schools' for the Rochester (N.Y.) diocese saidl River, said that Sisters in the convent kne,w the sister of Sister . her e. M s g r. William M. olic education was necessary to discussed Catholic counteract the know-nothing " Eamon, 60 year .old religious Roche who died of heart failure and Philospohy of Education in philosophy of the later 19tk st.rain the day ~fter her expul 'an Era of Renewal at the century, and to protect Catholic .siori from Peking.
San Diego Diocesan Teachers' ,y'oungsters from the Protestant Turn to Page Twelve
doctrine taught in the public Conference. , The first phase of Catholic schools. '.:here is no question but education, Msgr. Roche said, that Catholic education was ex lasted' from the Councils of Bal tremely successful in phase one. ,"There is no question," he timore until Vatican Council II, and'during that phase Catholic continued, "but that Catholic schools were the exclusive teach education was extremely suc el'S· of religion in the' Church. cessful in phase one. The sacri " "In phase one," he said, "CathTurn to Page Six
R~~ce @~ [La~M~~ ~rfill 'ChllDr~h C~[f~0~~@ ~@rro\1e01frD(Q)ln]
THREE GENERATIONS IN ONE SCHOOL: It's rare indeed when ,three generations of a -family are in one schooR at one time but that's the situ~tion this Yl:l~r at St. Theresa'~ School· in New Bedford. Sister Mary Joseph S.S.J., left. principal'" and: ·S~s,ter ~afie' Ernes,t, ·S.B.J., second grade :teacher, are. the.. aunts 'of' Gera.ld' LeBlanc, ~n' eighth~grade pupil. Gerald 'is' the u!lCI~ of YQung Dennis who is a l<:indero gauten pupil,' ,
seph, S,U.S.C., for her long years c.f faithful and outstanding SP.l' vice to St. Mary's oarish.
M~LWAUKEE (NC):-The state should be the servant of the family not its master, says Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh. "The family is first; all othei' societies, the organized state included, are subordinate. It is not the other way around," Bishop Wright emphasized at the nature it must not compete with first Governor's Conference the normal family nor is it .conceivable that it could use for Home and Family, spon its 'authority to undermine. least
sor-ed by the Wisconsin State' Council for Home and Family. . The Council w.asest;iblished in 1963 by the, state legislatUI:e to foster faqlily unity .and the" stability of marriage. Bishop Wright said civil so ciety "has l among its highest APPOINTMENT: purposes and <functions the help of the family; in the order of
NEW Sis t e r Jan e Raymond, S.U.S.C. has been named Diocesan chairman of the Teaching Sisters and Broth ers Committee of the Con fraternity of Christian Doc trine. She succeeds Sister Mary Kateri, R.S.M. The ~oly Union religious, also t~ newly named principal of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, was formerly as signed at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton.
cf all to pervert, the authority and the life of the fam'ily." A civil society which acted otn,erwise, he said, "would have lost its reason for being" and would require radical change'. "The' claims of personality and of the family, as the first school! of personality, should be the last Turn to Page Eleven
Registration for Awards All Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and Daughters of Isabella in Greater' New Bedford, who have been studying for the Marian and Ad Altare Dai awards will meet at 2, Sunday afternoon, Sept. 18, in the Kennedy Youth Center, New Bedford. Lay Chairman John aminations to be held on the D. Silvia of Catholic Scout following Sunday. , ing in the New Bedford area All candidates should submit said the Sept. 18 session is their book' work at the Sept. 1~ for registration and also for the assignment of time for the ex-
session and any other pertinen(J; work preparatory to ~ a1l1ar.d&.