03.09.61

Page 1

Congressional Leaders. Battle President Over" Federal Aid to Parochial Schools

The ANCHOR

Opposition' to President Kennedy is rising throughout the country with the insistence that p r i vat e

&~t~d·'·ii~·~~i~··Fitth~r~·-

To Serve in Bahamas

schools on the elementary and high school level be permitted to share in the proposed aid to Bishop Paul Leonard Hagarty, O.S.B., of the newly education through long-term established Diocese of Nassau, in charge of 750 islands' in' Federal loans for construction. Congress has before' it a bill the Bahamas, has welcomed the Fathers of the Sacred · from the President proposing Hearts for missionary work on the· Island of Abaco. The Federal aid to public grade and high schools but no assistance for missionary provincial house private pre-college schools. The is in Fairhaven. Three years President has also proposed a ago Bishop Hagarty conprogram of loans for all types of (:olleges and Federal scholarships ferred the Sacrament of for students who would be free Confirmation in several parto select their own institution. ishes of the Fall River Diocese, An Anohor of th, Soul, lfuN tIM rlnn-8T. PAUL The college they attend would making known at that time the · get a "cost of education" grant great need of priests in his misfrom the government. The bill sion islands, especially at Abaco. Last November in Rome, Very to implement the· proposals has · not been introduced in Congress. Rev. William Condon, SS.CC., The President has stated that provincial of 'the Sacred Hearts PRICE ICc © 1961 Anchor $4.00 per Year he opposes a loan program which Fathers, received permission would aid construction of private from the Sup~rior General to Second Class Mall Prlvlleg9'1 A"thorlzod at Fall River, Mall. . and parochial schools under the send missionarIes to aid Bishop college level as being unconsti- Hagarty. The first Mass was offered on tutional. Abaco in February by the Rev. McCormack House Majority Leader John Francis Larkin, SS.CC., and a W. McCormack of this State has second Mass was offered by the said that he would support a Rev. Damien Veary, SS,CC., the move in Congress to amend the two Sacred Hearts missionaries bill to include a program of chosen for the new assignment. long-term loans to private Thirty-five Negroes and wihites schools. He said, "There is cer- attended the.first services. BISHOP HAGARTY tainly no question involved in Great and Little Abaco extend the Federal government making over 100 miles with the south to have Benedicti()n. FatrJer long-term loans at reasonable point 50 miles north of Nas- Larkin made a censer from II rates of interest for the construc- sau. The total population is tin can -and Father Veary made tion or renovation or the repair 4,000 and there 'are 500 Catho- incense from a combination at' dried roses and herbs., "It of private schools. We're helping lics. worked out very well," they reThe two priests have rented a Our educational system, and . certainly when we put through small house. They report the ported. '11he missionaries have been a bill to help. the public schools roof sags, there are no windowQ it has an unintentional effect and tomato crates serve as fur- given a whale boat with inupon the private school system." niture, "but a start has been board motor well suited to the made and the future for too island waters so they may visit Not Unconstitutional smaller surrounding islands and Msgr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, church looks promising." director of the Department of , All their supplies had not ar- •cays. They have been aided , .,';,.<::' \_;~Edu"cation of the NCWC, the rived with them so it became enormously by two families of American Bishops' voluntary co- necessary to improvise in order ]a., persons. _ .....:..-.....;__IIII!MI.IIIi· e"=(.'iO< ••• ,lt-:.'.~i.' _ -_.._- .. -~.~ ordinating agency; has pointed S1'ONEHILL COURSE: Rev. Thomas G. Brennan, out' in an 'interview which is of Stonehill College, North Easton, is conducting a · printed in this issue' of The 8tonehill course at Holy Family High School, New Bedford. Anchor on page three that "The courts have never ruled against Shown enrolling for his course on "Introduction to. Sacred the constitutionality of loans to Pontifical High Masses for Vocations will be celebrated Scripture" are Mr. and Mrs. Francis Donaldson of Monument · institutions. As you know there Beach. . . ' is a college housing loa~ pro-. at 10 A.M. Monday, March 20, at Notre Dame Church, Fan gram in effect at· the moment. River; Tuesday, March 21, at St. Anthony of Padua Church,' What we are suggesting is a par_ New Bedford, and Wednesday. March 22 at St. Mary's Turn to Page Three Chur«h, Taunton, Rev. John Mary Academies will attend the J. Hayel:l, diocesan director Massat'Notre Dame. The Proper of vocations. aIUiounced to- .will be sung by the Monsignor The. Most Reverend Bishop Prevost High choir. Rev. Bernard day. .,. ' With the recent acquisition of the Taunton Inn to serve . has, granted . a dispensation Sullivan; assistant at St. Mary'a, The entire student' bodies of Norton, will preach. from the laws of fast and ab• a guest home for the aged and the infirm, the Diocese Monsignor Prevost High School s1inenee on Friday, March l'l. Students of Holy Family and of Fall River now has accommodations in its homes for the and Dominican, Jellus-Mary, st. Anthony's High Schools, New S,. Patrick's Day. elderly for one out of every 365 Catholics in the. DioCese. Sacred Hearts and Mount st. Bedford; Sacred Hearts AcadThis is the highest ratio of emy, Fairhaven, and Bishop Stang High, North Dartmouth any diocese in the entire will attend the Mass in New 8Ountry, and its ratio is betBedford, at which Rev, Patrick tered by only one archO'Neil, acting superintendent of diocese, the Archdiocese of Stdiocesan schools, will preach. Louis, whioh has accommodaThe Proper will be sung by SL . ' Au~iliary Bishop' Gerratd today set ,the mark for pastors in all parishes of the tions for one out of every 306 Anthony's High choir. ' diocese when he announced that St. Lawrence's, parish in New Bedford has achieved its Of its Catholics. . Turn to Page Eighteen The Fal,l River Diocese con- quota of. weekly home-delivered c~pies of 'this diocesan newspaper, The Anchor. Within ducts the Cath()Uc Memorial few subscriptions of their quota 011 several occasions in past years, the faithful and Home and Bishop Cassidy Wing for . Chronic III in Fall River clergy put on a spirited drive with accommodatiof\s for 244 this year to lead St. LawLOCATION PARISH PASTOR guests. Sacred Heart Horne in rence's into, the quota bracNew Bedford can care for 195 ket set for every parish by Complete Family Coverage guests, and Our Lady's Haven Most Rev. James L. Con.the Most Reverend Bishop: Our Lady of the Isle Fr. Daniel E. Carey Nantucket lin Fairhaven for 140 guests. nolly will preside at the The New Bedford parish and It is expected that the TaunDouble Pari.sh Quota Legion- of Mary's annual Immaculate Conception in' Fall ton Inn, when renovated, will River, both with more than 450 Sacred Heart No. Attleboro Fr. Joseph S. Larue Acies ceremony at 2 :30 P.M. provide accommodations for· paid weekly subscribers, riow Sunday, March 19 in' St. Mary's Exceed Parish Quota. more than 125 guests. only the Sacred Heart parCathedral. Preacher at this year's An important aspect of these trail Fr. John J. Brennan Chatham ish in Fall River in weekly Holy Redeemer ceremony will be the Rev. Franhomes is that while they are bome-delivered copies of this Our LadyofMt.Carmel Fr. Lester L. Hull Seekonk cis Regis, SS.CC., Director of eonducted by religious they pro- newspaper. Fr. Charles P. Kellagher New Bedford St. ,Boniface Regina Pacis, New Bedford cenvide work for many lay people Ft-. Alexis C. Wygers Acushnet St. Lawrence's is the first iarge St. Francis Xavier ter for Spanish speaking people. _nurses, therapists, attendants, Fr. William R. Jordan Central Village The Acies is a Consecration ehefs, kitchen help, domestic New Bedford parisb to achieve St. John the Baptist 'Bishop Gerrard . New Bedford, Illeremony in which all Legion~ . workers. In the homes already quota-sales. "The good people of' . St. Lawrence aries, Active and Auxiliary, reFr. James E. Gleason Falmouth in operation, there are over ,170 St. Lawrence's now have their . St. Patrick's . new 'their fealty to Our Blessed .Fr. Leo J. Duart Prov.incetown lay people in the full time em- sights set on the lead established St. Peter's . Lady. Members of the 19 Praeployment of the Diocese. When by their brethren on Nantucket Parish Quota sidia of the Diocese will particithe Taunton Inn goes into op- Island where The Anchor is Fr. Finbarr McAloon West Harwich pate in the ceremony includuing eration, this number will be mailed into every Catholic home · Holy Trinity Fr. Edward IF. Dowling Fall River . Legionaries from Fall River. in the parish directed' by Father Immac. Conception' increased substantially. Somerset, Taunton, New BedFr. Felix S. Childs Fall River Sacred Heart 'r.he homes, then, play an im- Daniel E. Carey." ford, Acushnet and Fairhaven. portant role in the economic Fr. Edwin J. Loew Woods Hole St. Joseph's The Sacred Hearts Fatbers, The 19 Praesidia have .186 aclife of a community as well as who direct several parishes in St Mary's Fr. Cornelius Keliher Hebronville . tive members, 456 adjutorians .,providing vital care for elderly Fr. Christopher Broderick So. Yarmouth the eastern section of the diocese. St. Pius and 4,540 lay auxiliaries. The dtizens. And the Diocese of Fall are among the 'most ardent sup- St. Roch's . Fr. George S. Daigle Fall River report of the various activities River is blessed in having such porters of The Anchor. Four •Fr. Gerard J. Chabot So. Attleboro St. Theresa's during the year will be read • hi~h ratio of accommodatioDB during the Acies ceremony~ Tun to Page Twelve b' its diocesans.

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 9, 1961

Vol. 5, No. 10'

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Schedule Three 'Pontifical Masses for Vocations

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Diocese Ranks 'Second In Care fo~ .,Elderly

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Auxiliary Bishop. Sets Pace for Parishes In Weekly Home ·S~les of T·he Anchor

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Acies Ceremony On March 19 In Cathedral

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of Fall RIver-Thurs. Mar. ' .9, 19.61• Of ' ) . :-. ~

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.. Bishop Cha.mpioa· Of Newman Club

-- ,. Ordinary R,equests. Sl.o'pport F'or Bishop$;1 Relief Fun~

LAFAYETTE (N C) Bishop Maurice Schexnayder was saluted as a "champion" of the Newman Club movement at a testimonial dinner . marking the tenth anniversa. of his consecration. Thepresented Bishop ofwith Lafayette, La., was a plaque

Beloved Sons and Daughters in Christ: Three things are asked of us in the holy season .of Lent. We should pray more. We should do penance. We should give help to those in .want. This last is a fulfillment of the corporal works of mercy, which bin<L every true' Christian to feed the hungry and clothe the _'. naked.

, How well this is being done through our Bishops Relief from the National Newman Club program you all know. But there. are some, not too well Chaplains' Association by BIshop Paul J. Hallinan of Charleston, . ' h disposed, who would like to suppr~ss suc . charity, since. S. C., before an audience of more they do not imitate it, and turn' the whole program over than 500 prelates, priests and to government offices, even though that would cost a m i n t l l ! e m b e r s of the laity. of money. It is not because they love the needy more, but -"He has beep. our champion,· because' they love us .less. .Bishop Hallinan said. "His lasting renown ID the Newman moveAs go~ Christians, aware of· the plight ~f our neighbor; ment has been his concern for and conscious of our own duty to' do aU' we can, we should the Gatholic student in the seonever be freed from giving. Neither, for that matter, would, ular college, that we do for theso those who benefit from the solicitous dispensing of our ~:::~t:n~~~ :: ~~l:a:.~, we CaD almsgiving, want to have it any' other way~ . Bishop Schexnayder, former , The Catholic . Bishops .·r¢lief' .proghun", .staff~. .: by". ' episcopal moderator of the New. NEW BEDFORDITE:Paulist' seminarian Wilfred' man Club movement, won ·supdedicated' laymen, sisters and priests, is· in touch with all·· .'. " ,'. '. . " 'port for the cause .amon.g. hI, Brimley, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.ilfred Brimley, New Bedford, .. manner of need throughout the world. ~t .is heartening.to " . . fellow bishops, "emphasizing aJ,. know that over forty million men, women and children in 'prepares for 'Seminarians' Conference on the Non-Catholic ways that the Newman movesixty-four lands have been fed and clothed this past year, Apostolate, held yearly in Washington under Paulist spon-· ~ent is .the twin sister of the through the munificence of Catholic people in the, United sorsnip to familiarize members of all religious orders with· . Catholic college, not theugl¥ . Church's mission to non-Catholic America. .stepchild," said Bishop Hallinan. . States.. It is good to know that the image of Ameri~ in . '." present moderator. . these needy nations is that Of' a good' neighbor eager tQ "iT" An" 1ft' The accomplishments of Bishop ,lend a helping hand to families unable to help themselves. t:J lra~tolT$ .0 Sch~xnayder were lauded also . ~ • 0 #'. '. L !' ' ": .~,'. by Bishop Charles P. Greco of There is no better way to express·, our true American ~arij~OB'tlg TOU' ~fi'Q1\ ,Alexandria, La.. tradition of brotherhood than by giving support to··the· l3OISE' (NC) ~ Boise's Bishop :said, . "These conditions'" are: . . ' . '. . ' .. Catholic.Bishops relief program.··' . . . . ' : . .Jain~s·J. Byrne has called upon n~i.therparty~xcludesthe};lossi-· Legion of Decen«:y . . Your charity is solicited. for' this vitally imporl~nt . his pasto'rs ~'to veto any sugges- b1l1t~. of ~arrlage;th~ company-' .. The foll()wing films are to be . Cau'se, next Sunqay. You will l;>e generouS! know; reaiizing .tion of teaching· ballroom danc':' k.eep~ng IS not a p~oxlmate ?cca- . adtled to the lists in theIr'· l'&' d I .. ", , , ing . to mixed' gr?up~ of grade: . Slon· of mortal .sm f?r one. or spective classifications: . th at every 01 ar goes a long WaY and gains trem~ndouslYsC,hOObboySand.. gIrls.' . " b~th,. and marrtage" IS. possIble. Unobj~ctionabIe for, 'general ':in value in the amount of good it does. Whatever alms' we"'All' the stllt~mE!n~' made. in. wlt~ma year or so,. " . ..' patronage: Absent Mi~~ed::Progive . will help us round ,out and, complete, the p~rposes of .favor ,of 'these.~dancmg p~ties' BIShop Byr~e saId common fessor (recommended as supe~ the Lenten season. We, have· the assurance of ,our' Blessed' are ·made., by 't~e' m·otpers. of the sense dictates. '~these c0!1ditions ior; ~holesome entertaiil.lnent); Lord that "whatever you do for 'these, the least of" My children,'-' the, l3~shop said,. "It ~ak~ any. pushmg of,.our g~ade:' Bernadette 'ofLourdes (Superior brethren, you do for Me". Such is the' measure of Chrl's't's " seems that it is the mothers who school. chIldren towards ~arly . religious drama); I Was A ·P. . are, doing the' encouraging' of. dat!-Dg and thus early, r.s'ieadY·· . ish Priest; Watch Your Stern~ judgment. May we all be secure in the knowledge that we these parties.'" company-keeping are. not only Objectionable in part for' aB= . . . . foolish but morally .dang~rous. . Blood and Roses (suggestive . b.ave tried honestly to live up to it. In a pastoral letter, Bishop 'c rt on! C h . . ' tu' d"tu t' 1. Faith.fully yours in Christ,' ' 'Byrne said: "If grade school e a l y, nOt at ohc 'father oo],s ifmimgt' an slli abllOns; 1 .. . .b . '1 It t th 1 th . or..mot h er· wan s to awaken an c. ass ca Ion app ca e on y to .' . . oys ar~.,.e oe~se ves, ey interest in sex in their little son' prints shown in U.S.A.) . -L) .~ .//ar~.mo~~~:~::.t~d 10 sp~ts a~d or daughter before God's time," Separate classification: Never ~"'iJI.~~o$,,-'~ II I games ~ 1 ~lr age. gra ~ Bishop Byrne said. Take Candy from a Straiiget: '. ~ . . school ,gIrls are left .to them'. . (deals with .molestation of smaR '.' . . ' ~elves,~ey a~e' ~.ore mt~re~ted Mass Ordo"'~ childi'en and, aithough trelitecl RIver 10 playmg WIth o.ther girls of without· sensationalism, . could ,." " '.< ~helr ,0~P. age. It IS true, h~wFRIDAY-Friday of III Week of' Jtave harmful effects updn yotmg ever, that both .l,)OYll and gIrls,. Lent; '111 Class;. Violet.' Mass and uninformed unless' 's&om' y" ~IO'. ·,,~an be. preJ?atur~ly: ta,u~h.t,~o I:>e '. ,.. Proper; No Gloria; "Second pllnied ·by .parent'. Advertising v I~ . 1Otereste~ In the .<!tqer ;s~x. ,.. \. C04e~t Forty Holy . Martyrs;~ .c;u;ri.es warning:. "'Notice to ,Going &teady.. , ',' no Creed; Preface of ·Lent. " parents: No child will be ·admitBishpp ~yrne,also·,warned'· SATURDAY-Saturdayof m.. ,tedunl~l!Saccompanledby.you." BELMONT (NC) -Comedian sl'le'.'headed 'south with' Sisters 'agaln'sfearly dating and "going Week I;.ent. III Class:·cViolet·,·, . ' .J: Danny Thomas is a man who can 'Julia and MarY-Frances in' July;" steady." He remarked':. "Early,· .. M:aSs.Proper; No Gloda ·or, saY."no"-bllt it's a shaky, al- 1960. She contrived' to fence "iit 'dating 'can only\.l~ad .to early," .C~eed; Preface, of Lent~, ", most inaudible negative when a Mike Tamer in a hotelJobby·and· ..steady. company-keeping. (that is, ~UNDAY"'7'"Laetal:'e~Sunday, IV . Qun is on the listening end. later observed, "I'm a~raid, ,he dating. the sanie .•.person ... aiL or..• Sunday ofLen~. I.Class. Ro~ "At'least that's th~·~~y it was' had'no'choic'e:hutto irivlte'\is to . most of the time). Early, steady,. (.or, Violet. Mass ,Plloper;. No .. "whElD - Sister Mary Michelle his suite." 'company-keeping,l~ads to.early.• ' ,Gloria; Cre~d; I?reface·of'Len~.. sought the help of the TV' and ',' The singer:..comedlan .was·ner" . marriage.,,'. ?r,;worse still! t~-: ... M,ONDAY-~onday· o~ IV-Week, c . :'11 night club' star to help 'raise vous when .he met the nuns)oo' the, commlsslon,of·mortal sms.. .0f.Lent. III Class.. VlOlet"Mass... funds for a convent' and other asked what they wanted: Sister The Bishop said three condi: Proper;' No GlorIa or' Creed; facilities for the Sisters of Mercy Michelle said: "When' we told' tio,ns must be fulfilled before one Preface of Lent. . here in North Carolina. him he' 'said he was~rrybut .has"the right to "gO, ·s..teadY." He .Tl;JESDAY-Tuesdayof IV Week '.' . .' ". ..., , . .' ... '.' " '. ' . of Lent. III Class. Violet. Mass ·.Proper· No Gloria or Creed' LIke thousands of others, ,SI5- he c~uld~'t, tllat w-e dIdn't reahz.~", ,rail. R~ver'" Fo,;;es't'e'rs ter Michelle well knew the story how many such requests he had If" • I P f ' f Lt' , NATURAL GAS of panny Thomas' devot~on to t~ tu,rn ~o,:,,~,. And ~ told him be, 1St. Anne's COl,lrt 604, CatholieWE~e;:~D~Y en Wednesday of. IV Week of Lent. III CIa St. Jude - h?w he. credits t~e dldn t.reab~e ~p:w muqh w~ werli!.Ord.er of Foreste!'l?;Fal! ~iver,' BUZZARDS BAY "patron of the ImpOSSIble" fqr hIS hcounthmgd0thenhSl~ tacceptance and will hold a Spring froliC' Slitu.r':'.· '. Violet. ·.Mass-Proper· No Gla:~' GAS COMPANY' success as a showman and how ow ar IS ers were praY-day, April 11 at Amvets Hall,·'· ria 0 C e d' P f ' f L t" Hy~nnis"';'Spring' 5-1070 he built a:'s~rine to the saint out t .. ing.""··, " " " : ' ,.:...f...,...•. .,.•" ., D'anfortl{' Street. AJ;thur .Boulay .' TaUR;D;ye~ T~~r:~:/' o/~V' Buzzards Bay-Plaza 9-410 of appreCIation. _ H e d g i n g ' "'. is'tick-et'chairman, aided by Mrs,' Week of Lent. III CUlss. Violet.~" ., . ;. ',.'."'_. ·No Choice .,'. D~nny. Thl)P,1asobse.rved,.the., .J3eJ',Qa(iette Brown, co.;chairman. Mass Properi 'No Glori'a or ! And like Danny Thomas arid ,.~.un.ll,fin~eri,ng,the~.be,ad.s,while ';l'he,.,planning committee will : Creed; Preface of Lent.. .BOTTLED ,GAS his.manag~, Mike Tamer, S~ster ,he ~alk.ed and !>egap, to hedge:,-·, . ~eet.,,·f611owing,·,··.the'···regular "",' , _. t " .LIGHTHOUSE, \ I: Michelle' IS. of Lebanese extrac- ,.he,had jl Y-llcatiop coJAlng,.,up;)n". meetipg of the court at 8 Mon-"" ', .. '. GAS COMPANY r·.· .. tion. So when she learned:the ,4p,ril and. if he cpuld geUhr.ough .,day; ,night, March, ,J.3 ',at .. St.· '.. entertai!1er...~as to, be in Atl~nta, his' .TY filmipg in time,.,may.be-,., ,An.ne's, Schoo!.".:,':'; '.' armouthport-Forest 2~3898 ~------~-..... iJhpossible," . ~B1,1t it y,roJ-lld. ~.pra~ticaliy ,~ ... ~ 1,I·s'h·"S' i..·ft~. ,i, t' .0" WILLIAMS PROPANE . lie. said. "It _Ylould, 1m..., "" . . GAS CO., INC. .' "'i8ke a' miracle, but see if 'you can . Taunton members' of Magr. JOSEPH M. F.DONAGHY falmouth -Kimball 8~5·15 get a place anyway." James Coyle Council 82; Knights' owner/mgr. . ,'. fORTY HOURS' And,liK~ th'e 'lirie of'a ~ong he 'of"Cohimbus, will'present'theIr" 142 tampbell St. NELSON L. P: .... DEVOTJON' sings, -"miracles can happen." 13th annual three day Irish Vai'New Bedford. Masl. " ., GAS CO, INC. . The Sisters hired Ovens Audi- iety Show- at 8 Friday and SatHyannis":"Spring 5·1190 torium Charlotte.-·'They're. urday nights, M.arch 17, ,and 18. ,WYman 9·'6792 , : ; Ma·r.:l2---HO'I~·F~inilY, Taun:. : " . '. ton.,' •... ..' . expecting a turnout of some 2,500 .anc~ .. at. 2:35) .Sund~Y af~~n,oon". ·HEADQUARTERS FOR . SUPIERIOR FUEL CO.' -·COLONIAL AND '.' .. 'Qur ~ac\Y's:H.aven, Fair- . ~persons to 'donate $25 each on ~ar~n ,19. in. Taunton High· Wareham-Cy.pr'ess '5·0093 April 22 for a Danny Thomas ' School ~uc;1it.ori1:1m. ,ThollJ.~s J.. TRAD ;. .',haven; , , •. show. Sister'Michelle said she '.. Hprgan. ,is. producer.... ' '. )TIONAL F~~NIT~.RIE ':,:::'M~i.q;~stM~r; t~unton. ..'antlcipates"IittIeirouble in rais~~,,' . : ' .. '. " .. .:.. ,,'/' .~:Ptir:. ~~d~, :.9£ ;~erpetual ing $50,000 from the show.:.:' '\ ',::" . .,:".' :~,~ lIelp; !N~w~B~qford.·: ., . . . . .... ;..-' _ .• , .•, __ ;, ·,Miii.. ~St;~::JQsephi· North 'Ncecrol@9Y ,'J ." :;~"j'. ~. :~}.bigIiti)li~\·': .;".",: :. J. The ANC~OR Hsts the ·an-,.""o. ,E5pirito,S~~t.o,~~lI River: niversary dates of the deaths ;' ;t~~·:~.:I~: t . ~:;,.-L:~·.-:~·' .': >~ ~f priests who have ser.ved, the~"'" '; '~pr.:' 2---St:~'';:~J1i[lf~e, New "·"iFa.J1' 'Riirer"jjiO'ce~e; siBce its"";;;'" ··,,:···:;f,t,~!l"~.4fC>..rp:;l'; ~'~<:; formation in.. 1904 ,with ·the ->;.'. :i~t;~~~er;':OigJ.tWrt. intention that the faithful .will , . give them a prayerful rememrOE' 'ANCHOR . ~bran'~•. : , . . ' ......" Second-Class mail privilegell 'authorized MAR 16 , at Fall River. Mass. Publ\lhed., eV'l.r7 . ". , ;, Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue. 'Fall ';.. Rev. Francis J. Maloney, S.T:L.". River. MaBl!o. by the Catholie Press ,of tho 1957· Pastor St Mary No Attl<>-· Dloeele of ·'Fall·Rlver. SubserIPtloli'>prlee '.'" ,." . . .......,'. " , , . -=; b.v mail. poltpa,id $6.00 per yeu, boio.·· .' ',:. • !...-...

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Msgr. "HochwaltExp'lains Bishops' Position On Federal Aid to Education Bill

THE ·ANCHOR....:.

3

Thurs., March 9, 1961

Following is the transcript of a television alid radio press interview of Msgr. Frederick G. director of the Educatio,n Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, Washmgton. Msgr. HochwaU expressed confidence that Congress will permit private schools to share in Federal aid to education througb a program of loans for school construction Questioner: Monsignor Hochwalt, President of us to serve in education as best we ca~. And Kennedy has said that there isn't any room therefore we would like to be challenged to be for debate on this subject, that the ConstitupaM of the program. ' tion clearly prohibits Fed-eral aid to parochial Questioner: So how would you like this in a schools. Now, you disagree; will you state . practical way! your case? Msgr.: Well, I think that loans at reasonable Msgr.: I don't disagree, necessarily. My case interest rates, such as in the college housing hinges around the question of loans· to school program, made available to those Catholic childl'en,' and I'm not suggesting, nor is anyone dioceses which will want to participate, should else, that something unconstitutional be done as be extended as an opportunity to our people, far as Federal aid is concerned. The courts have Now, we talk about classroom shortages.• never ruled against the constitutionality of loans Gentlemen, may I tell you that the shortages to institutions. As you well know, there is a are in the private 'Schools, not in the public college housing loan program in effect at the schools. I made a spot test just a .few days ago moment. What we are suggesting is a parallel .in ten places around the country, and discovored pcogram for elementary and secondary schools, that literally thousands of boys and girls whose which to my mind is not unconstitutional. Now, parents want to choose for them an education it's not in Mr. Kennedy's bill. We're suggesting it in our schools-our parochial school8.-'-are not be amended to be in Mr. Kennedy's bill. going to be able to do it because we cannot Questioner: Monsignor, does the statement provide the classroom facilities. We think we that was issued here at the National Catholic should be able to. If the crisis on the college Welfare C"nferenoe reflect th~ opinions of level can be met, why can it not be met on the all the Catholic· Blshovs in the country'! elementary and secondary level! Msgr.; It's presurn~. to. That's the reason the Questioner: Monsignor, do ,.ou want to set National' C!,Itholic Welfare Conference is organthe record straight on this one point! The ized. The Administmtive Board of the N.C.W.C. Bishops have been interpreted generaU,. as is deemed to speak for the Bishops of the United being a little put out at the President and Stiltes. his views. Msgr.: I think not. This is a professional question Questioner: A're you piannlng an organized. and should be treated as a professional question. campaign to propagate your Vtew on this There's no room in this for feelings or sentiment. question through church sermons imd articles This is a thing to be argued out as any other in church publications! political question can be. There are no hard Msgr.: I guess I'd have to question the use of the feelings on my part and I'm certain there isn't word "organized." Naturally, we will use our on the part of anyone else. educational resources to educate our people on a point of view. May I make one thing clear? What Questioner: Monsignor; I understand that the Bishops did in their statement yesterday wall you will testify at the Senate committee to respond. to a felt need and a set of urgent hearings! Can you I'ive us some Ideas of the requests from our Catholic people woo have said substance of your testimony? to us in this organization: "Gentlemen, where do .. you stand on this important issue which the .. Msgr.: Yes, I think I'd like to exp'lain to Congress again as I have in the past, something about our President has put before the country?" And the school system; its size, the fact that there are Bishops naturally are going to answer that. And , five million boys a·nd girls in bf.1e secondary and . where do they stand~ They told you in four good elementary schools, who are first class citizens. points in the summary by Archbishop Alter. I'd like to explain to them, too, what our form Questioner: Have YOIl hlld reaction .. of education is. I'd . like to put before them the thl\t stand? . . fair claim we think we have to long-term, lowinterest ra'te loans, computed according to the Msgr.: Y~s: indeed! My' i>pone has 'been rmging; formula of the college housing program, for letters begm to. pour in. It shows that once again. elementary school.! and for secondary schools; . the schools, all kind.! 'and type8.-'-private imd public-are near and dear to the heart. of the Questioner: Monsign~r, ,.o~ h~ve ask~d Con~ . American people. They are all interested' in it. . gress for this before-for this lone-term loaa .And, my:' mail is' always targ~, anq 1 expect it to amendment, have .7011 nol? . . be larger. ..... . . .' . ". . ~gr::LaBt year.. . Que~~io~er: MO~igtio;, 'Presldent . Kenned,., .. Qllestioner: And ,.ou have been workllllC .. as· the first Catholic 'President, has taken a . ·this field for several years. Do 70U feel • •• . position opposed. to .that of ·his Church.' Now. ,~me .Cat~olicll havealr.ead,. said, that his Msgr.: Several!' I'd say seventeen!· position was based on political reasons. 'How· Questioner: Do. you feel that yoar ehancetll do ,.ou feel about that? are good this year! That you ma,. be OB the Msgr.: Well, he's a citizen as well as a President. . verge of achieving this! He's entitled to his point of view. He has to' make Hoch~alt,

MONSIGNOR HOCHWALT

Education Aid

Continued from Page One allel program for elementary and secondary schools, which to my mind is not unconstitutional." Leading Authority One of the country!s leading authorities on the United States Constitution, Harvard Law School Profcssor Arthur E. Sutherland, a Republican and an Episcopalian, has disagreed with the President and has gone farther on the matter than the Catholic Bishops of this country who have criticized Kennedy's stand. Professor Sutherland, whose book on the constitution are standard law schools texts, has said: "If I were president, I could think of no clear constitutional 1'HE HIGH I .. INE: Emreasons to veto a bill aid Ing phasizing the critical shor~ church and private schools'." The age of Navy chaplains, five professor maintains that federal "circuit rider" priests travel aid to private and church schools is constitutional. He said that by helicopter or high line to there is a pl'ecedent for aid. to minister to more than 17,000 private schools in the· federal' m~n in destroyer branch. school lunch program, bus transMsgr. (Rear Adm.) George porta tion ,for parochial school Ros~o, Chief of Navy' Chap.. pupils, and the low-interest loan, program for private as well u lains, '~ays the Catholic public universities. Church' is the only major He said there is no legal difdenomination not filling its ference between 'helping conquota of chaplains. NC .truct a building; helping top~y a teacher or helping buy text,Photo. 'I bOOks. Bishops' Board DRY. CLEANING The Administrative Board of and the NCWC, through its ChairFUR STORAGE man, Most Rev. Karl J. Alter, Archbishop of Cincinnati, has made four points in its discussion of the matter. The Archbishop moral judgments and so do we. His moral. judgMsgr.: Let me say "Yes." Yes. I do. bas said: mentsare made on the weight· of the evidence 1. ':r,he question of whether or 34-44 Cohan net Street Questioner: The fMt that Mr. Kenned,. III and he has to keep it in balarice. . not there ought to be federal aid President is not .rel.ted! . Taunton VA 2-6161 We speak of something called .the "COmnl<ia. is a judgment to be based on good.... One decides what is best for the country, Msgr.: It j.s not related. Our position i.s the result objective economic facts conof a long educationa1 process through which ~ nected with the schools of the .01'. what is best for citizens in the country; I think he has arrived at his own judgments'in his own bave gone. country, and consequently Cathfair way, and I think we have· arrived at our olics are free to take a position Questioner: Monsllrnor, you have opposed own fair judgment in our own fair way. Thet ~ in accordance with the facts. ibis before but you've' never before taken a are at the m0l'l'!ent seeqlingly on opPosite poles 2, In the event that there i. position that you'd be against an,. bill, if is more due to the interpretation of what i. bein« federal aid to education we are this isn't inelud.ed in It. Do 70U think the fact said than to the actual facts, because I'm not sure deeply convinced that in justice thai a Catholle Is Presid.ent has I'lvem you that Mr. Kennedy and my organization·here are Catholic school children should an opportunit,o to take this lIiOI't 01 posibe given the right to participa~e. talking about the same things in the same way; tion ••• He d·idn't mention l~~ns; we do. 3. ResIJecting the form of: Pllrticipation, we hold it to be stl"ictMsgr.: No relationship. I wouldn't want to CoD,..; Questioner: Do you ·think &b~ be Ja fa 8011fledrlcal ly within the framework of the neet it at all. fllcit with Iiis own 'faith! constitution that long-term lowConuCictOl" Questioner: Well, wh,. do ,.~ now take the interest loans to private institu-. M~gr.: Not at ali! position thai you are opposed to the biil tions could be part of the federal Questioner: Monsignor; Just wbat "'ould ,.otI completel7 unl~ this Is included in i¢! Do aid program. It is proposed, 180 Liberty St. like from' the Federal I'overnment! you reall,. mean that ,.ou'd 4'ather ace·_ therefore, that an effort be made '. Msgr.: Recognition of the tremendous contribu. aid to education bill than one that doesn't to have an amendment to thi. tions of a very large 'number of American citizens. also provide loans. for paroehlal 8(lh~s! FAU 1tV!1 effect attached to the bill. We' feel tha·t when' you talk aboUt an emergency, 4. In the event that a federal Msgr.: N9t necessarily, But we think this is a fair or when you talk about excellence, that's "acr~ aid program is enacted· which opportunity to present our point Of view. (Pause) OSborne 2-2143 the board." When we have a military urgency . Thank yQu! . excludes chiIdn:in in pl'ivate no one singles out one group or another. We all schools, these children will .be serve. I think Mr. Kennedy's challenge is for all' Questioner: Thank ,.ou, Monsflrnor. the victims ot' discriminatory' legislation. There will be no alternative but to oppose such discrimination. ENJOY THIS DELIGHTFUL DUBLIN (NC) - Permissiom land. The Gaelic or English verfor use of the vernacular in cer-si~ns may be used at the distain rites of the Church in Ire- cretion of a priest in adminster.N~, WAY TO land is a generous. concession of. ing parts of certain sacrament.s, the Holy See to the c~untry,. a such a3 Baptism, Matrimony. and CONTROL WEIGHT Extreme Unction. But the Latin A new President of the LegiOll college president said. h~re.. Father Cathai McCarthy, pre&- langua~ will lie retained in the' of Mary Diocesan Curia will be NEW ident of Holy Cross College ill· Mass.. elected 'at Sunday's monthly Clonliffe, said the Holy See had Bishop JamecMacNamee '01. Curia meeting held in St. VinArdagh wu .chairman 01. the eent's Home" Fall River.. The shown gl'eat interest in the proposed changes submitted ·by tIM .. . . apecial election is being held to Irish Bishops. .~: eomm,tUee that. was set up three fill the vacancy caused »y ·the A COMPLETE BAlANCED' He said the H91y·See h8d ~ rea~. ago, ~ p'repare th~ new death of Mortimer J .. Kennedy. 900 CALORIE DIET ' Nominated at 'last month', amined th~ ~raft of changes verr. . ritual.. . meeting for the office were the carefully and had made;maar . In .a n article In the. IrIsh Eccle. ' '. • ..shcal record, BIshop Macfollowing Legionaries: Jarilell Namee said: "Each bishop will Lamb, St. Paul's, Taunton; Cio- IUggeshon.. ... , . . ; decide. the m~nner and extent tilde Nason, St. Mary's, Taunton; . SWANSEA' Gaelk V~otI to which the privilege of using Thomas F. Allen, St. Ja~es, New A trillngui.i ritual hu beea the trilingual ritual is to be Bedford,and Joseph Reilly; st. 15 Hornbine Road - OS ..."·...601 ·approved for the Churcll ill u.- availed of in Ilia diocese." . Mary's, Taunton.

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Bishop Walsh Heads NCWC pepartment

THE ANGtrl0.~TrntJr.s., IM:lIr-co 9, 1961

WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop Emmet M. Walsh of ,Youngstown" Ohio, has been elected episcopal, cl\airman of the Legal Department 01 the National Catholic Welfare Conference, , Th.e selection was made at the annual Spring meeting of . the NCWC Administrative Board just held here. The action filled • vacancy on the 10-member

.Jtec:tolf ,COlYl,t.ioJn,s

About [&ih~emes D.n V(ooa.tions NEW,QRLEtANS (NC)lParenitsshould neither- .disoow:~ge :a chHd';s reliigious, lv.ocatian Jlor IDI]T to ''',pus1l'' ,bim row ,reijgiou's lime, .~ $eDi-

board, created when Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of 51. Louis WM elevated to College-of en.dinals in January, Bi~hop Walsh was assistaDt episcopal chairman of the Legal Department from Nov~ber. '1959, until his election as ehaiPman. He also served as chaJrrnaa of that department from 1941 til 1953 and from 1955 to 1959.

the

maI:(Y meetor :said lhelle. iW:arning jpaTents ,against ~beilng too ,eager '.to rha:v:e .a :son .become II ipries:t, iF-ather ,John tM. McQuade, ~S.M., ·said: . '''\When ,-a 'boy 'Ul .not ,doing wen in ,the 'seminary, 'we :priests :hav.e 8 ··sa~ing,

'"Well, -his 'mother had ..

the ",:ocation.' " IOn .the :other :hand, Father' McQuade said, "~iI1ter'£erence" with:a vocation .\7y .parents ,is just :as ,bad. .Even .at present, he said, many souls cannot';be J!eached lbecause ther.e ,are 'Dot eDOl~gh 'Pl'iests. JParents' Institute ':F.a'ther 'McQuade, rector ·Of Notlle . Dame seminary hene, flI)oke ,at .a parentis' institute conducted :!:?y the ·education ,departmentaf Loyola .universityin coqperation with ·.the Council em Ca:lI~olic 'Schools . Cooperative Clubs. :;He lsaid lparents "must not .look 'upon :a lboy~ 'entering ,thesern!nary.as,an iruevocable'decision:" ''':Ilhez:e ;will ,be many ,y,ears belove ,he can be .ordained ;and only ;a 'small 'percentage of those ISABELLA BREA,iKIFAST: 'Present at 'Who 'eriter continue until ;ordinaBneakfastof .the Dau;ghteI:s of Isabella, tion," "he said. Mistake "~MaIlY ,a Jiine :boy w.ho lhas

been ·in ,the Iseminary ,a rgood mal1Y sears decides ,that the priesthood is not his Yocation.lt is '8 'deci&ion ,that is awfully 'hard , to make and ,it ;requires.a great deal Hifcourage. Ide lusually 'becomes .anoutstanding.layman." 'Fa'ther Mc~uade urged :parents 'not to ;make the 'IIlistakec1f thinking o'f ,theJBrotherhaod ;as 11 ~way\o'fllifelfor those 'Who could not :make the' ,gnade las lPr.iests. "The "Brotherhood is ,a vocation in lits<own 'right," 'he 'said.

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,ChGnge New ,tEdut.ation 'P10'n

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the 'Communion Benedict Circle No., ,,6i1, No, Attleboro, :ar-e, left to right, guest speaker Robert 'Y. 'McGowan,K:SiG., 'Chairman Mrs. James P. Harris, and Regent Mrs, Linwood J, Stone.

:D:n:toleir\o:bt:e :B:ur:den, 'To Rise'

,:g'f,:"P'r,iv'o'te ;Colleges . Fail NEW Y01RK (IN'G~- 'Tm 'educator who spearheaded ·unsuccess'f.t:il "efforts to..grant ..large.:scalestate aid to New York's :priv.,ate .con~ges,sees the revision of his proposals as "unfertu:na,te.'~,Dr.,Hen:rw Heald, president·of Ford FOtJnda.tion, r~peated his warning also meet academic :standa~' to <> ;that, lunless ,priv.a:te .oolleg.es be establisned by. the;State Eduare aided, they Wlilldecli;ne -cation Department ,and must pay in importance and the fin- '$200 ,or more 'a year'in tuition.

anc'ial strain'on the' ,taxpayer Undergraduates.wl1ose parents' and "to 'replace them 'wiJU 'be income totals less than $1,800 '''intoleral>ie:'' , -."Ou.1'd get '$300 a year from the 'AI;BANY (NC)-,Gov. Neloloft Dr. Healdseryed ,last .year :~, :state; ,studerih whose parents' !Rockefeller has .aClded ,n~w fea'Chairman of a three-man ,oom- .income is· between$l,aoo and tures -to 'his "scholar; incentive" mittee 'appointed 'by 'Gov:'Nelson,: :$7;500 would gef'$200,a year and ,program. Rocke£e'fler" to ·study. the ,needs, 'those / with a,n income· ~f over 'nhe 'principal ,change is ·the of New York"s institutions '01 '$7,500 would g~t$Ioo. 'scaling of "awards lrom~:$100 to higher education. These l'evi,;ions have brought $300 'to every undergraduate Tht: committee .proposed 'that ·an end of opposition by ·the State 17esident ;attendjng college ·in .pri'vat:e, lrnCluding chorch-related :Oouncil ·of 'Churches, a .Protest,New ;Yonk .State, depending (on colleges be given state 'funas, ''[1he . :allt ;body. 'and. by the' New YoIic: the 'income 'of the student and ;amount 'would :have been 'based Board of-·Rabbis, tw~ principal liisparents, on the ,number ,ofstudentli ,esch 'opponents of the first proposal, ''Fhe original 'Rocke'feller.pro'General SuPport ,;Posal called for the awarding institution graduated. Controversy " ,Dr. Heald told a iLuncheon of o'f'$200 .to ,an u ndei;glladuate' resllhe ~pl'oposal 'Set 'oM' a 'eo'Fitro-the New Y.ork Chamber '0'1' CQmident, . independent 6f his family's financial 'standing 'or .his versy ,'about 'using ;tax ftl~ds ito· '!Jrerce . that the Governor':s proaid ohurch.Jrela't-ed :insfftutiions; ,gram, will be 'of 'assistance to .'academic , recOl:d. . Tbelopposiition 'Was led by Prdt- many -students and ,should have 'U nder Ithe new tpJ:oposal ;aft ' gen'eral support for that rea~, undergraduate would ,get $300'~ 'estan:t ~na lJewiSh,groups. 'When 'Gov. "Ro<!kefeJ1ler, alfter 'But, :he added, ','!Icomiider it year if 'his' parents' income ,studying the report, made ,his; unfortunate that in, the clamor . totaled less than '$I,aOO; '$200 a year if it 'was. lbe-tween$l;aOO 'recommendations, :he ,prqposed ~ -about 'church.;related institutiOll8 .and:$7,500 and $1'00 if it was over fIat ,grant to ,all residents 'of the and the {)P.poSition. of some peo'$7,500. Graduate students in ,the :state 'enrolled ,at New York ·col- -pie. ,to spending any public funds .lowest df the thl1ee income' leges' where 1the 'amInal .wrtion -in 'PTiva'tely controlled colleges, was~5(J0,or'more. :the 'basic'o'bjE:ctive 'of" strength.brackets would receive $400' in IDnisJprop6sa'1;also'lllet 'Pl'&teet- 'enirrg allot the .State's higher i.their first· y~ar~df:stud>y<and '$860, 'ant ,imtl.lJewish '1"esistance. )It 'W8S <ed.ncafionrilsystem. has been :each additional year. ... ''Fhe. new ;programwould dis- ,desor.itMmlby them :asevasien ',largely lost.'; 1'\ contri'bution 'by the state ·tributeabotit '$Iffl million 'a,year- 'of- ,constitlitiomil 'Pl"dhfuRiom' 'in 'state financial assistance to ,against ,aiding .reHgiousinstitu- may be the "decisive 'difference" dn IpreServirig theSe in'stitutiona, ·,eollege ~anQ lUriiversity 'students. tions, 1t. wa's 'supported bY-the New he' 'said.' , 'State Catholic, Welfar.e "If . many priv:ate schools," h. WorkshQP for'De.a·f . York commtttee ,as 'Proper :aid'to ·Stu- ,added, '''were to 'wither away .dents· ,in imeetling \tuition 'costs. . under financial 'strain or price ILi&ted Rev,ised Proposal themselves· "out 'tifthe market WfA'SHING:JJON (NC) -Gal'Gov. 1R0ckeIeller tben Jl'eViUled wi.th soaring: tuition r~tes, toe ,launet c(jlleg~"will sponsor·tIl his -·proposal. It now calls.. for ·a· 'burdenon the taxpayer ~n ·supithre~day vocational 'n!habili'tation 'workshop fforCathcilic Re- 'slitlrng :sca\le of Igl'ants ,to stu- .plementing them with public . 'ligious ,and laymen engaged in -dents; depending ·on their income colleges .and universities w~uld 'iWoz:k 'for the deaf 'starting next 'or 'that,o~ the 'Parents. '·Theymust . ·:be ·int(}lel'able." . iWednesday, March 15. Gallaudet College is'the w:orld'S'only ',institution Of' higher learning for . ON (CAPE COD 'the ,deaf. The workshop ,will be conducted under:a grant from 'the Do'S. 'Office ·,of IVocational 'Rehabilitation.

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Sc h:&laf.sli'u,p i Prog:ra m ST.MA:R'Y$ COLLEGE, Calif. .(NC)_Students of St. Mary!s 'College have orgariizei:l:a "Stuilent Heritage Fund" to 'seek· .:funds from business for scholar·ships. Goal Ithis ,year .is ,$1;200 ffor two full tuition 'scholarships.

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, Prlcn shown In this ad QuaraMted thrD Sat., March 11 • off..lI.. It AlL A» lllper """keu IlIlbl1 .........111 " .Iclllllr

._ _. ..


THE ANCHOR:-Dlac8se of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 9, 1961

. flying. and is. shown, in right picture~ with Sister Louise doing social wort for Catholic Relief Services, whic'h is; supported- by Bishops' ReHef Fund. among people of· Kontum Province, Indo-China.

HOSTESS TO SOCIAL WORKER: After flying with refugees from Shanghai for several months, Miss Marrion McGillicuddJ', in left picture with TWA hostess Diane Lietz, retires flight cap ~fter nine yeats (}f

)

Lit·urg ist Asserts Mass in· English Step Forwa rd MILWAUKEE (NC) -:Permission to offer the Mass in English would be a s~p forward but would not solve all liturgical problems, a liturgical specialist has declared. Father Frederick W. McManus, president of the national Liturgical Conference, said "If tomorrow the Mass would' be celebrated in our language, a step forward would be taken, bl1t· it would not be a cure." It would not guarantee attention or piety any ~ore than ·the English in devotional services guarantees piety, devotion and attention," hE:! stated, Graver Need "English in the liturgy· would lay bare an even graver need., , an understanding by us all of liturgical concepts, of the Biblical turns of thought and expression found in the. liturgy, of liturgical symbols and liturgical algns." Father McManus, a professor of canon law at the ° Catholic University of American,Washington, D. C., told a lecture audience at Marquette University that use of Latin in the liturgy in this country is a "barrier to understanding, a barrier to °piety and • barrier that will be gradually lowered." He noted that Latin is not really essential in the liturgy, .ince some other rites of the Church use other languageso and the vernacular is being used increasingly in mission territories. Vocal Participation The Liturgical Conference head differed with those who express reluctance to incr,eased vocal participation by the laity in the offering of the Mass. .He attributedO this reluctance to "a fear that some precious moments of silent prayer at MaSs are being 'sacrificed to vocal pariticipation," He conceded ot hat "the Church's liturgy is primarily blterior devotion," but stressed °that this devotion is "necessarily made manifest outwardly, externally, through word and song and gesture,"

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8Qmething is terribly wrong. ' -__ By There has 'been a slip somewhere. . ' .REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA Before the presidential election, the country heard a Catholic University great deal about what would happen if a Catholic' were T 0 DAY - Thursday 01 tIM elected to the nation's highest office. Why, it was made Third Week in Lent. Noris there· .any true surrender.to the Father very cle~r, tha't .he would take dictation fro~ the hierarchy without a mutual surrender to and. especially in any matter that could possibly benefit his one another, without ,fraternai Church. His bishop would,in full pontificals, deliberate on love. A ritualism which cover. what was good '£or the Church and the I'resident would a lack of cqre for the poor and dispossessed falls' under the conaccept this. worthy's decision,ana push for this as the law demnation of Jeremias. The sacof the land. ., ramental life and its ritual acts Well, 'a' Catholic was elected to the presidency; and should rather' express man's dednow there is a hassle in Washington about Federal. aid .to ication to this brotherly care. TOMORROW - Friday. of the education. Third Week in Lent.. Converts But something has gone terribly wrong. For the preparing for Easter Baptism, country is being treated to the sight of President Kennedy's as well as the whole Church, maintaining that loans to private schools would be uncontoday learn of the central im'portance of faith in the Christian stitutional, while the hierarchy of the country is pressing life. Moses lost the promised for these as legitimate action by government. land because of a momentary Where is' the dictation to the President by the hierlack of faith and tr.ust. And archy? . " J.esus instructs the woman at the well that without the response Of course, all will be made clear any day now. Those of faith (in spirit and in truth) who predicted such manipulating of the President by the God himself cannot communicate bishops will come out and in just as clear tones as they to man the living waters of hiIJ 'inade the accusations will admit they were wrong. They grace. SATURDAY OF THE THIRD will certainly be fair enough to face up to· the fact that IN LENT. The contrast . WEEK they made a mistake, that a Catholic can be a'good citizen between human justice and the and a good President. .justice of God is made clear in It will be interesting to read their pronouncements. In the Old Testament reading of the, sto!'y of Susanna and in the .the meantime, ~hat with, .the .Federal. aid situation ? The. President has given his c'Onsidered opinion that long-range and low-interest loans to elementary and secondary schools The forgiveness new life under private orp'arochial auspices wpuld be \lnconstituthat Christ offers and by means of . , . his, passion, death ahd resurrectional.. Other professio'nal politicians of equally distinguishedBy Msgr. George G•. ~iggins tion apply equally to the innoqualifications, like Majo.rity Leader John W. McCormack, Director, NCWC Social Action Department cent and the guilty, given the see no constitutional difficulty at all.Mr; McCormack ·says Aboqt . a year ago' the" U:S. Air, Foree" issu~ (and faith requirp.d to accept them. it is simply am'atter of helping the' entire ~ducational shortly thereafter withdrew from' cirCulation) a controFOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT. program of 'the country ~ . ' .. versial training manual which alleged that communists have . Christianity is a religion of joy, not of sorrow. Long faces and A leading Jewish' educator, Profess~r Will Herberg,' infiltrated some of the major Protestant den~minations and.' crepe-hanging have nothing to Professor of Judaic Studies and Social J;>hilosophy at Drew the i r' over-all federation; "Communist i~fluence within do with Lent, the season of University in Madison, New York, said·in 1957: ··Justice The National Council of. the Am"e'rican churches is near Christian reneWal, recomit.ment and reformation. The'Les- . · is entirely -on the .side of those who call for public support C hurc h es. I n commen t mg on the zero mark" at the· present. son tells men to be glad beCause to parochial and other religious schools performing a public ·this manual, I expressed the time . in Christ mankind is free. Free function. So,. also, . is the practice of other democratic opinion, in a column dated April 'Patent FalsehootJ,' of the' 'slavery to things and the I have said ·that Mr. Roy's. small and stifling universe which eountries, 'where almost without exception religious schools 4, 1960, that the' Air Force had 'anti-communist· credentials are . result from a Christ-Jess world. nreeting the set requirements are given public support. as been' sold a bill of goods. The in perfect order. I know from This religion of life rather . public institutions." . extent of comexperience, however, that some" .than of law is, as the Gospel readers of this column will not· shows, centered in the Bread 01. Catholic leaders have. made it clear tha't they are not munist influ'be prepared to go along with life, rather than in a rule-book. pressing for direct public support of Catholic schools. But ence in. the .this statement .merely; on my And the Jerusalem of today'. American Protat the present they are asking for all appropriate auxiliary estant commusay-so. ·liturgy; the Chu!'ch, the city 01.' services such as bus transportation, school lunch programs, nity, I contend. I' should like to add, there- freedom, is to be purified ," . fore, that· Mr. Roy's 'conclusions through the Lenten obser~an~. health services, and, now, loans for elementary and'second- ed, has. been grossly exagare substantially the same as It is part of that constant ref01'ary ·schools. . gerated. To put 'those expressed in a recent lec- mation which Catholics believe To grant such loans to colleges both Churcl:t sponsored it mildly, the, ture by Mr. William C. Sullivan;' essential to the Church's life.:' Chief Inspector. of the' Federal Lent then has a corporate as and state operate<i while to deny them to private elementary reaction of some Bureau 'of Investigation: I take 8S a personal meaning. and secondary secondary schools on the grounds that it is readers to this criticism of the Air Force ·man- it that;no one will be so brasb MONDAY OF TilE FOURTH aiding one particula'r religion is to, use a type of logic · ual was somewhat less than flat- as'to say that Mr. Sullivan has WEEK IN LENT. A propheq difficult to follow.tering. A numQer of correspond- neen taken in by communist of the .resurrection and two inTo say that there! is a national emergency in education, ents wrote ·in· no uncertain' terms propaganda or is deliberately stances of judgment are the Bible that my defense of American peddling the communist line. readings. of today's' Mass. All.. and then .to penalize children who are exercising their <Protestantism was simply apIn addressing 1,000 clergymen penance, all self-denial, all acts inherent right to receive an education in a private 'school palling. at a meeting sponsored by the in conflict with the normal will' ' that meets local educational requirements is not justice. Two Experts U.S. Citizens' Committee of Cm- of man to affirm life and to aoPerhaps we' ought to hike cinnati, on Feb. 22, Mr. Sullivan cept human goods and values" To consider the public school system the only adequate sourCe of educated men and women is neither justice nor another look at the record which labeled as "a patent falseholJd" can be reasonable only if they will show that at least two' what he described as "the im- lead to resurrection, to a superior sense. highly quali.fied experts on the pression among many Ame'j- value and the affirmation 'of a subJ'ect of communism-and-the- cans that the Protestant denom- h'Ig h er 1ife. "vet ,J J1~JinQfl. meJru~aI!1l. churches have in recent months inatio.ns. 'in particular have oeen 'Th e judgments of Solomon on substantiated the position taken subjected to alarming infil1ra- the mothers and of Christ on the There are 57 voluntary relief agencies registered with in this column on April 4-; tion and influence by commun- temple merchants stir the souls the Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid of the The first of these experts, ists." of Christians out of a worldly ' Vigorous Opponents International . Cooperation A d mimstration. rganizations Ralph Lord Roy, is, the' author t torpor to a recognition of ultiMr. Sullivan admitted tha mate truth and value and good-,, . ' of a scholarly boo'k entl·tle'd registered with this agency are eligible for the ocean freight Communism and the Churches' " some we11 mean 109, . . tIl' t 10 e Ige.l ' ness. subsidy program and fo~ .donations of surplus food from (Harcourt, Brace and Co., $7.50). and patriotic people of distincTUESDAY OF THE FOURTH the Department of Agriculture. •Mr. Roy concludes that "The tion - including clergymen -7 WEEK IN LENT. Even' in Moses' have been induced to give t:':oeir During the six month's between January 1 and June 30,. notion that America's churches names _ and sometiems their time, in the midst of their libel'1960, these 57- groups contributed a total of Cl!144,337,213 and religious leaders 'are signif- talents.:.- to communist fronts or ation and election, the people 01. 'I' • icantly influenced by communIsrael were inconstant in. the . fo' l' f e pend't causes without apparently b~ing m' reIgn re Ie x . I ure8~ ists or communist sympathizers aware 'of their true nature of. faith, succumbing again and And here is the most impressive aspeet of these fig- is absurd." purPose." His explanation of this again to the temptation of :pur. ures: Catholic Relief Services contr,ibu,ted 40, per. ,nt of' ~e ~:kAes itc~ear that commllu,;, . is 'basically the same as Mr. ~uinthg p,agan gOdS (JLessonh~' ~, . nists "", merlca' .never rea y. Roy's.: ' . . . . l~ e p.resence 0 f esus Imse..., the ~mount,' sum oi"l60;378,329. Thi~ should ~e k~pt iJ.l 'attempted or ex~cted to infil,He attributes it to the' :fact. ,hIS JeWish hearers would be~~"• . mind when contrib.uting to. the Bish9PS' . Relief. Fund. 'trate the churches and .points that- these' 'clergymen "because ,t~day and tomorrow turn ag~iD8t Sunday.. Here is an opportunity to c~ange the image of. the 'out that only a SJ113JI number of of the busy; self-sacrifiCing iivCs' hIm (Gosp.el) ... · , , ... "ugly American" to the "kind Aplerican. H . . ,: clergyrri~n .ever joined. the party. that they lead," 'didn't have tiine ·59, too, l!lthe Ch\lr~h, ~aipa .. He estimates the number as be- .. 'to gain a .Sliff~cient understand~ ~ever "mer~ly somethmg ~ be .' ·tween 50, to" 200" and many of ing' of .communist. thought .and kept,.to be held. on tOe to ~ these, he says, .joined foi' reasOns t>racUce .and to the. further :ract ho~rded. It .is a gIft, .a pOWei'. far different from what com- that "in·their laudable desire to which. must be exercised.. The munist leaders imagined. . champion legitirn'lte reforms and Chris~ian's "Yes" to God. shou1cl . Near Zero' ,to protest acknowledged ills in be ·.re~terated and renewed ~• . .:Pdr.Roy is at his best in dis- our society" they allowed th ern- ThiS IS the business of Lent. cussing the .communist "front" selves to get associated with or.W E D N E ~ DAY O·F T OFi=ICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THIE DIOCESE OF FAll! RIVER · groups which too many members giuiizations' or individuals Seem- FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. The new creation of Christ; to be BePublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall Rixer · of the clergy .were foolish .ingly. (but o.nly seemingly) 410 Highland Avenue ,.' ' , . enough to join. He doesn't ex-. sharing their desire to :better our complished in the Easter 11178onerate these clergymen, but he country.. tery, is the subject of today'• .Fall· River, Mass. ' OSborne 5'·7151 does point out. that communist Mr. Sullivan concludes, "there Mass. Scarlet sins God will make PUBLISHER "front" organizations were most can be no ,question as -to the loy- white. A heart of flesh and a popular from 1936 to 1939 and' alty of the overwhelming rna,. new spirit are his promise. And Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. from 1943 to 1946,when it was' jority of the American clergy to the faith which is the conditiOil GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER not considered un-American to the nation and the fact that they of these gifts is compared in the Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, ·M.A. Rev. John' P. Driscoll sympathize . with the Sov·iet have been among the consistent Gospel to the attainment of sight MANAGING EDITOR Union. ' and vigorous opponents of com- by the blind. Faith is vision-.Hugh J. Golden Mr. Roy insists, however, that munism." true, accurate, all-embracing. ~'

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Thurs., March 9, 1961

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,Asserts Unrest Is Widespre~d, In Russia

NEW, YORK (NC)_The:,,~.abblts and reading a.l7 among the, eXtra~urricular interests of vivacious Lorraine Catholic population of the Mathieu, s~ude~t body preSident at Jesus-Mary. Acade~y, Fall River. The rabbits are New York Metropolitan area her ~ather 8-200 of them. After school she' pitches In to help clean coops and feed CINCINNATI, (NC)-Un,. tota,ls 6,346,326, an incre~ b~nD1es. No my,.stery about the Easter Bunny at the Mathieu house! "It's such a small; rest is widespread in Russia, of 4a,838 over last year, the Ij}(Jl' fnend.ly school. That's why especially among youth, a MetroPolitan Catho& Telephone Lorrame' chose 'to attend GiJiae disclosed. ' Jesus Mary is now being . Russian exile and anti-comPublisP7d. by the, Catholie followed there by her sister, munist leader told Xavier UniNews, offICIal n 7wspaper of. the New York archdIOcese, the guide eover~ an area that includes the archdIOceses of New York and Newark, N.J., and the dioceses of Brooklyn and Rockville Center in New York, Paterson, Trent~n and Camden 10 New Jersey, and Bridgeport, Conn. Catholics in this area are served by 1,424 parishes, 60 hospitals and sanitariums, 26 nurs. ti ing school s, 38 c h 1Old care IDS tutioDS and 22 homes for the aged.

Paulette, a freshman. As well as student body presIdent, Lorraine's head of the academy chapter of the National Honor Society She finds she eedB to' tw three n .spen 0 ar hours a mght at homework, to keep u.p her grades. . Ge!tmg to school ,takes quIte ~ while-every other week, t?at 18. On alternate w:eks, Lorrau~e has use of the famIly car, but m ' , ' between tImes she must take two buses to get to Jesus-Mary. Not surprisingly, she likes to drive.

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versity students. , Constantine Boldyreff, a member of th~ Inter-governmental Committee on Refugees, said "communism as a social or political doctrine is dead in Russia.· Soviet propaganda fails to convince the Russian people about conditions in their own country because they have tho evidence to disprove it, he said. But the propaganda machine does succeed in keeping the people distrustful of foreign nations because their contacts with other nations are scanty, Mr. Boldyreff added.

MaD,. Religious Business Administration There are ~09 seminaries, no1 vl.tlates and normal schools ..... Lorraine's hoping:for a College Cites Corruption devoted to training young men career at Bradford Durfee !nand women for the priesthood stitute of Technology, Fall River. Even private enterprise doesn'\ and the religious "life. There are She'll major in business admin; conform to the Soviet pattern in 4,084 diocesan priests, 2,522 or- istration, and would like to beRussia, he asserted. Government der priests, 2,011 Brothers and come an accountant. ) methods have proved inefficient, 21,942 Sisters serving the CathaGoing along with that interest he added, citing the recent farm lic population. is her choice of geometry as a program failure and the high inThe guide also discloses that" favorite high school subject, cidence of, corruption among there is a total of 861,382 stu- closely followed by American officials. dents' . attending the area's 29 history. , Russian youth are "strongly Catholic' colleges and universi... She's co-editor of the academy non-conformist", according to ties, 257 high schools and 1,087 : yearbook ~nd a I ~ 0 studies Mr. Boldyreff, despite severe elementary schools. Children in ,French, whIch she fmds opporpena~ties for getting out df step" the 'elementary grades' account. ; tunities to practice at home when with Soviet routine. . tor 682 537 0# this total. ' ,non-English speaking relatives "Unlike their parents.. he " " I from,Canada visit the family. noted, "today's Russian yo~th' did Leisure time activities include , not have' their backs broken by listening to semi-classical. music Stalin tyranny. Moreover; they LORRAINE MATHIEU' and baking-mostly cakes. She's have learned to live with trua " . an' enthusiastic Sumnier.:time secret police." ' :MIAMI (NC) - Premier swimmer and at school she enFidel Castro is about to ,joysvoileyball. Saturday nights launch a state religion in find her dancing, 'Blue-eYE!d, LOS ANGELES (NC) - 'l1le dark-haired' Lorraine, a 'member NEW YORK (NC)-The State ,hamper and hinder the Board of prayer for rain should be said Cuba, it was repOrted by a' of St. Louis de France parish, Spanish - language newspaper Swansea, is the daughter of Mr. Commission Against Discrimina- Higher Education in its admin- at all Masses when the rubrics published here. and Mrs. Leo Mathieu. Besides tion may' not investigate charges istration and control" of the permit, James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Ei Dairio de la Marina, former.' Paulette, there's an older brother, of bias in the city's municipal, municipal colleges. colleges, the State Supreme Court Angeles, has directed. Southern Havana daily', now published already out of school. , Cham of CommBnd here; has ruled. California is facing drought conweekly in exile here, said that in Board Chairman Gustave O. Havana a law modeled after' The decision came after the Rosenberg has maintained that ditions because of lack of winter rains. church legislation put into effect Board of Higher' Educatio~ faculty members who felt d.iItby Ute communist regime in Alwhich operates the city's, five bania is now being prepared. COVINGTON (NC) The municipal' colleges, challenged criminated against- had recourse, The newspaper said that , Catholic press was credited with the commission's right to investi- not only to the courts, but to the. Ernesto (Che) Guevara, presi- another conversion when· at· the gate charges of imti-Catholic dis- academic chain of command from the college president to 'the state dent' ,of the Cuban National mountain Church of St. Greg-, crimination at Queens college.' Commissioner of Education. ' ., , Bank.' brought the' text of the ory, in Barbourville, Ky", PatIn a ruling handed down by i The SCAD claimed that it had law with him when he returned r ck, Loyall, high school 'senior, Justice Arthu'r' Markewich, the conducted 82 investigations of to Havana froin Moscow in was,received into the Church. COMPANY court said the SCAD was not a asserted' job discrimination by December. . His, first contacts with the legislative commissi011 and 'tha't public educational agencies with"According to this law," EI Church were the few Catholics Complete .Line "while the commission might Da'irio said, "aU appointments of who worked with his father. conduct surveys and studies and out ,having its jurisdiction challenged. Building Materials ' , Chureh officials will require Occasionally his father would make ~ports, no sanction is givThe disputed investigation wall approval by the Council of Min- bring home a Catholic magazine 8 SPRING. ST., FAIRHAVEN isterS. Another of the provisions or a copy of the Messenger, en for it to do so by means of undertaken, it said, on the basiB ,of an opinion by the state Atwill oblige religiouS organiza- ' Covington diocesan newspaper,': Investigative. proceedings. WYman 3-2611 torney General in 1946 that gave tionsto submit texts of pastoral that· his Catholic co-workers 'Nonexistent Power'" the commission jurisdiction over letters, messages, speeches and discarded. Young Loyall liked a New York City hospital and _ The Judge said the board had sermons to' the Council of Min- what he read so much that for of the state.· ' isters for approval or disapproval two years he took a subscription established a rigBt to have the -the "subdivisions ....oi.i to the Messen'ger on his own in- commission stopped from further prior to pUblication." , I ' itiative. investigations and to have an- .Power In Ed~cation ,Knights of Columbus ads 011. nulled what had been done in Under such a law the state re- Catholic doctrines and teach- excess' of authority, tains the sole power in the field ings attracted the 'youth who The court maintained that a of education and can exclude re- took the instruction course by "public body cannot' acquire a ligious organizations from all mail, Next young Loyall sought nonexistent power," thus upholdteaching activity. out a priest .and completed in- ing the board's intention that the The Albanian law was pro- structions. commission lacked jurisdi<;tion NEW BEDFORD mulgated in 1951. It was' deover the colleges' hiring and prosigned to cut off the Catholic New motion of teachers. INDUSTRIAL OIlS Church in Albania from the When the board went to court Vatican by controlling its means . . ALBANY (NC) _ The New on .Septe~ be r 1, 1't c_h arged tha t of e x i s t e n c e . ' . . HEA TtNG OILS' York St1!te Assembly has passed in ves t'Iga t'Ions 'by the commIssIon . , - w 0 U 1. d ",SeriOUSly pre]' udice, and sent to the Senate a, bill TIMKEN empowering state oificials . to C h' d' I C' ,rate films, 'as suitable or unSuU:'.. OIL BURNERS CRESTWOOD (NC)-Laymen able for' children. . PITTSBURGH (NC) - · A , ., and' women are conducting a The measure was adopted :b<Y,' Blessed sacrament ehapel and Se,v;c~ weekly' series of Lenten lectures" • vote of 125 to 17. . "" a Lady chapel are.scheduled SOOIIl ' In'St. Elizbaeth 'parish' to expla.ln" The licensing diVision Of the, for: 'St.' Paul's "cathedral . h~ the Mass to their fellow parish- , State. Board ,of Regents at pres-, Bishop John J,. Wright of Pitts~Ol loners. . en~ may ban films for obscenity. ' burgh announced they have been KITCHENS The Lenten series is attracting" , Up-der the new proposal, the planned "to' 'provide fmo a more ' NEW BEDFORD, -Am.rfc.'.' moat envl.d Idtchllln.more than 100 each·night. It was nCE;n~in~ division would 'deter-, full and 'convenient observance"" :planned' by Father' James E.' IJl.iAc, wlt~ther films were s\lit- ,of 'liturgiCal 'and' 'rubrical: .ro-' WY 3-175l Ryai'i; St. Elizabeth-pastor, to roe- able Or l.ms\litable, for, childreq.: quirements.· " , . ' . - -,'.

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Traces Conversion To Cathol."c Press

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GREENSBURG (NC)-Bishtip Wllliam G, Connare of. 'Greensburg has convoked the first S)'llod for his diocese. The' Bishop said the synodal legislatio:l1 adopted for the diocese "will be a practical and workable guide for a deeper spiritual life fOl' both oW' priest and oW' people."'·

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:. fH~ ANC~6R~'[)i6c~seo~ Fall Riv~r';;Tl1urs. 'Mar. 9, 1961

Junior College'

Cooperation of Husband, Wife Makes Hpme Real Showplace.,

YONKERS (NC) - A prO'9lsional charter was granted here to Elizabeth Seton College, first Catholic junior college for wOJDoo el). in.New York state. Presentation of' the ehartel' was made by John F. Brosnan, chancellor of the State Board o! Regents, to Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, chairman of the col1e~ advisory board. The sehool, which will open in September, will 'be operated b,. the Sisters of Charity of MOUM St. Vincent. Mother Generai Loretto Bernard said the coilego will take over facilities formerIw used by Elizabeth Seton High School here. Students now' en.· rolled will be allowed to con;. tinue their courses but no new high school students will . be accepted. ' . The two-year college' will offer terminal and, transfer course~ and will confer associate degrees in' the arts and' in applied se~ ences. Enrollment for the' first year is expected. to reach 125 students, 'but the college willi ultimately expand to a student body 'of 350. Sister Miriam · Imelda, has been named president,·

By Alice Bough Cahill , . 'Why is it people so often speak of the handy-man, or do-it-yourself-man, overlooking that there are many on the distaff side responsible for 'a home that becomes a real showplace? What about .the drapes the woman makes, the slipcovers, the placemats of wood, formica or plate glass and the other bits of handi- over them, thus making a table work that change a house top for mirror and dressing table into a home? It is the home accessories.

Don't discard the ·old-fashioned that grows as a joint enterprise that is most rewarding. Let's dining room or ice cream :parlor chair, for either chair, given a turn first to the . coat of paint, can be used at a kitchen. Since dressing taple, with a sponge Mother has to rubber cushion c~vered by spend- much of Mother in material to match the her time there, drapes. ' · it. is in this Sewing Room' realm that her Have you ever considered what ideas are welcould be done to make a sewing comed. room a more attractive place in Height of sink, which to work? If a se'\lving work counters machine looks pretty beaten up, and cabinets give it a coat of paint (you could should fit a 'spray it with white lacquer). · woman's measThen proceed to' decorate It urements. "Washbasin" sinks. are remnants of the past, ·only· one with designs taken from sewing " step beyond the old hand pump. equipment - pincushions, tape In the restoration' of a kitchen, measures, sewing birds, etc. Mr. and Mrs. can plan ~ogether Such designs. do .not call for the where to place permanent fix- perfection of a professional artist tures, what kind of material and -just make them amusing. Now Father's job would be to eolorsto use. One cim sometimes save a considerable amount by install some nifty wall cabinets, 'building cabinets, adding beauty behind the doors- of which· will and convenience for less than a ' be shelves for materials and pat;. terns. Arrange to have the center professional will ch8;'Jte.'· Mother's personal work habits door attached in such a way that 'will probably determine wher~. it drops down to make an ample Bome cabinets should be built. cutting and ironing board. When Mr. Do-it-yourself should select not in use it can fold back in line his own working spot' and he· · with the other doors. Either will do well to add a "cutting paint or paper the walls in a gay block" ·at one end of the counter color and you'll have a working which he can reserve for ·himself . nook that will make Mother -a place where he can' trim needle-happy.. and season the steaks he'll want to broiL· Name Sister Mado~no '. At this end of the counter Father might place a rotisserie Cushing CoHege H~ad WASHINGTON (NC) -·Sister and possibly .build above ilt· · narrow shelves to hold barbecue Madonna, academic dean 01. Dunbarton college .here since JlQuces and Seasonings. · 1951, has been appointed presiPe~Dal Touches dent ot. Cardinal Cushing colleie , Having selected colors mosft in Brookline. A native of Bridgeport, Conn. 'pleasing to both, it will be Mother's job to make. curtains. Sister Madonna graduated fro~ One doesn't have to be a skilled Albertus Magnus college, New, or professional artist to add per- Haven, Conn., in 1937. She resonal touches that will make ceived her master and doctor degrees from Yale university• .working in the kitchen a joy. Dunbarton and Cardinal Cush: Apart from slipcovers and drapes that Mother elm make ing colleges are conducted b¥ . for the living room, .Father's Sisters of the Holy' Cross. , adeptness with hammer and saw · ean create cabinets for recordS, Collegians at Sixty shelves for books, or hang NEW YORK (NC)' Two' shelves in a .sunny window for · Fordham University undergrad~ African violets. uates can't complain that their Let's consider what a husband mother or father doesn't undezo.;. and wife can do together 'in sal- stand college life' in the' sixties. vaging household necessities. A mother lind daughter com- , Have you an old-fashioned dress- bination .at Fordham consists of ing table with long center mirror Mrs. Julie B. Krause aridViio'and narrow three-'drawer chests ginia A~ri Krause of Mamaron each side? Why not take this' ·oneck,·N.Y. The father and BOIl apart? The long mirror can be .attending ,the . university . are hung in hall, bedroom; or bath~ James Reilly;' Sr., and his soD, Because it is full length it ~in James, R., of Queens, N. Y. Miss I~OW how ~ve~. skirts .~re, or Kra~se •• ' studying ·.to· be it' 'how much taller junior is than kindergarten teacher. The young ~ister. The two side p'ieceil .can,· Reilly,. majoring ~ history. · be used as end tables by l{ sofa ' Both parents are attending night. <,r day bed. If such a.piece.. of coUrses at· the 1'000dham School . · furniture is badly marred ,and eli Educatio~ 'cannot 'be used in its' ~i'esent state, after Father does hammer " , and saw' work, Mother may be able to paint it. " . If you don't want to use. these Home made small chests 8S end tables, they. can still be made good for dressCANDIES, ing table use by,putting a p~, CHOCOlATES

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Family of 15 ChildreA WinsCaliadian Honor MONTREAL (NC) -A family with 15 children, three of them . in religious, life, .has been named Canadian Rural Family of, 1961. The honor went to the' Nareisse Gervais family of ~t. Timothee, Laviolet~ county.. Mr. 'Gervais, whose'wife died iol954, received an honor certificate .from .Social. Welfare ,Minister Emilien Lafrance. Mr. ,Gerva~s,'88,ispa~ch of 206 living .family members , spread over four generatiOns. Two of' his dauihters and son are'members .of religious orders. Five 'of 'his' sons 'are farmers', and three of.. bis :daughters are ~ ried to farmers. Mr. Gervais h_ ··100 .gr:i~dchildr~, . and 81:........ ..L: ."--:-

an altar cloth to be donated to Our Lady of Lourdes Churcb, Wellfleet, in memory of memMISSION TALK: Sister Claire Imelda, S.U.S.C.,.left, bers of Provincetown Catholie showed 'slides and ran a taped commentary made' in Daugnters of America who have Cameroun, Africa, to the Queen!s Daughters at the Taunton died recenUy. Mrs. Mary Avellar is Grand Regent of the unit, aa CYO. Rev; John J. Griffin, chaplain of the group, 18 in · affiliate of the Diocesan Council center with President Mrs.' William R. Powers at right. of.Catholie WomeD.

Marymount to Honor Mrs. Robert Kennedy WASHINGTON (NC) -Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy, 'wife of the Attorney' General,· will receive' the Christian Excellence Medal of Marymount College in suburban Arlington, Va., in a ceremony March 14. The award will I>e presented to Mrs. Kennedy by Mother' Mary-,. Maj ella, president of the junior college which is condueted by the Religious of the .Sacred Heart. The pre;entation will be part of a week-long series of events .at the college, March 12 to 18, based on themes. taken from.· President Kennedy's inaugural address. '

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THE ANCHORThurs., March 9, 1961

Tot Finds U:nique Lent Penance Won't Draw Houses till Easter

Little Sisters of Poor Reluctantly Take GiH

By Mary Tinley Daly Lent half over, self-imposed penances are still with us. Some sacrifices, entered into with too-great zeal and a rather unrealistic idealism, are faltering. The "won't go to any social function, nor '8 play or movie" falls into the marginal side when rather Blue eyes were serious. "Well," necessary meetings end with he hesitated, "I like Kate." • social hour. Also, when we "Now, listen," the seven-yearhave been following a series old explained, "how can you give' of TV classics and feel they are cultural and educational rather than merely entertaining TV -movies," Common sense and a veering away from Janaenism, see s to me, are indiea te d her e without going M'~rboard and eJtplainingaway

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fttlon.· • Lent is going along in much Its usual style at our house: everybody trying to grow spirItually by extra prayer, attendance at Mass as often as possible, lletreats for school-agers, daysof-recollection for oldsters, following rules of ,fasting asset ~th by our archdiocese. . . As grandparentS, we find it interesting to observe a 'growing awareness of' the holy season in the forthcoming generation. With parents who live Lent'in its, true spirit,' these tots seem to· breathe' in the spirit of the .eason.· . ' Seven-year..;old granddaughter :lIealizes that she"has: now lleached the age 'of reasOn' and, as eldest of five, her responsibiltty as pacesetter is minor only to that of her parents. No candy, Ibe told herself, and cut down on .....eets, even to. limiting the tlII\ount of sugar she puts on breakfast cornflakes. For this IiIweet-toother one, it III indeed, a hardship-but one bailed as having definitely good "-products by both her parents -.d her dentJ$tl . The six-year-old depriVed her11&11, voluntarily, of something 1M' different, but perhaps even berder: "fussing before bedtime.': Believe me, if you have become addicted to a little."fuss before bedtim~" l'evel in it, enjoy the attention it brings you, Ibis is not an easy give-,up. The five-year-old had a bit of difficulty, when aske,d by hill two older sisters what would be his Lenten penance. He was not about to give up anything, life being so interesting as it is. "But people do give up things for Lent," eldest sister explained. '"You give up what you like a lot. Mommy gives up candy 'n cake 'D all sweet stuff; Daddy gave up cigarettes and beer. If they can give up, we can too." The five-year-old ran a stubby band through his short crewcut.

Neyi' Bedford Jsahelias Set Style Show Monday'

CLEVELAND (NC)-The Little Sisters of the Poor are moving into a new $3 million home near here-a gift from Catholic Charities which they were reluctant to accept. When it was announced a few years ago that the Sisters and the 200 old folks in their home were to be uprooted by a new freeway, the Sisters insisted on begging for the $3 million to build new quarters. 0

up a baby that -lives here? No you gotta give up som~thing you like to eat or to do. Understand?" "Le' me sink," the five-yearold has troubles with his th's. Lying flat on his stomach, he went right on drawing,turning out opus after opus on the reverse side of old, news releases furnished by his daddy. , "I know what rip goin' to give 'up!" The whole 40 inches of de- termined manhood had reached a decision. "I'm going to give up drawing houses! Zat's· what I'd razzer draw zan. anysing else. I draw houses every day. I won't. draw a house till Easter!" Now, that's a give-up. The " five-year-old has stuck with his resolution. On the back of those outdated news releases are drawn pictur~s of flowers, people, ,airplanes, car~put nary Ii house. . . Let's h'ope that an incipient SILV~R TEA: Queen's Daughters SPQnsor a silver tea architect is not being thwarted at'Bishop Stang pa,.y Nursery, :Fall River, for benefit of the by the non-drawing of houses for 40 days.. Be that as it may, White Sisters. Left to right, Mrs. William T.Donnelly, St. the seed of self-discipline is be- '. patrick's parish, co-chairman of· executive' board; Mother ing implanted, satisfying built-iii equipment, good for a lifetime' Of-: Agn es L.l.lcille,·;:.:Miss ~rtrude .Lynch a,nd Mrs~ Charles B.rady (p()'uring;), both of Holy Name pa,ri,sh., . 't~~~e :for every human bein¢.,

Only after many conversations between the then-superior, Sis'" ter Anne, the community's headquarters in Rome and Archbishop Edward F. HOQan, Bishop, of Gleveland, were the nUl1ll then persuaded to let. Catholic Charities build their new quarters in suburban Warrensville township. : But' they insisted acceptance of Catholic Charities help still means they will pay back the funds with the nicklell and dimes they beg on their daily rounds.

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. ADRIAN (NC) - The Adrian Chamber of Commerce honored Mother Mary Gerald and Siena Heights College here in Michigan. A speCial award ~as presented the Mother General of the Sisters of St. Dominic of Adrian for her direction of the 197 units of the commun'ity from New York to California and from Lake Superii>r to the Caribbean Sea. Siena 'Heights College, conducted by the Dominican nuns, was honored for its contributions both economically and culturally l;o the community.

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Richmond Woman~ Wins de Marilla Award . EMMI,;£,SBURG (NC) - Mrs. Clara Somma Fowler of Richmond; Va., will receive the St. Louise de Marillac Medal of St. Joseph College next Saturday. Mrs. Fowler has been an active leader in the Catholic Daughters of America, served as. president of a group aiding the Crippled ' Children's Hospital of Richmond, took part, in fund-raising work for the Little Sisters of the Poor. Sister Hilda Gleason, president of St. Joseph College, 'will present the medal to Mrs. Fowler at.a convocation.. Bishop John R. , ~ussell of Richinon,d will preside aqd a-ive .the main address.

Hyacinth Circle '71, New Bedford DaughterS' of "Isabell8, -r>onsor a fashion show at Ken- _ oedy Center this Monday night. Proceeds will bemifit the White Sisters. Miss Ellen M. Gaughan is general chairman; Other activities of the unit indude collection of' bandages dothing and eyeglasses for mi~. sions and the annual Communion breakfast, to be held at New Bedford Hotel ~u1)day, March" 19, following 9 o'clock Mass at Holy Name ChuI::ch. . Miss Natalie Ferreira, regent of the local unit, has also been named'State secretary, 'of the' Daughters of Isabella. Hyacinth Grandmothers will.· . meet in April, according -to an.; . Douncement inade by Mrs. Flor- . ence Fernandes. '

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THE ANCHORThurs., March 9, '1961

BansPresid,ent's Sunday Mass mnformatuon

Japan Produces Many Priests, Few Converts

WASHINGTON (NC) The- White House has im-' posed a ban on prior an-, nouncements of the Pres~

,OAKLANP (NC) ,-"- Citing Japan as a paradox, a ,missionary priest said whfle Christianity is making little headway the country' boasts the highest vocation rate for a ,Catholic' population in the entire world. . Father Anthony J. Brodniak, M,M., of Oakland, said' before leaving here for Japan after a brief vacation, that he directs a tiny parish in Yokkaichi, an industrial port city of about 200,000 people on the main island of Honshu. His parishioners number only 462, with an average of 75 adult baptisms each year, he added. , Despite the small number of Catholics, the Maryknoll priest points with pride to the number of young people from his parish with religious vocations. At present the parish counts four young men studying for the priesthood, and 10 women in the convent.

EXPAND SERVICE: Members, of Notre Dame Conference of the St. Vincent de,Paul Society, Fall Rivet, have moved their 'Salvage Bureau, operated for the', benefit of the entire Fall RiVer area, to larger quarters at 1799 Pleasant Street. It will be open for opublic inspeCtion today, tomorrow and 'Saturday. Left to right, at front tables, Ferdinand Francoeur, conference vicep resident;' Raymond Roy, store manager; Mrs. Roy, auxiliary eo-chairman in ch~rge of 'clothing; Mrs. Ernest Plante, also a co-chairman. .

400 Priests "There are approximately 250,000 Catholics among Japan's total population of 90 million," l'I8id Father Brodniak. "Yet this . nucleus has produced over 400 ,' . . , '..ByPati'icia McGowan :, priests and many. mo~ .Sistel'8 . and Brothers." ' " .' , ,The name of:Rev;' Thomas-Marie Landry", O.P. is . w~ll :known" to parishioners, of But' e~en wHh.' this high': i>erSt. Anne's Church, Fall"River. Their pastor 'u,ntil 1957; he was .theyoungest pas't'orin' eentage of vocations, the Church the Diocese at the time of 'his appointment by Bishop Casidy. Since 1957 Father, Landry is registering little impact upon the life of the average japaneSe, , has been stationed in Canada where he w~sat "fiist assistant. director and profes~or at he declared. ," School Pas'toraJ ' a n d ' School of Pastoral and ~reaching Three major obstacles to the Preaching spons9redby,the in ;'1957 he was a delegate to a' , ". ,rowtharid progress" of the' convention of Dominican preachChurch in Japan, Fat~er Brod- Canadian Dominicans. Since - , ers' heid . in ,Rome, 'He ,visited 1958 he has been' at Maison , Diak said, are:' ., ',. ' many cities of Western' Europe " ,,' The inordinate 'national and Montmorency, Courville, Q~~bec, after the convention, stUdying' personal pride of the average from which '''home base" he , the problems and techniques' of travels throughout Canada and .Japanese, lack of interest in re:' preaching. ligion and a loss of spiritual New England giving missions and The Dominican's work at the ,awareness, and ddfficult eco- preaching at special exercises. Canadian school inclUded, the. He has returned to Fall' River nomic conditions. setting up of its course of To counte,ract these obstacles, several times in the course of studies and the ,training of young Maryknollers in Japan have these trips: \priests, ,'both Dominicans and turned to the use of such mass New Bedford Native, those of other communities as communications media as radio, well as Diocesan clergy. Born and baptized' in New magazines, newspapers, and. re": In,' his Maison Montmorency cently, television, Father' Brod- Bedford, Father'Landry att~nded , a Brockton parochial school and assignment he is currenqy,prac,:, niaksaid. : .j. conthiued his education' at Col';' ticing what he preaches'- he preaches! ,. lege de l'Assumptiori, ·Quebec. . 'In 1927 he entered the Dominican novitiate and' was ordained in 1933 'at St. Anne's; Fa'll 'Rive.... ST. LOUIS (NC)-Two .large Following ordination he continsuppliers of altar, breads have ued 'his studies, obtaihlng the reported marked increases in ,degree of Lectorate in Sacred. orders recently. Theology. ROUTE 6, HUTTlESON AVE. FATHER LANDRY The cloistered' nuns at the Three years' of teaching were Near Fairhaven 'Drive-In Passionist Convent ii, Kirk-.yood, followed by assignment' as re- , of the Franco-American Orien.. Mo" .and· the ,Good, Shepherd 'treat house director at. St. Hya- tation Committee and the'Conseil; Italian Dinners Our, Specialty convent here supply parishes, cinthe, Quebec. Father Landry de la' Vie Francaise en' AmerService On Patio seminaries and convents in many' 'combined his new work with ique. The pastor was active in the midwestern states, the giving of lectures at Pius XI , Mo'ther Mary Francis of the Institute of the University of '-fou'nding of the Franco-American Youth Movement and the/WomKirkwood convent reported or- Montreal. ' ders during the last week in His next assignment found him en's .,Federation, as well as the February running one-third pastor of a Quebec parish. Three Richelieu Club. In recognition of his work in higher than orders fora com- years there were followed by his perable week a month earlier. appointment as, 'pastor of St. so many areas of Franco-AmerSister Antoinette of the St. Anne's, Fall River. ican interest; Father. Landry re, New England's Playground Louis convent said nuns .there .' .. . . "This youthful pastor," notes·a .' ceived the Me,c:la~lle ~e la Re:': "have had calls from'two pastors cohnaissance from. France in , parish pUblicat'ion, "soon won the Plan Your DaneePany. 1946. In '1949 'he 'was . n~'llled ,for ali extra 5,QOO hosts:" affection of his parishIoners and chevallei' ,of the Legion ,of Honor. Fashion Shows' and the approval of his ecclesiastical . . . ~~.~nc..ease: ; ' Stat~wide::'re,cogl)~iion "of his superiors. ,His zeal, apostolic' Bc;lnquets ' . Tile conv~nt mails altar bre~ds efforts came in 1956 when he was - • ' daily ,t.o pastors in several states. spirit, sense of order and quali~ Chaplain of th~'tiay the State. ' at Uneoin Park's' Many who for 'years have had ties as an or(;taniier soon ma<ie -Senate. hi~ a true' shelpQ.erd, During standing o'rders for double the \ . MILLION-DOLLAR' , Immediately previous to Father, usual supply during Lent have the 15 years he was to be with Landry's . assignmen~ 'to the ' BALLROOM them, the parishioners of st. , had to raise their orders, she Anne's always found the door of Call ROLAND GAMACHE said. WYman 9-6984 Sister Antoinette said there his office wide open and benehas been a marked increase in fitted from his deep understand,PWMIING & jEATING, INC. the sale of hosts since the regu- ing of the miseries of human for Domestic lations governing the Eucharistic nature, which he. alwayo endeavored to alleviate." JnduBtriel fast were relaxed in' 1957. In &elM aalI 1958 her eonvent distributed Active In Many Fields 8enioe Oil Burners 3,616,000 hosts, in 1959 3,739,000, .. WY 5-1631 While at St. Anne's, Father and in 1960 3,801,000. Landry was active in many 2283 ACUSHNET AVE. extra-parochial ,organizations, . NEW BEDFORD including' the board of directors "Why

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dent's attendance' at Mass OIl Sundays. , .In the past, Pierre Salingell, Whhe House Press secretary, has' told reporters at what church' and at ,what' time the Presi.dent would attend Mass, with the un., derstanding that there would be rio advance publication of the information. He said this practice would be 'stopped. It had been announced earlier that there would be no advance information on some social events which the President and Mrs. KennedJ,l' would attend. "He just hopes that he will ba, able to worship in peace," Mr.. Salinger said, explaining that the action was taken in compliance with the President's wishes. A reporter asked whether the policy carried an implication. that newsmen kept the President from worshiping ~n peace. Mr. Salinger replied: "I am "not makin'g any implications. This is the desire of the ,President and I see' no reason for further expla-. DatiOn." The President has attended Mass at s~ver~l, different 'place., since "his, ,inaugl,lration. A hand'luI of' reporters 'haye accompanil~d him' 'to 'church, but ge~ erally have not been able'" occupy places close to him., Crowds have gathered outside the cJ:1urches, but this is believed' to 'have r~sulted from people seeing extra police details oa d~ty at th~ time. ,

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Detroit Pastor Says Tithing Is Success '.

DETROIT .(NC) -A. tithing program begun recently ina D~­ troit parish has had "gratifying results," according to the pastor. Father James L. Hayes of St. Michael's church said that in the first month of the tithing program, average weekly revenues were $3,890, a gain of some $1,400 over 1960. Father Hayes attributed much of the program's initial success to home calls by a corps of 400 volunteer workers who explained the plan to parishionerB.

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~R-Dioceseof

Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 9,

't961

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NEW ,BEDFORD CENTRO CATOLICO HISPANO: The first center membership. Center photo: 'Children entering the Center are greeted by for the Spanish spea:kitlg people of the New Bedford area satisfies an6ther . . Fatner Regis and Sister Prudericiaof the Sisters of the LQve Of God. need' in'the Dioce$e.' Left 'photo,: Rev. Francis ,Regis, SS.CC~, direetor 'of Right photo: Sister'Raquel and Sister Angeles conduct one of the Center's catechism ,e}aSses. . , ., ,', ''', . : ' '. '" ::,. the Cent~, registem,"Luiz rAe Martinez,. center, and Felipe G. ortega "fOr ,'I

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Missioner P'~trols' 'Bwnveni(Io' Is ' Word, to 'Puerto ,Rican 'Guests Urges Educ~tors Idealism Million Mil:e'~ , . At· New Bed,ford's entro Cq~olico, Hispano:' Promote PHILADELPHIA (NC)-HigbInCHICAGO Far' North ," . :er .education may be falling te (NCr ":":"Father . Bienvenido! In Spanish that mean'S welcome and that's just the way Puerto Ricans C.

William A. Leising, O.M.I., Arctic missionary, told the Oblate Crusaders of Chicago

entering New Bedford's Centro C~tolico Hispano are made to feel. The newly organized center, established this month by Bishop Connolly for Spanish-speaking people of the Greater New Bedford area, is u\lder direction of Rev. Regis Kwiatkowski, SS.CC., who has been released from par. At present' Father Regis de- sewing classes for older girls and ish duties to devote full time votes much of his time to home it is hoped that typing can be to this apostolate. ,A veteran visiting, attempting to fa~iliar- ~ffered in the near future. An of missionary service m ize as many .Puerto Ricans as orientation course for Puerto

get the best out of young people, a magazine editor suggested. . "Have we, we Christian educators, sufficiently challenged the ideals of youth?" Father Thurston N, Davis, S.J., asked, Father Davis, editor of Arn_ ica, national Jesuit weekly magagazine, spoke at a regional meeting of the National Catholic ~ducational Association at La Salle College here. He asked whether Catholic educators are making young people "understand that their own personal security must yield to the common good at every le·vel." "Have we given them a properly international 'perspective?'" he askE:d.

at a dinner in the Sherman Hotel that he now patrols his far north mission in the Canadian Northwest Territory fn his sevenpassenger DeHavilland Beaver Peru, Father Regis perfected bis possible with the services the Ricans newly arrived in New plane, . . Spanish in the Latin American center offers, These include a Bedford will be placed on an FaUler Leising is assigned to country. He is assisted by two social ser.vice referral office and organized basis as soon as poeservicing 30 missions manned by Sisters of the Love' of God who general orientation assistance. sible. 63 Oblate of Mary Immaculate, are likewise devoting full time The Sisters will soon start Father Regis will preach a priests scattered over an: area to the new' project. Later, addi:" mission in Spanish at the center of 1 200,000 square mlll;)s, He said tional Sisters will be assigned to Supreme Court Gets during t~e last three days of in that great expanse only 13,000 the center. 11Io... 0 scemty . Case' Holy Week and· he hopes to start ' d h'te ..... ew Eskimos, In d lans an w 1 s Catechism classes for some 50 ce 1ebrating weekly Mass there WASHINGTON (N C) - A on E ast er S un d ay. res id e. children from 6 to 14 started this Washington man found guilty of I n hi s 21 y ears of Arctl'c wor'k 'week at the center, located at In short, the "city missionary the mos t i mp re sS I've experl'ence 610 South First Street in the violating ,postal anti-obscenity, to the Puerto Ricans," his official was the reaction of 3,000 of his f N B df d Th laws has appealed his conviction title, is doing all he can to make end 0 ew e or, e to the U, S. Supreme Court. Esk'l'mo parishioners to the estab- south Sisters are instructing these . his new flock realize that at the lishment by the North American classes, but less formal instrueHerman L. Womack ,lIlrgueBcenter they are truly bienvenido! Air Defense Comma'nd, of the that the trial court which found Distant Early Warning (DEW) ,tion had been given for some 'n 1952, 0 months previously by Father him guilty was in error in refusradar line I . ing to allow him to show the NEW ENGLAND "You see, the Eskimos got a R egis. jurors material intended to es'on of Americans from Enthronement Ceremony CLAM bad notl tablish "contemporary communthe early whale fishing days at , Where Sacred Hearts Fathers ity standards" on such matters., A E' the turn of the century," Father are found, there will always Qe The Supreme Court has held in, CHARLES F. VARGAS Every Sunday - $2.95 Leising said. "When I first went an Enthronement Ceremony for the past that allegedly obscene 214 ROCKDALE AVENUI! up there I used to hear that a picture or statue of the Sacred material must be judged by the including - A LIve Lobster INIW BEDPORD, MASS. Americans only came' north to Heart. The center, also known test of community standards. THE get gold from the sea and lived as Regina Pacis, will have its '" only for wealth. Enthronement at 2:3.0 Sunday Mr. Womack was found guilty Respect Americans afternoon, combined with 1lA' OIl. March 21, 1960, of sending ,(oggshall Bridge, Fairhaven "But they saw the DEW liners open house for everyone inte!-- obscene matter and circulars for ' . t . such matter through the' mails. ested i n t h e new proJee . we re there for a purpose, ,Thev , He was "sentenced in U.S, Dis~ had come to live there 15,mont,htl Committee Defeats .::' trict Court. to a jail term of one R. A. WilCOX CO~ at a stretch, to build this.lil).e for tv. three year.s. . . the protection not only of ,wealth Waiting Period Bill " OFFICE FURNITURE , but what they believed.in. Little DES MOINES (NC)-Acom.. Stool< for 1.... edI.te Dell• .", . . :. by little, my Eskimos, began to Jilittee of'the Iowa House has de.. • DESKS • CHAIRS realize that the Americans are feated a bill requiring couples FILING CABINETS men of principle and it was a to wait three days before getting • FIRE FILES • SAFES ,;;.> happy day when I heard them a marriage license. FOLDING TABlES say to me: 'You know, Father, these' Americans are all right.'" But Rep, Floyd Edgington, lRIAND,CHAIRS The Americans learned some- thor of the bill, said he will ask thing from the Eskimos, Father the House to override the com273 CENTRAL AVE. Leising said, He explained~ mittee recommendation. 22 BEDFORD ST. "They learned first that what is "A waiting period in marriages FAll RIVER 5·78311 NEW BEDFORD today for these people is yester- is needed in this state," he said. day to us, We have a great prob- "We're getting too many couples WY 2-6216 lem up there, We now run six coming into Iowa to avoid the hospitals and four boarding marriage laws of. their Owtl schools and in both p1aces we ' 'mates." are trying, to. educate our peoIt. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport ple, , . , "Civilization as 'We know it is coming to them whether 'We will it or not and we are trying AS A HOLY CPOc~ FATHER to help them intellectually and Where The Priest-Teacher Home Missioner socially so they don't as it were, Entire, Family ~reign Missionary Parish Priest get drunk on our way of life." Can Dine For information about the Economically Approve Law -School Moly Cross Fathers or SAN DIEGO (NC) The Brothers, wriie toe American Bar Association bas notified Bishop Charles F. 'BudHOLY CROSS FATHERS dy that it has placed the law North !(llston, Massachusetts school of the University eli San Dieeo on its approved list.

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.:ese of Fall River-Thij:rs. Mar.. 9....1961. :.' " . ':_'--"'.' .. .':"~"""'.' '.'-~

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A.'JJf:,:~~rr 'lP:.. , ;JJ$ ,ChMwoth Right In tQ;(Q)~\f[fJ ~ ~i~, @lr\) M@ ~§'i@~e

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.God Love You

By MOst Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. D.Do

The following is a letter we reeeived:

By IRt. Rev. l\h.gr. John S. Kennedy The author of 'Whom God' Hath Not Joined' (Sheed and Ward. $3) calls herself Claire McAuley. This is probably a ,nom de plume, for one, who 'writes such an autobiographical book as this would certainly want to avoid revealing her identity: It is marriage and his children, he not that the story to be told did not share at all her concern is shameful; rather" it is about the propriety of the marpeculiar. The author, having riage, " entered into an, invalid marriage and lived in it for a number of yea,rs, now has 'a brother-sister reI a t ion _ I ship wit h her sUpposed 'hus~ band, and it is GI. tbis series of . events that she is writing. She says tnat a priest encouraged her .to do a book on tbe subject, because it is one of which little is said and nothing, at least in popular style, has been written. It may , .. be objected tbat the publication and general availability of a book such as hers will.encourage people to enter into bad marriages, since it is possible under eertain strict conditions, to avoid separation and still be admit~d again to the sacraments. But the author 'makes 'it abundantly clear thilt to get permission for this relationship. is extremely, difficult:' and that the relationship itself,' when permitted, is. , difficult' . F.;llse Presumption It is likely that the book will edify rather .~han. scandalize. For It shows the workings of grace" Ia two lives in which, for' a long:' time, grace seemed to play DO leading part. And it outlines the process of awakening to reality, of diScov«ing' the rightness of God's law,: eI. gradually recognizing the un-. assailability of the reasons for:' the Church's stand on ,marriage, which the author experienced. She was 18 when' she contracted a valid, sacramental marriage with a youth who shortly thereafter was "behind bars and bigamously married to another." Like so many, she presumed that' the Church would easily declare this unfortunate marriage null, and allo.w her to rewed. ' 'Also like many, she discovered thai the, presumption was completely false and resented what she)called an injustice. "So I sailed into a civil marriage with a barely baptized Catholic who Jtnew. nothing about invalidity, but only that he .was marrying the girl he loved.'" -

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,,A· Ring for His FingerS

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Dear Bishop Sheen, . :I am a junior at the ACli.dellll7 of OWl' Lady and by the special Grace. of God I am a Catholic. (II made my lFlrst Holy Communion last May.) Since freshman year, howeveli', I have been' a homeroom MiSsion Chairman, and I IIlncerely believe that by helping others to spread the Faith, Christ very generously gave me that Faith! ' However, I'd better get doWB to my :real reason for Writing this letter. The clay for ordering class rings Is approaching, and ·the more I think about it, the ·more I 'realize that twentl' dollars'would do much more &,ood if It were used to help those fighting for Christ than it would If It were used to decorate me with more gold than I could possibly wear at .once. ' Therefore, you will find enclosed twenty dollars for The Society to~ the 'Propagation of the Faith.,This comes not for praise' '(I'm proud enough), but simply from a grateful Catholic. , God Love Your, K.C.iI.

She convinced herself that she must effect their separation by driving him away from her. She ' staged a campaign of tantrums and general unreasonableness which puzzled and infuriated him" but did not make, him leave her. , . ' ' There arose" the; possibility of " getting permisSion for the 'brother';sister'relationship~The author had to persuade her husband of This is,our reply: UNDER ARREST: Liththe importance and desirability' Bishop Julijonas . My dear Friend, of this. Then a petition had to' be uanian , Your letter was one of the most beautiful made. Long before' the petition' Steponaviciu8, Apostolic AdI have ever received. First of all, I note the Good Lord has given was granted, the couple, though ministrator of the Arch- y-ou the gift of Faithj but before it came you were already serving together in the same house, diocese of, Vilna, has been the Missions as Mission Chairman of your class. Your conversion ceased living as man and wife. reminds me of what the Cure of Ars wrote to Pauline' Jaricot: placed under house arrest by , "Those Slow Process who aid tbe Propagation of the Faith will never l-ose tbe ' The husband began studying communist aut,horities for Faith"jexcept in your case it means: those who serve'The Propathe teaching of the Church. The refusing to ordain governgation of the Faitb will receive the gift of Faith. religion which was his because As regards the ring, I know how much a ring tneans to a senior he was 'baptized in infancy, but ment-favored candidates to til higb sehool; therefore, I know' how mUohthe Missions mean to in which he had not been reared, the priesthood. NC Photo. .you. In surrendering the ring for' the sake of Our' Lord . you took on meaning for him. Heacpratically put it· on 'His Fingers; saying: "Witb this rIng I ' Thee cepted it, and wanted to be adbetrotl).." 'I. , . ' . mitted to the sacraments and to Furthermore, by giving up the ring you are actually helping live the life of grace.' . , 'Ca,~ey 1lh-ose who have no fingers, such as tbe lepers in foreign lands. But the Church was slow to NEW YORK (NC)-The Asso- .Perhaps you noticed the scar oli Our Lord's I;Iands;, be sure He has accede to the couple's wish. The DOted the sacrlfice on your own. .. . '. author writes, "It is very easy ciation of Catholic Trade, Union. Some day 'you will get, the ring back, and in a far greater ists will presents its 14tb annual to become angry and blame a ceremony. than becoming a senior. The Heavenly Father will say priest for 'denying' 'you ,the sac- "Q4 adr agesimo Anno Medal" to ·to' you' on' tbe Last Day WOMS .like those the father' of the prodigal raments because it is easy to James B. Carey, a top' labor son said to hi~ on hiS return': '''Put';a ling on her band.'" Gotl-Love official, on May 21. ;. think that what you do is only You! " . ' - ," '.', ",' , ".. , Mr. Carey is president of the on your conscience; but this is ,~ishing 'you· every blesliing, assUring' you of my prayers and International Union of Electrical, erroneous. In the case of the beggmg your own, I am '.: bi-other-sister vow, anyone tak- Radio and Machine Workers, Faithfully yours in Christ, AFL-CIO, and secretary-treasing it is on some big consciences. M-ost Rev. Fulton J. Sheen "First, the priest who m~st de- urer of tbe Industrial Union ~ National Director cide if you are sincere ... and'not par.tment, AFL-CI(). : Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy win just sincere, but capable of living' Do you have $%0 whieh would do 'aWre good for thOlle ftllhtlDl' the VOWj who must promote ~ ,the principal speaker at the for Christ· than It Is dolo&' for yoa personally'! II this leUer your cause and present it to 'tbe ' association's' annual award IDsptres yoa to dent yourSelf a luxor,. aD d make a saerift~ for Bishop, who then 'has! the final breakfast. The senator is a memthe 'Holy Father'. Missioaa, send It to as and we will see that' ber of the Senate Labor Comdecision of refusing or ~granting' be receives It. . ., permission." " mittee. and head of its subcommittee on unemployment. Peculiai' I,Book , ,i. GOD LOVE YOU to'M.A.S. f<ir $10"Thtasm~token'iS to The association: is aCatboUc Their first,petition was denied.. ' tbaRf Our Lady for saving our home from Ii lJUlTOunding :fOrest laymen's group dedicated to This, though disappointing, led tU:e/" ........ to Mrs. J.H.for $28,10"1 'have 'always said that Ii I the author to pray the harder' futthering Catbolic'-,social priowere to wili the Irish SweePstakes, half would go to' Bishop 'Sheen and to practise penance regulai'ly' ciples in trade unions. fOr the M~ssions. With GOd's help, I won 20 ·pounds." .1 • • to S,P. for in_daily life, in small things as $1 ~ 11 years old. This is one w.~ek'~ allowanoe to help the 8s well as great. . Library MiclI'o~ilms poor chl1dr'en in Hong Kong." '" , ' '.' ' 1. • ' .• . t·' ,A s~,cond petition was eventu-' Pa'lat.one Conlect.oon . ally' granted; Those of uS' who . ~ " ~;, CUt out' tbis, column, pIn your sacrifice to 'it a~d' maO It ~ tM ' . receive Holy Communion· rouVATICAN CITY (NC)~At the M09,t 'Rev~ ~to.n J. She.~n, Natio~al Director o~ the Socle.ty for tinely" almost ,~nthinkingly, and request of the University of the ,PropagatIon of t~e Faltb, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N, Y.. without '!teen ,appreciation of the Heidelberg, the Vatican Library or your Diocesan Dlrec~or, RT.. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, d ell to' r d has microfilmed the whole of the pr ivilege " woula ,ow ea ~68 North Main. Street. ,Fall .River, Mass.' . . the lines 'in ~hich'the authorimpcirtant Palatine Library col~conveys something of her, feei,. lection, "which once belonged to ings when, after lengthy depritbe university. DAUGMTEltS5 OF 5ir.PA~1l vation, through her own fault, ,The Palatine Library colleeInvi~ young gi~1tJ (14-231 till labor IB she was again allowed to be tion at tbeVatican consists of Chri;"o vaot vinovard ao an A(ll08l1o c9' the absolved and to kneel at the .books and manuscripts dating Edition.: Prelim; Radio; Movio; and Tol• Wasted 'Effort .:.. altar rail. Her husband, now back to the ninth century, witb .,"oion. WI9h thooo modom' ";oane. Iii.." IttlooioOlary Sl.~ru bring .. Ch,lot'; Doctrine • ' sh;~~t~oU~~l~~e~n~~ ~~~~t~~:: mcoamdemhuinSl'oConn.fe!ision and his first codices in Latin, ~reek and Hebrew. Heidelberg became' a 10 an. rog.,rdloQO at race. cola, M C'OeCI• . C a 1VIOlS . . t cent er 0 f 1earn•, sickeningly way. As was remarked above, this ig, maJor ..Vow info,matioOl .vrito 10. She told herself that GQd ,a peculiar book. What remains in ing at tne time of the ReformaREV MOTHER SUPllRIOR 59 n. PAUL'S AVi, BOSTON 30, MAil. "tunderstood," meaning that' al-" the'reader ls, fitst, the 'author'u tion,' :and early in the. Thirty though what she '!Vas doing was 'II' b . . bl' .Years' War Maximilian of Bli.inful, He would s'o"meho'w' 'see' 'l·t. unwr. lngtheut rightness mevlta e of discov,...':: ery of' the ..varia."sent' the 'Palatine Library . not as sinful and would not im- Ch h d the' i to Rome as a"gift to Pope Gre.... pute it to her as' sin. ThIS' false- ' urc an ,·terr ble. conse:- ory XV.' ,.. ..and foolish assutance lasted for quenc'es,of going, against, the au" . a while. Uiority conferred by chilili, and, "German:'language codices that .... ': .. :'.~;.:"": secondly the 'lo'ngl'ng for tbe "we.re pa,rt,of.the library were reBut' there came inescapably " . ,', '. ",.." ,,', . turned to "th.e University at sac raments duorl'ng the 1 g 'd , .. home to her t.he fact that she was on es-" indeed deeply involved in real ert journey requisite before their Heidelberg in 1816 after an ac-' restora tiop. cord reached in the- Congress otI. and serious sin.."To' escape 'its, ' Vienna. stin~ she began'tO take"courses, .. rft'o 000 t T k P 't in t1'ieology, expecting that. such ~v.',;;, ~ a e or study w;ould enable her ·to'catch IIiil Newman:Week the Church out inerrorotlncon-' , :' WASHINGTON (NC)~An ee- ' Continued fro~ Page Om' 8 sistency:"and tbus prove that':!lhe' 'timatEid500,OOO Catholic stu- parishes headed by Sacred Heart was_in the right!, ,. ~e~ts 'throughout' the country Fathers will mee.t or exceed tbeir UNDON WHARf .FAIRHAVEN, ,MASS. ' It was wasted eff.ort,. at le.ast ~ill' participate in the third. anquotas this year. hi the sense that it did not,serve' miaI' Cardinal Newman Week 'And while we hesitate to sigits strang~ .purpose. !twas. not :obsex:yari~ beginning"'next nal ol;1t one p;Ui$ over another, wast~d, however" insof~r a,:!~. ,4ay::,.:", '. ' , . . ,,' 'w~ are mighty proud -of the succon~mced th«: autp.or· that ·the ' .. -The ·Natipnal. Newinan ,Club:; cess of this year's subscription 11 ' '.,)" Chu:rch-was perfeetly conslstent ' drive in tbe small St. Bonifaco , ", " ',' §'a.IDlVl, and:en~~relyligllt.,'She C~In!'! ·to, '; ~a~d 19E1~P~,rticipan.~ at!! ~tude'Ii~ ,"parish ,in 'New B,e,diOrd... ' liNe. .".': \ , . u~i:lerstand wh!it,,~as! 'wr~~~: "10 l'ie~manel~b.s·at..s~O ~~ular: . ? A; quicit glance attbe.list of 18 ; '. r .WIth the. Holy Roman Cathol~<;c.. ,cooUeges,apd uOlverslt~es acroStl .'Pllflshes, 'including nabonal and Church ... .,the .;lns\yer wa,s ..7\, Tpe ,parishes, 'ds tbe best ': :. ',' , , ' ,.';, , ", . Husband"C?onsen~: ,,' " .... ":.eyents' will includ!! intellectual 'I: eviden'ce that· attainment of the " ' . ", .. husband, ll,ctiyities - discussions,' is, possible ih each a n d " , · , · i ' 'R':':E: . '.:' :,:."', ,', D9thmg about .Catholic teachlqg,,':le,n,cE,ls,'setpinars, and )ectures'~' ~ .;ev~ry parish in ,the'diocese. u;;;, I~ and was npt m tbe least: ,co~- Ca,rd}n~l Newman's literary, ' .. Final'returils·fJ;om·this year'o . PPLIA~IJCES eerned about it. Content witb .hm 'work.s. '. ' ',' , . '. Subscription campaign.are not I~ ""'Aoo"" .... n C........ tr""'O '··I,.e~dl\i~.Your,Hands""iu<Jho~' c()I~~lete. ", Howexer, there is " .. gJO~II',"'IG' .... 11 ""IWI wu. v6 tbeme fO!\ tbe' observance.>:'~; , everY indication tbat The Anchor " . !~ V VATICAN CITY (NC) -The programs will.,be"~uiltaroun4.i~which~:,:!h~ 'largest weekly "! • ':"'" '" ,,',,; " ~,:' '''~~~y~,~e p.!l~,a~sumed responSi- the theme, which'.is'a:;teiliinder::'Dewspa~I n'Southeastern Mas-,; 'MANaS J., DEVINE 'c' " . ' "ARTHUR J:"DOUCrET, 'bWty ~o;l',,,t~e p~eserVation and that the Newm~n 'aP:o~t?ltite"'J1s ':':~~~\ls~#S-:-:isheaded for another" '" " .; : .)~;·. i .. ' . ' ':,:C ~; : ' <,[t.;; . , ."'<', '!"" ,)~J ,. ,;., ',' final dISposal of diocesan ciocu- tbewot.kofChrlStonthesecu,lat?\:~Qr:d.;year in home sales de-!'H 363,SECONDST.,,;::i: FALl",RlVER·,i·MlASS." 1L.~~.·~.Lid-V. ta~r>;";'ll·!i;1i·.);;'~ii\~';~,~;~FPlis, the NCCF said. : </~~~~d via. tbe .mails. :;j " ,-" ','", .' ,,:., . ~;; ,;,/,';. ::-",,~, ,t,,_"'~' "h.,,,,'

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tHE ~At«:MoR""':~~ce .. of 'Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 9, 1961

13

Catholic Charity Aids Chinese Refugees WASHINGTON (NC) - Hong Kong is a human reservoir with no' outlet. Into the 891-square-mile enclave, at the rate of several hundred a month, flow refugees from Red China. Once there, most of them stay, for the simple reason that there is no place else for them to go, according to a woman concerned with aiding these peoples. Hong Kong's C 11 r r e n t refugee-· Mrs. Lam is president Qf the Catholic Relief Se~ices. .welled population is con- Hong Kong Chinese C~tholic There are now 19 permanent aervatively. estimated a t Club. Her work for refugees clinics under Catholic auspices. three million.. Many of its has been as wide as their need. as well as a mobile clinic. Eacll people live amid crushing poverty, in rickety shanties or even OIl the streets, deprived of med-. !cal care, work, all the most basic needs of life; Christian charity. is a beacon' light of. hope in this morass of human misery. And one of Hong Kongos leading. practitioner.s 01.

eharity ~ small, soft-spoken Mrs. Mary Lam, now in this country' CD an aid mission.

Typically, Mrs: Lam is in the . United States on an errand of of these serves between 100 and mercy....,. escorting four Chinese 200 people a day. orphan children on their way to Mrs. Lam and other Hong new homes in .this country. Kong Catholics have been aeHer main project for the rem- tive also in such tasks as helping gees has been organizing Chinese the refugees find work, food and doctors and nurses who staff housing. clinics. This work comes natuCRS-NCWC has done yeom_ work in all these fields. Other rally, since she is the wife of agencies, such as the National Dr. Paul Lam, who is in charge Council of Catholic Womea, of refugee medical services for have also been active.

Hold Your Fire; B,illy IO'·idn/t Steal 'Your .

POPE'S PHOTOGRAPHERS: Three member!:l of the Felici family, official pontifical photographers, examine portraits of the late Pope Pius XII. Seated is Alberto, standing at left is Arturo. Luigi, standing right, is the present heir to the name and title since it was his grandfather, . Giuseppe' Felici, who founded Felici Photographers. NC Photo.

GOLD MEDAL Perfect-Whipped BR EA D

Members of Felici Family 'Official Photographers Under Six Popes .

ROME (Nt) - Behind the ' of the pontifical zouaves, .vol~ eamera of every photograpk un~r soldiers woo came from that has been taken within the Canada. The Canadians, like papal household in the last six most soldiers, wanted pictures of pontificates has stood a Felici. themselves in uniform to ~nd If one could speak of. a dynback home. The Canadian asty of photographers anywhere zouaves were. so fond of. Giuin the world it would be that seppe that they tried to persuade of the Falicis who have been him to return to Canada w·~tb the sole· official photogmphersthem. But Giuseppe had III of the papal household sInce sweetheart, a Roman girl, and St. Pius X so named them in a . SO he chose to remain here. rescript dated O~t. 11, 1903. Use Three Cameras Present heir to the name and One day. Pope Leo XIII well the title is Luigi Felici, who wlll scheduled to grant an audience be seen in formal attire with to a sports group in the Vaticamera in hand every time. and can's Belvedere Courtyard, and hi. every place that Pope John Giuseppe was invi,ted to record appears publicly. the event with his camera. With this beginning Feli0i, photogBegan in 1878 raphy and papacy were wed. Members of the Felieifam~ In 1903 Pope Pius X named have been taking photographs in Giuseppe as official pontifical the Vatican since the reign of photographer "as a token of Our Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903), esteem," granting him "the though it was only in the suc- ri~ht to use the coat of arms of ceeding pqntiflcate of St. Pius X the reigning pontiff on his busithat they gained the title of of- ness plate." After this, the certi£lclal pontifical photographers. fieate of nomination was reFounder of the FeUci photog- newed by every succeeding raphers was Giuseppe FeUci, pope. Luigi's grandfather, who came The first official photogmphs to Rome from his native Cagli by Felici were taken of P~us X. at the age of 22 to study the Three' different cameras were violin. In addition to his musical used for the sltUng and. the interests Giuseppe bed the photographs were taken on photography hobby. large glass plates mealluring' He began by making tintypes seven by nine and a half inches.

Australian Democratic Labor Party. Urges State Aid Private.Schools . CANBERRA (NC)-The s t a t e . . . · Id i f' neial aid to priThe groun~ swt:;ll ~f Jumor stush ou g ve Ina dents passIng Into secondary vate schools as well as pUblic grades 1Sthreatening to overones, the Democratk: Labor .. . p.arty said at its national eon- . ;'~':n~ u~~::D~e~U:t~~ venUon here. up to meet' the chailenge. Party members sa~. in a · . statement that it is unjust to make education cOmpulsory' for all, but free only for those who DONAT BOISVERT accept the state system of secuINSURANCE AGENCY·' lar education. All . Kinds Of 'Insurance Catholic schools in Au~lia '., face a growin~ problem ill proM WlLLJIAMSTBE~ viding added lIpaC'e for the thou-. NEW BEDFORD. MASS. sands of new students registerDIAL WY. 8-5153 ing in thp. schools each year. In 1946 about 9;1,000 students 'tlnonal Service attended Catholic schools in New South Wales, 65,000 of' them ID. primary grades. By the middle ol. 1960 the total, bad 'risen to 167,049. secondarY achool enrollment . rose. from. . . 20,149 in 1946 to 44,'1'72 ill 1960. ,.

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There would be many a killing m the Panhandle oWl Gold Medal Perfect Whipped Bread. Fortunately we live in a peace-IOYing community where neighbors share their Gold Medal Perfect Whipped Bread when their grocers supply runs out. But don't depend -on your. neighbor--keep an extr~ loaf on hand because Gold MedaJ Perfect Whipped Bread stays fresher daY~ Ionget. . .

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Open N_ Schoolli

III Sydney, new sehooJs .. IlUbstantial additions to existing schools 'Mire opened in' £oUr pllTishes on Jan. 29, and DlON are scheduled for cledicatioll ill at least 11' othet' parishe& This ili Iil acldltiOil to 11 ecbooM tIuIt

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THE~:ANCHOR-Diocese'of,F.all:River~Thurs, Ma't:.:9,:'196:1"

Decis'ion'-:-·lny'olYes··.:.P,e-rsolial

Tax Deductions For Educcition

'~s.p~·~ii·bil.it~<B'ef~:~~'.~od·~~<

WASHINGTON (NC) .,~ Sen. Kenneth B.' Keating" of New York has in-trOduced a bill to permit ded~tion8of

'1,~ ····By Father' John r..-;.Thomas, S.J.' ':.;: ." ;~". :~ Ass't Sociology Prof.~Stw :Louis- .Ubiver.siiY .:.

'~';;"~Our,18-year-old daughter has/been: going with :a.boy several m~mths. younger. I neyer -r.e1:l,lly .approved but never objeCted too much either. Now,th~y:v~ become very 'serious aJ>Ouf each otner and we've had some pretty harsh .worn. o\rer .'it. I feel marriage is· effect~e boy;s future, career'!' out of the qu~stion until he Remind her that a' mali muSt be has -fInished 'college or put· prepared 'to find 're~sonable' sat-:his time iIi the service.' I' isfact~on in his work'as well'as

up to $300 from Federal income

kiloW I should, have corrected 'in hisfamili. . '. this before but maybe it'can still . Contrary ,to .the wife, the ~ straightened ' b a n d ' s ' basic role' is fulfilled 'out- I .Clut. What do side the home. If early 7 6u think?" riage 'limits his 'needed prep": :Your letter aration, he will later: become rcifses several resentful, frustrated and dissatInlportant quesisfied. . . tioris' that merit MOll'ai Risk. . 'SISTER'S VISITORS: Sister Anthony of Sacred Hearts .serious . considShe may argue that he ean Academy in Fairhaven is shown welcoming her two sisters', eration by all still go to college. Get realistic 'parents. Are 18 here! In addition to the points ,Miss Eileen McCoy of County Carlow, Ireland, left, and Mrs. y~ar - olds too I have mentioned above, remind William Egan of Dublin, Ireland, second from right, with YO,ung to marry her that for Catholics marriage her daughter,: May Egan, right. In our society? • normally means babies,- and' , If they are, how starting at her age, probably a do you .deal good many of them. ' with a young couple already Why should they try to fool ,Sacr~d serious about each other? What themselves? Getting • Wort~' lesson should your experience ' ':rwosisters and a niece from the silver jubilarian. She was teach other parents? These ques- 'while college educatiOn is a fWl-' Ireland were irl Fairhaven last 'hostess at the academy· for :sevtions are all interrelated, but ~e ' "time. job. ' . week to celebrate. with their, eral days to Mrs. Wm. Egan of . shall deal with them separately .She may i~sist that, they only , -kinsman the 25th .anniversary Dublin and Miss' Eileen,McCoy of ' . for purposes of clarity. WIsh to contInue steady dating. of her life as a min ' County Carlaw, her sisters, and How. young is too young for ,For how long? !f m~iage is Sister Anthony, prin~ipal- of Miss Mary Egan, Mrs. Egan'. marriage?' Making. allowances :out of the questIon for several Sac.l'ed,. Hearts ,AcadeplY, Fliir- ' daughter, aiso of Dublin. :' .. for individual differences, once 'years, they have no right· at haven, who also teaches' English StUdentS at th~ academy hon- ' young. people have completed their age to run this' moral ·rlsk. and Spanish'at 'the' school;: was ofedSiSter' Anthony'with an puberty, the' optiinum age for Ask. !ter' to be honest imd. S i n - , ' ,. ,". " eri'tertainmehtand presented her marriage will depend on Social cere WIth herself an~ her' ,friend. with a bouquet of flowers and a eonditionsand custom. . ~ , , 'As in the above poInts. remind Yea.'r,"· pUrse. The , nuns had. private . \ .' . ' ' her that this is her "personal re", celebrationIater In the convent. SInce marrl~ge inv?lves bear:- ;'sporfsibiliti before.' GOd. -She WASHINGTON (NC)-'--Senator " , . '", ' Jng and rearl~g· chIldren, .the "can'f place herself .in an, impoe- Hubert ,Humphrey "of Minnesota Sister- Anthony has been at eouple must b~ ~~epared to carry" 'sible" situation and then argue has introdu'ced in the U. S. -8en- Sacred Hearts for 24 years.',Prior these·~esPo~sIbIhties as defined ' 'tli~t the mOral'law.is: floe dIi- ate a resolution to designate 1961 to that, after taking her vows in by t!telr SOCH:ty. Thi.s allows for ficultto observe. ";,.' . as "Bible Anniversary Year." Paris at themotherhouse of the II WIde margIn of dIfferences. " The legislator told' the Senate' Congregation of the . Sacred . For' example, the average' 'Climate of Oplnior th at the D ouay-Rheims, . or Cath,HeartstaU of lesus eel' and Mary, she (though not necessarily the op-' . Because young people lack olic version, of the Bible' was _:!Vas s on 1Q England for a ear timum) age at marriage' for ' life-experience, they tend to r&::- completed a little over 350 years 1: • American women is around 20, gard future difficulties, as insfg- ago and that the King James, or ~----...- - - - - - - -... whereas 'it is a little over 30 nificant.· Help her'to be"truly Protestant version, will have its In' Ireland and only about 14 in' honest and objective. 350th anniversary this year. ' India. ' It is her future, herbappiness, "The year 1961," he said, .,. Marriage Age. Varies .J1er 'loyalty to Christ' that is at a year when more than ever we Men tend to enter marriage·.' stake, and' she alone Buist a~Cept will face the' nE;ed for' re~ewed Melen Aubertine Brough somewhat later than women. As the consequences'of her d~lsion; faith and our nation, founded by Owner and Direetor breadwinners they normally re-' you can only advise aDd' m.. religious tnen and'womem, Should' Spacious Parking Area quire more years of training and ·courage. . --" be encouraged to turn' for preparation, while national cusj)&;s your problem' have:. strength to the ultimate 'source of WY,2-2957 toms may also have some influ- s~ri" for other parents? 'As you aU' strength-'in the Word of 129 Allen S&' New &e4f0r4 ence. intimatE!<i, you should have act- GQd."

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Irish Visitors, at Silver Jubilee Of Hearts Sister

taxes for expenses at tUition-, charging schools. The measure (5. 792) would permit the deduction by parents for their own or their children'. education at any educational institution, from grade school to college. where tuition and fees are' charged. The legislator told' the Senate he favored a larger deduction, but this would produce too largo an amount of revenue loss. His proposaI.he' Said, would 'cause an annual loss' Of about $300 million a ;year. Business Dedue'tiollll Comparing his approach with the deductions permitted businesses on the grounds these gen, erate further business' and additional revenues, the Senator said: "This is surely true ~ education, for the differences in income levels among those with. high school, college and graduate ,degrees is a very well, knc>wA fact." . . The Senator said ~ deduction would not be given to persons' who 'receive direct grants from states or communities·under state laws designed ·to block' school' desegregation.

Urges 1961 as Bible AJini,y';rsaI'Y'

AUBERTI'NE Funeral Ho'me'

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Para(Iqxically, during the 'past·' , 20 years when' succeSs in ··the American system has become" elosely- associated with ever';'inereasing amounts of formal, training, the average age at mar-" riage for men has' continued to·, drop. At present, 50 per cent are'

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ed' sOoner. Starting e'arlY,' parents ~should ,create a "realistic "clirriate of opinion" in the home concerning life-goals, dating and marr;iage.

This involves informaUo,n and abov~ all attitudes. Before ,the occasion arises, teen agers shou~d married before they are 23. By know what their parents expect, , eontrast, in Ireland, less than 50, what they will allow, what they per cent are ~arried before 3~. will forbid. You' are quite right in being On the basis of this pre-condisturbed about this youth's. age. ditioning, a timely word of adA man should be ready to take vice wil often suffice, and young a job before he assumes the ob- people will feel that their' parligations of marriage. Marriage'. ents are guiding, not interfering while in college may provide a with their development. eonvivial rooqImate, but it is fraught with difficulties. J' EFFREY' E. Besides problems related to flnance, disruption of schooling,' working wives, and so on, there ' , Is the husband's immaturity. FtaaereI. Most male students do not "find:' themselves'" or clearly recognize 550 Locust st.' their pla<;e in society until they ..Fall Riyer.Maa have' finished their training: OS 2-2391 ' The" wife who works' to "p~t : ; Rose E. Sulliv811 her husband through school inay , leffrey E.·Sulliv'aa " feel very herqic, but she is more c of a rriother than a wife~' ,,' , ",', The: girl one marries.just out of high, sch~l or early in, eOl~. lege qIay look, pretty 'drab, .aQd , ."' , FUNERAl' ~ unint.eresting five' Or ten years :'. '8~ "lymo~lh:.Ave~": .later ,when the former student. takes,,~his phice ,~adult ~~&1j: ,_',' .):011 River/tAos$. U eircles., , ' :",' HoW: Should you 'himdleyour :; ~',<, .1.i..... -.;,Fvnnl·"Oiredar :i daughter? ,As- you' have discov.:.;· and R;.giiter.;e,·~~·bcif~' ered, .'at. this late stage;" emotion,"" rather' ·than reason tendS: to',have'., •__the upper hand.·' '. '"'',:.,';''''' ~"!",!,,, _----~....- ....- . . She is also resolved to assert her independence. Under the cir,Fune;'ol Home eumsfa'iices the best· approach will: be' to hold your feelingg 571 Second St.· carefully in check and to exam:- . Fall River; Mass. ine with her all the aspects 'Of ' the situation. .' ", OS 9-6072 You may take for' gran~d , MICHAEL J. MCMAHOM that'she thinks she's in love, but Licensed Funeral Direaw point out that being in love' is . Regi'shilred Embalmer not .enough.How will marriage·,

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Mt:nus;~, Recipes'19r'''Filih:''JV~~k'of'

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.' 'THE "ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Mor. 9, 1961

By Gertrude Lynch THURSDAY, MARCH 16 Fast Breakfast: Half G~apefruit, English Muffin, Strawberry Jam, Beverage. Lunch:'Toasted Egg and Sardine Salad Sandwich, Potato Ohips, Pickles, Sliced Pineapple, Peanut Butter Cookies, Beverage. Dinner: Barbecued Hamburgers,· Lyonnaise Potatoes,· Buttered Carrots, Green Peas, Molded Fruit Salad,· Double Crust Lemon Pie. Barbecued Hamburgers Serves 6 1 Ih Ibs.• ground beef 3 T chopped onion Ih cup bread crumbs lIh t salt 1f4 t pepper 2 T fat Barbecue sauce I, Combine beef, onions, crumbs, salt and pepper. 2. Form into patties and brown slowly in fat. 3. Cover with barbecue sauce and cook 15 minutes longer, turning occasionally. Lyonnaise Potatoes 3 cups diced potatoes salt and pepper 2 t minced onion 2 T fat , I T chopped parsley 1. Potatoes should ,be slightly underdone for best tesults. 2. Season with salt and pepper. 3. Cook onion in fat until light brown, add potatoes and stir with a fork until all sides are brown. Do not break potatoes up. Add more fat if necessary.' 4. Transfer potatoes to hot dish and sprinkle with parsley. ' . NOTE: Canned potatoes may be used in this" recipe. Molded Fruit Salad To 1 package of orange gelatine add 1 cup boiling water ahd stir until dissolved. Adii 1 cup orange juice and 1 cup drained fruit oocldail. Pour into mold and chill until set. ' FRIDAY, It,IARCH 1'7, ST. PATRICK'S DAY No Fast or Abstinence SATURDAY, MARCH 18 Fast Breakfast: Apple Juice, Bran Flakes, Raisin Bread Toast, Beverage. Looch: Stuffed Prune and Or~nge Slice Salad,. Hot Corn Bread, Grapenut Custard, Beverage. Dinner: Pan Broiled Liver and Bacon, Parsley Potatoes, French Style Green Beans, Broiled Tomato Slices, Pineapple Cole Slaw, Fluffy Gold Cake with Butter Icing·. Stuffed Prune and Orange Slice Salad Serves 4 1. Soften slightly 1 package of cream cheese with a small amount of mayonnaise. 2. Pare and slice 4 oranges and arrange on lettuce leaves on 4 plates in a circle. 3. Stuff 16 large cooked pitted prunes. 4. Arrange top of' orange slices and gar,nish with chopped nuts. Fluffy Gold Cake , Two 9" layers 2 1h cups sifted cake flour 1 % cups sugar 4 t baking powder 1 t salt lh cup vegetable shortening 11/4 cups milk 1 t lemon extract Ih t vanilla 5 unbeaten egg yolks 1. Sift dry ingredients together 2. Add shortening 3. Combine milk and flavoring and add a little more than half to flour and shortening: Beat 2 minutes on medium speed. 4. Add remaining milk and egg yolks. Beat 2 minutes. 5. Pour into 2 greased 9" pans and bake at 350· for 25 to 30 minutes. Cool. White Butter Icing Blend 3 cups sifted confectioner's sugar and ¥.i cup butter together. Add about 3 T cream and Ilh t vanilla and stir until smooth. Lemon or orange juice may be substituted for creamomit vanilla - and add grated rind for flavor. NOTE: Egg whites may be used for fluffY,frostin'g or for a meringue shell for chiffon pie,

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MONDAY, MARCH 20 Fast Breakfast: Orange Juice, Hi~ Protein Cereal (Hot), Beverage. . Lunch: Corn and Tomato Chowder,· Croutons, Cottage Cheese and Pimiento stuffed celery, Cup Cakes, Beverage. Dinner: Cheese Topped Broiled Ham,· Candied Sweet Potatoes, Succotash, Apple, pineapple and nut salad, Squash Pie. Corn and Tomato Chowder , 3 T butter 1 medium onion 4 medium potatoes '2 cups water 2 cups milk 1 No, 2 can corn 1 't salt 1J4 t pepper 1 can condensed tomato soup 1. Wash and pare and dice potatoes. 2. Chop onion 3. Melt fat in pan, add onion and cook. 4. Add diced potato and water. 5. Cover, simmer 15 minutes. 6. Add salt and pepper and condensed tomato soup. 7. Stir until well blended. 8. Add milk and heat. Garnish with small amount whipped cream or buttered pop corn. Cheese Topped Broiled Ham Ham slice Ih" thick (cooked). Broil pne side of cooked ham 5 minutes. Tur,n and broil other side 5 minutes. Place slice of cheese on top of each piece, of 'ham. Sprinkle with paprika. Return to broiler until oheese melts and begins to brown. Serve immediately. Canned chopped ham may be used. TUESDAY, MARCH 21 Fast Breakfast: . Sliced Orange, Protein Cereal, Whole Wheat Toast, Beverage. Lunch: Goldenrod Asparagus on Toost,. CMTOt eUrls, Radishes, Whipped Jello, Hermit Cookie, Beverage. Dlimer: chicken Maryland, Curried Riee, Green Peas, Baked Acorn Squash, Hea'rts of Lettuce, Russian Dressing, Deep Dish Apple Pie. Goldenrod Asparagus Serves 6 1 No. 1 can asparagus tips 3 hard cooked eggs 12 stuffed olives. 2 cups medium white sauce. Buttered Toast ' 1. Heat asparagus in juice. 2. Chop egg whites and olives. 3. Add to white sauce. 4. Arrange hot asparagus on toast. 5. Cover with sauce and garnish with sieved egg yolks.' . WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22 Fast Breakfast: Prune Juice, Toasted Corn muffins, Beverage.' , Lunch: Eggs and Cheese Toast,· Tomato and Cucumber Salad, Applesauce, Chocolate Obip Cookies, Beverage. \ ' Dinner: Braised Short Ribs, yrhipped Potatoes, Buttered Carrot Sticks, Broccoli, Cranberry Waldorf Salad,· Indian Pudding with Desser,t Topping or Hard Sauce. . , Egg and Cheese Toast, Serves 8 6 eggs, slightly beaten lh t salt pepper lh cup milk 2 T butter 8 slices hot toast Tomatooatsup 1 cup grated oheese 1. Combine eggs, salt, pepper and milk 2. Melt butter in double boiler. 3. Pour in egg mixture and cook, stirring from sides and bottom of pan. as egg thickens. 4. Spread catsup on 'toast and cover with scrambled eggs. , 5. Sprinkl~ with grated cheese and place under the broiler to brown and melt cheese. Cranberry Waldorf Salad Slice jellied cranberr y sauce in rings. Place on lettuce and top with Waldorf Salad. Add mayonnaise.

Seek Bus Rides for Parochia'i School ANNAPOLIS (NC) Parochial school pupils in' Baltimore county wou ld be jriven free bus transporta-

even break on the transpor~tion issue."

Pu~ils

and, in fact, without these schools the public school problem would be insurmountable."

, "'We tnust keep in mind," Mr. Tyler aiso said, "that without Previous attempts to pass legislation giving free transportation under • b:'.1 introduceCi m: private schools in our county the state General Assembly.' . the tremendous cost of public tion to private' schools have The bill, Sp~nsored,bi,Delegate ' education would possibly doubie failed in the General Assembly. Herbert H. Tyier, would apply to all' private school pupils in grades one through twelve. It directs the Baltimore County Famous Reading tiARD COAL council to establish new bus NEW ENGLAND COKE routes for service to private IIChools. . DADSON Oil BURNERS· Mr. Tyler said he introduced 24-Hour Burner Service the legislation because "many people in, Baltifuore county have Charcoal BriquetS their children enrolled in private schools but are paying for public Bag Coal - Charcoal school teachers' raises, construction of modern public schools and facilities for the operation of these schools." Successors to DAVID DUFF & SON ' 'Even Break' He stated that "the least these New Bedfont 640 P1ealant Street Tel. WY 6-8271 taxpayers are entiUed to '18 an

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.. DOLLS TO HELP FEED REFUGEES: Mrs. Paul Lam, right, wife of Dr. Paul Lam, director of refugee medical Services-NCWC in Hong Kong, shows Mrs. Margaret Zemo. foreign relief secretary of the NCCW, how dolls and hand. bags are made by her p~ople. Sold by the NCCW, the proceeds from these items are used for refugee work ia in Hong Kong. NC Photo. '

,.

POPULATION SHIFTS

ill INDIA, as all)'where else In the world, occur when mall)' Jobl become available III particular areas. Several vlUages in I,ndl. have had the ,ood fortune of enjoyin. • "population explosion" because the, were chosen as sites for, new factories. One of these fortwiate villages la, RAJAGIRI In the Archdiocese of CHANGANCHERRY. Within the past few months 28 Cathollo families. numbering 165 persons, have come to live In RAJAGIRI because the fatl1en of these families secured jobs In • new factory there. The priest who hal been assigned as the pastor has 'al. Tht Holy Fathtr's Mission Aid ready baptized 67 converts and has 42 for lIN Driff/tal OJurrh more people under Instruction to beClOrne Catholics. If his ministry Is to continoe its effectiveness he needs a Church and a small rectory. $2,~OO ~ll bring theso Into beIn,. The people are giving what money they cean. Could yon help this priest and his parishioners by .' donation, largo or small? Any offering will be, apprecIated.

"REJOICE, 0 JERUSALEM, and come together all you who love her""-these are the opening words of the Mass for Laeta~a Sunday. In our day a wonderful way of showing love for Jerusalem is by a donation to help the Palestine Refugees, If you can afford to send $10.00 we will send you an Olive Wood Rosar)' from the Holy Land as a token of our appreciation.

SAINT JOSEPH'S MONTH

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Each year, In most of the Dioceses of our Holy Church, Ute month of March, dedicated to Saint Joseph, Patron of the Universal Church, Is designated 8S Vocation Month. During this month, in the Dioceses G1' the United States, intense physical, men· tal, and spiritual effort will be expended In explaining and recruiting vocations. As III result of the tireless el'l'orts of priests and religious in our own country, 1I10st og our Catholics are aware, not only , of the obligation of fostering vocations In their own families but also of IIsslsting, In whatever way they can, all boys and girls who aspire to the priesthood or reUgioWi life. For Borne Catholics this help takes the form of Illrayer, for others It also Includes financial aid. ' We are most grateful to those people who assist Oil financiallY In educating and training seminarians and novices illl 1\1IssioD countries undf'r the jurisdiction of the Sacred Oriental Congregation. Some of these good people pay completely for the education of a· seminarian ($600) or for the training of a novice ($300); others supply us with the money to boild and maintain Ilemlnarles and novitiates by membership In our CHRYSOSTOM CLUB (for seminaries) or In our MARY'S BANK CLUB (for novitIates) Membership dues for each of these clubs are one dollar a month. . In the important work of preparing, boys and girls to beco~ priests and sisters we are 'always In oeed of monetary help. III honor of Saint Joseph could you pay for 'the education. of JOSEPH VALIAKANDAM Or GEORGE'VALIAMANGALAM, wino are Itudents for the priesthood . iii , SAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY in INDIA! Or for the training of SISTER BERNAV A or SISTER CRUZ MARIA, who are' no\'Ices of the ADORATION SISTERS, 'alSo in INDIA' The full amount need not be paId at one tlnie. U '00 are not III '. financial position to "adopt" • seminarian or a novice, could :JOU become a CHRYSOSTOM 01' make • monthly deposit .. MARY'S BANK?

~'l1ear1istOlissions~ fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pre.ldent

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M.gr. Jos.pll T.. I"', Nat' Sond all c_aalcatloa. tol

CATHOLIC NEAft EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION . 480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y.

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:Hon:o-r$ Jiilst NegrOc,C:o-.ed ~EW YORK eNC).Charlayne "Hunter, fi T s t Negro co.:edtoenroll :at ,the ..University of Georgia, was

._1.,

honored :here -by :the Catholic flnterradal<council.cif:New York. 'F,ather ,J.ohn >LaF.arge,S:J., --eouncil ch~plain,~presented Miss :Hunter,a conv:ert;with <a 'citation .acclaiming -her'~exceptionaland J highlyexe~plary :denionstration ;'of .quiet [poise cand Christian . ,;Strength in 'the ,accomplishment of ,a ,great <-thrust "forward in' :the sliuggle:for ,equaLoppor:tun,tity in education:" 'More,than 100 personslattended Clhe council's :annual dinner, ,including, student, delegations 'from INew 'York's cCatholiccolleges "who-met'Miss:Hunter ,and Father IDennis 'Walsh, her pastor 'ilt St. ·Paul' of the' Cross church· in J!\tthe' air.port. ,. lanta,.at ·PrayStor tEquality :A:ccepting:the,award;.the Geortgia .co-ed said \She "felt over,whelmed ·.by.alLthe attention.and encouragement she hali received" and'expressed the hopc'.that or\ganizations 'such :as ,the council would continue to grow. M,iss Hunter saJ.d,she would.pray, ..a nd "hoped others would. pray, for the time when call .people 'wlllbe ,treated as {equals, In areport'to 'members, ·F><ither rLaFarge ,aseribedthe "extra.'ordinary \development"ofCathotic Interraciaf.councils in ',this ,country "to ,their '~uncommon .ateadfastne~s" .in ,apPbo:ingthe _ . {natural law .teachings of the ,Church rto .the Iproblems of.1SOceiety .and ltorth,eir.·practicalrmode .of eaction, These .achievements, he de(clared, 'depend qpon 'Ill -deep ,conviction ,that ,the diversity of traces and peoples 'is 'not a r.plaguesome :problem but '8 lGoa-given :opportunity." The:present;attitude .regarding '(Negro ,students entering ·~the· Uni~I¥ersity of Georgia indicates a '''toning 'down ot :feelings,"Miss .Huntersaid in an ·exclusiveinterview during her stay ·here. , "Most of the students .ar.e ,adjusting and, if th~y are not tot.,'ally accepting it, they are not '-resisting it 'in an outward way;" ':Miss Huuter'said'in'an exclusive "interview with "Father 'Philip S. over Fordham . ''Hurley, S,:7" University's radio 's t'8 t io n' WFUV-FM.

Squ ires :Invi.te ,iN-ew (Members

.....

.The ' Columbian .squires, Circle tl68, Fall River,-are'inviting .boys :between :the ;ages of .13 and ,18 who are interested inthe,:Squires Ito visit the 'Knights of(Columbus -'Hall on FranKlin :Street in Fall 1River this evening I.between 7:30 'and '9 o'clock ,where :the'Squires :;program 'will :be ~explainetl too .'1bem. The Circle =has :been informed that it has received an "AU'rating ~trom July, 1960, through :Februcary of this 'year, , 'The Squires :have '3lso :bought ~blue jackets with the 'name <spelled out'in :script 'on 'the back 'and have 'organized a basketball iteam, Bumper 'stickers have been ,tlistributed·so that the organiza·(.tion . will be "better :known throughout the area. New committees'are: 'Spiritual -Chairman 'Robert Firlet, with !Morris 'Farias,· 'Robert 'Moni:/; ',fRichardCarvalho 'ana Armand )Valerina, . Civic 'ana Ctiltur.aI-.Ghairman JJeffrey Oliveira, .with 'Raul In.utra, ·Norman'1.lavoie,::Raymond "BelandaniLLouis :Deschenes, Social Chairman Thomas 'Gasior, with :7osElph ·Monteiro, :Richard Czepiel, Richard Valerina and -Norman Marceau, :physical - Chairman James Soares, with Louis Lesczy.nski, Lester Wood, ..Steve Kozak ,~Hid JRaymond·:nolirigues.

'Cen~te,r

O,pens

SOUTH ,ORANGE,( NC,) ..Seton Hall university, .incoQperation ,with .the 'MouIit ;CarmEU ,pildof\the:Newark :archQiocese, fJIas opened:a (heai'ing.and,~ '-1I8Ilter.

(CAPITOVS STAR'UARY HALL PROPOSALS: TWo Catholicmissionarfes '.may some day be honored :by having their Jikenessesplacea in the StatuaJ::Y llallo! ,the U.s.· Capitol in Washington. They are Father Damien de Veuster, .SS.CC.,:Belgium ;native who labored ·among '.the victims of ,Hansen's disease (leprosy) on MolokaJ Island anH P,atner

Eusebio Kino, S.J.~ Spanish missionary wbo worked among Mexico and Southern Arizona Indians. Their work ia depicted, at' tbe .National 'Shrine of .tbe Immaculate Conception in Washington.~atherKino rides horseback 'on one ,;of !h'i8 -epic journeys to minister to Arizona Indians. Father fla.mien and companion bring Faith to Hawaii. NC ,Photo.

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·THE ANCHORThurs., March 9, 1961

Women's Retreat

r

'The Parish Parade

SACRED HEART, HOLY FAMILY, TAUNTON NORTH A'l.'TLEBORO The- Women's Guild will. hold· The Ladies of. Ste. Anne wIn hold. their annual retreat. Sun- its· regular- monthly· meeting' clay, IVfarch 12. Sodality; reception: Monday night at.a o'clock in.the will.. be held at 2. SundaY' after-- . Holy Ghost. Hall, Middleboro Ave., East, Tauntori. noon, March 19 in the- chu~ Rev~ .rames F: Lyons, assistanti ActivO' and honoraIT members. of the parish St. Vincent de Paul: at, Iinmac.ulate· Com:C'e:p ti·o'n conierence' have' received a com~ Ch~ Taunton, and: director; pletc outlinO' of their obligationS' at the- recent, Girls'· ffigh School and privileges in the society:. It FUnd raising campaign in' the is' hoped' that the explanation; Taunton area, will addiess the graug Dnd show slides_ on the wil~ clarify the- activ:iticS! proper recently built ffigh Schools in to· the:t organization. the Diocese; and the pI:mned ST. MAR:Y'S~ school for- the- Taunton area. SEEKONK The 51st annual parish. variety, ST• .I0SEPH'Sj show will be presented' irt the FAIRHAVEN The parish. will sponsor-a whist. Peter Thacher School Audito-· par~y in the church. hall at. 7 rium; Attieboro, at 2 and 8, Sunthis Sunday night. Sc.ore and atday afternoon and evening; tendance prizes will be awarded March 12. • Mrs. Venita Cate, director, and. and refreshments will be' served. Mrs. Marie Tetreault, co-directnr Mrs. Vincent Bonczek, Mt's. N:orand musical director; are in. man· Robinson and Mrs. Ernestcharge of a cast of 75, including. Bouley are chaiI:men. \ senior choir members and many ST. JOHN BAPTIST, local and out of" town vocal, inCENTRAL VILLAGE strumental and dance' performers. The Ladies Guild will hold an Large committees are handling open meeting and' hat fashion choreography, makeup, publicity, show at. 8 tonight in the parish costumes, tickets, ushering and hall. Members are. requested to lJtage technicians' duties.. bring an original millinery creation. Prizes will. be awarded. 8T. FRANCIS XAVIER', The guild wiiI· sponsor a whist HYANNIS . party. at, 8 Saturday. nightl Mardi The- Women's Guild win hold.: 11, also in the parish hall. Mrs. Its annual Communion brealdast' Antone- Vieira and Mrs; .Gene'this Sunday, March 12. The unit vieve' Whitty. are· co-chairmen. will "adopt" Rose Hawthorne' Home for a sewing project, pre--· ST. MARGARET'S, paring pads and bandages for BUZZARDS SAY The SS; Margaret-Mary Guild patients. A variety show will' btF sponsored by the (luild at Barn- will hold a public whist, pdrty at, stable high school Friday, March a Friday nightl March 17 in. the' basement. of the school halL 17. Refreshments will be seI:ved: ST. JAMES, IMMACU'LATE' CONCEPTION NEW BEDFORD Msgr. Noon Circle will hold ~ GUILD, BREWSTER TIle Altar Guild wili sponsor·fashion' show of: Spring' hatsWednesday, March 15 in: the a' demonsti'atiOR of table' top. lower church' hall, follOwing: cookery at S' tonight- at' St; Joan. of Arc School hall; Orleans: Mrs. Lenten devotions.· M'rs; Leonard L. O'B'rien win Prudence.Morris' and MFs.. Norma. Snow are: coc-chairmeD' and an.. be chaiJ:man ror. the coHee Mur. nounce Uiat: the. public. ma,t attend. ST. LAWRENCE. NEW BEDFORD HOLY NAME, The' Couples' ~lub "Tin spon- NEW BEDFORD' IIOF "An Evening with Our Pas-, The Women'sG'uild'willhold'" tor," at which Most Rev. JameS' St. Patrick's- Social, featuring' a: J. Gerrard will be-guestof'honm; group of' rrish' dancers !tom' Stl at a Sunday· evening; March 19 P'atrick's. parish; Fan RIver. The' at the Italian..AmericBn: ClUb: unit will sponsol" a: Sp.ring dance' Parker Street. Saturday nigltt; April 15 at the· Mr; and Mrs. Daniel Dwyer church hall. head & large· arrangements:· c0m;ST. JOSEPH. mittee. FALL RIVER.

Combo&1<ed Efforts Sen BB~~e

ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE, SWANSEA' The Confraternity· of'Christian Doctrine will be C)f.ficially established at. 4' this Sunday af~ernoon in the church by Rev. Joseph: L. Powers; [)jocesan Director: AIL parishioners are' invited to- at..

.. ,,~. i" •. :l,;

tend, The CCD will'Qpen.a-catechism claSS' in Uie B~ton Point. area for children of the locality... It will be- ReId at 6i30 Tuesday nights; Members of' the Children of MBrY' will meet at 1 this Sunday afternoon in the church hall to' plan for a fashion show to· benefit; the parochial school. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT A passion play;, Pilate·and the Cross, produced· by the Catholic Theatre .Guild, will be sponsored by the Women's Guild. at 8 Sunday night, March 26 at Dar.tmouth High School, Slocum Road. Proceeds' will benefit the school bUiliiing fund. Next regular meeting of the. guild. will be held. at the- parish hall . at. 7:30 Monday night,. March 20. Mi.-s·. Ralph Souza, president; requests that,all ticket . returns. for the passion play be made at. that. time. OUR LADY OF' LOURDES, WELLFLEET Charles M. Grindle; president of the- Holy Name Socie.ty, hasannounced that. members from. Wellfleet, Truro, and No.. Truro will receive Corporate Commun.,. ion on Sunaay; at the 9 o'clock Mass in Our Lady· of Lourdes; Church, Wellfleet. The- members will meet Sunday evening, in the parish hall to complete plans for a Communion. Dinner. to be: served 011 Sun- . dar, April 9~ This affair will be open to the' women of the' area.

ST. MICHAEL,.

17

THE. HAGUE! (Ne) - Catho.. lies and Protestants have combined in: door-to.-door selling of the, Bible in this Netherlands capital. This' is:b'elieved·to be the fi7st joint Catholio--Brotestant. vent.ure in'. spreading the"' Bible- and> 10stering,its. re..ding. It was' undertaken a t the. sugw gestion' of tlie Protestant Bfule' Sflciety. Catholic authorities. accepted. tile. offer, especially' ill view of th:e->Ptotestants' groote!' f,xjJerience; in h.ouse-to-flOUlle selling: The' Pro~pstant, Bible soeieb" hll~ promised' to supplY' tWti tmcks to' carry the bibles to. djstribution points, from which tr' Bible salesmen will hll1' OU"... Eacb team of a Protestant and a Catholic will carry both Proteso t:>nt and Catholic Bibles: Prot-> estant homes will be- oHered. Protestant Bibles, and Catholic . homes Catholic Bibles. In' case the family professes no religion, it can choose.

Costs

Are~

Up

WILMINGTON (NC)-Unem.p10yment since November h¥' trebled the caseload of the Catblo., olic We-lfare' GWId here in Jld"o. aware~

A Delicious Treat

PERUVIAN: In tattered clothes and: with apprehen.sive gaze, a.poor boy of'Peru. is testimony of' the great, need, of. the Bishops' Relitaf~

FALL RIVER

Members of~ the' HolYl NameSociety, will receive Holy Com-. munion Sunday morning. at the7t3a MaSS'. and will hold 11.' Communion' Breakfast· after' Mass iw the school: hall. Carliii' Lynch, Director of; Athle.ticS' at StanJ}' High School, will be' the< guest speaker. Rev. H'enl"Y." Sbragia; O.P'., temnorary' assistant at- the' par_. ish, will preach It. retreat in Portuguese' in the- parish beginning: Sunday evening at 'i o'clock. A native of.' Italy; F'ather Irenry agent many years. doing .mission_ ary. work ill; Brazil' and Portugal. R newly-formed organization of" 33" Cub Scouts: with Robert' Gre-enhalgh as scoutmaster i,.~ now operating. TE!D den mothers' are assisting- in the work. Henry Letendre, scoutmaster' for' the' Boy Scout~T:toop, has' announced that scouts of the'parish< will.exhibit: camping' equipment at- their' booth at. the' ScoU~ Exposition.

The Women's Guild' meeting: OUR. LADY OJ.' AlNGELS, tonight. will feature' anr Irish> FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold a: program. fashion show at 7:30' Wednesday ST. ANTHONY' 01' DESERT; night, March 22 at White's resFALl; RIllED; taurant. Mrs. Mary> Silvia ~ Bishop Connolly; will. preside chairman. at. a celebration at We- parish'sThe parish will sponsor I) g,olden jubile-e and dedication of! showing of' religious films at Us' new center, TrinitY. Sunday, 7:30. Sunday night, March 19 in: May 28.. . the parish hall. Parish membe.,· OUR LADlY OF M'J!; CARMEI;.. will be' hostesses. April plans include It potluckl NEW BEDFORD The' Women's Club will, hold ., supper- a·t 6:30 Wednesda3f, April public g.ames. party Wednesday, 5, a turkey supper. S'aturday, WORCESTER (NC) - Msgr. March' 22 witli Mrs: Fernando. David Sherin, executive editor of' April It and thE!' annual silver tea Cabral as cliairman. Members· the Catholic' Free- Pre-ss, WorSunday, April 16. will donate· canned 01' paekaged1 cester diocesan newspaper, has. ST. MARtY'S, fOod. to· be awarded' as an' attend.. been elevateet from a papal &nee prize. NORTON chamberlain to' 8) domestic' p.relThe sixth a·nnua.} COmmunion The Women'S' Club' and: Chilate with the, title' of~ Right breakfast of Norton Catholic dren of' Mary' will co'-.sponsor· 8' lteverend Monsignor. Women's Club will follow I) eake and food sale in the' school o'clock· Mass th.iS' Sunday mornauditorium following- Masses this· ing and' wi'll be' held at Norton Sunday. Proceeds will benefit a scholarship: fund. High. School cafeteria. ReV'. Eugene Robitaille-, S&.CC., novice' ESPIRITO SANTO, ' master at Sacred Hearts N'ovi_ Ii'ALn RIVER Everything thite, Fairhaven, will speak on· The CYO will sponsor a Whist. in' "Education: Mother and Child." Party, Saturday. evening at 7:30 Mrs. Robert J. Murphy is ill in the parish hall. Inez Dian, Photo Supplies· charge of arrangements. . 245. MA:IN"ST: . .John Pontes, Joanne Lenadro and Robert Lopes are- serving:on',the' 'Palmouth-· Ki a~19r8 ST. DOMINIC'S, committee. SWANSEA The Women's Guild will hold its annual fashion show at % this Sunday afternoon at. K of C Hall, Swansea. Spring and Sum-· HANDY - LASnNG~- PRAC.TICAL. mer styles will be featured, with Mrs. Eleanor SacknoH acting 88 commentator. A $50 gift certifi,. BEITER WORUI ENTERPRISE, INC. cate and door prizes will be awarded and refreshments will P. O. Box 171 Ne. Westport, Mass. < be served. (Cut out - MAIL NOW) Tickets are available from Name . guild members or at the door. Street ' Mrs. Norman Ashley is general chairman and Mrs. Florence .City , . Hastings is in charge of special English French· Portuguese prizes.

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1'8

THE: ANCHOR-DiCicese'~C?f Fdll .River.:..Thurs. Mar. 9, ,1961

Diocesci n'Youths .To ,Compete '.

Birt~' Controllers Su'bstitute

Twelve students from Holy Family High School, New Bedford, have qualified to compete Saturday, April Sat Watertown High School for state-wide 'finals in a speech festival. Five boys from Msgr.will Coyle Taunton, alsoHigh be School, among

Man-Made Law For Divine By Most Rev. Robert. J. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop of Reno

.

.'

It IS the fashion nowadays, even in the citadels, of orthodoxy, to patronize the ample gh.ost of. Gilbert Keith Chesterton. Poor man, we say, he. meant, well of course, but surely he .overdidthe antic strain, and as for his h t f l ' · t' .ever1as mg penc an . or th a't h Iyze d b'Ir'th -con t ro1 as e ana paradox, Lord, who can the attempt of a frightened capiabide it? This view actually talism to escape from its ecofollows the normal rule nomic responsibilities. It is th~

contestants., The Holy Family entrants are David Sheehan, radio broadcast. . mg ca t egory; B nan Hea 1y, Robert Peccini, boys' extemporaneous speaking; Margo Finnell, Martha Sullivan, girls' extemporaneous; Patricia 'Kruger, Edward Parr, group discussion; Thomas Wa!ker;-'original oratory; Susan Sweeney, prose reading; Jan'e Humphrey, humorous interpretation; Maureen Hayes, Anne Morrissey, oratorical interpretation. ' . From Coyle, Joseph QuiU qualified in radio broadcasting; Brian Got'ey, George Simmons, boys' extemporaneous; Laurence Lacaillade, original oratory; . 'Robert Mendes, humorous IlrOSe. Win Debate Tourney' .. In addition to .qualifying as

whereby the works and 'pomps easiest way, he remarked, f6r. of the generation immediately capitalism to slough off the burpreceding 0 u r den of its blunders and selfish:' ' own are held ness, by invoking a distorted' up to ridicule morality· to save it from paying whereas thos~ its own bill. of earlier times . The capitalists'''lured men into a re welcomed the town with the promise of as f res h and greater ·pl.easures;. they ruined spa r k'li n g ; them and left them there with Weaknesses and. only one pleasure; they found the faults eKC cerincrease it produced at first con· tainiy had, as he . venien~ .for labour and then i n - , . ' eon f e s s.e d convenIent for supply; and 'now FIRST AMERICAN HOUSE : There was an authentic throughout his they areready'to round off their touch of America in the Eternal City when Archbishoplife with ele:. experiment in a thighly appr:opridesignate John J. Krol of Phi.ladelphia lai.d the cornerstone'· . . phantine hVmility.,. but he also ateI:l\almer! b)' ellmg ~h.em.,.,that of the 'resid.ence. of the Missionary S.e,rvan.ts o.f th,e Most' . bad gifts of greatness, both as. they. must have no .famllIes.. speech finalists, students from a writer'and a i n a n ; T h e sociologist might write a Holy Trinity~ Father ,Justin Furman, M.S.SS.T., center,. Msgr. McKeon Debating Society bo k t t f th th t t h ' ·Pro.curator G.,e,neral of the ol'der, and Father Arthur SW1'ft, of Holy Family have' won' the . He failed' in .the sustained' 0 0 se or a eSls; Southeastern Massachusetts deflight of phUos()phic;al spe'cula.-, Chesterton has:dori.e it in a par-' .M$.SS,T., assist the new archbishop. Ne Ph9to. lion as he failed in the di'udgery agraph., Nor IS It ,haph~zard ·batingchampionship. They were Of historical accuracy, {or he Was ,gues~ing; it is. the distillation of p" . named winners· at a regional 0 deba'te tournament of Mass~chuessentially a ,poet: and' hiS 'long study and mature,refleCtion. setts Secondary School Princistrength reposed in the subtlety G~anted that the simplifica. S, pals' Association, ~eld at Marshof his perceptions. .' tion ,maybe too broad and the. · ,Power Intuitio'o terms not too ex;act, it is a critVATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope . ~n danger because of numeroua field High School. , . . f th l't h' h h John h~~ made specl'al VI'SI'tS to crack:~. . . They were victorious' over 10 The term institution has ac- IClsm o. e mora I y W IC as' "'" ~ 'quired a 'bad odor because of the inspired the industrial r~volution St. Peter's basilica and the, Count· Enrico Gaieazzl, archlother schools, and will compete foolishness of so _many of itS which hits the maI:k squarely; Vatican museums to see imtect of the Sacred Apostolic in semi-final matches and, if . .... F ·t· h"l t th t th . provements und,er way there. Palaces"told the Pop'e he winners in those, In final rounds proclaiiried adepts, though it or l' IS un appI.y rue a. e ' at Watertown on April 8. The Pope, accompanl'ed by,·' hope'd an elev,ator could be I·.nought to be clear that .much . the zea 10 ts of econ 0 ~IC c h an g e, anybest of all human thought· cim . where in the worl$l, have been Domenico Cardinal Tardini, stalled in the structure so that Holy Family debaters include be traced to this rare a'bility to· far less concerned to regard man Archpriest of .the' Vatican Ba... visitors to the museums .may' Thomas Azar, Susan Aquiar, "see . into". 'the heart of any as a perso'n: tHan asa tooL·. silica, inspected models of new' ride to the top to obtain a panoRichard Peras an~ Marilyn matter. . So long as he wa~ a useful tool, equipment to be installed in St. . rami~ view of t~e Vatican gard:. Mulcairns.· · This was "Chesterton's forte,demanding not too much byway Peter's to make it easier to set· ens and of the city. of .Rome; M' , . C though your professional phil-' ,of shelter for his' head and food up stands and barriers' for au- . :Ouring the tour: th.e Pope oSopher. 'would die rather. than, for his stomach, he was anasset. diences and papal ceremonies. climbed ~ steep' flight Qf steps admit its validity in him. Likely But ':Vhen,. fulfilling 'an~nex. PoPe Johll also watched a and visited rooms resto.r:~d durWASHINGTON (NC)-Catho· enough however given the spin:. ' .pected' biological law, he began trial demonstratiQn of propose4' fng t.h~ present ,,:ork,. WhlOO has lie' Action awards will be pre.ling of 'fortune'~ wheel, one of' to, m~ltiply ,in. his indu~trialnew lighting. installations d~ l?een underway ,smce 1957. sented by the National Council these days the philosophers and captivi~~ beyond the J.Ilarg in of signed to give fuli illumination of Cath?lic. Me~ at its b!ennial the historians will be culling his,' ,econom.lC: usefulness, he was II to the giant church's side aisle~ •. convention In Pittsburgh, May" works to. produce learned to'mes ' liability'. And as a liability. he and chapels: , to 7 I.;ibell~d Cilest~rton ~hePhilos~:" . should be curtailed".' . . . 111. . 'another., excursion within " . W'inners, will get trophies and · plier or' Chesterton the Historian'. ,Chester.ton' was in error i. the Vatican wans; Pope John' . Coyle .-High·School Student rUrlners~up·will get certificate. as the case !11ay be. They wili identify'jng-capitalismas the sole toured the reconstruction work" Theater,' Taunton, ,will. present for best activities aimed at "re·then celebrate ··his remarkable source of. this injustice,·.What he being done on part of· the Vati:.. . "The· Late George .Apley" by J. storing all· things in Christ." powers of ·intuition. meant,.andas he would doubtless, .' can Museums..The Pope visited, '·P. Marquand and.G. S.. KaufmanFund raising and'athletic eventl' · . We miss him most in the co'n-' ~rnend his critiCism to ·read·to- the' "Apse of Bramante,".a large at 2 this Sunday afternoon and are' not eligible. temporary' controver~ies we are' day, is. that .the fault lies. in. the structure at one end,of the.Cour~· 8 Monday, and Tuesday nights,' . The activity must have taken earryingon withthe.peremliai whole ethos of the managerial of the Pinecone which has been March 13 and 14. All perform- ·place between Jan. 1, 1959,'and Rcularists. Few if'any of us have rev.c;>lution which, has trans'", . M' ances will be in .the school audi- Dec.31, 1960. It must have been anything approaching his sheer formed the world in' our times; -torium. performed by a group of laymen genius. for' penetrating to the . It .involves a. blank denial of . COrltinUlid from Page One St. Ma'i-ys. High School girls, with the express or implied apvery 'pitch of error and transfix.:. the dignity of' man,.. casual The Monsignor Coyle 'High Taunton, wIll also be cast mem- . proval of the bishop. ing heresy on the point of his ,willingriess to degrade him to School choir will sing the Proper bel'S. Leading roles will be dialectic skewer. Still fewer have the level of the beast upon whom of the Mass' at St: Maryjs~ Stu-' played.by 'Gerald Kelly, Mary his saving grace of doing it with . experim~nts may be made wi.th.,. dent bodies of Coyle and St. O'Hearne, Chester 'Kawa and · charity and a cherubic smile. ' , out mor.al consequences. Mary's High School will attend. Iris Campbell.' .' , /We marshal our learning' and . Indifferent to Man The preacher wHI be Rev. John Plot concerns life among set forth· o~r arguments with ,The very readiness with which . Cronin, assistant at St. Patrick's, ··proper.. Bostonians~~ at the be~~derous Virtue, a.s often as not the moral law is laid aside as Fall.RiVer. ginning of this century. The play "'wsmg our tempers ,10. t.he proce.ss. . antiquated' and' 'inapplicable is The anndal novena for guid- ,is directed :by Brother Albertu8 ~t so~nehow ~ack thh1s persP~c-l' . it measure .of the root indiffer': ance and . for the fostering of Smith, C.S.C. and stage set and ael y m, graspmg e essenba ence to h" lf th' . vocations ·to the pri'esthood and production de~a'ils are in charge 335 Winter St. Sp. 5-0079 POllint .a~d his tSklli!1 inhsummin g sessor or~~ali~~~~l~'~~gli~ Pao:ci the religious life will begin next 'p~f Brother' Albe~t Ciri, C.S.C. up m· a crys a me prase. ·We.' the ce t ' f' "1 t bl ' .... Thu''r'sday, Mai'ch'16 and close on' , roceeds will benefit Holy. Cross . .' d h' . " . n er 0 . me uc a e responB th ' d t' I'~ISS, m a wor, IS mtulhve'sibilit'ies which h t ' d t"Saturday, March. 25, the Feast of 1"0 ers e uca IOnal fund. dIrectness. . .. '. . as cap ure .... ·· t l' modernmmd. the Annunciation. ,Daily attendMAILING ..P er h aps t h IS IS no ,u tlmately Nothing" f thO '. 'f' . b . '" ance at, Ma'ss 'and the reception important, though it can har'dly " 0 . I~, or ~ VIOUS IN' NEW BEDfORD .,e d 'd 'th b f' d f reasons, appears In ,the propa- of Holy Commtinion are recom-. eme , el er y nen or oe, ganda of th .h k t f" t mended for the Novena period; DIAL 3-1431 that it deprives our debate of birth-co t" ~se wu;o see Ido OIS.. ," Excellent' films. 'on vocatiorls' that zestfulness. which makes it ; n ro on. e ~or unger . tolerable. Truth can be win' _ the gUl.seof economic .nec!!sslty. . are available' for showing in' ,. '. . ? There IS never a word of 'criti'- schools" or before interested Commercial • Industri~ ..ooted or club-footed, and shll cl'sm for'th . . '; b I ... ' g"roups,' Father. Hayes'. said'. . .' t 't 1 f '. . . '. . . e economic 1m a ance Institutional arrIve a I s goa 0 conVICtIOn. which h as b 't;r . 11'" " They iriclude "The Salt. of the , But there are moments,· as' we'" ated a ·d ..-. e_ebn. ar Idlcll~b y .cre:-.. . . .' 'Painting' and Decorating 'ha t'h ht" . . n IS emg e I eratel,. Earth," a'half-hour film showing IN fALL RIVER · ye oug In recrudescence maintaiiled It . ," h · ..· . the 'training and work, of the DIAL 2-1322 0.. ~-7620 . of. the argurilent over birth-conto amend t'h IS SOl m u,c theasler 135 Franklin Street tr 1 h . e mora l aw an to· diocesan priest, and· "To the · ~, w en we would give· anysacrifice dividends. Altar of God," a 20-minute film I=all River ' OSborne 2-1911' PRINTING thmg for a return engagement Th h" . tak t St M ' Se . f h'l's lam' be'nt WI't I·t· I'S all 'so ,_ e.e.mp aSls, mstead, IS all on en a . ary s. mmary. O , the Pit bI h d h' ff '. : Slides on seminary" life taken' d t t' t· I la e ar SIpS su ered· du ll an d so rd'd I an 's. a IS Ica . by those w h 0 h ave t 00 many at St. John's Seminary, Brighton, . . Distorted Morallt,. . children anci upon. the cranl 'ed are also available. Diocesan semIt is 'instructive to remember lives' those' children, in, t~eir inarians studying, there have that he 'covered the ground of turn, will be forced to live. These' volunteered)o show them with this debate duririg the deca!'ies of are teal, unquestionably" ~ut . commentary d~ring their vaca.specie.t E~ph~lil ~n lourdes, F.·atima, lq' Salette ~nd Rome · the '20s, and'30s, when it raised they reflect on the social an':' tion periods, Father Hayes an,Spring-Fall-Summe.r 'Departures' ' . . · its ugly head in the revival of archy Which has produced' such' -!lounces.· An indusive, Rates. from $1jI94 to $1383 .paganism which' fol1o'wed th'e' a' cohditionrather than on 'ibe~ AC:lCte:~Oe-=-c:=.cX:ICICl~O~. , ..Under the leadership of the ' First World War, He may· not . moral' order which ··cries 'foe ,.. .',MI$SIONARIES Of OUR LADY Of. LA SALETTE have encountered the' phrase ' reco~nition ..· explosion'.'., though it '." There is \ this difference be. -' . , " .. Arranged GftcI 0.....0..., by , , "population may'. be imagined with what.. tween, tl)e debate as ChestertoD: TREASURE TOURS, INC. · g~eeful ch~rtles ~e would ~av:e. :. ~ng~ged i? i~ .. ,and .asit. ap-' ~ .. ~ . :' ': '~"Y~I;, .M~"'~I, ',i.o..dH' aM ; .... .welcomed 'It as fair game for hls,pr9aches .- Its clImax 30 yeal"ll , . ' ' . Write' .... fr.. 'tnuitrateel 1I00klet ~mmentary. ',. , ',." ':" ,: lat~r;.1t is that'jt'is no longer. . SO. Dartmouth" . " .' '...-MBa... .,.~: iN fvrther' ,infO;MotiOlt ~ ':1961- catholic T~......... : He.dealt, n~vertheless, with aU ~ntended as'an intelleetualexer:' ·Hyanni•.· '" '~', . ,t~e, b~sic facts ,a:nd 'fan~ies, .not- . c;ise,' but·. g.ame· played .f«· ,'., ably In that book. which· some .' keeps.. ,. .'., ,. . __ ..So.. D.artm~"'" . have claimed as tl]e peak of his W.e might as well face up to it 'c~:....:" .._.:.. :::.::.:.:.::~:: ....:__._. Z_~:,:,:.:... StQt•.,',.':.:,.,,:.....:.;... _~_·_ _. performaI;lce, "An. Outline ,. of· . that the goal in ,view is not free,WY.. 7.93.4, .. ··, , Tr...·ow. To~j-i. '1", . ....:'I';lg·r;"'O;" ~ee.or . 'SanitY.'; . .' ' . . . dom, 40m an .outmoded law but Lill sGl.tte 'Seminary'.' "l,., Sale"o DePt~" , H~~~~is'2921 " ..' ,It ·was, lor'example; w:lth one', . t!te slavery of • new ,man-made', C.nfer Harbo,', '1'4.'". ..' ' ·n'~, -42nd St,; How To'" 36;-1'4, T. ,. " . " ". ,ef his sudden" flashes of insight .. law.

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en s ouncil Plans To Present Awards

Boston .·0 ns' To'p.·C' Of C oy I'e PI: .ay

'¥oca'tion

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Real' Estate Rene,Poyant Hyannis

DONNELLY PAINTING SERVICE

VISIT

EU'ROPE

And, its Centers 01 Catholic Deyotion

·J·B.

LUMBER.. 'CO.

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, THE ANCHOR-' Thurs., March 9, 1961

Attleboro· New Bedford Tech Feature at Garden

Sugges~s 'C~Yrch

In JapO'ln S~ed Western Tag

By Jack Kineavy Southeastern Mass. is assured of having-a Class A rIDalist in the 1961 Tech Tourney. Meeting tomorrow night at 10 P.M. in the feature of the Garden's semifinal program will be Attleboro High, one of Bristol County's tri-champions, and the Crimson of New Bedford Tech champion and in the tour, whose blitz of tourney-tested ney for the 19th successive year, Somerville has been the high posed a real threat to the Crimwater mark of the eompeU. son, but they came through tion to date. There is a further possibiUty that the A final may bring togetherthearea's a I' chI' i val s should the Durfee Hllltoppers get by the i I' qua I' tel' and semifinal tests. However, we refuse to speculate in this direction, the r e being too many variables in'valved. Suffice' to Say that Bristol County is enjoying its greatest d.egree of representation in A .. in years. . Conversely, area .representaUvea in the C and D classifications failed to survive the qual'':' terfinals and, in some instances, the qualifying round. .Marian High of Framingham eliminated both Narry League entries in successive outings. The Regional Parochials decisioned Holy Famlly, 65-61, then belted Somerset; 63-49, in 11 rough quarterfinal contest at Bridgewater. The, loss snapped the Raiders win skein at 23, .8 strealt, that stretched' back to the '59-'60 season. . CaPe, champion Dennis-Yarmouth survived the elimination test against Immaculate Conception of Newton, 73-65 before dropping a low scoring 38-37 affair to Weston. Barnstable" High, the Cape's second D club, went out in the first round losing to Scituate,75-70. Bridgewater' and neighbor West Bridgewater advanced to the semifinals. The ,championship game is scheduled to be played at 3 P.M. tomorrow . in the Garden. . Scoring Record New Bedford's great center Frank ,Nightingale electrified the huge., Gallden throng Monday.. night when' he shattered the, ,tournament. individual scoring' "record with a fantastic 44 point performance. The 6-7 pivotman tossed in 19 'field goals and C .' foul shots to outscore Somerville's talented Gerry Knight who tallied 34 markers' in n 10ll-" ing c·ause. Nightingale's tremendous effort erased the previous high of 40 established by the late Pete Houston in 1954 when he spearheaded 'Archbishop Williams of Brairitree to the Class A title. Houston went on to Holy Cross where he continued to excel until . illness curtailed his athletic career and subsequently brought about his untimely death.

handsomely to win going away, 82-64. ' Mark Stuart, 6-3 senior forward, came up with a strong 9 point fourth quarter to ice the contest and bring his game total to 17. Also turning in a clutch effort was' sophomore Wendell Miranda who las,* year was voted the Mo~t Valuable Player in the Junior Division of the CYO Easter Tourney. Miranda had 12 points for the night and was deadly from the foul line. It was a case of too much Charley Grochmal for the Blue of Fairhaven who were defeated, 67-55, by' Attleboro High in the . r~bber meeting, of the ,two schools which, together with Durfee, shared the Bristol . County League pinnacle. The twelve point spread was the exact margin by which the Jewelers won their home engagement against Fairhaven, after having been edged, q3-51, on the Blue's court. Grochmal poured 33 points ,through. the strings, accoun"tf'ng, personally for almost half his team's total. John Kidd with 20 was Fairhaven's leading marks- , man. Captilin Mike .Fitzgerald, whose 38 markers against Silver, Lake' was the 'previous Garden high for the tourney, was limited '. to 12 by an alert Jeweler defense and there was the story' of the ball game. . Don Lange, Attleboro's rangy ,center, played a strong game off the boards. Bob Higginbottom. cQntributed 10 for the Cassidy forces, Lange,'9 and-Pinocci, 8.' The largest 6:30 game crowd ill the history of the Garden' viewed the Fairhaven-Silver Lake game last week ...Rindge Tec.h of Cambridge, Suburban League', titlists, . came into the. Tourney with the best record in Class.A, but failed to'survive the, . firll~ round. Sam Jones, the Cel_. tics' .~ce backcourtnian; was on lUnd~e's. bench in .an,advisory capacity. ,..','" The elimination of Rindge left ~rfee (18-2) with the best slate go1O~ into the q~ar.terfinals... By .~e, s8flle token, the Hilltop"'; . pers' Tuesday opp~nent, Lawrenee Cen~al, owned the poorest record, 19-7. ', ~he. ;Charley Fiorino-coached' quintet just barely made Tech but they knocked off B. C. High i~ the ~relimi?aries, then turned giant-kIller In setting down vaunted Quincy High, champions of the Grseater Boston League, 69-?~, in the upset of the competitIon to date.

19

JEFFERSON CITY (NC) -To make faster progress in Japan the Church needs to correct the idea t.hat it is a western religion only, according to a former Buddhist monk who is now a Catholic. Professor Paul Tagita says misunderstanding of. the Church is the cause of the long persecution suffered by Catholics in Japan. "Even today all too many Japanese, in some degree have a similar. misunderstanding of it," he sa.id, summing up his appeal for adapting Christianity to .Japan~s culture and custom's in ..the phrase "unity, not unifOrm.-ity.". ' , A faculty member at Nanzan University, Nagoya, Japan, Prof~ssol' Tagita has been succes&- . ively a member of the 'Congl'Cgational Church, a Buddhist monk and a Caiholic. He 'urged that Catholic missionaries' in Japan study Japanese culture in order to encourage its blending with Catholic liturgy imd ritea.

.GEORGE M.MONTlE Plumbing - Hearing

,

Over 35 Years of Sotlsfled Service

....

. BROTaER DAVin KEANE

806 NO. MAIN SYiUer . fait Rive; OS 5.7497

Forme,r C~,- lonel ,Now Religious ·Helping Desti,tute on Skid Row'

NO JOe 100 ItO

MIAMI (NC) - From Army' ity's founder, Brother Mathians colonel to supervisor of a mis- Barrett, requesting details on'the' sion for the down-and-out de- 10":year-old institute. scribes Brother David Keane. During a 20-month tour of The 'former officer 'has ex- duty, in Korea as senior Army changed' his uniform for' the' advisor to the Republic of Korea 'white habit of the Little Brothers Corps, he continued his corresof the Good Shepherd of Albu- pondence. , querque, N. M. . Brother David, who Wears a He now directs the commun- medal of S.t. Barbara, patroness ity's Camillus House, situated in of ar~l1ery~en, attached to his ,the, heart of Miami's skid-row rosarY,said he also talked with· wh~re he and three' other 'aroth- a ~91umban missioner in Korea, l;lrs .'minister to. suffering. and ,Father. Sean Lynch. . . homeless .men. . When he' returned to the Supporting their work by peg-,' United'~tates,h~ presented him-' ging, Brother David, and: hill, self to the Brothers as a cl\ndi"'; companions feed hundreds of ,~ate. , . men 'twice a day and permit. Depend on C:0ntributions others to stay overnight in the." Because the community insists ·mission. . .tpat ~embers depend upon con~ Aided Japanese tributions to sustain their work, ',l'his assignment and one he . it. will n~t permit Brother David had earlier 'as Col. William m~o US~lllS month.ly Ar.my. re~ire-: ..Keane have much in common ent check durmg hiS lifetIme. ,He aided in the rehabilitation of ~he checks. are. now being millions of Japanese as senior maIled to relatIves m MassachuU. S. advisor to the Japanese s~tts..When Brot~er David makes Defense Force. ,hl~ fU's~ profeSSion of vows, he. The 52-year-old Brother, Ii WIll assign them to·the Brothers native of Lynn, Mass., re~ired . who will spend the accumulated from the Army in March, 1960, money only after his death. after 20 years of active duty, during which he rOlle th,r'ough .the t ranks to colonel and. took' i th .. . par n e campaign 10 the, Philippines in World War U., .

Trin'itcirian " .Fathers·

NONE TOO SMAU.

SULLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS llahl Offtee aDd PI'"

lOWELL, MASS. 'l'eIepboae LoweD

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'-8111 aDd OL 7-_ •

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A~ JltanCB

BOSTON,

OCEANPORT, N. J. ., PAWTUCKET, R. L ' I

.Complete.

·BANKING SERVICtE for Bristol County

Getting by the quarterfinals Eighth ,Grade Student was a big hurdle' for the New, Bedford team which is in, Tech 'O~t.sp~I·ls ·Publ,·CI·...t '. .., for the eighth c:onsecutive time NEWARK (NC) ...:.... Madeline . unner coach Stan Grabiec. In Bill,eighth grader from Our Gets Details ,BOYS WANTED for 'the each of the previous seven at- Lady of Mount Virgin school in Althdugh reluctant toniscusS TAUNTON MASS~'" tempts the Crimson found the Garfield:outspelled not onlY her' his personal life, Brother 'Oavid ' Priesthood and Brotherhood. ~, , . . . ,e<lrly competition ins~rmount- . fellow spelling bee finalists 'but disclosed that he becamEdnterleick 'of funds NO 'impedlable. .$9merville, three time the Newark archdiocesim CYO " e~~ i.Ji the Little. Brothers -ment. ' THE BANK ON ··.t· pubHcity director as well . through an article about !hem' . Write to: . TAUNTON GREEN Catholic Teams 'Take Madeline won $50. for herself in the Our Sunday Visitor, 00-' and a plaque for her school. tional Catholic newspaper.... 'p' O. Box 5742 All aces In e oy Member of F~deral De~' After all other contestants had He later wrote to the communNEW YORK (NC)-Catholic . . Baltimore 8, Md. .' Insurance CorpOll'a&loD . . Honor Ambassador . schools dominated the'two-mile been eliminated, she correctly .. and relay in both the National AAU sPh~lled ::gfeneatlhogy': t "mis-, SEATTLE (NC) _ Sea'ttle' ~~~~.~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~ ~~ ~~ ~.~~~~~ ~~. and National Interscholastic c Ievous or e VIC ory. N Ma,c" saystrack and field championships at CYO publicist George Fairbanks university announced that,' its rushed the news to local papers. 1961' award fO,r economic states, Be Thrifty - Be Wise. Madison Square Garden here, Madeline, he wrote in his re-.. manship will be presented A,pril Ask yo~r Meatman for CII. ~o~~~v:~ts~cOring positions in leases, had: correctly spelled 1;> t~ .James D. Zellerbach; who . DAVIDSON'S . . 'St Frlmc'fs"Prep of "Brooklyn' "geneology·.. ·and "mischievi~us.",.' r~c!':1'1tly ~~r~ed as U, S. 4~bas-" (MacGregor Brand) ...\: . . r " s a d o r to Italy. set a new record of 7:56.8 min- .;1i@ygefS Ridonft Hi«'llh "..., . , ". , ~ utes, ~reak'ing' the 8:02 record iF " . '. ' ~ i3 ~"~• • • • • • BC!k~ in the.Bag":'No Ba~tin9 set last year. It was the third" :Under, Khrudllchev: ". ~" A FAMILY' TREAT"! ... ·~eal Scot~h Ham FlavorU" straight ,yearSt: Francis had won' '.. NEW: 'YORK·.·(NC) - T h e , . " .. t • - > "WINNING FAVOR ' the championship i,n thiS, race•. ··...Soviet Vnion is doing b~ttei1 t, BAR, ~'BeQ CHICKENS .... , Following St.. ' Francis were unsler ,Soviet Premier Nikita~ ~ , '. . WITH' ITS FLAVOR'" ".. Seton Hall P;er, ~f ~o~tll.q~an~e,.. ~hr';¥lhc.~~.v th~n it did wide~ •. ) N. J.; ArchblshoP.St~piQac.l~igh., .. SJ~UQ, ,-!in expert on Sovie~ af" t ;: , .. I" Holy Cro~ ..High ,of:..New'YQrk, .. fair.s.!lai.d,ber~~) ~ ....... >,." . •" I .;--. FARMS. ~. ,:', and ArchbIshop Molloy High of Philip E. Mosely, former direc-': ~l45 Washington St., Fairhayen Brooklyn. ·Holy Cross College tor of the Russian InStitute df.. ~ '. Just off 'Route 6 "I. won the two-mile relay in the Columbia University;..said Pre'::. ~, ': AAU class with a 7;~9.8 effoJ~:. mier Khrushchev is ':':usi~g a. • ~, ~," :..W;¥·.7-J);i36 ,,"1' ~ , • ''-' ,c' C~mpleting the .SW~? b~ Cath- much ,~jcl~! ~nge., Qf' .weapon!!!" • . .Wlltch for Signs :'; '.., ." '" ·JUST· at All Leading, olic colleges wer:e MlI.n;tIa,ttan, f~om nuc1e~~... thre~~.~.tQ .. educa? t~hile out for:l Drive, '" ''', 'Cli>'~ ",' ~ , ASK FOR Food Stores'-· VUlanov~, 0(. ,Philadelphia and tional ex.cha~ges, thaI!- ~.taliri .·StO)) ill ihis 'Delightful Spot·,:: .,:, '" ","'" ~u~ai@,·'~" . . SWEETNICS'.ln· Massachusetts Fordham. {J (iid. . .i ~ ~!lM ~~w~~~~w~"'Wl w ,....Wl~w~~~M~~

"Bristol County J)ust Compon, ,

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20

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 9, 196J ,

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Complete CongregationalParticipationatMa~s at Holy Redeemer Paruh . By Russell Collinge . When Father Pe~er Connolly, pastor-at-Iarge of Sandwich, was touring his parish from Providence to Provincetown ~ with side trips to the Islands _ he probably stopped' , " ' . .. . . for a ",,:ord or two WIth the reSIdents. o~ C~atham. Most lIkely hIS VISIt wa~. purely s.ocIal, for whIle there were plenty of CatholIcs' ni Rhode Island and Massachusetts, very few lived on Cape Cod. The essential point .is that Father ' II . t' a C . ~n~o y was ac mg as miSSIOnary, and for a long,

cup of coffee out of thin air. plete Holy Week ceremonies. The ~arish inst~ll~d the'C~n- Confirmation, the Forty Hours-~ratermty of ChrlSha~ D.octrme two members. of the choi~ act as In 1957, and also mamtams the chanters and mtone the LItanies, Association of tll-e Sacred Hearts,. Requiem Masses, and, of course, the Holy Name Society and the 'the Sunday Mass. Some easy, Society of St. Vincent de Paul. some demanding-all done welL ... Eager Altar Boys Item: Exposition of the Blessed Altar boys are the special care Sacrament on First Fridays. of Father Christopher who not And the knowledge. that every: only makes sure they are .thor- project, every activity of the, J.ong time-despite the growing oughly grounded in their special daily life of the parish is of conDumber of Catholics spread over service but instills in them a suming and vital interest to the 'the Cape~Chatham continued devotion, interest, and' eagerness pastor. And the further knowlto be regarded as mission terri~ that is unusual. There is never edge that underlying everything, tory. a shortage of servers for any is the sincere, personal and When the Fathers of the ConSunday Mass-in fact, although burning desire of Father Brengregation of the Sacred Hearts the rule is that order of arrival nan and Father Cl).ristensen for established a residence in Wellgoverns who will serve, there are the spiritual welfare of parish fleet in: 1910, they were anxious times when' fighting for ·the and parishi'oners. to do whatever they could for honor 'is no casiIal phrase. Holy Redeemer Church dethe surrounding towns-and they 'It is the earnest desire of pends on s~mplicity of design accepted Chatham as .a mission. Fa'ther Brennan to have pariSh- and decoration for an impres~ 'Before 1910 any Catholic in or ioners understand and be a part sion Qf lightness and uncluttered near Chatham had to make the of the living' liturgy. of .the ,grace. It has the quiet assurance trip to H-arwich to attend Mass Church-and the parishioners and certainty of a church that is or receive the sacrament&-but cooperate. ., wrapped around Infinity and th~ Fathe.rs in ~ellfleet made Item: The dialogue Mass has 'wh?se walls are alive with the thmgs a httle eaSIer. been an 'accepted part of parish whIspered echo of the Word of The first Mass in Chatham was life ever since the Sacred Con- ,of God, offered in the home of Matthias gregation of' Rites issued its ~nd w?at of the parishioners? P. Slavin and, after that, condirective. All Masses are dia- It IS. obv~o,:,s that they l?ve ~nd --,.tinued to be offered on a once iogue....:..except the 9 o'clock on adl~llre, th.elr Church, .thelr..Falth, 8 month basis in various private Sunday which is a sung Mass- theIr parIsh and theIr l?rIests-houses, Particularly that of Benfrom "In Nomine Domini ..." to but ope. small thing WIll,. perjamin O. Eldredge-which was the last "Deo Gratias." This may haps, give a com~lete plctu~e also the center for catechism, be of interest to some of the and. an un?erstandmg of their with all the children gathered in vastly larger parishes wh9 break speCIal quaht y ., the big living room., The Elinto print every so often. to anThey 11 Ta.lk dredge home still serves the nounce with great exCitement "Take any Sunday morningChurch, as it is now the rectory that with the aid of a specially before or after ~ass. "Vou are a of Holy Redeemer parish. trained group their congregation stranger but you say "Good Use of Bungalow now' say the Amens and Et cum morning". to someone unknown , Saying of Mass once a month spiritu tuos out loud. to you. They do not look startled. til private homes continued until It should be of interest to the or suspicious, or affr~mted. ,They.. 'a Mrs. Curtis, who was not a professional head-shakers who do not rush for the pastor ~o re-· Catholic, offered the use of a~ sole'mnly assure you that no one port an unsavory character-unoccupied bungalow. Her offer will ever 'get set-in-their-ways they do not compress faces and· was accepted gladly-and from parishioners' to go along with' move away quickly. They seem· then on Mass was celebrated in any new-fangled changes. ' to tak~ it for granted that the Chatham 'every' Sunday'; at 8 Item: A men's choIT _ which location and the circumstances A.M. ., sings the Mass every Sunday, make it natura~, and reaso~abl~ In 1915, Father Elkerhng, pasand useS' chant-and again in for you to say Good mornmg. tor at Wellfleet, fe~t that HOLY REDEEMER eHu.RCH, CHATHAM line with' the papal~ directive, So· t~ey" smile, .and say "G;ood . Chatham should have Its own stresses the xVi: Mass in the hope mornmg right back. Yes, a httle C,~urch, He d.iscussed t~e ~atter total number of parishioners to may be completely concealed so that SO,me. daYJhe whole congre_ thing, but it tells a great ?eal, Vigorously WIth the parIshIOners, about 3000 ... all of whom nat- that the basement may be uSed. gation will 'siiig the Mass.. Some. about Holy Redeemer parishlon,. . tile necessary land was pur- urally, want to go to Mass on as a parish hall. A modern and of them "do so now and all are ers. ehased, and construction of the Sunday. Their need. is met by. ten fully equipped kitche!l makes it requested and urged to join with By a h~ppy coincidence we' Dew church began on Nov. 3?, Sunday Masses-achieved with easy to take ,care of Commu'nion the choir.. So if you like to sing started With" Father CO~1DOlly.: 1915. Th~ work went so ~ell, It . the help of Fathers from the, breakfasts and other gatherings the. Mass without having people ,who ~~und few Catholics to was pOSSIble .to say Mass 10 the Congregation Monastery inFair- .requiring serving e,f food. move away from you or call. an at~end.. on Ca~ Cod, and end new church 10 the early Sum- haven who are assignd for ~umI 1960 th t usher:'-here's your opportunity. WIth Blsh?p Connolly who found mer of 1916-a pleasant and d .th h .. ta n e rec ory was reU bt i so many 10 one small spot that o rUB v~ tOrMgan Al welcome surprise for Summer mer dutY,an WI t e assls nee furnished and partially rebuilt' It . Tnh they Pad to be a parish. wsitors. of visiting priests who may be ·to allow for office space and the em.. e .orgams. rs. ~x'. ' on vacation in' and around necessary privacy for intervie'ws, ande! Gpffm goes along wltil Elevate Cleric's Son, On Aug. 2'1, 1916, Holy Re- Chatham. . visitors and the ever present the mind'of th~ Church (that old N0RT~MPTON(NC)-Msgr•. deemer Church in .Chatham was These visiting priests make . parish pllper work. rcan, and do, directive again) that· the organ dedi~ated by the Most Rev~rend for a steady and active use of all say that Holy Redeemer rectory should' support and underline Charles Alexander Grant, 54Damel F .. Feehan, D.D:,Blshop three altars in the .church:' on' is a most pleasant place't6 sPend ~e, voices, but never overwhelm year.,.old son of an Anglican. of Fall RIver. .. weekdayS-:-so that daily MasS . a' few minutes, or as .is what them. So, iri'this case, the organ archdeacon, &88 been appoiilted A~xiliary Bishop to 73-year-old Chatham now had ds own may be attended all Summer at . . , is not ootrusive. ...L. • ed ., usua,'11y h appens, an h·our. vnurch but, remal.n. a mission almost any time. during' 'the ' . It is there for' the. Choir to hear Bishop .Thomas L. Parker 01. England. ofW~l1fleet·u.ntl1 1931, when morning.' " '.. ,This is due, in·part, to the·fact and for'them to lean on' in those Northampton',' , Harwlc~,aIso 10 charge ?f the One other prob'lem arl'ses w'l'th that you are always welcome- fleeting. mome.nts when help ill f the.CongregatIOn o o t h Father Brennan and Father needed. But there are no throb.Fath ers o the f influxb of Sum.mer parishionthe Sacred Hearts took over the Christopher make you 'feel they'd b' .l'esponslblbty , ..' ers-not only. do' they come ' t m '. pedal I u-t<e. I!1NO HELPfUL beeno hoping you'd dropin, g and. ' tones, no lush har, . Mass, but they come by automomes no crashing and susI NST£AD OF HELPl£5S In 1,953, having d~e regl\rd>f~r mobile. And even the most ou't- in part to the cheerful friendli- ~inelci' cJ:1ords.:..-,which, far too THE Will(' I. WAS eEfOltl the large and growmg Cathohc ness·ot. the. housekeeper, M r s . ' . . . standing usher cannot make a many organistll feel to be their WI! RDnItD nils ·..populatIon 10 Chatham, the Most bunch 'of cars "00,ch over" to Danz, who: always seems to be· unchallen~ed right and prerog- . WHEEL CHAIR FROM Reverend James L. Connolly, able and 'willing to produce a ative . '. . D . h f F II R' squeeze in one more. . .D., BlS op 0 a.. Iver, g~ve So Father Brennan bought I f · h D W. Item: All ceremonies done as' the n~cessary permlssH~n and 18- land for additional parking space nter alt CDY Ins completely as'iiI possible-with '!tructIOns for enlargmg HQly and, thanks to an admirable and New Support on Hill r the choir expected to be preRedeemer Church and work was enforced parking plan and' a . WASHINGTON (NC)-A pro- pared and ready to do ita part. started on December 5 of t,hat . strict, supervision. of'all: car posed 'arinual "Interfaith Day" 'Devotions diJriM Lent 'the comyear., . ~ , movement in the area; the nine has won new congressional back-. .. The first Mass in the en la rged o'clock gets away and the' ten . ehurch was said on the Feast of .. mg. ~e Sacred Heart, June 25, 1954 ~tl~~~a:.e~~:l:i~~g~:~~~m:n': YO~~P. i~:~~~c~:ltz:,a:e::'~u~i~-: and on July 25, 1954, Bishop jangled nerves. (The last qualifi- (H.J. Res. 271) in' the House of Connolly made the formal ded- ca'tl'on' does not apply to t". .... Representatives designating the wation. pastor.) fourth· Sunday in September of On April 24, 1955, the great Catechetical Center each year Interfaith Day. A resday, arrived. Holy Redeemer beIn 1958 the property adjoining olution for.this purpose (S,J. Res. came a parish! Father John J. the church became available and _ 24) was introduced in the Senate Brennan, SS.CC., who had been, was purchased by Father Bren- in mid-January by Sen. Kenneth to all intents and purposes, actnan for use as a Catechetical B ~365' NORTH FRONT, STREET .' K ea t'109 of New York. ing pastor since 1952-was ap- . Center. The large house on the NEW BEDFORD -. pointed pastor in fact, the first prop.~rty was re-worked and its Rep. Holtzman's resolution was ~ 202 ROCK STREET· pastor for Holy Redeemer. His 11 rooms provide a separate class referred to the .House Judiciary . WYman 2-5534 ~ assi~tant was Father Jeremiah room for each school grade for Committee. An Interfaith Day FAILl RIVER, "MASS. Casey, SS,CC. Father Casey was religious instruction. measure was. approved by the replaced by. Father Harold Whe-:. Grade" 'schooi children. are' Senate in' the 86th Congress, but lan, SS.CC.,. who gave 'way' to under the supervision of Our the House did· not act on it. Father Roger Doherty, SS.CC. Lady of" Victory Missionary SisHe in turn gave way to the pres- ters who .come 1<>, Chath,am from A. D~ McMULLEN ent assistant,·Fa·ther Christopher their convent in West Harwich. Inc. .~ooklets Christensen, SS:CC. High school ·st.Udents are inThe 'enlargement of Holy Re- structed by the priests and some MOVER:S deemer allows for seating 450 in of the high school teachers. , SERVING the main church arid an addi": While the new property' was Fall River, New Bedford tional 300 in the basement chapel, being converted into the" CateCcipe' Cod 'Area more than ample' for a Winter chetical Center, men of the Holy Agen&: , .-~ eongregationof 700 for three Name Society went to work. on OFFSET LETTERPRESS AERO MAYFLOWER Sunday Masses. But Summer is the church basement, refurbish1 another story. As is· common to ing, reorienting and redecorating. TRANSIT CO~ "INC. 1-11'CC:>FFlN AVENUE Phone WYman 7-942,1 Cape parishes, the population. A new altar was designed and Nation-wide Movers' explosion is·a "here now" reality built by one of the paril1hioners, New Bedford, Mass;. WYman 3-0904 every Summer. For Holy Re- Freeman Phillips, Jr. 304 Kempton S&. New Bedford aeemer it· means a jump in the The altar and its furnishin§J

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