~First Anchor Subscription Report Strong
A new record high for weekly home-delivered ANCHORS is in prospect today, notwithstanding the fact that.the majority of first parish reports are not expected until next week. However, the eonfidence evidenced by the pastors throughout the Diocese in conversations' with the Circula tion department has established the assurance that this year's final results will exceed all other years. For the sixth year, Rt. Rev. Louis E. Prevost, pastor of St.. Joseph's Church, New Bedford, has called before the Subscription Drive was 72 hours old and reported that this North End Parish of New Bedford has reached its quota.
Rev: John G. Carroll of St. John the Baptist Parish, Central Village, informed The ANCHOR office that the subscriptions this year will sur pass the 1962 quota-breaking number of readers in his parish. The parishoners of St. Dominic's; Swansea, have responded so well to the first appeal made Sunday, that Rev. William R. Jordan,pastor, has announced that once more that parish has made The ANCHOR Quota Honor Roll. St. Joseph's Parish, Fall River, is another repeater in the quota-making class. Rev. George E. Sullivan has said that "he would not be satis fied until every parishoner is reading The
ANCHOR every Thursday." Already over his established quota, the pastor of the Immaculate Conception parish, North Ea8ton, is aiming at complete parish coverage during this year's drive. Rev. John J. Casey, pastor, remarked that "the complete ac tivity and development of the Diocese is only known through the weekly reading of The ANCHOR." The reports that have come in are numerous and statements of success have been made by . parish leaders from all sections of the Diocese. As each day passes, the new record of paid sub scriptions is evident.·
,. "
The ANCHOR Fall
~i'Yer,
Mass., Thursday, Feb. 21,. 1963
Vol. 7, No. 8 ©
1963 The Anchor
PRICE lOe $4.00 per Yem
Ordinary Urges Closer Imitation 'of. Christ
VICTORIOUS DEBATERS: Trophy-laden members of the triumphant Holy Family High Debating team with their director are, left to right: Brian Healy; Maurice Dow ., pmy that they all may be one,' as Thou Father art. in Me and I in Thee, that the wo'rld 'ftw,y believe that Thou . ney; .coach; Marilyn Mulcairns; and Edward Parr. Richard Parras, the fourth debater. is confined to his home by sickness and is thus not pictured with the team. lias sent me." . St. John 17 :21 Beloved in Christ, We have just' passed a significant time in the history of the Church. It was prepared Jor· on the insistence of Pope John by prayer and works 'of penance. It brought together for the Second Vatican Council bishops from all parts of the Christian world. They numbered 'over twenty.·. four hundred.' Our separated brethren were represented The' Msgr. McKeon De ouring all deliberations and many a follower of Christ, even bating Society' of New Bed ford's Holy Family Higll Turn to Page Two School won a rare honor last
Holy. Family
Catholic Highs Set
Debaters in ~op Place.
Council Promises Speed~er Action in 'Next Sessio,n The Second Vatican Ecumenical Councilis a truly his toric event of enormous importance that has beenwell begun, will move at an accelerated pace when it reconvenes.' on Sunday, Sept. 8, and will produce~more good, although its fruits may be a lo~g time in . manifesting themselves. At "We have been privileged' in the same time, there is 'great sharing in a tremendous epoch in the history :of God's relation need to be on guard against ship with mankind, and look false impressions created by lOme reports on the council. These are ideas that stand out lD views expressed by members of the Hierarchy in the United States following their participatton in the council's first session .. Rome last FalL
forward to resuming our delib erations in September," said James Francis Cardinal' Me Intyre, Archbishop of Los An geles. "The council will stand out in history as a great accom plishment." Turn to Page Eighteen
Entra'nee Exams
All Cat}:1olic high schools in the Diocese of Fall River will conduct entrance and placement examinations for new students at -8 :30 A. :M. Saturday, March 9, 'Father Patrick J. O'Neill, superintEmdent of schools, announces. Students wishing to enter any of these High schools of the Diocese schools next - September are located as follows:
should report to the school of Attleboro: Bis~op Feehan High their choice prepared to take (for .boys and gIrls).
weekend -by taking top award as : the best four~man debating team "in the Georgetown Invita~ tional Debate Tournament in . . Washington, posting the best record. of .102 competing schools a ~hr~e;hour exammatIon, Father .0 NeIll s a.nnouncement states. from all over the nation. There WIll be a two dollar fee, The team of MarilyQ. Mul. cairns, Edward Parr, Richard payable at the time of examinaPerras and Brian Healy won tion. Students need bring no eleven 'of their twelve debates. _records with them, nor do par. The debaters are coached by ents have t~ acc0ID:pany them. Attorney ,Maurice F. Downey, C0!Dplete infOrmatIOn as to an alumnus of Holy Family and' courses and activities will be New Bedford, City Solicitor. - given at that time. The. examination will be a The team of Marilyn Mulcairns nationally standardized test ad. Turn' to Page Seventeen ministered by Science Research Associates, providing data equal. ly applicable to all schools, In. formation will be obtained from ,The Most Reverend Bishop students' present school conhas granted a' dispensation' cerning scholastic achievement, from abstinence for tomorrow, previous test data and character Washington's Birthday. evaluation. C
- Dispensation'
FaIrhaven: Sacred Hean. Academy (for girls only). Fall River: Academy of the Sacred Hearts (for girls only)· Dominican Academy (for girl~ only); Jesus-Mary Academy (for girls only); Mount S1. Mary Academy -(for girls only); Mon. signor Prevost High School (for French-speaking boys only). New Bedford: Holy Family High School (for boys and girls); St. Anthony High School (for boys and girls).
North Dartmouth: Bishop
Stang High School (for boys and girls)." Taunton: Monsignor Coyle High School (for boys only): Bishop Cassidy High School (for girls only).
Food for ,Body and Soul During Lent
Daily Menus for Lenten Season
Make the Bible. Your Daily Diet
During the holy season of Lent, The Anchor will present' day by day menus planned with all fasting restrictions in mind. This year, menus and recipes will be prepared by Miss Nancy Carroll, home economics teacher at B.M.C. Durfee High School, Fall River, and member of Holy )lame parish in Fall River. Menus will be presented a week in advance to allow homemakers time for shopping and planning. Recipes are given for starred items, directly below each day's menu.
Lent is almost here and for most of us' it is a time, even more than New Year's, for good resolutions. Some of them fall by the wayside, but there is one that shouldn't-and that's the accomplishment of a reason able amount of spiritual reading. The reason is simple. Quite legitimate reasons may interfere with getting to daily Mass every morning of the holy season, we may not be able to get to evening devotions-but surely in every day there is a slice of time that can be devoted to reading. Maybe we are limiting TV viewing for Lent, maybe we are cutting down
Turn to
Pa~e
Fifteen
Turn to Page Eighteen
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Lenten Regulations' IQr Fast and Abstinence
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fatl River-Thurs.• Feb. 21, W63
FROM ASH WEDNESDAY TO HOLY SATURDAY MIDNIGHT, 1961
Closer Imitation of Christ
To foster the spirit of Penanee and of reparation for sin, to encourage self-denial and mortification and to guide her children in the footsteps of Our Divine Savior, Holy Mother Church imposes by law the observance of fast and abstinence. . _ According to the provisions of Canon Law, as modified through the use of special faculties granted by the Holy See, w~ herewith publish the following regulations:
Continued from Page One
though not of our communion, gave us the benefit of .hIs or her prayers. All who were privileged to ,share in the work of the Council have testified to a wonderful spirit of unity and charity that abided there. In the goodness of God, it brought us all closer to the realization of Christ's prayer: "That all may be one, that the world may believe that Thou has sent me." Now we await the reassembling of the Council in· the Fall, confident that again we will be helped by the prayer and penance of all who bear the name of Christian. American Bishops will go back more· alert to the general deliberations. Not, indeed, that they did not have their place. They are already highly respected for the leade~ship that has found expression in so many ways here, - in the cause of Catliolic education, - in social-justice, - in support of the missions, - in respect for the work of the Lord, - in the rich outpouring of help for every good cause and in t.he flowering of vocations. ,The Bishops were. indeed respected for all this and more that'the Church in the United States stands for. But it is basically to the faithful that' thanks should be given. For after all what is a leader without a devoted, responsive following? Of what avail is a voice when it cries in a wilderness of indifference? But how effective when it strikes ready response from thousands of hearts, as,it does here. As Lent approaches, Your Bishop feels -first of all the compulsion to thank you for what y'ou have done thus far by works of prayer and penance to help us all,' Pope and Prelates, prepare for the Vatican Council, and for your constant remembrance of Christ's Vicar, whose great hearted charity has been an inspiration to the world. There is no one who could possibly believe that such turning to God has been unavailing. The results are too manifest for that. Our only concern is lest good men and women fail to carryon and make stronger the echo of Christ's prayer in their own hearts: "That all may be One." So we thank you for what we trust you will do for yourselves and the Church this Lent. . All of us know that Christ lives in His Church, not alone in His Eucharistic Presence, - but in the Sacraments. They that are baptized in Christ have put on Chr.ist. He lives in them, and they are destined tq grow up in Him Who is the Head. We are made one with Our Blessed Lord. We are as branches to the vine. We must live on in Him seeking nothing more than to serve as willing, responsive instru ments of His Holy Will. They that are Christ's are known for their will to imitate Him, "doing alwl!Ys the things that please God." They that are Christ's deny th.emselves and take up their cross daily to follow Him. , Lent has always been the season set apart for the closer imitation of Christ. We will all do well when we take it seriously.. Not a day should pass that is not marked by some act of devotion, some proof of detachment from teinptations and the allurements of the world. It eould be the correction of a nagging fault. It could be the building of a real spirit of Charity that, please God, will endure long after Lent is over. It could be the rooting out of anyone of a hundred attitudes that affect one or oth~~r of us for the worse~ Why' should we wait any longer? Now is the acceptable time. Now is the day of,decision. Weare all for Christ. But how do we prove it? Above all, and beyond all, is the need fQr prayer and assistance at the Sacraments. Definitely, we must be faith ful to Sunday Mass, for this is the day of the Lo~d, and.' we have no greater nor more powerful approach to the Eternal Throne of God than our union with Our ,Blessed Lord in the renewal of His Sacrifice. There we find our selves one with Him. There we unite with those who believe in Him as we do, knowing that whatsoever WE! ask in His Name will be given us. And first and foremost our hopes should be that we may grow more and more in His Likeness. , There is no end to what can be accomplished in Lent by way of growing up in Him Who is the Head. It all involves putting off faults, to be sure. But more important is the matter of putting on the habit and the manner of Christ. What we cannot do for ourselves, God will do for us. So let us all ask him for our own sake and for the work of the Church. And let us not forget for a moment, in prayer and penance, the needs of the coming session of the Vatican Council. ~elieve me, with much affection and a hearty blessing, Cordially yours in Christ,
~~/62-~ BishoD of Fan River.
Alumni Breakfast
legion of Decency
The following films are 10 be AJlumni of St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, will hold. added 10 the lists in their re spective classificati.ons: their annual communion break fast following 9 o'clock Mass this Unobjectionable for general Sunday morning in St. Anthony's patronage: Tammy and the Doc Church. Breakfast will be served tor. in the school cafeteria. Unobjectionable for adults and THE ANCHOR adolescents: Day of. the. Triffids. Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. Publislled every Thursday at 410 Unobjectionable for adults: t1lghlan<l Avenue Fall River Mass, by the " c:atholic Press 01 the Diocese at Fall River. Dime witil a Hale.; Love • a Subscription price by mall, poitpakl $4.00 BalL year.
"r
ON FAST Everyone over 21 and under 59 years of age is bound to observe) the law of fast.. The weekdays of Lent are days of fast. On these days only one full meal is allowed. Two other meatlesl meals, sufficient to maintain strength, may be taken according to one's need; but together they should not equal another full meal. Meat may be taken at the principal meal on a day of fast except Fridays and Ash Wednesday. Eating between meals is not permitted; but liquids, including milk and fruit juices, are allowed. When health and ability to w.ork would be seriously affected, the law does not oblige. tn doubt concerning fast or abstinence a parish priest or confessor should be consulted. " .
. ON ABSTINENCE . NEW .ASSIGNMENT: Rev. John L. Pelissier, M,S:, Holyoke native, is new Cath olic "Relief Service director for the Malagasy Republic. CRS, receiving more than 50 per cen); of all· surplus food distributed abroad by the a.s., handles more than all other voluntary agencies to gether. Father Pelissier will 'arrange duty - free en try, warehousing and transporta tion of food and clothing for needy Malagasans. He is a veteran of 10 years mission ary service in the Philip pines. Malagasy is on the is land of Madagascar, fourth largest island in the world.
Everyone over seven years of age is bound to obRerve the law of abstinence. Com~plete abstinence is to be observed on Fridays and Ash Wednesday. On days of complete abstinence meat and 'soup or gravy made from meat may not be used at all Partial abstinence is to be obgerved on Ember Wednes day and Saturday. On days ,of partial abstinence meat and soup or gravy made from me~t may be taken ONCE a day at the principal meal. We earnestly exhort the faithful during the Holy Season of Lent to atte~d.daily Mass; to receive Holy Com munion often; to take part more frequently in 'exercises of piety; to give generously to works of religion and charity; to perform acts of kindness toward the sick, the aged and the POOl'; to practice voluntary self-denial especially regarding alcoholic drink and worldly amusements; and to pray more fervently, particularly for 'the intentions of the Holy Father. Obligation to fulfill the Easter duty.may be satiRfied from Sunday, March 3, the First Sunday of Lent, until June 9, Trinity Sunday.
Prayer in UN
By order of the Most Reverend Bishop
WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep. Frank J. Becker of New York has introduced a resolution provid ing that the U. S. delegation to the United Nations "shall take such steps as might be necessary to have each day's session in the United Nations opened with a prayer." .
MaslOrdo FRIDAY - Chair of St. Peter, Apostle. I! Class. White. Mass "Proper; Gloria; Second Collect "(Under one conclusion) St. . Paul, Apostle; Creed; Preface
.~ of Apostles.
SATURDAY-St. Peter Damian,
Bishop, Confessor and Doctor of the Church. III Class. White; Mass Proper; Gloria;,no Creed; Common Preface. SU:lI."'DAY-Quinquagesima Sun.' day. I! Class. Violet. Mass \ Proper; No Gloria; Second Collect S1. Matthias, Apostle; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY - Mass of previous Sunday. 'IV Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY - Mass of previoWl . Sunday. IV Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Common Preface. The beginning of the Lenten Fast at midnight. " WEDNESDAY-Ash Wednesday. I Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Preface of Lent. In Masses which imme diately follow the Blessing and Distribution of Ashes, ~ Prayers at the Foot of the Altar are omitted. The Blessing and ~istributiOD of Ashes. . THURSDAY - Thursday after Ash Wednesday. II! Clasa. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo ria or Creed; Preface of Lent.
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9.UMBERTO S. MEDEIROS, , Chancellor
Guild for Blind
Fall Rivc~ Catholic Guild for the' Blind will hold its monthly meeting Su.nday, Feb. 24; in the Sacred Heart School following RoS{U'y and Benediction in the church at 2:15 P. M.
,FORTY HOURS' DEVOTION Feb.22--':"'LaSalette Seminary, Attleboro, . . ... ,
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Feb. 24-St. Anthony, ,.E as t
Falmouth.
Catholic Memoriat Home, Fall River. St. Anthony'Convent, Fall . River. Mar. 3--5t. James, New Bed ford. Our :Lady's Haven, FaiT-" haven. Mar. l0-5anto Christo, Fall River.
Our Lady of Lourdes,
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St. Augustine, Vineyard
Haven. Mar. 17-St. Mary, Taunton. St. :FrancUl X a vie r ,
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Necrology FEB. 22
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.THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 21, 1963
Religious, Leaders .Seen Warring on Prejudice
Three Classmen Schedule Reunion In Guatemala
PURCHASE (NC) - A rabbi said here that religious leaders across the nation "mean business" in their efforts ~ainst racial prejudice in the U.S. "They are determined ti assume moral leadership in this area as never before," 8aid Rabbi Marc H. Tanen will have failed in large measure baum of the Arne ric an' this ... hour in which to trans 1ewish Com mit tee at a late into reality the principle for u m at Manhattanville of brotherhood under God that eoUege of the Sacred Heart. Rabbi Tanenbaum, who served lIB chairman of the program eommittee for the recent· (Jan. 1'4-17) Conference on Religion and Race, held in' Ohicago, as .iled the hypocrisy of many Antericans who profess belief in eod. Contradiction "The dally contradiction be ......een the profession of lofty, Ileligious moral and ethioal prin _pIes pronounced from our pul pits and embalmed in our Negro brothers and sisters in most of the basic areas where human aecessity and dignity are to be !IIlUilled, have l'esulted in a eeneral perception of the church IlDd synagogue, as being spiri tually and morally anemic, eources of hypocrisy rather than at holiness." Rabbi Tanenbaum said that lleiigious leaders mum explore ~e deeper attitudes which are tile psychological ground that so ftcisively influences how the aegro and white actually think tIbout and behave toward each other." Communication ""Unless this real communica_ tion is achieved," he stated, "we
New Bedfordites List Projects Activities of New Bedford euria of the Legion of Mary in. dude bi-weekly visits to the !JIIen's Mission of that city. Men l.egionaires make informal con tacts with Mission guests and lead them in recitation of the IIOsary if conditions permit. Le sion work was commended in 4he annual report to mission di. lectors by Allwyn Ainsley, in marge of the project. He noted 4hat a splendid job was being done by the curia men and that • was "the first attempt of this eort at the mission." Also a Legion project is peri. edical publication of a pamphlet, -Worthwhile Books," listing _table spiritual reading matter tor Catholies. Rev. Albert 1'. IIIhovelton, ,curia moderator, is llaeard daily by New Bedford .dio listeners in a five minute ipiritual meditation, presented Monday through Saturday bJ' Mtion WBSM.
has been professed so piously and meaninglessly by so many 'good religious people.''' Rabbi Tanenbaum then' cited the significance of the religion race conference in Chicago. "From my. ·association," he said, "with Catholic, Protestant, Orthdox and Jewish leadership, Negro and white. alike, in the organization of the • • . confer ence . . . and in the preparation for follow-up in local commu nities, I am persuaded that re ligious leaders today across the nation mean business. Discentent "'1'hey are increasingly seized with the prophetic discontent that refuses to tolerate any longer the flagrant discrimina tions which are the debasements of the sacred image of God stamped in the' personality of man." "If I may borrow respectfully from the language of Catholic tradition," he conclUded, "reli gious leaders are prepared to speak 'urbi et orbi', to the city and to the world."
REUNION IN GUATEMALA: Two physicians, Dr. Martin Gately, left of Levittown, Long Island, and Dr. Mal· colm Hetzer, Rockville Center, N.Y., are planning an un usual reunion with a fellow Fordham University classmate, Father Joseph Rickert, M.M. The three men, members of the 1937 class at Fordham, will meet in San Pedra Necta, Guatemala, where Father Rickert is a Maryknoll mission ary. The doctors and their wives will spend a month helping Father Rickert solve some of his medical problems. NC Photo.
'Needs Self-Help Missionary Explains Conditions
In DisturbeCi Caribbean Nations
Tells Adventists Of Council Aims
CINCINNATI (NC)-Help the LTh"'COLN (NC)-The Second people of Latin America to help Vatican Council was convoked themselves--by forming native leaders and by developing grass because of the Catholic convic tion that unity among His fol. roots economic programs geared lowers is the will of Christ, to the people's needs. This is the plea of a missionary Bishop James.V. C'asey of Lin coln told the Seventh Day Ad. who has spent more than 20 ventists Fellowship of Ordained years doing those things in Jamaica and throughout the Ministers'here in Nebraska. Caribbean. The council has been "a real Father John P. Sullivan, S.J., education for the Catholic bish on a visit to Cincinnaw, warned ops" of the world, Bishop Casey said. He declared: "We 'are no that "in the disturbed Caribbean longer living in the period of the it may be later than we think." "Handouts and charity and counter-Reformation. We live in sending the Marines ashore a new age and have new prob lems and the Church must make none of these is the answer if we the teachings of Christ relevant are to survive. The answer, for all its heart-breaking slowness, is in our day." economic self-help, particularly Bishop Casey said the council in the credit union field. Fathers were impressed and Meeting with credit union pleased by the large number of' non.-Catholic observers at the officials in. the Cincinnati area, the BOllton Jesuit descibed his council. He addressed the min isters, then answered questions work in ~he West Indies since 1942 as "selling fish, marketing for nearly. an hour. eggs, and negotiating short-term ID' the invitation to address them, the ministers said "we are lo51ns." $3 per Week muCh iIiterested in the signifi_ He has been directing the ()l' cance of the ecumenical council ganization of credit unions-co DOW In recess in Rome." operative peoples' banks--in aa effort to raise the standard of living in Jamaica and other areas of the Caribbean. Average' income amQng the 1,500,000 people in the Englishcharged in a telegram to mem ben that the bill's equal treat ment of public and private col Says Church Needs leges imperiled Church-State separation. Well-Informed Laity Rep. Roman C. Pucinski of PORTLAND (NC) The Illinois told Wyatt that the NEk Church's need for a well "tol'lpedoed" the bill and de ...informed, active Catholic laity manded "assurances" that the was stressed by Bishop Daniel NEA will not oppose a college 1. Feeney of Portland in a Cath bill this year. olic Press Month letter read in Wyatt replied: "I give my as all churches in the Maine dio surance that I don't believe it cese. will take place." He said it was Bishop Feeney's letter called a decision of the NEA's board. attention to the work of the Questioned sharply on the Vatican council which has "al NEA's views on the constitu ready given new emphasis" to tional issue of aid to private the need of a laity with a solid education; Wyatt told the com grasp of the doctrinal and moral mittee that "it is not our position as an organization" to support teachings of the Church.
NEA Testimony .Fans to Clarify Plans on Church-State Issue WASHINGTON (NC) - The powerful National Education As eociation left unclear to House :.ducation Committee members bow its opinions on Church State separation will affect Federal school aid propGsals this year. Robert H. 'Wyatt, president ~ect of the 816,000-member as eociation, said the NEA supports President Kennedy's all-purpose bill, including its provisions for \!Ome Federal grants to institu tions of higher education, pub lic and private or church-re JDted. But, after Wyatt's testimony '>efore the House Education eIommittee, the legislators com plained they were unable to draw from him a statement on Cbe NEA's intentions if the omnibus bill is broken up into several measures, including one lPecifically for colleges. Separation of the President's 2l'l-point bill into at least two measures is considered a likely eourse among committee mem bers. Last September, NEA inter yention was a decisive factor in the death of a bill to aid all eolleges. The measure had passed 'both houses, but the compro 8lise died in the House. The NEA
Federal aid for priV'ate schools. He said his association also op poses giving such aid directly to individuals rather than institu tions. Asked by Rep. Albert Quie of Minnesota how the NEA could support the current omnibus bill with its provisions for direct grants to colleges for graduate institutions, libraries and some other purposes, Wyatt replied' that "in our opinion the bill has better protections" to keep money out of "sectari·an educa tion" than the measure last year..
3
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speaking West Indies is about three dollars a week, he said, and thousands of the people "live en tirely outside the money econ omy." ''Tens of thousands of dwell ings are unfit for human habita tion," he continued. "In one of our congested urban areas it isn't unusual for 1\":' • share one room of about 120 square feet, sleeping four to a bed. One faucet in the yard serves about 1,000 people-there are no cooking facilities, no drains, no sanitation."
Ask Reconsideration Of Cut Back Plans VALLETTA (~"'C)-The leader of- a delegation of Catholic pas tors has appealed to the British government to reconsider its plans to cut back work at Mal. ta's shipyards, which promiae. to aggravate the island's chronic unemployment prGblem. Father Laurence Zammit, president of the college of pas tors of Malta, told Gov. Sir Mau rice Dorman that a reversal of the British government's deci sion on dockyard layoffs would "avoid much unnecessary hard ship." Father Zammit spoke in reply 110 the Governor when he re ceived the 48 pastors of the Malta archdiocese in the tradi tional Candlemas ceremony at ~he Valletta palace.
ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) -Three 1937 c1assmen of Ford ham University have planned a reunion in-of 'all places-San Pedra Necta, Guatemala. One of the classmen, Father Joseph Rickert, M.M., a Mary knoll missioner, has been sta tioned in the Guatemala town for several years, looking after the spiritual and material wel fare of natives. The other two classmen are physicians--Dr. Malcolm Hezer, an obstetrician on the staff of Mercy Hospital here, and Dr. Martin Gately, a Levittown gen- ' eral practitioner. The doctors arid their wives left here Monday for San Pedra Necta,. bent on helping Father Rickert solve some of the med ical problems which confront him at his mission post. , Give a Hand "Dr. Gately and my self got the idea last year when Father Rickert came home for a six. month rest period," said Dr. Hetzer, vice president of the Catholic Physicians Guild of RockviHe Centre. "He told us about some of his problems dealing with medicine. We asked if we could help and he wondered whether we could come down and give him a hand. That's how it started."
Form Conference On Race, Religion CHICAGO (NC)-Chicagoans from the host committee for the recent National Conference on Religion and Race have voted to form a Chicago Conference OR Religion and Race. U.S. Dis t ric t Court Judge J'ames B. Parsons, working chairman of the Chicago host committee for the national meeting, agreed to serve _ chairman of the Chicago organi zation for its first year. Judge Parsons, a Negro, is • member of the Congregational Church of the Good Shepherd. The policy and program com mittee of the local conference will seek to arrange miniature versions of the National Confer ence on Religion and Race ia C ~ i c ago neighborhoods aacl suburbs.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fort River-Thurs., k~. 21, lWtJ
ST. JOSEPH, TAUNTON Assumpta Guild will hold a calendar supper in ·the school hall at 6:30 Tuesday night, - March 12. The unit heard Rev. Michael D. Annupziato speak on his missionary work in Japan and presented him with a gift. C
ST. MARY, . NEW BEDFORD St. Mary's Guild plans a penny sale Friday, April 26. Mrs. derard Beaulieu will be chairman. Rev. John F. Hogan will address members at the meeting set for Monday, March 11. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT ~ A variety show is scheduled for 8 Saturday and Sunday nights in Dartmouth High School Auditorium by the Women's Guild and Holy Name Society. A children's performance will be given -at 2:30 Sunday afternoon in the parochial school auditorium. Mrs. Ralph P. Souza is general chairman, aided by Warren L. E. Johnson, ticket chairman. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER Members of the Men's Club will serve a St. Patrick's Day supper beginning at 5:30 Saturday night, March 16 in the school hall. The Women's Guild will spon·sor a Spring style show at 8 Monday night, Feb. 25, also in the hall. Senior CYO members will condll.ct a cake sale at McWhirr's department store from 9:30 to 3 Saturday, Feb. 23. Donations of cakes may be left in the school between - and 8 tomorrow night. Also planned by the senior group is its annual penny sale, set for 8 Saturday night, March 2 in the school hall, and open to the public. ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER This Saturday night, from 6 to 8 a malasada supper and dance will be held at the parish hall under sponsorship of the Women's Guild Also on the organization's agenda is a Commuion bre<.tkfast Sunday, March 10 and a cake sale Sunday, April 7. Mothers aLd daughters will gather at a second Communion breakfast, planned for May. June plans include a ball and a dinner outing. Next regular guild meeting is anndunced for 7:30 Wednesday night, March 13. ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women announces a Spring fashion show of men's and women;s styles at 8 Wednesday night, March 20 in White's restaurant. State Sen. Mary L. Fonseca will be commentator and ·Mrs. Roger Caron and Mrs. Raymond Melanson head a large arrangements committee. /
ST. MlCHAEL, FALL .RIVER -Sunday, March 24 is the date chosen by the Council of Catholic Women for a fashion show , to be held in the school auditorium.Mrs. Lucy Lopes is chairman. Tickets are available from all council members. ST. JOSEPH, NORTH DIGHTON Parishioners will sponsor their annual penny sale at 8 tonight and S<~turday, Feb. 2'3. To· take place at the church grounds, the event will feature prizes, refreshments and 'free door awards. SANTO CHRISTO, FALL RIVER New officers of the Council of Catholic Women will be installed Sunday, March 3 at church ceremonies, to be followed by a luncheon in the church hall. Other forthcoming council activities include a potluck supper in April and a Mother's nay calendar supper and program Sunday, May Ill'. Next meeting will be at 7:30 Tuesday nrght. March 12.
Says .Old, Young Keep Faith Alive In Red Russia
SACRED HEART, . NORTH ATTLEBORO With the theme "The Family Before God," a CYO exhibit will be conducted from Ash W ednes~ day through Tuesday, March 5. Topics will include Eucharistic devotion; Christ, the' life of ~e soul; apostolic leadership, Christconsciousness in the home; and family devotional practices. Nine CYO members a~e in charge of the exhibit under direction of the organization moderator, Rev. Roger LeDuc, and the CYO advisory board. Attleboro CYAO members will also have a booth at the event under directilm of Normand Turcotte. Another special booth will feature the recently or<''lnized Home and School Association of the parish.
LATROBE (NC) - Courageous old and you n g among the Russian people by propagating Christianity should be an example to • Catholics in the struggle agaiMt materialism and secularillm, Bishop Nicholas T. Elko ~ tM Pittsburgh Greek Rite dioceM said here in Pennsylvania. The Bishop was honored here by St. Vincent's College with _ honorary doctorate of huma~ ties at a special convocation. "One reason why the Faita has not died out in atheistic Russia is that baptized and instructed Christians. dare to rise above the darkness that surrounds them," the Bishop said in his address. "The grandfathers and grandmothers who ba~ tize secretly makes others aware of the responsibility to propagate the Faith. To Hig-her Levels "To cite an example," he continued, "in Leningrad, the OFthodox seminary is situated on the second floor of a bUilding which houses on its first floor a school of atheism. To reach the seminary, the .. candidate must have strong convictions to pass up the materialistic inducement. and opportunities for success that the first floor offers. "Yet, those in authority- there inform us that they have the faith to move above the ground floor to higher levels in order to teach the light of Christianity 110 others." Bishop Elko observed "if this is being done in the darkened highways of an atheistic country" it should inspire Catholics everywhere "to transcend the mundane, the materialistic and secularistic tendencies of tile day.".
BLESSED SACRAMENT, FALL RIVER Mrs. Claire St. Laurent will lead a reactivated Brownie troop in the parish and Mrs. Imelda Champagne and Mrs. Jeanne Bernier will direct a Girl Scout troop. ST. ROCH, FALL RIVER Miss Florence Boullard, chairman, has announced that the Council of Catholic Women will meet Monday night at 7:30 in the parish hall. A card party will follow the business meeting. Mrs. Charles Pelissier will be available before the meeting to collect dues. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER Raul Fernandes, president, has announced that a Malacada supper and dance will be held Saturday evening in the parish hall. Supper will be served- from 6 to 8. Dancing will follow the supper and will continue until midnight. The Serra Club of Fall River will cunduet a Holy Hour in the church Sunday afternoon from 3 to 4. Refreshments will be served in the hall. . NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER Sunday, March 10 is the date chosen by the Holy ~ame Soci. ety for 'a family Communion breakfast to be held at 9 o'clock at White's restaurant. Lucien Roy is chairman. The Council of Catholic Women has scheduled installation ceremonies for 6:30 this Sunday night at White's restaurant. Rev. Roger Poirier will be installing C'fficer imd Mrs. Robert Phenix and Mrs. Oscar Levesque are in charge of arrangements, aided by Mrs. Rene Cadrin, ticket chairman. To be seated are Mrs. Wilfred Garand, president; :Mrs. Oscar Barnabe, first vice-president; Mrs. Albert Lachance, second vice.president; Mrs. Normand CastonguaY and Mrs. Paul Dumais, secretaries; Mrs. Vernon Letendre, treasurer. Father Poirier will also install a board of directors, including Mrs. Alfred Bouchard .and Mrs. Emilien' Gelinas, representing the coundl; Mrs. RClbert Petit, Ladies of St. Anne; Mrs. Octave Desmarais, Third Order of St. Francis; and Miss Pauline Dunn, Children of Mary. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NORTH EASTON Dr. Barbara Gray will address the Women's Guild at its monthly meeting, Monday night in the parish hall. Mrs. Margaret Hall will head the refreshment committee.
Shr~ypr
to Speak
CHICAGO (l"-C) - R. Sargent Shriver; director ot' the Eeace Corps, will be the principal speaker here at th-e :I!'ourth Deee exemplification of the Knig of Columbus In the Archdiocese of Chicago and the- Diocese of Joliet. The event sclaeduled for Sunday, Feb. 24, is expected to draw some 2,000 Kn:i~ts.
IN NEW POSTS ~ Three U.S.bishops .have-been transferred and a seminary rector has been named a bishop by Pope John. Bishop James A. McNulty, upper left, of Paterson, N.J., becomes Bishop of Buffalo, N.Y. and Bishop James J .• Navagh, upper right, of Ogdensburg, N.Y., is transferred to the See of Paterson. Bishop Leo R. Smith, lower left, administrator of the Buffalo diocese,- becomes Bishop of Ogdensburg. Msgr. George H. Speltz, lower right, rector of Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary, Winona, Minn., is named Auxiliary to Bishop Edward A. Fitzgerald of Winona. NC Photo.
Schedule Dedication of Stamp Museum
Amazing Advance Vermont Prelate Emph,asizes Tremendous Church Gains in Last Five Years WINOOSKI PARK (NC)Bishop Robert F. Joyce of Bur_ lington says that 'in the relations of the Church with the rest of the world, more has been accomplished in the last five years than in the past 400 years." Speaking of the Second Vatican Council at St. Michael's Col. lege when he was inducted into Delta Epsilon Sigma, national Catholic honor society, the Vermont prelate cautioned that "Christian unity is not just around the corner," but added
Conservation Expert Receives New Honor . ,
DENVER (NC) "Alfalfa George" Hildner dropped into Denver and raked in another award for his growing harvest of honors. "Alfalfa George," known also as. the "fighting priest of Missouri," the "levee priest," and the "savior of souls and soils," is Msgr. George J. Hildner, who for 48 years has made the cause of soil and water conservation his own personal battIe..
the effects of the Council "will be felt for many years in all parts of the w~rld and will real:h. all people, at least indirectly." He notes that the Church is "universal and timeless, going to people of every color, race and tongue, and carrying on her work under every kind of culture, and every form of goverll- . ment, and under conditions that change in every era."
WESTON (NC) - Dedicatioa of the Cardinal Spellman Philatelic Museum; Inc., on the CaJapus of Regis College here m. been scheduled for Saturda~ May 4. Sister M. Fidelma, executiw director, said Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, will officiate at the ceremony. The date will be the ea.dina!'s 74th birthday. Sister Fidelma said the town of Westoa is celebrating the 250th annivetlsary of its founding this year.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 21, 1963
Says Real Spirit of Brotherhood Is Found in Assisting' Poor WASHINGTON (NC)-People fIf. all religious faiths who aid
4be poor and underprivileged express the real spi~it of brotherhood, Washington's Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle declared. The Catholic prelate spoke before more than 1,600 persons at 1be annual Brotherhood dinner here. He was one of three who received the annual Brotherhood Award of the Washington Recion, National Conference of Christians and Jews. The other two are Brooks Bays, as assistant to President Kennedy and a former president , el. the Southern Baptist Conven,Cion, and Milton W: King, Jewish leader who is a former president ef the District of Columbia Bar Association Archbishop Q'Boyle said he tlCcepted the award "in the name end on behalf of the thousands 01 more or less - anonymous pl'iests, Sisters and laymen in Gte Archdiocese of Washington, who . . . are modesUy and un ebtrusively carrying out the 8Pirit of brotherhood as they go Ilbout their daily round of work." Helping All "These good people and their Mlmerous Protestant and Jewish eounterparts are helpibg not only the poor and underprivileged of Creater Washington. They are alao helping all the rest of us," be said.
Pastor Receives Work Clothes SPOKANE (NC)-Students at Itt. Mary Veradale school here presented their pastor. Father Ioseph Brunner, with a gift-a DeW set of work clothes. Father Brunner, who paid his tuition through the seminary by part-time jobs in constructwn work in Pennsylvania, had worn IUs old work clothes to shreds while setting the pace in the con .u-uction of a four-room school • MIlex. The pastor was aided bY' 150 IIlen of the parish who put in hours of work in the eve tne and on Saturdays in building the school annex. The volunteer work shaved the construction east from $40,000 to $23,000. The tDb was completed in six months.
'.000
~ar.
Reclamation has been cited ~ ike "saving grace" of this moun tainous colony. It has given the .lony its sponge-like capacity • absorbe phenomenal, popula tion increases as well as the rapid rate of in,dustrialization that has characterized the life and economy of the colony dur Ing the past decade. Vast housing estates fringing industrial "satellite" towns are being opened up on land re claimed frOm the sea. Ranges of hills rising steeply from the bay have been leveled and the ~il dumped into the water to make a large area of fiat land tor factories. Catholic Agencies One such es~te is located at Xwun Tong· where close to 100,000 refugees are expected to be resettled in the near future. • is here that U.s. Maryknoll Fathers Peter A. Re~, MoM.. Edward Krumpelmaa. MJ.t.. mel
WASHINGTON (NC) Bishop Fulton J. Sheen has proposed inauguration of an annual science Sunday when
S- a ys La ws Boost Mino,itv Morale
Land Reclamation Aids Hong Kong Resettle Red China Refugees HONG KONG (NC) - Land RClamation has been the saving crace for this 391-square-mile eolony which ·absorbed 159,000' _migrants during 1962. Over the hills, down through Clle valleys and by sea, more Chan 140,000 "illegal immigrants" !rom Red China stole into the eolony during 1962, according to efficial statistics released by the Bong Kong government. An estimated 2,000 escapees
eontinuing to sneak into this British colony each month. de -r,lite the vigilance of police land and sea patrols. Augmented also
by legal entries (19,000 in 1962) and natural increase, the colo ay's currently reported popula tion of 3.526,500 contin\les to
Urges All, Faiths Observe Annual Science Sunday
"The unselfish and disinter ested charity of these good men
and women-Protestants, Cath
olics and Jews-is the spiritual
bond which binds us together
into a community of friends, or,
better still, into a family of brothers and sisters serving the same Eternal,Father in the best of all possible way~, namely, by serving one another for His sake and His greater honor and glory," the Archbishop said. "This is the real strength of our city, the thing that holds us together, for 'when brother helps brother,' we read in the Book of • Proverbs, 'theirs is the strength of II fortress, their cause is like
a city gate, unassailable'," he
declared.
'
FROVIDEl.'o~CE (NC) - Laws will not solve the problems of discrimination, but they will educate majority groups and raise the level of hope a!llon~ minority groups, Father Robert F. Drinan, S.J., dean of the Bos ton College Law School, told a Brown University audt.. ':Ice here. A moral revolution is needed to rid American communities of discrimination in housing and other areas, Father Drinan said. The leader in causes for equal rights said until that happens. legislation would have to open the way for minority groups to escape from their "ghettos" and . find better homes. Educational Force Law ed~cates, deters and changes attitudes among those blocking social progress, Father Drinan said. He urged the pub lic to, challenge the "selfish" motives of real estate dealers who have supported c~paign. against fair housing. . "No one claims that the enact ment of a law preventing dis crimination is a panacea," he sam. "Law alone cannot challge opinion or eradicate deep seated fears. At the same time the law has been one Of the great edu cational forces in the history of American institutions. Law sets a standard and an ideal which within a short time becomes a reality of the ritizeIll")'.·
AFTER VISIT WITH POPE: The president of the Methodists of Great Britai~ Rev. Leslie Davidson, is' all smiles as he leaves the presence of Pope John. The Protest ant leader spent half An hour with the Pope on what was termed "a courtesy eal!." With him is Msgr. Igino Car dinale, chief of protocol of tlte Papal Secretatiat of State, who served as interpreter du.ring the Vatican audience. NC Photo. ,
'Need Priests Number of Spanish-Speaking in U. S. Presents 'Pastoral ~are Problem SAN ANTONIO (Io."'C)-Span.. ish-speaking people - Cubans, Puerto Ricans and Mexican& are spreading :far and wide throughout the U. S., presenting the Church in this country -with an ever-growing problem of pas toral care. More priests interested in 1Ibe Spanish-speaking apostolate are needed to cope with the situa tion. These facta were brought out b7 Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio in aD interview here. The Archbishop ischalr men of the U. S. Bishops' Com mittee for the Spanish Speaking. The Chm-ch's ''field activities in behalf of the Spanish Speak ing have grown immensel~ since the establishment in San Antonio in 1945 of the regional office of the Bishops' Committee for .'the Spanish-Speaking, Arch bishop Lucey said. He indicated, however, that a large task lies ahead. Statewide PrOcraIDS There are now 60 archdioceses and dioceses which have diocesan aeetol'S cooperatinC with the
John D. Moore. M.M.• serve aJl already resettled refugee popu lation in St. John Baptist' parish. The parish runs a school for 1,900 primary school children which was opened last year. Maryknoll Sisters run two general and anti-TB clinics and a large nursery school for more than 190 children. All three are l~cated in crowded resettlement blocks.
Helpi~g with Hong Kong'a welfare and housing problems are various agencies 01. the Catholic Church: Caritas-Hong Kong (the colo
ny's Catholic relief orgaltiza
tion). missionary agencies such
NEW O.RLEANS· (l\"'C) - An as U. S. Catholic Relief Services
National Catholic Welfare Con electronic computei' center win ference and the Misereor Social be established at Loyola Univel' Aid Fund of the Germaa. af,ty of the South, Father Andrew e. Smith, S.J., president, an Bishops. nounced. The data processing center will be initially financed by a $24,1'70 gran,t from the National Science Foundation and a WASHINGTON (NC)-Father matching amount from tbe urnThomas J. Carroll, director of the ve!sity. Catholic Guild for All the Blind It will contain the latest model in Boston, was honored here fu' central processor with input and !lis work as a member of. the output unitll and associated of£. National Advisory Council OIl line equipment. Vocational Rehabilitation. The priest, whose fom--)"eal' term. has expired, received a certificate of appreciation from Anthony J. Celebrezze, secretarF Convalescent Home, Inc. el the lJ. IS. Department of • GREEN STREE'I' MHtHAYIiM Health, Education and WeHare. WY4-764S QAROU_ additional _mmo
Pathet' Carron • the author datiolU for metl and wom...
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tnition III t'be rehabil:lWtion Gil and Joan Larrivee
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Rehabilitation Work Wins Recognition
GREENVIEW
biiR4 'Mer
= . .,. .,. . . ;
~
5
Bishops' Committee, Archbishop Lucey said. ' There are four staff offices for the Spanish-speaking apostolate; The Spanish Catholic' Action Of fice in the Archdiocese of New YeJrk, the Cardina!':s Committee for the Spanish-Speaking in the Archdiocese of Chicago, the Of fice for Latin-American Affairs in the Diocese of Miami and the regional office in San Antonio. In addition, the:re. are two statewide programs sponsored by tile Catholic bishops in Wiscon ain and Ohio, and the "very. active jiocesan-wide programs" include those in-the Archdiocese of ~ilwaukee, Denver and San Antonio, and the Dioceses ·of Lansing, Saginaw, Buffalo and Toledo. The office of the Bishops' C.ommittee recently assisted in the organization of programs in the Archdiocese of San Fran cisco and the Dioceses of Joliet and Oklahoma City and Tulsa. Archbishop Lucey said Cuban
refugees are eoming into the
U. S. by way of Miami at "a rapid rate." The Resettlement , Program of Cuban Refugees
sponsored by Catholic Relief
Services-National Catholic Wel fare Conference, has "resettled Cuban refugees in 114 dioceses of the United States," he added.
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persons of all religious faiths could join in thanking God for the blessings of modern science. "We have not been sufficiently mindful of such blessings from God. So at least on one Sunday of the year we should thank Him for these great blessings of our material civilization," said the national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith and auxiliary Bishop of New York. The New York prelate, speak ing to some 700 men and women at the annual Communion break fast here of the Catholic Apos tolate for Mass Media (CAMM), said greater recognition "of values outside ourselves" is a principal means of more patriot ism among the American people. Bishop Sheen's remarks, tele cast locally, said TV arouses various emotions, all good in themselves, in people. He added if such emotions are aroused without a proper objective, they become ''mythical and unreal." 'Nobler Burden' Americans owe "a great debt to the world, which cannot be satisfied by taxes or foreign aid," the Bishop said, stressing greater lise of TV and world education. He said: "We have not only an Gbligation to educate people by this means, but to do so in a morally responsible way." The
Bishop said the nation's oppor
tunity to help strengthen West
ern civilization is "a nobler bur
den than we know, perhaps a greater burden than we deserve." He called upon Protestants. Jews and Catholics to petition their spiritual leaders to work for observance of aft annual science Sunday in the United State•.
·61 New Buildings NEWARK ,(NC) - Sixty-one new buildings were erected in. the Newark archdiocese and Paterson diocese in 1962. A sur. vey by the Advocate, newspaper of the two Sees, showed 44 buildings were completed in the Newark archdiocese at a cost of $17,719,000, and 14 buildings at a cost of $7,746,OOOin the Pater son diocese. Thirty-nine of the buildings were built for educa tional purposes.
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THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 21, 1963
Lecture From a Red
Ellel.i•• •
It is embarrassing -
or should be - for Americans,
among others, to have to listen to a' lecture OD" human
dignity from an official of Red Russia. But truth is truth,
no matter by whom 'spoken, and the words of the Soviet
member of the United Nations Population Commission
should be heeded, and perhaps, with a certain amount of
shame.
'IVLI
REV. JAMES A. CLARK Assistant, St. Mary's Churcll
At a meeting of population experts at the United Na
tions in New York, Peter Podyachikh of the Soviet Union
said that his nation believes in bringing the economy into
step 'with the population and not vice versa. Artificial
methods of reducing the birth rate, he declared, are "in
human" and "insulting to human feelings."
Wew Bedford
AN EXTENSION
INVITATION
The Extension Society fII. America was founded in 1905 . to help the home missionll where the percentage of nOD
Podyachikh stressed the point that developing .countries can increase their agriculture if the industrialized countries help them to do so. He noted that India is now spending ten times as much on birth control as it did ten years ago but the population is still increasing and that the money might better be spent on industrialization.
Catholics is greater than it is • many foreign missions. For " yea rs Exten sion has built
churches, . sup
ported priests,'
Democracy is built on the proposition that there must
supplied vest
be respect for God and for individual men. The Founding
ments and edu
Fathers deliberately introduced the concept of God' into
eated semina
rians for the
foundation' ideas of this country. They deliberately set out
home missions.
the rights that each individual enjoys.
But now Exten
sion is sending
It is a strange picture of democracy that the developing ~o'lto the West and
countries of the world are confronted with when they see So u th some·
and hear American officials urging them to deny them thing more val
selves the right to have children, encouraging them in' uable than supplies: people. what amounts to racial suicide. And this while the Soviet Extension hopes to supply • dioceses with over 300 lay vol officials speak about industrialization and condemn arti By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic pniversity unteers. Extension gambled thaCl ficial methods of reducing the birth rate as inconsistent the increasing importance of the with the dignity of man and as "insulting to human TODAY-Mass as on Sunday. But we repent that our response layman in the Church which be feelings." gan at the altar would not stolt The Communion Hymn of th~ of love (First Reading) has not When men are hungry they do not want to be handed Mass is a psalm long used by corresponded - as much as a there but would inspire Cath. olics to become lay missionarieL contraceptives and told to reduce the population, and the Church as a baptismal hymn. human being can correspond- In the front lines of the to the dignity of our calling. this in the name Of democrary. They want food and It is our Baptism into Christ Church there is a shortage of .the methods of providing for themselves and their de which enables us to approach priests and nuns and brothezw holy table of our sacrificial MONDAY-Mass as on s.m. and the empty places can be pendents. They want to be allowed to exercise their own the meal. day. But even our response ., taken by laymen. Laymen OlD God-given rights. And they will resent, and rightly so, the It is our Baptism which first in a mysterious way the gift of the missions are new and yet patronizing managing of their affairs by "big brothers introduces us to that purpose . Him who "works wonders", who are really an old practice: Paul and sisters" from America who urge them to national and hope of which the Eucharist has made known His power hand Timothy, Ignatius !--i a is the continuing symbol and (Gradual), who is our "strength", group of disciples, Father M~ suicide. food. The Easter feast toward our "refuge" (Entrance Hymn). quette had Joliet. The lecture on human dignity given by the Soviet which we look is also the great Without this gift of love, the Today teachers, nurses, d060 member of the United Nations Population Commission baptismal feast, the time for the great human acts and talents re tors, social workers, typist-, celebration of the sacraments of ferred to in the First Reading clerks, maintenance men, c~ would be heard with profit. initiation: are as nothing. Love, charity, • penters, electricians, artists", more than the acts by which It cooks, census takers and other TOMORROW st. Peter's must be exercised. God is love. solid Catholics are needed on the Chair. Catholics the world over And love is a' participation, a missions. Many areas can be Much is being written and discussed about the confliet make today's feast an occasion communion, a being. Christianized only by a laymaa for the priest is resented and the of interest law in Massachusetts. It seems too bad that for renewing their prayer for nun is rebUffed.
legislators must pass laws to enforce what a developed con Christian unity. And also their TUESDAY-Mass as on S0lI prayer for the Holy See that the Tests, TraiD1n~
science should dictate without any external preBsures. day. Since this is a party ~, · venerable authority of the The need is for single or mal' we are naturally drawn to the But if human nature must be ~encourag'ed" by the Church of Rome may be exer text of the Communion Hymn: ried couples from 21 to 40 whe cised everywhere and always are willing to serve full time for force of law to remain honest, 80 be it. The community with love and humility. We ask "They ate' and were well filled, one year; the actual service be must be protected from modern piracy.of its assets, even the intercession of Peter and and the Lord gave them what gins on Aug, 20 of each yea&. though the individual is not inwardly changed by enforced · Paul for the whole Church and they craved * * *" It is no CbriB The volunteers will go to Okla tian idea to think of our appe - Especially for the human instru homa, Texas, Colorado, Arka... integrity. · ments by which God keeps' the tites as tricks God ,has played on sas, Louisiana, Missouri, Ka... WI and of our frustrations as Ria There are areas, however -where no law Clm spell out Church in visible unity. sas, New Mexico and Wyomina. . pleasures. Bad enough to hu If you apply then you ",,:'1 fill in detail what is right and what is wrong. No law can en manize Divinity, but to make .. SATURDAY -'7" St•. Peter Da vision every possible situation where a conflict might Him also sick is too much. Our out a detailed information fora and take certain tests. Then yo.a develop. These areas can be decided by the sensitive con mian, Bishop, Confessor, Doctor. appetites are blessings and the will undergo training while re In this second year of the Second things toward which they move science of a man of integrity. maining at home and doing yo. . Vatican Council, tOday's· Mass are truly goods. own work. You are free .. And so often morality comes back just to that-not . commemorating a great teacher accept or reject any missioa to laws and not to policing but to the integrity of the in and reformer of the Church in ASH WEDNESDAY-A bit al. assignment but once you acce~ a previous age will have special dividual, to his pride in his own sense of honor, to his ser significance for all of us. The ashes, haunting thoughts of it you must remain for the yea&, death, hearts repenting our fail You will receive room an4 vice of God and his awareness of the moral law. texts of the Mass stress faithful ure to worship God and our lack board 'and some spending moner ness, proclamation, "sound doc A politician-an honorable name for an honorable pro trine" (i. e., doctrine in con of respect and love for man, we (you are volunteering for the fession-must present himself as, above all else, a man of -formity with the Word of God). embark on' 40 days of conversion missions, not applying for a job). knowledge and a man of integrity. His chief credential must The Council is concerned espe to newness. Part of this conver You will have a four-day inten. sion is a rehearsing and fresh sive training course just before be his honor. He must be, like Caesar'~ wife, above suspicion. ciallY, as was today's saint, with . study of God's saving deeds (Of going to the missions and a proclamation, preaching the And if he carries with him the least taint of corruption or fertory and Communion hy·mns). spiritual program outlined f~ Good News clearly and intelli moral compromise he must be rejected. Part of it is repentance and pen you while associated with Ex. gibly. ance for our sins (First Reading tension. Government is big business. Opportunities for dishon and Gospel). . For Solid Catholics est profit are ever-present. A man who wishes to serve his QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY. Living conditions, social lite, Both aspects are hymned in community must be above yielding to personal gain. He We approach the Lenten season the Lenten Preface: "For by insurance, a trip home for must be a man of the highest integrity. of concentration on Baptism and means of our bodily fasting you Christmas; these and other basie The public has become cynical about politicians. They the new life to which our Bap restrain our vices and uplift our needs are handled by the p~ alone, by exhibiting sensitivity of conscience, must restore tism initiated us. The Gospel minds'" * "'" (Note: All transla grall).. teaches that it is Christ (through tions of texts from Masses of This is not a program for wen public confidence in public officials. our "christening") who gives us Lent are from "The Layman's Catholics; the volunteer must be the ability to see things as .they Missal," Baltimore: H eli c: 0 D a solid, balanced Catholic of are, who gives us true vision. good will and great love of Goci 1962.) Faith is no escape from the who is happy in his preseDt real world. Faith is the key to career.
the real world. In faith reality Asserts Newspapers If you have any questions send
unfolds itself. Of the reality we them to us; 'we shall answer Advance Leadership call'heaven we still have in faith them personally or in this col. only glimpses (First Reading). BOSTON (?<i'C) - The c:hief umn. The invitation must be without faith, without the role of newspapers "is to ad answered before March 1. Give OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER But vision Jesus offers, man has only vance positive and- effective a meaning to your life; become leadership to bring men a better a missioner. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River glimpses even of this world. 410 Highland Avenue
Lent's consciousness of our understanding of the times in which they live," a bishop said sinfulness and of our sins, a fre Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151
Church Role here. quent note in the liturgy of the PUBLISHER
NEW YORK (NC)-The role Auxiliary Bishop Jeremiah F. next few weeks (Collect), is a Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Ph[).
matter of repentance, not de Minihan of Boston made the of the Christian church in _ ASST. GENERAL MANAGER GENERAL MANAGER spair. God's grace remains free, statement at the annual Mass for age of crisis will be the subject Rev. Daniel F. Sholloo, M.A.· Rev. John P. Driscoll given, available. Its glory is' members of tJhe St. Francis de of a five-part series on the '.'Loolt MANAGING EDITOR greater in the darkness of our Sales Society, composed of news Up and Live" TV program • March on CBS-TV. Hugh J. Golden ains and our gratitude keerier. papermen.
-
...
'ThnOlA.Clh th£ WEEk With thE. ChlA.":ch
all
Conflict and Law
®rheANCHOR
l'
Urges
Catholi~
Press Stress Major Issues ST. PAUL (NC) - Msgr. Daniel Moore, editor of the ~t. Louis Review, archdioce san newspaper, told news
Immaculate Conception Serves -750 Families In North Easton, Oifers Active Parish Life By Marion Unsworth
Although officially the parish of the Immaculate Conception in North Easton was established in 1871, Catholics in that area are believed to have been visited by a Rev. Peter Connolly from New Bedford as early as 1832 and in 1840 a Father Wiley celebrated the paper, radio and television per-' aonnel of this area at the annual first Mass in the town in the dining room of the Ames Company boarding house, near the Press Month symposium that site of the present shovel lOme editors in their efforts to making plant west of Me "enter the marketplace" with chanic Street. About 15 ~tholic newspapers, are over eager to crusade against atheists, people attended.
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Feb. 21, 1963
'.,
Wa'rns Teachers Against Ignoring Power of Faith PITTSBURGH (NC)-A London educator told some 7,000 high school principals here that the depth and
power of religious faith should not be ignored in teaching the political sciences. John C. H. Eppstein, secretary No story of the town or church general for education of the agnostics and others who do not Atlantic Treaty Association, lr now about Judeo-Christian of Easton would be complete without mention of the Ames spoke to the 47th annual conven. principles.. tion of the, National Association "It is not the pagan's fault family, who owned a great deal of Secondary School Principals. Chat there is social imbalance, of property in North Easton on The association is a division. of poverty, greed, strife and war," the site of which are now situ the National Education Associa. Msgr. Moore said. "It is the ated Stonehill College, which is within Immaculate Conception Christian's fault." tion: Eppstein said that "politics, The Catholic press, he said, parish, and parish properties. should exist "to help form ,the fascinating as they are, are not Duing the 1840's, the congre Catholic's mind and endow, it gation increased to more than the whole or even the most im with Christian principles, so that 100 persons and~ on land donated portant part of life." ..It is not politics that brings he can aptly think about and by the Ames Company, the first make j u d g men t s about the Immaculate Conception Church hall a million people on foot larger issues of the day." from the townS and villages of was erected .on the porth side of Msgr. Moore indicated many Pond Street. Father Fitzsimmons Portugal to Fatima in the moun_ ~atholic publications have read
tains on the 13th of May, or even from Boston was in charge of ers who don't want to think the construction,' and Bishop more to Czestochowa on great about the' larger issues of the Fitzpatrick of Boston dedicated occasions from all parts of day."
Poland," he said. the edifice in 1851.. MaSS" was Proper Perspective "It is not politics that fills a celebrated there every second "Many of our subscribers are Sunday until 1856 when Rev. vast stadium to hear Billy Gra as surprised to see us (Catholic Thomas McNulty became the ham. It is not politics that draws periodicals) in the market places pastor in Easton and services the patient pilgrims from all as they are to see nuns bowling could be held more often. over the Moslem world to Mecca. and going to ball games," h~ It is not politics that has built Father McNulty also was re said. "The surprise is often well sponsible for moving the site the new Israel in the teeth of mixed with chagrin when we of the church to its present loca bitter enemies," he added. discuss a subject about which tion on Main Street, North Eppstein, a prominent English «J.ere are strong pros and cons. Catholic layman, emphasized ~aston. "But our diocesan papers must J~MACULATE CONCEPTION, NORTH EASTON what he considered "the best Father Looby be Catholic not only with an way of teaching world affairs to The present GOthic style upper case 'C'; but a lower case ness Administration, 14 Sisters the boys and girls in our sec one as well. According to Pope ,church, bui~t, of stone quarried pastor of Immaculate Conception.
ondary schools." .John, not one of the larger frOPl the ledge on which it Holy Cross Fathers continued to from Taunton, and 35 lay men and women. assist at the North Easton parish
stands, was erected by Rev. issues of the 'day fails to have Man Most Important A very active parish, Immacu James Looby in 1904. Immacu. until the appointment of Rev.
its moral facet," he said. The Atlantic Treaty Associa late Conception. includes some John J. Bteakem in 1960, and
"There is no .ntention (on the 'late Conception Rectory was part of an editor) to neglect 'the purchased at the time the second Rev. Martin L. l3uote in 1962 as 750 families, and has a Women's tion has as a primary concern Guild, Holy Name Society, Cath. the teaching and study of inter minor issues, but such things as church was built and is situated assistants to Father Casey.
With 996 youngsters receiving olic Youth Organization, and national affairs in secondary sPorts, wedding announcements neXt to the church site. St. Vincent de 'Paul Society. schools. _ and parish social events must be In 1912, Rev D~miel E. Doran catechetical instructions, Stone. As the first fundamental, put in their proper place and became pastor at the North hill offered the use of its facili. Twenty-two teenagers commute Eppstein reminded the educa each day to Bishop Feehan High proper perspective. And yet Easton parish, and during his ties for Confraternity of Chris School in Attleboro, and nine tors, th'! vast majority of them there are those among your sub time there renovated, the old tian Doctrine classes. boys attend Coyle High School. , public school administrators, scribers whose only interests are' St. Mary's Hall, originally the that "international affairs is not Youth' Center the minor issues, and when per church, for use, as a parish cen· . an abstract science: it is about spectives clash you have irate ter. This building was destroyed Last year, a long term need people - millions of men and eustomers," he added. . " by fire in the late 1940's, long the parish was realized with con_ women and children each with after Father Doran had resigned struction and dedic?tion of ~his or her own character, each due to ill health in 1931, and maculate ConceptIon ParIsh one a spiritual universe, as Rev. Charles A. Donovan, for , Youth Center, containing class BOISE (NC) ' - The Bishop Jacques Maritain says, each of mer Rector of St. Mary's' Cathe rooms, aUditorium, lockers and of Boise says it :is the task of infinite value in the sight of Bu~ldin9s dral; Fall River, served as pastor kitchen facilities. Since the congressmen to come up with a God, however we may have to for four years. Father Donovan dedication, Confraternity classes PHILADELPffiA (NC)-Court was succeeded by Rev. Edwin J. are held in the Center, under the bill to aid' the private school lump them together for con child rather than the school, venience of description into action is underway to block con Loew in 1935. direction of Father Steakem, thus 'avoiding 'constitution!U nations and .states and races and struct-ion of a new Catholic 'Meanwhile, the church and who is assisted by the Confra issues. blocs. murch, school and convent in rectory were renovated, and the ternity president" Vincent P. Bishop Sylvester Treinen of "It is man that matters," he Huntingdon Valley, Lower More Wright, Dean of the Boston Col Boise, writing in 'the' diocesan stated. parish increased in numbers. At land Township, Pa. the time of Rev. Joseph K. lege Graduate SchOOl of Busi- . Idaho Register newspaper, ob Four Huntingdon Valley resi serv:ed "if it is not against the dents have filed an appeal with Welsh's pastorate from 1949 to AnLEBORO'S
Constitution to assist private the Montgomery County Court ' J955, Holy Cross Fatiiers from Church in Portugal
Leading, Garden Center
colleges, it should not be to assist Sto'nehill College assisted him in at Norristown, Pa., asking it to private grade and high schools." caring for the needs of the, par :reverse a Jan. 12 decision by the Desires University
ish and seminarians from Pius X Bishop Treinen indicated his township's zoning board of ad LISBON (r.."'C)-The Church lb justment permitting construction Seminary conducted catechetical Portugal continues to hope for preference is that no Federal of the buildings of St. Albert instructions. the establishm~nt of a Catholic aid to education be adopted. South Main & Wall Sts. In October of 1955, Rev. John the Great parish. center of higher stUdies, Manuel "Federal aid in anything is al The parish, founded last May casey, then pastor of St. ,Paul's Cardinal Goncalves Cerejeira, most always followed by Federal control," he said. by Archbishop John J. Krol of' Church, Taunton, was named Patriarch of Lisbon, told a stu CA 2-0234 Philadelphia, is seeking to con In addition, he said, "dollars dent publication here. struct a church, school and con_ would be sent to Washington in A Church-sponsored univer ."~~,,, Yent on a 25-acre site zoned for OJJserve Centennial
versity has been a hope of the taxes; pennies would be' sent ~sidential use. back in Federal aid. We are A FAMILY TREAT Of Proclamation
Portuguese hierarchy since 1926, better businessmen than that." Granted Variance WASffiNGTON (NC) - Sev the Cardinal observed, but pri BAR.. B~Q CHICKENS The zoning board of adjust eral prominent Catholics were orities 'for such projects as sem 1I1ent granted the parish a zon among hundreds of civil rights inaries, new churches, primary ing variance, subject to condi schools and 'Catholic Action or. leaders at a White House recep tions governing details of con ganizations have delayed any tion in observance of the cen , FARMS Just Across The
struction, by a 2-1 vote. tennial of the signing of the concrete plans. l45 Washington St., Fairhaven Coggeshall St. Bridge
The appeal to the County E~ancipatjon Proclamation. JUA off Route • Cardinal Cerejeira observed eourt was filed on behalf of Mr. Catholics at the reception in that Portugal is almost the only Finest Variety of WY 7-93~6 and Mrs. Edward A. Jacobi and cluded Archbishop Paul J. Halli Mr. and Mrs. Ulrik F. Smith as nan of Atlanta, a vice chairman European country outside the Watch for Sign.
SEAFOOD Individuals and as members of of the' National Conference on Iron Curtain that does not have While out for a Drive
a Catholic university. In discuss Served Anywhere Also
, the Lower Moreland Property Religion and Race; Auxiliary Stop at this Delightful Spot
ing, the proposal to establish one, STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN
Owners Association. The asso Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New he suggested that the term ciation was formed seven months York; Auxiliary Bishop Philip "University of the Church" be ago by 21 area residents. Jacobi M. Hannan of Washington, who used, rather than "Catholic uni is its president. represented Archbishop Patrick versity." He did not want to A. Boyle of Washington; Father categorize the existing state uni. Theodore J. Hesburgh, C.S.C., versities, as opposed to Catholi Praises Portugal's Famou. Reading HARD COAL president of Notre Dame Uni cism. NEW ENQLAND COKE Work in Colonies versity and a member of the MOZAMBIQUE (NC) - Trib U. S. Commission 'on Civil DADSON OIL BURNERS ' ute was paid to the colonial Rights. 24-Hour Oil Burn... Service policy of Portugal by Bishop Also Father John La Farge, Manuel de Medeiros Guerreiro S.J., a founder of the Catholic Charcoal Briquets of Nampula, MozllI\lbique, at Interracial Council of New Bag Coe" - Charcoal eelebrations noting the 200th York, and Msgr. George G. H;ig-. anniversary of this port city on gins, director of the Social Africa's .southeast coast. Action 'Department, National 94 TREMONT STREET The success of multi-racialism C!ltholic Welfal'e Conference, a TAUNTON, MASS. m the city, be said, proves that ,convening agency for the reli lIhe various races "can live to gion-race conference held, in New Bedfonl Tel. VAndyke 2-0621 640 Pleaant S.... Tel WY 6-1271 sether in harmony." Chicago.
of .. B-.shop' of Bo-.se
Asks Ch.-Id A.-d
Appeal to Block Parish
.
CONLON f:t DONNELLY
ATTLEBORO
.
CASA BLANCA
ROSElAWN
••••••
Casey-Sexton,
___ Cleansers
_
Inc_ .
GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc.
8
Taunton
, ,THE ANCHoa-~foc"e of Fan River-'-Thurs., Feb. 21, f963' .,.
Set Supper
Readers Give Many Suggestions' .
For Sending Items to Mis~ions
Taunton Queen's Daughtel8 will hold their annual corporate Communion supper following ,. o'clock Mass Monday night, March 4 at St. Mary's Church. Professor john McAleer of Boston will speak on "Diet and Sanctity." The oommittee in cludes the board of directors with Mrs. William Raymen~ vice-president, as chairman. Tickets are available until ne. Thursday from Mrs. Rayment • at Gormley's Hat Shop.
By Mary Tinley Daly February is not Catholic Mission Month. It -is, how ever, officially designated as Catholic Press Month. Matter of fact, probably all 12 months of every year are Catholic Mission Months, Catholics being ever conseious of the tremendous work of the mis sions throughout the world, cut around stamps to save the and the handicaps, money perforations. Stamps, particu wise, of our devoted mission larly commemorative and un
usual stamps, are of especial aries. An extremely fitting tie value. in seems evident in this partic By the way, stnmps from all u 1 a l' Catholic
correspondents to this column Press Month
are going straight to the mis when correspon
sions! dents to this
Wedding Gowns one small col
Some of the most appealing umn in the
letters were the "wedding Catholic Press
gowns, evening gowns" in an. have come
swer to a correspondent's re forth with val
quest: iant and com
"When our daughter was pletely volun
shopping for her wedding gown, teer efforts to
she planned to send the gown acquaint other
away to be made into vestments readers wit h
right after the great day. tile need of special mis~ions.
"This phase of the wedding To recapitulate: several weeks ago, a few letters were here was a .happy one. ~rhe gown was published froni. persons who turned into the beautiful vest wanted to donate canceled ments you see in enclosed pic .tamps, old gold and jewelry, tures. ' "Consideration shown to us in evenirig and wedding gowns to the making of vestments was out .be made into vestments - all these to be sent to the miSsions. of'this world. We left no in or requirements. At the· time, this columnist structions knew only one or two such When the 'scraps' came back, we "places, and asked for others. found the entire bodice of the gown had been left intact and When the first· few letters ar rived, I was delighted, sat down that a pattern had been made of the skirt so that the gown could to answer them right away. I would thank donors, send easily . be reconstr.ucted for a . names, all with personal letters.. future family bride," And, here's a honey: "I de Flood Comes And then the mail began to. bated for a while-eonsidering eome in floods, in torrents. (Our sending my wedding gown to mailman commented, "Glad to some Sisters I know of who get rid of this big load before make vestments. "I had already moved my wed_ I go to the next house.") Originally, I had thought that ding gown from Pennsylvania to one column could, in small type, Washington, to West Virginia; give names and addresses to back to Pennsylvania, and then which such articles could be to New York. We already had three daughters and three sons. llent. Because of the enormity of the . Everyone said to keep the gown generous response I am sure for one of our daughters who, readers will understand that this might want to wear it. After watching their rate of growth, plan ·is now completely imprac I decided they were going to be ticable. May we take this space to much bigger than I. So-o--I thank the hundreds who have gave a style show to the children -and satisfied myself that it written, giving names and ad dresses of missions throughout still fit! Then I sl~nt it to the the world who will welcome Sisters. They told me their work wholeheartedly the stamps, old was for the poor parishes of the South, I believe. Regardless of eyeglasses and other parapher nalia, useless to us but a godsend where it went, I felt good know ing that it would be used for to them. Since I did not want to let such a wonderful purpose." Once again, thank you for these generous -people down I phoned the Society for the your letters, your suggestions Propagation of the Faith, hoping which will be kept for further the solution to the problem reference. Unfortunately, this column cannot pursue the sub would be fOund there. The answer was even simpler ject further. than I had imagined. The So ciety accepts and distributes all Choirs of Three Faiths
gifts for the missions. They may be sent to the Society for the In Fellows~ip Concert
SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Cath 'Propagation oi the Faith at 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 9, N. Y., olic, Protestant lind Jewish or to the Washington office at choirs will be featured in a fel 1721 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W.. lOWship concert at Our Lady of the Lake College here Sunday, Washington 6, D. C.' As to stamps, wh~rever you Feb. 24. Choirs taking part in the con .end them, we learned that a' quarter-inch of paper should be cert are from Temple Beth-El, Alamo Heights Methodist church, Medical Colleg.~ Honors St. Luke's Catholic church, St. Mary's University and Our Lady· Maryknoll Missionary of the La~e College. PHILADELPHIA': (NC)-Sis Origina~or and coordinator of ter Gilmary, a Mat,yknoll mis the program is Sister Mary sionary serving in Pusan, South Elaine of Our Lady of the Lake Korea, was awarded the 1963' College, conducted by Sisters 01. citation of. Woman'/! Medical Divine Providence. " College ()f Pennsylvania. . This citation is given yearly to Catholic Credit Unions a Pennsylvania alumna of the Number' Over 1,000 college in recognition of her out standing achievements in the MADISON (NC) - - Catholic field of medicine. parishioners and Knights of Sister Gilmary, ;the former Columbus organizations in the I:ileen Simmons ot .York, Pa., U. S. formed 54 new credit is a 1948 graduate 'of the local unions in 1962, according to rec medical college for :women. ords of the Credit Union Na4 tional Association here in Wis Assumption D of I' consin. These new credit unions bring Assumption Circle, Fall River Daughters of Isabella, will hold to more than 1,000 the number its annual corporate Communion of Catholic credit unions serving at 9 o'clock Mass Sunday morn· Catholics in America. Six new parish credit unions ing, May 5 in St. Mary's Cathe dral. The March meeting will were formed in Canada during the year, bringing to 'about 330 feature plans for a 45th anniver sary program and a penny sale the number of Cat.holie credit unions in that countr~ is set for ApriL
Wome,.~·':
Authorities ~eied Ed~cation Proposals SYD~EY (NC) EducatiOll authorities of the State of New South Wales, where one city's Catholic schools closed down ;.. a protest move last July, have rejected recent education pro posals from both Protestant and Catholic sources. Catholics proposed a "shared. time" plan, and an Anglicaa archbishop urged that religioa teaching in state primary schoohl be extended to seconda,.,. schools. : State Minister for Educatioe Ernest Wetherell turned down a request by Anglican Archbishop Hugh Gough of Sydney that "the teaching of Christianity . be made compulsory in state ondary schools. Wetherell also indicated that a decision waa forthcoming on whether reli gious instruction given in state primary schools would ~ dropped.
PRIEST WINS NEW HONOR: Father Thomas J. Car ron, left, director of the Catholic Guild for All the Blind, Boston, receives a certificate of appreciation from Health, Education and Welfare ,Secretary Anthony J. Celebrezze, right, for his work as a member of the National Advisory Council on Vocation Rehabilitation in the presence of Mary E. Switzer, Commissioner of the Vocational Rehabilitation Administration and ehairman of t.he Council. NC Photo.
see.
Aids Migrants
Howard Univer~ity to Honor Woman Doctor For Distinguished, Community Service WASHINGTON (NC)-A Negro woman doctor who uses her medical· skill to assist migran~, workers will receive an alumna achievement award from How ard University hereFriday~ March 1. Dr. .Lena Ed~ards, wh~ has a son 10 the Prles~~~o~, wI.ll be honored for . dIstmgUlshed achi~,:ement in the ~ields of medICIne and commumty se1'¥ lce." A gynecologist and obstetri- eian, Dr. Edwards gave up her practice in Jersey City N. J , ..
sion near Hereford. She hal! operated a clinic for migrant workers· at Hereford since No-' vember, 1962. Mother of Priest Dr. Edwards is a member of the Third Order of St. Francis~ Her son, Thomas (Father Mar tin), was ordained in 1962 as a .priest of the Society of Atone ment. D Ed .... '11 be h ed r. wa~wt WI. on?r together WIth four alumm of Howard l!niversity at chart~r day exerCIses on the 9~th a~mversary of the umversIty'. founding. University president James M. Nabrit will present the achievement awards.
Fund Raisers ~.
Catherine's Fund 'RaisIng Committee of Dominican Acad emy, Fall River, will sponsor a spaghetti supper Saturday., March 30. A planning meeting will be held Tuesday, March 12.
PUBLIC'WHISr ST. JACQUES' CHURCH HALL 249 WHITTENTON ST.. TAUNTON, MASS. Prizes Galore 8:00 P.M. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Admission 50c
at The MERCHANTS
More and more buyers
DR. EDWARDS
of NEW and USED
In. 1962 to devote her medical skill in behalf of migrant work ers in Heretord, Tex. She was invited there. bJ': Father Raymond Gillis, S.A." director of the St. Joseph mis-
CARS
"ECONOMY- AUTO lOAN PLAN
Catholic Women Dr. Joseph L. Driscoll, presi dent of Southeastern Massachu setts Technological Institute, address New Bedford Catholie. Women's Club at 8 Monday night, Feb. 25 at the organiza tion's elubhouse. His topic win, be "What the School Means iJO Our Community." MrS. Howland S. King and Mrs. Edward L. Ryan in charge of ~range,; menta. "'1'lJ.
will
are
SERVING II FINE ITALIAN FOOD II
r- I I
are taking
advantage of the
GONDOLA I•
RESTAURANT and LOUNGE
Oil Lake Sabbatia
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j
THE ANCHOR,....
Stresses Essence of Religion
Is Love of God and Neighbor
Thu·rs., Feb. 21, ·1963
9
Dioc1esan Women - To Meet Sunday
By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.
Aast. Sociolon Prof.-8t. Louis UniversitJ'
"I'm married to one of your 'good' Catholic men. He 1ISes me as a mistress, the house as a TV theatre. He wouldn't dream of using contraceptives and yet, now t~at rm pregnant for the eighth time, he is so disgusted WIth me that he doesn't even talk. , He wouldn't miss your Noc- tain clearly defined extern~ tlu nal Adoration and spends activities which we 7an fulf111 r . . h'l more or less mechamcally and hours playmg WIth the c I - without having to face up to the
Board members of the Dioc. esan Council of Catholic Women will meet at 2 Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24 at St. William's church hall, Fall River. Mrs. Gilbert Noonan, Diocesan president, will preside and plans will be made for the council's 10th annual convention. To be present will be Rev. Thomas Walsh Diocesan mod erator and Re~. Raymond Mc~ Carthy, .moderator of District One, host unit. ·Women of St. William's Guild and officers of District One will , form the refreshment committee.
elren - while I put up storm true demands of our Christian windows and take in the Sum- vocation. mer furniture. It is no easy task to live as a Ju; far as disfollower of Christ, for this nec eiplining . those essarily involves an unending I18me children, st::-uggle against our inherent ~that's up to self-centeredness if VIe are to Momma! Y -= S, continue to grow in love of God rm stuck wlth and neighbor. him - but let's Thus the attempt to avoid this II. 0 p e 0 u r inner struggle, this "conversion daughters ~arof the heart," by concentrating .,. responsible, on external practices and devo mature men tions is nothing more than an GERMAN CHARITIES: Since 1958 German Catholics and I don't care escape from religion, though it Under the chairmanship of • they ev~ .go . " may give the appearance of per have contributed over $42 million through the Lenten Miss Margaret Miranda of this to Church. Answer thIS one. feet observance. Misereor campaigns to aid the ne.edy of the. world. ~~re "This one" was answered a
Diocese, juniors at Salve Regina Mr. D.R. Alexander, director of ,SOCIal welfare III the BrItIsh College, Newport, will hold their long time ago by the Master
Operative Charity
Himself: "Not every· man who
colony of Hong Kong; inspects a school supported by annual Junior Weekend starting The second source is closely BaYS to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will be tomorrow. Class· rings will be Misereor donations. NC Photo. related to the firs~ This is the I18ved, but he who does the will presented to students at 2:30 ·failure of religious teachers- of My Father." tomorrow afternoon by Sister It's not difficult to understand parents, instructors, and spirit Mary Hilda, college president. ual directors--to make explicit why you're irritated by your Other weekend events will in.
h.usband's conduct, Cora, but. the basic law of Christian living clude a Sapphire Ball, a German
isn't your bias showing a little -love of God and neighbor Die Spiegel party and a Carib
Experience Shows Repeal of Appropriation when you imply that he is what and to spell out clearly its prac bean Holiday.· A communion
tical implications. be is as the result of being a Measure Is Virtually IITlPossible breakfast on Sunday morning As Pius XII reminded us, the "good" Catholie? I think you will conclude activities. Rev. WASHINGTON (NC) -Could any kind of Federal financial will agree that one can find ir-. perfection of Christian life con Christopher Johnson, O.P. will sists primarily in ardent, atten hroad Federal aid to education assistance must entail Federal be speaker. I'eSponsible and immature hus tive, and operative charity-this be temporary? control.: because Congress wants bands among Protestants, Jews, Fourteen girls from the to know how money it appro This is an important consider -.d the unchurched, as well as is the essence of the Gospel mes sage. Prayers, devotions, and ex ation in the present effort to get priates is spent. The other Greater Fall River area will be among Catbolics. Since no r e Ii g i 0 u s group ternal pious practices are only a new Federal aid program "axiom" is that once an appro Clmong program participants. priation measure is Pllt on the
• 18ims that it includes only means to this end, not substitutes through Congress. Experience would seem to books, it is next to impossible.
..ints among its members, aren't for it. Superiors at Sister Moreover, since operative prove that, once inaugurated, to repeal it..
,.ou being illogical in blaming This is an invariable ·pattern:
Iluch a program co.uld not be the Churcb for your husband's charity implies actions, the prac Formation Conference tice of charity consists in the discontinued. once Federal money is integrated objectionable conduct? faithful fulfillment of all the in the school budget, the legis The Administration realizes MT. ANGEL (NC) - Fifty ~ttll With Us duties of one's state in life. the real pOpular concern that lation providing the. funds is three mother superiors and con. In other words, as Our Lord These obligations are primary; revolves around this point. regularly extended and ex vent officials representing 13 re pointed out ~e and again, a there can be no substitute for President Kennedy demonstrated panded. ligious communities and 22 con. person may meticulously fulfill their fulfillment. While the President has ex this in his message to Congress. vents attended the seventh an every external detail of religious
pressed the wish that his new nual northwest regional meeting "I do not say the Federal gov Cloak for Sloth
practice yet experience no inner Federal aid program should be of the Sister Formation Confer. ernment should take over re conversion and co mp letely
I think these two sources, sponsibility for education. That "where possible, transitional," ence here !n Oregon. Ignore the very essence of re namely, the· human tendency to is neither desirable nor feasible. experience would seem to indi The three-day meeting was ligion, which is love of God and substitute external pious prac Instead, its participation should cate that it is impossible to make attended by superiors from Deighbor. tice for inner self-conquelft, and be selective, stimulative and, such programs transitory. throughout the U. S. northwest The strongest terms you will the failure of religious teachers where pQssible, transitional." ·and parts of Canada. The or lind in the whole New Testa to make clear and explicit the Invariable Pattern ganization works to improve the lDent were used by the Savior practical implications of the Needs lay Volunteers spiritual and professional de Over the years, congressmen to condemning such persons: Gospel commandments· to love, velopment of Sisters for their -tlypocrites," "whitened sepul As Religion T~achers go far toward explaining the and others here have made two ebres filled with dead bones,". puzzling gap between religious observations so often that they SAN DIEGO (NC)·- Bishop apostolate in contemporary life. ~ so forth. have virtually become axioms Charles F. Buddy of San Diego observance and Christian con. These "good" religious persons duct indicated in your remarks. "on the Hill." One is that almost has appealed for 3,000 voluntee1'l were a scandal 2,000 years ago; to train as teachers of religion You, and many like you in the· Cbeir kind have plagued every for' Catholic children attending period of the Church's history; past have been scandalized and . AsSerts 'Moral Gap' public grade schools.
turn~d from Christ by the pious ~ey are still with us today. The prelate said there is need
4Ypocrisy of those who use re- Most Urgent Problem ImpUcit Hypocrisy llgion -as a cloak for their spiritLAKE CHARLES I (NC)~The for another 3,000 lay persons to
I think if you analyze the ual sloth or malice. "moral' gap" between what ad in capacities other than ~urce of your anger, yOU will I can well understand your people preach and what they teaching. lind that your real quarrel is - He pointed to 61,433 Catholic DOt with the Church but with feelings, Cora, but you also practice is America's most children in public grade schools. would be making light of the urgent problem, a specialist in the implicit hypocrisy of some truth if you rejected Christ be the social apostolate said here "These children are deprived of Famous for our Prime f1f its members. instruction in their Faith," he cause of the petty failures of in Louisiana. What you are really asking is said. "Let no one pretend to ig some of His followers. Father Louis Twomey, S.J.. Aged Charcoal Broiled why there should be such a gap
nore his obligation. We must editor of Social Order maga between the careful observance
face it .because we shal.1 have to Steaks - also Roast zine, said the modern layman 01. specifically religious devo answer for its neglect before the St. Mary's to Receive "must remember he is a mem tiOns and practices and generaJ judgment seat of God.:" Beef • Sea Food Religiol.!s Drama Award ber of society as well as an indi
Christian conduct of life. vidual."
What good does it do to to NOTRE DAME (NC) - St. 'He may be faultless as a hus "anci~g Every Saturday -go to churcb" if one fails to Mary's College here has been Nit. to the Music of IulfiU the obligations of hilf named to receive the National . band and father, but too often ~ Electrical lItate of life? More particularly, Religious Drama Award of the he is not exercising his social Henry Cottrefl and his responsibilities," Father Two Contractors wbat kind of church is it that . National .Catholic Theatre Con Orchestra mey said in a talk at Our Lad,. teaches its members not to use ference. ~G Queen. Heaven parish. . eontraceptives yet apparently Father Gabriel Stapleton. 'Ionniee A Wechf.... Sh.w.... e lails to train them to be re S.D.S., conference president, IJPOnsible partners and parents? made the announcement at the ..........tin. Cd .....
Hyacinth 0 of· I. 0 AI,.,.. Pharasaical Approacb religiou& drama workshop helcl Hyacinth Circle, N~w Bedford These questions focus on a at !be college. The award will . . . . . . . . .IM'fA~.
pUzzling £allure ill ChAstian 1;)e . predated at the confereace'. Daulfhters of Isabella, will hold
livini, the lJOUr'ee of which we conveqtion in Miami, ~., from a Communion breakfast at 10:15 .944 County St. MAYl'AfIl4-tIII-4-9979 Sumtay· morning, March 31 at
will find in two separate .eu. Aug. 23 to 28; I.dferd
91 CraAdall RcI.tivertoA, IJ. Holy Name Hall. Guest· speaker First, there Ul the pereunial The conference is a prole. tendency to regard religkm as sional auoelaUon of CatlioJ..a will be Mrs. Gilbert J. Noonaa. little more than a set of beliefs, engaged in drama. It. cenu.l The unit also plana a social Tuesd81', Feb. 26 at ita JtohesoD precepts, aDd pious practices. If o.ffice is in Washington, D. Co Street clubhouse. Atty• .lulia these are accepted and obserYed, A. Joyce will apeak. Mar salvation is. assured! Coyle Mot~rs Thh pharuakal approach IIUlkes such a persistent appeal Newly-eleded .officers of beeause it enables us to confine Coyle High School Mothers' Club eur practieu of religion to cer- include Mrs. . Louise .Moran, president;·-Ml'8. Denise Peterson, FOR YOUNG WOMEN
vice-president; Mrs. Helen Miles, 196 Whipp.e St., Fall River
Rivier Alumnae 11' lASTS secretary; Mrs. Marita Downing, Conducted by Franciscon
Bivier College Alumnae of treaSUl"er. The unit will meet Missionaries of. Mary
..all River and New Bedford will at 8 TuesdaT night, March S. Il00MS - MEALS
bold a dinner meeting at ., Tues Featured wiD be a flower ar OVUNIGHT HOSPITAUTY
day night, :March 12 at White'. rangement demonstratiOll br UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN ......,. os 3-2192 Hatauranl. .Charles LeonarcL
Junior Weekend At Salve Regina
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10
THE ANdiOR Thurs., Feb. 21, 1963
Relig ionTeaching Must Restore Sense of Unity
Labor Secretary Sees New Form Of Bargaining
MOUNTAIN VIEW (NC) - The teacher of religion is a "co-laborer with Christ" who represents Christ :ill
CHICAGO (NC) - See ret.'lry of Labor W. Willard Wirtz told a Catholic group here a new form of collective
\..
bringing His message to stu dents, a catechetical specialist said here. . . William Reedy, co-author of a catechetical series, noted that· "Our Lord can't go any more into classrooms and write Oll, blackbOards, nor does He stand before our children and speak to them." . Instead, Reedy said, the work of teaching religion is done by catechists. Describing the rela- " 'tionship between teachers and students he'·sai'd: "It is the per son of Christ in us, speaking to the person of Christ in the child." Reedy spoke at a San Fran cisco archdiocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine institute, held at Holy Cross High School ~and' attended by some 2,000 priests, 'Religious and laity.
bargaining ill developing and the Federal government is plan. Ding to aid it. ; Wirtz spoke to the John A. :Ryan Forum sponsored by ,the Catholic Council on Working Life. The forum is named for the late Msgr. Ryan, first direc tor of the Social Action Depart ment of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. The Labor Secretary said that the new movement in collective 'bargaining is to make arrange. ments for the parties to deal, during the contract period, with mutual problems, such as ad justment to automation. Prevent Accumulation These discussions, he said, are intended to prevent the parties from waiting until the contract He said the aim of modera
has esxpired and two or three catechetics is' "to retore a sense
years of problems and disagree of unity to the Christian mes
ments have accumulated, he said. sage, a unity lost when the con
"I suggest that the government tent of the Faith 'was divided
must respond to this new form," into three equal parts - faith, ,
he said, noting that the Federal the . commandments and the
Mediation Service has already ~raments .....: and . presented
begun through its efforts to SUP CHURCH IN AI..GERIA STRONG:. Although 80 per cent· of the Catholics of Algeria three .different times in almost
ply parties in nationally impor. have left the. 'c91intry~ ·the Church sti)l continues its ,work. among its remaining mem~rs! ~~ same ~y in 'the course of '
'bilt negotiations with fact-find- . ,Thro~gh Carit~8-Algeria" distributor of food and clothing, pro~ided. by' ~atho.lic ~eJief the format~on of' the child."
big studies. ,. , 'Thi$unity, he said, can be re- .
Services--NCWC, the Church is helping fight the menace of famme and epidemiCS. Arch,:, studies, he silid, w'ould ."'bear on the solution" of 'differ. Bishop Leon Duval-watches as an Algerian workman unloaqs a:.sack Of surplus flour: N~ .wtOr~ by: ,"~ressing in eveJ7
single lesSon that we teach the . , , .' , eentral, ent wage, manpower utiliiati0!1' Photo~ .. trutp of Christianity,. and job security problems of the " which is like a hub ·in the wheel ' kind that are' not norinally cap:. , to which individual truths are able of solution in the intensive dJ'8wn: that God the'Father h~ atmosphere of last minute con invited WI to .share 'with Him traCt negotiations." , 'His oWn diy.inelife through Our ~rd, Jesus 'Christ: We' are called to live the 'divifle life ill • buman way." .
·These
Says Supreme
Mission Prelate Lauds Koreans'
C~lIrt
Faces· Dilemma,:
<IllI
Religion in Publi~ Schools Is. Pro~lem .
NEW YORK.(NC)-Tbe U. S. National Catholic Welfare eOft-, _ Supreme Court; may . ha,ve. ference. This 1961 study argued. ,PHILADELPHIA (NC)':'- 'A. painted, itself into a corner on . that it would be constitutional' .isiting missionary prela,tede- the questi~J1' of ~eligi.oJ1 and fo.r the Federal govelnment to ' .eribed Korea all' '''a . land 01.' public schools, a, constitutio~ . "iye ~nancial assistance to' the dO-it-yourself Catholics." law expert,has indicated. . secular aspects ,.of educationm 'That's the main rel;lsop for ~" 'William B. Ball Of 'Harrisburg, . ~urch~related schools., '~~wth of th~. Church in,~orea, , Pa~, says ,tb;e court' has held 'that ' IDcludes JI;,wt aid . ArchbIshop H~rol~. W;, religious indo~trina'tion 18 barred Writing in the February isS~ Henry; S.S.C., of K.)'VangJu,· ,. ' hom,publ!c sehoole.. ' of. the' Columbia University' "eteran. o! 30 years In .the Ko-, ' BUt;' he adds, 'the Court alsO Teachers College Record, 'Ball rean misSions. He went th~re in ' h'as gefh}(~d>re,ligi09;'so'broadlY . said the Supreme Court's 1962 ,1~33' as the leader of. a,. plOn~er: that' it could 'leave public schools decision against official relig~ou,1I band' of Columban mISSlOnarleS.' .' ," ., , '''They've been doing things 'by . '''l1t~O~t a p~~osoph~ hto .offer exercises and practices in pub themselves from the very begin-' pupIls .as agule,for e aVlor. lie schools includes a ban OR ' Ding," he said. ..The _only way out of this religious indoctrination. The first Korean Catholic he' dIlemma, Ball says, may be. to Yet, he says, in another deei. Mid was Peter Sueng Houn let the government give eco. sion the court has defined "reRh~ who was 'baptized in nomic· aid for secular, essentials Ilgion" aI meaning more than ;peki~g, China, in 1784, He in all. ~chools a';d not. be in belief in God. The cour,t in "smuggl.ed the Faith" into Korea v~lv7d ~n the phllosophJcal un· eludes beliefs which do not teach and when the first Catholic mis derpmmng. the existence of God and it has sioner appeared in 1795 there Ball, executive director and llpecifically cited secular human were already 4,000 Catholics in general.counsel of the Pennsyl ism and ethical culture, he notes. Korea, the Archbishop said. vania Catholic Welfare Commit Secular Humanism 'Blood of Martyrs' tee, is a prominent figure in Logically, he claims, this Since 1795 the Church has discussions on Church·State mat could mean that public schools . K orea b u t't ters . grown s'te a d'l I y 10 I may not offer their pupils any . . s h 0 t 'm th e arm receJved its big Secular Essentials guides to conduct. The "obvious · th e K orean con fl'IC t In . d urmg effect" on schools would be "VD 'l th C th l' He is the principal author of the 19508 . U n t I en, a 0 ICS tual suffocation,' he writes. on both sides of the 38th parallel a major Church.State study by were alienated from each other the Legal Department of the However, he adds sch.ools can in allegiances, The northwest section ,was sympathetic to the communists; the southwest sec. tion was not, he said. But with the war, which took the lives of more than 50 priests NEW ORLEANS (NC) - In dren baptized in the Church. and nuns and 1,000 other Cath South America a rural atmos Practically all receive First olics, all Korean Catholics united phere seems more conducive to Communion. Practically an get· as one and the Church grew the practice of Catholicism, ac married in church.' All go out rapidly. Archbishop Henry said cording to a veteran missionary. for processions-they really love it was a repetition of the old, Father Anthony J. Elfrink, processions. They come for COD adage that "the blood of martyrs· M,S,F.; who went to Brazil in fession and' Communion at is the seed of Christians." 1951 after 17 years of mission Easter time. But don't ask them service in Indonesia, said here for too much in between." that figures on' practicing Cat,h Father Elfrink, who was born olics in South America are often in Holland, has been in the U. S. misleading. since the latter part of 1958 in 'It is true," he said, "that in behalf of the minor seminary NEW YORK (NC)-The Fran. the htrge cities only about io to conducted by the Holy Family ~iscan Friars of the Atonement plan to open their first mission 15 per cent - and this figure Fathers at Cr!lto~ Brazil. could be too high-of the people in' South America. could Father Bonaventure Koelzer, olics. be . called practicing Cath S,A., Father General of the "In the country, however, you order, known also as the Gray have several states where it moor Friars, and Father Camil Plumbing - Heating
lus Daniels, S.A., have left here comes up to 70 or 80 per cent, even though they are relatively Over 35 Years
by air for Jatai, Brazil, the dio. cese in which the mission will uninstructed in religion. of Satisfied Service
'Love ProcessioDB' be located. Father Koelzer will 106 NO. MAIN STREET
"Their Catholicism," he con. make arrangements in regard to the mission, which will be tinued, "is mOre a Catholicism RivfW ~ 5-74~7
of custom. All' let their ebiJ..' headed by Father Daniels.
DOt be neutrlll. They must offer students "orthodoxies, values,. Catholic's,~rotestants pr,escriptions of oughtness," he
AtDi~logue
I8Ys.
'was
CORREIA & SONS
., Sees More Practicing Catholics In South Am·erican Rural Areas
Plan First Mission In South America
GEORGE M. MONTlE
Fan
:Mass
To indicate that public schools To.,RONT0 (NC) ..-;::- Led b1 do thill, he c.ites ~l.asses in'!:i':l,ter: ' Rev. ,W.W., ~iesberry, seven gro~p ·rel~tlon~. ~ seekmg ~ .. mem~rs :'.0(, St.. ,George. the ins~lll attitudes in students,., ~ : Milrtjr Anglican pariSh attell'ded ~I~,these ~lasses ~ffe~ ~otI- ' Ii dialogu~ Mass at 'St; ,Patricki. ".abons<'or philosophical ~ropo.,: Catholic cQurch'here. .' llltions. .' . " ,.It the .iirsLtime parish !!lta~mentB of ~e.liel .. ,. ioi)ers. ,of . the :. two" historie .. ,,,?-,hlS IS' because, he ,~aYf!: ' ci~ur~es had k-nelttogether ill c:luldren want to. k~o~ .w9! . prayer.. ' : .' . . , they ,should beh~ve In cer~allllt ,was' a gesture,of gratitude ~ay~. The ~~YS ~~e not lack- by Rev: Mr. Riesberry for 109 lO pop~l.arlty uhhzed cou,rses prayers of Catholic friends for on the tOPIC and very often are his wife a medical doctor who framed in such terms as "be. , died r~ently of 'cancer at an eause democ:ac~ ~ema?ds ~hat early age. He enlisted the group we do not d!scrn~llnate or be of his parishioners to pray side cause we believe m the brother by side with Catholics. hood of all men.' " Such answers, he maintains, are clearly statements of 'belief. Furthermore, he continues, they are "direct representations of ONE STOP
secular humanist belief"-a sys SHOPPING CENTER
tern of thought the Supreme Court calls a "religion." • Televilion • l'urniture If secular humanism is taught • Appliancel • Grocer7 in public schools, he asks, why 1M A.llen St., ,New Bedford should other "religions" be WYman 7-9154 banned?
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THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 21, 1963
Suggest Changes In U.S. Foreign Aid Programs
11
Latin Americans Go to School 'Via Radio
NEW ORLEANS (NC) Policy changes in the nation's foreign aid programs were suggested here by speakers
NEW ORLEANS (NC)
Some 2,500,000 adults in Lat at a regional meeting of direc. in America are being educa.: tors of the 1963 Bishops' Relief Fund appeal. .. ted through a series of radio rlassroom programs assisted bF Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, a U. S. Catholic relief agency. executive director of Catholic The far-reaching effects of the Relief Services-National Cath. instructional setup' were de olic Welfare Conference, said scribed at a regional meeting one weakness in the program is here of the Catholic Bishops', "failure to bring help down to Relief Fund by Msgr. Joseph the level of people in the towns Gremillion, socio-economic de and villages in the underdevel velopment director for Catholie oped and emerging countries." Relief Services-:National Catb "Aid programs that operate olic Welfare Conference. exclusively on a government-to The operation is one of anum. government _level cannot .easily ber of programs for social and accomplish this," the Bishop economic development in South said. "Programs conducted by America which have been as American voluntary agencies, sisted through CRS-NCWC with such as CRS-NCWC, can and do. .technical and administrative Theirs is foreign aid that im. guidance. proves social and economic con Started 12 years ago, the radio ditions by getting down and Instruction program b'egan its working on the village level. spread in Latin America about "This is the sort of foreign aid five years ago, ·Msgr. Gremillioa LEARN OF JEWISH HERITAGE: Harold Bernstein of Minneapolis shows Sister that we are asking Americans, • said. and especially American Cath. Anne Eugene and St. Margaret's Academy freshmen Mary Stuart, left, and Janet Kelly, Desire Is strong olics, to support and increase by religious articles in the Jewish Temple of Aaron, St. Paul. NC Photo. ' The broadcasting stations __ ' giving to the 1963 Bishops' Re which have a radius of 50 to 100 lief Fund appeal. mile&-are used exclusively lor Msgr. Marvin Bordelon, educational purposes. Groups, 01 Shreveport, La., pastor, recently citizens interested in studyin. returned from a three-month . under the program are helped'" trip to.14 African nations, advo obtain a receiving unit and 20 te : cated foreign aid on a long~teim 3() persons participate in each basis'eo that those helped can classroom, Mligr. Gremillion said. : "plan for the next 10 year. .. ¥INNEAPO~IS(NC.)-::ftI"early ~ .The fr.eshmen were tak~ Oil 'A local volunteer with the' She said that although there rather than for· the . neXt 12 . 200 freshmen at St. Margaret's' a . tour of a temple after they· equivalent of an elementar:v' Conservative, Orthodox and months." . , school education Helps 'the adun Firsthand Academy here were conducted completed their study 01 the Old Reformed Jews, "there is actu ally only. one Jewry, with the students with his ABC's and on • tour of a Jewish temple.in Testament. A prime reason for Iris trip,' _St.. Paul as an· aid. to their study degree of law observance the other basic stUdies, he said. 'One Jewry' t'leMonl1i gnor said, was to get 01 the Bible. "The desire for education .. Mrs; Rutman told the student. only difference." ,a firsthand view of the U. S. "Any Jew can mllrry in' any strong," Msgr. Gremillion said. for.eitfll aid program. He said: Accompanied by five Sister~,. that Jewish worship is' home. He noted that in the slum areas -. synagogue," she said, "anq he "'I'm more for' foreign aid ,now the· girls visited the Temple Q/, centered, with synagogue serv of the large cities there are not ices preceded by similar cere feelsaa much at home in one than I ever was before." He said Aaron, where a member of the enough facilities to ,take care 0,. he' favored an inci-ea$ed U. S. .temple;. Mrs. Morris Rutman, led monies in the family circle. as in another." the education of children and them' on' the tour and described generally there is no other: :foreign aid program. He also "'-"ish worship· .and c...toms, advocated that countries . of' on::w means of adult education except . Offer~d western Europe ·.etmore inIn their religion classes, the l'adio instruction. YOlved in· foreign .•id· 80 that. freshmen at. St. Margaret's eoordinated program of .help for studied the first five books of lInderprivileged countries could the' Bible, known' 'to Catholics . SAIGON (NC)~A priest 101" historic Catholic setUement and _ operated.' " a s the Pentateuch· and to the TENAFLY (NC)-:-Father- Pet~ . whom a Requiem l\IJass was' cel- . Jesuit mission beadquarters on· . 'in the 14 .coun~ies· he visjie~j-:.J~~s ;is ~e 'torah: ebrated in Sh~ghai, China,. 141 the outskirts· of Shanghai. The J. HesB, S.M.A., who' ,was . in- ' 6e Monsignor said;' he found' . They. . , also became, familiar· ' y~rs ago,' is busy in, Thu-duc ". celebrant was Fath~!l" Fernand ' valided from the West Africa.' -the peaple eager. to ,better them- with. Jewish religious ,al'Uelea' near ,here, . together ·with the, Lacretelle,' S.J., appointed to missions 01 the· Society of· Afr~ ('an MiSsions in 1901J,.celebrated . eelves economically· and educa- through use of • kit" that' 'in- . priest who celebrated the Kalil' su~eed Father Henry as supe .... . rior. h~ 9lst birthday at the society'~ iionaHy. He said these peopie "eluded' the.. tallith· or prayer for him. ~80n: "We have t~is for' this shawl and a box' of matzoth; the Father Yves Henry,S.J., now: .The Requiem MasS was ending provincial headquarters here .. year, but will it be cut next year? ' unleavened wafers'· used in the superior of the Vietnamese -Jes- when'. telegram arrived from . New Jersey. Should we just plan ahead for Passover Seder ceremony com uit· novitia~ ,in Thu-duc, wB!' : the 'dead" priest. He had suc a year or could we plan for 11-· memorating the flight of the' believed 'dead in China in· Jan.'" ceeded in reaching the town 01 years?" Jews from bondage in Egypt. uary, 1947. As superior of the Yangchow. Shang.haiJe~uit . missionID:ies, Now brisk and alert ~at 83, the French ~rIest had gC?ne m~o Father Henry begins his day at northern Klangsu .p~ovmce.ID Thu-duc before 5 A.M. With him, ~ctober, 1946, to VISIt the mIS as master of novices is Father lliOnS' , He' found himself in an area Fernand Lacretelle. VATICAN CITY (NC)-The deliberations, expected to last controlled by communist forces. Redemptorist Fathers have been a month, by considering possible Without being a prisoner, he was reminded by Pope John of the changes in their eonstitutions unable to move. MO:ftl"TREAL (NC)~The Grey great importance of their work and preparing an' election of new Brisk, Alert Nuns of Montreal are founding CHARLES F. YAlGAS 01 preaching parish missions. consultors. His disappearance in commun their first missions in Africa. 114 ROCKDALE AVINUI Speaking to the congregation's The Pope reminded the Re ist-held territory was followed They have agreed to take charge . . IEDIOID, MAlI. world leaders during .their 16th demptorists that the updating of by reports that he had been of the nursing service' in a new General Chapter here, the Holy religious rules and constitutions killed. Early in January, 1947, 300-bed state hospital for chilo Father said: to make them adequate to the solemn Mass was offered for the dren in Tunis. Others will go to "It is the task of your congre needs of the present day de repose of his soul in Zikawei, Nigeria lor nursing and teaching gation to enkindle a more fer- . mands "the greatest prudence." duties. vent Christian life among the Pope John explained: "What people by preaching missions. is substantial in the religious This task is so essential that, life and constitutes your par according to the words of st. ticular purpose must be con Alphonsus Liguori, if It is re HAMRUN (NC)-The Arch scientiously conserved, but what moved the institute will lose its is subject to the changes of time bishop of Malta blessed two mo very reason for existence." bile canteens set up to serve may be brought up to date ac Leading the Redemptorist at cording to the needs of your factory workers, here by the their audience with the Pope epoch." Young Christian Workers move was Fath~r William Gaudreau, ment and thanked U. S. and Ger 273 CENTRAL AVE.
C.SS.H., Rector Major of the man Bishops for their help in community, an American. With the project. WY 2-6216
him were members of the Re Archbishop Michael Gonzi, at demptorist General Curia and the ceremony which started the BERLIN (NC) - The Polish service, thanked all those who leaders of the congregation's 71 NEW BEDFORD
provinces, vice-provinces and Bishops' Conference has asked helped in the project and gave that concerts of religious music, special thanks to Francis Car missions. These superiors began their both instrumental and vocal, be dinal Spellman, Archbishop of held in churches throughout New York; Bishop Edward E. Poland, it was learned here. Swanstrom, executive director At the same time, the Polish of CathoLic Relief Services National Catholic Welfare Con Hierarchy overruled the long LANSING (NC)-Three priests standing tradition that only men ference; Bishop John J. Wright and a Catholic layman are on serve as church organists. The of Pittsburgh; and the German a 21-member Moral and Ethical Bishops issued an instruction to Catholic Bishops. Alexander C. Zammit, Mal Advisory Panel set up by Gov. the effect that Sisters and lay ~olttr"etors sinee 1913 I George Romney of Micnigan. I women who hold music school tese Minister of '.Labor, Immi The panel, composed predom diplomas may Dow 8erve at gration and Social Welfare, for t inantly of clergymen, ,has no church organists. mally started operation of the 703 S. Water Street 3·0911 official authority but will confer The Bishops also instructed service which distributes hot informally with the Governor on all diocesan chancery offices to meals to workers in 20 factories New Bedford RIch questions as minimum establish libraries 01. worlul 01. in this industrial town of about wage legislation and tax. reform. religioWl music. l'1,OOV
'Nuns,
Stude~ts Tou~. Jewish
Temple
'Visit A.i4s' .SJ'udy of Pentateuch Clre
vieW .
Requiem 16 Years Ago '~~r Je$u:it Mi~sioner,' Now· 83
91 st Birthday
SAVE MONEY ON:
Pope Lauds Redempotorists ·Work Of Preaching P(lrish Missions
YOUR OIL HEATI
First Africa Missions
Archbishop of Malta Grateful for Aid
•
BLUE 'RIBBON
LAUNDRY
caU
=-
..
Nfl/itlt.".".,
~ ~
Polish Bishops Ask Church Concerts
HEATING OIL
-
Appoints Catholics To Special Panel
JEREMIAH COHOLAN PLUMBING &- HEATING
WYman
12
THE ANCHOR-Di(oC::!'~e of fa,IIRiver-Thurs., Feb. 21,
19~3
In. the Name of the Holy Father
Lauds Francis Broderic.~'s Biography of Msgr. Ryan
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.O. What did I see at the Council? I saw the frUit of trlbulatlou and the operation of the basic law of our Faith: unless there is a Good 'Fr'iday In onr lives, there will never be an Easter Sunday; unl.~ss there is a ~own of thorns, there will never be a halo of light. Only those who suffer with Christ will have ~lory wUh Him.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. ~ennedy John A. Ryan's is a name which has little resonance in our land now; 17112 years after his death. It once re sounded, an~ possibly it will again command more atten tion. Francis L. Broderick has written a biography of
Monsignor R y a n, entitled
Right Reverend New Dealer: consequence. On the living wage, John A. Ryan (Macmillan. it examined both its ethical and $5.95), and it.may be that its economic aspects. In this, in a clue to his subject's temporary eclipse is to be found in that title. The l\~ew Deal is no longer a matter of much discussion, and, Monsignor Ryan was certainly closely identi
fied with it. Of course, he was
. famous long be
fore the New
Deal was'dream
ed of. Born in 1869, he was 63
when Hoosevelt was inaugurated, for the first time. "He showed no -great enthusiasm for Roosevelt's nomination and election, in the depths of the depression, and expected from the new Presi dent little, if any, of the reforms whieh he himself held requisite for righting what was desper. ately wrong in American society and its economy. But he was quickly and per manently, converted to almost passionate partisanship once he saw the New Deal come into be ing and adopt a philosophy and measures he had been advocating for decades'. Saw Farmers' Problems Ryan was born on a farm in Minnesota, not far from St. Paul. His parents were Irish immi 'grants deeply devoted to their religion and working hard to provide a good life and educa tion for their 11 children. From his earliest days, John saw at first hand the plight and problems of the farmer and the battle with the railroads imd other moneyed interests. As a' youth he heard and was moved by Populist oratory. He was 18 when he entered the seminary in St. Paul to study for the priesthood. The arch bishop at that time was John Ireland, celebrated as one of the leaders of the so-called liberal element in the American hier. archy. Epochal Event While in the seminary, he spent not a little free time' in listening to debates in the state legislature, where he could see factions at work and hear the commonweal debated. He be came ever more absorbed in ,economic and labor problems, and the promulgation, in 1891, of Pope Leo XIII's encyclical Rerum Novarum (On the Condi tion of the Working Classes) was an epochal event in his personal life. Ordained in 1898, Monsignor Ryan had only one parish assign_ ment" and that was for a couple of months, at Belle Creek. Therearter he was sent to Cath olic University to prepare for teaching moral theology at the St. Pau: seminary. He spent four years in grad uate work, did well, came under the sway of outstanding scholars.' He began teaching in the St. Paul seminary in 1902, aDd stayed a~ this task for 13 yeant. 011 Living' Wace But his seminary classes di4 not take aU his time. For ex ample, he prepared his, disserta tion for the doctorate, and it ,proved to be a work of strong impact and enduring praetical
Organize
~ita'
NEW ORLEANS (NC)-The 32 religious communities of women in the New Orleans arch diocese flave formed an organi. . zaUon aimed at fostering. better understanding among yoWlg ,people and adults of the reli. gious vocation. The Organiza tion is called Vocational Instruc. tion Toward Apostleship-VITA.
his writing on the fair. price, the minimum wage, thE~ evils of monopoly, and so on, Ryan broke new ground and created a stir all over the country. There is an interesting judg ment by Mr. Broderick to the effect that, when in 1915, Ryan transferred to the faculty of HONORED: Msgr. George Catholic University, he left scholarship behind. The record Hildner, 81, "fighting priest seems to bear this out, in the of Missouri", for soil and , sense that Ryan did little further water conservation for' 48 research and never again' pro duced a scholarly work. His year~, was ,honored at the books from that time on would 17th annual National Asso be mostly collections of speeches, ciation of Soil and Water and articles. Conservation Districts con Civil Liberties But he was busy in movements and on committees which were laboriously effecting public ed. ucation and securing needed reform.s. Much time was given to the Social Action Department of NCWC. His ideas and pro posals were sometimes made their own by the American hierarchy.. - In the 1920's Monsignor Ryan was active in undertakings to vindicate and safeguard civil liberties, an occupation which won him identification as a bol. shevik. A book on which he col. laborated during that decade was to cause him, and indeed the whole American Catholic body trouble for a long time to come.. The book was called The State and the Church, and' in it Ryan gave an answer to the questions of other religions in a nation predominantly Catholic which even to this day is· used to but tress the argument that in an Am,erica with a majority of Catholic citizens all others would be denied equal rights. Controversial F'i&'ure He was not close to Roosevelt, as legend would have it, nor did he have any, great part in draw. ing up New Deal legislation. But as he saw so many of the things for which he had fought long and seemingly in vain. made into the law of the land and accepted as normal, he was understandably' gratified. A controversial figure, he was embroiled with, various church men, became the betenoir of the followers of Father Coughlin, and ~as engaged in on~ fight or another practically to his last breath. Mr. Broderick has written a thoroughgoing and careful study which begins in lively fashion but slacks off at intElrvals. John Ryan was not a colorful 'figure, nor was he a personality easy to know. His convictions and his work are the impressive and en during things about him,and these, although important, do not lend themselves to drama tization.
New Jersey Solon To Receive Award KANSAS CITY (He) - The National Council for the Spanish Speaking has announced -that it :will 'present its first Father Ray mond A. MeGowarl,Award to Sen. Harrison Williams Jr. of New Jersey. Father Theodore McCarrick S.J., president of the NCSS, said that the award iDeS to Sen. Wil.
liams for his work as chairman of the Senatesuocommittee on migrant labor. The National Council for the Spanish Speaking is an organi. zation under Catholic auspices to provide for sOcial opportuni ties ,and to improve the spiritual and economic condition of the more than' eight milliOI1 "Lati nos" who are a part of the Amer. kan community.
]
vention in Denver. NC Photo.
Slate Stonehill Sales Course
One day at the Councll; a certain archbish9P spoke in favor of putting St. Joseph's name in the Canon of the Mass. His voice was nervous; he spoke very quickly, in an oratorical fashion which was a bit out of place in a deliberative body such as the Council. He exceeded his time limit and was stopped. After he had finished I turned to the bishop next to me and said: "This archbishop wili put St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass." Because of that talk'! No! But few knew his background. He was from Yugoslavia, had suffered through. one of those long trials made famous by the Communists and was then sentenced to four years in prison. He and other prisoners were then put on a train, which was de liberately wrecked in ari attempt to kill all aboard. The archbishop survived, but both his hips were broken.
---'
Broken in body but not ~ soul, he dragged his poor bod,..
80 frail and nerVOUl! after imprisonment and brainwashing, to
the Council. Then he had the added humi
liation of bEling interrupted for overtime
and for "preaching." Aware that God sends a cross before a crown, a Gethsemane be
fore an Emmaus, this writer knew that, by suffering, the Archbishop had merited, as much as one man can merit, to have St. Joseph in the Canon of the Mass. The Holy Father, Who followed the proceedings on television in his apartment, announced two days later that St. Joseph would be so honored.
Very Rev. Richard H. Sunt It would have been worth going to the Council just to have met brother. bishops van, :C.S.C., president of Stone hill College, has announced such as this. No American bishop can ever plans for an evening seminar for ,be the same again. We rubbed shoulders with saints; we touched sales personnel to be given the hem of the garments of martyrs; we spoke with brothers in Thursday nights during March Christ who are strong, as the Cardinal of Poland. said, "because at the college campus, North we have nothing material to defend"; we saw how much we had Easton. and how little they had (of wealth), and how little we had and The seminar, first of its kind how much they had (in their con-Crucifixion wi\h Christ). in the United States, is one Friends! We cannot go on building larger and larger g:rrn phase of an extensive program started at Stonehill in 1958 to _siums and richer and richer seminaries While bishops, pries" improve r~lations between the and laity elsewhere in the world ~o on sufferlnK. What good' d _ my voice do in this column week after week? Now and nation's manufacturers and the Catholic institutional market. tben it Inspires readers to sacrifice for such aa these: "Oh, I The program's director, Brother oU~ht to send 8Omethin~ to Bishop Sheen!" Bishop Sheen Is Dot Herman E. Zaccarelli, C.SC.,. begging for an organization, for one area of the world, for ODe missionary society. As head of the Boly Father's own Societ:r for Director" Food Research Center for Catholic Institutions, stated the Propagation of the Faith in, the United States, he is begginc that while there is perhaps no In the name of the Holy Father. All he receives goes directl:r to other market ,in the United 'the Pontiff. God grant that your Faith maT inspire you to dail:r sacrifices, so that St. Joseph' ma:r intercede to rive you a hapPJ' States which' equals in activitY and total assets the Catholic· death for having shared the death of Christ! institutional. ' market, for the GOD LOVE YOU to A. for $45 "This is my annual contribution sales representative, especially those unfamiliar' with the gen. to help the Holy Father's Missions." '" to Mr. and Mrs. N.M. for eral structure of the Catholic , $10 "In gratitude to God for happy times, times of trial and times Church in the United States, the of spiritual fervor." .,. to R.W.E. for'$1 "Many times I have given Church's organizational system my last 50c to the Missions, only to receive an unexpected $5'
often appears as a maze designed before the end of the week. The' returns on charity are always
more to confuse and thwart his h~gh." efforts to promote his product WORLD~SSION, a quarterl:r magazine of missionary ac 'than to aid and aSsist him. tivities edited by Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, is the ideal gift It is the purpose of thy for priests, nuns, seminarians or laymen. Send $5 for a one-J'ear seminar, declared Brother Her subseription to WORLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York man, to ~move some of this 1, New York. confusion and misunderstanding in a manner beneficial to both Cut out this column. pin your sacrifice to It and mall it to parties-to enable the sales rep the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, Natioual Director of the Soeiet:r resentative, in a relaxed, confi. for the Propagation of the Faith. 366 Fifth Avenue. New York dent manner, to present his 1, N. Y.. or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. firm!s product in harmony with CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. the protocol and customs of the religious organizaztions with which he is dealing. Topics to be discussed include the market division and function of Cath olic institutions, ethical prob lems of selling, protocol, and methods of dealing with reli gious organizations and parishes. The faculty will be comprised of members of the Holy Cross Fathers and Brothers, a com. munity of priests and brather. founded over 100 years ago in France by Rev. Basil Moreau. The program's director, Brother Herman,· has Jtudied at the School of Hotel and Restaurant Administration at Cornell Uni. . Be Thrifty - Be Wise versity and has taken advanced AP: your MeatmGft for a studies at George Washingtoa DAVIDSON'S University under, a grant giveD . (Moc:GreQ:or Brand) him 'by major food distributioD companies.
His fourth book, The Catbolic
Bake· the 'Bag-No Basting Food Manual, has just been pub- .
-Mac'" says lished and ~e has lectured ex
tensively on the "Catholic Insti
"WINNING FAVOR
tutional Market - How to Sell hat Scotch Ham Aavorl
it," to manufacturers throughout WITH, ITS FLAVOr
the United States.
BISAILLON'S
GARAGE
24.Hqur Wrecker ·Service
653 Washington Street, Fairhaven WYman 4-5058
'. SWEETNIC •
in
DAVIDSON'S·
Seek Medal
WASHINGTON (~"C)-Legfs lation has been introduced fa Congress for striking a com memorative medal for the 250th anniversa.ty of the birth of Father Junipero Serra, founder of the famous California mis siona.
Mac Gregor ~.
«
JUST
ASK fOR
u "\ • ~ ..)
at AU Leading
Food Stor.. SWEETNICS '" ManGchuJeltJ
•
Retreats, 50-Mile Hike, Debates
mE ANCHOR.;:.
1$'
"Thors., Feb. 21, 1963
On Mid-Winter Vacation Program At Many Diocesan High Schools
Court Invalidates Municipal Laws Ba rring Schools
Students throughout the Diocese are enjoying the an nual Winter vacation this week. It is particularly welcome since it enables many of the students to put aside all thoughts of regular class work and perhaps concentrate on some special project. It is a time for catching up and Coyle High. The following for pulling the loose ends to achieved high honors: seniors, gether. It is a time, too, for Neil Bowen, John Cabral, David
HACKENSACK (NC) Municipal zoning laws gov erning the establishment 01 schools are invalid in New
Jersey. . That is the interpretatioB relaxation and recreation. With Gay, Christopher Godek, Alan Grenier, Paul Keating, Walter being put on a decision rendered mid-year examinations over and Kosinski, John McAndrew, Wil. in Superior Court here in a suit no pressure beillg exerted many liam Navin, Stephen Nolan, brought by the Archdiocese 0.1 students find this to be their James Smith, Michael Sousa and Newark against Hohokus bor most profitable vacation. Joseph Costa. Among juniors ough. The Winter vacation is not, Judge Charles W. Broadhurst however, a period of idleness for receiving high honors were ruled specifically that.a Hohoku. many of our Diocesan students. Louis Andrews and Robert ordinance barring the construc Many worthwhile activities have Meunier. Sophomores included tion of any school, public or pri been planned for this week. Frederick Campos and Albert vate, in an R",I residential zone Eighteen junior and senior Pepka and Dennis Callahan and Walter Sylvia were among the violates state law. members of the sodality at Do· freshmen. The judge ruled that "the pur minican Academy in Fall River Margaret Smith af South , OUTSTANDING STUDENTS: Students at Coyle High ported ordinance stating'that aD will end a four day retreat today Dartmouth and Patricia Vogel of School, Taunton, achieving high rank in National Merit schools are prohibited in the at the Cenacle in Brighton. Fall River, both Stangites, 'I'e Scholarship tests are, front, Robert Beauregard, John R-l zone cannot control the The girls' sodality at Bishop cently participated in a planning establishment, of a public schooL Stang High in North Dartmouth Cabral, Joseph Costa; rear. Carlton Boardman, James It therefore applies only as te will also have its retreat at the conference of the National Honor Waldron~ Neil Bowen. private schools" and thus vio Cenacle, 3S will more than 20 Society. The meeting, called in lates state statutes. l!iodalists from Mount St. Mary'S order to correlate activities of Frederick J. Gassert, counsel tI.. Academy in Fall River. The re· chapters in area high schools, prize for his project, '"to Q. Maze ttclpating In a discussion ceA for the' archdiocese, argued iD Test." Other winners included tered on the r.."'ew Testament. ' treat is being conducted by Rev. was held at Attleboro High. Saint Anthony's High in New sophomores Kathleen Connor, Also at, Feehan, memoers of court that public school district.
Henry Kane, C.SS.R. The girls Bedford. has orga'nized the first were' ,government entities not
Maureen O'Brian, Joel Regula the Junior Great nooks-program will return to classes next week renewed both physically 'and debating society in the history and Mary McQuillan; juniors both sophomores' and freshmen:-' bound by municipal zoning:ordi.
spiritually and will, no doubt, of the school. A former alumnus Beatrice Abraham, and Mary watched "Pygmaiion" ,on televi. nances In choosing school sites.
af Saint Anthony's, Attorney Gosselin" freshman Lee Ann sion recently 'in'order'to com In a 12~point brief he had con
t1pproach the second semester Richard Bachard, 'has been ap tended. that a. 1961 state law pro
Sowa. All entries will now par pare the TV version -with,the ....ith vigah. pointed coa~h and Rev. Gerard ticipate in the Greater New Bed bibiting zoning discrimination
book which they had read. Washington Trip Boisvert is director. We look ford Science fair which will be Dominican A ca d e m y an. between public and private
And speaking af vigah-it Is forward to great things from this held later this year. nounces that ItS freshman class schOOls was therefore applicable. ' very much in evidence' at Coyle new group. will hostess the annual "Open The court upheld that view. YOUD&, Orator Science Fairs High in Taunton. Ten members All-Inelusive Ordinanee
House" to' be held froin 3 to cs Sophomore art students at Movies have been very much of the varsity, in response to Tuesday afternoon; Feb. 26. AD, The archdiocese also attacked
Sacred Hearts Academy in Fall President Kennedy's challenge, in the news at Doininican Acad eighth grade girls in' the area the ordinance because it wa.
River recently competed in an participated in a 50 mile hike on emy recently. Th~ American art contest for a design to be are invited to attend. The pro-' adopted after the archdiocese
Monday, starting from Boston at - Legion Freedom' Forum Com done in mosaic of Our Lady of gram will include a welcome by had purchased property in Hoho- ' mittee presented a special pro 4 in the morning and hiking to the Library. The entire student officers of high school activities, kus and made known its plan to
grain of films to the entire stu Fall River. body will vote for the winner ~ tour of the school, refresh. build a regional bigh school for
Meanwhile the Holy Family dent body at an a~sembly recent and the' design will be turned ments, an exhibition basketbaD 1,500 boys.
High debating team of Thomas ly. James Manning, formerly af game, and "get-acquainted", At the time of purchase tht! Notre Dame and Fordham Uni. into a reality by the sophomores dancing. Azar 'and Richard Perras VB. Ed ' area 'was not zoned against as a gift for the new'library. ward Parr and Marilyn Mul. versities, and now full-time Also from Dominican Academy, school use, and Hohokus at
And students at St. Anthony's ehairman af the committee, gave cairns has been preparing to at student government day repre tempted to short-circuit any suit
High are anxiously awaiting re tend the Holy Cross College De. an introductory talk before sentative Rita Chouinard has based on the argument of dis sults of the annual Teen Talent showing "The American Story" bate Tournament in Worcester, contest sponsored by Extension ,been notified that her' position crimination by passing an all to be held tomorrow and Satur. and "Communist Encirclement, Magazine of Chicago. Many stu. in the Massachusettll General inclusive ordinance. day. Debate topic will be the 1961." Judge Broadhurst said that dents entered the contest which Court will be that af senator for And the following films were Common Market. the Bristol, County district. under the statutes governing the
consisted of three parts: cover viewed by the history and soci
Holy Cross College will also And at Bishop Cassidy High establishment of boards of edu
sketching, photography and es be host to the varsity debating ology classes: "The Beginning at say writing. American History classes are cation, the municipal governing
team from Bishop Stang High. Plymouth Colony," "Our Two
Meanwhile from Prevost High busy collecting bills to be" body cannot determine the
Members of the Stang team who Great Documents," "A Look at
brought up in the legislature on placement of schools within the
ift Fall River comes the a'n Socialism," "A Look at Commu.
will compete with~ teams from student government day which community and cannot, there-'
nouncement that Reginald Car New York and the New England nism," and "Responsibilities of
will be held Friday, April 5. fore, restrict the placement 011
din has won over all other con states are Alfred Saulniers, American Citizenship."
Congratulations to Prevost private schools either.
testants in Fall River's "Voice Meanwhile at Saint Anthony's
James Donnelly, Peter Sweetser High seven senior math students of Democracy" contest. Reginald High School's debate team,
and Emile DesRoches. will now represent the city of named second. place 'winner in
And Coyle students have been have entered their names in the Fall River in the statewide com. the New England Catholic Boys'
mathematics contest
active this week on behalf 'of annual Tournament held at Fitchburg.
petition. Congratulations to Pre the Taunton scholarship fund. sponsored by the Mathematical vost's young orator: Team members include Collin.
Association of America. The
Proceeds from the Taunton High Matton, Marc Mancini, Reginald
Student Government Coyle basketball game held on exam will be given on Thursday"
Cardin and Arthur Desrosiers.
At Sacred Hearts Academy il1 Collin was also awarded the tro
Tuesday are being used for the March 14.
From Sacred Hearts Academy
Fall, River St. Margaret's team benefit of the fund. in Fall River comes the an. leads St. Agnes' team at the phy as best affirmative s~eaker. And a strong sense of cooper ation was evidenced this week nouncement that the following close of the first semester in the students will participate in the merit system. The results of the when Coyle High, Bishop Cas PRINTED AND MAI'LED sidy High and Taunton High Massachusetts Youth Citizenship gym meet to be held Thursday Convention to be held at Bridge_
and Friday, Feb. 28, and March sponsored a dance for the bene. OSborne 2-1322 water State Teacher's College on 1 may decide which team will fit of upcoming scholars. LIVERPOOL (NC)-The LN WYman 3-1431 Meanwhile 40 juniors from Monday, April 15: seniors, Nancy hold the school plaque for 1962. erpool archdiocese is to run a
Mount St. Mary's Academy are Souto, Kathleen Collins, Paula 1963. Eighth grade girls af area plant of its own to create build
enjoying a tour of Washington, Duffy, Joan Camara and Jean schools are invited to the pre': ing material.
liminary meet to be held at 3:45 D. C. Besides touring the Capitol, Smith. Juniors participating in The factory, which wm em
clude Maureen Toomey, Donna Monday afternoon, Feb. 25. the White House, the Washing ploy about 200 men, will be set Lynch, Susan Johnson, Joan And at Feehan High students ton Monument and other places up on the site af t1K! Liverpool
are reading "The Greatest Story cathedral, now' being built on of interest in the Capital City Gallagher and Margaret Don Ever Told" in connection with Brownlow Hill overlooking this
the students will take side trips nelly. And the science fair for 1963 Bible week. All classes at'e par. big Atlantic seaport, and will to Mount Vernon, Annapolis and at Saint Anthony's High will be Arlington's Tomb of the Un make preCast concrete sectiona
Commercial • Industrial in the church basement on known Solider. for the construction. Institutional Thursday, March 21. Purpose is A second temporary plant may New DebaUnr Societ7 Painting and Decorating to incite students to explore sci also be 'erected on the si,te where
A number of students from entific fields in the hope of de.. contractors commissioned, te
VATICAN CI'I\Y (NC)-Pope Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro veloping .vocational interests
135 Franklin Street will spend part of their Winter therein. ,Sister Mary Ernest Al. John said at a general audience erect the' huge" glass central Fa" River OSborne 2-19"
tow:er af the cathedral win pro vacation working on science bert is chairman and moderator that the Pope is a man of peace duce the glass on the spot.
papers. A number of others will of the program.
and it is his job to make the relax with a good book. For The mimes of the- winners of ' 'yearning for peace felt by all. - . , . 'Pope John said that even ift sophomores the book will be the annual Holy Family' science
"Red Badge of Courage" and for fair have been announced. ltl his meetings with heads of state freshmen the 'book' will be the high IChooi division Barry' and leaders of nations the Pope WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBLEMS "Anne Macy Sullivan: Teacher." Ha:rrington, freshman won first' cannot but stress the' peace of at the Both are required 'reading at'
the Lord, good agreement, and Feehan.
obedience to the laws framed by Christian civilization. The Debrabant Chapter of Ute Calling attention to the hlU\ol' National Honor Society at Bish. $OMER~, MASS.
mony and unity of intention of op Cassidy High in' Taunton is planning to draw up • new COLUMBUS (NC) - G<lod the more than 2,000 Fathers of Assets OYer $2,600,000 in 3 Yeal'S
the Second Vatican Council, the charter for the high school. At Samaritan Itm, Columbus di "'e most friendly, democratic BANK offerIng
Bishop Cassidy, also, a contest ocesan rehabilitation center for Pope said that although. they is underway for songs that may men alcoholics, has served 20,000 might have had differing points be used for the school's cheer meals sfuce Jt opened in. June. of view they worked to complete Checking Acc()unts Auto Loans and to clarify positions and con and the alma mater. Entries are 1962. Savings Accounts Business Loans cepts. Father Chester A. Leblanc, di to be placed in a ballot box i1l Club Accounb Real Estate Loans He stated that if an men show_ the foyer of the academy. A rector of the inn, said that 66 prize will be awarded to the per cent af the residents have love for God, and for one an~ At Somerset ,Shopping Area-Brightman St. Bridge winner. been non-Catholics, the average other as brothers, they will have The honor ron for the first age is 42 and the average still even on earth some peace, somll Member Feder:al. Deposit Insurance Corporation quiet and the blessings of God. lIeIIlester has been published • 40 daya.
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·14
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaURiver'-Thu,s:, Feb: 11, 1963
Says Columnist Deviates· ~From Policy of Fairness By Msgr: George G. Higgins
Direcwr, NCWC Social Action Department I don't always agree with The New Republic but I have .. always thought of it as being reasonably fair and objective in its treatment of controversial issues. This probably ex-' plains why I was so surprised and disappointed·when I read T.R.B.'s highly emotional, .fluestion-begging. column on this, we sometimes wonder?" . the Federal aid to education One doesn't bave to be very controversy in the issue of well-informed ·on the intricacies Feb. 16. This column by T.R.B. of constitutional law or very well whose incisive comments "From acquainted with. all of the ins Washington" ap. and-outs of the Federal aid con- . troversy to be in a position to pear every week
say, without fear of contradic on the first page
tioD, that T.R.B.'s column is ex of the magazine
tremely superficial and falls -reads in part • s . follow s:
. markedly short of the minimum "John F. Ken.
standards of objectivity and fair nedy, a Cath ness which one can reasonably elic, has once
expect of a responsible "liberal" periodical. more sent up a Federal aid for
T.R.B. blatantly begs two very education bill
important questions:·· whether which the Cath Federal aid to parochial and pri olic hierarchy
vate schools is constitutional and denounces. The Church leaders whether or not Catholic "Church leaders" are alone in maintain want Catholic children to go to ing that it is. , .. parochial schools and the state . If. h e was rea11y persua ded· to help support them. that' Catholic. "Church leaders" "Mr. Kennedy says this would unconstitutional and it is hard are alone. or almost alone in for most onlookers who try to be thinking that Federal aid to dispassionate about it not to parochial and private schools is agree with him. constitutional, the editors of The "The Church leaders, however, lIi'ewRepublic should have put say, 'No, it is constitutional, and him straight before the column went to press. anyway, we have the power in Congress to block Federal' aid Conveniently. Forgets for all children unless we get They must have been aware of ~tate support, and we shall exer. the fact that some of the most ase the powe,r no matter how authoritative defenders of the much America needs· better. constitutionality of granting equipment, better teachers and .. Federal aid to parochial and better schools.' other private schools are Prot 'Fascinating' Uses estants and Jews and that others "The uses of religion have. are not affiliated with any always fascinated us. In one·. church. ·community it means that you As. an old T.R.B. fan I am dis ean't eat pork, in another that appOInted .not only b~a~~e he . you can't eat meat on Fridays;·' ign~red thiS. embar;asIng Infor in one community it means that ..,matlo?-w~lCh ObVlOusl~ w.oul.d you can't buy beer on the Sab- have Invalidated th.e logic. o.f .hlS bath, in another that the Sab- rather conde~end~ng critIcism bath comes on Saturdays not. of the Cathollc hlerarchy:-but Sunday ' . also because he convemenUy "In C'entral America, where forgot.to mentio.n .the National the world's birthrate is extraor- E~ucabon AssoClatlo~ and eel dinarily high, religion· forbids' t~ other t;l0n:sectarla~ educa-. birth control, while here in tional ?rga?~zatlons.in hl~ vastly America it mean that the F d over-s~pllfled diSCUSSion of s e who will be to blame f cut eral Government can't pass a . ., 0: s . desperately needed bill to aid thng thiS year s Federal aid bill. the schools. Regrettable Slip "We mull it over and we find. The fact is that T.R.B. doesn't DO answer. It is all done in the really know what will happen Dame of religion, and generally· to the Federal aid bill this year, .m the name of Christianity. but, as an experienced and. What would Jesus make of all highly sophistieated. WashingtoD commentator, he must be able ~ to recall that the NEA deliber.· . at~ly torpedoed the higher edu cation bill last year because its leaders didn't want religiously oriented colleges anduniversi ties to benefit from its provi sions.· . · I have no way .of knowing why T.R.B. failed· to mention this well-known fact in his re . cent column. But this I do know, that he and his editors have deviated from what I had always thought was their official policy of trying to be fair and square with the opposition. They can make up for this re grettable slip by telling their readers as soon as possible that the latest Gallup poll· (Feb. 10) indicates that the weight of opin ion throughout: the country (49 per cent) holds that any federal aid should go to help not only public but parochial and other private schools as well. · ]t will not be necessary for them to point up the significance of these statistics. Their readers will be able to tell at a glance that the figure of 49 per cent must of necessity include a sub stantial number of people who are not Catholics, much' less Catholic '"Church leaders."
be
GENERAL .CHAIRMAN:
...
Mrs. George Sanford, Jr., St. Mary's parish, Taunton, is in charge of arrangements for the Queen's D aug h t e r s Charity Ball, to be held this Spring at the Cotillion Ball room. She will be aided by Mrs. James Downing and Mrs. Herbert Camacho.
Students Retreat · CHAMPAIGN (NC) -Father Richard Butler,' O.P., national chaplain of the National New. man Apostolate, will conduct the annual three-day retreat for Catholic students at the Univer sity of Illinois beginning SUD day, March 3 in St. John's chapel ~ the university
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River'-Thurs., Fe h . '21, '963
.15
eontinued b«8 Page One ASH WEDNESDAY, FEB. Zf
Fast and Abstinence Breakfasi: Orange juice, scrambled eggs, toeBt with jam, beverage. . Lunch: Swiss cheese and tomato sand""ida, fru« gelatine with cookies.
with salmon liquid and other ingredients. Pack into well greased loaf pan (9 x 5 x 2lh). Mixture will be soft before baking. Bake in In()derate (375) oven about 1 hour or until nicely bro~. Cool in pan 10 min., loosen from sides of pan and turn out on platter. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Serve with celery soup sauce: 1 can condensed eream of celery soup with lh' C milk. Simmer about 2 min.
Dinner: Broiled halibut with leMon bUtter, parsley potato~, wax beans, lettuce with Rl» llian dressing, chocolate chiffon layer cake..
SATURDAY, MARCH Z Fast
CIHleolate Chiffon Layer Cake
Breakfast: Cereal with bananas, com muffins with jam, beverage. -
2 eggs, separated Ilh C sugar 1 3,4 C cake flour % t baking soda % t salt lI" C oil 1 C milk 2 sq. melted chocolate lh t vanilla
Lunch: Tomato stuffed with egg salad, potato mips, sweet pickles, rye bread, cupcakes. Dinner: Baked ham with fried apple ~, baked sweet potatoes, broccoli lemon sponge pie.
Lemon Sponge Pie 1 unbaked pie shell
Heat oven 350. Grease generously end dutrt with flour 01' line with waxed paper bottoms of two round 8 inch layer pans or one oblong pall 13 x 9lh x 2.
14 C butter or margarine 1 C sugar 2 egg- yolks 14 C flour 14 t baking' powder 14 t salt 1 C milk juice and rind of 1 lemon 2 egg whites
Beat egg whites untn frothy. Gradually beat In lh C of sugar. Continue beating until veI1f .tiff and glossy. In another bowl, sift remaining sugar, flour., BOda, salt. Add oil and half of milk. Beat 1 min. at medium speed on electric mixer. Scrape Irides and bottom of bowl constantly. Add, re maining milk, egg yolks, melted chocolate and V'aniHa. Beat 1 more min., scraping sides of bowl constantly. Pour into prepared pans. Bake layer cake 35-40 min., oblong pan 45-50 min. or until done.
Preheat oven to 400. Cream butter with sugar, add egg yolks and cream well. Stir in flour, baking powder, salt, milk, lemon rind and juice. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. POll!" into unbaked pie shell. Bake at 400 for 10 min., ~uce heat to 350, bake 30 more minutes.
Magic. Fro·sting
MONDAY, MARCH'
1 C sugar' 5 T cold water
2 egg whites 1/4 t cream of tartar lf4 t salt
1 t vanilla
Fast Breakfasi: Cranberry juice, Danish beverage.
Lun~h:
Mix sugar, salt, cream of tartar and water in small saucepan. Stir and bring to full, rolling·
boil over moderate heat. Place egg whites in small bowl. Do not beat until syl'UP is cooked.
Pour syrup slowly over egg whites while beating at high speed on electric mixer until all syrup ill added. Reduce speed to mediwn; add 1 t vanilla and beat till mixture is of spreadinc consistency. Note: Save the 2 egg whites from the morn ing's scrambled eggs.
mURSDAY, FEB. !8
Welsh rarebit, fruit saled, cook1elL
Dinner. Ham casserole,· asparagus, pineapple cole slaw.. ging,erbread Y"'i~~ whipped eream. , Ham Casserole
.% C leftover ham, cut into c~
J C thinly· sliced potatoetl 1 onion, sliced % C milk thyme Place layer of potatoes in «!Overed casserole dish, add ham, remaining poteto and onion, , • IIP rinkle with thyme and add milk. Cover Imd Nke 114 hours at 350. Serves &. TUESDAY, MARCH I
Fast Breakfast: Half grapefruit, buttered toast, beverage.
PeBb'¥..
Fast
W
. ceral.
Lunch: Oyster stew, hard roll'll, fresh peaN. _ Dinner: Baked chicken with mushroom aauee,
baked potatoes, peas, molded cranberry ealad.
- IlPple pie . Baked Chicken with Mushroom: Sauce . 6 chicken breasts 1 pkg. dry mushroom soup llh C water . lf4 C sherry % t poultry seasoning salt and pepper paprika
Preheat oven to 375. Place chicken breasts til
Ilhallow baking dish, sprinkle with salt, pepper, poultry seasoning. Heat dry soup mix with water~
pour over chicken breasts, add sherry and cover with aluminum foil. Baked covered for 1 bOll!". Uncover, baste, sprinkle with paprika and cook uncovered for another lh hour or untilbroWD and tender.
FRIDAY, MARCH 1 Fast and Abstinence Breakfast: Orange sections, poached egg 011.
toast,_beverage. Lanch: Cottage cheese and peach 5Il1ad, muffins, raisin squares.
COftl
Dinner: Salmon loaf, * string beans, tossed Feen salad, brown and serve rolls, pineapple v:psidedoWD cake. Salmon Loaf 1 can (1 lb.) salmon 1 can (10% oz.) condensed cream
of celery soup
1 C fine, dry breadcrumbs
2 eggs, slightly beaten
:If.a C chopped onion 1 T lemoB juice
Dram salmon, save If. C liquid. Remove skhl -.d bw1eII ~ Almon, flake, thoroughly mix
LENTEN COOKING: Miss Nancy Carroll, home 'econ omics teacher at B.M.C. Durfee High School and member of Holy Name parish, Fall River, kitchen-tests a Lenten recipe. She,is preparing meal suggestions for the holy season, te appear in The Anchor weekly.
Men to Meet Convention Speakers to Discuss
Business Ethics - Morality
WASHTh~TON (NC) ~ problem of inculcating business ethics with morality will be dis. Lunch~ Corn chowder, apple and eelery saJad, cussed at the 1963 National Council of Catholic Men con. Nking powder biscuits, fig Dars. vention in Atlantic City, N.. J., Dinner: Broiled hambw:g with broiled tome from April 24 to 28. toes,· mashed. potatoes, green beane, br~WDies Speakers at a special panel 01\ -Ii laMode. _ . the subject will include Father· Raymond Baumhart, S.J., of Broiled Tomatoee .Loyola University, Chic'J;:"o, who· - Cut unpeeled tomatoes in half. SeasoD wUII. will speak on "Frequent Unethi. I8It, pepper, trace of sugar and few grains CUft"y cal Business Practices," and Herpowder or oregano. Sprinkle with buttered bread' bert Johnston, philosophy pro-· crumbs and grated cheese. Broil 8 to 8 minutes fessor at the University of Notre with hamburg. Dame, who will discuss "Re sources and Activities to Help Businessmen Meet Moral Prob lems." The seminar will be fol EMBER WEDNESDAY, MARCH.
lowed by an audience participa Fast, Partiai Abstinence tion forum. William F. Johnson of Pater. Breakfast: Grapefruit half, English muffine son, N. J., NCCM president, with marmalade, beverage.. commente~: "Undoubtedly some Lunch: Tomato soup, sardine sandwich, toes will be stepped on and some brownies. consciences twinged by what will be said at the seminar and Dinner: Liver and bacon, fried onion rings, forum, but there is no use dodg buttered carrots, whipped potatoes, mocha ing these vital issues. Spanish cream with peaches.· "Many businessmen of all faiths are deeply concerned by Mocha Spanish Cream
frequent unethical business prac2 t instant coffee 1 envelope pIain gelatine
lh· C sugar
Prelate Says Unity 2 egg yolks
dash salt
Pope's Ardent Wish 2 C milk TOR01'o"O (NC) - It is the 2 egg whites· most ardent wish of Pope John 2 T sugar to create a spirit of unity among canned peaches nations and among the various churches, Coadjutor Archbishop In saucepan mix -together instant eoffee, gela Philip F. Pocock of Toronto said ~ne, lh C sugar' and salt. Beat in egg yolks and here. milk. Cook over'medium ~eat, stirring constantly, until mixture coats spoon, 3 to 5 min. Chill until "Our contribution must be to it is consistency of unbeaten egg white. Whip give the Church a new image," egg whites until foamy. Slowly add 2 T sugar. said the Archbishop at a dinner Conute beating until glossy and· soft peaks are meeting. "We must break down formed. Fold into gelatine mixture. Pour into the barriers that separate nation 1 qt. mold. Chill until firm, unmold, garnish from nation, man from man, and with peach slices. bring all into· one family.
Breakfast: Orange juice, fried egp, butteNd 'toast.. beverage.:
tices .with which they com.e ill contact. We would be derelict in our duty if we did not point out emphatically the prin-::;I)les of Christianity in such practical, daily matters as business ethic. and morality,"· Theme of the convention wiD be: "The Catholic Layman in an Age of Chiistian Renewal." The convention is sponsored by the archbishops and bishops of the Province of Newark, which' in eludes all of New Jersey.
Newark App~~ls Zoninq Rulirl'1 HACKENSACK {NC)-Supe rior Court Judge Charles W. Broadhurst has taken under study here a suit brought by the Newark archdiocese to urcet a zoning ordinance in nearby Hohokus. The case concerns a 20-acre plot of ground purchased in 1960 by the archdiocese in Hohokus, a residential Bergen County community. When the archdio cese plans to build a school on the site, the borough council amended its zoning ordinance to bar all but Sunday schools from the area involved. . Frederick J. Gassert of New ark, attorney for the archdiocese, argued during a three-day hear. ing that this constituted illegal selective and spot zoning. In his brief, he also charged that it was an improper use of police power, was not in accord ance with New Jersey statutea afJ.d constituted discriminatioa against parochial schools be cause land could be made avail. able to the pubUc school district despite the existence' of the amended zoning law
'6
THE AW" ''"'~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 21,1963
Cites Catholic
Schools' Value
I~ City Areas
History of Johnny Shi!oh' Has Footnote fo'r Cat:'Dlics I
ROCKVILLE C E N ,T R E (NC)--":The moral education imparted by Catholic schools in urban areas could be seri
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno
:m one' of his happier forays into American folklore .'the1'. story Walt Disney has latelY portrayed for us, on television, of Johnny Shiloh. His rendering of it was in tlended for the children's hour, though it may be suspected that audience numbered as JftanT grey-beards as suck render, you damned little Yan Ings. It is, indeed, in Sir kee!" But it was Johrtny Reb who rolled in the mud and Philip Sidney's phrase, "A Johnny Clem who fought on·
tale whIch holdeth children from play and old men from the chim DeY eorner." But the ineffable ~alt'w version, . "s~d on a tlclionalized ac eount by James A. Rhodes and
:bean Jauchius,
published
III. 1959, owes about as much to fane yas to fact, and fails 60 ten the com plete story of the late Major Ceneral J 0 h n • :Lincoln Clem. The veritable his eory, actually, supplies a modest tootnote for Catholic Americana. For Johnny Clem, known as Ibe Drummer Boy of Shiioh and ~hnny Chickamauga, and who, lor an the world like an<>ther Peter Wanderwide, "wandered ~ywhere he would," was born end baptized in the Faith and ~e back to the Faith at the end 110 die. '!'he records of St- Francis ,de 8ales Church, Newark, Ohio, eeriify that on Aug. 13, 1851, he was christen~d John Joseph, the first child of Roman and Mag dalene Klem. His parents were Alsatians, recent immigrants, IlIld his father worked as a stone
..
for the Rock of Chickamauga, General George Thomas. Wounded, he narr<>wly es capted capture, and after the battle was hospitalized and fur l~ughed home. Later on he served Thomas again as a dis patch rider until the war's end. Commissioned by Grant Afterwards, some of the gen erals who had watChed the boy soldier grow, Thomas and Rose crans, sought to help him make a career in the army. Simon Cameron's interest was enlisted and the boy was sent for a cram~ ming session 00 a school in Indi anapolis, in preparation for West Point. But Johnny's educational lag was 000 serious; he could not make the grade at the Academy. Disconsolate, he wandered down to Washington and found a job asa government clerk. His 'plight was brought to the attention of Prl~sident U. S. Grant, however, lind in 1871 he was personally commissioned as a 1st Lieutenant. A veteran at 20, short but magnificently erect, he dreamed his dreams of mili tary renown. Desk Job Instead, it was to be the hum drum lu;e in the old army that has become an American legend. mason. With his bride a daughter of His mother died within a few Civil War Gene~al B. B. French, pmrs and the boy was reared by he saw service in m~ny of the • 'step-mother. With the excep post and oUtPOStll before being tkm of Johnny, all the family transferred to a Washington lI8l1lained devoted to the Church. desk in the Quartermaster's de Be was the maverick. partment. Might Make It After 27 years of this, now a Pol' a boy growing up In Mi<J. widower, he engaged in such An1-erica in those fateful years, ~ction as might be conjured up Lincoln's call to arms after Sum 10 Puerto Rico. during the ter must have set the blood tin Spanish-American fracas. There 8I1ng. Young Johnny was soon was nothing here to compare .tyling himself John Lincoln with Chickamauga. ad at 10 he had not the slight It was Johnny's misfortune as . . doubt that he could settle a soldier to have done most of the issue between the States. his fighting while he was in his "1'wice he ran - off with local early 'teens. booop levies, only to be reclaimed Returns to Church by his exasperated father and His second marriage, in 1903 8UJTendered by embarrassed of was with Miss Elizabeth SUlli~ !fleers. The Colonel of the 3rd van, of San Antonio, Texas, her. Ohio, johnny's first love, snorted self a daughter of an Irish lad that he ''wasn't enlisting in who fought for the Confederacy tant~" , as Johnny had fought for the To be sure, there were drum Union. mer boys as young in both Her Catholicity began to recaU armies, but Johnny was smarr him 00 the Faith once implanted :lor his age and looked puny. in him, though it was not until Still, someone suggested that .Johnny might just make it 'as a much later, long after his retire ment as a Major ~neral that Vummer. he made his First Comm~mion Convincing Drummer and was Confirml~d as a soldier The woods around Newark, in another kind of Army. that Autum of 1861, might well By the late '20s there was an have resounded to the rat-tat-tat added reason for his re-enlist. ol his practice. When the cam ment, for the only child of this paigns were staiting next year marriage had entered the reli be slipped off again, this time gious life as a nUll. .. the wake of the 22nd Michi Daughter Is Prioress gan, and no provost was sent The last decade, spent in San after him. A regiment needs a Antonio, was quietly reminiscent. mascot, after all, and Johnny's Honors came to him as a living drumming, if erratic, was con legend. Even at President Hoov ~ncing. er's Inauguration he was able to Fairfax Downey tells of the represent the Grand Army with J'Oungster trudging bra vel y dignity and fine presence. along with Company C, some At 86, on M~y 13, 1937, he times being given a lift on went 00 sleep with his rosary horseback by a kindly officer. • The men chipped in to pay him p.ntwined in his fingers. His widow still lives at the old his $13 a month until, in 1V!ay, 1863, he was put on the regular home. His daughter is Mother Anne of the Trinity, prioress of payroll. the Carmel of Our Lady of the Serves Gen. Thomas The story goes that he was Mountains, Reno, Nevada. beating his drum for all he was worth at Pittsburgh Landing JOLIET (NC)-The Joliet dJ. when a shell fragment ripped the drumhead. All right, then, a ocese has announced plans f-or musket would do as well, and a 300-student, $2 million minor Johnny had his baptism of blood seminary, which will be co~ structed adjacent to Lewis Co),. , at Shiloh. His day of glory came at lege, conducted by the ChrIstian ehickamauga. There on the Brothers in Lockport, IlL Com infantry line he was run down pletion target date • ~ :by a Confederate officer. "SIJ1l 1965.
Minor Seminary
PRAYER OF THANKS: Archbishop Josyf Slipyi of Lviv, recently released from Siberia, joins Pope John in the Pope's private chapel for a prayer of thanksgiving. The Archbishop is the only one of 11 Ukrainian bishops to sur vive Red prison camps. NC Photo.
Tax-Paid-, Textbooks Says Colorado Law Entitles Parochial
School Pupils to Equal Treatment
DENVER (NC) - A Denver ruled, he said, that "where plata. attorney said here that private words with a plain meaning are and parochial school students are . used by the Legislature, not even entitled to tax-paid textbooks ill the courts have the right to add secular subjects under existing a technical qualification or eJi ception,H Colorado law. T. Raber Taylor, a specialist \ Taylor said "no one would e. . in constitutional law, pointed to pect that Catholic textbooks, Colorado's free' textbook statute such as ~atechisms, that reflect of 1887, which calls for "free Revelation 01' the fullness ClIf textbooks for the use of alL" Catholic thinking would be sup Taylor, addressing the Denver plied by 11 public authority." Serra Club, said that sinee 1940 Seculal' Subject. "hundreds of thousands of dol But, he saId, there is no rea-. lars" have been spent by the why textbooks in secular sub state to provide free texts fur "homebound, hospitalized aDd 'jects could not be provided for public and parochial school sa. handicapped" stUdents. Noting this pre c e den tfor dents on an equal basis. "Our e h i I d r e R are bei:og giving textbooks to students Who are not in public school, he said drafted to learn the same secular parochial school student. are Iftlbjects u the children at entitled to the same- treatment tending the public schook." be said. "It is in the interest al our under the existing law. Dation as well as in the interellt. He argued that the 188'f ted of _our state that all children to book law does not limit its bene fits to public - school students day be given proper education... Taylor called for "diligent only. And Colorado courts ba'\llll education of our neighbon aDd eurselYft" ~ underline the issue al juatlee iDvolved in efforts to win equel tl:eatment foe an __
Five Boston Priests Become Chaplains '
NEW YORK (NC) - Franet. Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York and Military Vicar of Catholics in the U. S. Armed Forces, has announced that five priests of the Boston archdiocese have been granted permission to become chaplains in the A:nnecl Forces. The permission was receiged from Ricllard CardinJal Cushln& Archbishop of Bost'9n. The priests are Fathers Joseph B. Frates, Riehard T. McCue, JoIm. P. McDonough, Hugh H. O'Began and Richard L. Osterman. WheD they are commissioned, theM will be 62 priests of the Bostoa archdi<>eese serving as chap)aiDs. Cardinal Spellman said that 18 per cent of the chaplains who an diocesan priests belong - to- tba Archdioceses of New York and Boston.
ously imp~ired if such schools are not included in a Federal aid to education program, an expert on urban racial problems said here in :"lew York. Dennis Clark, executive sec retary of the Catholic Inter racial Council of New York, said the contribution Catholic schools make 00 better educational op portunities for minority groups in urban areas will be threatened if Catholics have 00 meet a financial crisis that could be caused by Federal aid 00 public schools only. Addressing some 800 parochial school teachers of the Rockville Centre diocese, Clark pointed out that "compensatory educa. tion in the heavily Negro neigh borhoods and in racially chang ing areas will, indeed, cost money." Crippled Bud.Jete "I am fearful," he continued, octhat without some easing of the burdens that Catholic parents and schools now carry, that the tremendous and strategic serv ices of Catholic education in the inner city areas will be balked by crippled budgets. "Indeed, the moral redevelop ment of the city could be under eut by subjecting ,Catholle schools to heedless economic in equities," he said. "Catholics operate the largest single network for moral educa tion in our urban areas," Clark continued. "We should keep this in mind when we address our selves to questions of Federal aid to education."
Postpone TV Show Following Protests PARIS (N~)-Franee'. st_... operated television network bM postponed pending a review a ,dram~tic presentation on the eonversion of st. Paul follow Ing a Catholic group's charte that the work is inaccurate his torically and theologically. Vox, an organization of Cath olic television viewers, had pro tested . that telecasting author Marcel Haedrich's ''The Way to Damascus" would be offensive to ChristiaM.
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2nd Edward Parr was the only undefeated twosome in the d~ bate. The two defeated Brooklyn Preparatory School of New York City, Calvert Hall of Baltimore, Marian High of Omaha, Arch bishop Stepinac High of White Plains. N. Y., Alvernia High of Chicago and Muskogee High of Muskogee, Ill. The team of Richard Perras and Brian Healy defeated Cardi nal Hayes High of New York City, Coral Gables High of Coral . Gables, Fla., O'Connell High of Arlington, Va., Chaminade High ' - -uf Mineola, Long Island, and Mt. Carmel High of Chicago. Lone loss was to Xaverian High of :-l'ew York City. For this feat the team received the Edmund A. Walsh first place trophy. Second place went to Muskogee High and third place to Lafayette High of Lafayette, La. Special Debate A special two-man debate tournament was then held with Miss Mulcairl1S and Edward Parr selected to represent Holv Fam ily. Miss Mulcairns was the only. girl on the best teams chosen ac cording to their records. Besides Holy Family, teams were chosen reoresenting Miami Beach High; Regis, Monsignor Clancy, St. Francis Prep, and Xaverian High Schools of New York City; Muskogee High and Jesuit High of Dallas, Texas. The team of Perras and Healy narrowly missed selection when it placed ninth. The Holy Family team de feated Miami Beach and Regis Hil!h. Regis was the team that last year won the National Cath olic Forensic League champion !lhip in Miami Beach. Parr and Mulcairns were finally beaten in the finals for the first time in three days by Jesuit High School of Dallas. Texas. The Texas school won the nod from three of the five judges in a close de cision, one of the three judges scoring the debate even on points and ranking but awarding the decision to Dallas without a difference in score. The Gaston silver cuo was presented to the Holy Family team of Miss Mulcairns and Ed ward Parr for the second-ranking iwo-man team.
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NOTRE DAME (NC) - The University of Notre Dame an nounces it has surpassed its $18 million, three-year develop ment program more than four months ahead of schedule. Father Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., executive vice-president .and treasurer, said the university to date has received $18,004,560 in gifts .and pledges from. 21,156 donors throughout the U. S.
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HEADS NEW SCHOOL: Father Eugene C. LeBel, C.S.B., head of Assumption University, Windsor, Ont., has been named president of the new University of Wind sor, an inter-denominational institution with which As sumption.merges on July 1. NC Photo.
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TH'" \!'!"'''''''' !):C'cese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 21,1963
Le~~
.~
is the Period for Spiritual Reading
Continuec! from Page One perusal of frivolous fiction and magazines, maybe we could even get up a few minutes earli er in the morning: however we do it, we can manage a little time for reading.
As Howard Smith, of the Bruce Publishing Company, pointed out in a recent talk, "10 minutes a day is better than JOO minutes every seven days."
And who knows :- this habit, begun during Lent, may easily prove so pleasant and profitable that it won't be laid aside with the coming of Easter. We may find we like the meat and potatoes of doctrine and Scrip ture as much as the dessert of lighter reading. ' What to Read What to read? First and fore most, the word of God Himself - the Bible. It's not impossible to read the entire Bible during the six weeks of Lent. Everyone may not do that, but everyone can read appropriate excerpts. The book of Isaiah from the Old Testament is most suitable for 'Lenten reading, and of course the four 'Gospels from the New
Testament. '
There is no dearth of modern,
at t I' a c i i ve translations' from
~hich to choose, if one shys away. from the traditional, ver
lIions of the Bible.
The Knox translation of the
LENTEN READING: Tots, teens and all ages on up
whole Bible offers new insights ·on every page and the Kleist can profit by spiritual reading during Lent. Michael and
Lilly version of the New Testa Susan Connor, St. Mary's parish, Mansfield, find that read ment has wakened many people ing aloud is worthwhile for both of them. to appreciation of the Bible for . the first time. with the opportunity for • Daily missals are a treasure Bible background references will trove of Lenten readings and certainly learn more and more thorough s p i I' i t u a 1 Spring especial emphasis should be laid about the place of the word of cleaning. To end on a practical note: on the Epistles and Gospels for God in Christian life." many wish to carry the spirit of Home Retreat the daily-Masses of Lent. New Lent into the family circle, in Many feel the need of periodic in the missal field and offering particular help in the field of retreats. Catholic high school ways especially' that will make Scripture is the St. Andrew and college students customarily an impression on small children. have yearly opportunities to "go A pamphlet full of suggestions ,Bible Missal. "An important preparation is apart and pray" but once out in to this end is offered by the' the world and especially if they Liturgical Press, Collegeville, that whic~ is made at home be are married, with small chi~dren, Minn. Titled "Lent and Holy fore Mass," notes an introduc Week in the Home," it's replete tion to this volume. "The Bible the chance to make a retreat is with suggestions to aid families Missal has been written with this . frequently remote indeed. But such harried Catholic can in making Lent a time of true need in mind. At the beginning of every season and of every stiIJ manage ,something on the spiritual renewal. greater celebratiqn, we have order of a retreat-with the aid given background material for of books. Two, not new, but still among the best, are "Reatreat study beforehand. "The missal has been named for Lay People" and" "The Lay
to suggest a way of using the mlm and His Conscience," both Bible to good advantage. Those by Msgr. Ronald Knox. Both BOSTON (NC) - A Catholie who will look up and study the provide the man of good will priest urged religious leaders to "go more than half way in meet ing the troubles of the alcoholic.· Fat her Georg~ Hagmaier, Sp~edier C.S.P., of the Paulist Institute Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken for ReligiOlls Research in ,New Contiriued from Page One Richard Cardinal Cushing, of San Francisc,o put it. He re YQrk City, spoke here before 200 Archbishop of Boston, thought minded that the fruits of the delegates at a conference on the the counCil "may mark a deci . council will manifest themselves p r 9blems of alcoholism.
sive stage toward Christian reo over a long period of years. The conference was attended
unification." Archbishop Celestine J. Da by leaders of several religiolH It is the best prepared council miano, Bishop of Camden, felt denominations including Rich ever held, Albert Cardinal that "the effects of this' council ard Cardinal Cushing" Arch_ Meyer, A.rchbishop of Chicago, will be measured not in years bishop of Boston; Episcopal declared.' He said it represents but in centuries." Bishop Frederic C. Lawrence of The first session of the council Massachusetts and Methodist "once-in-a-lifetime profoundly serious c;ieliberations of 2,400 was "a tremendous success," and Bishop James K. Mathews' 01 bishops from all over the world," the "debate opened up vistas Dallas, Tex. and that "most of the council never expected," Archbishop "The alcoholic parishioner Fathers left Rome with some John F. Dearden of Detroit re should be listened to so that he ported. very definite impressions." will not feel as though he has False Impressions Noting that "more than 2,000 been rejected," Father Hagmaier More than one prelate warned said. An act of kindness in meet. bishops from 135 countries were transformed into a purposeful against false impressions created ing the alcoholic more than half body, conscious of its aims," by some reports on the council. way, he said, "reasserts in a There was "much exaggera Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arch positive way that the alcoholie tion" in some accounts' of differ bishop o'!- St. Louis, also ex has not been abandoned by, peo pressed pleasure with the ences of opinion among the ple whose esteem he values." groundwork laid at the first council Fathers," Archbishop "When a clergyman walks session and optimism for rapid Leo Binz of St. Paul said. He into the house of an alcoholic he progress at the second meeting. observed that the voting on the often dispels by this one act a Liturgy PI'oj ect, for instance, need on the part of other mem Pastoral Spirit manifested "an' almost over Archbishop Lawrence J. She bers of the family to hide the han of Baltimore pointed out whelming unanimity." truth from those who can help," "Newspapermen striving for Father Hagmaier said.
that "the council has' shown in an exceptional angle" were all its deliberations and deci blamed by Archbishop Gerald T. sions a determination to exer cise that pastoral spirit which Bergan of Omaha for stories of
characterizes the Good Shepherd conflicts among the bishops at the council. "You'd get the idea of all souls." HUANCAYO (NC)-The suc
The council was "one of the that some bishops were wearing cess of. 2,000 Indian volunteer. most democratic meetings I have guns on their hips from some teachers in the Puno area has
ever attended-each bishop was reports," he contended. prompted the Maryknoll Fath
very free to express his opinion ers to extend the catechetical
on the agenda," said Archbishop system throughout the entire
Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washing altiplano region of South Amer WASHINGTON (N C) - A ica. '
ton, who added: "The bishops went away feeling they belong bill to provide that a portion of Under the' direction of Father
to the 'Church Universal. You the pay of Veterans Administra Thomas W. Verhoeven, M.M., realize that the work of the tion chaplains shall be -con national director of the cateche other bishops is your work also." sidered a tax free rental al tical movement in Peru, the lowance was introduced in the teaching system is being tried "We find ourselves in the posi tion of farmers after planting House by Rep. William C. Cra in other highland areas of Peru, and cultivating," was the way mer of Florida. Ecuador and Bolivia.
Urges More Aid For Alcohol ics
Action Next Session
-
Maryknoll' Extends Teaching Program
Aid VA Chaplains
'Love of the Soil Remains Strong Through Four Generations MONTREAL (NC) - Pierre Gujnois, 90. and his wife, Augus tine, 8,4, have instilled their pro found love of the soil unto four generations of their family. Now retired, they had the pleasure of a public testimony to their devotion when 27 adult members of the third generation of their family received the title of "Farm Family 'of Quebec, 1963."
That honor was conferred at the national Salon of Agriculture at the Show Mart here. The Guinois family was chosen be cause so many of its members have remained in agriculture. Pierre and Augustine' Guinois had 11 children, of whom 10 are living. All except two, who are nuns, are stiL working on the land. Today there are 72 grand children and 80 great-grandchil dren. Of the grandchildren, 27 are still making their living from the soil.
From the first 10-acre farm of Pierre and Augustine Guinois, the' family holdings have risen 'to 1,339 acres under cultivation. Another 700 acres of uncleared wood have been saved for the fourth generation.
Pope Honors Editor
WASHINGTON (NC) - "To gether in Christ," a marriage preparation volume consisting of 11 booklets which has reached the 40,000 mark in sales in three years, i!J undergoing a third printing of 20,000 copies, the Family Life Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Conference, which issues the volume, u. announced.
HONOLULU (NC) - Father Francis A. Marzen, editor of the Hawaii Catholic Herald, dio cesan new spa ,p e 1', has been named by Pope John a papal chamberlain with the title, of Very Rever end .Monsignor. Msgr. Marzen has been associ ated with the paper since 1952.
The Guinois family supplies the Montreal market with 66 per cent of the celery grown in Que bec and 50 per cent of. the bunched onions and radishes.' The family farms also grow an abundance of potatoes, cauli flowers and spinach. Pierre and Augustine came to Canada from Brittany in 1888. They were on' the same ship. He was 15 years of age and she was 9. Their families settled in Megantic. Pierre and Augustine were married in 1896, when he was 23 and she 17.
Marriage Volume
In dia-: Daughters of St. Francis FRANCIS and CLARE, saints of Assisi, once sat down to ea& together. Francis immediately began to speak of God ••• Sua..
t Eh denly the people 01 Assisi saw tile
L...1>S '- ~!J.I. monastel'J' and all the woods. around ·V 09' it in flames. When the frightened ~ ~. men ran up to throw water on the fire, ~, ,0 they found FRANCIS, CLARE and ~ ~ their companions quietly at prayer C(It around a bare table laid on the ground .., + .•. Thus by miraculous fire God showed His servants' love for Him. The POOR CLARES have always re mained faithful to the rule of their 21t Holy Fathtr's Missitm Aid father FRANCIS •.• Toda)' in INDIA, J in the village of KARANCHIRA (DiOo Jor tht Orimtal ChtmIJ eese of TRICHUR), the FranciscaD e1arist Sisters have opened a home for p&or girls. Sister AnnUII lliat. writes: "n " meant for the care 01 drls under 13 • • • To .tart with, we hope to admit 25 orphans who, if left unoared for, will go astray and lose their faith... • • . The Sisters have started buDding, but there is no more money; $3,000 wiD finish tile sehool and OrPhanage ••• Won't you help this Franeiscaa. 'feIl tare in INDIAf
A SOLDIER SPEAKS JtI'OIIl • Veterans' Hospital: "Because I was a soldier in World War
n and 'Korea, your appeal for B1.ANKETS FOR BEDOU INS touched me personally. Speaking for Jll)'8elf, Father, I would rather be hot, hungry and t:h1.nt)o than cold without sheltet' ... Enclosed please find my check for $60 . . .H '
1IRM words from. one who knows! For $2 you too OlD _ 1IIaaJIlet for one of our PALESTINE REFUGEES.
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DINT FROM MOTHER CABRINI
Mf ELDERLY ITALIAN LADY told _ tills IItor7 fI. II&. I'nnces CabrlDl. All a yo~ nUD, she was work~ alDOl1&' &he poor in New York's Little Italy. whe~ she went at'OUII4 . . . with a basket be.-Pug food. ' "One da,. she found me ClI'YiDc beeause I had no white dress ,... m,. FIRST COMMUNION. 'Don't WOrry,' she told me, TD find you one! ADd she did! A beautiful angel oostame tbe .WIII had kept from a school plu!" III our missiGll laDds today man,. another ehUd eo bUJ' DO eutllt for this Ve17 special d~. A $10 gift from Y!)U wiD help eIlfJ 01 them .. to the altar . . this da,. 01 dan appropl'i.te~ dressed!' '
YOU CAN HELP TODAY A $10 FOOD PACKAGE will feed a PALESTINE REFUGEE family, for one month; $1 • month (3c a da)') to one of our MISSION CLUBS aids orphans-ORPHANS' BREAD: lepers DAMIEN LEPER CLUB; the aged-PALACE OF GOLD; build ing schools-BASILIANS; furnishing chapels-MONICA GUILD; educating seminarians-CHRYSOSTOM CLUB; training sisters -MARY'S BANK. SEND US YOUR MASS INTENTIONS. The offering you make, when a missionary priest offers Mass for your intention, supports him for one day. Jll your will, kindly remembe..- 01.11" associatiOft. OffIcial title: THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIA~IOiL
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19 It's Tourney Time Again; Jim Duffy N.B. Tech's Backcourt Ace 'N.E. Catholic To~ight THE ANCHOR-Dioce-se of Foil River-Thurs., Feb. 21, 1963
By
J-a Kineavy
Officially it's an over and yet it hasn't really begun. So it is with scholastie basketball which has concluded league
play and now finds itself i~ the incipie.nt stages of tourney
competition. Bay State commenced actIon on Monday; N.E.
.
Catholic gets underway tonight and Tech is scheduled Tech qualifier. Always an ex
to launch proceedings next citing club to watch, the Blue Monday. Anyway you look at Wave has drawn Cathedral High
Attleboro Native Has Eye on Coaching Career. By Lynn Kennedy
Coach Jim Flanagan ealls
him a typical Attleboro High-·
School basketball player aggressive, sure - handed,
good driver, and real clutch at of Boston, Cat hoi i c Central the foul line. The only trouble it, it's a basketball buff's delight. champion, in the Class B open- is that Jim Duffy, a 21 year old Pairings in the Bay State Tour- ing'semi-final, Saturday at 3:45. senior backcourtman, won't be ney caused just Only four teams are entered in around to help New Bedford a bit of eyethis class. The championship Tech win basketball games much lifting in the contests in all classes will be longer. The 5-10, 165-pounder n e i g h b 0 rpiayed Sunday. . is due 'J be graduated in June. hood early this This is the third consecutive "That," says Flanagan, who wee k. Bristol year that the Parochials of New has had his share of top-notch C 0 u n t y and Bedford hav.e been invited to the hoop combines, "is out loss." N a r r y lines Catholic tourney. In 1962, they .. Duffy, a business major with the w P. recrossed were eliminated in the semi. accent on accounting, is heading and recrossed finals. 'I'he season record of 14 for a teaching career and, he as member and 3 indicates the strength of hopes, some basketball coaching c 1 u b s w ere this' quintet and makes its a on the side. slotted from A strong contender to be the con "He should do well as a to C. Classificaquering finalist. . coach," Jim informed, "for he tion evidently was made purely on the basis of male enrolment From all indications this knows the game well, and has the skills to impart to kids. Just with Somerset and' Dartmouth could be a record year for par elevated to the' A ranks, while ticipation In Tech. A total of 66 the same, I wish he were coming BCL schools Fairhaven and teams had qualified by the back because he's the type of North Attleboro were relegated weekend at which time there player that doesn't make many to B. still remained two additional mistakes out there. And he Old Rochester and Appone- probables. Defending champions passes well, so well, in fact, that quet, both Narry, were assigne<;l in all classes are in the fold, I like to have him in ther~ to to compete in Class C which is though, as mentioned, Memorial crack a zone." the ranking accorded that loop will eschew defense of its B Physical Trouble in Tech. By the same token, title. Losing finalists in all but Yet, truthfully, Jim's career Bristol County is an A circuit C are also back, hoping, no at Tech has hardly been mete by Tech standards. It gets rather doubt, to grab the brass ring oric. It has only been this past confusing along about here. Suf- this time around. season that the ex-Attleboro fice to say that BeL representaRep res e n tin g South High standout has shown signs tives stepping down into Bay eastern Mass. .in Class A will of coming into his own. Not that State B should find the calibre be BCL champion Durfee, run he lacked ability, Jim, unfor of competition much to their nerup Coyle and the Crimson of tunately, has been beset with liking. New Bedford who played an in physical troubles. When he ar Coyle-Matignon dependent schedule. The area is rived in New Bedford the Fall Monsignor Coyle High of not involved in B but will be of '59, he came as' a much Taunton hits the tournament extensively listed in the C and heralded playmaker. .Flanagan trail ton i g h t against strong D brackets. A trio of Narry actually planned to team the Matignon High of Cambridge in dubs, champion Case High of freshman in the backcourt with an 8:45 Class A quarterfinal Swansea, Holy Family and his ace "Butch" McNamara, he N.E. Catholic Tourney· contest Prevost are in C as are Wareham thought that much of him. The at Law r e nee Central gym. and Mansfield. idea was that Duffy could profit Matignon and Catholic MeNo less than four Cape teams, from playing alongside the Tech morial are '63 co-titlists of the headed by undefeated Falmouth, great, then take over the reins Catholic Conference. Memorial, 16-0 on the season, have quali the following season. The scripf incidentally, will seek this year fied in D. Others include Yar didn't follow quite that way. to pull off what Winchester mouth (14-5), Bourne (12-6) and Here's how it read: came very near doing in Tech Harwich (13-5). Norton; Tri_ The season started like any in '57, that of passing up defense County runnerup with a 14-4 other for Duffy. He had looked of the B title to go for all the record, rounds out the list. sharp in practices, was shooting marbles in A. Heaviest concentration is ex- and passing well. Then, he de Matignon which fell back into pected to come in Class D where veloped abdominal trouble. His a tie with Memorial after an· up- .19 schools have already made game fell off, and to play was set 54-53 win by St. John's Prep the grade with Ipswich an addl. to play in pain. Finally, Jim was on Sunday may pass up Tech tional possibility. . out of school, sick. He recovered this year if the Headmasters' Easter Tourney that Spring, only to undergo Association 'sanctions participa corrective surgery that Summer. tion in the Washington, D.C. Applications are now being ac Catholic Tourney. In the event' cepted for the 5th Annual Easter Hopefully he played the last the Cantabrigians are able'""lo CYO Basketball Tourney which half of the '61 season. Given the accept the invitation, they'll be Is scheduled to get underway' on green light to play, Jim slowly the first New England team ever Sunday, March 23. As in the past rounded into form. But he was to participate in the· tourney. there will be two divisions of too late to be of too much help Coyle alid Matignon are far competition. Players who s e to the Whalers. More Bad Luck from strangers. They've met birthdays fall on or after Jan. 1, several times on the gridiron- 1947 are eligible for Junior di. For hardluck Jim, the '62 cam this is the school, by the way, vision; Senior division eligibility paign looked like it. He felt which produced a couple All- dates from Jan. 1, 1943. Entries strong again and Flanagan was East grid choices last Fall in the are limited and the deadline is happy. The season began and persons of Art Graham of Boston March 17. The entry fee is $5.00 Jim looked every bit the player College' and Don McKenna of payable with the submission of Flanagan knew he was. Then bad Dartmouth-and it was in this rosters. luck dogged Duffy again. This very tourney in 1959 that they Additional regulations require time his left knee began acting last faced one another on the that all team members be from up. The condition worsened and basketball court, Matignon win- the same parish; those involved Duffy was on the sidelines once ning 61-43. In Diocesan championship finals more. Examination revealed a Comparative season's records .are ineligible. Trophies' again growth and it necessitated sur leave little from which to will be awarded on an individ gery. choose. Coyle at l5-2 has a slight ual and a team basis with mem A determined athlete, Jim edge over Matignon which, at bers of the first two teams in Btayed in there and battl~d all this writing, and with a game each division receiving awards. the way, eventually earning the with B.C. High pending, boasts a The Tourney Director is Paul starting shot that had' eluded 16-3 mark. The Warriors moved Borkman and entries may be him his first three years at Tech. strongly in ~arly season play addressed to him at 403 Anawan annexing' the LaSalle Invita- Street, Fall River. Legion Expands tional and defeating highly-re garded Brockton. The loss of 6-4 NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Areh Says Shared-Time Ron Richards through midseason bishop John P. Cody, Apostolie complicated things but the club Administrator of New Orleans, Proper, Desirable has regained momentum and is has authorized formation of a HARTFORD (NC)-ConnecU again at full strength.• second curia of the Legion of. eut has had shared-time educa Mary in the city. New Orleana , BolT Family-Catbedral tion programs for the past 30 ~ now has more than 40 parish and Also rep r e se n tin g South. years and a state official de college groups of the Legion ol eastern Mass. in the New Eng scribes them as "both proper Mary. lands is Holy Family of New and desirable." Bedford, runnerup to Case in At present in the Hartford Narry League play and Class C archdiocese, seventh and eighth grade pupils of 31 Catholie schools in six cities attend publie Honor Editor schools for industrial arts and GARY (NC)-Father Edward home economics classes. Joaeph A. Charpentier
Reg. Pharm.
F. Litot, editor 01. the Gary edi Theodore Powell, public in TEL WY 6-0772 tion of Our Sunday Visitor, haa formation director of the Con been elevated by Pope John to necticut State Department of PRESCRIPTIONS the rank 01. domestic prelate Education, says that the prac Ittl ACUSHNET A VL
with the title of Right Reverend tice "obviously serve. a public NEW BEDFORD
pupose." MoDSi&nw.
BROOKLAWN
PHARMACY
JIM DUFFY
Now, he has only three games . slightly under a 10-point game left of a varsity eareer t~t average. But he doesn't shoot that much. At the foul line, started out so promisingly. For Duffy, who captained the where Attleboro products have Jewelers his senior year into always excelled, Jim notches around 80 per cent. He also has the Tech Tourney at Boston Gar den, there are no regrets---':no earned two letters as a member bitterness. For him, there is only of the New Bedford Tech soccer the future and brighter days team. In ,high school, he played baseball three years at both ahead. Ile plans to be married second and at short. His senior il1 August to a pretty South At. tleboro Miss-Patricia Fanning. . year, Duffy hit .301. He fore-: His main problem is to get the went the diamond sport at Tech: teaching job he wants. So far With only three games left to there have been interviews and play - against Durfee Tech, extra oourses at Bridgewater Bridgewater and Stonehill, Jim State to get the credits necessary would like to end his college to teach. playing d~s on a winning note. When he isn't at Tech, he's Tech needs two wins to wind up home with his father, John the campaign playing .500 ball. Duffy of 252 Main Street, At A true team player, Jim doesn~ tleboro, and his two young~r care how many he scores as long brothers and sister or seeing as Tech and he can go out ..• Pat. In the summer he's kept winner. Somehow, for Duffy, t.t'a busy working at the Balfoui long overdue. Jewelry Company's plant in At tleboro and on the golf links, wherever he can find one. Of his golf score, Jim is. quite proud. He shoots in the SO's c'on sistently. Good StUdent
He's a good student, mostly B's to show for the rough pro gram he's taking. On the court, using his soft one-hander from around the key, Jim has hit for
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 21, 1963
PRESS MONTH ON THE CAPE: The Women's Guild of St. Pius X Parish, So. Yarmouth, is pro moting the Catholic Press with its own exhibit.
~
Conscience of Man Cardinal Mcintyre Stresses Natural Law
Governs in Field of Communications
HOLLYWOOD (NC)-Natural mind, will and intellect." law applies to the field of com. The Cardinal warned against munications, James Francis Car. violating moral principle and dinal McIntyre has told 2000 at milking inroads into the con . the motion' picture industry's science of men. There is great 12th annual Communion break responsibility in com~unica tions "and no mystery in the fast. The morality of communica ethical principles that should tions is not determined by indi govern them," he declared. Yidual taste and interpretation, "Yet," he added, 'man some but by the natural law, the Arch times deliberately violates or bishop of Los Angeles empha abuses them. But the basic law of God, the natural law, does not ltized. "The morality of communica cease to exist in the mind or con Clons is governed by the same science of man. Beware of in fundamental principles govern roads into the conscience of' ing man's nature and essential man." • selationships to God, his fellow man and the universe," the Cali fJOrnia prelate asserts. "His acts of will in communi eations as in any other field .hould be decided by his knowl. WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep. edge of what is right and wrong;'" Hugh Carey, a member' of the the Cardinal declared. House Education Committee, has. Conscience of Men .. First determinant in making said the administration's Federal this decision, the Cardinal said, aid to education proposal is "a "is the natural law, a law uni . bill that soars and then sinks." The New York legislator, the versally prevalent among all men, estabiished by God in man's committee's most vocal sup porter of Federal aid to all types of education on elementary and secondary levels, said that the administration "ran its bill up the flagpole. Not many -salute~." Carey, named to the commit.. Among Catholic Press Month tee for the first time this year, Observances in Taunton has been said the all-purpose educatiol,l a series of talks before women's .measure "soars in its provisions guilds by Merrill A. Maynard of for higher education." He said the Catholic Listener Library. its treatment of education on Mr. Maynard has explained this level is on "a non-discrimi the work of his 'organization, natory basis." which provides Catholic listen But, he added in a statement, ing material to the blind, shUt.. !'the bill sinks into the same old ins, and others unable to par. well of non-equal aid" on the ticipate in church devotions. pre-college level where it pro Catholic books, articles and poses Federal assistance only f()r other spiritual material are tape public grade and high schools. recorded by Library meml>ers "To private school children it and mailed to a list compiled says: 'Stop the world, you have with the aid of interested priests, to get off,''' commented Carey. and Legion of Mary and St. Vin. cent de Paul workers. Mr. Maynard notes the need of volunteers to assist with the Library program. Those inter.· ested can contact him at P. O. PITTSBURGH (NC) - Ninety Box 4, Taunton, or by telephone, per cent of the principals of 94 VAndyke 3-3783. Jewish day school~: favor Fed. Further information is also eral aid to the' secular portions available via a pictorial display of their curriculum, a Jewish now on exhibition at the Taun. educator reported here. ton Public Library. Joseph Kaminetsky told the 15th annual convention of the National Association of Hebrew Day School Parent..Teacher As NEW ORLEANS (NC)-More sociations that 87 per cent also than 10,000 persons phoned Dial favored Federal aid for develop ment and expansion of facilities. A-Movie here in 1962 for Na Kaminetsky, director of Torah onal Legion of Decency ratings of films. An average of 1,738 per Umesorah, a national society for sons each week, or 248 each day, Hebrew day schools, drew his dialed the number sponsored by figures from a survey of the the Church Supply House of heads of 94 schools. There are, New Orleans. The calls averaged he said, 275 Jewish day schools enrolling about 50,000 pupils. one every five minutes.
Federa I Aid Bill 'Soars, Sinks'
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