AT CIVIL RIGHTS RALll..Y: Rev. Edmund T. Delaney, left, curate at Holy Name Church, Fall River, greets dinner guest from North Carolina, Mr. William Speller. Center, Audrine Scott, 14 year old chorister from Williamton, chats with Mrs. Floyd Black, wife of president of Fall
Diocese Prays for Safe Papal• Visit
The
ANCHOR
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Fall River, Mass., Thlusday, Jan. 2, 1964 •• PRICE lOc Vol. 8, No. 1 © 1964 Th,e, Anchor $4.00_ Y_'
New Decree,'on Liturgy
Asks People Participate
By Rev. John. R. FoIster
st. Anthon,. Parish. New Bedford
The period betweeh the closing of the 2nd Session of the Vatican Council l.nd Feb. 16 is to permit the Church's ,authorities and scholars to familiarize themselves with the recently passed liturgical decree before it becomes actual law. Already there have ' been some commentators of the "long, work of all who proposed and publicised the ver_ that have summarily called nacular question over the years," the entire constitution a the bishops were nearly unani
.imple substitution of the ver nacular for the Latin. One of America's I e a din g liturgical authorities, the Rev. Frederick MsManus termed this manner "an over-simplification." For, "'there are much more important liturgical reforms decreed by the council." However, all agree th<,' the use of the vemacular is one of the decree's most striking changes. In the council hall, it was not long before the b ish 0 p s thoroughly understood that the • Church was truly Catholic, i.e., there was great diversity in the Church. As far as Latin was concerned, it is "not even re motely a universal language. It is not the language of the Scrip .'" tures, nor the language of the Oriental churches. The vast majority of the world's inhabit ants do not even have ancestors who spoke Latin." ,. Faced with such diversity and "Ctual truth, and with the weight
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River unit of NAACP. Right, Robert Shea family of St. George parish, Westport, with their guest. From left, James Smith, Deborah Shea, Robert Shea,' Bob Shea. Seated, Mrs. Shea~ Sunday night Freedom Rally story on Page Three.
mous in proposals for language substitution. It seems that the only possible objection or condition was that the bishops themselves - on re gional bodies have control over such sUbstitutions. The reason for substitution' is ' a simple one: "If' the words are to be meaningful and prayerful, people must pray them in their. own language." The Holy Father had stressed that the liturgy is by nature pastoral and didactic. Therefore, the Fathers stated: "Whe,. the Church prays or sings or acts, the faith of those taking part is nourished and their minds are raised to, God, so that they may offer Him their ra tional service ...... *" This can only be done if the people nor mally understand and can nor mally participate. According to the council, the sacraments and sacramentals are entirely open to chan"'e. "The ' Turn to Page f¥"
Pope Paul VI Makes Historic Holy Land Trip to Promote Cause of Church Unity
The,Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D. , Bishop of Fall River, today called upon the of the diocese to offer prayers for the safe visit of His Holiness Pope Paul VI when he goes to the Holy Land, Jordan an d Israel this weekend. It will be the first time since St. Peter that the Supreme Pontiff has visited the place of the death of Jesus Christ, founder of the heal the breach originating be 65 miles. Before reaching the Roman Catholic Church. The tween Rome and Constantinople' Holy City he is scheduled to trip of the Holy Father, in 1054. visit Bethany, where Mary and ,Pope Paul has reiterated sev Martha and Lazarus lived. He which is attracting world f~ithful
wide interest and attention, will also be the first that the head of the church has made hy air':' plane. -:: is also expected that His Holiness.' will' meet with ' Ecu menical Patriarch Athenagoras I of Eastern Orthodox C"'trch. T!te expected meeting will be the' first between a pope and a patriarch in 525 years. It was in 1439 that Pope Eugene IV met Patriarch Joseph II in northern Italy in an effort to
,Bishop's Statement "While I know that the faithful of the Diocese are ac customed to pray for the Holy Father, I urge all to keep him especially in mind as he pre pares and carries out his pil. grimage to the Holy Land, January 4th to 6th. This significant journey is more than an expression of one man's piety. It is sym 'bolic of the questing for Peace among men of good-will in a small corner of the world dear to Christian, Jew and Moham medan. Already the ' world seems to wait the good results that we all hope and pray may come from this pilgrimage of Grace.' Let 'us 'not be slow to join with Pope Paul vi and make these three days sources of spiritual renewal to our selves. May the 'Lord bless and preserve Pope Paul, and make him ,md instrument of true peace and ·)rotherhood."- e
We Will See You Everything is in complete readiness for the Bishop's Char_ ity Ball at Lincoln Park, Dart mouth, next Weonesday night. This year's ,affair will be the biggest in the history of the out standing social eveht in South eastern Massachusetts.
eral times that the purpose of his Holy Land visit is solely religious. Attempts have been ~" ie to place some political sig-, nificance in the visit but the Holy Father, has, repeatedly pointed out 'the prime and sole religious purpose. After Pope Paul is welcomed at the Amman airport in Jordan on Saturday by King Hussein; he and his entourage will go by automooile through Amman to' Jerusalem, a distance of about
plans to arrive at the Basilica , of ' the Holy Sepulcher in Old Jerusalem at 4 P.M. and will offer Mass ' there at the site at the Resurrection. 'Afterwards he will go to the residence of Archbishop Lino Zanini, Apostolic Delegate to the Holy Land, where he will have dinner' and sp",ld the night. At 10:30 P.M. that evening he will take part in a holy hour on Gethsemane in the Church of Turn to Page Eighteen
Father Albert F. Shovelton To Conduct Radio .~rogram Rev. Albert F. Shovelton, assistant at St. James Church, New Bedford, will inaugurate a half-hour radio program, The Catholic Viewpomt, this Sunday evening at 8 :30 over New Bedford Radic Station WBSM. The program, which will.be on the air every Sun most qualified to discuss' with day evening at that prime him the Catholic attitude on listening spot, will open this these pressing issues, or the reac week with Father Shovelton tion of those of other religioM interviewing the Most Reverend Bishop who will discuss the ac tivities of the Second Vatican Council. .' Succeeding programs will dis cuss such topics as birth con trol; Catholic schools, the prob.. lem of unwed mothers, and other topics sure to be of interest to non-Catholics as well as Catho lics. As Father' Shovelton' has expressed it, "Purpose of the program is not so much to en gender controversy as to pro mote understanding." In line with this goal, Father Shovelton plans to invite both Jewish rab bis and Protestant ministers to participate in the program with him. As the program name indi cates, topics of present -interest will be opened up on the pro gram, and Fathf T Shovelton will have as his guests those he feels
to the Catholic position.
BEV. ALBERT F. SHOVELTON '
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THE ANCHOR
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Deplore Housing For Negroes
Thurs., Jan. 2, 1964
Greek Newspaper Opposes Action Of Church Synod
, BaSTON (NC) -
ATHENS (NC) - Opposi tion by the ruling synod of the Orthodox Church of Greece to the proposed meeting in Jerusalem between Pope Paul VI and Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras of Con stantinople was cause for "deep est sorrow," according to a pro minent Athens newspaper. Ethnos, middle - of - the - road daily, noted (Dec. 18) that the Holy Synod of the State Church at its sp.!!cial meeting on Dec. 17 "rejected, as was expected the Patriarch's proposal to meet the Pope. The paper added that "our Church, alone among all Orthodox Churches, 'has fore seen in the actions of the Catho Church dangers for Ortho':' doxy and a trat>.' " Ethnos said also: "Archbishop Chrysostomos (of Athens, Primate of Greece), vehement and austere, insisted that a trap is hidden hehind the f r i end s hip of the Catholiq Church. He ~dded that the Pope 'is pursuing something else which is going to be against Orthodoxy,' and invited . the Bishops of the Synod to deny approval of the meeting in J eru sali!m; because otherwise the prestige of Orthodoxy will be shaken," ' 4fter noting that only Metro politan Archbishop of Grevena and the government's represent ative in the synod, Dr; Hamilear Alivizaios, disagreed with Arch_ bishop Chrysostomos' s tan d, Ethnos declared: . 'Serious Matter' "The decision .of the syno.d' hl SUCh a serious matter has caused the deepem sorrow among the theological circles of the Orthodox Church and among the pOOple. ,Once more, the theolo gians say, it is proved that our Church is not ready to face the great problems of our time, such as collaboration between the Churches. "An unhappy impression haa ~n created by the fact that without any serious data or any special consideration, fears are 'being e x pre sse d about the dangers of the meeting, and will fUl intentions are attributed to the Catholic Church." "According to the latest news, the journey of the Patriarch will take place, as will the meeting with the Pope, because all the other Orthodox Churches have approved the intentions of the leader of Orthodoxy."
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New Ambassador TOKYO (NC)-Francis Xavier Yukawa, a Catholic, has, been named Japanese ambassador to Belgium. He served as ambassa dor to the Philippines from 1957 to 1960 and was secretary gen eral of the Foreign Office at the time of his new appointment.
AMERICAN SCULPTOR: Father Thomas McGlynn, O.P., stationed at Pietrasanta, Italy, recently exhibited thesE> two bronze sculptures of Pope Pius XII. A native of Peta luma, Calif., Father McGlynn sculptured the 151h-foot statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary that now stands over the portal of the basilica at Fatima. NC Photo.
Priest Exhibit!; Sculpture in Rome Hotel Dominica,n C:haplain for Cloistered Nuns
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rights committee headed by' a priest· issued a report here a~ tacking poor housing for Negroes and the practice of segregatioa in Boston and adjacent areas. The report e h a r g e d that Negroes who escape the segre gated slums of Boston find them selves 1 i v i II, g in segregated neighborhoods in the suburbs. It was drawn up by the Massa chusetts Advisory Committee te the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, headed by Father Robert F. Drinan, S.J., dean, BostoR College Law School. T"" report also stated: More than 'Ui per cent of Boston's white families live iA sound dwellings, but less than 50 per cent of nonwhites do. Negroes pay higher rent for inferior housing than whites' do for the same kind of housing.. Act Ineffective Boston's racial ghetto cause. a high rate of disease and delinquency. A "black boomerang" area ia the city should have 19.4, acre. of playground space but has only two acres. , Declaring that the Massachu setts Fair Housing Practices Ad has proven ineffective, the com mittee urged that priority be given pUblic housing funds" to aid low income families and that the state Legislature paSi laws calling for stricter enforce ment of building codes.
gesture of welcome and of detailed descriptions given him blessing. Both are in bronze. by, Sister Lucy, only survivo~ ,of Father McGlynn is preparing a the three little seers of Fatima. A 12-foot statue of the same limited edition of reproductions ot these bronzes for use in the s.ubject was commissioned by Richard Cardinal Cushing of United States. Boston,' and now stands near the 'Make It Bil:' hom e. Cardinal Father McGlynn, born at Peta- Cardinal's luma, Calif.; 57 years' ago, has Cushing recently commissioned NEW YORK (NC)-The wel Father McGlynn to do a statue fare. programs of CathoDe Relief been working at Pietrasanta al most eight years. He went there of Blessed Julie Billart, foun Serv~ces-.National Catholic We1-' to nurse a gigantic block of dress of the Sisters of Notre Dame fare Conferencf in Vietnam' are de Namur. . '
marble out of the quarry and gradually resuming operatioR When Father McGlynn asked and soon should be back to nor shape it into his principal work: . a 15-and-a-half-foot statue 'of him what kind 'of statue he mal. the Blessed Virgin Mary that wanted the Cardinal replied"
This news was received here now stands over the portal of "Oh, I don't know. They'd prob
at the heaquarters of CRS the basilica at Fatima in Por- ably like it big. Make it big." NCWC from Msgr. Joseph' L End of instructions. Harnett, of Philadelphia, diree tugal. tor of the agency's operations ia There it is seen by millionS Asia and the Far East. of pilgrims. Father McGlynn carved the' statue according to The first CRS project to reo 'SUrDe operation after i'he ave";'; UNITED NATIONS (NC)-The throw of the Diem governmf,!Dt The following films are to be Holy See will contribute the was a food and clothing distri added to the lists in their re-' symbolic gift of $1,000 to' the bution center in a sl)lDl district program of the United Nations of Saigon. Msgr. Harnett said spective classifications: Unobjectionable for General Relief and Works Agency for that its inhabitants are mainly Palestine Refugees (UNRWA); families of rickshaw-men who Patronage-Thomasina. Announcement of the annual pay 20 piasteres a day to rent' a' Unobjectinable for Adults and The following films rae to be Adolescents-Ladybug, Ladybug. gift was made by Msgr. Timothy rickshaw and whose earnin'ga added to the lists in their 're J. Flynn, 'director of the New on even a good day never exceed Unobjectionable for A",··'ts ~ spectiveclassifications: York, Archdiocesan Information 80 piastres ($1). . America, America; Mail Order Unobjectionable for General Bureau, who represented the Bride; Move Over Darling; Patronage - Incredible Journey. Holy .~ee at the UNRWA pledg-' ' Unobjectionable for AdUlts Strait-Jacket. ing conference held at UN head':' BERLIN (NC) - A 'c~OWd of and Adolescents-Act One; The quarters. hundreds braved a snowstOl'Dl Chalk Garden; Kings of the Sun. He said the token contribution to gather outside a Warsaw raiJ,. Unobjectionable for Adults-: FRIDAY - Mass as on Jan1l1l1'1 of the Holy See to the problem road station to welcome Stefa. Bedtime Story. 1. IV Class. White. Mass of refugees of Palestine is Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Objectionable in Part for All ~roper; Gloria; no Creed; "merely symbolic of its vast Poland, home from the ecumen -The Man in the Middle (Ob Preface of Christmas., Two contributions to the alleviation ical council. jection: A sub-plot in this film Votive Masses in honor of the' of this grave human problem." tends to condone immoral be Sacred, Heart of Jesus per "Since 1949 the Holy See has havior on tqe part of the fiero' mitted. Tomorrow is the First expended more than $20 million and heroine.) I SERVING- I Saturday of the Month. . in money, goods and services to Condemned-War of the But SAT U R DAY - Mass of the alleviate the sufferings of these fiNE ITALIAN FOOD tons (Objection: The vulgarities Blessed Virgin for Saturday. refugees," he stated. ' and obscenities used in the treat. IV Class. White. Mass Prope~;. ~,'GONDOLA ment of this film are inadmis , Gloria; ~o Creed; Preface of sible for a mass entertainment '~RESTAURANT and LOUNGE Blessed Virgin. , medium.) ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-An SUNDAY - Most Holy Name of I on Lake Sabbatia Jesus. II Class. White. Mass interreligious New Jersey Con ~ 1094 Bay Street Proper; Gloria; Creed; Pre ference on Religion and Race will be held here Sunday, Jan. lIT~NT~N _ _ ~ ~7~ J~. 4, face of Christmas. ~...-.-......-~~ Rev. Eugene L. Dion, 1961, MONDAY - Epiphany of Our 26. Lord. I Class. White. Mass Pastor, Blessed. Sacrament, Fall Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface River.
JAN. 6
Communicantes of Epipb Rev. James F. Roach, 1906, any. Founder, Immaculate Concep TUESDAY - Mass as on feast of Epi1>hany. IV Class. White. tion, Taunton. , JAN. 8 Mass Proper; Gloria; nO Creed; Preface of Epiphany. Rev. Alfred J. Carrier, 1940, WEDNESDAY - Mass as on Founder, St. James, Taunton. Direct from New Bedford, Fall River, Attleboro, Cape feast of Epiphany. IV Class. Rev. ArthUr C. Lenaghan, Cod, Taunton or your home city. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 1944, Chaplain, United States Write or Call for free colorful brochure Army. no Creed; Preface of Epiph .. 2& RODMAN ST., FALL RI¥EII any. THE AJlCffOI second Class Postage Paid It Fall River, THURSDAY-Mass as on feast '878 B£DFOAD Mass. Published, every Thursday at 410 of Epiphany. IV Class. White. Highlano ~venue, Fall' River Mass, by tile WY.6-8276 Cltllollc Press 01 the Diocese 01 Fan River. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; . fIi call you local parish rectory SUbscrlptiOll price lIy 1lIa1l. IIO'tpald $4.00 Preface of Epiphany. per ,Iar. ' ' ....... , . .,..« r 1L • ,; ............ c - .. ROME (NC)-Father Thomas McGlynn, O.P.,' would be a natural as chaplain of Italy's colony of American expatriate artists, if the artists ever got organized. PendiI(lg that unlikely event the American priest-sculptor is chaplain at two highly-organized institutions: the convent of cloistered Dominican nuns at Pisa and the district jail at Pietrasanta, about 20 miles from Pisa. At Pietrasanta, where marble has been quarried and statues created since Michelangelo first saw its possibilities, Father McGlynn also has his studio. But the Dominican .sculptor has come to Rome with his latest' works and put them on exhibition in the Cavalieri-Hilton Hotel. One is a life-sized bust of Pope Paul VI, the other a full-length figure of the Pope, something over two feet tall, walking with arms opened hi a
Relief Operations Resume in Vietnam'
Legion of Decency
Holy See to Aid UN ,Agency'
Legion of Decency
," Greet Cardinal
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Interfaith Meeting
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
Jan. 5 St. Patrick, Fall River. St. Lawrence, New Bed: Bedford. Jan. 12 - St. Joseph, Fair haven. Our Lady of the Angels, Fall River. ,Jan. 19 - Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford, 'st. Patrick, Wareham. Jan. 26 - St. Anthony, Taun ton. . ' Sacred Heart, Fall River. Bishop Stang ,Convent, , North Dartmouth. !
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Plan, College Day In No. Easton
The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Executive Board of the Immaculate Conception Parish, North Easton, will sponsor a College Vocation Day on Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5:30 in the Parish CCD Center. John Boyle, Executive' Board ehairman, has announced that l'epresentatives from St. An selm's, Stonehill, Regis and Providence College will be available for consultation on both group and individual bases. Other colleges are expected to be present at this meeting. Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Dioc esan Superintendent of Schools, will deliver the opening address. Mr. Boyle assures all that there will be ample parking IIpace at the Immaculate Con eeption Center at 193 Main Street, North Easton. A coffee hour will also be part of the program,
Swiss Hermitage Is 550 Years Old LUGANO (NC) - One of the 1D0st notable hermitages of Eu lOpe observed its 550th anniver_ sary this year. It is the Eremo San Nicolao, st. Nieholas' hermi tage on Mount Generoso near here which, according to tradi tion, harbored its first hermit eround the year 1200. Its beautiful baroque chapel ~as built and dedicated in 1413. • is perched on the precipitous edge of mountain rocks and can tie reached by cable railway "om Mendrisij).'· No hermit lives there today. Instead there is a.grotto, an inn where tourists enjQy.the entranc ing view over the Swiss Alps .od lakes. '
Pledge Thanksgiving Service for Rescue LENGEDE (NC) - Eight hun tked persons of the parish of Lengede have vowed to have a thanksgiving service every year on All Saints' Day for the rescue of 11 miners who were trapped 195 feet underground for two weeks. The 11 were the last of 100 lDen saved from the nearby Mathilde iron mine after a res ervoiJ;' dam near the mine burst _dthe mine was flooded by a 40rrent of mud and water. Eighty-six escaped shortly after tibe disaster, and three othel'S were brought up tbrough a res. eue shaft. . Prayers were said in churches aU over Germany for the succesa of. the rescue.
Reverses Conviction For Jury Refusal ST. PAUL (NC)-The Minne IlOta Supreme Court has reversed tile conviction of a woman who Slefused on religious grounds to 4lerve on a jury. Last March 8 the state high court had upheld the conviction of Mrs. Laverna H. Jenison, sen. tenced to 30 days in jail for re fusing to perform jury service. But Mrs. Jenison appealed to the V. S. Supreme Court, which on Gct. 14 directed the Minnesota high court to reconsider its ac tion. The second time arounli, the state high court found (Dec. 20) that Mrs. Jenison "convincingly demonstrated her sincerity by preferring jail to the compro mise of her religious faith." A member of the Church of God, Mrs. Jenison based her refusal to serve on a jury on the Bibli text, "Judge not, that you. be DOt judged."
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3 Rally Sponsored, by Three Religious Groups Thurs.,ANCHOR Jan. 2, 1964 Protestant Navy Backs, Negro Struggle for Equality She could be your daughter or mine. She's 14, a shy giggly teenager who loves music and dancing and owns to a preference for the back seats at school-so a little whispering ean go on. But at 14 she's already been jailed for her beliefs. She's taken part in un counted demonstrations. She gave up a home Christmas to help explain those beliefs to thousands of people as yet hazy or apathetic on the civil rights issue. She's Audrine Scott of Williamston, N.C.,
Chaplain Studies For Priesthood
HARTFORD (NC) - A former Protestant clergy man, who five years ago browsed through some books
on Catholic doctrine and subse quently entered the Church, ex one of 43 Negro teen-agers and pects to be ordained to the adults who appeared Sunday priesthood next March. night at Sacred Heart School Now completing his studies auditorium in Fall River in a fo. the priesthood is Rev. Mr. Freedom Rally. Richard P. Layman, who in 1958 ,:.c: youngsters were typical was an Anglican clergyman teen-agers, again like yours or serving as a chaplain with the mine. They were observed to Navy in the western Pacific. shuffle and fidget a bit during Book Reading the serious parts of the rally The story of his conversion program. One seemed absorbed was told by Father (Lt. Cmdr.) in tying her shoelaces most of Charles E. Webb, priest of the the time, and a boy was sneaking Archdiocese of Hartford and peeks at a sports magazine. It Navy chaplain, who received was hard to realize these kids the former minister into the ha" been to jail, were actually, Church. as one speaker expressed it, "the "In 1958," said Father Webb, spearhead of the civil rights "Mr. Layman was the Protestant revolution in the South." One chaplain assigned to Amphibious girl, it was mentioned, was still Squadron No.5, of which I was suffering pain from a broken senior chaplain. In the Summer finger inflicted by a Williamston of 1958 this squadron was on police officer. duty in the western Pacific area Torture by Heat during the crises in Lebanon and And Audrine told of the Wil at Quemoy. liamston jail, designed to hold "A normal chain of circum eight, having 52 men crowded stances under those near-war into it on a blazing Summer time conditions brought Mr. day. "Then they turned on the Layman to my cabin as its oc:' heat," she said. cupant for six weeks while I was How do Audrine's parents, her away in another sector. Dur~ng ninl. brothers and sisters, feel CLERGY GREET VISITORS: Rev. Harold W. Melvin this period he 'read most of the about her participation in these Jr. of St, John's Episcopal Chureh, center, and Father John books on my shelf and upon my demonstrations? "They feel E. Boyd, pastor of St. Patrick's pal'i~h, Fall "River, meet return announced without cere 1.be way I do," she saId. Her mony but with strong conviction father, a deliveryman; has sent reverse Freedom Riders at Fall Jliver rally., that he wished to become a several of his children to col Catholic." lege and Audrine herself hopes faiths joining hands with the she said thoughtfully. "I like my' Father Webb said that in to be a math teacher•. Williamston visitors and the home and if things break down, December 1958, he baptized Mr. She and her fellowteen-ageJ;'s Fall River audience as all sang I want to stay there." Layman conditionally and re take part in nightly Freedom "We Shall Overcome." Also She got home today and she ceived him into iheChurch. The Rallies, much like the one in moving was the spontaneous and' the others who came North former minister, who had never Fall River and one held two rising of the audience in tribute with her are once again plunged married, . expressed a desire to nights previously on Martha's to Mrs. Sarah Small, leader of into the situation that faces the study for the priesthood and, at Vineyard. These rallies "restore the Williamston group. An ex Southern Negro.· Once again Father Webb's suggestion, the the soul of the movement, night pectant mother, she has never she'll be combining school with matter was taken up with Bishop after night." Freedom songs are theless led the SCLC unit since homework with nightly atten Charles A. Buddy of San Diego. sung and often new ones are its inception six months ago. Mr. Layman is scheduled to be d~nce at rallies and demonstra_ born, and prayers are offered ordained on March 19 in San 'New Black Joe' tions. This is not a child's bur "that men might have strength den. It should not weigh down Diego. "This is a do-it-yourself free to love and forgive." dqm campaign," commented Rev. ye'- : daughter or mine. It should Th~ Williamston Negroes be Virgil Wood, speaking of the not weight down Audrine'. long to the Southern Christian Williamston activity. He said Leadership Conference, headed that there's no more "old black ~ by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Joe" spirit among Negroes; that They follow Dr. King's prin now there is "a new black Joe, ciples of non-violence in con whose head ain't bending low." ducting their sit-ins and other SAN ANGELO (NC) - The The singing, 'clapping entrance Diocese of San Angelo will be. civil rights demonstrations. "And of the Williamston youngsters don't think it isn't hard to look gin publication Jan. 24 of its at a police officer threatening to Sacred Heart auditorium own diocesan weekly newspaper, you with a night stick and still mid-way through the rally pro the Texas Concho Register. 365 NORTH FRONT STREET feel love for him" commented gram brought the' audience to Father Paul Surlis, an Irish its feet once again, and parti Rev. Virgil A. Wood, president of ' NEW BEDFORD priest on loan to the diocese for ) the Massachusetts unit of the cipation in the freedom songs one year, has been named in was universal as priests, minis \ WYman 2-5534 , SCLC, who .also participated in ters and laymen alike caught terim editor, pending the ap the Fall River rally program. pointment of a permanent editor. the catchy rhythms with clap Local Support ping hands and tapping feet. The rally occasioned an un "King Jesus will open doors precendented cooperative effort for me" sang a tall Negro boy, by representatives of all faiths echoed by his choir mates, and in Fall River. With the approval many from the audience jointed and support of Bishop Connolly, in a campaign - type march ll Rev. Edmund T. Delaney led around the hall accompanied by IIS Catholic participation, while the a chanting song with local names Fall River Council of Churches supplied: Fall River Wants Free and rabbis of area synagogues dom! were equally active. Moving First Trip spirits were Rev. Harold T. PREACHER-FR. COSMAS TIMLIN, O.F.M.
This holiday pilgrimage, in Melvin of St. John's Episcopal cluding stops at Philadelphia, Church in Fall River, who was Boston, Cambridge, Concord and BEGINS THURSDAY, JANUARY 9th
among Northern clergymen re Rutland, Vt. as well as the points cently jailed in Williamston for in the Fall River Diocese, was participation in demonstrations Audrine's first trip Nor-th. How there; and Rev. Floyd Black, did she like it? 10:00 AM.-12: 10 Noon-5: 10, 7 and 8 P.M. minister of Bethel African Meth "There's prejudice here too," od;"' Episcopal Church, Fall River, a president of the area WSAR-Fail River _._.. 1480 on Dial-6:45 P.M. NAACP unit. Participating priests included WPlM-Plymouth _ 1390 on Dial-6:45 P.M. Rev. John E. Boyd, who gave a WJDA~Boston _ . 1300 on Dial-ll:05 A.M. Scripture reading and Father GEORGE M. MONnE WARE-Springfield :_ Delaney, who spoke on racial :.1250 on Dial-9:45 A.M. Ret. Master Plumber 2930 prejudice as a moral issue, em Over 35 Years
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• Reunion In 'No. Carolina
THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 F<JII 'Ri¥er-lJihl1r:s., Jon.:2, 1%4t CfIoARLOTTE (NC) T h'e Sabates family is getting togeth er again-and that takes a bit of 'dlJirlg. ThFee years ,ago Guillermo .and Lady Rose Sabates, living in Cuba, faced .a ;problem: Under 'the F·idel (CaS~ro regime, :their two sons a'nd two daughters had ,to .j:jo .tesohool to .get ,clothing land 'iood. ~ndinsChool the<)' wene 'taught oommunism. The tparentE Iwel,;1hed' 'the chOioe ,be ;t.ween lCaUmlicii:mandooromu-. ·n ism, ,tihen ,lost no time 'paoldng theiryoungs.ter-s ;gboal!d :a ,plane :and'Sending 'them .lothe U. 'S. -..knowiJlgthe<y ;might .not 'See 'them .again. 'Some 'week'S .ago 'Guillermo ;and Lady :ROBe 'Sabaies !got 'out IOJ' Cuba. They 'cBmeh611e 'V'ia
Mexioo, then ,Panama, where Mrs. Sabates has a brother. They're now staying with Sa bates' sister. MTS. Maria Tano in Lexington, N . .c., while Cath olic Social Services liIf Charlotte arl'allges the family reunion. There .already have bee.nteJ phone reunions between the par 'ents and ·children. It "shook" Mrs..Sabates to learn her ·cIa'" tel's, Lady Ro~, 12, and Norma, 9, now stl\ying with ,a reIativ~ m Columbia, Mo., speak lj,tUe Spanish aHer three years in tae U. 'S. Mrs. Sabates, who natu rally speaks little ;English,said in Spanish: "All Norma could say in Spanish was 'si, momma.' " 'il1here wasn't much of.a .pr.ob- lem with the boys who 'still I'e
·OPEN 'DAnv
'W'ELC6'ME'TO ANTA'ftCTIC:: IF'xmlOit; 'Car.ffina1 ~ man is greeted by Rear .A-dmiraliJames It lReeftw q)n _ ar.ri¥al a.tGhristchUltc:h, Niew Zealand, ;llostarl; _ annual Dbriis1Jmas 'Visit ·tomem:bers;df !lihe :a,'S. ;$JB6d ~ this :time 'those 'serving in ·:the A:ntooetic, 1i\iC ~,
11:_
Red ,Stepping Stone Catholic Ed·i.... Sees CII' ••' .".,.....
BaSis for S-iels
SAVANNA.H (NC) - ACath olic ,editor '110 specializes in Latin \merican ,affairs said here that the Cuban revolution has provided "stepping .stones for th~ Soviet world revolution." Jaime ·Fonseca said events in Cuba have shown that a '~Soviet military base can be established in the Western Hemisphere, over the dead bod~ of ,the MOnPoe Doctrine of the unfulfilled com mitments of the Organization of, American States." The cold war has made the establishment of .a communist ~tion in the Americas a "threat of unprecedented magni tude;" Fonseca told a southeaat regional meeting of the Catholic p:', _ AssoCiation. Fonseca is editor of .Noticias Catcilicas, Spanish and Portu guese-language edition of the N.C.W.C. News Service. He said such in:fluences a1l "nationalism, economic resent ment:and romantic images about the Marxist p a r.a dis e" are "fading" in '_atin America, but added: ''Do not feel relieved." "The process is creating a dangerous vacuum. '1'he old ide ologies - liberals, conservatives
- and 'SOme newer ,ones -Mar xist liberals, Ultra-<rigbiest oon servatives - cannot 'fill that vacuum," he 'said. Fonseca said the 'sl\ppression of 'the Church in Cuba iabeing carried on according to a blue print drawn up by communist Chinese. He said the plan calls for communists .to "avoid ,making martyrs" w:. He at the same time weakening the Church's organi zational structure and defami~ its reputation. He called 'for prompt social re forms based on the .pqpal ,en cyclic<lls in the econOlriically de pressed areas of Latin America and for 'vigorous missionary ·ac tivit-y. He also voiced .hope that the AlIiance for Progress - 'ldespite its faults" will not -.be ,de stroyed.
PO.per Supports Moro CoG IjtioR
ROME (NC) - Vatican City!s daily newspaper has thl'own its weight behind Italian Premier Aldo Moro's '::oalition with the Socialists in the face .of mount ing opposition within MOIlo's L> own 'Christian Democratic .party. In two editorials L'Osserva tore Romano urged Catholics to SANTA CLARA (NC) - A rally round .Moro's Catholic-in college without. a digital com spired party. Powerful party puter today "is lik.e a school members led by former Premiers without a library," a Santa Clara Mario Scelba and Giuseppe Pella University professor asserted had threatened to withhold their here. support from Moro's center-left Gerald E. Markle, 49, mathe government in the parliamen matiCian and speCialist in the tary vote of confidence required computing machine field, de for ever~ new government. dar-ed in a lecture here that use Scelba and company object to of the computer "in industry jg so commonplace today that an .an~ collaboration wUh PietIto Nenni's Socialists Beoause tof engineering student without ex posure to it will be 'handicapped .their Marxism and neutralism. Threat to Split seriously." T.he ijirst editorial 'fIPok~ in 9Jut Markle,in .chal'ge ao! :the veil.ed terms of unity alllOJilg digital computer installed at the Catholics without referring ,to uri~versit) here last Spring, 'tI8id the m2.chine will not replace the ·thepolitical crisi$. It .only 811M ,that '!anY:DFeach in ;theuni~ of sliile rule. The ,COITlllUter ,has·.Gb Catholics in any field means joy soJ:tbed most of the slide rule's processes, but lle asseried,tbe :for the ·enemies .df <tbe F.aiih." But the very day ,that'edition,ap slide rule alwllyswill be u'lMld ~ peared, -the breach within·the check calculations. !Many -engineering 'schools <do· Christian Del1U1C1lBik ·.pmtty ee came public knowledle. ndblaavecompulers ,for the dlsll8 Two days laier L'Oasel'\la~lle room instruction beoause of ·the elli}JCnsc involv.ed,Matkle 'said, 'spoke forthrightly 'abont'the thr,eat 10 .&pDt '*be 1Qbr.iIman The monthlY rental fee is '61iJ~r Democratic party and ··thenD mous, .and 'buying 'the -syStem ,is not .. .good jnvesimeJit ';fera uoneealed 'I8tisfa<Jti,on oef ·1IGDJe JtaWan m6Wlg)lWel'$ ;at ttIDis N¥dh school becaufie '<:I'f imp:ro.'\Iements made iil'om ~ear 'to ',)l6&r, Jbe 'IIUd. in 'tile o1pllrt)". lell4leNhip.
ComouteT "Must'
for Col1eges
member 'their Spanish. William, woo turned 15 on Dec, 23 and used to be Guillermo in Cub-. ,days, .and &berta, 13, are Iiv., with Mr. and Jlrs. David Mec. .gar Vi AlOuquer.qye, N ... Williolm had a question-".oo they have baslretball in Cb» 101ae?'' H~'s ~ve1Gped an .adepi fl~ with the round ball. 'file Sabates 1amily will be retllnited and begin .life an OVClI' again here. ~. Michal J. Begley ,of Catholic Social 'SeJIo vices has ren.Iied a home for them. Sabates is fast learnin« English. It won't be long now beforQ .the whole family is reunited and the Sabates youngsters will be :going 10 Catholic schooH, a~m.
9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
AK)M
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Tell Seminarians More Expected Of Priests
TI'fE ANCHOR Thurs., Jan. 2,
Red Fidel Castro Ba·ns Bibles
ST. LOUIS (NC)-Father Andrew Greeley, a Chic-ago. sociologist and columnist for. the Anchor, and Thoma..~ P. Heill, professor of histCKY at St. Louis University, t()ld semi aarians here that more will be expected oi them as pt'iests in ibe age of "the new layman." ,Gth addressed a convocation which celebrated the Council of Trent giving students of Cardi aal Glennon minor seminal")t a priest's and a layman's view of wh'lt will be expected 0( parish. cler~y.
Father Greeley set out new
at· . udes he said priests wiU
Deed in order to perfol"m their pastoral missions. Neill described· the educational' c()Ocepts that Jni~ht develop these new atti
tudes. ChanDng AK~ Father Greeley described the Dew era as "po3t-Johannine" - that "two men named John" _gnaled a changing age. The two) lo~ .s were the late Pope John XXIII and President JGbn F'. K.ennedy. "The lives you: lead as priests,'" Father Gree1e7 told the semi narians, "will be very different because of the two Johns," Thl~ Maior ~ be said,. can be sumJDed 1ZJjl tl!lis way:: There ia a DeW laitV ia: tih.~ Cburcb,. one qaite apart fJ'olu -.e oW atl1JftIPts of lIllY people,. "h(' Cllurdl i5 a church of fl"ee 4Iom aDd fZat~, concepts that ..-e new~ bazIC realized. 'Itll~ ...iat'lJ ~ 111 ~rnwMc- an,t aeal~ -.d m.t C~. it·· IeIi with wiu:aabic ridUs i"()1l'
otbers. JlIIK ......c. . - r Por the Americaft ~ : ... person. .1otm Nzg.enld J[ennedT seTTeS » sort ., I' "'patron sainr' fiIr aU ac·· eorctiDg tD t1'le ~ prMsl. Father G'.reeIey said the contri·· 'nation of Mr. lteIIDed.lf fo A.el'·. IDa. Clltha1'icism was as. a la!y.• anaa "who is independt'nt. Gf. ftu~
mw,
5 1964
170 YEARS LATER: The eight-inch solid silver chalice used by Rev. Stephen Badin, right, the first priest ordained in the United States and the first missioner to Kentucky, was used by Bishop Edward L. Fedders, M.M., left, at his consecration Mass as Bishop of Juli, Peru. It is kept with Father Badin's missal at the museum of St. Pius X Seminary, Erlanger, Ky. NC Photo.
Visit Focuses Attention on Holy Land Christians Constitute Smatt Minority 'Fhe' surpnse announcement of Pope- Paul VI that. he will visit
Jerusalem focuses attention on the situation in tbe Holy Land amf: on the work of U.S. Catho> lies there. The Holy Land' proper is Pa:l'estine', a name no' Ionget' Oft' filit:e map'. l't disappeared in .y, 1!NIt,_ with- the creation of the State"' of fsraet T~ core of atl. cieDti.. P:ii'estine is: the land'- be Iweeft, bh:e Mediterranean 3ea an4 the J'ordan moyer. 'It'Je- term "!folly, Land'" alSG' caa applY' 1:& an area- much ~ t1'Imt Palestine. It CO'l'el"S the overall area. in which B'it'Ni cal e-.ts. toG1I. placa - lJI'esent- . dIliy .JmrGJan,. and. Isuael, ~ia, 1.daIt.eR,. Turkey, 1.&34.. wan. and
IDPt·
.Jerosalem. is sam!a«, not. 90.11 .. Christiana, but. to. l\f.oslems .aIiIId Jews as. well. For the Mos 'lea). Jerusalem is the. place W8ffi' organized Church,'" Neill echoed many o! Fatllet· . ~h. Mohammed was trans .oried i.nta Hea¥en. As. sucb, it "reeleY'$ points. is the tbirci boliest site oJj his To prepare priesfs to fuUill religion. For the Jew, Palestine their unique sacerdotal rolen is a Promised. t.and, and Jeru .ore perfectly, Neill proposed 80me goals for semi'naries. . salem., the City of David. Armed Camp Seminary education sh~d For the Christian, Jerusalem JIve up to accreditation stan·· and ather places of Palestine' are dards for higher education.. hE! laid. This is necessary to pre-· e () n sec rat e d and set apart through association. with the pare seminary graduates. fol' higher studies in a non-seminar): earthly life of Jesus Christ. The Palestine of old - part .niversity, and so that priests; cen be as well-educated as thE~ of which is now in Jordan, part in Israel - is today an armed Jay people they will serve. camp, manned by the troops of nations technically still at war. Actiont Thus, the sacred shrines are cut off from one another: Bethlehem is. in Jordan, Nazareth is. in
BOWLlNG GREEN (NC)>-A IsFael.
laity leader .aid political action
OFdinary tourists may pass is needed to save tradition from from. Jordan into Israel (via the "'wpecial interest groups" which Ilistoric Mandelbaum Gate), but ere chipping away at Sul'l{)ay ab·· they may not return. Christians. aervance laws in Ohio and else·. in Israel may visit the holy where in the U. S. places in .Jordan. at Christmas. .James J. Hollern, exeeutlVE!
~ary, Ohio Catholic WelfarE~
Anl1iverscuy Conference, sounded the ~
hnday at tile Tol.ede Diecesan Councils of Catbolk. Mew an<ll"
TRENT (NC) - The :fiouoth Womea jo.imt CODYention ali CeDitemary o£ the; alosing. at the Bowling. Green State Uaiversit)P. CGwiciJ of Tr.ent was. marlc.ed Bonern said "each special ill.· .resC. group tries to be exempliedt, aere by ceremonies presided· oyer by Giovanni Cardinal Ur from closing on Swnda3f'.... &~ 1D9Iai. of Venke w:!lo, was: the' pr«dided "If the ptes. are csn.· repI:eseBtati~e oi PIt'pe tlnva.rr,- opeaed,. Sandll¥ will IDe·· ~ PaIIIIi VI 1iGIr the commemoration.• eome- just anoCha etas Oil! Speaking in '.IZDent eathe'da7al. 'Ilusinesa as usuaL''' _eve the Tl'identine: cdUOcil
__ 1Ieid,. CardiDal Ul:bam. said,
Unify Leaflets Iball flbt great. council 0' the·
LOImON (NC) - fte cah-. C.uMei"-Reformation b:a& the
• 'l'nlth Society bas disbilNtedt san:R aims all the Second VatiMan lulU a miIllon leaflets oa thE! Co¥ncil, now in. prog.rellB. 0IaiT of Unity 0c1:;n0e,. aa eiglt:-. A message £rom. Amleto Cat- _ period of prayer for I!Ie NIl·, fliAat Cicognani, Papal Secretary ~ of lapsed Cathoties audt a! State, was read in the c~se iIlOR eutside the ChWhh. of the ceremonies..
and Easter, but only for a :few hours. Divitled City JeFusalem itself is< a divided city. Jordanian and Israeli soldiers, armed with sub-ma chine guns, face each otheF on the alen 2'4' hours. a day.. Free access 1'0 both pa'l'!3- of the city: is lW'lrillablie- onlY' to' a handfu.i' of dipmmlMls' and/. ~ tTuce ob geI'YeJ.lS.
cacamltClJi. ill.
t!te-
l!Ikst
Nlear-
coumtPies lII'C', it!' lacge' numi/ler.s, 1II"eID.&e.Qt ltf t1'te Eastwltt Kites w.mtk tlteir' li:tu~ andl rit'es,. l_s a1ut ~ dWl:ereAt tWm
Roman Rite CatholiC8- in the West. Christians in these countries, with the exception of Lebanon, which is 51 per cent Christian, constitutie a small minority. of the total population. The m,a... jority of people is the Near East generally (Israel excepted) are Modems. Catholics ill> .r'OrdQ1\! maitle"up ()lll)f 2;T per' cent of lAe
~ p'Opulation; ~ Tllilkey-,..M' per cent, in. Egypt, 1.2 pel' cent. U.S. Catholic welfare agen cries; opeJlatl!' ire Utelie' counuie90 sel'ving the poor "on the basis of need, not creed."
TORONTO (NC)-Fidel Cas tro's government of Cuba has banned the import from Canada of illustrated Bibles and Biblical excerpts. Rev. Dr. Kenneth MacMillan, general secretary of the Cana dian Bible Society, said he con. firmed this recently when he went to Cuba to see what had happened to a. Canadian consign ment. The society had been al most the sole supplier of Bibli cal texts to non-Roman Catholics in CUba. He said Catholics are able to get some Bibles into Cuba but the Castroites believe they have broken the back of the' Church in that country. The number of priests had been cut from 700 to 200, he said. Some Pulped On his arrival at Havana he was arrested and detained for five hours by airport guards. He later was informed that a limited, unspecified number of Bibles and Testaments w~uld be allowed into Cuba but all Gos pels, Bibles and Testaments which aFe illustrated are being refused. admis9ion. Dr. McMillan said it was. ob vious that the "communists real ize the' Bible is. a- powerful tool of ev.angelisml and that the illus tIrated, Btble is. particulady at
tractive."
Dr. McMill';n said he' was able
to, coniirnt: lAat some' Bibles and 8X!Uerpts. which' tlie socie~' had sent this. y.ear. hadJ been confiso
cateli and pulped. A trade em bat'~ has' pre'ITent'ed: <!:uliw Atom gettiU& pulp. from' it&. former main 9ltPpliett, the' Unitedt State&; since late in 1960'.
Fall River Trust STILL the LOWEST
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1601 So. Main St. III St ~·-~d Road ---~----
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 2, 1964
Liturgy Decree'
Pilgrim
Continued from
The Human Touch
Paae
Cfhnouq.h thE W u:k With thE: Chunch
Religious Sense in'
.
One
«m1ke text, Including the verr form of the' sacraments, may be There is not much point to speculating about the forth in the people's language. eoming pilgrimage of the Holy Father to the Land of Christ "This affects or may affect 0 .... dinations, funerals, blessings of and the results that might come about from his meetings every kind, Confirmation and with the various religious groups. In God's good time, the Penance, the very importan6 facts will speak for themselves. rites for the sick and the dying, the special services which on But the pilgrimage itself, the visit by Pope Paul to occasion precede Mass, such all the places hallowed by· the footsteps of the Lord, his talks the Holy Week rites. with those of other religions-these human contacts are "The council was similarly bound to have a good effect on the minds and hearts of men generous with regard to the Church's daily prayer or office the world over.' when this is prayed by Religiou. Today's man lives in a remarkable age. Technology is or the laity, but made only a at an all time high. Science has pushed back the frontiers limited or indirect concession of of knowledge and progress. Man is both unlocking the the vernacular office to the clergy." secrets of nature and exploring the vastness of outer space. Mass It is a wonderful age in which to live. Concerning the Mass, two situ But the very progress being made by man hmds to ations were recognised: "(1) the almost univer make him feel somewhat insecure. He is overshadowed by sal desire in the things. And it is the human touch that he looks for and Church for the needs, the reassurance that in the midst of things, the per Scripture read son is more important. Concern over his well-being, his ings '" '" '" in the vernacular; (2) spiritual welfare, the food in his stomach, the peace in his the widespread, world-these are the things that he searches for and grasps though not uni at gratefully. versal, need for This concern Pope Paul is showing. Following in the wider conces sions; especially footsteps of the beloved Pope John, Pope Paul-who said and immedi of Pope John, "He gave the world a taste of fatherhood" ately in the is showing at every turn his concern for people. His Christ part s of the mas message spoke of the three great needs-food for the Mass which the people say. or sing." world's hungry mouths, technology for the world's emerg Normally, what MAY be said . ing nations, and peace for all men. in the vernacular (if the episco By REV. ROBERT .W. HPVDA, Catholic University. His visit to the poor of Rome on Christmas day was the pal bodies" approve)? 1. The readings or lessons. That do.. pastor visiting the very humblest of the flock and being. not mean that all the training moved to tears at the sight ·of sickness and dignity amid TODAY-Mass as on Jan. 1. It Jesus' naming hod circumCision of lay readers has been wasted. poverty. is this unbreakable bond with places Him without question a8 "T\. .~il stresses the hier Jcture of the liturgy, His trip to the Holy Land will enable him to show the Abraham, Moses and the Exodus, a member of that chosen people a of Jsrael, which makes.it .impos- , whose call in Abraham' and an~ reading.' of Scriptural eoncern of his heart for peace among men of different· .sible to understand Christian whose Sinai 'covenant spell ihe lessons .. d' t· t fro . the religious beliefs. Once age-old animosities are br9ken down, worship and the .sacraments beginning'of a new'sp'iritual' era priesUy office 1.S· IS 1pC m .. in worship.'" . . then can differences be explored. without familiarity with these for the .human race. Entrance,. 2. "Theptayer of the faithful ., .' Arid it is in the climate of peace.' and charity that the ·antecedents. "He has revealed GraduaUuidCommunion Hymns or' "the common prayer" to· t>e his justice in' the· sight .of the . invite to 'share this era alI'the reintroduced after :tbe sermoa, , Holr Spirit' b.i'eathes. . nations~t (Gradual HYmn): This nations, for whom the Jews hed before the ·offertory" may be ill ia the great. mission, llle. great. been a :sign., . the vernacular:' The Constii.u. .,', '. destiny of Israel: to 'proclaimi~ . MONDAY .:..:. The Epiphan)' .,', tion does not give us' the. text. lts worship the one true .God and . O.r LOrd' ·.JesuS 'Christ. The Jor:.:, But the people are to respond Speaking ~ft~r Christm~'~ a youth group. that cares to manifest His Word in time. and :danbaptiSr#... ~~ Cana weddil)& ". to' petitio~s "for H!'ly. Ch.urch, 1•• for young children, Pope Paul urged that "love of Christ before the nations, theGenti~s.· tJte wilie,meri. as sy'mbols of the. for the. ciVIl authorities, tor those · Ma " pagan naHons<-- all manUM.· oppressed"by' various n,eeds,. for and, a religious sense" be instilled into· youngsters at all TOMORROW .;. sa as J . 'M"" i .h· . . all mankind and for the salva early age and then "this feeling wiUresist any erisis." Jan. 1. It is the same God speak esus as" es~ a -:fClDg. 'r°dllf - ti . f' h' t· ld" . It . ' . and ohthe Sundays following on o· teen ire wor . lS H :. .. The Pope is re~alling what thos~ e:xperiencedinedu ing nowkthtrhOugh h th Son. w hots' celebrate'· 'these maniiest8-" coUld· take 'the' .Good F~JdaY'. spo e roug .e. 'prop h e . ti f H' I . solemn form or bes()Ine simp1er eation and psychology and child-training know-that child once (Alleluia). The implications of
ons o. " IS' g orr as a p~oper form . ren acquire their religious values at avery early age. . universality in the sacrament of . concluslOnto. ChrIstmas. We see 3 ' "Th' . ts h: h t . . e Pla~, ..w itCh a tPerh~J~ By the time a' child is ready for-school he knows how . J'srael are , however, made artic Him no l~nger its Infant. .., t'he peop e, i.e., w lC.. Accepting the fact" that ,the the people should say or sfng important God is in his life:-or neglect of this has made ulate an.d clear in the sacrament. of ChrISt. ~radual,. Offerto.ry Son of. God :ceally became part together. (e.g.,the Agnus Dei' him lack awaren'ess of his Creator. and CommUnIon Hymns acclaIm of the human .family, one of liS, although said by the priest·· hi Parents who are strangers to God in their actions and the message as non-discrimina we at once affirm His Lordship "truly the people's prayer or in their speech will impart that same negative attitude to tory: "the whole wide world" and His. Kingship lest we b.e lost hymn" - and the priest too '" '" • "from pole to pole." in merely human sentiment. The would use the vernacular.) Here their offspring. MASS OF SAINT MARY ON Preface sings of His appearing too would be included the nor The use of God by parents as a sort of super~cop to in the r.eality of our mortal na mal "ordinary" and "proper" SATURDAY. This Mass (No.2, ture only to .emphasize that He parts of the Mass. frighten children into line will show itself in the hostile from Christmas to the Purifi Special Permission attitude that youngsters have toward their Father in Heav cation) is in its entirety a hymn "renew.ed us in the light of his "Wh' enever a more ex t en ded en. This harsh and false picture can rise up to plague them to Mary. A Chrstian hymn, for own deathlessness." everything turns on her mother for a lifetime. , TUESDAY-Mass as on Epiph. use of the mother tongue within hood, on her nurture of the any. But ·we sometimes forget the Mass appears desirable' it If God has little relevance in the day-by-day life of Divine Word. 'There is no con· He is our Lord and Saviour may be introduced' but only witll a home, then' children will be convinced only with great fusion of roles, no mistaking that the consent or formal permis because He is our Brother, be difficulty in future years that He must be th~ axis around where salvation lies. Christ is cause He is fully man as well sion of the Holy See." This the sole redeemer, only source as truly God. In forgetting these would include the priest's parts, which life is lived. of reconciliation with the Father. things, in failing to balance the mentioned the noted liturgist, The Pope asks that children be introduced to the Christ Mary's preeminent place in the "namely, the prayers called the deeds of Christmas and Epiph of the Gospel. The strong, serene, holy and true picture devotion of the Christian people any, we have at times made the collect, secret and post-commu of the Lord thus acquired will be with them in times of is exclusively in her. maternal tabernacle more important than nion, and above an the canon it self. crisis through their lives, and these moments of religious relation to the Word of God. the altar. "Even before the council's'ses difficulty will be for them "progress, development, victory SUNDAY-The Holy Name of We have .turned our churches sions ended, bishops from 'some Jesus. According to his original from sacred assembly halls for countries, especially in mission and deepening in Christ, the son of the Living God." plan, Pope Paul will be today worshiping communities in t 0 lands, were considering petitions and tomorrow in the Holy Land, throne-rooms 'of mere adoration. of this kind' for the Holy See'. that ancient, middle - eastern We have removed and elaborated permission." center of world history into our altars until they become. . '..Results ForseeD. which Jesus came as the climax shrines, rather than holy tables English .has been used in the of a series of God's mighty deeds for the celebration of a sacrifi Mass for some five years in the for man's salvation cial meal. Byzantine Rite here in the U.s. As we celebrate today's feast WEDNESDAY ~ Mass as OIl Bishop. Elko, Pittspurg Byzan of the Holy Name of Jesus and T he Incarnation tine Rite Eparchy, promised that great Epiphany, we Epiphany. OFI=!CIAl NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER tomorrow's makes His glory' our glory, His, the Latin Rite's introduction of join ourselves to our primate His EnglisQ .in .the ·Mass would b~ar °ubllshed weeKly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Rive, bishop in prayer around our· Kingship our kingship, altars, that this dramatic appeal priesthood oUr priesthood. First unbelievable fruit. In his Rite, "10 Highland Avenue
.to the untty of Old and New Reading.and Gradual Hymn both the BLthop said, choice of Ian Fall~iv~~, Mo.. OSborne 5-7151
.... ". Testaments and to the comm~m teach .of a worship which has guage iil up to individual past<>F" PUBLISHER discipleship of Orthodox and profound eff~ts on the wor-' "It is· slow. for some.· We .don' Most,.Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., PhD•. Protestant and' Catholic may shiper.•• The 'g1<>ry. of the Lord ord~ ~~~, ;oukB~w, b~t it..." forcefully advance the cauli4l ."i.e up~n" ~l' ·"has risen, upon", , com.m~. m. -:.The BIShop ~ent..~ ". GENERAL MANAGER ASST ,GENERAL MANAGER ' . "•.. us. It; dOes JJlot. ~maln pur~)y'" ~ ~bow some of the. ec\Jmen~cal of the' Church's renewal and' reo Rev Oan,el'F..Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John ,~ D;itColl . exter$i, leaving us with ri!')th.· ff1~b," ,?£-. ~ch an 1DtrodQcti~ .form. . MANAGING EDITOR .' <.' :.' Today's Mass' stresses' both· ing,bqt awe' aJid' wonder,' It ... b~ ~p.tionlIlg'some of. tlle,Jar,. • ~~ W. P~e· se"•. tl'utbll. Th~ Gospel, ac(O~nt. ot M'WS las ,anci i$ witl. W' , . . t1"Slh. ~. ~ld'"
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Pal lli'i«--lItun., Jan. 2. 1lO64
EducatorS· "lJrge Extending Years of ,~:ublic' Schooling WASHINGTON :{NCJi-AIi influential group of public school educators has' proposed that all high school graduates be offered two additional years of education at public ex pense. The proposal come!s from the Educational Policies Commission, an "educational education. At present. to receive
brain trust" supported "by education beyond high school
the National Education As students must pass admission
sociation and the American tests. The commission would
Association of School Adminis trators.
The commission periodically is
sues "policy statements" which get wide distribution among
public scbsool officials.
Should the commission's latest
proposal be implemented, it would revolutionize U. S. higber
Urges Minorities Unite for Actior. SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Minority groups should unite 10r joint action to cope withllOCioeconomic problems - and the Church should support them, according to a priest experienced in work for minorities. This view was expressed by Father Ralph J. Duggan, assi.<:tant executive secretary of tile U.S. Bi!Jbops' Committee for Migrant Workers. Father Duggan. who recently
eliminate these.
In addition. the commission's
proposal would seriously aHect
privately supported colleges and
universities which charge tui
tion.
Of the new "non-selective col
leges," the commission saoys:
''These colleges must operate
under controls which ensure that
they are truly non-selective;
that is, that they will admit for
at least two years of general
study all high school graduates
who apply. "Obviously, these will be
mostly public institutions. Uni
versal education has always
meant public education. The
great majority of potential stu
dents can hope for a 13th and
14th year of education only in
public institutions which the public requires-and permits b7' means of adequate financial sup port-to be universal in their admissiOns policies." The commission argues that
INSTRUCTS DEAF: Finger spelling and oral communication are used simultaneously to instruct pupils at St. Joseph's School for the Deaf in Oakland, Calif. Finger spelling is not the same as sign language. Used with speech reading it employs the language pattern rather than isolated words. NC Photo.
:~P~~h.;e:::ur~:::e::~ :~~~~~'d~~i:~:::n~t~a; =ie~ ~~:::t~e:~; ~~~fcan~~c~:-~ most
Private Colleges Need Tax Credits Fr. To Save Them From Bankruptcy· -On
Manton Speaker 'Catholic Hour'
. last to be hired and the 'first tQ . Non.selective colleges, it says, NEW YORK (NC) -- Father be ·tired" - should engage in should exist.in every "popUlation MILWAUKEE (NCr - ' , pe~ with tax-supported institu- Joseph E. Manton, C.SS.ll, of joint efforb to cope with proIl>- center.". Congressional enactment of' (ions. Ro~btl!Y, w~l1 be featu~ed in a )ems arisiD« from .utomatio~.' Its new pol.i.cT statement is en- tax credits· for tuition paid .. Private institu.tioDil cannot serIes of four talks on The Cath 4liscrimiDation and the lmpor- titled "U~iversal Opportu~ity eolle a and wu'versities l'llise tuition to cover the actual olic Hour radio program' Sun tation of foftign fann Workel~s. for Education Be7QDd the High . , Id·bo....... • te .nstituti cost of education without pricing clays in January. His tC!lpic will Anet. he saiet. the Chun:h hou School." ~u save prlV'a , I ,ons themselves out of businea. yet, be: "Four of a Kind: A Quartet • role in deve10piq ftspoilsIlJi- " from bankruptey, accoi-dia.g to neither can -they cOntinue to of Unquaint 3ainta,"
in minority groups. " . "'r B a Marquette University political ~ar the financial burd;? of the Ii 'iongtime favorite of The
Too oftea, Father Duggan _£d, • IO ~ .eientkt. diffe!'ellee tuition aDCl Catholic Hour program,. pro_ -We pay lip ~ce to the prillFather Virgil C. Blum. S.J., actual cost, he believe&. dticed by tkeNathlnal Council eiples of iIodal ju.stice bbt are 0 ICy . -.ys that spinling costa of edaFather BlUM notes that in of Catholic Men and carried on . .willing to step 011 aD7 tOes 110 •.' . alion in private iDltitutioos are - ·lt4., more than 50 per' cent of the National Broadcasting. Com put them into effect hi tile ~:cmCAGO (NC) - Pre8i.. . fnR:ing. increamg numbers of , • naUoo's eoUegian.S were in pany Iletwork" Father Manton tical' order." . ient 1ohnson has pledged to INIftnts to send chldretl .. tax,:,: private colleges. But .~ 1983, . will centethis talks.around st. SUpport legislation which 'will' support~d colleges. ' . that percentage had tumbled' to Peter, St. Va-:lentine, St. Pills X Dec. _. fee.' ..' repeal the siringem: qUota' !k believes that if parents . lesi& .tbim· 3"T and' "it has been and St. Paul. ' . , . Music fOr the servi~ will be . SY9tem of U.S. immIgration,DOw w~ allowed a tax eredit on' . predicted that by 19'15-. less than .CoIltiIlued from l?aae l$is .1n fo!e~.in the McCarraa~W.ltel", their Fe&ral income tax debt: 20 per cent of our students will 'provitJed by Soeur Souriie (Sis-Rale c:onven1ons to Catho1idllJ(', act. tOr aporlion of their child's col_ be in, private instituti~. . ter Smile), the Belgiap D~min«banks.to the change. "There is. .DO coaPstencl7 in 1e«e tuitioD Costs, this Would "This fall," he writes irlOur iean nun whoa recordings. of re 1Jp te CviII· IU1 Americaa policJ' that both "ensure students freedOm: to""SuDdayVisitor; "the University liglous folksongs are current The success of Vatican n dE!- . recognizes equality among peG- e1roose between' the the publie'· of Wisconsia has a freshman best-sellers in Europe' and the pends on the Curia Cardinals, pIes and capricio~ bars imand. indpendent college." claa increase of 16 per' cent; U. S. Aid Pope Paul in traditional ~:- ~ .. migration from countrw' of G t to P is Marquette University has a de ebange of Christmas Il'ee~:s: .southern E u r 0 p e:' President ran aren. : crease of Z pel' cent. la.st week.. Johnson said in a message to a Father Blum advocates the tax "While the public universities It was God's Win' that Bl.e rally here. . credit approach in two current and colleges of Wisconsin enOHice Equipment
Ipiritual heritage of Pope John ''Each ~SOD lIeeIdng admis- articles, one in Our Su~ Vis- joyed. freshman class .increase Salesroom
XXIll should be not 0Il1y re- 11011 to the United States should iOOr, national Catholic newspaper of lZ per cent, the private iD.sti eeived but continued, the Pontnf be judged on the basis of his per_ published in Huntington, Ind., tUtions of the state suffered a NEW AND USED
stated. The Church must pray to sonal qualities and. skills; and and another in the JournaI of . decrease of 4 per cent." Wood and Steel De.b aIId cain oted fi»q- CIlIriDetL lDehsa.oM1Y Christ for ability "oil the OIJe special consideration should be'. Higher Education. published by iq. CUt.. u.f_ -hand to defeDd tile sacred "de,- given to reuniting families-" Ohio 'State University Press, ~ positum' and OIl the other to More than s.ooo American& of Columbus. Ohio. ·lOllJUA. S.YDNEY (NC) - Projects in I _ U n... eonfront the sea that lftllTOunds Italian descent demanded repeal Father Blum is a frequent tIS, that is to say ••• to .all- . of the present quota. system eommentatot on educational British· North Borneo, India, proach . the ':UthJe. bat DOble during the raIIy, spouored by financinc. He 1& a maj« ~e Pakistan, Vietnam and Brazil, . IIewIf«MmI world In which we live," . the Chicago chapter of the in the movement to eod. cooUo- whkh have been ~red by WTI-l11a the Australian Catholic Hier The PGpe insisted tllat tile American Committee OR Italian veny over Federlil aid :tor e1e Council must be brought to CIa Migration which works with the -eDtar7 and secoodarJ' .moots archy, will benefit from the laappy CCII1C}ulliolL" ~ toil !rational Catholie Resettlemst by aDocatoing to eadl child • Oat PreedoIIl from. BUIlCr Campai&D would be demanded anC! -Oil Coun-cll. Federal g,rant their parents. can conducted in all Australian' 70 u r cooperation depeud's large!:1!' '!be quota system aHocate8 1IIIe at an;)' IICbool,. public or states Iut Ka7. The national committee f~ the camptip has the practical. outcoaIe at the new immigration quotas· on tbebasis private. A national group. Ciii conciliar period"~ of the ethnic: ~ zelV for Educational Preedom. allocaied $:l2.400 for tile AI» U.S. accordinc to 19211J· c:ensus with headquarters ill Sf. Louis, 1ndian Biabopa' project. statisties. The law, passed in haa. been fonned to supporl WI 1152. lr'eezes the annual level pI'O(lOSal. NEW BEDFORD
of Immigation at some 100,000 persons. "!'here are seYen1 'bWs !'u'eeIItqe De« . .,
MONTREAL (Ne) - An idea DOW pending in Congress which fte Jesuit believes that unen INDUSTRIAL OilS
advanced by Paul Emile Cardi would liberalize the quota. !lowed private institutions" face nal Leger has culminated tEl tem. a dilemma in attempting to com .' HEAliNG OILS
the opening of an interfait:11
chapel close by the Montreal.
TIMKEN
International Airport. . .. MEN 17 -25 The Cardinal originally pro;. ASUNCION (NC) ..,.. A court' ?IL· BURNERS
posed that the chapel: be bUilt i!tl, of appeals has annulled a nine JOIN THE NEW the airport, but the port officials month sentence and $250 fine said this was not possible-. The!i. imposed by a lower court on ' .SocietY of Brothers' of & Service
Conrad N. Hilton and Herbert . Father Wilfrido Rivas, pastor' OurLadyofProvidence ~. O'Connell stepped ·into the 'of Caazapa in' southern Para SOl COUNTY ST.
for information write to:
picture.· 'l'hey installed' th~ guay, who was lIentenced in FATHER MASTER·
chapel in the $4 million, 288- August on a charge of slandering' • .HYANNIS' NEW ~EDFORD room Manuea! .Aeropod HiltoJa'·and libeling CoL, Andres·Lar-' St. Je..pIa the Worker
.• HA~JCHPQI:lT hotel, within 8even minutes ·rozo, milital'Y commandeli of the Novitia'
3-1751 • ~·¥ARMOUTHwalking distance 'frila 'the ur', ctidriet ill which Caazapaj'a cit;'~ Warwick'Neck. R. L
..... , terminaL of 23,000, is located. ",
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Allocate Aid Funds
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Blesses Montreat Airport Chapel
HATHAWAY
OIL CO. INC.
sn-
Court Frees Priest
Sales
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 2, 1964
Praises Nativity Poster Campaign
New Year Resolutions Include Prompt Replies to Letters
LONDON (NC) - Some lOr 000 posters portraying Christ's birth and saying in effect, "This is why we celebrate Christmas," were put up under auspices of the interdenominational Christ mas Poster Campaign here. To raise funds for the posters. the campaign group printed 30, 000 Christmas seals selling at a penny each. The campaign, organized by a small group of Catholics 18 years ago, received this message from the Anglican Primate of All England, Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury: "The Christmas P 0 s t e r Campaiga brings many people the re minder that we get ready for Christmas not by starting UpOR its festivities before it has begun, but by thinking carefully aboat what Christmas means." Auxiliary B ish 0 p George Craven of the Catholic Archdio cese of Westminster praised the campaign posters for the "com pelling way" in which they gave expression to the real meanins of the feast of the Nativity.
By Mary Tinley Daly
Happy New Year, all readers I As we toss out the 1963
ealendar, hang up the 1964, we note 366 days, the "one day
more, each year in four" according to the old rhyme. Some
how, the advent of a new year brings instinctively a resolve
t() do better. Corny as they
At your house as at ours, the may be in this sophisticated more elaborate fruit cakes have
age, New Year resolutions vanished with the holiday en
are perhaps made by all of tertaining, but it is still nice to
us - made tacitly or openly, have a bit of the goody around,
possibly a carry-over from child_ so here is the recipe printed here several years ago: hood, and a Wash 4¥4 cups seedless raisins wholesome sign. and cook with 2 cups water and In an unex 2 cups sugar for five minutes. pressed, back Add ¥4 cup shortening and cool of - the - mind to room temperature. kind of way, we Sift 21h cups flour. Resift with resolve, firmly, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1h t. all to grasp with a spice, 1h t. cloves, 1 t. baking tighter clutch powder, 1 t. soda and 1h t. salt. those three With your hands, mix this flour g rea t virtues, mixture over 2 cups candied faith, hope and fruit and 1 cup nuts, broken in c h a r i t y, to pieces, until each piece is floU!' make them an coated. integral part of ourselves. Beat 2 large or 3 small eggs. LAST WORD IN EQUIPMENT: Some of the most And, like the World War II New York Archdiocese phrase attributed to a chaplain, Then, alternately add the dry modern apparatus in the field of chemistry is being in "Praise the Lord and pass the ingredients and the raisin-syrup stalled at the Catholic University of America, Washington, Seeks Foster Homes ammunition," we decide Oft mixture, blending well after D. C. Dr. John J. Eisch, associate professor, demonstrates NEW YORK (NC) - TIM specifics, to improve in many each addition. Grease tube' pan. Line with to Sister Esther, P.B.V.M., a graduate student, the' 0Il Archdiocese of New York has departments of our small orbits. announced an intensified drive Goodness k now s, there's brown paper cut to fit, and eration of an inert atmosphere chamber. NC Photo. to find foster homes for Puerto plenty of room for improvement grease paper. Preheat oven to 'Rican and Negro children. in the organizational, structure 300 degrees and bake 2 hours, 01' Msgr. G. Edward Moore, direcat our house, ,at least in those more, until dOne. A pan of water on lower shelf , tor of the Cardinal's Campaign areas administered by the author of oven produces a nice glaze. for Foster Homes and of the of this column! Frankly, some of you asked Catholic Bureau, said the arch To begin with the present, we 'talian-Born 'Sister Petitions Court diocese has been encouraged by are going to get all those Christ':' for this recipe.in early January, For Permanent Resident Visa the results of a recent surv~ mas exchanges done pronto, not 1963, and mea culpa" I just put showing that families without wait until the correct sizes, off sending it to you. W ASffiNGTON (NC) - A8 United States from Italy, but Hope you like the cake, and Spanish 'b a c k g r 0 u n d s were , colors and styles are completely Italian-born Sister has filed on a visitor's exchange visa, a taking in homeless Puerto Rica. HAPPY NEW YEAR! Gut of stock.
suit i1\ U.S. District Court here procedure selected because she children with greater frequency. Come February, we are going,
to halt her possible deportatioR was advised this was the mOtJt At present 182 Puerto Rica to "take that course" we have Congregation Studies ltecause of an expired visa. expeditious way to return. " mildren are waiting for place long postponed. Whether it be
Mother Charitas, administraThat visa has now expired. ment.' They range from infants the study of a foreign language, Beatification Causes
tor of the Mother Cabrini Me- The Immigration and Natura to 16 years old. Only 60 Negroea the history of Western civili
morial Hospital, New York, ,lization Law provides that a v A TIC A N CIT Y (NC) zation; or an adult education Beatification causes of a French lIsked the court that she be holder of an expired exchange are awaiting placement. eoursein philosophy, the time priest and a Sparii!!h nun, bOth I:ranted a permanent resident visitor's viSa must remain out has come for a little intellectual founders Of Religious commu visa. ,. side' the countrY 'for' two year. Slate Consecration, ,stimulation ar 0 u'n d here, a nities, have been introduced be Papers filed in court said the befori! beiJig' able ~. return. PHILDALEPHIA (NC)-Joinl dusting off Of the old brain, a fore the Sacred Congtegati~n of flister entered the country in consecration of Bishops"desig .hitting of the books ,aside from Rites. ' 191 ~ and' filed in 1922 to be ,Georg "tO Nun's March Date John J. Graham of Phila best seUers and magazine arti- ' , The causes are those of Father «lome a citizen. But before she For Racial Justice 4elphia and Joseph T. Daley 0.1 eles. ' Victor Scheppers, founder of the Iiould complete naturali:l;ation, ATLANTA (NC)-The strange Harris~urg, Pa., has been sched ,We're going to m,ake' the Institute of the Brothers and of Ilhe was transferred to China uled Tuesday, Jan. 7 here in the wholesale hurrieane of Spring the Sisters of Our Lady 01. where she served' froin 1928 sight of nuns participcting in a publk demonstration occurred Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul. cleaning unnecessary by a sys- Mercy; and of Sister Maria del until 1952. ' here when 2,500 persons staged "The consecration is. sCheduled , tematic, thorough cleaning'ofour Monte Carmela del Bambin In 1955, she reentered the a march to' downtown Hurt Park' for the newly establIshed fea~ house, bit by bit and week by GeSu, foundress of'the Congress in an interracial justice rally.' day for Blessed John ~. Neuweek - not wait until bureau of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus The group of nuns along with ma.nn, C.~.R."fourth Bishop oi drawers are a mess, windows . and Mary. Advises Nuns to Seek . priests and laymen marched with PhIladelphIa. are foggy, curtains 4ingy. , . The' congregationaliro es-, the St. Martin's Human Rela-, The Head of the House will be amined the writings of Father 18etter' Public Relations glad to learn that our automobile Luigi V a ria r a, S.D.B:; who CLEVELAND (NC) -A nun tions Council, an liffiliate of the National Catholic Conference
habits have taken a turn for the founded the Institute of the Sis 'Who heads her community's vo better. No more will we simply ter Daughters of the Sacred I~ations program said here that for Interracial Justice.
Nine organizations' partjci
fill up the gas tank' and go. No, Hearts of Jesus and Mary in :1£ nuns want to have a better sir, we will remember to get oil, Bogota; of Father Wilhelm :public image "they had better pated in the demonstration 10 have battery and tires Eberschweiler, S.J., a 20th-cen ,start first to have better public which advocated steps for total H desegregation of Atlanta. Prin checked. tury German who won' fame for :relations. And correspondence? We wit! his spiritual guidance, and Ita "T'here are people who believe cipal speaker at the rally was • PHARMACY answer letters promptly, while lian Ursuline Sister Maria Lue 'that girls in the convent some Dr. Martin Luther, King, Jr.. the glow of receiving them is rezia Zilerl. how are tortured; forced to head of the Southern Christian Hearing Aid Co. still' fresh; bills will be paid enter, and once they get in are Leadershiup Conference.
before the "gentle 'reminder" starved or given impossible pen
Surgical Appliance Co.
comes along. Rules Christmas Lighi!. ances," said Sister Daniel Mir This brings us to an answer aine, vocation!! directress for
to a request from many readers Are Constitutional the Sisters of Charity of Cin Irene A. Shea, Prop. recently: recipe for the quick, :MIAMI (NC)':"" Dade County , cinnati.
easy, economical fruit cake that Attorney' ,Darrey A. Davis has '"Too many youngsters and
doesn't need aging - it ages as held that a display of Christmas parents get their ideas of a cOn
202 • 206 ROCK STREET it· cooks. lights in the form of a cross OR vent from a bad movie or an
FALL RIVER, MASS. the county courthouse was eon- equally bad book. Hollywood i.
no place to learn about the reli Sisters Canf:et Plans stitutional. LEO B. BERUBE. Mer. OSborne 5-7829 - 3-0037 ' , Davis said a "reasonable de- gious life. But it's up to the Sis 951 Slade St. .let. 08 5-1816 For Women's College gree" of government recogni-' ters themselves to make sure
ROCKFORD (NC) - The Sis- tion of the Christmas season that people get the correct
ters of Notre Dame de Namur "does not infringe upon any' image," she told 'the Theresians,
have canceled plans for a constitutional inhibitions." His a group of laywomen who foster
women's college here'in Illinois. ruling was given in response to vocations to the sisterhood.
Spokesmen for the commu- a request from Attorney Robert nity's Cincinnati province, which Scott Kaufman, who said two of was to have conducted the col- his clients considered the cross lege, gave two reaso,ns for the shaped Christmas light display cancellation: the drain on per- an unconstitutional ,attempt to Just Across The
sonnel caused by the Sisters' force Christianity on non-Chris Coggeshall St. Bridge
stepped up missionary program tians. Finest Variety of in .Bra:z:il, and comJlI~tion.of an County Manager Irving Me affiliation llrrange~nt WIth St. Nayr said he :wo~ld be guided 2(t66 MAIN Sf. FAU. RIVER SEAFOOD LOuis (Mo.) University, where- b)' the County Attorney', opiD . . .. Served An~,-'Aho by nuns will receive' professional ion and added: !'No statement III ~~ training there instea4 ',of' at tbe· ill orcWao eo 'Ws, kind' oi ~ STEAKS--CHOPS-CHtCKEN .' 1>iO,jec~ Rot:kf~r.d~e.'llle~ , ,. . . .".~, ': "
Faces, Deportation
TOUHEY'S
••
GERALD E.
McNALLY
(ASA BLAN(A
GENERAL CONTRACTOR ~
'~
'NORTH .
0I.H9'I ' .
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 2, 1964
Says Parents Are Children's
Models of Honesty, Courage'
By Father Walter W. Imbiorski Dear Father: Our boy, a sophomore m high school, was just sus pended for cheating in a test. I maintain that we must punish him. His mother sayll that everyone cheats in tests. What do you say 7 Harry Dear Harry: First of all, rd say that his mother is letting her SOD down. She seems to be for getting the man she hopes he will become when she ex cuses the boy for such a laJ)8e! Cheating is an area which to day has lOst the sharp distinction between the black of wrong and the white of right. It fa • tUay area which has such subtle dLadings in adult minds that the kids are left bewlldered. Bow has this happened? Modern Atm08Phere It happened in many ways, not the least of which is the sort of cultural atmosphere in which we exist which makes it "OK" for Dad to fix a ticket or Mom to lie to a salesman, but sinful for Junior to lie to that same Dad or Mom. . The same atmosphere where all politicians are judged disho nest, but movie stars may change spouses as often as cars; where education is equated with honors and marks rather than the knowledge gained; and, where parents measure all too often their succ,ess or failure by the' size of JU1lior~s first pay check•. 'Chance to ChaDKe Your boy, was fortunate to be caught. Now he has a chance a chance to mend the error of his ways, to be punished and then forgiven, and to start anew. Don't think for one minute that he was unaware of his wrongdoing, Do not think either that he doesn't know that he is better off relieved of the burden of the guilt he felt. . . .' Whether he needs punishment more than that received at school is debatable: It would depend on the ~ttitude- of the boy, on ·your llucces- in, communicating ·)'our· di~apP9intment: in him, :oft the· reasons. why he cheated in the, fir~~ plaee.·: . ; , ~e feels Ulat cheating, is, llo~e of '~cool" game to· be played between. teacher" and pupil, he nee.ds to be taught his ow,n reSPOnsibility in •. class room. Needs to be Liked If he suspects that either you or his mother are more con cerned over the humiliation of his having been caught than over the fact that he cheated himself, both you and he need to do Bome New York Honors ltOul searching. Lastly, if he cheated because Father Hesburgh he felt you would not be satisfied NEW YORK. (NC) - Father with the best he could do, it is Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., high time you clarified your University of Notre Dame presi feelings on that score! dent, was one of four men who The sophomore desperately received the 1963 Bill of Rights aeeds to be liked by you and by Award at City Hall ceremonies.' his friends (an almost impossible here. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, combination) because he doesn't presided. like himself very much. ·Be· can Others honored included U;S. ao longer be the child he was, Sen, John O. Pastore of Rhode. end he can't get a very clear pic Island; Dr. Constantine D. J. tUT~ of the man he wants to be Generales, professor of apace. eome. medicine, New' York Medical A mother uauall)' recognizes College; and Burris Jenkins, Jr., these needs intuitively, although editorial c a rtoo n 1st for the Ihe cannot always verbalize Bearst Newspapers. Otem to her husband. This may They were cited for distin be the situation at your house guished service in the fields of and may explain the atand ahe education, government, space has taken. medicine and journalism Jle Decisive Steve spectively. I do not think she is honest with herself when she says be h I may cheat because all youngsters P ysica Fitness do. Surely she would not excuse Alumnae of Sacred Hearts excessive drinking on your part Academy, Fall River, will spon because "everyone does"t aor a 10 week physical fitness It is difficult, however, for a eourse, beginning at 7:30 Tues-: W'oma.n 1?4e~clJ,' th~ Bill from .~y night, Jan.. 'Un the academy: ~e smner. She cannot &ee,.. gymnasium and directed by Miss: easily as you, that your· SGn·-eaa, ~.Y'nt~i~ ~u~van. Aluamae and; be punished without' belna . ze.;. jriends are ilwited to participate,
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9
World Movement Meeting Today CHICAGO '(NC) - Saint Xavier College will host the first three-day Better World Movement course in this country I for college-age members of the laity, starting today. Sister Mary Olivia, new presi dent of the liberal arts college for women, said the program will be sponsored by the col lege's Student Association. About 150 participants will be housed on the campus. The Better World Movement . waa founded in 1952 by an Italian Jesuit, Father Riccardo Lombardi, in response to a re quest from Pope Pius XII. . Although the movement has been active around the world fQr many years, it has only re cently been established in the United States. Saint Xavier College was in volved in the early stages of its organization this past year with the assignment of Sister Mary Josetta, then president of the conege, to a position with the promoting group of the move CENTENARIAN GETS WISH: Mrs. Juliana Mueller, ment which has headquarters in D.C. Sister Josetta 100 years old, got her wish to see modern Berlin, thanks Washington, also serves in Washington as the to the Sacred Heart Guild, made up of the wives and other executive secretary of the Con,.
women relatives of U.S. servicemen stationed in Berlin. Two ference of Major Superiors of
nuns from the home, two members of the guild, and Father women in the United States.
(Maj.) F. N. Maguire, Berlin Brigade assistant chaplain,
escort her on the tour. NC Photo. Kinc;fergarten Verse
In .White" House Display
, Violates Court Ruling
LA MESA (NC) -California kindergarten ·tots in the La Mesa-Spring Valley School dis 18th Century Creche Owned by New York trict can no longer thank - for evefything. . Woman in East Room They had been reciting following verse: , NEW YORK (NC)-The fruits Jacqueline Kennedy. Arrange Thank you for the world sO of a Manhattan woman's lifetime ments were made again to set up sweet,
nobbyare part of the decorations the Nativity scene by Mrs. Lyn . Thank you for the food We
in the East Room of the White don Johnson.
eat,
House in Washington during the From Collection Thank you for the birds that Christmas season. Mrs. Howard, who says she sing; . . An 18th century creche owned nas collected "quite a few an-· . Thank you now for everythiJ:1g. by Mrs. Howell Howard went oil tlque creches" in a lifetime of The last line, which originally display in ·the famous room· after. collecting, said "the creche is' read . "Thank you, GOd, the close" of the official mourning a very beautiful 'one with tbe everYthing," 'was change4 fo.l period' for the late President· head and parts of the legs .of lowing the U. S. Supreme Cou,~ Kennedy. ' ' the· figures constnlcted of terra-. ruling outlawing religious .ex~- . 'Mrs; Howard's creche was dis- . cotta and carved wood, while the. cises iri Public schools. ",. plaYE!d hi .the same room laSt' bodyimd arms and 'pa~~9f the 'After the verse was challenged legs are' mad~ o~ wire mesh .so ChristmaS '~t the· request of Mrs. by the San Diego chapter' of th~ that the positions of the figures American Civil- Liberties Union, can be set to order." . . . San Diego County CounSel Ber-: Hears Mass in Home The display, about nine feet tram McLees, Jr., ruled: ''To the long and 20 inches deep, has been eXtent . that these verses and On 100th Birthday set up on a table in a· recess' in songs are Intended as and' nsoo LAFAYETTE (NC) - Mrs. the middle window of the East for prayers and religious ~er Peter Klein cerebrated her Room. It is set off with banks cises, they are prohibited bF the birthday here 1tl Louisiana of live flowers. Constit~tion." propped up in bed, assisting at a "The .scene is set in a simu special Mass. She's now 100. lated case made with paper Bishop Maurice Schexnayder mache and there are five angels, of Lafayette gave permission to three kings, four shepherds and Father Ovila Forget to offer the six sheep in the display in ad Mass in her home. The Bishop dition to the Child Jesus and the also visited Mrs. Klein on her Holy Family," Mrs. Howard birthday and gave her a special said. blessing. A native of. Langbreich, Ger many, Mrs. Klein came to this country in the 1880s. Four of her INSURANCE AGENCY, IN.C. eight childien· are living. She also has 20 grandchildren, 55 M WILUAM STREET great-grandchildren and three great.g.reat-lUaDdchildren. She NE\tI BEDFORD, MASS. lost her sight two yeers uo and is bedridden but said on her WY 1·5153 WY 7·9167 birthday: "Life is good and I PERSONAl SERVICE WYman 9-6984 thank: God for it."
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10
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 2,
1964
Countries Helped By Relief Ag,ency Now Aid Others , HONG KONG (N C) European countries 0 n c e helped by Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic' Welfare Conference are now helping CRS to help Asia's needy nations. "Catholic Relief Services is distributing $60 million a year to help finance relief and re habilitation projects in the Far East," it was pointed out by Msgr. Joseph J. Harnett, regional director of CRS-NCWC, who makes his headquarters in Sai~, gim and is currently visiting CRS-NCWC nrojects in Hong l{:mg and Macao. . "More resources are available to us today than ever' before," explained Msgr. Harnett. "And in the last five yeal many of the countries that had previous ly been assisted by CRS-NCWC arc now assisting such under developed areas of the world as Asia. "Non _ Catholic organizations and civic groups - and of course the various freedom from hunger campaigns - these as well as the bishops' committees - are all joining CRS-NCWC in its efforts to assist the people of Asia." 10,000 Squatters Hong Kong was cited by Msgr. , Harnett as an example of what can be achieved when the tech nical advantages of the West are placed at the d,isposition of the East. '" "A British Labor party Mem ber of 'Parliament recently ex pressed shock at ~he fact that . Hong Kong's roof dwellers have doubled to 80,000 in the past· ~ven years, an~ about 100,000 'squatters still n~d to be re-' settled annually," continued 'Msgr. Harnett. "Housing undeniably is a serious problem here although' the Hong Kong government has done an excellent, almost un paralleled job in housing its millions of refugees."
WHERE POPE WILL PRAY: The Basilica of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem, left photo, and the Grotto of the Nativity in Bethlehem, right is the scene of many
visits of pilgrims during the Christmas season. His Holi ness Pope Paul VI will make an Epiphany pilgrimage to these holy places. NC Photo.,
Says Ecumenism Here to Stay
l
I'NoisyFew Criticize Catholic Priest Talks on Road Safety At Anglican Vicar's Invitation
BOSTON (NC) - Ecumenism is " in the Catholic Church to stay," Father, Gustave' Weigel, CORFE MULLEN (NC) - An S.J., told some 400 Catholic and Anglican vicar here described Protestant clergymen here. all unfortunate the reaction of, Father Weigel, a faculty mem ber at Woodstock College and a parishioners who criticized him felr inviting a Catholic priest to leader in the ecumenical move ment, said no one at the Vatican preach in his church. "It is unfortunate that my Council has s p 0 ken against Christian, r e u n ion, althougb, g4iad intentions should bave there' are different ideas on bow ' been misinterpreted by a noisy fE:W who are playing the devil'" to achieve it. ' 'He said .the success of the council must 1>e measured' by spiritual values. "You cannot regard the council workings as C~n merely human," he said.. "We BURLINGTON (NC) - The m ,~see things through the eyes f(ormation of a Commission on of the Holy Spirit, and from this Church Unity to promote better point of view much has been understanding a m 0 n g Ver done." monters of all religions has been announced by Bishop Robert F. 'Major step' The Jesuit theologian took Joyce of Burlington. Bishop Joyce said he would part in a discussion on the coun cil with Dr. Douglas Horton, name 12 to 15 Catholic laymen DUBLIN (NC) - Tne beati former dean of the Harvard and clergymen to the commission ,fication cause of Matt Talbot University divinity school. The and anticipated that representa has reached the stage of exami- ' discussion was sponsored by the tives of other religions would join the projects. ' nation for heroic practice of vir Paulist Information Center. The Bishop announced the tue, Archbishop John McQuaid Dr. Horton, an off' ',,1 non plan for the commission during has written to the people of Catholic observer at both ses a panel program. Dublin from Rome. Directing a Dublin diocesan sions of the council, called con tacts between council officials col~ction to promote the beati and the non-Catholic observers fication cause, Archbishop Mc Quaid reminded that processes a "major step" toward ecumeni cal understanding. requiring years of careful in RIO DE JANEIRO (NO) vestigation still lie ahead. He He said he found no "undue also urged prayers invoking opposition" to ecumenical ideas The president of the Jewish Matt Talbot's intercession with at the council and felt only lack Federation of the State of Guan God be offered, so that there be of time prevented action at the ahara congratulated Father Pat an opportunity for possible mir second session on such issues as ,ri,~k Peyton, C.S.C., founlier of acles, which are necessarY in the collegiality of the bishops the Family Rosary Crusade, on his efforts to inspire ,family the cause. and religious freedom. prayer in Brazil. Matt Talbot, a Dublin lum Rabbi Tofic-Nigri told Father beryard worker and reformed Pt' ',on he had asked all the alcoholic, died in 1925. An ex rabbis of the federation to lead ample of deep spirituality to his tbeir congregations in prayer fellows, he had secretly worn a for the success of a Family WESTPORT (NC) - A 60 belt of chains as a penance. year-old English woman pilgrim, Rosary Crusade program to com reported missing from her hotel memorate National Family Day here, was found praying ~utside in Brazil. the locked oratory on thl' sum mit of Croagh Patrick, Ireland's NEW YORK (NC' - Kinder garten children in a public school "holy mountain." Inc. Martha Larkin had come from don't violate the Constitution MOVERS Lancashire and made the pil ,when they say "God is great, grimage alone to the tiny ora Go,~ is good," a Federal judge SERVING to' \500 feet up the rock slopes bas ruled. I=all River, New Bedford
Judge Walter, Bruchhausen of Croagh Patrick. Cape Cod Area
held in a case from P.S. 184 in Miss Larkin had fasted three Acen': Queens County that "the volun days and spent two frosty nights AERO MAYFLOWER tary prayer offered by these in the open. But when the search children is made without com party located her she declined TRANSIT CO. INC.
pulsion and is not prescribed by assist~!lce. "She came down the Nation~wide Moven
law and does not tend to estab mountain better than we did," WYman 3-0904
_, lish religion in violation of the, Police, Sgt. Sean O'Neill re 1I0( Kempton St. New Bedfordwil First Amendment." ported.
Fllan Commission
Church Unity
Reports, Progress
In, Talbot Cause
R,abbi Lauds Prayer
C:rusade Efforts
Find 'Lost' Pilgrim Safe at Prayer
Upholds Voluntary
Prayer in School
CYO Convention Shown on Film
j". D. McMULLEN
NEW YORK (NC) - Pope Paul VI, the late President Ken nedy and FBI director J. Edgar game," Rev. William Rodda told' Hoover are among the personal his congregation in St. Hubert's ' ities featured ir a 'new film of church. ", highlights from the 1963 Na The Anglican vicar had invited tional Catholic Youth Organiza Father Bernard Basset, of near " tion convention. by Bournemouth, to preach at The 27lh minute, black and 8.t. Hubert's church on "Road llY'hite, 16 mm'. film was shot a1 Safety." Rev. Mr. Rodda'founded' the CYO couventi'on held here the Star Drivers' Association, Nov. 14 to 17 and attended by which seeks to reduce accidents, nearly 7,000 Catholic' young' by having d r i v e r s practice people. Christian courtesy. Father Basset Dramatic moments in the film was the first Catholic to join the b1clude Pope Paul's recorded association. ' message in English to the con 'Happy Error' vention, President Kennedy's ad. "The purpose of Father Bas dress-delivered to the cheering set's visit was not union," the delegaates just one week before vicar said, "nor was it a take his death-and Hoover's talk at over bid as suggested by other the convention banquet. people. It is only working to Msgr. Frederick J. Stevenson, gether that we shall to under national director of the CYO stand each other." said plans call for the film to be Father Basset said he thought shown to audiences in some he waS going to Corfe Mullen 13,000 Catholic schools and CYO to speak to a group of _star units througpout the nation. drivers and did no.t expect that "an ecumenical error would place him in the pulpit of an NO JOB TOO BIG Anglican church." NONE TOO SMAll "But it proved a happy error," , be added. "I received nothing but kindness and piles of con gratulatory letters. There were just a few who called me the 'thin end of the Roman wedge' PRINTERS or a 'papal bull in a china shop."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Jan. !, ~
Cou'rt Upholds Reds' Refusal To Register
1{
WASHINGTON (NC) The U.S. Court of. Appeals has upset the conviction of the Communist party for willfully refusing to register U:r1 der the Internal Security Act as an agent of international com munism. The three-man court said un animously that the government had failed to prove that anyo:rie w?~ available to the party who could sign the registration state ment without incriminating him self through association with a part)' that has been' labeled criminal. The decision was a major vk tor:" for the communists in their 13-year fight to avoid registra tion. It is seen as making it possible that the Reds will never register unless the government begins a new suit to 'prove some one is available who could JIm' o,.L the form without incrimi.;. nating himself or unless it ap peals successfully to the U.S.
FUTURE' DOMINICAN: Juan Garcia, internationally famous in bullfighting as Mondeno, is soon to enter a Do minican novitiate. At left· he gives a farewell performance in the bull ring at Tarragona, Spain. One of his last ap pearances was for charity, to help a housing development
Brother Andre T om b O d pene
Supreme Court. Sets Fine Aside The party was convicted in 1962 in District Court here and fined $120,000 by Judge Alex M 0 N T REA L (NC) - The ander Holtzoff. The new ruling tomb of Holy Cross Brother sets aside' the fine. Andre, who founded the world The Court of Appeals decisi.on famous shrine dedicated to St. stems from conflict betWeen two Joseph here, was opened as part U.S. weapons against commu of the Apostolic Tribunal's pro nism. One law, the Smith Act, is ceedings in his cause for even aimed at punishing members of tual canonization. the party while another, the ,Subversive Activities Control Dr. Lionel Lamy, personal Act, is aimed at requiring j,he physicia'n to Brother Andre, who party to register its officers, attended him at the time of his membership lists and· certain death, Jan. 6, 1937, and Dr. Jean other facts. '.. ' Marie Rousel, Quebec medico OUicers of the party claimed, legal expert, verified his remains and the appellate court uph,eld as .part of the required proce their view, that they cannot be dure. compelled to register under (me Dr. Rousel said the body wai of the laws because they could - . in- a mummified state. He ex not do so without incriminating plained this condition occurred themselves under the other in when the metallic envelope of violation of the Constitution'l the tomb lost its airtightness as guarantee against self-incrimi it became rusted. The tomb al nation. ways has been in the crypt of St. Joseph's oratory' and the warm ail' had caused drying of the Bishop Walsh WelD, body before decomposition could set in. Brother Reports Follow' Canon Law CUMBERLAND (NC) - Bish op James· E. Walsh, M,M., who Seals verified that the coffin has been held a prisoner for was that of Brother Andre. The years by the Chinese commu seals had been placed by the nists, is well although hospita late Archbishop Georges Gau lized because of age, his brother, thier of Montreal in January, Judge William C. Walsh, said 1937. These had not been broken here. since that time. New seals were Reports that the veteran mis placed on the coUin, following sionary Bishop was ailing were the identification. spread after Raymond Scheyven, . Father Jean Durand, C.S.C., a Belgian legislator, said last vice postulator of Brother An September that during a visit: to dre's cause, said the entire pro Red China he had been refused 'ceedings were carried out: in permission to visit Bishop Walsh, keeping with the strictest regu on the grounds that the mission lations as set, out by canon law. ary was sick and in a hospital. He had been held in a Shanghai prison. Swiss Have Catholic
"So far as our family knows, my brother is not sick," Ju,lge· President for 1964
Walsh said, speaking on the BERN (NO) - The Swiss basis of letters reporting that Confederation will have a Catho the Bishop is well. lic president in 1964: Ludwig von Moos, 53, of Sachseln, canton of Obwol, one of the three origi Quebec Starts Dri've nal cantons of the Swiss Con federation. Against U.S. Smut Sachseln was the birthplace MONTREAL (NC) - A drive of St. Nicholas of Flue, "Brother against sale of obscene periodi cals and magazines has been Nicholas," "father of the Helve opened here by police, who tic nation," and the new Presi claim the publications are being dent, the youngest of 12 children, brought into Canada at Toronto is of the family of the Saint. from the U.S. President von Moos was edu Andre Tessier, chief lawyer of cated at the Benedictine college the Municipal Court, said: of Sarnen, SWitzerland, and in "While many of these periodi 1933 took his degree in law at cals would have little or no ef the University of. Fribourg. As fect on adult minds they inflame a' member of the Swiss Federal the minds of impressionable Parliament,' he was responsible children." a few years, ago for presenting Police said if the magazines the motion aimed at suppressing were imported directly into from the Swiss Federal Constitu Quebec instead of Toronto, they tion the articles of "exception" would be subject to action by directed against the Jesuits. and the Quebec Board of Censors. Catholic convents.
in Portugal. At right he makes a traditional visit to a chapel. The renouned toreador established a fund to care for his aged mother and other relatives before renouncing the life of the bull ring. NG Photo.
Gets Cool Reception
Catholic Authority Fears Effects
Of Common Bible on Scholarship
ST. LOUIS (NC) - A na tionally known Biblical scholar had a cool reception here for news that English Bible scholars may have succeeded in adapting the Protestant Revised Standard Version of the Bible into a common book for Catholics and Protestants. : Father Bruce Vawter, C.M., professor at Kenrick Major Sem inary and author of many works on Scriptures, said he feared-the tendency toward a "common Bjhl~" might have harmful ef. fects on future Scriptural schol arship.
Irish Prelate Warns Of Reckless Driving DUBLIN (NC) - The Primate of All Ireland warned here that reckless driving is not just a breach of courtesy but a breach of the moral law. Archbishop William Conway of Armagh said in St. Patrick's cathedral that "reckless driving is sinful driving and that is true whether an accident takes place or not." He also said that such driving "is a matter of confes sion even though no one has been killed or injured by it." The Archbishop spoke on traf fic safety in response to a na tionwide campaign conducted by the. Safety First Association of Ireland.
Qffers Condolences To Disaster Victims LOS ANGELES (NC) - Pope Paul VI sent condolences to vic- tims of the Baldwin Hills dam disaster here. ;His sympathy was expressed in' a cable to James Francis Car dinal McIntyre from Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Sec retary of State. . "The Holy Father is distressed by news of the flood disaster and expresses condolence to the bereaved families of the victims. He assures his prayers, "and im parts his particular apostolic blessing," the message said.
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Admitting that a common Bible might have advantages, especially in the ecumenical movement, he nevertheless was worried that such a book might lead people to consider the work "definite" and thus inhibit future scholarship and new translations.. "This is what happened to the King James Version," said the Vincentian scholar. . "King James has always been harmful to scholarship ~ause the people became wedded to it an tl resisted any attc~mpts to change it," he said. CCD Work Better Work on the common Bible in England was disclosed recently during the sessions of the Gen eral Assembly of the National Council of Churches in Phila delphia. '1'he Rev. Dr. Luther A. Weigle of the Yale Divinity School made the announcement. However, in London, no of ficial confirmation by Catholics was made, although it was learned that discussions had been underway for some time by Catholic bishops on whether an imprimatur should be granted such a work. As to the Revised Standard it self, Father Vawter called it good, but he thought that the American - produced Confrater nity of Christian Doctrine work was better in many respects.
Former Attorney Ordained at 72 DUBLIN (NC) - Arthur Cox, an attorney in Dublin for 46 years, was ordained to the priesthood here at age 72 by Archbishop John C. McQuaid of Dublin. Father Cox retired from his legal practice two years ago to stUdy for the priesthood. His wife, the former Mrs. Kevin O'Higgins, died a few years ago. She was the widow of the first Minister for Justi.ee in the Irish Free State, who was shot dead on his way to l'yfass one Sunday. A distinguished array of guests attended the. ordination. They included former Premier of Ire- ' land John Costello, with whom Father Cox obtained his B.A. degree in 1913; and former president Sean T. O'Kelly of Ire land and his wife. .Father Cox offered his first Mass in the Carmelite convent at Blackrock, where his step daughter, Sister Kevin (O'Hig gins), resides.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall 'liver-Thurs., Jan. 2, 1964
For The Impoverished Christ
Innate Fairness, Honesty, Qualities of Teen-agers
God Love You
By Host Be.... Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.
Rich people may find it hard to enter heaven. So saM the Lord of heaven and earth. Therefore they must make a greater effort than the poor in spirit, who are already like balloons without ballast, all set for flighl
By Joseph T. McGioin, S.J. Early in the young life of this column, there was a piece entitled "What's Right About Teen-agers 7" As ex pected this one drew some expert opinions adding to the long list of what's wrong with you teen-agers, but it also broug~t a few short letters to an adult life ot selfishness of appreciation from Borne of and unfairness. your literate young types But innately, and as a group, who have spent much of teen-agers, just em~ging from y('''!" lives listening to what's Wrong with you. In that previous , ar' it was
pOssible only to
list few teen age, pOtpTltiali ties. In this ar ticle a "d in
sr, f u t u r e
ones, we'll try
to' explore some
of these alleged
qu:iUties a little
nl (, r e deeply.
Right now, let's
.. Ie into just one of them the innate fairness and honesty'of teen-agers. ' Despises Weakness Now to say that a teen-ager is h'onest by nature doe not neces sarily mean that n('l teen-ager would steal ,a hub-cap or cheat in an exam. After all, the crooked adult had to get his sta~t in life somewhere. No but when you label teen ager; as innately honest, you mean only that they are honest if they live accordin~ to their real nature, and that any tra~ of dishonesty will worry anel shame them. A teen-ager may, for instance, give in to je;l1ousy (and its con sequem;es-gossip, slander and even calumny) on occasion. But this is not natUral to him, and he <iesplses his weakness here. , BamaD Itespeet .
'
n
He ~aY <~~ollow the crowd, even ~hen he suspects th,e crowd is wrong, but be .isn t ':proudof himself for doing $0. A teen-ager, may do things out. of buman respect so as not. to, 'be' ,called" ,squar~, but he'll in variably hiite himsp.J£:for it, too. That is "he'll hate himself uhtil;' with :'adulthood," he starts chise ling down his ideals. "Teen-aged honesty often takes tb f f a frankness" and e nn~~: w~ich can be embar ~ . but "w hich is also ,re rassmg, freshing. And there are hun dieds of "onest young people for , ' g clod who has al ev.ery youn d stifled this natural open rea y ness. Fundamentally Fair "Slightly different from his _natural honesty is the teen • ager's innate sense of fairness. Here again, as in the case of honesty, there are teen-agers who already have a good start on an adult brand of unfairness. ,But the teen-ager is funda 'm~ntally fair to start with, un til' he ~ecomes spoiled ,or learns better from his elders. And ,this 'fairness shows itself everywhere -at school, at home, ,anli so • 11y. ' ' ella ,' ' N'aturally, the teen-ager, like all human beings, will not al ways be -above thinkinC 'be is being treated, unfairly on ocea sion. ,-and so his sense of fair ness can sometimes wane. With Right Direeth.
a
One rather enormous field in which teen-agers tend to be un fair is in their dating patterns. But ",ery few of them have ever ,been taught that sex attraction is selfish and unfair, but that love is unselfish and fair. Once they If'arn this, fact, the teen agers' sense of fairness will spreaci to this difficult field as well. Let's face it-there are completely unfair. selfish teen-agers, ab,'eady. well started on the road '. . , ,".-.;.
.....
Those who are bleuetl with the worfd'. ceods 40 lea"
aome eI their mODey to so-called "eha.r'lb." IIUeh as addlnc an
other milnoD to an Institution that alread,.
Ilaa millions. Bowever commendable this
may be, the eomtoriable 1DAJ' weD pondew
tile words OUl' Lorel will saJ' on the Da,.
of Juqment: ''1 WAIl hUDl1'Y &ad yon p't'e
Me to ed.'· Be will Dot sa,.: ''I had ten
dormitories &ad Y01l &"ave Me tile eleTenth."
Be will ~: ''I was thirsty &ad YOll pve
Me to drink:' not: "I had. a 20 million
dollar endowment and 7011 made it thirty."
Be wiD say: <'I was naked and you clothetl
Me," not: "I had seven million, dollan is
't'e8ted in W&l1 Street. the interest of which
helps M)" mlMiOliaries, and ,.ou made it
eight million." Note that what Be ilOD
aldered as done to Himself were thOM
thin&'s done when Be was destitute and liviD&" in the poor. Glvbl.c
more riches to the wealth,. may meiit reward. but this is le.a
certain than wheu dvinc to those wile have nowhere to laJ'
their heads.
the se~ess of c~ildhood, are not this way, and WIth the right directi~n and so~.. example, they will not go thl$ way. III Raee ltelations It 18 perhaps in the field of nil COUNCIL POST: Amer race relations that the teen ican-Born Bishop John E. ager's instinctive fairness is at Ta:,lor, O.M.L, of Stockholm. its best, far ethead of the "ex ample" of some of their adult Sweden, has been named to archetypes. a Ilew seat on the Second Kids are flabbergasted, as well Vatican Council's commis they may be, when a father and mother of German origin, say, sion on the Sacraments. NC will not allow theit teenagers Photo. to associate with those of Italian extraction, or when an Italian When tbetime comes to make your will, o~ if you want to" parent doesn't want any Polish take out an annuity because you need the" income to live on, here neighbors, or when a Polish are some points to remember: ' " mother doesn't want her daugh 1. Leave the money or take Qut the annuity so that it serves ter associating with any of those WASHINGTON (NC) - Su the impoverished Christ in Asia, Africa and Latin America. !rishers - shanty, lace-eurtain, preme Court Associate Justice 2. Arrange for its, distribution to the hungry Christ by leaving or what-have-you. Arthur Goldberg said here that it to his Vicar on earth, Pope Paul VI. " Confused by Adults the htgh court's prayer rulings, 3. Be certain that none of it is invested again, but that it is Teen-agers ar e completely like other decisions it bas made, given immediately to those who need it. confused by the adUlt attitude can be reversed by changing ..the These three conditions are fulfilled by taking out an annuity or which irrationally labels as Coru;titution. making your will in favor of the Holy Father for the propagation wz:ong their attending school, "Power is derived from the of the Faith among the poor of the world. For further details, with Negroes, or Mexicans or people. They can always adopt write to me (including the date of yolir birth, when requesting Orientals or Jews or Catholics. an amendment reversing the the pamphlet on annuities). Pray for me and the Missions! To the young, this is stupidity. court. Whether this woUld be And they are perfectly correct: wise, as a matter of policy, is GOD LOVE YOU to L.B.,' fOlf' 5e "I 10 years. old aDeI
It is. It is also one of the oldest, another question," Justice Gold c1oD't get an allowance, but I want to send this in thanks for a
bitterest defense mechanisms in berg said. cood ,Mom and Pop and the &,ood food I eat." ••• to .T.M. for
human history. . , Rulings by the Supreme Court $! "I was savinc this for a bicycle, but although I can wait for
But .h~n.esty ~d faIrness are in June, 1962, and June, 1963, that, the pOOl' can't wait for fOOd.'" • •• 60 Anonymous fqr ,U
potentialities With you teen have barred prayer and de "I am trying to reduce without the aid ,of redllcin&' pills. I ha.'t'e
agers, and like any potentialities, votic'nal Bible reading from' lost I' pounds 110 fM and am sendin&' a dollar for eaeh pOlID""
they have to be actuated, or they public lIIChools. die out with your graduation Justice Goldberg, speak~ at .We are not only askiJig for your 'sacr~ces. but for your into "adulthood." So what can ceremonies marking adopti~,of_ prayers. Send your request and an offering of' ~ for the WORL~ , you do to keep them alive?
the Bill 'of' Rights, pointed to MISSION ;ROSARY, and we will lIM!nd 108 th,ese multicolorell. . i)aUn&" Habits
the constitutional amendment beads blessed by Bishop Sheen. Each time yOu say the WORLD '
authorizing a graduated income , MISSION ROSARY you. will Nmember to :put i'U!ide a dailr .acri- , F.irst .of all,. check, the cate ,.",' go.rles m which YOl.\r natural tax and said it was adopted fioe for the Holy ~ather:.. faU"ness and honesty are already after a Supreme Court ruline half dead!'w~ere you are selfish ", that such a tax wu unconstitu Cd .~ UaI.a eo~aaua. plll~oUl' sacr'fice,to ,it and malUt to tiona 1. , ." the Most Rev. Fulton J., Sheen. Natif,ma,l DIr!'dor ., the 8ctcl$ and unfllir,. . .
Proposals for a constitutional Take, for instance,.your datmg
for the Prop&catioD of the Faith. ~~. Fl.flh AveDue, New, ~erk,,, habits. Do .yOU alw~ys ,have to amendment to authorize prayer 1, ~. Y., or ,o~ ~ocesan Dlrectol'~ RT.,a~. BA:YHOND ~. ' date the g~l you ,like. best, or"" and ,Bible reading in public CONSIDINE, 36~, N.orth Main Str~ Fa~. BJveJ:, Ma& the ~anllest .boy m "your schoo,ls are pending in Congress. ' school. Or is It beyond the, YOURS TO LOW AND TO (JIVE1 rea~ of possU>~ty that you try It JDay be hard for you some ... If. of • OAUGH1'Ei O' 51. PAUL ,Lov.·..... atie? littlegeneroluty here IIOme _ _, . . . ~ Ie kJtewfeclg. _d lori of times to be nice to someone who m. ,. .... It" ..mq Hi MlRienwhfdl' _ tho A~ least do~.tglve, )"ourse~ is mlturally revolting, to you,' .--, . . . . . MoIi Utur., Gad tv. to ltriIle but it's not SO tough if you keep the 'Huma,n Bemg of the Week Hi. Wor" Ie IOUIa .".rywh..... Zetdon youee til h th b . award un you ave" e aSlC inm:ind what Christ said about sir'" t4-2J "oars iDto....' . d . thl. UJliquo generosity (and courage) to go it, "'VIi'hat you did to one of these, Apostolato may writ. Ie, a littl.. out' of your way in dating " the least of my brethren, you UVBENO MOTHD SUPalOI for 'some motive other than sel.' did to Me." DAUGHTEIS O' 51. 'AUL fishness. Honesty and fairness are vir SO ST. 'AUL'S AVE. BOSTON •• MIdi. tues 11atural to you. Don't louse ReSponsibiUtJ'Is NDw them up, but develop them, Secondly, where adult exam even in the face of the loud pIe is good, follow it, and where mouths y!lU encounter who try it is useless (as it is in the case to make you seem a square be,. of race prejudice) have nothing cause you aren't as loudly stupid to do with it. as they. INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC After you're old enough Don't ever learn the, lesson of now to know that chewing to hatred some adults would teach bacco is not a sign of maturity, you. l.earn'tlie lesson of love the 90 you're also old enough to best adults quietly teach you bT know that race prejudice is just their I!umple.' as dirty and' juvenile as -this Youth's Real Spirii practice can be. (I've known To 'me, teen-age fairness was some neat, well-mannered, ra most IlCeurately demonstrated b)" tional chewers. But the same a picture I saw not too lone ago. New IcIdfotd WV 7·9162 J12 HmMCInSi. :virtues can't :be attributed to lt sho'lIl'ed a picket, a young guy 'the race supremist.) in hUs twenties carrying a Thirdly, don't be • Scarlett sandwich-board sign, blazing O'Hara, putting off~nsibil forth tl)ne of the many inanities itiesto a tomorrow which never of the "race supremist. comes. Your responsibility is And walking along behind now, not tomorrow. And yOI1 him '\Vas a drtun majorette, don't have to do tomorrow's ac tions on today's graces anyhow. about 16 I would say, calmly but fu'mly beating him over the head with her baton. Natural V!rtues DOMESTIC & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS This may not always be, the Finally, keep in mincl that 110 ideal" 'lVay of dealing with stu one can be unselfish or fair or ~ SerVice pidity, b1tt it is o~e way. It is, honest for long without motiva tion and that the only motiva-" moreover, one admirable use for : 'MAIN OFFl~ - 10 DURFEE ST.;:, FALL RIVD tion'that can sustain such virtues a pato:tl. It L; al80 indicative of the is that of ,,doing God's will and perfecting yourself bellause this" rial spirit, of ,y()u,tl,l.-<:ommon , . . '. -.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" RiYer-Thurs., JcM. 2, 1964
Debate Schedule Holds Important Place on Post-Holiday Calendar Of High School Events
13
With the holidays but happy memories, Diocesan teens are once again buckling down to school life. Important.on the New Year schedule is debating. At Bishop Stang in North Dartmouth, the Debating Society is working hard in preparation for. Narragan h' I Db' s coo preSl'dent , M a d e I'me sett InterschoI ashe e atmg Morin vice-president Jeannine League competition. At a Garand, secretary; Jea'nnette Ro_ practice tournament in Lynn, bidoux, treasurer. A busy girl Stangites won four out of six indeed is Louise, who is Mem debates and also in practke ory Book epitor in chief, senior meets they have met teams from class vice-phesident and a 50 St. Catherine's in Newport; Prtl- dality unit leader. She sings in Yost ill. Fall River; and St. An the glee club and plays flute in thony'. in New Bedford. the orchestra (not both at once). Active- Debaters And officers at Prevost for the At Holy Family in New Bed Freshman A and Freshman B ford, always active in debate classes are, for ~, Paul Gen circles, much has been going on. dreau, president; Roger Bouch Freshman debater Dennis Kell ard, vice-president; Guy Morin, nedy won a silver medal in a secretary; Paul Cabral, treasu novice debate tournament held rer. For B, it's Richard Rashed, at Notre Dame High School in president; Henry Raymond, vice Fitchburg, for being second best pre sid e n t; Louis Howayeck, negative speaker in the tourn,il secretary; Gabriel Andrade, ment. treasurer. TEAM TEACHING: Team teaching is in wide use in Diocesan high schools. Pane On speaker ranking there was Tryouts for the annual gym lists at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, explain this new technique. From left, Louise a three way tie for first place meet are scheduled Monday, Jaft. among Dennis Kelley of St. 6 at SHA, Fall River. Let's go, Auclair, Cynthia Erdmann, Ann Richard, Louise Casavant. Peter's, John Warner of St. St. Agnes and St. Margaret! John's Prep and Kennedy. Ea4~h Events will include relays; bas. Educator Urges Aid Schools Plan Course received three firilt place votes ketball and volleyball. Heading and one second place. The tie St. Agnes' team is Aileen Mo On Commandments To Private Schools was broken by resort to speaker loney and Nancy Powers captaina UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS (NC) GARFIELD (NC)-The Board points. In Kennedy's only second St. Margaret's. -The president of the American SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - A of Education in this New Jersey place vote, he was beaten out Lots of livestock at Prevost, Association of' University Pro Catholic educator said here that community has directed the su. for the top spot by his partn4~r, notes the Maple Leaf, school fessors said here in Ohio that efforts to "baptize" every sub perintendent of schools to ini freshman Michael Kramer. paper. "It seems," says their re government aid should go to all ject in a Catholic school are tiate classroom study of the Ten The tournament involved four porter, "that Brother Raymond's schools, public and private. Commandments in such courses "misguided." rounds of debate for both the pets are not satisfied with the as history as soon as feasible. Fritz Machlu'p, Princeton Uni. affirmative and negative teams facilities of the lab, as a couple "When the major proposition versity economist, said the fact Vincent Rh!ilosi. nub I i c of each school. Kennedy and of white. mice were seen scurry demonstrated in an English class Kramer were victorious over ing around during an algebra that a majority of American is that Shakespeare really was schools attorney, proposed the students attend public institu inclusion of such studies in ex Notre Dame High, -Xaverian a:nd elass." tions doesn't mean it has to be a Catholic, then we have a situ isting courses' to the board. The St. Anthony of New Bedford, Brother ~aymond also main ation which is basically unfair board adopted the measure losing only to Bishop Guertin. tains a flourishing tropical fish that way. . "It just happened that way," to the Church, the student, and Holy .Family's affirmative tellm collection, to" which the latest per haps Shakespeare," said unanimously. Rigilosi said such . study in the schools would be a of Timothy Place and Fran<:es addition is a pair of sea horses. Machlup said. "But there is lio Father Harold O'Donnell, vice proof that it has to be this McIntyre bested Our Lady of principal of Serra High School legal' alternative to the prayers way. I can e a s i I Y conceive banned by last June's U. S. Su Pl'ovidence, St. Peters, 'and of a system where all education in San Mateo, Calif. Open Educational preme Court ruling. The board losing only to Melrose High. First Class Preparation is llupplied through private Em. , Holy Family's overall record ordered that such studies be OD terprise," he said in a lecture to . Father O'Donnell gave the of six wins and two losses gave Center 'on Formosa an elective basis. some 2,000 students a·nd faculty keynote address at the annual TAIPEI (NC) - Nearly 1,000 them a second place tie in school Meanwhile, Catholic groups bi members ·at John Carroll Uni. southwestern regional conven including the Republic persons, rankings for .won-lost records. . liOR of the National Catholic nearby Wayne have asked the Catholic Memorial of West R(lx- . of China's Minister of Education, versity~ . Educational Association's sec Board of Education to erect bury was first .with seven and were on hand fora ribbon ondary school department. cutting ceremony opening the 'Lauds 'Share~-Time' one. plaques in public schools with Dew $250,000 Tiea Educational Stressing the c 6 n v e n t ion the motto "In God We Trust.... Edward Parr Coaches Classes Increase Center here.. ' theme, "Catholic Education The ·tournament, open to an - Thomas ,Cardinal Tien, S.V.D., SAGINAW (NC)-An increase A Commitment to Excellence," high school debaters· without Apostolic Administrator of the in ."shared-time" school pro he said students in Catholic experience previous to Septe,m bel' of this year; attracted (~n- . Taipei archdiocese, for who'm the grams in the 16-county Saginaw sChools must· receive first~class tries from 17 schools in the New ' ~enter is named, presided at the diocese was character·ized by academic preparation. England area. The novice team ceremony. Education Minblter Bishop'Stephen S. Woznicki as "The world will accept them, from Holy Family was coaohed Huang Chi-lu praised the work "a practical demonstration of the listen to them, if their total edu. by Edward Parr, president of of the 'early Jesuits in intro fact that public and parochial cation is superior; it will not if ducing Western science to China . schools are partners in the great this education is mediocre," he the McKeon Debating Society'. and Chinese culture to the West. task of education." Citizens' Scholarship said. The center will be staffed by Margaret Mulyk of Mt. St. He noted 463 students from 16 Mary Academy'is vice-presid,ent members of the Jesuits' Far parochial schools are enrolled in of the student unit of the Citi. Eastern Province. pub lie school "shared-time" zens' Scholarship Foundation of classes. The "shared - time" Fall River, nationally fam,ous classes enrollment in this area DISPENSING
organization. Carolyn Cote is Boland Chancellor is a i18 per cent increase over OPTICIAN
Prescription,
school del ega t e from the Of Trinity College the 1962-63 figure. for Eyeglan.,
Mount and Carolyn Holleran, Bishop Woznicki called the DUBLIN (NC) -:.. Frederick "shared-time" plan "the best Filled
also a Mountie, is corresponding OHice Hour,
secretary. School delegate from H. Boland, former president of· answer yet" to the problems 9:00-5:00
the United Nations General As . currently confronting parochial Jesus-Mary is Claire Cloutier. except Wed.
Skiing and history research sembly, has been named Chan schools. . Fri. Eve. helped to pass the time of , cellor of the'University of Dub 373 New Boston Road 6:30- 8:30 lin (Trinity College). students at SHA Fall River over Roam 1 He is only the second Catholic . Catholic Center Fall River OS 8-5677 this vacation period. Lots of girls 7 No. Main St., Fall River OS 8·0412 LONDON (NC)-A center for brushed up on their skiing to hold this post at the Anglican_ skills, says Reporter Kathleen founded institution in 371 years.. London's 15,000 resident Span. Mr. Boland is also chairman of lards and the thousands of others Silvia; while seniors had his tory research papers to prepa're the new natipnal industrial .who come here from Spain each year is being established under for Sister Albina Marie, S.U.S.C. council that j.s trying .to stimu and Mrs. George Snyder, both of late this . country's . economic . the direction of Father Manuel growth, and he is Ireland's per-' Herranz, C.M. A large grant is the history department. English compositions will be manent repfesentative at the . expected from the Spanish gov , . INCORPORATED 1937 ernment to help pall for the due from Holy Family stud~mts UN. $105,000 center, which will in w hen they return today. clude a chapel, library, recrea Any subject will do, but get it Czech Reds Thwart tion hall and conference rooms. in on time, stresses Sister Mary Daniel, R.S.M. Religious Teaching TaJking of scholastic matters; BONN (NC)-Representatives faculty members at Prevost of the communist government of were understandably nervous Czechoslovakia have refused to JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Pres. last report card day when Mau- yield to Vatican requests for an FUNERAL HOME, INC. . Elegt8teredCivU and Structural Engineer rice Masse and Michael Cloutier easing of restrictions on rell a. II........ Bor ~ C. 1.0.....1......
Member National Society Professional Engineen arrived at school bearing ri:fles. gious education of children. ao.u ~
'1 Turned out they were only for· Regulations provide for relt ,I FRANCIS L COLLINS, )R., TreCII. a Rifle Club pra~ti~e,; but jUllt. gi~us. train~g in Czechoslovakia, . PUN~ DIRICTOU
THOMAS K. tOWNS,' ~y. the .me· •• . .schools pu~ government ~iDII mVINGTOJI W.
' New oiflceN· - Istrative edlet.. make it almost wy
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1-964- .
,SAVEMQRE. tIN·64!
Former Prisoner Delegate General Of Franciscans CINCINNATI (N C) Father Sigfrid Schneider, O.F.M., former China mis sionary who spent 18 months in Red communist jails, has been named Delegate General of the Franciscan Or.der for Japan. His appointment came from Father Aug u s tin Sepinski, O. F. M., Franciscan Minister General in Rome. Ordained in 1931, Father Schneider's first assignment was in China. He became Vicar Gen eral of Wuchang diocese. With Bishop Rembert Kowalski, he was imprisoned by the commu nists until his expulsion in 1954. As Delegate General for Japan he will supervise the work of 240 Franciscans, representing 15 nationalities and 25 provinces of the Order, in that country. Since 1960 he has been Vice Delegate General for Japan and Korea, and for the Past . two years also has been superior, of St. Bona.;. venture Friary at Takamiya and rector of the seminary there. Relatives in Order Father Schneider has two brothers and four nephews in the Franciscan Order.· One of his nephews, Father Bernardin Schneider, O.F.M., stationed in Japan, has been commissioned to translate the entire Bible into colloquial Japanese at the Fran ciscan Bib I i c a I Institute in Tokyo. . , Another nephew i!i' Father Christopher Schneider,' O.r.M., pastor of W:le beleaguered' parish of Our Lady of Good Harbour, Buras, . La., where .egregation Ists bombed the parish schooL .,
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Af.lic;~ ,'Study : NEW YORK (NC)-The 1!'ord . Foundation,' has, announced a $2:5,000 ,gran.t to .Georgetown 'U.niversity to orgatiiZe 'Ii month long congress on' research an?', de,velopm,ental problem.&: gf. FI:ench-speaking Africa. I'
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Ministers Attend Mass in Mexico
Vance Hartke of Indiana . paid tribute in the Senate to' the ~sters ofSt, JoSeph, Tipton, 'Ind:, who areceiebrating their community's 75th a1lI\iversary. Hartke said ,. the . nuns had "woven love and learning into the" religious fabric of:. our Hoosier state."
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OXFORD (NC) - ArcJ:11>ishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury, the Anglican Primate, addressed 200 'members of the.-, Catholic NewmanSociet,y at Oxford Uni versity on spirituality ana Cli'rfS.;." tiao unity,
L·35
BONE IN
NEW ORLEANS (N C) In subsequent years he is ad There's never a shortage of altar v'anced to "acolyte," "'friar" aDd boys at st. Dominic's pariSh "friar generaL" here, where· an unusual syStem Receive lDsWuctioDll of seniority and promotion has Assistance at the Roman high sparked their interest and de l!laes and the pontifi~l low votion. II...s i.s reserved for thoae who When initially accepted as an reach the rank of friar, general. altar boy, a yowigster fa knowl\ The boys of St. Dominic'. are . .. a "postulant." This qualifies .•1) enthusiastic that they pve up , him to lerve low Mass on week l!laDy hours of their· Surtuner to . days and 'ad as a paten, bearer ~. prepare for the ann~l "alJ cereat Sunday Masses. Dlony at which the,- advance · C Stu'd If after, a yeer he meets· cer·, fl~om one rank to the next. D tain requirement., a boyw ad-' They spend one to two- hours SAN . FRANCISCO. (NC) - , vaneed to the order of "novice." daily for six to eight weeks re- , Chemists at the UnlVersii,. of He now can add funerals, Bene- ' ceiving instructions. Their in San Francisco are 'conducting a '., diction and holy. hour to the' sltructors are the older altar double-barreled research' pro- lervices at which he can assist.· boys, the friars general. ' gram aimed at finding. ways to halt or slow the growt,b of,.can eel' cells. Heading the twin projects at the Jesuit school's Institute of Int(~ Chemical Biology are Dr. Gif 1'l!y, 8, Beth Allison, 6-, Craig BRIDGEPORT (NC)-A pep ford E. McCasland and Dr. David· R. Grassetti. Their studies· are ' py, 14-year old girl joined a Steven, Z, and Tiege Aaron, 18 months-were received into the supported by grants totaling' 80ftball team herein Michigim and belted a sPiritual home run. Catholic Church. There's anoth $113,000 from the National Can el~ Delaney-Mrs. Edwin Boyke As a result of her athletic ad cer Institute of the U.S. Public venture,. Candy Delaney· and OlE Saginaw, Mich. Health Service. Encouraged by Candy Delaney, Dr. ,McCasland is investigating nine members of her family a technique for suppressing today are converts to the Catho. Father Zalekski began calling at the Delaney home once a week, metabolism in cancer cells, while' lic Faith. The girl joined the Bridgeport gliving instructions. He said he Dr. Grassetti is seeking to deve Swans softball team last Spring. D~ver met a family more eager lop chemical agents capable of Candy Delaney said it was the 1" interested in the Catholic "starving" such cells. good example set by her fellow l'4!ligion. Often at the urging of players and the team coach, the family he overstayed his . Robert Rutherford, that got her u:.ual two-hour weekly instrue tion period. interested in the Catholic reli Father Zalewski put most of gion. MEXICO CITY (He) - A the Delaney youngster. into par Then, too, there's J'ather Sig _group of Protestant ministers mund Zalewski. O.l'.M:., pastor ish Confraternity of Christian attended a Pontfical Mass in of Aasumption of the Ble.ed Doctrine classes. He cautioned' honor of Onr Lad;,: of Guadalupe Virgin Mary parish here, who i.s the teachers to go easy on them, offered here by Archbi91lop a fan of the 80ftball team. He since the7. didn't have the reU. . lIliguel DarioMiranda y Gomez became acquainted with Candy gious background gf ()ther stu of Mexico City. Delane7 after watching her play. dlmts. The reply came baCk from The ministeD were part of Eventually, she approached h. tine teachers that the Delaney some 200 delegates taking part in Zalewski and asked for more In. youngsters were among the, best an assemb17 of the Commissioll formation about tile Catholic· students. of the World Mission and Evan After she Jnontha of J.nstruc religion. gelization, sponsored by the As a result, the gjrl's parents, tl')R, Father Zalewski received ' World Council of Churches. After Mr. and Mrs. Bernard' Delaney, tllie family into the Church. Mrs. the Mass the ministers greeted and her brothers and sisters--, Delaney with Tiege Aaron and the Archbishop and he conversed Mary, 12, Michilel Shawn, 10, Cj~aig were ~aptized absolutely, with them at length. Bernard Gerald, 9, Mi<;hele Aud- while 'other members were bap Two priest - observers, ap ti:red conditionally 'liince' they pointed by the Vatican Secre ha,d been members of the Bridge tariat for Promoting Christian 'O()rt Co~unity Church•. Unity, were at the assembly. WASHINGTON (NC) _. Sen.
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THE ANCHOR-DioceM of Pol ""'-Thurs., Jan. 2, 1'"
IS
SISTERS OF DIVINE PROV.IDENCE: Left, Sister Domitilla, princi- _ From left, Sister Mary Elizabeth, Sister Joseph Mary, Sister Domitilla, pal of St. Joan of Arc School, and superior of the Orleans convent of Sister Frides. Community has served Orleans parish of St. Joan of Arc the Sisters of Divine Providence. Right, Sisters enjoy reading period. since 1952.
Church Expert!; To Accompany Holy Father
Sisters of. Divine Provide,nee Serve Orleans' Parish of St. Joan of Arc
NEW YORK (NC)-Auxiliary Bishop EdwardE: Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Since 1952 the Siste~ of Divine Providence have bee. an i~pprtant.part of the Relief S~rvices--National Cath parish of St. Joan' of Are ill Orleans. There they staff • grade school accommodating olic Welfare Conference, has bee~ nlUPed pastor of ,t-he .some 1.72 boys and girls from orleans and the surrounding area. .The community was Church of : St. Andrew, located founded in 1851 in Mainz, Germany, by Bishop William Emmanuel VOIl Ketteler.Co neal' City Hall here. foun.dress was Amelia de la medal bearing the likeness. of of this community. . may contact . The' Bishop wiil continue to Roche: The ~ist~ ~m~,J-! Bis.hop Ketteler .~n one side ~nd the Sisters at St. Joan of Arc or , head the overseas rell~f adency the United St~te~; in" 1~1G the Eye f)f, God on the other. write ,the ,Provincial Superior, maintained' 'by U. S. Catholics. and now have over 400 mem. The Sj8te1'li1 at Orleans .wQrk " Box 2, Rcn..te 80, Kingston. He has been its director ~irn:e }>ers working in this country aDd in a mOdern school with "the" Candidates should be at least Puerto Rico. General mother- iatest equipment supplied by' 16. They are postulants from six . 1947. Under his administration house is still in Germany, whUe Rev, ,Jatnes E. Lynch, palttor _of :montbB to 'a year and novices for CRS-NCWC has grown into the there are, three provinces in the St•. Joan of Are. To these. two years. . .. world's lar~est overseas relief. United State8.· . material advantages they add the agency under private auspices. The Orleans Sisters belong to plus of intelligent discipline and New Officers the province of Our Lady of character training for the chil- . Divine Providence, founded in dren under their care. The Women's Club of· Our 1957, with the provincial house Girls interested in the work , Lad.Y of Mt. Carmel, New Bed & at Kingston, Mass. The province ~rd· bas .c;hpsen as new officers ONE STOP
staffs a teacher training school, Encouraging Trend Mrs. Mary Araujo, president; SHOPPING CENTER
a high school, five, grammar Mrs. Alice Cruz, secretary; Miss Iii Priest Ra,tio schools, two kindergartens, and Leonor Luiz, treasurer. Installa • Televillion • Furni&ure 11 catechetical 'centers and also LIMA (NC) - The number 01. tion ceremonies will be planned • Appliances • Grocery serves a minor seminary. priests in Peru is increasing at a business meeting WednesUnusual RosarJ' Itt Allen S&.. New Bedford faster than the Catholic popula day, Ja~. 8, with Mrs. EileeR WYman 7-935t The Sisters wear a black habA tion, according to figures re- , Cabral in charge of arrange . leased here. The trend brings with a short cape and veil and an unusual five-decade rosary the number of Catholics pel' ments. made by themselves. To it aN priest down to 5,050 in 1960 to attached a plain cross and a 4,700 today. . The Peruvian Ecclesiastieal College Has Course Directory for 1964 reports a total • of .2,204 priests, an increase of What You Have In Protestantism . 22 per cent over the 1960 figure DE PERE (NC) _ Six Prot- ' .of 1,802. There. is an extraordi estant ministers and two Prot- . nary increase In the number of estant theology professors have - Religiou~ communities ~f women 135 FRANKLIN STREET joined the St. Norbert College from 68 In 1960 to 91 now. Insurance Agency :faculty. " Peru's prie~t total compar~s FALL RIVER OS 2-0211 The" eight are guest lecture1W favor~b1y ":Ith other Latm TEl" Myrtle 9-8231 in a special course on "Contem- AmerIcan natlOns. I~ Guatem~la, porary Protestantism" which the . for example, there. IS one prIest i 88 NORTH MAIN STREET
Norbertine Fathers' college h~ lor 1'l,000 Cathohcs. But the . NCJRTH IJ, )TLEBORO .
in Wisconsin is offering during ratio is poor when compared the next ro weeks for ~e :Or_ with the United States, where it time. . • one to 775Father George J. A u ~ O. Pmem., in char,. of the Color Process eoUl'Se, said: "We 8l'e responding ·10 Pope Paul'. eaU :for an eca menk!a1 atmosphetle. ODe 01. bill directive. fi'OIIl the v.aticaIl eo-ncif waa that we ebtaUl a deeper . Jmowiedge and awtft Degeol"~ . . . . _ _ caa be aebIwed ~ all
VATICAN CITY· (NC) Pope Paul VI will be accomp anied on his Epiphany pil grimage to the Holy Land by tbree cardinals who are top ex
perts on the Oriental Cburc~hes. Vatican 'R a d i o announced that the Patriarch of the West on his journey to the East would be accompanied by a part:y to 'include Eugene Cardinal Tisser ant, Amleto Cardinal .Cicognani and Gustavo .Cardinal Testll.. Cal'dinal Tisserant, French born dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, has devoted :most of his life to Oriental studies. Fluent in a dozen languages, in_ cluding Hebrew and Airabk, he served as Secretary of the Sa cred Congregation for the Ori ental Church from 1936 until 1959. The Secretary ranks di rectly after the Pope, who al ways maintains the title of Pre fect for himself. Cardinal Cicognani, the Pope's Secretary of State, served as As sessor-the number two admin istrative post - of the Orilmtal Church congregation kom 1928 until he became Apostolic Del egate in the United States in
CORREIA
HUTCHINSON/S ART SHOPPE
1933.
He succeeded Cardinal Tisser ant as Secretary in 1959, shortly after Pope John XXIII recalled him from. Washington to make bim a cardinal. He remained ad ministrator of the congregation until he was named Secretary of State in August, 1961. Scripture Scholar
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Cardinal Testa, Secretary of the Oriental congregation since August, 1962, is • Scri]lture echolar and expert .in Semitic languages who served for many years ia papal missions kI the Middle East. He was· Apostolie Delegatetio Egypt and Arabia hm 1934 to 1941. Prom J948 to M6I be 1NlI ApostoUe Delegate to PakWne aIMi Resent of Gte Ioatia lUte Patrtare~ crl .Jeru8eIem. iii ~ . IWteMIIt tIMe capac_ he wae iilMnl..... doe8 . . . . . . . . . . . to eemui-. til ia dNIUnc pie.. *-' .... ~ of the cWeftoeMInI
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16
THE A!'!r:HOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 2, 1964
Monsignor Etteldorf's Book Explains Greek Orthodox By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S,. Kennedy One of the most important conditions for the reunion of all Christians is that the ancient antipathy between Orthodox and Catholic abate and end. If such antipathy is to disappear, it is necessary that Orthodox and Catholic have knowledge each of the Church affairs. Thus, the Church other. How much do we ,recognizes divorce and remar Catholics know of the Ortho ria<;e. The Greek Church has 66 dio dox? Painfully little. And
-
even that little may be inac
curate and inapposite. A situa
tion so sorry
m u s t be re
medied. A start
In that direc
tion is provided
by Monsignor
Raymond Ettel
dod's new book,
The Sou 1 of
Greece (New
man. $475).
Monsignor E' teldorf, an offi cial of the Sa cred Congregation for the Orien tal Church, makes it clear from the outset that he is writing only of the Church of the Byzantine rite, not under the jurisdiction of. the pope, as it exists in C!:reece. The pop u 1 a t i 0 R of Greece is about eight and a half million, and almost eight million, or 94 per cent, 'If these people are members of the Greek Orthodox Church. Lists Differences Although the Greek Church is not now under the authority Of the Patriarchate of Constan tinople, it is a direct descendant of the ancient Church of Byzan tium. Originally a" part of West ern Christendom, the Greek c:':hurch was linked to the East by political circumstances. and from the fourth century throurh the nineteenth its destiny was determined by the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Even before the great -schism of the eleventh century. there was a separateness of the Greek Church from the West - "a point of view in apJilr<~aching and accepting the same truths of Christianity in Byzantium dif ferent from that in the Western Roman Empire." The author lists some of these differences. Thus, the Greeks were inclined to speculative theology, whereas the Latins were inclined to law. On the one hand there was protracted discussion marked by subtle argumentation, on the other a bent for definition by decree or law. Separated in 1054 Again, with the Greeks the laity always took a far greater part in the administration of the Church and even in theologizing. Moreover, the Greek liturgy was more apt for putting the faith concretely in symbolic ritual. There was, then, a whole his tory of disparateness before for mal divorce came about after 1054. That divorce was directly eaused by political as wen as ecclesiastical factors. In examining the Orthodox Church in Greece today, Monsig nor Etteldorf points out that it bas a very special sort of tie with the State. This is partly the heritage of Byzantium. But partly, too, it stems frQlll fairly recent history. For example, during the -long period of Turkish domination, the Church preserved no1 only the religion of the pe<»ple but also their Greek .identity-, na tionality, spIrit of resistance. Church, state Linlte-II With 'Greece reestabliShed as autonomous, Church and state were very intimately !iliked, and 80 i\'!main. The king is, "for ad ministrative reasons./' 'head of the Church. ::'-- -, the government has far-re.l~~._:.J authority ..iA
ceses, the smallest numbering but 5,500 people. The rl"vern ment of the Church is synodal, and the authority of the synods is determined by the State. There are two classes of priests. The parish priest is married, and his work is largely liturgical. There is a much smaller n u m bel' of celibate pr'--ts, whose work is more ad ministrative, a 1 tho ugh these also preach and hear confessions. They are much better educated than the parish priest, whose years of schooling may be only four. Seven Sacraments Much church act i v i t Y is carried on by laymen, and the faculty of theology at a univer sity is made up almost entirely of laymen. .' The author gives no little space to the liturgy of the Greek Church. It is manifestly an act or worship, and joy is one of its most striking notes. Every body participates, and this is facilitated by the fact that the liturgy is in the people's own language, more stately than that in comm<ln use but still easily intelligible. The singing is mag,. nificent. The Greek Church recognize3 seven sacraments. Baptism is by immersion, and both Holy Com munion and Confirmation are administered to infanta directly after baptism, on the grounds that the new Christian needs at once the graces these other sacraments confer. Holy Unction is not reserved for the moment of death, or even the stage of illness where there is danger of death. Popes Named Jobn Monsignor Etteldorf explores many other features of Greek Orthodox belief and practice: e.g., the regard in which Our Lady' is held; mysticism; the character and use of icons; mon asticism, with particular atten tion to the complex of monas teries of Mt. Athos (where, inci dentally, the number of monks continues to decline sharply); the place of women religious and the increase in their ranks. An interesting point is the evidence that the Late Pope John's ecumenical enthusiasm was engendered during his years in the East in Turkey, Bulgaria, and Greece. There he came to know the Orthodox, and there too, as he studied the antecedents and con_ sequences of the Great Schism, he doubtless observed that popes named John had sought to avert or mitigate it. His name as pope, one gathers, was no accident.
Catholic, Methodist Hospitals Plan Drive KALAMAZOO (NC) - Two hospitals - one Catholic, the other Methodist - will launch a joint $3.2 million fund raising drive in March. Borgess Hospital" conducted by the Sisters of St. Joseph, and: Bronson Methodist Hospital will share equally in proceeds from the drive. The joint fund raising effort is being undertaken at the re commendation of the University of Michigan Bureau of Hospital Administration, which studied th.. local situation.
CHARMED AUDIENCE: Archbishop Egjdio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate in the U.s., right, watches as young children at St. Anu"s Infant and Maternity Home stage a. Christ mas play in Washington.. D. C. Apostolic Delegates have attended 14 01. IS annual Chri~ mas parties held at the hmne. N.C. Photo.
B,elieves Catholic Attitude Holds
Key to State Birth Control Plan
CHICAGO (NC) - The top Illinois public aid official said here he thinks the fate of tax supported birth control programs in this state depends on "shifts an~l liberalizations" in Catholic attItudes. 'l'his vi~w ~as .expressed by state Public AId D.lrector ~arold O. Swank at the fIrst hearmg of a <:~mmission set .up ~o study the, Issue of tax-paId bIrth con troJ.. 'I'he commission is made up of eig:lt Catholics and seven Prot estants. Swank said that the at titu.de of the Catholic members is "the key" to the commissIon's act.ons. 'l'he commission is to report its findings on the issue to the 1965 state General Assembly. Controversial Issue 'I'ax-supported birth. control has been a controversial issue in Ulinois for more than a year as a result of an effort by the
state Public Aid Commission to set up such a program for re lief recipients. Under the original plan public funds would have been ~d to pay for birth control services requested by any female aid recipient, married or not. Un der a compromise now in opera tion such services are available at public expense only to mar ried women living with their husbands.
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Jewish Audience Hea rs Report On Council
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall
MIAMI (NC)-Intergroup tension would be eased if Christians and Jews empha sized their "rights" less and
WINFIELD (NC) - Christmas was merrier than usual this year for Spanish-,peaking persons in this central Illinois Dupage County region, thanks in part to the late Pope John XXIII. Study of Pope John's social encyclical Mater et Magistra has spurred area residents to take steps. to bette~ the ~ot of their Spamsh-speakmg neIghbors. One of the major beneficiaries was the Gonzalo Pineda family. A year ago Pineda was working up to 118 hours _ weel< in a fac tory on a mushroom farm. His nine ch.ild~en ~ere living close to destItutIOn In a ramshackle house that had been condemned. People here pitched in to help. They aided Pineda in getting a better paying job with better hours ·nd working conditions. They obtained a house for the
their duty to love their neigh bors more, Bishop ColeffiOln F'. Carroll told a Jewish audience here. Bishop Carroll received a standing ovation following his hour-long report on the Second Vatican Council, presented at the invitation of the local chapter of the American JeWIsh Committee and' the Greater Miami .Jewish Federation. The . Bishop said there has
been a change 'for the better in
the relationships which exist
between men throughout the
w. ld as a result of the almost '''miraculous'' influence -of Pope .John XXIII and the sessions of V~tican Council II. Pope Paul VI, he add~, shows
the same charity and concern for
aU people of the world that Pope
.John ffiOIn~.
LeTe el Neit:'tlber Replying to a ~uestion, the Bishop said it 'Was "a disap pointment" to many council Fathers that there was fI1) vote on the general acceptability for discussion of two sections of the schema on ecumenism one dealing with reli~iolls liberty and the otner with Jewish-Chris tian relations. "They were not discussed only because there was not -suffi~'ient tdne to treat of them," he said. Notin~ that both Catholics and Jews ha\'e been persecuted at \':Jrious times and places. Bishop Carroll pointed out that "every i1uman bein~ on this earth is, regardless of his coInr or ere<' i. a child of God. and we cannot ove God unless we love our lIeighbor."
Welfnre G..o·'O Hits Sterilizotton Law CALG"RY (NCl-The Albe:!" fa Cntholic Welfare Association has cond~mned a prnvincial law thnt permits sterilization of mental c1efec1ii.'es without eOIl sent and called on the Canadian province /{overnment to halt such sterilizations. The welfare as..<;ocmtion, in a resolution unanimously approvE~d by 150 delegates to its thil'd annual meetin~, said such a law is "morally wrong. ~enerally medically and psychologically unsound. and legally beyond the powers of the province." Alberta's first sterilization law was enacted in ]928 and permicled sterilization, at their eonsen t, of persons dischargE!d from mental hospitals. It w.as amended in 1942 to include men tal c1efcctive5., and provided that tonSenL was not neces..<idry·in the ea~e or such p~rsolls.
Puppet Dromflls Help Exp.ain Christmas FOR:\'10SA (NC)-Oa Christ mas many parishes in Formosa used typical Chinese pt':Jj'>et plays to tell the story of' the hi:lh of Christ. The Jesuit-sponsored Kuan.g chi Broadcasting Service ma.ie ~l complete pu')pet stages which were used by missionaries in cit it's and villages throughout the island. :\'1.ade up of 12 hand-puppet characters, the sets were com plete with stage scenery. and a t"p. recording in Chinese of the story of the birth of Christ. The voicu "'ere those of talent.~d <lctors who work for the Kuang ilhi service. With musical !.J<;lck grounds and sound effects of sheep baaing and ulI"els sill"ing the story was well "'.a~pted ~ the form or puppet drama po:-,u lar among the Chinese pe.>p~.
17
Jon. 2. 1964
Study of Pope John's Enc~'~lical Aids Spanish-Speaking pp'·sons
NEGRO PRIEST O.S.B., right, is the M{)nastery at South priest elected to head NC Photo.
PRIOR: Father Bernardin Patterson new prior of St. Maur''S Interraciai Union, Ky. He is the first Negro a Benedictine monastery in the U. S.
family and helped renovate it. More than 100 couples of St. John the Baptist parish turned 4>ut fur a welcoming par~ ~sored by the parish Chris tian Family Movement shorUr after the Pinedas moved in. But Winfield residents have not confined their efforts to the Pinedas. They have been aidine other Spanisll-speaking persons, too. One significant development .. the f'Ormation of the DuPage Opportunity Council. With the cooperation of county officiall and area residents of maIl1' faiths, the DOC sponsored an Epiphany fiesta for the Spanish speaking. It has undertaken ef forts to promote the assimilation into the community of newcom ers as well as an older Mexican.. Ameri~n group.
START 1964 RIGHT
Heads MOl'astery father Patterson, Benedictine Priest, Is New Prier SOUTH UNION (NC) - St. Interracial Monastery here. opened in 1949, plus a 10 year development program in which six new buildings will be erected at an estimated cost of ~i; million. The long-rang project of the Benedictine monastery, which has 21 white and 10 colored members on its staff, calls for expansion of both the major and minor seminaries and for facili ties to house a National Institute on Religion :llld Race. At present on Iy 40 students can be accomo da~ed in each seminary. The monastery was founded and planned by Father Alex ander Korte, O.S.B. The prior, Fat her Bernardin Patterson, a.S.B., is president of the Mid western Clergy Conference for Negro Welfare. M a u r
Asserts Pope John, t{ennedy Ideas Alike BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing said the ideas of the late Pope John XXIII for a 'just and ~uitable social order were much the same as those of t:1e late President John F. Ken nedy. T:'le Archbishop of Boston said some of President Kennedy's i"eas coincided with those ex pressed in Pope John's encycli cal "Pacem in Terris" on the subjects of racism, religious liberty, di3armament and other subjects. The Cardinal told an audience at a cornerstone-laying cere mony that Pope John was re sponsible for changes which wiII take place in the Mass and for other changes in ceremonies of the Church.
Canadian Colleges Seek Federal Aid OTTAWA (NC) - The Cana dian Universities Foundation has urged the Canadian government to give increased assistance to universities and colleges. Msgr. Irenee Lussier, rector of the University of Montreal and president of the foundation, and .J.A. ~rry, principal of Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., and vice-president, presented the re quest to F-ederal Finance Mi:1:s~::'r W~lter L. Gordon. Their brief said the univer sities wiII need $800 million by 1900, of which only $500 milliOll is available from sources outside 10M Federal govecnmcnt
,.
At the proposed National In-. stitute on Religion and Race, workshop and clinics will be conducted to promote interracial understanding and Net!'ro wel fare. A monastery spokesman said the instutute will train priests for work in big city parishes in changing communities, and nuns and social workers will learn how to cope with problems peculiar to the Negro commu nity.
Anglicans, Catholics Plan Joint College VICTORIA (NC) - Anglican and Roman CathoHc authorities have offered to build a residen tial teaching college at the Uni sersity of Victoria. Anglican Bishop Harold Sex ton of British Columbia said after conferring with Catholic Bishop Remi De Roo of Victoria that the college would be "uni que in associating Anglican and Roman Catholics in a joint en deavor in the field of higher education." Arts courses of the university and theological courses would be offered by the college. Bishop Sexton said. The university senate is consideri(lg the pro posal with a view to seeking introduction of a bill in the British Columbia Legislature to authorize the project.
t;we
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Ust Additional Names and AddNHes on Separate Sheets
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88th Congress Acts on Issues
Of Concern to Church Groups'
Cj~es ~{erw~edy Contribution To Ameri~an Catholicism
WASHINGTON (NC) - The Approved a limited nuclear 88"1 Co?-gress, ?OW catching its test ban treaty which was hailed bre~th m a brIef lull between by many religiou9 leaders, In seSSIOns, .has already acted on elUding Pope Paul VI. . _ Approved (in the Senate) and _sev:e~al 'ssues of interest to relIgIOUS groups and will face then deleted (in conference) the many more when it resumes first birth control program ever work. . written ipto, the foreign aid bill. Facing Congress upon its re Cong.ressmen return from theIr abbreVIated va~ations Tue.sday, turn nGxt month will be two Jan: 7. Confronh,ng t?em WIll be major issues that have drawn a Jammed legislahve agenda the attention and concern of made even less tractable by the ch'_lrches: civil rights and medi fact that 1964 is an election year. cal care for the aged. The 88th Congress ended its first session Tuesday, Dec. 24. In the preceding 12 months it took OTTA WA (NC) - Father these actions of major concern Charles Mathieu, 39, has been to church groups: named French-language secre Passed two big aid to educa tary general of the Canadian tion measures: a $1.2 billion . Catholic Conference. He suc college construction program and ceeds Msgr. Raymond Limoges, a $236.4 million medical and who has resumed full time duties dental school construction pro as Vicar General of the Ottawa gram. archdiocese.
By Rev. Andrew M. Greeley :
As the pain the whole nation feels over the death of Pr:eside~t Kennedy slowly begins to ebb, the task of evalu at~ng hIS contribution to the -history and development of o~r republic commences. It is much,too early to attempt any kIJld of profound or defini" . tive evaluation of the "Ken- ~postle, yet he dId represent " . In many ways the "lay laity" of n~dy Years, but It seems the American Church. safe to say that when an atHe would not have made much tempt is made, it will certainly of a head usher; he did not be have to consider the Kennedy long to a Holy Name Society nor contribution to even to CFM; he did not give American CaCana Conferences; he was not th?licism. At an "active parishioner;" he did first, such a not look to Church leaders for statement may guidance in policy decisions. see m strange. Yet, according to the new W~ile no one concept of the role of the laity, ever questioned he had no less a claim to the the sincerity of title of "Catholic Layman." the late presiHowever important the more dent's fa i t h . strictly ecclesiastical roles may _-j the r ewe r e have been, the president was no man y people lessarepresentativeoftheChurch who felt that in the world because he passed he leaned over backward to up these ecclsiastical roles. avoid any signs of partiality He was working in those toward the Church.' areas which have come to be Indeed he was frequently lec- called that of "independent ini tured by certain Catholic jour- tiative" or "lay competence." nals on this point. What the Surely he was not the first complainers seemed to have for- Catholic politician in our coun. gotten was that appearances of try's history. But he practiced favoritism - especially on the the political craft precisely. at delicate school issue _ would that time when the Church had have been an unmitigated disas_ begun to realize that politics ter for the Church. (and the other temporal activiView of Freedom ties) has a religious value, a Part of the Kennedycontribu- "bearing witness" value, in itself tion surely came froI;ll the fact and apart from any ti_es to speci that as the first Catholic presi- ficaHy _Catholic orgalli,Zations. dent' he :finally- persuaded ou...· Effect on Church ~1l~Catholic fellow' America'ns For the first time -in the his that a' Catholic could serve as tory of the American - Church president and feel no pull of di the best ltllown American Cath~ vided loyalties. It is no exagger olic was not a cleric but a lay ati<;m to say that perhaps two man; and we found that, just as fifths _of - the American pe:Dple the lay apostolate theory h.-ad did not think this was possible. argued, this layman was. able to Nor must the Kennedy contri represent, th~ Church ,in many bution to the grQwing ~merican areas far more effectively than Catholic view ,of religious free any cleric. dom be overlooked. Without a We further learned that he doubt the American, Bishops did so by being exactly what would have pushed this ,subject the theory said a layman should at the Council if it had not been be-a master practitioner in the for the 1960 election campaign. field of his own competence. But it is at least probable that _ ThE' conclusions to be drawn the campaign-,-and the Houston by American Catholics from the speech in particular-created a, "Kennedy Experience;; are ines climate in which a conciliar capable; and th'ere can be no statement seemed even more im doubt that large numbers of po_rtant. Catholic young people who have Represented Lait;r
been persuaded that to be a _ ,However, it would 'seem _to "layman" is .an authentic voca me that the real, contributions !lon will draw· these conclusions. of ,John Kennedy_ to American
They would, have drawn them Catholicism did not have to do evelltually perhaps, but the life with the Church's image among of John Kennedy has notably noh-Catholics, but with the accelerated the proceSs; and be . . Chur~h's ~age of itself. cause of that life, the American' It IS unlIkely that the Presi Church is going to be_ a very dif dent ever thought of himself as ferent phenomenon than'it has an '-,e.merging layman" or a "lay been in the past.
Blind Man Teaches Third Graders In Milwaukee Catholic School MILWAUKEE (NC) - John with his work." Schuch, 27, is a determined Though elementary school teacher. But he neve!," sees his teaching is a new field for pupils, who are fascinated by Schuch, he is well qualified for him because he reads with his the job. He was graduated in fingers. 1958 :from Marquette University Totally blind from an unsuc- with a bachelor of science de cessful eye operation when he gree.He majored in mathe was 7 and a second grader at matics. St. Casimir's par ish school, Then in two-and-a-half years Schuch now teaches in the same he completed all - classwork room .·where - he oric-e -attended' -" toward a master's degree in classes. _H,e~s. in charge _of, 33_ theo~ogy..He ,has done private third grade pupils, conducts his tutoring with Marquette math classes - with, the help of his stu.dantsand pupils from several mother, Mrs. Isabelle Schuch. Milwaukee high schools. .Last "He does 'all-the teachIng; -just .. "year he taught weekly catechU like a sighted person," Mrs. cal classes at St. Agnes parish. Schuch said, "I just do the paper Schuch instructs his young work." _ , _ pupils with the same texts and Has Master's Degree workbooks they use, except his He got _the, job, when-Father .. -are- in, Braille. He can distin Leo Kowalski, pastor, announced guish his pupils by their voices in the par-ish -bulletin last -August, .and where they "sit· in 'the class that a third grade teacher wall room. He also uses a tape -re needed. It's Schuch's first fu11- cording of the archdiocesan time teaching job. Father Kow-' teachers' manual for study -at '>' alski said: "Weare very pleased home.
In New Post
COADJUTOR: B ish 0 p Joseph A. Durick, auxiliary in Mobile-Birmingham Dio cese has been named Coad jutor with right of succes sion to Bishop William L. Adrian of N ash v ill e. NC Photo.
Pope's Visit C,)ntinue(i from Page One the Agony. During the ceremony the Gospel account of Christ's Passion will be chanted in sev eral Eastern languages as well as in Latin. On Sunday Pope Paul will leave the apostolic delegation at 6 A.M. to drive to Israel. There he will visit the Sea of GaUilee, the Mount of the Beatitudes, and tne town of Tabgha, which pre serves ruins of the Basilica of the Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes. Israeli President After meeting Israeli Presi dent Shneor Shneor Shazar at Megiddo, a town near Nazareth, the Pope will offer Mass in Nazareth and then have lunch at Mount Tabor. That day also he will return to Jordanian Jeru-, salem for several visits, and later he will receive officials and special delegations at the apos to 1 ;n delegation. On the Feast of the Epiphany, Monday the Pope will offer Mass in _ Bethlehem, either in the grottD below the Basilica of the Nativity or in the basilica itself. Art objects, prepared by people of the town, will be presented to the Pope at a ceremony in front of the Church of the Nativity after the Mass. The Pope will give a major talk there, then return to Jeru salem, where he may meet Pat riarch Athenagoras I and pray with him. He will then go to Amman and leave from there by plane for Rome, where he is scheduled to arrive in the late afternoon.
WILL THE POPE STOP AT RENEH 1
WHKi'HER- HE STOPS OR NOT, THE HOL~ FATHER WILL NOT BE FAR FROM RENEH WHEN HE VISITS
NAZARETH THIS WEEK. RENEH.
)'ou'll remember, is the village now
on &he sUe where Our Lord played
I'ames when He was a child. Like
most Arab villages, U has narrow.
crooked streets, slum housing, none
et &he American conveniences. The
Catholles in RENEH, vel')' few In
number, are extremely poor . . . U
he stops In RENEH, the Pope will
aee a llttle church, haU-eonstructeel
and practically abandoned. It has no
'2')., Hoi, PIIIIJ"', MissUHt Aill roof, an unfinished floor, not evea for IIH o,m"J CIJ.,iJ. aidewana. The former church .. a
laeap of rubblel It w.. destroyed by earthquake In 1927 ••• Some
., our readers 'sent mone, two years al'O to construct a chureb
.. RENEH. The mea In RENEH donated &heir aervlces, dq
• foundation. mb:ed and laid' cement. The· mone,., however.
. . . far from sufficient, and the church remains anIlnIshed •••
We'd like to do aomethiq about It this week, .. a token 1'eC0I
altlon of &he unIque Importance of the Holy Father's rilIlt. We'.
Uk. to flnllh the church I ••• Will ;rou helpT '3,700 will be
. .ough, we Qllnk, to buy the rest of &he materials. '1,000 will
pay for the roof and part of the superstructure. Even 'I, f20, ,7S will be a Godsendl •.. Can ;rou Imagine what a small,
aeat, attractive church will mean to the Faith In RENEHT
ItENEH wu &he playground of Our Lord. Plea.. aend lOme
tblnl' now-and mark It "RENEH."
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WHAT THE AVERAGE SMOKER SPENDS FOR CIGARETTES
($2 a week) IS ENOUGH TO EDUCATE A POOR BOY FOR
THE PRIESTHOOD. WRITE TO US. WE'LL SEND YOU
THE NAME OF A BOY WHO NEEDS A SPONSOR.
NOT SINCE THE TIME OF ST. PETER
lias a Pope let foot In the Hol~ Land. Pope Paul's visit thla
week ls. therefore. unlquel~ meanincful. It'a meaningful, too,
to tho people. who read this column-because. throuch tho
~ears, ~our donations and prayers have helped keep the Chure"
ID the Holy Land aUve • . . The,re's lICarcely a natlv. priest or
Sister In the Holy Land who Is not Indebted to ,ou. For years
aow ;rou have I'enerously "adopted" seminarians ($100 a year)
and Sisters-to-be ($150 a year), enablinc them to reach their
I'oal. These ,priests and Sisters still write to you, and they pra~
for you. You share In aU the rood they do . . . By member
Ihip In our $1-a-month ($12-a-year) missIon clubs, ~ou care for
the aged poor (our PALACE OF GOLD club), rive medicine to
"pers (our DAMIEN clUb), keep chapels and churches In repair
(Gur MONICA GUILDl. feed orphans and clothe them (our
ORPHANS BREAD club). We thank ~ou! Just Imagine the
1'00d your $I-a-month has done I • . • Perhaps this week new
readers will make a New Year's Resolutlon-Month-by-month ID
'84 _~~l~ the helpless help themselves. ~ducate
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Stages Interfaith Chlristmas Pageant OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) - A suggestion made by a Catholic laymen's group resulted in the first interfaith Christmas pag ent !ltaged in this city. The Greater Oklahoma City Council of Churches, repre senting 65 Protestant churches, and 15 Catholic churches of the Oklahoma City-Tulsa diocese spon:;ored the pageant in the Mun:icipal Auditorium. The pro gram. f eat u red tableaux, a massed choir and audience par ticipation in carol singing. The suggestion came from members of St. Patrick's parish, who were planning a Christmas observance in November and urged it be staged on a citywide basis. '
HOW CAN I HELP?
a seminarian ($8.33 a month) or a Sister-to-b.
($12.50 a month).
J(, 'mission club ($1 a month-$12 a year).
Enroll yourself and others In this Association (Indlvlduall
$1 a year, or $20 for life). . (Family: $5 a year, $100 fOl'
life).
[] A stringless gift In any amount for "where It's needed
8
most."
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Feed a Refugee family for a month ($10).
Oear Monsignor Ryan: Enclosed please find .•.... for
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.IANCS CARDINAL SPILLMAN, Pr•• Wip. T. Ii.. 'Nai't Soc",
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CATHOLIC NEAR lAST WELFARI ASSOCIATION
480 ~.xin9fC)n Ave. at 46th St. New York 17;~ • .,.
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'Church Institutions Adopt F~ir' Employment Program CHICAGO (NC)-The three major faiths have launched a sweeping fair employment program for church-run insti tutions in the Chicago area. The program calls for institu tic;mal hiring and promotion policies based on ability, not on race or other accidental con~he statement spoke of "pro siderations. It also pledges found restlessness" among par participating institutions W ents who "desire to see all our "seek out" members of mi- city's children unpenalized by
nority groups and encourage race or color ~nd" free to develop them to· apply for jobs. to full capaCIty. The program has been .apThe CCRR's fair emploY';D~mt proved by the Catholic Arch- pro~ram centers on a ~lr~ng diocese of Chicago the Chicago polley s tat e men t commIttmg Board of Rabbis a~d the Church church-run institutions not to Federation of Greater Chicago. practice discrimination. . It is being carried on by the .Th~ sta,~ement p~edges a~ ~ Chicago Conference on Religion stltutlon to a pollcy of hirmg and Race. . and upgrading. em.ployees ~ ~ • Meanwhile in a separate de- solely on the crItenon of abillty velopment the Conference on to perform the required work. Religion ~nd Race has urged ':We ~ledge ?Ioreover to ta~e the Chicago Board of Education affl.rmatlve ~ction to make this . to adopt "an official policy. • • pollcy effe~tlv~; to seek out p~r favoring r a cia I integration sons of mInOrlt~ groups~ to. l~ wherever possible in schools." form them of thIS non-dlscrlmlPositive Value natory policy and to encourage The CCRR took this stand in them to become applicants for a position paper on education employment." it says. and race. The statement was adopted against a background of Gives Up Vacation controversy over allegations of "de facto" segregation in Chi For Mission Work cago public schools. .NEWARK (NC) -A Catholi$: "We believe," the statement woman gave up' a month's vaca said, "that interracial contacts tion and Christmas at home to and friendships have positive live with a Negro :family heft value and must be multiplied a and do lay missionary work ill hundred-thousand fold if Chi a Negro parish. cago is to be a healthy' city, • Violette Corey of Boston spent good place in which to worship, . her vacation and accumulated live and work." . leave helping Father Thomas J. It said '''swift progress il over Carey and. his a8Sistants at due to establish and perfect edu Queen of Angebl parish. W. cational arrangements in Such a Corey, Labor Department ~ manner to promote intercUltural tary, learned. of the p;1rish needS life." two years ago she met Father Carey on a pilgrimage. w~she was hospitalized•.. Attleboro Activity '"I made a promise to God," she recaIlecI, "that if He would In Ozanam News National attention has bee& keep me wen for one year, I would accumulate all my vaca :focused on activities of St. Vin tion and spend it working fOr cent de Paul members in the At_ Him." tleboro Particular Council and She chose the Christmas the Sacred Heart Parish Confer son to fulfill her promise be ence in North Attleboro. The cause that was the biggest sacri current· issue of Ozanam News, issued by the Superior Councll fice of all, she said. . of the United States from New. York City, describes the work of Sacred Heart Conference if!. Polic:e Arrest. Man providing a dental clink for. In Shrine- Looting parochial school children. BOMBAY (NC~Police have Also outlined fa' the curricu lum of the Ozanam School Of arrested a man suspected of'ran. 'sacking the Bon Jesus Basilica Charity. sponsored by the Attle of Goa, major Cath()lic shrine·iJl boro ~articular Council and di rected by Rev. Edmond L. Dick~ India and resting place of the inson. Held in 1963 fur the first . remain·s of St. Francis Xavier. time, the School is in its . The suspect, .Patracinio Sergio de Souze, 35, was charged. with second session, which will eon stealing many priceless posses
elude in June. sions of' the shrine, including four. silv~r crowna, two cibori~ ums, a Communion plate and DePaul University three siwer strips :from the Names Chancellor casket containing the saint'. CHICAGO (NC) - Father relics. Police said the suspect entered . Comerford J. O'Malley, C.M., has been named to the newly the basilica in the evening, hid created post of chancellor of behind an· altar and then ran DePaul University here after sacked the shrine in early morn ing hours. He was arrested by serving 19 years as president. Father James A. Fischer, C.M., an oH.,duty policeman who was attracted by a bulging bag the provincial of the Western Prov man was carrying. ince, Congregation of the Mis sion (Vincentian Fathers), which conducts the Wliversity, an Rhythm Confer~nce nounced that Father John R. Cortelyou, C.M., chairman of the .Planned in Oregon department of biological sci PORTLAND (NC)-RegiStra ences, will be the new president. tion for a Catholic conference He will take office Jan. 24 M on the rhythm method of birth DePaul's eighth president. regulation has reached capacity 'here in Oregon. A "second c0n Prelate at Fete ference is being pla~. MILWAUKEE (NC)-Milwau The first conference on Jan. kee's Archbishop William E. 13 next will be attended by 15 Cousins will be a chief speaker couples. Talks wUI be given by Sunday, Jan. 12 at a bl'Qnch Catholic. doctors, a priest, and a which will honor. the 12th anni-. married couple. Group instrurlion, win be versary of the consecration of Episcopal Bishop Donald H. V. given for the most part in • Hallock of Milwaukee here. The single session, with follow-up Catholic prelate will discuss conferences scheduled as l1eeded. happenings at the second ses-. '1'be pJ'Gl!raDl • sponsored' by the sion of the' SeeoJKi Vaticaa Family Life Deparbneftt of tile Council. Portland archdiocese.
when
sea
now
NEWMANITE GRIDIRON .sTARS: Three members of the Newman Club were 011 the University of Illinois football team that played thE! University of Washin~ton Hus kies in the Rose Bowl yesterday. With Father Edward J. Du'~can;Catholic Chaplain at. the U. of Illinois, are left to right, Co-captains Mike Taliaferi9,' ,quarterback, and Dick. Deller, gUard" and Dick Butkus, All-American center and linebacker. NC Photo.
Notre Dame Gets $6 Million More From Foundation'.• SOUTH BEND (NC)-The University of Notre Dame has been awarded a second $6 million grant from the Ford Foundation - provided it can again raise twice that amount by itself. .' The university already has re ceived the first $6 million. It raised a total of $18,603,157 in gifts and non-government grants between 1960 and June 30 of this year. The Ford Foundation has agreed, said. the university, .to allow .. the difference between the. $12 million needed to double the first grant and the excess raised iri the campaign to appiy to the m~tching requirement of the lJeeond award. . . For Special Program The - university called its $18 million fund-raising drive un precedented and said it included gifts averaging $345 from a re cord 80 per cent of Notre Dame alumni.
The Ford grants are made as . cation. ·Notre Dame said it will use . part of a "special program in the money for an overall de education" launched in Septem velopment program including ber, 1960, to bolster selected pri vate institutions of higher edu- construction of a 13-story library . scheduled to be dedicated for mally on May 7. Antimission Rioters .The university also announced a grant of $1,543,000 from the Sentenced in Israel HAIFA (NC)":""Nine extremist W; K. Kellogg Foundation, Battle· Orthodox Jewish youths were Creek. Mich., for construction; and four years of operation" of sentenced here for their forcible· a· Center for Continuing Educa-· : entry into a Protestant schooi. tion.· ~onvicted youths forced their way into the school on the same day that hundreds of other tanatical youngsters staged anii mission riots against Catholic and Protestant schOOls in Jeru. salem and Tel Aviv-Jaffa. In October, 10 rioters were con Helen Aubertine Braugh victed in Jaffa. They were fined. Owaer and Dlreetor
$33. to $66 and given suspended. Spacious Parking Area
jail sentences of six months.
Eight of the nine defendants WY 2-2957. here were sentenced to $165 lit "lieD 8t. New Bedford' fines or 60 _days in jail. The' ninth was given an additional . . . . . . . . . . . .~ H ~
fine of $83 for spitting on a : A FAMILY TREAT policeman.
The
AUBERTIHE
Funp.ral Home·
• BAR"B-Q CHICKENS
Fund to Aid School SOMERSET (NC)-8t. Anne's parish here in Wisconsin has launched a "JohnF. Kennedy Fund" to raise $1,000 to help build a schOOl in Parramos, Gua temala. Father John Rivard, pas tor, ealled th. campaign "a fit. ting expression of our wish to carry on the ideals of love and peace" of the late President.
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Electrical Contradors
~'4~
flt4J~
M4 County St.
"'W I.MoreI
SULLIVAN'S 'Office Supply, Inc. TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
'Sales'. Service • Rento/s • Supplies
32 Weir St. Taunton, Mass.
Tel. VA 4-4076 FRANK S. MACHADO, Sales Rep.
i ROSELAWN •
FARMS
.lU WashinCton St.. FairhaVeD • Just off Route 6 : ~ 7-9338 Watch for Sign. • • While out for a Drive Stop at this Delightful Spo~.
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HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO ALL!
Maclean's Sea Foods UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 2, 1964
9th - 'An:r,.ual
BISHOP'S CHARITY . . BALL '
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This Message ;s Sponsored by the Following Individuals and Business Concerns in -- Greater Fall Riyer:
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Building Materials, Inc.
Duro Finishing Corp.
Enterprise Brewing Co.
The Exterminator Co.
Fall River Electric Light Co•
.Fall River Trust Co.
Globe Manufactui'ing Co.
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Kormon Water Co.
Mason Furniture Showrooms_
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.UN])ERPRIVILEGED ·CHILDREN
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Mooney & -Co. Inc.
Featuring-- RALPH- STUART and HIS .ORCHESTRA.
Newport -Finishing Co.
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.. Plymouth Printing Co., Inc.
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Sherry Corp.
- LINCOLN PARK
MaLlON DOLLAR 'BALLROOM
SobiloH Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO
Wednesday -Eve~ing • Ja~u~ry -8th. -
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Conducted-
Under The .
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4~spices' of .
raul:
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For The Benefit'of.· -,. ':.-.,... ~.
R. A. McWhirr Company - . .
MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.
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Society of: St~ 'Vi~cent d~ and-.
Diocesan CouneU:of catholic: Women,
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