dJThel
ANCHOR
Yol. 9, No.4 Fan River, Mass. 'rttursday, January 28, 1965
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Three Diocesan Assistants In New Assignments
His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bishop has an ftOunced the transfer of three curates in the Dioc,ese of Fall River. The Rev. George J. Sousa, assistant at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, New Bedford, will take up his !lew duties at St. Anthony Father Sousa' was born Church, Taunton, as assist Sousa. on Jan. 7, 1925 in Funchal, Ma· ant. The Rev. Evaristo Ta deira Islands. He studied philos· vares, assistant at St. An ophy and theology at the Sem·
thony Church, Taunton, will go to st. Michael Church, Fall River, as assistant. The Rev. Gilbert J. Simoes, assistant at St. Michael Church, Fall River, will serve as assist· .m at Our Lady of Mount Car· -.el Church, New Bedford. The son of Feliciano De Jesus ad Leonilde Caldeira De Jesus
inary of Angra and was ordained in Funchal Cathedral on May 24, 1951 by Most Rev. Antonio Manuel Pereira Ribeiro. His assignments in the Dioeese have been St. John of God, Som erset; St. Michael and Our Lady of Health, Fall River and Mount Carmel. Tum to Page Four
AWARD CONTRACT FOR CLEARING SCHOOL SITE: Eight firms were invited t. bid on the contract for the removal of trees and stumps from the area of the new Cath. olic MemorialHigh School for Boys in Fall River, located at the junction of the President Ave. and Eastern Ave. North Rotary and Route 24. The North Watuppa Pond is visible ~above the highway. Callan Construction Co. of Swansea has been awarded the contract for the clearing work that will start next week.
Pope 4ppoints Archbishop Shehan of Baltimore
COLLEGE OF CARDINALS
NOW HAS . 103 MEMBERS
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Three PatriarchS, 18 Arch. bishops, a Bishop, the Pl:tPaI Master of Ceremonies, three Monsignors and a Priest are
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Fit. SIMOES
Fit. TAVARES
Fit. SOUSA
Bishop Pleads for Charity To Aid Indigent of World "We must not seek excuses" in aiding and assisting the Indigent world poor, Most Rev. J'ames L. Connolly, Bishop ..r Fall River, has told the diocesan faithful in his plea for generosity at next Sunday's Poverty collection. The Ordinary noted the urgency. . of real charity in a pastoral While in Rome, assisting at letter which was read at all meetings of the Vatican Council, I heard many appeals made Oil masses in all churches last behalf of the 'poor in the world. Sunday. He noted the repetitious It moved me to the point that I pleas he received from Bishops made an offering on your behalf in all corners of the world who and for' myself. .eek the charity of their much We have been subject of late better-off brethren in this coun- , to all manner of persuasions that try. The Bishop's letter follows: ,we should give more to help 1llBe1oved in Christ. Turn to Page Sixteen
today the new members of the largest College of Cardinals in history. . Of ' the Archbishops raised to the Purple by Pope Paul was the Primate of the United States, Archbishop Lawrence Shehan of Baltimore. All of the new Princes of the Church shall be raised to their new rank at a consistory on Feb. 22. Pope Paul also indicated that he plans to name even more cardinals after the close of the ecumenical counCil. , The first prelate named a Prince of the Church, therefore having certain honorary privi leges, was Melkite-rite Patriarch Maximos IV Saigh of Antioch. He was followed by two other Patriarchs: Maronite-rite Patri arch Paul Meeuchi of Antioch, one-time pastor of' Our Lady of Purgatory Church, New Bedford, and Coptic-rite' Patriarch Steph anos I Sidarouss of Alexandria, Egypt. Three prelates from Sees be· hind the 'Iron Curtain were also named: Archbishop Josef Beran of Prague, Czechoslovakia (re· c:ent]y released from 14 yeartl
imprisonment but not yet per mitted to return to his see),
Archbishop Franjo Seper of Za greb, Yugoslavia, and Metropoli tan Josef Slipyj of Lvov, U.S.S.H. (recently freed of 17 years im prisonment and now in Rome). Others named were: Archbish· ops Paul Soungrana, W.F. of Ouagadougou, Upper Volta (the second negro cardinal); Thomas Cooray, O.M.!., of Colombo, Cey lon; Agnelo Rossi of Sao Paulo. Brazil; Lorenz Jaeger of Pader born, Gennany; Joseph Martill of Rouen, France; Owen MCClUUl Turn to Page Six
Fairhaven Parish Already.Assured Of Quota Sales Rev. Alexis C. Wyger'lJ, SS.CC., has made Sacred Hearts parish, F-airhaven, a quota-plus parish. A little
~ARDINAL
SHEIlA!(
over a year ago Sacred Hearta achieved 12% per cent of its quota of The Anchor subscrip tions. Then the dynamic administra tor "got on the telephone, spoke from the pulpit, told people about The Anchor." Now sub Continued from Page Eleven
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THE ANCHOR-Di~ese' ~f Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28,1965
Diocese of Fall River OFFICIAL
DENVER (NC) - A Jewish , ,newspaper here in Colorado haa challenged the stand taken bJ' the American Jewish Congress in opposing participation of Catholic schools in Federal anti poverty programs. The Intermountain Jew i News said in an editorial that it "repudiates" the Me as a spokesman on this issue for Jews. The Jewish congress re cently challenged use of Federal funds for anti-poverty progr3JD8 involving Catholic schools as • violation of church-state separa. tion. An article in the Intermoun tain Jewish News said the AJe, stand on church-state relatiODl: has recently encountered "inter nal opposition" from the Jewish NEW CARD][NALS FROM AFRICA: Paul Cardinal day sChoo~ movement which . Zoungrana, W.F., of Ouagadougou, Upper Volta, and Owen "m,oving toward the Catllolie in advocating Federal Cardinal McCann of Cape Town, So. Africa, will now join position aid" to parochial schools. ' Cardinal ltugambwa in the Sacred College. NC Photo. The newspaper said ''hum. relatioIlJ!l experts" feel that the Jewish congress and other J~ , ish defense agencies should re-' MEMPHIS (NC)--A conven auspices of a Church-related uami1ie 't h e i r position _ , tion on "Religion ~ll1d Race in. group to deal with the needs, of chlircl;1::'~ate separation "in ~ , the South: Catholi,:: Perspec the region. ,Host for,the conven.. " light of the ecumenical move- ' and the growipg Jewisl!•• tives" will be held :l1ere March tion, will be the Memphis Cath-, " 19 to, 21. olic Council on Humap Relati~, Christi~ dialogue." , Sponsored by the 'National The' meeting' will be open to" Catholic Conference for Inter an'Catholics as well as members' 'racial Justic:e, it will be one of of the 24 Catholic Human Rela- ' the first public meetings under tioiui Councils"in the South and Southwest.
It'
TRANSFERS
Rev. George 3'. Sousa, assistant at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, New Bedford, to St. Anthony Church, Taun ton as assistant. Rev. Evaristo Tavares, assistant at St. Anthony Church, :Taunton, to St. Michael Church, Fall River, as assistant. Rev. Gilbert 3'. Simoes, assistant at St. Michael Church, 'Fall River, to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, New Bedford, as ,assistant. Transfers effective Wednesday, January 27, 1965.
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Jewish ,·Joumal
Hits Opposition
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Bishop of Fall River
Pope Payl Give$ Catholics, Advice on Ecumenism '.:'.
vA.TICAN
Meeting to View Stand on Race
CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has warned to hide, modify or deny' Necrolo!9Y "'those teachings of the Catholic Church which are not , JAN. 29 today accepted by the separated brethren." Christianity, he Rev. Christiano J. Borges, said, "is a divine truth which able of' engaging in the eCUmen- ' 1944, Pastor, St. John Baptist, is not given to us to change ieal dialogue "by means of a New Bedford. Rev. Albert J. Masse, 1950, but only to ascertain and to more open and humble sincerity; by means of the passion and joy Pastor, St. Joseph, Attleboro. accept for our salvation." I..
Ciithoii~s. against the temptation
In an address'to those attend ing his weekly general audience during the Chair of Unity Oc tave, Pope Paul noted that he wlis speaking "during a week dedicated to prayer and study for-the great cause of the recom posItion within the sin g I e Church of Christ of those who believe in Him and who are now separated among themselves and from us." Temptation The temptation attracts not only those who are ignorant of theological questions, the Pope said, but even experts "who seek, often in good faith, some expedi ent rationale for' smoothing out the way of coming together with the separated brethren. "The intention is good. The method is not." From the Catholic point of view, Pope Paul continued, "to want to recognize how much good is still found in the patri mony of the church~s and Chris tian confessions detached from out Church is fine. To want, to present Catholic doctrine in its authentic and essential aspects, leaving aside its debatable and nonessential aspects, is fine. Charity "It is fine, too, to seek to pre sent controversial points in terms which can render them more exact and understandable even in regard to those who do not share them. This is brotherly patience * * * This is charity at the service of truth. "But to pretend to resolve doc trinal difficulties by seeking to discredit or disregard or conceal affirmations which the teaching authority of the Church declares binding and definitive is not a good service.". This does not aid Christian unity efforts, the Pope said, be cause it either arouses suspicions or creates false hopes. It also makes Catholics fear that unity is sought "at the price of truth." Pope Paul said he hopes to make Catholics ever more cap 11IE ANCHOR !econcl Class Postage Paid It Fall River, Mass Published every Thursday at 410 Mighland AVenutl, Fall Rive, Mass, by the Catholle Press of the Diocese of Vall River. SubscrlptiOll . , . IlJ lll&il. 1lClIta14 ....Gl " , \leU. . ..', "
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469 LOCUST STREET JAN. 31 FALL RIVER, Mass. Rev. Charles J. Burns, 1901, as 2-3381 Pastor, St. Mary, No. Attleboro. Rev. WilEam F. Sullivan, 1930, Wilfred C. 'James E. Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerset. Driscoll Sullivan, Jr. Rev. Manuel C. ~rerra, 1930, Pastor, St. Peter, Provincetown. FEB. 1 Rt. Rev. Michael J. O'Reilly, AU~~~T~NE 1948, Pastor, Imma(:ulate Con ception, Taunton. FEB. Z Helen Aubertine Brough
Most Reverend WiUiam Stang, William H. Aubertine
D.D., 1907, First Bishop of Fall Brian J. Aubertine
River: 1904-07. Rev. Patrick F. McKenna, 1913, Spacious Parking Area Pastor, Immaculate Conception, WY 2-2957 Taunton. ,Mass Ordo 129 Allen St ' New Bedford ') Rev. John L. McNamara, 1941, FRIDAY-St. Francis De Sales, Pastor, Immaculate Conception, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor Fall River. of the Church. III Class. White. Rev. P. Roland Decosse, 1947, Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Pastor, St. Hyacinth, New Bed Common Preface. ford. SATURDAY-St. Martina, Vir FEB. 3 gin and Martyr. III Class. 571 Second Street Rev. Antonio JPonte, 1952, Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Pastor, Our Lady of Angels, Fan Fall River, Mass. Creed; Common Preface. River. SUNDA1::-IV Sunday After FEB. 4 OS 9-6072 Epiphany. II Class. Green. Rt. Rev. Hugh J. Smyth, P.R., MICHAEL J. McMAHON Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Pastor, St. LawrenCE', New Bed licensed Funeral Director Preface of Trinity. ford, 1st Vicar Gfmeral, Fall Registere-' Embalmer MONDAY-St. Ignatius, EUshop River, 1904-07, Adm:inistrator of and Martyr. m Class. Red. Diocese, Feb.-July, 1907. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY-Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary. II Class. DEVOTllON White. Mass Proper; Gloria; FUlleral Home Creed; Preface of Christmas. Jan.31-Holy ,Name, New 550 Locust Street In Masses which immediately Bedford. Fall River., Mass. follow the Blessing of Candles Our Lady of Mercy Con and Procession, the Prayers at vent, Attleboro. OS 2-2391 the Foot of the Altar are omit St. Joseph, Fall River. Rose E. Sullivan ted. The Blessing of Candles. Jesus Mary Convent, Fall ;Jeffrey E. Sullivan WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ River. ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria; or .....•••....•• Creed; 2nd ColI. St. Blaise, Bishop and Martyr; Common Preface. (or) St. Blaise, Bishop SPRING PILGRIMAGE TO LOURDES-April 15 to 29, especi and Mart~T. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common ally dedicated to the sick and the handicapped. $595.50 Preface. all inclusive. Optional extension to Rome and Ireland. THURSDAY-St. Andrew Cor NEW YORK-WAl;HINGTON-May 26 to June 2. $93.50 sini, Bishop and Confessor. ill Class. White. Mass Proper; SHRINES OF CJ~NADA-July 1 to 7 - $106.25 Gloria; no Creed; Common PILGRIMAGE TCI THE MID-WEST-July 30 to August 14. Preface. One Votive Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, the $237.00 Eternal High Priest, permitted. For infclrmation and reservation contact: Gloria, 2nd Coll. St. Andrew Bro. Gel'ard Brassard, 567 Salem End Rd., Corsini, Bishop and Confessop, IIl'amingharn" M0!55. Tel. 879-2541 they must feel for the light of the truth of a whole and lived faith; by means of a didactic, gradual explanation of our' teaching; and by means of re spect, esteem and charity toward those to whom we are speaking." Catholics should engage in the dialogue in this way, the Pontiff said, sci that separated Christians "may see that ours is not an 'a priori' dogmatism, nor a spiritual imperialism, nor yet a formal juridicism, but a total homage to the total truth which comes from Christ."
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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 28, 1965
Says War on Poverty More Than Political Gimmick
Laymen to Lead Anti-poverty War
DENVER (NC)-"The war on poverty in the United States is jusi beginning. It is' not a political gimmick that will end with the present administration." That is the opin ion. qf Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher, executive secretary of the National Conference of gram. He estimated that a half Catholic Charities, who be million child-ren between three lieves that attempts to affix and six go without direct par a ," political smokescreen" ental supervision regularly, and label on the anti-poverty pro gram amounts to "superficial thinking." Eager to Assist Msgr. Gallagher feels that the poverty campaign was a l~t of "talk" prior and up to the No ,,-ember election but contends that federal, state and local of ficials are now taking a calm, objective look at making the program a permanent one. "The anti-poverty program opens up whole new avenues in attacking the social and eco nomic problems that have arisen in the UnIted States," he observ ed. "It was time that we took a good look at the socia:l and eco nomic illls that the AmericaR YMY of Hfe produced after two generations of prosperity-gener~ ations that have not known the ha·rd times of the 1930s." Msgr. Gallagher emphasized that Catholic charities offkes all over the nation are piacing "'existing facilities at the disposal of community program direc tors," and will in no way du plicate or intrude in work being done by public charitable agen cies. Centers and Homes He cited child care centers and homes fur the aged as two specific areas in which Catholic eharities offices could partici pate in the anti-poverty pro-
that by the mid-1970s we will have 21 million elderly persons in the U. S. . "The demand for these centers and homes for the aged and the personnel to man them, is going to grow," he continued. "Not only will the young men and women who take this training be learning a skill that will insure .steady' employment, but I think they will become better individ uals in the process." ENGLAND AND BELGIUM REPRESENTED: John lYISg~. Gallagher said he felt Cardinal Heenan of Westminste'r, London, England, and the field of education is a major Joseph Cardinal Cardijn of Belgium, founder'of the Young at"e8 of concern in the antt poverty program. He especial~,. Christian Workers organization, are now numbered among Ph ' th'e C0 11 ege .0 f Card'ma1s. NC ,oto. cited the need for more pre the 103 10 school training. . Wasted Lives, "Educators have long recogn i?ed th~t many elementary pupils .a,re not ready for school," he de clared. "Many come from cul ,tuNllly sterile. homes where the only conversation is in mono syllables-'shut up' or 'eat.' JERSEY CITY (NC) - Ecu He noted the great value of "They develop an inclination the decree on ecumenism is that to drop out of school eady, and menism· is everybody's job ac it departs from the false atti poor grades just add to their cording to Father Francis M. tudes of the past. problems. By the time they reach Keating, S.J., who told alumni "It points out that there can high school, they're so far behind and students of St. Peter's Col be no ecumenism worthy of the they're ready to quit school at lege that the Second Vatican Council's decree on ecumenism name without a change in heart. the' first opportunity. It recognizes ,that a real com "As a: resUlt we're trying to makes it dear that concern' for ecumenism "extends to every munion, though an imperfect pick up the pieces of a potenti whatever his talent, one, exists among all Christians," ally wasted life at a difficult age. , one, Father Keating said, addi.ng: . How -much better would it be whether it be exercised in his Christian life or in his "If asks for an honest assess to train these children so that daily theological or historical re ment of all Christian bodies, for they are ready for school." search." true dialogue among competent
Everybody's Job
Second Vatican Council Ecumenism Decree Concerns Everyone, Jesuit Stresses
Form Anti-Poverty Committees To Aid Government Program WASHINGTON (NC)-Sixty four Catholic archdioceses and dIe-income families, needy stu dioceses have formed committees dents from low-income families are offered part-time jobs re to mobilize their resources and offer assistance to the Federal lated to their studies or in con nection with social welfare pro government's anti-poverty pro grams. Colleges administer the gram. Three of them, in Detroit, program and the Federal gov Pittsburgh and Chicago, already ernment pays 90 per cent of the are participating in community cost of the studentS' wages. According to the legislation action programs directed by which established the new Office broad-based local groups sup of Economic Opportunity, the ported by the new Office for major potential area for involve Economic Opportunity. ment of Catholic and other pri Reports to the National Cath olic Coordinating Committee on vate agencies is cooperation in Economic Opportunity here show community action programs. These efforts, for which the that Catholic social welfare agencies have joined Q,thers in Federal government pays 90 per cent of the cost for the first two recruiting youngsters for the years, involve a blending of Job Corps, a project offering local resources to fight poverty school drop-outs and other un derprivileged youngsters a basic through social and educational education and training in a skill. projects. Catholic diocesan committees will arrange to provide pciests for religious services in job corps camps. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Catholic colleges, along with Paul VI received 84 national Girl their public and private counter Scout officials from Canada, parts, have volunteered to assist in the program of work-study Brazil, Haiti and 17 other coun . tries of Europe and Africa who for college students. were in Rome for the charter Community Action assembly of the International Under this project, which Catholic Conference of Girl President Johnson has proposed Scouting (Girl Guides). be expanded to children of midThe audience followed ap proval by the Holy See of the charter and statutes of the new organization. Speaking in French, the Pope MADRID (NC) - An annual expressed admiration of their day of voluntary fasting by "spirit of simplicity, willingness Catholics in Spain has been in to accept teachings of creation, strumental in aiding the cam the nature of the universe, and paign against world hunger. the work of God which fosters Initiated five years ago by admiration and love for the Cre Catholic women in Spain, it has ator." He also encouraged their now been taken up by the entire "spirit of sacrifice and generos lay apostolate, under the direc ity * * * because it is highly de tion of Auxiliary Bishop· Jose sirable and necessary that youth Guerra Campos of Madrid, secre have this human and Christian tary of the Spanish hierarchy. character."
Pope Paul Receives Girl Scout Officials
Spain's Day of Fast Aids Hungry Abroad
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Diocese Schedules Planning Program LANSING (NC) - Catholic programs on family planning
and the rhythm method of birth
regulation will begin this month
in several cities of the 15-county
Lansing diocese here in Michi gan.
. Father John Shinners, acting director of lthe project, said the Family Life Institutes will not just "teach rhythm" but will seek t~ instruct Catholic, couples on a WIde range of spiritual, psy chological and sexual matters in
experts, cooperation among Christians and prayer in common in certain special circumstances." None is sure how Christian unity will be achieved, he said.
DETROIT (NC)-Two laymen, one a Negro, have been named, to lead the Archdiocese of De troit's war on poverty here in Michigan. Rufus Kingston, a Negro pa rishioner of St. Cecilia's parish will serve as neighborhood rela~ tions coordinator of the Archdi ocesan Opportunity Prog[:am (AOP). Assisting him as business ad visor on a voluntary basis will be .Thomas Umlauf, owner and president, of a Detroit sausage company. 'rhe appointments were dis closed by Father Thomas Gum bleton, AOP director.
. Madrid - . Number . M-ADR
to Triple of P . h . ar.s e~
ID (NC) - The MadrId archdi.ocese, raised from the rank ·of ~ diocese in 1964, has started a pastoral development program ·that will more than triple the number of parishes. ~rchbishop Casimiro Morcillo 'Go~zales of Madrid-Alcala lI8id he wHl establish 253 new parish es,' none of which wiH have a population of more' than 10 000 Catholics. The See at present 'bas 106 pa,rishes, some with over 30,000 ,parishioners.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965
I
New Mexico Council of Churches Scores Right to Work Laws
The Parish Parade
, ANNE, FALL RIVER Holy Name Society officers, to be installed Sunday, Feb. 7 at a tlinner ceremony, are, J. Omer Lebrecque, president; Antonin Fournier and Noel Lajoie, vice presidents; Ernest Talbot and Joseph Bourassa, secretaries.
ST. JEAN BAPTISTE,
FALL RIVER
Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts of the parish will have a joint char ter presentation and court of awards in the church at 7 Sun day night, Jan. '31. Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey, chaplain, will con duct the program.
SACRED HEART, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will meet at 8 Monday night, Feb. 1 in the lower school hall. The program will feature a penny sale under chairmanship of Mrs. Francis A. Gillespie. Guests are invited. Co-chairmen of the social hour will be Mrs. William A. Barnes and Mrs. John H. Fay.
SS. PETER AND PAUL,
FALL RIVER
Miss Ruth Dowell of Boston, newly appointed advisor for Campfire Girls and Bluebird programs, will meet with group leaders and chaplains today at SS. Peter and Paul church hall. Guest parish units will include St. Mary's Cathedral and Sacred Heart Church. A Cub Scout pack meeting is
scheduled for 7 tomorrow night
in the church hall.
VISITATION GUILD, NORTH EASTHAM A social is planned for the first week of February at the home of Mrs. Frank Popoli, Ship's
Lantern Lane, North Eastham.
The guild will sponsor an Italian style Valentine supper from 6
to 8 Saturday night, Feb. 13 at
Visitation Church hall, Massa
soit Road, North Eastham. Spa
ghetti and meatballs will feature the menu and a handmade quilt
will be raffled.
SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO The CYO Good Will Club wtll . meet at 4 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 31 in the school cafeteria. Members will receive corporate Communion at 5 o'clock Mass following the meeting. February CYO activities will include a meeting at 7:30 Tues day night, the 2nd in the church hall; a board of advisors' meeting
at 8 Thursday night, the 11th; a spiritual meeting at 7:30 Tuesday night, the 16th; a fashion show
and hootenanny at 8 Saturday night, the 20th; and an officers' meeting at 7 Tuesday night, the 23rd in the church hall. ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER Cubs and Boy Scouts plan a joint Communion breakfast to follow 8:15 Mass Sunday morn ing, Feb. 7 and to be held in the parish hall. A Blue and Gold banquet is set for the hall Sun day night, Feb. 21 with Alfred Vieira as chairman. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER Cub . Scouts will hold a pack meeting in 'the school hall at 7:30
tonight. Boy Scouts will meet at 6:30 tonight. Also tonight, the "'omen's Guild will sponsor a whist party at 8 in the Bright man Street parish hall. Also to be sponsored by the guild is the parish's annual mid Winter gala, scheduled for Saturday night, Feb. 6 at Venus de Milo restaurant. ST. PIUS X, SO. YARMOUTH Mrs. Bernard Mulcahy an nounced at the January Guild meeting that plans are being or ganized for sewing groups for the preparation of articles for the Summer Bazaar. The annual past presidents' dinner will be held on Monday, March 1, at Armand's Restau rant. Hobbies of various types were exhibited at the past meeting and explained by the members who were the exhibitors. . OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER The. Council of Catholic Women announces a Valentine whist for Saturday night, Feb. 6 at the parish hall. In charge are Mrs. Lillian Laforce and Miss Clo rinda Ventura.
ESPIRITO SANTO, FALL RIVER PTA officers newly installed
are John T. Cabral, president;
Mrs. Dorothy Antaya, vice-pres
ident; Mrs. Mary Souza, secre
tary; John Arruda, ~reasurer.
BLESSED SACRAMENT, FALL RIVER The scheduled day for the Council of Catholic Women's
Corporate Communion will be
the Sunday following the regu
lar monthly meeting. Plans have be~n set for a rum mage sale on April 9 and a whist party on April 24 in the church hall. Entertainment for the next meeting, Feb. 17, will be a fash ion fair in the church basement.
This will be an open meeting.
ST. MARY,
FAIRHAVEN
The Couples' Club will con duct its annual Valentine buffet and dance on Saturday night, Feb. 13, in the Polish American Veterans Hall, Acushnet Ave., New Bedford. Members of sim ilar clubs from surrounding areas have been invited. Several attendance prizes will be award ed and all proceeds will benefit the Church building fund of the parish. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cataldo Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Lyles Bissonette are co-chair men. Tickets may be obtained by contacting the chairmen. ST. FItANCIS XAVIER,
HYANNIS A revised constitution and set of by-laws have been ap proved and voted by the Wom en's Guild and will be distrib uted in booklet form for the 1965-66 year. The committee that revised the rulings was made up of Miss Constance Fortune, Mrs. Albert Trocchi, Mrs. Leo Gregoire, Mrs. John Lycett, Mrs. John Moda and Mrs. Adolpe Richards. A public penny sale will be held in the parish hall on Tues day, Feb. 9, at 8 o'clock. Donors of articles are asked to contact Mrs. Albert Bourgeois, Mrs. John Moda or Mrs. Fred Cheney. The regular monthly meeting of the Guild in Feb. will feature a covered dish supper. "Secret pals" will be selected at this meeting. Mrs. Fred Cheney will serve as chairman for the March 28 Communion' breakfast. \ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, FALL RIVER A cake decorating demonstra tion will highlight the Women's Guild meeting scheduled for 8 Monday night, Feb. 1 in the church hall. Mrs. Jeannine Al bernaz is chairman.
Febru.ary Is The Anchor Subscription Month' \
SANTA FE (NC)-The Chrstian Social Action Commission of the New Mexico Council of Churches, which includes hte Archdiocese of Santa Fe, has s h a r ply criticized' proposed "right to work" legislation. The commission said right to work laws impair "the freedom of all workers to bargain with their employers and maintain an
Laymen Join Oregon Church School· Board PORTLAND (NC) - Archbis hop Edward D. Howard has ap pointed four laymen to serve on the Portland archdiocesan school board. The first laymen to become board members join six priests who advise Father Martin Thielen, superintendent of schools, on general policies pertaining to Catholic education.
DIRECTOR: Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson, director of Christian Family Movement in Greater Attleboro Area, has arranged for Cana talks to married couples during next three months.
Set Cana Talks For Attlebctros The Family Life Bureau of the Diocese of F·all River will sponsor Cana Conferences in the Attleboro-No1"th Attleboro area during February, March, and April. These Conferences wil be held under auspices of members of the Christian Family Movement of the area. 'Sessions are sche';' duled as follows: February 24-8:00 p.m.-Saint Joseph Hall, Attleboro. March 24-8:00 p.m. - Saint Mary's Hall, North Seekonk. April 21-8:0o-Saint There sa's Hall, South Attleboro. Discussion topics will include "Parent and Young Child," "Sanctification in Marriage" and "Parent and Teen-agers." All married couples are invi.ted to attend these sessions and bring married friends with them. Cana Conferences aim to help married couples be,:ome more cognizant of those things which are important to them as individ uals, and as citizen!;.
Transfers Continued from Page One Father Tavares was born on Oct. 20, 1933 at San :Vliguel, The Azores. The son of Jose and Mariana Da Conceicao Silva Tavares, he attended seminary in The Azores and was ordained on June 5, 1960 in the Cathedral of Angra. He served at Otir Lady of Lourdes, Taunton from August, 1960, until assigned to St. An thony in November, 1961. Father SOllsa Born in Falmouth on Oct. 2, 1933, Father Simoes ;.s the son of Mr. and Mrs. JustLno Simoes. Following studies in Falmouth public schools and St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn. he completed his education for the priesthood at St. Mary Seminary, Baltimore and was ordained by Bishop Connolly on May 1, 1961. He has served at St. Michael's since ordination.
Hymn Festival SACRAMENTO (NC)-Cath olics and Protestants are joining Sunday in the fimt Christian hymn festival ever held in this area. It will be held during the Chair of Unity Octave at Fremont Presbyter:lan Church, which can accommodate 1,000 persons.
effective voice in determininft their working conditions." A statement issued after a meeting of the commission said right to work laws are misnamed and should be called "anticom pulsory un ion membership laws." Free Ride "They give no one the right. work, nor do they obtain jobs for anyone out of work," the state ment said. "Workers cannot bargain ef fectively with employers other than collectively,'" it added. "Right to work laws impede the exercise of the workers' right to bargain collectively. "Such proposals will deter workers in organized plants to 'ride free' on the backs of their union fellow workers, enjoying aU the benefits * * * without pay ing for them."
INDIA: NO MASS FOR 1,000
CLo"SE TO 1,000 CATHOLICS IN A WOE-BEGONE VILLAGE IN SOUTHERN INDIA REGULARLY MISS MASS. Tbe reason? The village, caUe.cl Panic kaDkudy. bas no cburcb, rectory, or priest ••• Children crow up in dirt and hunger wiib only ihe lDstruc tlon ibeir poor parenis ean provide. The main road 18 &en miles away by foo&' Tbe priest who eomes io eare for ibe sick irudges boib waYIl in heat aDd rain • • • Can ibe vil lage have Us own. foil-time priest? Bishop Mattbew Potanamuzhi, 61. The Hoi, PIl,h",', M;ss;ow Aid says ll_but the priest most have lor the Om",J Ch,mh a church and parish center. The men In &he village have eagerly arreed to do ibe construction work free of eharge, since ibey bave no money to contribute. The materials will eost only $3,800 altogether ($1,950 for the church, $1,850 for ibe parish center, lB which the priest will have a room). Bishop Matthew and his people are praying that someone will make It possible io brine Christ to Panlc-kankudy ••• Will you? Name &he church or par Ish center for your favorite saint, lB'memory of your loved ones, H you build It all by yourself. Send at least a smaller gHt ($100. $50, $35, $20. $10, $5. '2). whatever you ean afford. Help cive the villagers a foil-time pries&. JANUARY 31-Today, which ls World Day for Leprosy Suf ferers, the late President John F. Kennedy will be honored as a "keen supporteT of leprosy programs throughout the world." By joining our $1-a-month Damien Leper Club you .can provide food, clothing, medicines for lepers in south India month by month. Lepers can always be helped, sometimes cured. Write to us. FOOD-UGoocl food helps make good studenis." says Carmelite Father Michael Angel, rector of St. Joseph's Seminary, Alwaye. where candidates for the priesibood are being supported by readers of ibis column. The cost of rice <the staple food) has nearly tripled in recent months because of India's food shortage ••• Cut down on calories by doing without dessert or drinks this week. The $2, $5, $10 you save. we'll send io Father Michael. MISSION VALENTINES-The gift cards we send, at your request. to the friend (or friends) you remember St. Valentine's Day (Feb. 14) are personalized, colorful, artistic. They tell your friend (be. sure to send his complete address) you are helping, In his name, to build a mission parish. Write us now. Here are some gifts to select from: Chalice ($40>, Altar ($75), Statue ($30>. Tabernacle ($25), Food Package ($10>, Sanctuary Bell ($5). Blanket for an Orphan ($2). Dear Monsignor Ryan: Enclosed please find
for
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ltl'l2ear5stOlissions~
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President
Mit" Joseph T. 1'011. NCIt'. Sec',
Send oil CONIII.lllcatiolll to:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARf ASSOCIATION
no
Madl"1I Ave. CIt 4211d St.
New York. N. Y. 10017
mE ANCHOR -
5
Sulpician Favors Effort to Soften Divisive Issues
Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965
LATROBE (NC)-Catho fics and Jews should work together for a "narrowing" of their Clifferences on vari
Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Dio cesan Director of the CYO, euglogized the late CYO secre tary, Samuel J. Priestly, at an evening Solemn Mass of Requi em Mass celebrated Monday in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. Speaking in the presence of Bishop Connolly, Father Sulli van stated that Sam Priestly, by his dedicated work in the CYO, made many realize the things that should be done for youth. "His life was a dedication to service of and for youth. He ac cepted the challenge of this ded ication as a young man ... and continued his close contact with the young by leadership and en couragement."
Director Lauds eyO Secreta rty
ous controversial programs, says Father John F. Cronin, S.S., as sistant director of the National Catholic Welfare Conference's Social Action Department. He spoke at a Jewish-Catholic "col loquy" at St. Vincent Archabbey bere in Pennsylvania. Citing controversY over pro
posals for tax-paid birth control
to fight poverty in the U.S. and
abroad, Father Cronin noted that
the morality of reducing fertil
ity through "hormonal techni
ques" is "still a debate question"
for many Catholics. He recalled
that a special papal comn:!Jss ion
His dedication, perseverance is now investigating "the entire
and unselfishness continued problem."
under three area directors, Reduce Issues Father Sullivan said. Rev. James However, the Sulpician added, A. Gleason, Rev. James F. Ken it is "fairly safe" to say that "the ney and Father Sullivan were birth control problem will con all unanimous in stating that tinue to be a divisive factor in "We trusted him with our most inter-religious relationship, at precious work - our Catholic least in the near future. youth-and he kept the image "There is no present prospect of Christ ever alive inthem by of development in Catholic at his efforts." titudes toward techniques of On Monday morning a Sol :liamily limitation to the point emn High Funeral Mass was cel fJhat there would be no differ ebrated in St. Patrick's Church, ences in our major religiouS Fall River, for the repose of the communities," he said. soul of Mr. Priestly. "There may even be continu ELEVATED BY HOLY FATHER: His Eminence, Paul Peter Cardinal Meouchi, Mar ing clashes on objectives, since Bishop Connolly also assisted many Catholics find it somewhat onite Patriarch of Antioch and of all the Orient, left, chats with Bishop Connolly, right, at the Mass in the morning. puzzling that the richest nation at the last session of the Vatican Council in Rome. The new Cardinal served as pastor in the world must promote fam of Our Lady of Purgatory Church in New Bedford from 1922 to 1925 and visited Bishop ily limitation as a technique for combating poverty in our midst," Connolly in Fall River in the Fall of 1962. Father Cronin added. At tbe same time, the priest said. it is possible to reduce the COMPANY number of friction points -be tween Catholics and others on flhis issue. Complete Line
Oppose Compulsion Building Materials
The solemn Mass is the perfect with the ministers unless he is sanctuary area. He said the elements of such Offertory form for the celebration of the to direct the Prayer of the Faith an approach lie in Catholic in ful. Kisses of the hand or objects sistence that there should be "no, Mass. In its execution, the vari 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN .Homily ous roles of all present are evi are omitted. element of compulsion" for cli There shall be a homily on The Paten is not held by the ents, doctors or social workE;rs dent. But that this may be more WYman 3-2611 Sundays and feast days of ob Subdeacon but is left on the in public birth control programs, evident and more orderly exe ligation at all Masses which are altar. and in the insistence of birth cuted, the following changes celebrated with people present. Secret Prayer control advocates that tax-paid have been ordered by Pope Paul: This prayer over the offerings No exception may be made for contraceptive services "should Salutations-Incensations- Kisses Limited or abolished as in the conventual, or Pontifical Masses. is to be chanted. be made available to those who Canon Doxology Sung Mass. On other days, the homily is desire to limit their iamilies." Procedure is as Sung Mass recommended. "Many Catholics would not Deacon Alone Our Father Prayer of the Faithful It is lawful to celebrate a sung oppose this posHion," he com Procedure is as Sung Mass. The intentions or invoca mented. "They would feel that Mass with a deacon only. Embolism Prayers at the Foot of Altar tions may be chanted by the any opposition would amount to This prayer for peace is to Shortened or abolished as for Deacon, a cantor or another an imposition of Catholic doc 273 CENTRAL AVE.
the Sung Mass. qualified server, reserving to the be chanted. trinal positions on those who do Holy Communion Proper of Mass celebrant the words of the in not share these stands." Those parts of the Proper of troduction and the concluding Distribution of Holy Com WY 2-6216
Fat her Cronin urged tha,t munion is as for Sung and Read the Mass which are sung by the prayer. The celebrant shall di Catholics and Jews work togeth schola or by the people are not rect the prayer either from the Masses. NEW BEDFORD
er in fighting poverty and in said privately by the celebrant. seat, from the altar, from the Last Gospel winning equal opportunity in It is omitted. ambo or from the edge of the Ordinary of Mass jobs, housing and education for The celebrant may sing the racial minorities. parts of the Ordinary together Better Conditioned with the people of the schola. He noted that much progress Lessons and Chants Between the was made in interreligious co Lessons (Const. art. 51) oPeration in working for passage In Masses celebrated with the of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 people, the Lessons, Epistle and and said religious groups should Gospel shall be read or chanted, maintain their impetus in this facing the people at the ambo CLASSES ON TUESDAY· EVENINGS 7:~ TO 9:30 P.M. Spring Session
field. or at the edge of the sanctuary Feb. 16-Apr. 27
The priest observed Catholics area. Liberal Arne Bininess: have often differed from Jews no. ABC', Of C.im. Aceovnting Fa. N_ 1......."1.....
Order to be Followed TIte Anist AI Work
Elementory Sho,tho"" (Gnogg)
and other Americans in their at Comparative Religion.
Insurance Part ,.
The celebrant sits and listens titudes toward church-state and s-cI for "ochu•• with Contempor••y Nove' ,,, Am••i..
Investing I" Sto.... AtMI .....
to the lessons and the Epistle civil liberties. applleotion fo.m at' • Conv...alion.1 Fnnet.- llegin_
Real Estate
as well as the intervenient Conversational Span""
Tf'aining Cou.........
He caned for "intensive dia pho.... 10Ial-C£ Supervisors chants. After the Epistle has C...atiy~ Writing
TalC: Review e.vn. For loque among Americans of dif 8-2052 or 80..... 1' D,awi"g And..........
Altomey, been chanted or recited, the ferent faiths" on divisive issues Effective E.....
--oK 6-90'0 CK apply Subdeacon goes to the celebrant La...... Law Special Inhtreet: in these areas, adding that "to r. panon Monday and is blessed by him. Then the Effective puisNe lelaflOllI Interior Decoration
day we are much better condi ..,.... Priday, Admiot Sociology, Y A"" Sociely celebrant, seated, places in TIM Hou.. You Lift ...
tioned for calm and unemotional Reading Imp' e..ent Fa. Adults Personality Improv ..
ilh'atlott Bui'ding, from cense in the thurible and blesses (Ot,,- Roaclfng Cla._ Women discussion" of controversial top 7:30 P.M. to B:3O P.M. it. While the Alleluia and its Updating Efficiency ... Woe"'y F... P,imary & ics than in the past. Secondary ea.-sl Tomon-ow', Foad Serv'" verse is being chanted or toward the end of the other chants fol The above cnurse, are non..credit and without prerequisites. lowing the Epistle, the cele CINCINNATI (NC)-The Cin brant rises to bless the Deacon. einnati Jewish Community Rela At his seat, he listens to the tions Committee has taken a Gospel, kisses the book of the e," ,. 'N-or,th Easton,·Massac'hu:sett~-_.". strong stand against legislation Gospels, and after the homily, to provide public bus transporta intones the Creed, if the latter tion fur parochial school ehil is to be said. At the end of the Creed he returns to the altar ekeD.
FAIRHAVEN
Instruction Revises Solemn Mass Rite
LUMBER
Emphasize Proclamation of Scriptures
BLUE RIBBON
LAUNDRY
Continuing EducatiOtt
EVENING, CLASSES
_---------'1
Oppose Free Rides
;
.S'tO·~_ EH 1_ L':('~;';<C 0 L(; E-·d E ,,~!:~,
6
THE A "'rI-/01?-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jon. 28, 1965
New Cardinals
Background
,Continued from Page One of Cape Town, South Alrie.; Leon Duval of Algiers, Algeria; Ermenegildo Florit of Florence, Another collection! Italy; John Heenan of Westmin ster, England; Jean Villot of That was the initial reaction of many Catholics to Lyons, France (Archbishop only the announcement that a cc;»llection for the needy of the one week); Giovanni Colombo world would be taken up this coming Sunday. It is not of Milan, Italy (Pope Paul's suc that people are selfish or unthinking of the needs of others. cessor); William Conway of It is just that they see the .collection and sometimes do Armagh, Northern Ireland. Two Archbishops are members look beyond. of the Roman Curia: Enrico Those who attended any of the sessions of the Vatican Dante, Secretary of the Congre Oouncil remarked that over and over again Council Fathers gation of Rites and Papal Master called on members of the Church to imitate the poverty of of Ceremonies; Cesare Zerba. Secretary of the Congregation of Christ. These men were in a position to see that in the Sacramental Discipline. world today there is startling contrast between those who The Bishop is that of Malaga. have and those who have-not. And those who are poor, Spain, Bishop Angel Herrera y many to the point of degredation, have a difficult time rec Oria. The three Monsignors are: ognizing the Christ of the Gospel when they see their more Joseph Cardijn of Belgium, founder of the Young Christian affluent brothers in the Lord calling themselves Christians Workers; Charles Journet, Swiss and, at the same time, apparently unmindful of the needs theologian; Frederico Callori di of their fellow children of God. The poor and needy are Vignale, Papal Majordomo. told that Christ will change their lives; they cannot be The Rev. Giulia Bevilacqua. an Oratorian Father who is an blamed for wondering how He has changed the lives of old friend of the Pope and ac these who enjoy a high living standard, who preach with companied him to the Holy words but not by actions to them. Land in January 1964, is also a The collection that will be taken up on Sunday is not new Cardinal. "just another collection." It is the person of Christ in the Lawrence Cardinal Shehan Cardinal Shehan is a 65-year lives of Americans reaching out and showing mercy and old .native of Baltimore who haa eoncern for their less fortunate brothers. It is the Faith headed for three years the arch being preached not by word but by action. It is the proof diocese which is the cradle of that Christianity has changed the lives of those who have Catholicism in the U. S. The' onew a portion of this world's goods. prince of. the Church has been a priest for 42 Years and °a Bis}lOp Christ will be recognized in charity. And the sacrifice for nearly 20. He was conse that this brings into the lives of those who give makes the c.rated in l!i45 as Auxiliary of Christ of poverty more clear in their lives. Giver and bene Baltimore, named first bishop ficiary both p~ofit. of Bridgeport, Conn. in 1953 and returned to Baltimore as its By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University Archbishop since 1961. The eminent prelate has long been a champion in the causes TODAY-St. Peter Nolasco, pledges unconditional allegiance. A daily newspaper had a picture a short while ago of Christian Unity and Racial Confessor. The themes of love to the King, dares to love. Only Equality. In Nov. 1964, the Car that showed several members of a college varsity basket and identification are reinforced when we can say, "I shall not ball team in class. The class that they were participating most uncomfortably in today's die, but live, and declare the dinal was appointed episcopal chairman of the Press Depart in was Organization and Administration of Athletics. This lessons. "We are still the world's works of the Lord" (Offertory),· ment of the N.C.W.C. and as must have brought a smiIe--or maybe a grimace-to the refuse" (first lesson). Are we? do we dare open ourselves to head of the U. S. Bishops' Com faces of their fellow students who were struggling through And if not, why :not? The fig- the sufferings and the needs of mittee for Ecumenical Affairs. urative character of Jesus' "Sell others. Baltimore is the oldest U. S. physics or biology or even the Verrine Orations of Cicero. what you have" (Gospel) does It is dangerous. But then his Catholic See. Its Archbishop has The present investigation into cheating at the Air not rob it of its edge. words in the Gospel sound fresh, been granted by the Holy See Force Academy indicates that some athletes are involved. And the Council's constitution "Why such cowardice? What the right of precedence in cere The problem, of course, is that athletes in a college on the Church tells us that as weak faith you have!" monies and meetings over all MONDAY-St. Ignatius, Bis other Archbishops. He thus holds are either spoon-fed with courses that make a mockery of Christ "carried out the work of redemption in poverty and op- hop, Martyr. Love, death and the title of "Primate of the college, or else they are expected to shoulder the sometimes pression" so the Church is called the cross are the themes as we United States". insupportable burden of a full and honorable Class schedule to humility and selfsacrifice. honor the great pastor-martyr. and an athletic program as well. The answer is that less TOMORROW-St. Francis De The Gospel teaches that the must be expected of the varsity athlete in the way of Sales, Bishop, Do,~tor. Salt and cross is present in all love, as athletic performance and he must then be given every op light may on a rare occasion it is in death, if love is true make a dramati<: appearance. and godly. portunity to pursue creditable college course. One thinks' of lightning. But A mere self-love is self-de If the alternative is followed-allowing athletes to take ordinarily their presence does structive. Love fulfills the self, courses in bead-stringing or scuba diving and the like-then not create a stir. It is very good, but only at the expense of dis VATICAN CITY (NC) ciplining ;t, pruning and cleanscolleges should be prepared to admit that they are engaging very necessary, v,ery quiet. Pope Paul VI criticized sec And the Christian newly <:on- ing and painfully chastening it. professional athletes and should do away with the pretense ular press coverage of the scious of the great needs of this Yet, we can be certain that no that these are taking courses ona par with their fellow age of revolution needs to be' pain, no "trail, or distress, or ecumenical council's third students. humble and modest even about persecution ..." (first lesson) session and called on Catholie But the vicious cycle has been introduced-teams must his witness and the fruits one can separate us from the love newsmen to help remedy the sit uation. be the best, athletes and coaches must be pushed to the can expect. "Dreams of glory" of Christ. are alien to this cause except in TUESDAY -- Purification of. The Pope speke at an audience extremes, winning is the goal and no substitute need apply, the ultimate sense of the first the Blessed Virdn Mary. "And granted to the executive commit and all too often a young athlete's whole future is sacri lesson. : suddenly there will come to the tee of the Italian Catholic Union ficed when he drifts through college asa thinly-disguised SATURDAY _. St. Martina, temple the Lord whom you· of the Press: professional who puts in class time but takes little from l'irgin, Martyr. 'We are truly seek, and the messenger of the He told them that the so-called the foolish COurses he is directed to take. A few, of course, virgins (Gospel), stir innocent covenant whom you desire" "great press" showed a lowering most of what Christ has to (first lesson). This' is an epi-·· of tone in reporting the third walk then into rich professional contracts. But the rest of give us and to communicate to phany feast, a feast of the Lord's. session. Instead of stressing the coast along for a few years on the strength .of their scrap us. We still claim His gifts by- . appearance and manifestation, great light of the council debates books and then realize that they have been used. our potentialities more than by prophetically announced by Ma:' and conclusions, he said, it de lachia and' confirmed as historvoted itself to secondary aspects Athletes have a place in college. But they are no sub .any achievement. But we gather around the ical event in the Gospel story and· sometimes issued absolutely stitute for a college education. And if the goal is a superb altar regularly to maximize our of Simeon. fantastic reports that had noth athletic team at the expense of education, then the price wisdom and' minimize our foolThis day's blessing of candles, .ing in common with reality. is too high. o Stress Exterior ishness. And ,if we get the real symbols of the light'that Jesus message, we find a judgment on is, belongs to this season cele Pope Paul added that Catholic our ways, mutual fo rgiveness brating the Word of God's com journalists should work in the and a unity with our neighbors ing among us in our flesh. most conv:incing way to dissuade which shames al1 wealth and WEDNESDAY -- Mass as on colleagues who would rather all exclusiveness. Sunday. A Christian, of course, stress exterior aspects than try FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER cannot hear this Gospel of the to capture the nature of the su EPIPHANY. We have been cel- Lord's power without reflecting preme truths which attract and ebrating the epiphany, the man- on the boat as a symbol of the' occupy the human mind. He said that Catholic news ifestation, of thE' King. "What Church. He is present in his' OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER sort of man is this?" (Gospel), Church, not only in its ultimate men, out of love for fellow hu Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River for his power is absolutely uni- identity with the human race,' man beings, always must remain vigilant to use the best and most que. And it is that power that but as it is right now when 410 Highland Avenue
proposes love a:; the greatest it appears as sect, as sometimes comforting methods of winning Fall River, Mass. 675-7151
souls for the Gospel. of the commandments and the self-centered and self-righteous The Pope called not only for one which includes all others island. PUBLISHER (first lesson). Despite all those human im-- more Catholic journalists but Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD., also for better Catholic publica Love is the epiphany of grace, perfections which constant re GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER of god-likeness, (.f Jesus' saving form must combat, he is present, tions. He recommended that Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll power. Only the person who love is present, and the seeds newsmen keep in close touch MANAGING EDITOR with their bishops and Church has dec ide d definitely and o~ renewal will never die: Word organizations. whole-heartedly for faith. who and sacrament-" Hugh J. Golde..
Another Collection!
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th~ CW~£1t
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Too High a Price
Pope Criticixes Press Coverage Of Council
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7
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jan. 28, '965
Asserts - Reunion 'W·ould . ··Achieve . ,··Lut~~er 'Desir~':
Plans Variation Of Shared Time
WASIDNGTON (NC)
· The reunion of Oatholic and
· Protestant churches would · fulfill the "deepest desires"
SWANTON (NC) -Plans are wnierway to enable public school students to take vocation al training courses at a parochial high school operated by the Ed mundite Fathers here in Ver mont. The unusual switch in shared time schooling has been made possible because St. Anne's Academy has a vocational train ing shop superior to those in nearby Swanton and Highgate High Schools. In most places, shared-time programs have been devised to enable private school students to attend technical courses in public schools. Father John LaBrake, S.S.E., principal of St. Anne's, said the two public schools have ex pressed interest in exchanging students for some courses. The Catholic students would take courses in automotive mechanics at the public schools. "We already have 12 of our own boys working in the shop, helping to get it underway," said Father LaBrake. "But we could probably take care of 30 boys in two sections by using the machinery every afternoon."
Of Martin Luther by creating a
Church that is truly reformed and truly united according to Jlather Avery Dulles, S.J. The Jesuit theologian told a eongregation at the National Shrine of the Immaeulate Con eeption that the present ecumen Ical council is carrying out the reform envisaged for the Catho lic Church by Luther and left !Incomplete by the Council of Trent in 1563. Speaking of Luther's "unfin Ished reformation, "Father Dul les said the Protestant Reform ation had "enormous positive significance" for Catholics be cause it came at a time when '"Christian piety was undermined by the scandalous lives of some churchmen, by rampant super stitions and by theological teach
ings incompatible with the Gos pel." , Protestant Reforms While the council of Trent eI1red some of, these. ills, he noted, it did not meet ~me other needs seen by Luther, in duding a Scriptural theOlogy, • living vernacular liturgy, a First Co-Ed , restoration of the dignity of the OMAHA (NC) - The Omaha laity and a revival of preaching. Archdiocese plans a $1.8 million, "The Chureb in the Counter _1,200-student high· school which :Reformation did not give suffici . will be the first Catholic co-in ent value to 'these sound Luther stitutional secondary school in an principles," said Father Dul Nebraska. Boys and girls will les. "Only in the present gener CURTAIN DESCENDS: The late Sir Winston Churchill on a postwar visit with Fran be taught in separate wings of ation has Oatholicism begun to the building. be genuinely self-critical. Since cis Cardinal Spellman of New York. NC Photo. (pope John XXIII) summoned the Second Vatican Council, the Church has been engaged in a vast program of self~amina tion and self-reform, much of it to line with the central thrust of the Reformation." HARTFORD (NC) -There is We are hoping for the control verted to a segregated church, Father Dulles, a convert him- "'frightening apathy in American of deep-seated emotions. Catholic or otherwise," because self, said the reform of the Oath- . churches" towards this country's "The total solution to the "a segregated church gives clear cdic Churehhas been leading to racial problems, a Negro priest problem will involve knowledge . evidence of hypocrisy or betrayal • new reform of Protestant has told the Archdiocese of Hart derived from psychology, sociol of a fundamental tenet of Chris ehurches and that those move- .. ford and clergy conference. ogy, education, economics and, tianity." ments taken . together • might', Father Rollins E. Lambert, other disciplines. But our own , !ead to full unity. He said su.ch ...chaplain of the Newman Club at bishops have told us clearly: cut • result would not ~ve dIS'"' the University of Chicago, ting through all the issues,- the 1i&.~".~_.~Am..~6Aft ~_.~:_,.,£,'lIiiI.' pleased Luther. charged indifference applies to heart of the race problem is 'V!J·.'V!ilD'.'~r!J'.,~iJ",~'., Half Achieved an churches, "Protestant and moral and religious." ""M:odern Lutheran thinkers, Catholic alike" and involves Fundamental Tenet .... have frequently pOinted out . "both the higher and lower ~eir judgment is borne out," that Luther envis~d the'Re- levels of the clergy." he continued, "by the fact that formation as a coITeCtive move,:, Last Parental Resort where religious leaders anq ment within the Catholic ChurCh.' He declared there is a "reluc groups have involved themselves A reformed Church he wanted tance even to talk about the issue in the problems posed by en indeed, but not a s epa r a,t e in moral te~, still more to im trenched injustice, in those Church. The only Chu~h which· plement religious and moral places these problems have been !he willed to reform was the one, principles by action." mitigated if not solved in an holy Catholic .Church founded "In 1958," Father Lambert atmosphere of peace and cooper by christ Himself.' said, "the American hierarchy ation rather than one of strife, "If all this is true" averred issued a strong statement con Q~ ~ violence and bitterness." ~r::'::Hl Father Dulles "we ~ust con- demning racial segregation and Himself a convert, Father ~~ 15PJ elude that Luther's Reformation discrimination. Yet it was only Lambert warned the priests that is still an ongoing thing. So long last year that the Catholic Negroes are not going to be con as there are two separate Chris- schools in some Southern states .l:;!l ~ tianities, Protesant and Catholic, w~re desegregated; an? there a:e ' 0 b·lec t·Ive remal1lS . b u t half stIll pockets. . of resistance h' In ~; ~, h·IS ' achieved." Northern CItIes, wher~ ~ Ite schools are carefully mamtamed. "In fact, it is true in some places that the parochial schools Newl"l)(1)il'f' Nurse' Is ~OUTE 6, HUTTleSON Ave. are the last resort of white par C~ PAVILA V~hn~!I'~eD' Near Fairhaven Drive-In
ents who do not want to send • CATHOLIC PROGRAfI 1965 their children to the integrated PROVIDENCE (NC) - As a C~!:llian Dinners Our Specialty
public school." highlight of the Providence dio Service OnPatlo
C_~ ,~ cese's observance of National Heart of Problem Catholic Inter-American Week The Chicago priest declared this week, Bishop Russell J. that "perhaps the most shocking McVinney presided and preached thing about the moral issues in Enjoy Din;ng at the first departure ceremony the field of race relations is that TraV"eJ. O f f i c e for a diocesan Papal Volunteer they have to be pointed to as IN THE
C~ WASHINGTON CHICAGO ROME LONDON for Latin American Sunday at moral issues." St. Jude's Church, Lincoln. "I don't mean to oversimplify JOLLY WHALER
lii;;1 CATHOLIC -TRAVEL OFFICE . FRM ~.., Miss Virginia Mehegan, a a problem that is truly complex," ~'" Dupont Circle Building, Washington, D. C. 20036 -AND Newport nurse, will leave for a Father Lambert. asserted. "We three year term in the missions. are attempting to overthrow a JSI Please send me your free' Illustrated booklet describing in ~_ ,SPOUTER INN ~ detail the "world-covering" pilgrimages. ~ social system that is centuries old. We are expecting a change RESTAURANTS IiHP English High Mass -.. Name "'-til of mind and heart on the part of Always Free Parking, DETROIT (NC) - ThE! first millions of people. We are work • Address ~, Solemn Mass in English in the ing to revise old ideas to make, C~ City/Zone/State. Detroit Archdiocese will high them conform to the truth in ~R~R6R_~_~,.,_~~~~~_~ light a Liturgical Da.Y on Feb. 2'1.' atead of to Wltrue generalities. WV~V.V~U.V~U~u~U~U
Criticizes Racial Justice Apathy Newman Chaplain Hits Hypocrisy
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Irrver-Thurs., Jan. 28, t965
In Tension-Filled Great Society
There's Need to Slow Down
Mass. DI Regent Is Mrs. Charron Mrs Charlotte Charron, Bene. diet Circle, North Attleboro, win serve as" State Regent of the Daughters of Isabella as a re sult of elections held at the organization's annual meeting ill Boston. She was re-elected • her position. Also to serve in office is Mm. Catherine Letendre of Hyacinth Circle, New BedfO'rd, who will be a trustee. Mrs. Mary Loa Silvia, Assumption Circle, Fan River, will be publicity chairman for Diocesan Cirdes of the Daughters. She served as ma~ shall for installing ceremonies held during the annual meeting. Members resolved to aid iJt ecumenieal projects and assist local programs aimed at prevent.. ing discrimination and furtm.. ing integration. The next state meeting &f tbe Daughters wiU be held m MaF
.....
By Mary .Tinley Daly Two incidents, small in themselves, have somehow almost prophetically enmeshed, timewise, to rescue us from the ulcer circuit. The first concerns, of all things, an egg timer! We noticed this piece of kitchen equipment on Gin ny's desk when we paid a recent visit to our college streams. "Help me to know the magical, sophomore. "Fix your own restoring power of sleep. breakfast, Ginny?" we ask "Teach me the art of taking ed, pointing to the egg timer. "In the dorm kitchenette instead of going to the dining room?" "Oh, that," Gin ny laughed. "You know me and boiled eggs, we're allergie to each other. I use it sometimes when I'm call ing you long distance" (From the size of our telephone bin, that "sometimes" should read "very rarely," but that's beside the point.) "I use it when I'm studying,· Ginny explained, "and it really helps. I used to start one sub ject, then panic thinking of another assignment. I'd end up nothing done right." "But the timer?" we puzzled. "'Three minutes per subject?" One at A Time ''No, just the idea behind it: only one tiny grain of sand can go through at a time. Each grain goes through, one after the other, and the thing does what it's sup posed to do, mark an accurate three minutes. Maybe I'm nuts, but it helps me to concentrate do just one thing at a time, and do it right." We think of this each morning as we use our own egg-timer, and try to remember its lesson often throughout the day: one thing at a time, and easy does it! Yes, we try to remember, but like Ginny with the multi-as signments, we often find our selves dropping one task, taking up another, going 'back to the first-Ugetting nowhere fast" as the old saying has it. Continuation of Ginny's gim mick, but on a far higher plane, came shortly thereafter as a mes sage from a dear friend, a nun, who slipped a little prayer into her letter. She does not know its origin, nor do we. Perhaps some reader of this column can identify the author so that proper credit may be given to one whose words bring a profound sense of peace to all of us in the tension-filled segment of the Great Society in which we move. I reprint the prayer here, in gratitude, and with the hope it may help others: Slow Me Down, Lord! "SLOW ME DOWN, LORD! Ease the pounding of my heart by the quieting of my mind. . "Steady my hurried pace with the vision of the eternal reach of time. "Give me, amidst the confu sion of my day, the calmness at the everlasting hills. "Break the tensions of my nerves and muscles with the aoothing music of the singing
SHA Alumnae Forthcoming events for alum nae of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, include a Valentine dance at 8 Saturday night, Feb. 13 at Venus de Milo restaurant; a fashion show at 7:45 Sunday night, March 14, also at Venus de Milo and a family day at 3 Sunday afternoon, April 25, in the academy auditorium.
one-minute vacations""" "Slowing down to look at a flower, to chat with a friend, to pat a dog, to read a few lines from a good book. "Remind me each day of the fable of the hare and the tortoise that I may know the race is not always to the swift; that there is more to life than increasing its speed. "Let me look up inta the branches of the towering oak and know that it grew great and strong because it grew slowly and well. "SLOW ME DOWN, LORD, inspire me to send my roots into the soil for life's enduring val ues, that I may grow toward the stars of my greater destiny. "SLOW ME DOWN, LORD, that I may live more abundantly! "SLOW ME DOWN. LORD: SLOW ME DOWNI"
of 1966.
Benedictine Sisters Get Mission Posts
Priests, Laymen Picket Landlords WILMINGTON (NC) - Two priests and eight lay members of the Catholic Interracial Coun cil took part in picketing of two landlords here in Delaware ac cused of maintaining substand ard properties. The Catholics joined with some 30 members of a local group called Concerned Citizens. The priests who participated ift the picketing were Fathers Bruce Byrolly and Richard A. Reissman, both of Wilmington. A spokesman for the Catholie Interracial Council said the group usually works in "a quiet manner" but decided to picket "to help in a very just cause."
Prevost Mothers Pro tempore officers of the newly-organized Mothers' Club of Prevost High School, Fall River, are Mrs. Marguerite Lov enbury, president; Mrs. Jeanne Desjardins and Mrs. Jacqueline Martel, vice-presidents; Mrs. Fernand Letendre, secretary; Mrs. Rita Cloutier, treasurer. The unit will meet tonight to adopt a constitution and complete elec tion of officers. All mothers of Prevost students are invited to attend.
New Meeting Date The meeting of District I Council of Catholic Women that was postponed last Sunday be eause of the weather has beeft rescheduled for Sunday after noon, Feb. '1, at 2:30 in Our Lady of the Assumption Hall, OsteP ville. Rev. Edward Z. Mitchell, __ sistant at Holy Name Church, Fall River, will give an illus trated lecture on his experience. at the Ecumenical CounciL
INAUGURAL, PARADE: Sacred Heart high school band, Biloxi, Miss.. , steps smartly past the reviewing stand in the Inaugural parade as the President and Mrs. Johnson, and the Vice President and Mrs. Humphrey applaud them. NO Photo.
Experiment to End
Ursuline Mother Superior Sets Termination
Date ·For Controversy on Habit
PAOLA (NC)-Th,e controver sial experiment whi.ch ehanged the habits of two Ursuline nuns of the Paola motherhouse into a simple jumper and street dress probably will end in June. Mother Charles McGrath, su perior of the motherhouse here in Kansas, said June was the original termination date, but she added: "This is an experi ment, and as such, it is liable to stop most any time." Two Ursulines who teach at Oklahoma City's Bishop Mc Guinness High School have been wearing the new garb for six weeks. They have attracted worldwide attention and set off intense discussion within Catho lic circles on mode,rnization of religious habits. At the school where the Sisters teach, another member of the faculty said the change is taken for granted now and no further J'eactions have been noted. Favor Change The two nuns, Sister Stephen and Sisters Immaculata, said they received more than 300 let ters, running two to one in favor 'of the change. "i would say tPat those against
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Tragedy at School ALPENA (NC) - Volunteer lay teachers are keeping classes going at St. John's parish school here in Michigan after a traffic tragedy took the life of one Feli- . ciar. nun and injured two others of the school staff.
this habit are a minority and many of them very unreason able," Sister Stephen said. "When you hear someone say she might as well stop going to Mass if the Church is coming to this, you wonder wllere logic has gone," she said. Most criticism, she said, stems from the shortened street-length skirt and the lack of a veil.
FERDINAND (NC) Sis Benedictine nuns of Immaculate Conception convent here in In diana will staff the community" first permanent Latin Americaft mission in the diocese of Coba:a., Guatemala. Superior of the group, Sister Mary Victor, principal of St. Ferdinand High School he-reo with Sisters Marilyn, Mary Hal" old and Romaine will leave for Guatemala Feb. 4. They will be followed in Sep. tember by Sisters Mary Janet and Mary Geoffrey. The nUM will operate a school and health center in the village of Salama.
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Irs Possible to Have Fig Trees
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan..28, 1965
Despite Masso Winters
Declares Rights Protests Useful
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick When I was in college I had a biology professor who apent his free time going to jungle movies in the nope of finding some flaw in Hollywood's use of animals and plants. He delighted in telling us about the time he saw a lIlovie in which a monkey Fortunately for me, a teacher's IIlat was native to South day ends fairly early and I am America was climbing a Cal. generally able to don an apron Horna palm in what was by four o'clock, but even then .apposed to be darkest Africa. I ~ sure that if he were to visit Mr. Frank Luiz of Our Lady of Grace parish in Westport he ~ould be surprised to find fig trees growing in Massachusetts.' :Mr. Luiz has had fig trees for more than 20 years. At present he has four trees which bear fruit twice a year, in July and in September. Once, during a par ticularly mild Autumn, he had a third crop of figs in November.· Fig trees, of course, are native to warm climates and although they are grown in the United States, are not normally grown this far BOrth. We had a fig tree in our gar den when I was a boy but I have DO idea what became of it. The only thing I remember about it was that it received a great deal of care and attention but never .eemed to produce any figs, which was·my main concern at the time. Mr. Luiz does not have this problem. The greatest problem in grow Ing the trees here is the weather. 'l'hey must be given special treatment in order to protect them from our Winter cold. Mr. Luiz actually buries his trees in the Fall. When the weather begins to get cold he digs a trench wide and long enough to cont~n the tree and then digs up its roots on one side so he can bend the tree over into the ditch. In this way the tree is still rooted in the ground, since half its roots re main undisturbed. He then cov ers the tree completely with straw, over w1llch he places tar paper. The whole thing is then covered with garden soil until the danger of frost has passed. When thp tree is uncovered and righted in the Spring it is firmly rooted and ready for the growing season. Should the tree be uncovered too early there is the danger of losing the first - crop to a killing frost, since buds ere already present while the tree is buried. Fig trees are handsome and attractive in any garden. They do not flower but the foliage is large and has an exotic appear ance which attracts attention. They have no special soil re quirements although they do re quire an abnormal amount of water. Mr. Luiz fertilizes his trees with a little 5-10-5 fertil izer i n the -Spring, which he finds sufficient to last the Sum mer. He has found his trees to be disease-free and only once in ZO years have birds bothered the fruit. All iIi all, fig trees make an excellent addition to our IIOrthern gardens. In the Kitclieil
When I asked Mr. Luiz why
he went through all the trouble of growing .figs, he said that he enjoyed looking at the trees and eating a fresh fig now and then, which seems reasonable enough to me. "Cookery is a necessary art and art that is worthy of the at tention of the most intelligent and cultivated women of the land." Thus begins the preface of aNew England cook book printed at the tum of the cen tury. I'm sure the housewives of today agree with this statement
made during a more leisurely era. However, as one of the mil lion or so American women who combine home with career, I find that time stymies much of my creativeness with food.
fatigue overcomes art. Realizing the presence of tiredness on a working day, but not willing to · bury my love of cooking, I am constantly looking for ways to bring good meals to the table. with a minimum of effort when the situation demands it. One llolution I have found is the use of the freezer. There are many dishes which can be cooked on a weekend when you feel like Fanny Farmer and brought to the table the evening you're rushing from work to home to a P.T.A. meeting, which taste as good as the day they were originally cooked. My freezer is quite small, the top of the refrigerator type, but there is generally room for a frozen casserole or two to see me through a busy week. The following is a good freezer recipe which was given me by Mrs. Joseph Mello of St. Anthony of Padua parish, Fall River. Tomato Noodle Casserole 3 Toil 1 lb. ground beef 2 onions sliced' 1 clove garlic minced 1 can tomatoes 1 can toinato paste % cup water or dry red wine Jh t. paprika 1 t. salt 1 bay leaf % t. thyme % t. majoram 1 1. Worcestershire sauce Jh t. tabasco sauce 8 ounces noodles (1) Heat oil in skillet, add beef, onions and garlic until meat is browned. (2) Add remaining ingredi ents and bring to a boil. (3) Tum half of mixture into a 2% quart casserole (if you plan to freeze this, :Jine casserole with foil, leaving long ends), add uncooked noodles and re maining sauce. (4) Bake in 375 degree oven for 45 minutes. (5) Before serving, sprinkle with parmesan cheese. . (6) If this is to be frozen, cool to room temperature, fold ends of foil over food, remove from casserole and' freeze. (7) To reheat, place in same casserole in a 375 degree oven until warmed through, about 35 minutes.
Aid Flood Victims LOS ANGELES (NC)-More than 4,000 pounds of clothing and relief supplies have been sent to flood victims in northern California by the 52 courts of the Catholic Daughters of Amer ica in Los Angeles archdiocese.
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ROMANS ON LIST: Enrico Oardinal Dante, secretary of-the Sacred Congregation of Rites, and Federico Oardinal di Vignale, Majordomo of the Pope's Household. NO Photo. "
Ideal' for Us Rocket Research Engineer and Family Join Lay Mission Helpers ~n Latin America LOS ANGELES (NC)-A senior research engineer in rocket propulsion is leaving here with his family for three years in Latin America as a member of the Lay Mission Helpers Association of the Los Angeles archdiocese. .. Norman G;;lc, 27, and his wife, Jean, will join the faculty of two-year-old Madre y Maestra Catholic University in 'Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic. They have a"16-month old daughter, Andrea.
Prelate Urges Respect Fof O+hers' Beliefs JEFFERSON CITY (NC) Catholics and Protestants should regard each others' religious be liefs "with great reverence and with great respect," Bishop Jo seph M. Marling, C.PP.S., of Jef ferson City said here-in Missouri. Bishop Marling spoke to an audience of Presbyterians imd Catholics at the First Presbyte rian church. Following this talk he and the Rev. Kenneth Yerkes, a Presbyterian minister, led the audience in prayer. The bishop said that the "very finest preparation" for ecumen ical activity is "for Protestants to become better Protestants, for Catholics to become better Cath olics.
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Rivier Alumnae Members of the Fall River New Bedford chapter of Rivier College Alumnae Association will meet Thursday, Feb. 11 at the home of Mrs. Augustino Gag liari, 252 Bailey Street, Fall River.
Fall River Catholic Guild for the Blind will meet Sunday af ternoon in St. Joseph's school following Rosary and Benedic tion in the church at 2:15. Host esses for the meeting will be members of the Holy Rosary Women's Guild. Entertainment will be offered by students of the Imbriglio Accordion School.
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"It all began before we were married," explained Mrs. Gac. "We had read 'The Ugly Ameri can' and we decided we wanted to do something. We concluded that the missions were ideal for us. We could serve God and our country at the same time." Her husband said they talked the matter over with the New man Club chaplain at Rensse laer Institute in New York and also investigated various lay mission organizations. Their de cision was made in favor of the Lay Mission Helpers after their chaplain referred them to an Albany priest who had been a college classmate of Msgr. An thony Brouwers, founder of the Lay Mission Helpers. They came to Los Angeles and took the year's training here in missiology, theology, ascetics and Scripture.
ST. LOUIS (NC)-A Catholic nun feels civil rights demonstra tions are successful in achiev ing goals for Negroes and awak ening the community to prob lems of racial justice. Sister Catharine Robert Keane of Notre Dame de Namur focused her study on demonstrations in St. Louis from 1960 through 1963. Noting the time sequence be tween the demonstrations and the subsequent social improve ments, she believes the demon strators accomplished what they set out to do. "The demonstrations h a v e been an effort to bring about more equitable social relation ships between Negroes and whites," she says. "Dissatisfied with the pattern of seg{egation and discrimination being per petuated in American life, Ne groes have gone into the streets to demand publicly that their rights be respected." After studying 18 different non-violent demonstrations, Sis ter Catharine Robert stated that in the nine cases "positive conse quences were generated for St.
Louis Negroes."
"Action protest elicits a re
sponse from white men more
effectively than does verbal pro
test," wrote the 27-year-old nun
in her dissertation for a master's degree in sociology from St Louis University.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965
South Africa Sees Rise in Catholics
Papal Permission To Carry Oils On Person
CAPE TOWN (NC) - T h. Catholic population of the Re public of South Africa increased by 131,869 during. 1964, more than double the rise in the pre ceding year, to a total at 1,162,489. The 1965 Catholic Direct0J7. of Southern Africa reported that the total includes 166,667 Whites. 131,215 colored, 854,698 Africans. 8,424 Indians and 1,480 Chinese. The directory also reported that the Catholic population at all areas under .the -apostoUe. delegation to Southern Africa_ South Africa, Southwest, Africa. Rhodesia, Basutoland, Bechuana.. land and Swaziland-rose 170" 998 to 1,909,819 during 1964.
ROME (NC)-Pope Paul has granted permission for all priests of the Rome dio cese to carry holy oils either on their persons, in their resi d€ n ces or in thek automobiles. The Pope granted the request in answer to the .petition of Luigi Cardinal Traglia, pro-vicar general of Rome. Archbishop Ertrico Dante, pre fect of the Congregation of Rites, said no decree has been issued But he declared that bishops may apply to the congregation for a similar faculty if they desire it. The reason Cardinal Traglia made his request is the increasing rate of car accidents.
Legion of Mary Aids Prisoners
"' THREE IRON CURTAIN PRELATES N AMJH:D: Among the new 27 named Cardinals are three from Sees behind the Iron Curtain. Left to right: Josef Cardinal Beran of Prague, Czechoslovakia; Franjo GardinaI Seper of Zagreb, Yugoslavia; and Vkrainian rite Josyf Cardinal Slipyj of Lvov, V.S.S.R.NC Photo.
Asserts Wisdom Basis f~r Peace
PITTSBURGH (NC) - "T~ first ingredient of peace is wis dom," Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh said here in Pennsyl vania in accepting the 1964 Peace Medal of the Third Order of st. Francis. The medal is given annually f~ the core content of liberal arts "truly Chri§t-like efforts in be . education in a Catholic college . "t t· 11 diff t" half of peace among all men.· IS no e.ssen 18 y . eren . ;; '''It .. ·h . . , . ... from other liberal arts colleges. IS w en WIsdom IS SIC.. He said' ,.,. ' ' , that the powers against peace', ;, "Libe~al ·arls eollegesacrolii' ,ga~n ascendency." BislJop Wright the country have a common body &ald. of knowledge, core of courses . Bi~hop .Wrightrecalled as~c_ which they judge every liberally of his· trIp to the internatIOnal· educated student should take." Eucharistic Congress in Bomba3ll, He agreed in a Catholic liberal India,last December to illustrate arts college "you would find a the. role of "Qoly wisdom" ~ sequence of co.urses in theolo~ fostering. peace. Commenting on the enormm. Which would he over and above" the course content of other col- and enthusiastic reception the leges. city gave Pope Paul VI, the bish op said: "I met families who had placed themselves in mortgage Public Ordination· for the rest of their lives to come BOSTON (NC)-For the first to Bombay and see the Pope time in the history of the Boston for one minute. Why? Because archdiocese, seminarians will be he was the symbol of holy wis ordained to the diaconate in a dom, and the people find that public ceremony, scheduled for transcendently important." March 17 at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross. Ordinarily the cere mony is held at the seminary Offe~i~g chapel.
Va~~dity of TfJX Aid to Colleges Mc»ryland State Case R,esumes Next Month
Argue
VANCOUVER (NC)-A prison chaplain asserted here: "Clergy ANNAPOLIS (NC) - Argu ity of $2.5 million in state match and professionals in rehabilita tiop. work must come down from ments on the constitutionality of ing building fund grants to col their ivory towers and see Christ state grants to church-related. leges and universitieil of various in I 'every' man, even the crim colleges will resume Feb. 23, in ,religious denominations. . Anne Ar1,lJ!.del .. County Circ;uit AttorneYIl for the Horace Mann ina!." Court here in a case which bas :.League, dedicated to sirengili~n~ Father Thomas Francis Cor widespread implications in the ing public school s3'stems, and eoran senior Catholic chaplain field of tax aid· to religious affil the taxpayers contend that o( British Columbia told a' con iated schools. granting tax funds to a college is ference of provincial chaplains Judge 0.' Bowie Duckett re unconstitutional whel~ a primary that in ten years of work at cessed the trial lifter Father Paul ~ .purpose of the collllge is reli Oakalla Prison Farm, the Legion C. Reinert, 5.J., president of St. gious instruction.· . of Mary achieved many successes Louis University, testified.it is Lawyers fQr the colleges main through spiritual counseling de: "difficult to set guidelines to ,tain there is no way to determine. "oid· of clinical analysis, psycho measure the extent of religious the extent· of religiolls influence· logical jargon and a patronizing influence in church-affiliated in a church-related institution. manner. colleges." They contel'\d that if the opposi "Only when we apply our He said Catholic institutions tion argument prevails it would Christian teaching of loving our are "not essentially different" mean no tax funds could go to in neighbor as ourselves will we from other liberal arts colleges, stitutions like Harv~lrd, Prince turn bitterness into love and re but acknowledged "there would ton and others whieh have minor place resentment with self re-· be no point· in having Catholic relations with church bodies. spect and a sense of respsonsi institutions unless there would Father Reinert testified that bility," he said. be other .effects over and above Father Corcoran, president of what a good liberal arts college Christian COLlIples does." , the British Columbia Correction Ivy League Effect al Chaplains Association, sug To Hold Dialogues The suit was instituted by the gested establishment of more SAN RAFAEL (NC) - Some Horace Mann League and 13 half-way hou!jes, patterned after 150 Christian couples, Catholic Sancta Maria House opened here taxpayers, challenging the legal and non-Catholic, wi.ll take part five years ago for women of all in "neighborhood dialogues" religious denominations and op Introduce Bus Bill Sunday culminating a commu erated by Legion of Mary volun week':long ecumenical teer workers. In Ohio Legislature nity-wide program here in Cali.fornia. COLUMBUS (NC)-A bill to Thirty homes will be the give tax-paid school bus rides to scenes of the dialol~es, which Indiana Bill Favors nonpublic school pupils has been will include singinlt, Scripture introduced in the Ohio House of . reading and discussion. Five Aid to All Pupils Representatives amid a growing couples representing different INDIANAPOLIS (NC) A controversy over the plan. Christian denominations are to plan which would give every The much-heralded Ohio take part in each of the 30 ses school child in Indiana a $50' school bus bill is supported by sions. payment is proposed in a bill Citizens for Educational Free Other special events, including :Introduced in the 94th Indiana dom, a non-denominational prayer services and a Christian General Assembly. Co-sponsored group, and has the backing of hymn festival, will precede the by a Catholic and a Protestant, Catholic groups, including the neighborhood dialoltues during the bill is called "the school Ohio Catholic Welfare Confer the previous week. ehildren's asistance act of 1965." ence, which speaks for the state's 'fhe measure stipulates that bishops. Following its introduction in its aim is to protect the rights of parents to have their children the State House, the bill came Just Across The
educated in schools of their under immediate fire from the Coggeshall St. Bridge
choice and by so doing "avoiding executive board of the State Fairhaven, Mass.
Illny contravention or limitation, Convention of Baptists, which includes more than 60,000 South directly or indirectly, of the con Finest VariEtty of ern Baptists. stitutionally guaranteed rights SEAFOCID
of- any individual in matters of Bequeath $1 Million Served Anywhelre - Also
education." STEAKS-CHOPS--CHICKEN
Under the plan, payment in To Dayton Parish file form of a $50 check would DAYTON (NC) - Corpus go to the parent or other legal Christi parish in this Ohio city guardian of the student. The stands to get more than $1 mil c\J.eck would be honored for pay lion from estates of two recent ment only when endorsed by deceased parishioners. the parent to the school in which William E. Neise, a parish file child is enrolled. Endorse charter member who died Dec. ment by an authorized official of 11, directed $1 milliion to two Ithe same school also is required. funds of the parish. Julia Farley, Private and parochial schools who died Nov. 13, left securities .ould benefit the same as public valued at $83,500' to the parish, AND WEEKLY BUD~ET
erhools, provided the schools fall plus the as yet unestimated res-. ENVELOPES
'Within the state's "approved idue of her estate after payment of four specific bequests. -.:hools" category. Write or Phone 672,;1322
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THI: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28,1965
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,,",ANCHOR SUPPORT:,Undeltaking The Anchor subscription drive Francis Xavier Pari8h~' Acushnet, ~, leftphoto, OOrlnne. Leb~u, Geoi'ge A. Leblane and MurielLebeauwho.are ,eh~king subs'eriptiQri cards;
1ft"St.
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Falrhaven. Parish; " Continued from Page One .. : "
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center; Rev. Alexis Wygers, SS.CC., who basthrom his wholehearted support behind, the drive; and' right, Mrs;' Helen, Frechette and Daniel 'COsta diseussing ~he weekly diocesan· newspaper. . '" ,
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President's: School' Aid Prog'ram 'Evokes Critic:ism' Fails To; Provide Equal' T,-eCitment for All 'Children,'
ICripUons stand at, a healthy , 11~ per cent of quota' arid'.': Sacred Hearts is assured of 'a TRAVERSE CITY (NC) • national system of shared time. plaCe' of honor on the roll cit Stuart D. Hubbell, national presUnder such a shared time pro": quota parisher' throughout the ident of Citizens for Educational gram non-public school children Diocese. Freedom, has criticized President would be obliged to leave the Parishes staHed by the Sacred Johnson's education program be- schoolS they have chosen to at Hearts Fathers are conspicuous cause it fails to provide equal tend in accordance with their in their support of the Diocesan treatment for all America's constitutional rights in order to newspaper, notes The Al)chor school chilldren. participate in 'any of the benefits circulation department. The "President Johnson's program under the program. This is three parishes in the town of represents an historic education neither equal nor fair." Fairhaven, for instance, are all al landmark for this nation," he , Parental Rights on the quota honor roll, and all declared. "It is the first time in Hubbell said shared time pTo are administered by Sacred our country's history that a Pres gram may be an acceptable ex Hearts Fathers. periment in local circumstances Fairhaven is thus the only ident has estblished as his ex press purpose the equal treat but it "can hardly be proposed as town in the Diocese to have ment of all Amarica's school a national solution for providing every parish a quota parish. children under an educational quality education on an equality, Other Sacred Hearts quota parishes include Holy Redeemer, assistance program. This is most basis for all school children." He believes shared time is imprac Chatham; St. Francis Xavier, praiseworthy. "The program, however, fails to tical in "the great majority of Acushnet; St. Anthony's Matta meet this standard of equality," our nation's communities if for poisett; St. Boniface, New Bed ford; Our Lady of Lourdes, Hubbell asserted. "While the no other reason than because of the plain facts of geography." Wellfleet; and Holy Trinity, President has declared the ad ministration's policy to be a Hubbell noted shared time West Harwich. concern with need not creed, in has. been held questionable un prllctice' 80 per cent of the pro der a number of state constitu Propose to Protect gram, in terms ot monies to be tions. He also charged.the shared expended, would be 'based upon time as proposed in the John Clergy Citizenship son program makes "no allow WASHINGTON (NC)-A bin ance for the choice of the parent to protect the citizenship of Gives Permission whose rights in this case should naturalized clergymen working be the particular object of pro- ' For Special Mass abroad for church agencies has been introduced again in the WASHINGTON (NC)-Catho- ' tection in view of the poverty House. lic parishes in the United States status of that pare~." Rep. Abraham J. Multer of have been given permission to New York is sponsor of the bill eelebrate one votive Mass of Our (H.R.) 844) assigned to the Judi- . Lady of Guadalupe during the observance of the Catholic Inter ciary Committee. He was spon sor of an identical amendment American Cooperation Week, Jan. 24 to 31. to the Immigration and Nation ality Act last year. The permission, given by the The bill would provide that Congregation of Rites in Rome, LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET
clergymen who are naturalized was announced here by the Latin FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD
America Bureau of the National citizens shall not lose their na ''Where Service
tionality by residence abroad, Catholic Welfare Conference. Is a II. ,tter of Pride"
even though they are not repre sentatives of American organiza Interracial Council tions, if they devote full time to PATERSON (NC) - S te p s ~
their clerical duties. toward formation of a Catholic Interracial Council for the Pat Respond to Appeal erson diocese were taken at a WORCESTER (NC) - Nearly meeting here. Fifteen white and 400 parishioners in 21 Catholic Negro men active in area fair and 17 Protestant parishes here housingp r 0 gr a m s attended. volunteered to donate a pint of Areas of development were out $0. Dartmouth : • blood for use in area hospitals lined by Arthur Wright, execu iii response to an appeal by tive director, New York Catho and Hyannis C : Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of lic Interracial Council. Father Worcester and area Protestant John T. OatQir, assistant chancel . : So. Dartmouth' WY 7-9384 • leaders. lor, has been named chaplain.
ooThereis very little difference ' ,the good faith and high standar4 between indicating that equality of equality of treatment· the, can be achieved only by surren President has insisted upon, the '. dering the child's attendance at details of this program can be a non-public school for a full worked out in a manner which day and indicating that to is truly equal for all children achieve equality the child must without requiring a surrender of surrender s u c h attendance sacred parental rights in educa. through shared time for half a tion of any child." day," the CEF head asserted. CEF is a non-sectarian organ. Can Be Done ization devoted to seeking free. dom and equal treament in edu Hubbel.l said he wished to cation today. make clear that CEF does not believe, at this point, that the program is without merit or pos sibility. He added: "We are confident that with
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12
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28, 19M
Aid Pope First
Jesuit ¥/rites Impressive Story of Imprisonment
Gcd Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. We may not reveal the name of the country where the fonow ing incident took place for the obvious reason that priests are not allowed there. However, three of them entered this country as archeologists. They pitched their tent near a river so that they could fish for food. Their sufferings were Intense, their poverty dire, "to beg they were unable," but to dig they were not ashamed.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy "Matter-of-fact" is the expression which repeatedly comes to mind as one reads With God in Russia by Father Walter J. Ciszek, S.J. (McGraw-Hill. $5.95). Father Ciszek is the priest who, in 1964, came back to the United States after 23 years in Russian he was transferred to a labor prisons and slave labor camp. For the first year he lived camps. In telling his story, practically as a hermit in a sol he has had the assistance of itary cell of the Lubianka; fol Father Daniel L. Flaherty, S.J. Much of that story is hair-raising or fantastic, and and all of it is exception ally moving. But Father Ciszek's manner of pre senting it is laconic, dispas sionate, and the very reverse of sensational. The book is all the .. more impres sive because of the absence of heroics in a chronicle of rare heroism. Father Ciszek was born of Polish immigrant. parents in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania in 1904. He describes himself as having been a tough youngster, one whom his father considered bound for a career of delinquen ey. When in the eighth grade, he decided he would be a priest, "My father refused to believe it. Priests, in his eyes, were holy 'men of God; I was anything but that." Trained in Rome But young Walter went to the seminary at Orchard Lake, Michigan, and there, having made a retreat under a Jesuit, resolved to become a Jesuit. This time his father was not just in credulous; he was outraged. Eventually he was accepted for tbe Society of Jesus, in 1928. D!lring his novitiate, he heard of t::Ie center at Rome which was to prepare seminarians for pos sible future priestly work in Russia. He felt strongly that this was to be his vocation, and vol unteered. He got' to Rome in 1934, was trained there, and was ordained in 1937 to say Mass in the Ori ental rite. At the time, it was im possible for a priest to enter Russia, hence Father Ciszek was assigned to a parish in Albertin, Poland. Then World War II broke out with the Nazi-Soviet attack on Poland in 1939, and the Soviets took over the section in Which Albertin was located. In 1940, Father Ciszek assumed a different identity and freely offered himself for a work bri gade being recruited to go to Russia. His objective was priest ly service, which would have to be surreptitiously performed. After a two-week journey in a packed freight car, he was put at hauling logs, later at driving a truck. The work was arduous, the conditions difficult, but he managed to offer Mass in secret to gi ve solace and instruction to not a few people. Arrested as Spy After Hitler's attack on Russia, In June 1941, he was arrested as a Nazi spy. During liis first two months he discovered that his real identity was known to the' Russians, and eventually the charge against him was changed to that of being a Vatican spy. 'He vIas . 'fted to Moscow's notorious Lubianka p r i son Where, for months on end, he was exhaustively interrogated by an expert, who finally had him drugged in order to extort from him a false admission of guilt on which a cr sen tence could be based. On July 26, 1942 he was told that his sen tence was 15 years at hard labor. But it was several years before
lowing the Jesuit order of the day, praying, reading, trying to keep fit by calisthenics. Then came three more years of inter rogation, transfer to another prison (in which there 120 in NAMED: Maurice Card one cell, some dying), return to inal Roy, Archbishop of the LUbianka. Quebec, now lists J ah. 25 as Dreadful Reality the date of his birth, date A year after the end of the he was named Bishop of war, in June 1946, he was Trois Rivieres, the date he shipped to the Arctic Circle. As a prisoner, he worked at coal was named Primate of Can loading, mining, construction, ada and now Cardinal. As a and other strenuous assignments. ' theology professor at the The weather was fiercely cold, Grand Seminary, he taught living conditions were abom seminari&ns from the Dio inable, food was at a mere min imum. cese of Fall River. NC Photo. Although Father Ciszek's nar rative is unadorned with melo dramatics, the dreadful reality comes like a series of hammer blows in his bbnt prose, and the reader is acutely aware of an FREIBURG (NC) - Ex existence painful in the extreme, pected changes in Catholic and an atmosphere quite without canon law concerning mixed hope. But Father Ciszek never lost marriage cannot alter the hope or heart. He tells us, very fact that ruch mar:.age will re simply, that he had put his trust main "for Christi~lns who are' in God, that he was actively truly religious an area of painful aware of God's loving protec and continual conJ'lict between tion, and that he regarded what fidelity to one's own religious ever happened as providential. community and personal love," And always he kept at his according to Archbishop Herman priestly work. It is amazing how Schaeufele of Fre:iburg. often he was able to offer Mass. Declaring that "authoritative True, he did go for five years spokesmen of all Christian de without b~ing able to do so. But nominations agree in strongly in the prison camps, especially, advising against mixed marri the opportunity came frequently. The wine was made from raisins ages," Archbishop Schaeufele said: laboriously hoarded, the hosts "There is no doubt that the from flour slowly got together; (Catholic) Church knows she is the chalice was sometimes a bound in many ways to the crude glass, sometimes a tiny metal affair fashioned by one of Christians who are separated from her. the prisoners. But Christians who are im Parish in Camp bued in their fait:3 and really That he was a priest, soon be came known among the latter. In want to live it cannot overlook the extent to which the variance fact, in prison camp he had a in their beliefs hinders their sort of parish, hearing confes reciprocal love." sions, giving Communion; coun seling, preaching. He found other But the~, quite imddenly last priests in camp, and these man year, he found llimself whisked, aged to get together and to have without explanation, to Moscow, a three-day retreat! treated like a V.I.P., and brought The grim monotony of prison to the airport, whe:re he learned camp existence was shattered in that he was about to board a 1953, when, after Stalin's death, plan for home. Leaving Russia, there were riots in many of the he traced a blessing over the camps in the Arctic Circle area. land in which he ha.d worked out Father Ciszek's camp had its own his strange vocation. revolt, violent and protracted, Without Bitterness and in it he almost lost his life. His is an invariably interesting After a month, it was brutally book, moving briskly along, and put down, with terrible reprisals. wholly without sl~ntimentality, His description of the observ self-pity, or bitterness. The ance of Holy Week and Easter strongest impression it makes is in Norilsk is thrilling. Despite to the effect that, although a their life of deprivation and the militantly atheisti<: government ever-present possibility of pun may do its worst, God finds a ishment for religious activity, way, and aspiratio:o. to and love hundreds of people sought to of Him do not. die out of the participate in the liturgy. Father human heart. Ciszek was kept busy day and Here is a priest who tramped night with confessions and measureless miles in below zero Communions. cold, labored long hours at 800 at Mass backbreaking tasks, sometimes Later, at Krasnoyarsk, he had went 36 hours without food and a large congregation in a church once tried to get sustenance which had somehow escaped de from blades of grass, a priest struction or perversion. And in a who endured unspeakable dirt "mission" of what he called his and want and abuse, but who parish, 800 would assemble for never flagged in faith, prayed Mass. steadily, :nade friends wherever Father Ciszek sometimes hoped he went and testifies enthusias he might get back to the United tically to the goodness of God as States, and at one point half manifest in his own experience. expected a visit from one of his What a reproach to those of us sisters. But these possibilities incomparably mor,~ comfortable, strangers to hunger or need, se faded out and he had recon ciled himself, at 60, to spending cure and well treated, but feeble the rest of his life in Russia. in faith and in love!
Mixed Marriages Bring WOlrning
What do you suppose they turned up In their excavations
at the very point where they pitched their tentT The ruins of the
first cathedral that was built In that land
• thousand years before. Was It by acci
dent that they were led to this spot? There
are no accidents in the sPiritual life. The
Providence. of God had directed them to
tie together two strings of time, the be
ginning of the Church in that land's dis
tant past and Its re-beginning in the pres
ent.
Suppose you had bought the tent for these- priests, or an ax, a shovel or a cot. How happy you would be to share in this evident manifestation of God's overrtiling Providence. But the same opportunity is gven to you every day! We' know you have to build churches and schools in rich America, but you are part of the Church in poor mission lands as well. The need is much greater there. The Holy Father said that you were to' aid him "first and principally" in this great work. We may never convince you to aid him principally, but may we convince you to aid him first? At the beginning of every day, from now on, put at least a penny into a box and as you do it say the prayer: "Thy kingdom come!" Send your sacrifices to us and we will send them to the Holy Father. GOD LOVE YOU to J.M. for $'7 "I have always wanted an
expensive sweater and for several weeks admired one that cost
seven dollars. Then I was given some money which I knew I
should save for college, but went down instead to ~et 'the sweater.
As I was deciding which color I needed most, I thought of Christ
saying, ''I was naked and you clothed me." and I knew that I
didn't need it at all. My heart would not let me wear it while
Jesus is suffering in mission lands." .•• to a man who is work
ing while the light lasts for $50 "for the poor of the world, to
thank God for being so good to me in the past year. I had the
health to work all year-with a little overtime too--and as I have
emphysema I never know how much longer I will live."
Do you pride yourseif on being "up on the news?" Then ask yourself this question: "How much do I know about what is hap pening on today's frontiers of the Church?" Find out in the words of the missionaries living and working on .-the scene who write of their experiences in WORLDMISSION. This quarterly magazine, edited by the Most Rev. Fulton J, Sheen, can be sent to you for only $5.00 a year. Write to WORLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and mail It to
Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for
the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New
York 10001. or to your Diocesan Director,
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine
368 North Main Street
Fall River, l\lassachusetts
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THe ANL'tfOl<-
Coyle Students Eagerly Anticipate
Annual Sports Night Program Planned by Fathers' Club Coyle High School students are looking forward to the annual Sports Night sponsored by the ~athers' Club. To be held at the Taunton school Monday, Feb. 1 in the auditorium, this year's program will feature Gino Oappel letti, ''kicking and receiving expert for the Boston Patri- a two day skiing trip. to Mt. " Monadnock, N. H. durmg the ots ; Ike DeLock, former Winter recess. "It'll be the first Red Sox pitcher; John Hav- experience with skis for most of licek, "best number six man in them," confides Jeanne St. Onge, professional basketball"; Sam Anchor reporter. "Several wor Jones, high scorer for the Bos- ried students have been over ton Celtics; Johnny Pesky, coach heard wondering if they'll live for the Pittsburgh Pirates; Henry to have any other experiences." McCarthy, "'father of· the New Margaret Potvin, senior at England High School T e c h Fall River's Mt. St. Mary Acad Tournament"; and Warren Wal- emy, has been awarded a full den, TV sportscaster. tuition scholarship to St. Anne's Master of ceremonies will be Hospital School of Nursing, also Frank Fallon, veteran Boston Fall River. She's the daughter of sportscaster. Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Potvin. The annual senior play is 1ft Seniors and juniors at SHA rehearsal at St. Anthony's High Fall River were among students in New Bedford. Titled "Clem- at Diocesan highs who partici entine," it's a three-acter and pated in a statewide math exam students are working on it night- this month. Tops at the Fall ly under direction of Sister River school were Katheen Mary Perpetual Help. Curtain Foley, junior and Margaret will rise at 7:30 Sunday night, H 0 11 and and Susan Reid, Feb. 14 in the school auditorium. both seniors. At Dominican, Plan Sno-Ball high scorers were Jeanne FronGirls at Sacred Hearts Acad- ~zek, Dorothy Fer~ei~a, Suzanne emy, Fairhaven are looking forat~e and Kate GrIffm. ward to their Sno-Ball annual EIghth grade students attended semi-formal sponsored' by the an op.!!n house at Mt. St. Mary's senior class. It'll be held in the last week and a similar affair school gym Friday night, Feb. 19. is s~h~uled for tomorrow at The varsity basketball team DOmInICan Academy. School of at Mt. St. Mary Academy in Fall ficials will address the po~ential River has yet to be defeated. It students, refreshments WIll be scored its third straight victory se;l'ved and the bas~~t?all team against Dominican Academy, WIll present an exhIbItIon game. also Pall River, with Joan FalHold Elections lon, Ginny Bailey and Anne SulSemi-annual shift of student livan as top scorers. Final tally: eouncillors has taken place at 39-21. Jayvees, however, lost to Bishop Stang. Although council their DA opposite numbers, their officers serve a full year, coull first defeat for the season. cillors, representing each homeAt Sacred Hearts, Fall River, room, are elected for a half year varsity basketball players have term. Remaining in office are defeated Bishop Cassidy of James Quinn, president; Joe Taunton and Jesus-Mary of Fall elyn Marcoux, vice-president, River. Today the team meets Jean Muldoon, secretary; ThomDominican Academy. as Keary, treasurer. Five seniors at Sacred Hearts, Prevost High now has a MothFall River and juniors and sen- er's Guild, which will hold its iors of the "A" group at Prevost second meeting tonight, at which High, Fall River, participated ill election of officers will be com a magazine-sponsored current pleted and a constitution will be events test recently, consisting adopted. of 100 questions on news events Coyle upperclassmen, with se- . of 1964. Results released at Pre- rious thoughts of the future, are vost showed two juniors each planning their Spring programs having 97 of the 100 questions with a view towards working in correct. The au· courant lads a retreat at Gonzaga Hall in were Roger Lizotte and Richard· Gloucester, Mass. Three retreats Desrosiers. Class averages, how- are available and students may ever, put seniors ahead of jun- choose the most suitable dates iors, with seniors scoring 83 and for themselves. . juniors 78. Government class students at Top Gridder St. Anthony High have visited a At Bishop Stang in North New Bedford City Council meet Dartmouth John Doherty has ing and viewed a documentary been named to the National film on the city, "The Rising Catholic High School All-Amer- Tide". Narrated by TV newsman ican team. He's an end on the Chet Huntley, the film depicts Stang eleven and hopes to at- the history of New Bedford, its tend Holy Cross or Boston Col- present and its hoped-for future. lege come September. And the SHA Fairhaven stuStang football news also in- dent body has elected Carol eludes announcement of a din- Olivier to represent it at Student ner sponsored by the Stang Government Day in Boston. Gridiron Club in honor of the Carol is student council presi Bristol County League and Class dent. e titleholders Sunday, Feb. 14 Also at the Fairhaven school, at Lincoln Park. Chief speaker as everywhere, midyear exams will be Bob Dee of the Boston are in the air-unles you're the Patriots, possessor of an 85 per cent aver· ''The Viking," Coyle High JIge. That's worth having on the School's yearbook, will be pub- SHA campus, for it exorcises for lished in May announces Broth- its lucky - and bright - owner er Richard O:Brien, C.S.C., fac- the midyear demons. ulty advisor. Pictures of elass Cast Musical officers to appear in the book The Mt. St. Mary dramatics were taken this month. department is at work again Seniors at St. Anthony's High note reporters Monfque Demer~ are preparing for the annual na- and Lynne Chrupcala. Casts tional oratorical contest. This have been chosen for "the mus year's subject deals with the ical extravaganza of 'Babes in Constitution and the duties of Toyland' which will have' a cast citizenship. School eliminations of over 100." Players will in will be followed by inter-school clude members of the Mount glee competition. club and elementary school chilJuniors at SHA Fairhaven are dren. Male parts will be taken more or less eagerly anticipating by boys from area schools.
Education Never Ends - Read The Anchor
Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965
STUDENT COUNCILLORS: Student council officers Dominican Academy, Fall River, are, seated from left, Cynthia Strickland, secretary; Suzanne Ratte, president ; standing, Julia Melvin, vice-president; Lucille Boilard, treas urer.
at
Additional college acceptances received by Dominican Academy students include Patricia Ody necky, U. of Rhode Island; Jan ice Costa, Merrimack; and Louise Gauthier, Stonehill and Bridgewater. Also in connection with col lege plans, Stang students and their parents heard an address by Warren Holt, dean of admis sions at Southeastern Mass. Technological Institute. Bowling's taken very seriously at Prevost, where even heavy snow, canceling most area activ ities, didn't deter the Freshman B group from earning a trophy in competition with Freshman A in a match at a Westport alley. High scorers for the school are Richard Rashed, Paul Bernier, Richard Fournier, E d war d Gagnon and Robert Froment. The first Narragansett League debate was held yesterday and schools participating included Prevost; Mt. St. Mary, SHAFall River, and Bishop Stang. The annual Southeastern Mass. Follt Festival will be held in the Bishop Stang auditorium Satur day, Jan. 30. The hootenanny, sponsored by the Bishop Stang Alumni Association, will feature folk music groups from all parts of New England and proceeds will benefit the alumni scholar ship fund. Big event for Mt. St. Mary juniors is the receiving of their
class rings at a special ceremony, followed by a Ring Dance at which the gym is decorated in the school colors, red and white. and a big event for the Coyle High Pep Club was the Coyle Durfee basketball game at which pep clubbers "joined their vocal faculties and cheered their team on to victory." Final score: 59-56. Students and faculty members of Dominican. Academy were pleased recently to hear Rev. Anthony I. ·Robinson, chaplain of the Providence Catholic Inter racial Council and director of the St. Martin de Porres center in the Rhode Island city. His topic was civil rights.
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Fast approaching is the Cas sidy Junior Prom, scheduled for Tuesday night, Feb. 23. Prepar ations are being directed by Sis ter John Mathilda S.U.S.C., class moderator. Theme for the din ner-dance evening is "Three .Coins in a Fountain". U.N. Assembly Nancy Fornal, Joanne Gregg, Michele Koehler, and Nancy Tinkham have been chosen to represent Bshop Cassidy High School at Salve Regina's Model General Assembly. This presen tation by the college's Interna tional Relations Club is sched uled for today. Open House will be held at Cassidy Sunday, Jan. 31 for all . incoming freshmen. The pro gram includes a Biblical dis-· play; a French conversation interpretation exhibition; sci ence and busmess demonstra tions; senior presentation Off "Midsummer Night's Dream'"; and a fun-for-all hootenann3l Sister Eugenia Marie and Sister Paul Elizabeth are serving 811 co-ordinators, with assistance rendered by members of the stu dent body and student council. Mid-term exams are being taken this week at Holy Family High, New Bedford and thus the social aspect of school life has been pushed into the back ground. However, it seemed very ap..· propriate to announce that Jobn Aylward has been accepted at Stonehill and Mary-Anne Mc
Quillan has been accepted at
S.M.T.I. as well as StonehiIl. The school memory book, The Maria, is at the printers and all seniors have been measured for gowns and so there is only one thought on every student's mind -passing the exams. The annual SHA Father Daughter dance at SHA will start at 8 o'clock and continue until 11 on Friday night, Feb. 5. Refreshments will. be served
during the evening.
Five students from the Prob lems in Democracy class took the Times magazine news service test on current events. The stu dents were: Susan Penrose, Beth O'Neil, Anne Marie Dunn, Paula Powers and Mary Kelly.
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THE AN~.J:iOR":""Diocese 'of Fall River-Thurs.; Jan. 28,'1965
St. Vincent Group Meets Tuesday
Unfair Statements Impair Patriarch's Communique
The monthly meeting of the F'all River Particular Council, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, WIil be held Tuesday evening, February 2, 1965 at 8 o'clock. Our Lady of the Angels Con ference is host this month. Ben ediclion of the Most Blessed Sacrament will be given in Our - Lady of the Angels Church, - Dwelly Street, Fall River, at , 7:45 P.M. and the meeting will follow in the Church Hall on Tuttle Street. After a short business meeting the fourth session of the Ozanam School of Charity will be held. The speaker at this session will be Mr. Edmond E. Berube, Jr.. Supervisor, Department of Pub lic Welfare, Fall River, who will , talk on "The .Municipal Public Welfare." We hope we shall have a !!argeattendance at this meet ing
By Msgr. George G. HiggiJls The Vatican Council's overwhelming approval, last November, of a draft statement on Christian-Jewish re 'lations has predictably stirred up a violent storm' of oppo sition in the ~rab worl~. In an effort to calm th} troubled f th Old T tam t h waters,. hPatriarch hMaXlmos' . 0 e es en prop esied: IV Salg 0fA· nboc, le.admg A stain of shame. But this stain spokesman for CatholIcs of of shame does not constitute a the Melkite rite and one of personal crime'" '" "'" the most imposing figures in the It is difficult to know precisely Council, has issued a strongly what this statement means in worded commu theological terms, but, in any nique chiding event, it does not reflect the the Arab press ' spirit or the tone of the Council's for criticizing declaration and most certainly the Church "re would have been overwhelming garding a sub ly rejected by the Fathers if it ject on which had been put to a vote on the they have no floor of the Council. knowledge and Clothe Reality abo u t which The Patriarch's communique they learn only also says that "because of their b y h ear say propaganda skill, the media of without know which are in their hands and ing the official under their influence, the Jews text or its contents." can clothe reality as they wish. Concerning this "orchestrated Thtly exploit the least word that uproar" the Patriarch offerS a is said to serve their political number of" clarifications for the interests." benefit of "those who seek the Jews all over the world will truth." His aim, he says rather legitimately resent this accusa tartly, is "not only to defend tion, and there is every reason right, but also to preserve "the to feel that Arab nationalists will reputation of our country so that seize upon it as a further argu the world will not speak of it ment against the Council's decla as a nation of primitive mind." wion on Christian-Jewish re Religious Statement lations. The principal purpose of the For my own part, having fol Patriarch's communique is to lowed the debate on the Coun ,reassure the Arab-world that the cil's declaration very closely, I Council's draft declaration on can only report that I have yet Christian-Jewish relations is not, to find the slightest evidence in any sense, a political docu that the Jews of this country are ment. exploiting the declaration for "The declaration of the Coun political purposes. eil," the co~u?ique says, "is a If there are any Jews in the p u.r ely ~ehglOus sta~e.ment, Middle East who are doing so, whIch pert:uns to the pOSItion of .their ]position is absolutely inde the Cathohc Church toward the fensible but the record will non-Christian reli~ons,. just as show, I' think, that compared to ' the Church has def10ed 10 other the Arabs the Jews in the Mid ~xts its position toward. Chris dIe East have been remarkably tians who are non-Catholics. self-restrained in their com "It suffices to ponder the title ments on the declaration. of this declaration, which is self S tt f Pit revealing and which states sim en lDlen 0 y pl~r 'The' Relationship of the La~tly, the Patr~~rch's com Church to Non-Christian Reli mumque says that if the great gions.' " majority of the ~ouncil, and In developing this point, the namely the Amencan prelates, Patriarch cautions Arab critics voted for the declaration, it is of the Council's declaration to for personal reasops and inter differentiate clearly between Ju ests. The personal reasons are daism as a religion and Zionist ,dictated by a sentiment o~ pity Judaism as a political movement, due to the ma~sacre of mI.llions and then goes on to say that if of J~ws by NaZism and the 1Oter the Council defends the Jewish est 'IS due to the fact that tpe people against the charge of dei great n~be.r of Ameri~ans hav~ cide, "it is because it is spurred commercIal1Oterests With Jews. by a spirit of humanity and jus The latter part of this state tice, as well as respect for evan ment is demonstrably unfair to gelical forgiveness, especially the American bishops and, how following the biggest massacre ever unintentionally, is calcu history ever knew-the Nazi ex lated, I am afraid, to fan the termination of a people in Ger flames of anti-Semitism-a mon many and much of Europe." strous evil which, in all its forms, Other Remarks is solemnly condemned in the The Patriarch's point is well Council's declaration on Chris taken and, hopefully, will help tian-Jewish relations. to set the record straight in the The Patriarch himself un Arab world. With all due respect, doubtedly' abhors the evil of ho\vever, it must be said that anti-Semitism. Thus it is all the some of his obiter dicta about the more regrettable that his com Jews and about the American munique to the Arab press, bishops are open to serious mis which, on the whole, is worded interpretation.' so effectively and so construc We read, for example, in the tively, is marred, by a few state text of the communique that 'ments which are' likely to exa'c "there certainly remains on the erbate rather than improve forehead of the Jewish people, Christian-Jewish relations. as long as it' is far from Christ the Redeemer, what the prophets Formosa Hospital TAIPEI (NC) - Construction Laymen Heads of a 267-bed Catholic hospital LANSING (NC) - Laymen will begin here in February. To have been appointed to head be built in two stages, the first four of the five departments of stage will cost more than $1 mil the Michigan Catholic Confer lion, most of which has been ence, established in 1963 by donated by Misereor, German the bishops of Michigan to co bishops' organization to combat ordinate social and civic activi poverty and siCkness in' the ties of the Church in Michigan. world.
Portuguese' First SMALL PATIENT: While recuperating, Charlie is en joying the food at the SO-bed Our Lady of Maryknoll Hos pital, located in the slum area of Hong Kong to care for the very poor. NC Photo.
-Part'icif)cU1Jts in'Operation Understanding' At ~k~IW Orleans Increase, Relaxed Temple Sinai. A number of rab bis and Jewish officials agreed that visitors this year seemed "more at ease" and asked more pointed questlons concerning Jewish beliefs and customs than the visitors of a year 'ago.
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ELIZABETH (NC) - A $2.5 million expansion program at the motherhouse of the Bene dictine Sisters here in New Jer sey has been launched. It will involve construci;ion of a chapel, infirmary wing, general' service building, residence and retreat house.
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VIANA DO ALENTEJO (NC) -Mass was concelebrated for the first time in Portugal when 12 other priests joined the pastor 'here, Father Almeida Gil, for the Mass marking the 25th anni . :versary of his ordination.
ELEaRI( LIGHT (0.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Jan. 28; 1965
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965
Advis~s
Girl to Call Bluff Of Re!uctant Boyfriend By John J. Kane, Ph. D. "My boyfriend and I are old enough to be married. We would like to do so within a year but one problem separates us. He is not a Catholic. I will not -give up my religion. He refuses to become a Catholic and will not enter into a mixed marriage be courtship. But they cannot face cause he says they don't up to the serious responsibilities work out. He's a wonderful of married life. To turn about an person in every other way. old saying, "they are always the Can you help us?"
This is the old problem. of
-w hat happens when an irre sistible for e e meets an im movable object. The basic an swer is that it just can't hap pen - and in you r case it means that you and he cannot be united in marriage. But if you dip beneath the su:t"
face of your letter, some strange
facets appear. You have been
going together for some time. He
must have known for some time
that you are a Catholic. Why
then does he continue to go witi'm
you, since he is opposed to a
mixed religious marriage?
The price he is asking for put
ting a wedding ring on your
finger is that you leave your
church. This you do nof intend
to do but apparently you haven't
quite convinced him of the final
ity of your decision. He must
have some secret hope that he
ean melt your resolve.
Girl Unrealistic You will have to,make it even clearer than you have to date that your decision is unalterable and will remain so, even if you two must part. As a matter of fact, as much as it may hurt, you will have to state quite strongly that it is going to be a mixed re ligious marriage or no marriage at all with him. But I think you too have been as unrealistic as he. It is not wise to urge that he become a Catho lic only in order to become your husband. Conversion entails much more than this. He must be firmly convinced of the truth of the faith and wish to embl'ace it for that reason. Of course, you should pray that God may give him the gift of faith. You can ask that he read Catholic literature, attend services with you and discuss the Cburch with him. But you cannot pressure him into converting, and to attempt such is quite wrong. His statement that mixed reli gious marriages do not work out is not quite true. Some do, and some don't. If he begins with a firm conviction that a mixed marriage will fail, you are both halfway to a failure. Some Happy, Successful Case histories and statistics show that probabilities of a hap- _ py mixed religious marriage are less than those in which both parties are of the same religious persuasion. But - some mixed marriages are happy and suc cessful in almost every sense of these terms. But at the risk of going out on a limb, I have a feeling that his claim mixed marriages do not work is not his real motive in rejecting them. I wonder if he wishes to marry at all, or wheth er he wishes to marry you. The fact you mention you are old enough to marry also prompts this suspicion. Some men are marriage shy. They enjoy the pleasure of being with women, of dating, even
best men but never the groom". Plausible Excuses Almost invariably these men have what appears to be excel lent reasons for postponing mar riage. Sometimes it is an aged mother for whom they must care, or the need to move ahead on their work before they take the big- step. _ In reality these are merely plausible excuses, not the actual reason. They suffer some kind of psychological bloc against marriage and' it is deep within their personalities, so much so, that even they do not realize it. I fear you m;1y be associated with just such a person. Even if you agree to abandon your faith -and I trust you never will-I feel certain some new reason for delaying marriage would imme diately occur to him. At the present moment he has what appears to be a serious and sincere reason for not marrying you. It is part of - his defense mechanism against marriage it self, not against a mixed reli gious marriage. If this defense Were removed. another wou~d soon be erected. Wasting Time Since you seem to want to get married and since you are, as you put it, "old enough to get married," I suggest you are wasting your time with this man. You did not say you were en gaged, so I guess you aren't. You seem to have what is known as "an understanding". Sometimes these are like 99 year treaties and would last that long 1£ both parties survived. . There is another way to caU his bluff. Suggest that you both begin to go out with other men and women for a while. In your own case, I think this highly de sirable. You may meet other men whom you will come to like and one perhaps whom you will come to love. At any rate give yourself the opportunity of having more than one boyfriend who appar ently intends to be that peren nially. Different Case If he really cares deeply for you, he will have to come to terms with reality and accept the fact that some mixed mar riages do work and you and he intend to see that yours will. Usually, I too am hesitant about mixed religious marriages, but your ease is somewhat dif ferent. At least, you seem com mitted to it. If you do enter into one, you do so with your eyes open to the fact that more than the usual adjustments must be made. But frankly, I rather doubt you and your friend will marry at all. I wouldn't waste too much time waiting for him, or you may be "waiting at the church" the rest of your life.
Honor Bishop Reed TULSA (NC) - The Tulsa branch of the National Confer ence of christians and Jews will honor Bishop Victor J. Reed of Oklahoma City, Tulsa for his contributions to interreligious and intprraeial relations at its annual Brotherhood Dinner.
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Columbus Diocese Has New Clrdinary WASHINGTON (NC) - Pope Paul VI has appointed the Most Rev. John J. Carberry as the Bishop of Columbus, Ohio. Until now Bishop Carberry has been Bishop of Lafayette in Indiana. Bishop Carberry succeeds to a see left vacant by the transfer of Bishop Clarence G. Issenmann to Cleveland, where he will be enthroned Tuesday, Feb. 2 as Coadjutor Bishop and Apostolic Administrator.
Poverty Continued from Page One lighten the burdens on a diocese. a mission, a hospital. Other ap peals are made on a _non-reli gious, on a non··sectarian line. In fact, suggestions have come in that all Christians unite in a great campaign, with a view to face the problem of poverty with a solid line. My feeling is that whatever decisions are mG.de at the top, or whatever recommendations made, the responsibility comes down to us, as individuals, cler ical and lay, - as parishes and_ social groups to act conscien tiously here and now. When peo ple are starved, they can't af ford to wait until next year or next month. A good deal of the discontentment in the world stems from the fact that men, women and children have not even a subsistence diet. What brief experience they have in life is plagued by pangs of hunger and the consequent rav ages of disease. So, I am asking you to supply me with the means to answer the urgings of the Holy Father, of my brother-bishops - who write in often to endorse a nec essary work done by sisters, brothers and lay apostles in mis sion areas. We have been doing well. But far from curing the affliction, we know that it's getting worse. We must not seek excuses. These are our brothers, all chil dren of the Bame heavenly Father. I must say that I do not expect any oml great act of generosity. We have few in the diocese who could do such a thing. Our histo:rY,-in fact the history of the whole Church, has been a record of what small do nations, often the fruit of sacri fice, can mount up to when prac tically all, or most of our faith ful can do their part. Let us then unite on January 31st to provide a handy means for doing systematically and sympathetically what we would like to be able to do on behalf of those who cannot help them. selves. We may all be sure that the Lord loves the "cheerful", the conscientious giver. And ~at we do for one of these lellSt brethren, we do for Him."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965
Prelate Pinpoints Growing Role of Catholic Press
President's Education Bill Proposes Good of Child
BY LAWRENCE CARDINAL SHEHAN Archbishop of Baltimore Chairman, NCWC Press Department Since the days when journ~lism itself became a sig nificant force in society, Catholic journalism has been a profession of vast potential. As the general role of jou~ nalism gained influence through the growth of democratIc institutions, the correlative the everyday world accord vocation of Catholic journal form: ing to the mind of Christ. ism became more necessary Dialogue Promotion for the formation of Christ As such an intermediary, the centered faithful and Christ minded citizens. Hence, for all its accuracy, the repeated assertion has long grown threadbare that' "never has tru"e Catholic journalism been more necessary than now." We are therefore condemned to a cliche when we justifiably make that same assertion in a year when the Second Vatican Council will most likely end and a postconciliar age will begin. Once again, history proves that nothing is so true as a truism. History-both past and ex ceedingly recent--likewise sug gests that within the' Chu_rch a lengthy period of growing pains is in the offing. During this pe riod, Catholic journalism will be uniquely challenged and must be adequately equipped "to dis turb the comfortable and to com fort the disturbed." Reflect Public Opinion The council's master docu ment, On the Church, insists that the laity should openly reveal their needs and desires to their pastors. This they should do "with that freedom and confi dence befitting children of God and brothers in Christ." Further, "the laity are, by means of the knowledge, compe tence, or outstanding ability which they may enjoy, permit ted and sometimes even obliged to express their opinion on those things which concern the good of the Church." The Council document directs that such opinions should be ex pressed "thrpugh agencies set up by the Church for this purpose." One such agency already exists in the pages of the Catholic press, where news stories, col umns of opinion, editorials, and letters to the editor can in a practical way both generate and reflect that public opinion which, as recent popes have re minded us-operates as a need ful part of the Church's life. Pub I i C opinIOn, however, should be in con tin u 0 u s conversation with the authentic teachers of the living Church. Here the Catholic press is called :Ipon to function as an interme diary, between the divinely ap pointed teachers within the Church and the whole people of God who are summoned to trans-
17
WASHINGTON (NC) - Cooperation between public and private schools for the benefit of pupils and the com munity is the aim of President Johnson's educational pro gram and of legislation that nas been introduced to imple ment it. Both the Secretary identify areas of poverty con of Health, Education and taining concentrations of chil Welfare Anthony J. Cele dren who need compensatory brezze and the U.S. Commis programs, rather than to provide
Catholic press offers no more creative service than the promo tion of that ecumenical or house hold dialogue which ought to flourish within the Church be tween all ranks of her members. It would surely be hurtfully ironic if this exhilarating age of patient, courteous, and humble dialogue between Christians were accompanied by the ab sence of such dialogue between CARDINAL RICKETTS Catholics themselves. Here, as in so many areas, Catholic journalists can lead the way in exemplifying the coun cil's words about the truthful ness, courage, and prudence" with which opinions should be voiced within the Church, as well as "the reverence and char CHICAGO (NC)-A card ity due to those who by reason of their sacred office represent the inal from Peru estimated Person of Christ." .here much credit for the Worthwhile Reading Church's advance in Latin May Catholic Press Month America belongs to the hier 1965, then, be the, occasion of professional rededication to the . archies of the various countri~s
there who "have taken an ag
worthily claSSic maxim: in nec gressive stand on the urgency of
'essary matters, unity; in open social and economic reform." matters, freedom; in all matters, J u an Cardinal Landazuri charity. On every side may fresh honor Ricketts, Archbishop of Lima, Peru, told the' second annual be given to the wisdom of St. Francis de Sales concerning the conference of Catholic Inter superior effectiveness of honey American Cooperation Program (CICOP), that this aggressive over vinegar. . ness has "changed the image of Mindful of Pope Paul's ad monition that the Catholic press the Church in the eyes of the general public." can no longer be regarded as a luxury, may all literate mem Cardinal Landazuri Ricketts, bers of the Church resolve to a keynote speaker at the confer serve God with their whole ence, said: "People are begiq minds by making the Catholic ning to realize that government press a c.onscientious part of support for the Church is uncer their ordinary reading matter, tain and insignificant at best, for worthy Catholic journalism and that consequently they will provide them with reading themselves must contribute." matter which really matters. As an example of the new ac tivity of the Church, the cardi nal cited a program he instigated Schedule Dead Sea
in his archdiocese three years ago. "I .prepared and ordered to Scrolls Exhibition
be preached in all the parishes WASHINGTON (NC) -Four of the archdiocese a series of 22 teen of the famous Dead Sea sermons on social justice," he Scrolls will be exhibited at mu detailed. "The contents were ef seums in" several pads of the fective, because the series had U. S. between late February and hardly begun, when pressure was late September, the Smithsonian built up to cancel it." The ser Institution has announced. . mons continued, he added. The exhibition will be spon sored by the government of Jordan, which sent the 14 scrolls Vernacular in Mass and other objects connected with LISBON (NC)-Use of Portu them to the U. S. guese in the Mass will start on The Dead Sea Scrolls, the first March 7, the first Sunday of of which were discovered in Lent, it was announced here by 1947, are the work of a Hebrew the patriarchal curia of Lisbon. Guatemala Suffers sect known as Essenes who The Epistle and the Gospel are flourished in Palestine around already being read in the ver Vocation Shortage the time of Christ. The scrolls; nacular at a)l public Masses. GUATEMALA CITY (NC) which shed much light on beliefs Despite the construction of a and customs of the era, are re Z}ew seminary here staffed by garded as a major contribution NO JOB TOO BIG Canadian Sulpician priests, the to the study and understanding shortage of vocations to the NONE TOO SMALL of the Bible. priesthood is still critical in this Central American nation" and will probably remain that way Formation Conferenc for many years to come. PRINTERS
Officials Plan Meet At the present time in Guate mala, where 90 per cent of the OAKLAND (NC)-About 110 Main OHice and Plant
4.5 million persons are Catholic, major superiors and officials of, 95 Bridge St., Lowell, Mass.
there is only one priest for every the Sister Formation Conference 13,000 persons. Tel. 458-6333
will gather at the College of the Even that comparison is mis Holy Names here tomorrow for Auxiliary Plants leading, since the number of the three-day southwestern re priests engaged in administra gional meeting of the conference. BOSTON tive and school work. increase Msgr. John S. Cummins, chan-. CAMDEN, N. J. the pastoral ratio to one priest cellor of the Oakland diocese, OCEANPORT, N. J. for every 18,000 persons. (The will open the session by speak United States has one priest for ing on the topic: "The Role of the MIAMI about every 800 Catholics.) Sister in the Church Today."
Peru Cardina! Is Keynoter At CICOP
sioner of Education Francis Kep- . general support for the entire pel struck this note in opening school system." testimony on the Perkins bill Shared Services (H.R. 2362), the first of the edu The commissioner said the· cation measures to reach hear whole of the President's program ing stage. encourages "maximum flexibil Secretary Celebrezze told the ity for the local agency" and in lawmakers the President's pro dicated the bill calls for private gram and the Perkins Bill both nonprofit schools to enjoy not seek to "benefit all the children just "shared time" but "shared in the area served" and "to en services" as well. Under "shared courage collaborative efforts time," private school pupils may among public and private attend some classes in public schools." schools to take advantage of Proper Role facilities available the r e • Commissioner Keppel said Pres "Shared services" is a broader ident Johnson had moved deci concept and the commissioner, sively toward having the Federal in answer to a question, indi Government play its proper role cated that this could include in education "by actively en sending teachers and specialistS couraging cooperative educa to serve the children in private tional services at local levels, schools. serving both public and private school students under public Buy Seminary auspices." SYACUSE (NC)-The Crosier He also said that to respond Fathers have purchased Our fully to the President's program, Lady of the Lake Seminary here "we must * * ... help all our chil in Indiana from the Fort Wayne dren in all types of schools-both South Bend diocese. They will public and private." Commissioner Keppel also dis operote it for their own semin pelled suspicion that the bill in ari-ans who come frOlll several volved general Federal aid. He Mid-West dioceses. tpld the legislators: "We seek to
Says Condemnation Obstacle to Unity PITTSBURGH (NC)-The ec umenically minded Christian should avoid passing judgment on his fellow Christians, a mem ber of the French Protestant monastic community of Taize said here. Brother Frank ven het Hof, speaking on Christian unity at Duquesne University, stressed that the ecumenical vocation is not a call to judgment. "Every condemnation breaks unity," he declared, cautioning against reviving the mistakes of the past and indulging in mutual recriminations. He said the ecu menical Christian strives to .be "a man who brings unity and not division" and does not insist that his way is the only way to unity. "What does unity mean if it is only unity itl one direction, our own direction, even if it is a good one?" he asked.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28,1965
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Name C. U. Teacher·· Roman Rota Ju,dge: VATICAN CITY (NC)-Msgr. Giovanni Abbo, a member of the faculty of sacred theology at the Catholic University of America In Washington, D. C., has been nanied, a judge of the Roman RO,ta, high Church court. Msgr. Abbo's official title at the Rota will be that of prelate auditor. AUditors - a score of them-are judges, all doctors in theology and canon law, with a dean at their head. The present dean of the court, which was set up in the 13th century and re , constituted by Pope Pius X in 1908, is an '.Affiericl'm,· Msgr. Francis J. Brennan from Shen andoah, Pa. Another American judge is Father William Doheny . from Merrill, Wis.
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Cardinal Bea Plans Talks in Germany ROME (NC)-:-Augustin Car dinal Bea, president of the Sec retariat for Promoting Christian Unity, has flown to Germany for a series of conferences explain ing the ecumenical council's de cree on ecumenism. He will lecture in Wurtzburg and Munich. His conferences will be tied in with the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. On Thursday, and Friday, Feb. 18 and 19, Cardinal Bea will be a guest of the World Council of Churches at its Geneva head quarters. This will be the first time a Catholic cardinal has vis ited the headquarters of the _. organization of Protestant' and Orthodox churches.
Approves Voluntary Prayers in Schools GRAND RAPIDS (NC) - A U. S. district court judge has ap proved prayer by students in public schools provided that it is strictly voluntary and does not take place during class time. Judge Noel P. Fox turned down a request by nine parents in the Jenison school district' for an injunction against the school board to halt in-school prayer and Bible reading. He specified, however, that. students must be free not to take part. in such exercises, that the exercises must be held else where than in the students' reg ular home rooms, and that they must take place either before or after the regular school day.
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THE ANCHOR- . Thurs., Jan. 28, 1965 "
Three-Club Race Heightens County Court Loop Interest
19 ,-:'
-----------,\,\ Pope ~(Jt~d Pl!'~;;~es ~
Place @f
By Fred Bartek High school hardwood combines are now in the second half of competition. Dighton-Rehoboth, which has met all competition, has had no Ji.ttle difficulty in maintaining iots undefeated Narry League status. The Bristol County League is another story. At- , ' tleboro Coyle of 'l'aunton game behind Coyle and Attle~lO , , . due to an open (late. The Hill and Durfee of Fall RIver toppers will host North Attle were picked as the top three bOlO Friday night at the Fall
Spo~~s
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI, receiving members of various Italian sports clubs, told them that "sports wisely prac ticed are a factor of good edu cation and training, not only physical but spiritual and moral." The Pope thanked his visitors warmly for gifts of shoes and clothing they had gathered for distribution to the poor. He ex pressed satisfaction for their "activity in the pursuit of Chris tian and social aims, in conscious lIIid generous harmony and joy fulness, which is of great value.
in pre-season talk. The first half River Armory. The Rocketeers play ended, with the three tied are still looking for their first for the top spot. win.Durfee, to keep pace with T his simply the leaders, is determined that means that the North's first victory will not be title competition at its expense. will be more The Attleboro Jewelers will be exciting in the at New Bedford Vocational. At fin a 1 round. tleboro looks like the most poThe most intertent offensive quintet in the Cardinal Cushing esting game toleague. With Dave Hardt and morrow night John Shockro under the boards, FROM COPTIC AND' MELKITE RITES·. HI'S' E.....;- (auds CYO WOf1'ft in the N a r r y Voke will have its work cut out. u"" BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car. j League co u 1 d However, the Artisans do possess nence, Stephanos 1 Cardinal Sidarouss of Alexandria, Egypt, well be Holy two top scorers. Dave Loveridge and Patriarch, of .the Copts, together with his Eminence, dinaI Cushing characterized the Catholic Youth Organization as ... Family at Old turned in the season's top scor- :Maximos IV Cardinal Saigh of Antioch, and Patriarch of "one of the strongest arms" of Rochester. Coach Jack Nobrega'. ing performance in one game, ',' the Melkites, were named members of th~ Sac'red' "~llege the, Church in the Boston arch Parochials are about the only' until his team-mate Joe AdaVU'J team in a position to challenge mowski, hit the twines for 40 of Cardinals with 25 other prelates on Monday, lan. 25. NC diocese. He said during the last 20 the league leader, Dighton- points last week. P~to. years 1,325 boys and girls from Rehoboth. Stang at Taunton C'¥O ranks embarked on studies Holy Family, only two, ~~mes, ,,~~~e ,is one, game on tap ~ for ~he priesthood or training for off the pace, has been playing' ,mght. The Stang' Spartans Will the' 'Iiie of a Religious. He alsO' . excellent ball lately. ' be at ~ulcahYlgyDi in Taunton saId' that in 34 semi-annual • • The Bulldogs of Old Rochester; to fa,ce'the Taunton High Her ,wastepaper collection campaigns ,,', California Prelate'Visits Counties although not ina position to ' $gs~,S~ang,whjch has shown the" eyo raised $1,456,250 for ,": challenge the front runners, have ' iJriprovement lately, could re , Devasta'ted by Floods archdiQcesan charities and other . consistently given, everY 'team 'wrse an earlier loss to Taunton. pr!igrams. ' tough opposition. Off,ensively Paul Matheson, Paul SAN';I'A' ROSA (NC) - ~'The stag~ch trails, will probably
Bill Synott has become Holr G~s m;td AI Cate~ have been present danger is over," Bishop be cut for three more months.
:: Center Church Family's leading scorer, 'caging :sconng m double figures for the Leo T. Maher' of Santa Rosa Mills Closed lGNGSLAND CNC) - Con-,:, 20-plus points in the last few Spartans. Taunton seems to have said as he returned from the . Dispelling a report that food struction will begin soon on the- ' games to bring'his game average,' , lost a bit of its momentum, but flood-devastated northern coun is no longer needed, Bishop round ,umbrella-like par ish i to 18. Tony Mello and Mike Brit- two high scoring, guards, Jim ties of his diocese, "but the fu Maher said that canned food church of St. Charles Borromeo ' to supply the one-two punch for Medas and AI Rogers, could be ture is dark and dismal." will be in demand for at least which will be built adjacent t~" the Bulldogs. The talent they still too tou~ .for the North , lIip-booted and rain-slickered, three more months. a shopping center here in ~. ··~S.' have exhibited on the hardwood Dartmouth 0 Bnen-men. , the bishop jeeped and sloshed ,~'What can one tell a man who matches their gridiron exploits. ~oYle of Taunton will be at through' a visit with his storm-' has just seen his home dashed , Fauhaven tomorrow n i g h t • battered flock. to bit by a wildly rampant river; Falcons Speed Ahead Coach Jim Lanagan has a slight
whose job has just vanished with Comtplete "The damage to the area bor
Apponequet Regional High of twinge within as he approaches the wind, or whose herd of cat ders the cataclysmic, and the Lakeville will travel to Dighton. this encounter. It was at Fair,;, personal losses of individuals is tle lay dead amid flood debris The two teams have completely haven last year that his War-: BA~H{'NG that is indescriable?" the bishop opposite league records, Dighton riors had to play the first half enormous," the bishop said in asked, his own clothes still being 10-0 and Apponequet just, of a game on Friday night an4 an airport interview, ''but what showing the effects of drenchirlg the opposite. The Dighton Fal-' the second half the following worries me more than anything rains. cons are i getting A-I perform- night because of a power failure. else is the weakened morale of The lumber industry comprises ances from Ray Glynn, Joe De- The Warriors lost and were these good people." for, Bristol County' 70 per cent of the local economr. Mello and Glenn Field. In one forced to share the league title The flood which wrought ma Bishop Maher reported that on~ game last week this combination with Attleboro. jor havoc in five of the six coun accounted for 57 of their team's Improving Warriors ties in the diocese has left 3,000 third of the mills will be unable 68 points. Coyle played excellent ball homeless. Transportation into the to operate for six months. Four q,ict~~ fIov ! Somerset and Diman Voca- last week beating Durfee by stricken areas is presently re , mills will never reopen., tional of Fall River will meet at three points and then the War stricted to airplanes. Roads, ex Com~C'.,y the former's court. They are tied riors went on to take Feehan in cept for mud paths and old ~_ for fourth pl'ace. Diman, a sur- ,a game that sawall of Laljagan's
prise aggregation has been giv- hoopsters in action. :
,TAUNTON, MASS. ", ., ing the top teams a go of it. The Feehan High of Attleboro will
: Excavating !: Somerset Raiders have dropped have an open crate. The Sham
THE RANK ON slightly off the pace they set in rocks won their first game last
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punches. Ricky Castro and Bon ~. _---~~ islaus Mewald are the Artisans Hails Popes, Council PERSONAL SERVICE
threats while Bob Douglas and ALEXANDRIA (NC) - A Lou 181 Dave Sypko are Somerset's of- isiana Episcopal clergyman has fensive threats. told a Catholic group here: "As" ,.. ,;"....... _
ON CAPE COD Durfee Eyes Penant an Anglican, I thank God every T' d f ixth 1 d f' day for the witness of Pope John Ie or s p a c e an. aCIng and Pope Paul who were and are Pharma~y each other tomor:ow nIght are". not just good men but instru BUILDING MATERIALS
Prevos~ of Fall River and Westments of the Holy Spirit." Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm.
Pst°rtt,High. prtevbost, afttehr a slow Rev. Robert E. Ratelle, rector, SPrirtg 5-0700
DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM
e on e fmove. of St . James Ep'Iscopa1 ch urch , th . A ar . seems t S 0t ' SUPPLIES
gaIns . omer~e In one 0 eu gave his impressions of the Sec 204 ASHLB.Y BOULEVARD
last outIngs, five of the ParodV . . . · 1 h·t th twO f d bl CounCIl at a meetmg i ch la s 1 e mes or ou e on f th abean 1 . New Bedford
figur Th '11 18 t W t- 0 e ocal ~erra Club. He saId i rt es. ey WI pya es the Council has done more than WY 3-8405
AMPLE PARKING i po . make pronouncements. Currently in the Bristol County "It has said to all of us that League, Durfee High is a half the real question on judgment day will not be 'Are you Catho lic?' or even 'Are you Christian?' , Inc. Science Grant but 'Do you love me?' he de LATROBE (NC)-The' Rich clared. MOVERS ard King Mellon Foundation has Rev. Mr. R~itelle, said the most SERVING
given $250,000 to St. Vincent important Council actions were Fall River, New Bedford
College here in Pennsylvania the approval of the Mass in the Cape Cod Area
to aid in construction of new vernacular and the Constitution 46 Taunton Agent science facilities. Plans for the On the Church in which baptism lOur Heating Green science complex calls for three is pointed out as the common de AERO MAYFLOWER
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'UfE..ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 28,1965
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