The ANCHOR
Legion of Mary Opens
Apostolic Year Sunday
The Annual Legion of Mary Acies (Consecration) Ceremony wilJ be held Sunday afternoon at 2 :30 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall Riv~r. At that time Active and Auxiliary Legion members from the 23 Praesidia throughout the Diocese will meet with their spiritual directors to rededicate themselves to their apostolic work. The Most Reverend Bishop will preside over the ceremony and the preacher will be Very Rev. Roger M. Charest, S.M.M., Provincial of the Montfort Fathers, and a native of Fall' River. Participating in the services will be Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, Fall River Comitium Director and Diocesan Moderator, Rev. Albt!rt F. Shovelton, New Bed ford Curia Director, and Rev.
Joseph Delaney, Taunton Curia Dil·ector. Members of St. Michael's Choir, Fall River, under. the di , Tection of Rev. Gilbert Simoes and with Mrs. Marguerite Ward as organist will sing. The Legion of Mary report Turn to Page Twelve
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 14, 1963 Vol. 7, No. 11
©
1963 The Anchor
PRICE IOc $4.00 per Year
French Prelates Support Striking Coal Miners CAMBRAI (NC) - Three French prelates have ex pregsed their sympathy for France's 200,000 coal miners in their nationwide strike. The strike against the nation alized mines, which began March 1, has been supported by all major French union their demands. The govern organizations, the commu on ment has said it will not nego nist, socialist and the French tiate until the miners return to Confederation of Christian work. Workers. It is regarded as a major test of strength between organized labor and the government of President Charles de Gaulle, which has issued a back-to-work order. Miners are demanding shorter hours and an 11 per cent pay raise. The government has offered a 5.7 per cent increase. Strike leaders have declared they will not order their men back to the mines until the government opens negotiations
Archbishop Emile Guery of Cambrai, whose See is in the mining area, said: "Over and beyond all politi cal, economic and technical con siderations which are not our responsibility, we have the duty to . raise our voice and guard against the worst. "We need to find human solu tions to human problems; these
must be sought in honest conver sation between both sides. It is necessary for representatives of the unions to be received and heard. If the wages of miners are 11 per cent lower than other wages, this poses a question of justice to the nation and govern':' ment." Bishop Gerard Huyghe of Arras, also in the mining region, stated in a pastoral letter: "Many .people are perhaps dismayed by this strike, thinking of the coal which will no longer be delivered to them. Let them also think of the causes which have driven the miners to· this test· of strength: They are dis couraged because they feel they are abandoned and misunder stood." The Bishop continued: "We know well' enough how difficult the work of those people is, how their health is endangered and how uncertain their future is. "How could I avoid thinking of the suffering of the men and women in the coal mining areas? They must know that I sympa thize deeply with their misfor tune, and I want to tell all Christians that one cannot be Turn to Page Four
Announte " Vocations Masses Five Pontifical Masses for Vocations will be offered in the Diocese in the week be ginning Monday, March 25,
TURNS 99: Archbishop Daniel Mannix of Melbourne, Australia, has recently cele brated his 99th birthday. Until just a few years ago, the Archbishop was accus tomed to walking fOlir miles each day from his residence to St. Patrick's Cathedral and back again. A native of Ireland, he has been a bishop over 50 years. NC Photo.
St. Anne's To Cap Student Nurs'es The Most Reverend Bishop will preside over Capping exer cises that will take place Tues day, March 19, in the Chapel of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River. Thirty-nine young ladies will receive their caps from Bishop Connolly who will also 'speak at 7 o'clock evening ceremony.
with students in Catholic sec ondary schools in attendance. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., will' celebrate Mass at 10 Monday morning, in Notre Dame Church, Fall River. The choir will be composed of Sacred Hearts Academy students. On Wednesday morning at 10 o'c!ock Bishop Connolly will of fer Mass for Bishop Stang High School students at their school in .North Dartmouth. On Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock students of St. Anthony High, Holy Family High and . Sacred Hearts Academy, Fair. haven, will attend Mass in St. Anthony Church, New Bedford. Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, will be celebrnnt..The St. An thony choir will sing. Taunton students will assist at Mass in St. Mary's Church at 10 Thursday morning. Bishop Con nqlly will be celebrant. Coyle High School students will sing. Bishop Connolly will celebrate the final Mas" at 10 Friday morning at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro. A Novena for Vocations will be conducted in all churches and schools of the Diocese start. ing Friday, March 22 and ending Sunday, March 31.
Convert-Nun First American Saint
Pontiff
School Aid Talk Smoke Screen
St. Patrick's Day - The great day for the Irish, takes
on added significance this March 17 when American
BALTIMORE (NC) - An
excited teenage girl has left here for Rome and what she calls "my first real big
born Mot her Elizabeth Ann Seton is beatified. Her biographers have written much about the great influence of the devout Catholic family of Felicchi in Italy, who befriended the young widow when her husband died there in 1803. But little has been said about the Irish in her life who aided and guided her both before and after her conversion to the Catholic Faith. We have, for example, the words of Mother Seton, in a Turn to Page Eighteen
trip." She is Ann Teresa O'Neill who will be not just another tourist, but a central figure at the beati fication of Mother Elizabeth Seton because she is a principal reason that Sister will be the first native U.S. citizen declared Blessed. Eleven years ago, when Ann was four-and-a-half, she was dying of leukemia. Physicians told her parents that her case was hopeless.
that Federal aid to private schools is unconstitutional. "1 am more convinced than ever," the Kansas prelate said, "that depriving religious and private schools of Federal aid has only one purpose behind it- to get rid of these schools. "I do not care that the poll ticians protest that this is not Turn to Page Twelve
Three more parishes have achieved their quota of sub. scriptions to The Anchor
for the coming year. A total of 22 parishes has now reached the quota mark. S eve I' a 1 parishes scattered throughout the diocese are work. ing feverishly to attain their quotas, hence they have not made final returns to the Circulation Department of this diocesan newspaper. The three reporting quota sales today are: St. Joseph's, New Bedford. St. Lawrence's, New Bedford. St. Mary's, Hebronville. A number of' parishes are close to reachmg their quotas. It would not take much to' put them into the coveted bracket which, in turn, will assure Ii sixth straight cirCUlation gain for The Anchor, the largest " weekly newspaper in Southeast ern Massachusetts.
We expect that several par. ishes will join the Q-class with. in .the week. This will establish a new quota class high.
Mother Seton Beatification Sunday
PATRON: This statue of Ireland's St. Patrick is lo cated at Saul, County Down, whet'e the Saint is believed to have died around the year
461 after spreading the Faith in the Island of Saints
and Scholars.
DODGE CITY (N C) Dodge City's Bishop Marion F. Forst characterized as "a smoke screen" the argument
Total of 22 Quota Class Parishes
B L E S SIN G: Cardirial
Spellman of New York will
bless Bishop Cassidy High
School in Taunton on Friday
May 3, at 2 :30. to R~ceive afternoon, Sisters of the Holy Union of
the Sacred Hearts staff this Cure Girl school.
'Great Day for Irish' Gets New Significance Young'
Turn to Page Eighteen
...
Role of Layman Is To Mediate WASHINGTON (N C) - A Catholic lay leader said here that the average layman today has no idea of how he is to carry the Church into the world. Donald J. Thorman, director of the Spiritual Life Institute and a former Catholic magazine editor, said the layman is to be a mediator between the Church and the world. Thorman, author of "The Emerging Layman," said that the layman "has to see himself as part of the world and the Turn to Page Four ,
-
2
THE
ANCHOR-Dioce~
of Fail River-Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963
Says Ecumenism Offers Practical Plan for Peace
Welfare Bureau Director Hits Shot-Gun Marriages
CAMBRIDGE (NC) Bishop John King Mussio of Steubenville describes the movement for religious unity
MONTREAL (NC) - The priest-director of the Catho lic Welfare Bureau here advocated that "shot-gun marri ages among teenagers should be discouraged at all costs." Father Patrick J. Ambrose said experience has shown most teenage marriages fail to' . have an' obligation to help these last. He add ed'. "When teen- fathers," Father Ambrose said. agers in trouble face the Same Cause problem realistically and de "When we a 11 a I y z e this
alarming increase in young un
'married mothers, we almost in- .
variably come back to the sarrie
cause," he added.
"It is lack of discipline in the home, too much freedom, in some cases parental negligence, not necessarily physical but very often e mot ion a 1. Too many parents are too often concerned heavily stacked against them if _with the material care of their they do," Father Ambrose said. He recommended that the daughters, forgetting the most fathers of teenagers in such important need, parental love ' t 0 the 0 veI' and affection," Father Ambrose cases be brought III all aid plan for the' unwed said. mother and her child. Father Ambrose said his annual report disclosed the Catholic Welfare Bureau s' e I' v e d 307 unwed mothers last year. "The problem of an unwed . Stonehill College will conduct mother is immediate, but the its sixth annual liturgical con boy or man involved can be just ference for religious and laity as confused and emotionally dis fro~ 1:30 to 5, Sunday afternoon, furbed as the unwed mother. April 21. Social agencies, where possible, Theme will be "~rhe Liturgical Year" with the program de sign~d to help promotion of lay participation in religious cere FRIDAY-Friday of II Week of monies and under direction of Lent. III Class. Violet. Mass Rev. William F. Hogan, C.S.C., Proper; No Gloria or Creed; chairman of the department of Preface of Lent. theology of StonehilI College. It will include a general ses SATURDAY - Saturday of II t Week of Lent. III Class. Violet. sion conducted by Rev. Mass Proper;' No Gloria or Schlitzer, C.S.C., noted author and lecturer and member of the Creed; Preface of Lent. SUNDAY-III Sunday of Lent. I theology department of the Uni Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No versity of Notre Dame. Four individual sessions will MONDAY-Monday of III Week include: "The Meaning of Sun of Lent. III Class. Violet. Mass day," conducted by Rev: William Proper; )'I,"c Gloria; Second Manseau, St. Elizabeth's parish, Collect St. Cyril of Jerusalem, Miltonj "Teaching the Liturgical Bishop, Confessor and Doctor Year," Sister John Mary, S.C.N., of the' Church; no Creed; Academy of Our Lady of Naza Gloria; Creed; Preface of Lent. reth, Wakefield; "Living the Preface of Lent. Liturgical Year in the Home," 'l'UESDAY-St. Jo.seph, Spouse Mr. and' Mrs. Clyde Pax, Holy 01' the Blessed Virgin Mary Cross College, Worcester; and and Patron the Universal . "Music in the Liturgy," George Church. I Class. White. Mass Pelletier and the Stonehill Col Tuesday of III Week of Lent; lege Glee Club. Proper; Gloriaj Second Collect· Creed; Preface of St. Joseph. WEDNESDAY-Wednesday of II Week of Lent. III Class. Violet. The following films are to be Mass Proper; No Gloria or added to the lists in their respec Creed; Preface of Lent. ti ve classifications: THURSDAY - Thursday of III Unobjectionable for General Week of Lent. III Class. Violet. Patronage-The Man From the Mass Proper; No Gloria; Sec Diners Club.
ond Collect St. Benedict, Ab bot; no Creed; Preface of Lent.
Unobjectionable for Adults
as "our most practical plan to meet the egomaniac threat to world security and peace." Ecumenism highlights modern man's realization that he cannot get along by himself, the Ohio prelate declared as he credited Protestant and Orthodox groups as the Ecumenical movement's "best promoters." Bishop Mussio added that Catholics were "com placent in the thought that we had a unity satisfying to us." "We were wrong in that satis faction," . the Bishop continued. "We now I' e a liz e that Christ wants all men to be joined in a unity of effort that His will be fulfilled on earth. We have also learned the lesson from our time that unless we do so unite in a conscientious submIssion to the word of God, the enemy will profit by our isolationism."
cide not to marry, usually they surrender their child to a social agency, begin a new life, and go on eventually to marry someone else." Against Them I!Teenagers in trouble should never marry because ·of fear, family pride, or community reaction, because the cards are
To Conduct Sixth Liturgy Session
"Certainly, any sensible man must know," the Bishop said, "that it is going to take a united and energetic front composed of all believers to withstand and overcome the onslaught of dis belief, despair and the loneliness of an empty isolation. "Ecumenism comes naturally to us when we begin to see our selves as we truly are," Bishop Mussio concluded.
. Mass Ordo
!.
Necrology MAR. 16
. Rev. Fancis J. Maloney, S.T.I.., 1957, Pastor, St. Mary, No. Attle boro. MAR. 19
CHARITY BEGINS IN YOUR ARMS: Having com pleted a television appeal for his annual Catholic Chari~ies drive Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken of San FranCISCO cuddl~s a crying child who appeared with him in the film. The child is one of the negleeten ..._.1 t-~('·,hlQr'l (''h'1''''''l he is seeking to .help. NC Photo. .
0,
Legion of Decency
. Attleboro K of C St. John's Council, Attleboro Knights of Columbus, will hold a St. Patrick's social and dance this Saturday night. The annual Easter ham raffle is set for Thursday, March 28 and a major degree exemplification is set for 7 Sunday night, March 31. April events will include the annual Spring communion Mass and breakfast, a social Thursday, the 11th and a Spring Ladies Night dance Saturday, the 27th.
FORTY HOURS DEVOTION Mar.17.L..St. Mary, Taunton. St. Francis X a vie r , A;:ushnet. Mar. 24-St. Joseph, Nor t h Dighton. Espirito San f 0, Fall . River. . Mar.31-':"St. . Boniface, New .Bedford. St. Peter. Dighton.
Our Lady of Perpetual
Help, New Bedford.
April 7-0ur Lady of the
Immaculate Conception,
Fall River.
St. James, Taunton
THE ANCHOR
Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River,
Mass. Published every Thursday at 410
Hi!l1lano Avenue Fall River Mass. by the
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an d Adolescents - Donovan's Reef; The Four Days of Naples. Unobjectionable for Adlilt5--I Could Go on Singing; Spencer's Mountain. Objectionable in Part for All Follow the Boys (Objection: Suggestive situations and dia logue; light- treatment of virtue of chastity). Island of Love (Objection: The theme of this tawdry film is developed in an atmosphere of vulgarity, sug gestiveness and irreverence.)
Anni~ersary
Program
The 10th anniversary program cf Bishop Cassidy Council, Som erset-Swansea Knights of Co lumbus, will include a 5 o'clock Mass Sunday afternoon, March' 31 at St. Thomas More Church, Somerset. Mass win be followed . by dinner in the council home, Swansea.. Msgr. Humberto Me deiros will be guest speaker. In charge of' ticKets is John C. Oliveira.
Real Estate Rene Poyant Hyannis 335 Winter St.
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Newman Movement Head of Chaplains Association Underscores· Need of Colle_giate Organization ST. PAUL. (NC) - The head of the National Newman Club Chaphiins Association has un derscored the need of expanding the movement in this country at a meeting of Catholic college presidents and Newman Club chaplains here. Father Richard Butler, O.P., president of the chaplains asso ciation, said tnere are 875 New man organizations at 1,223 secu lar colleges and universities in the nation. He pointed out there are only 200 full-time chaplains directing these centers. Only 113 of tbe secular colleges and uni versities where Newman Clubs are located grant credits for courses in· religion or related subjects, he noted. Msgr. James P. Shannon pres ident of the College of St. Thomas here, reminded Catholic college heads they must plan now to meet the expected in-
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creases in students during the next 20 years. i'The Catholic college presi dent holds the -responsibility to deliver what the college bulletin promises," Msgr. Shannon said. "The program of Catholic col leges must be tho I' 0 ugh I y orientated so that the student receives a deep Catholic philo sophical and theological orien tation." He said it is important for the Catholic college to preserve its Cat hoi i c identity and show "along every step of the way that religious and intellectual life are happily and firmly. .wedded."
Rev. John J. McQuaide, 1905, Assistant, St. Mary, Taunton. MAR. 20
Rev. Francis A. Mrozinski, 1951, Pastor, St. Hedwig, New' Bedford.
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SOLEMN DEVOTIONS OF THIRTEEN TUESDAYS TO ST. ANTHONY BEGINS TUESDAY, MARCH 19th CHAPEL DEVOTIONS: Every Tues day at 10:00 A.M., 12: 10 Noon, 3:00 P.M. and 5: 10 and 8:00 P.M. RADIO: W5AR-1440 on Dial at 6:45 P.M. every Tuesday. SERMONS: by Fr. Eugene F. Malek, O.F.M. For a Novena Booklet, please write to:
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THE ANCHORThurs., Mar. 14, 1963
Underdev·eloped Countries' Living Standards' Greatest Challenge SAN Al\"TONIO (NC) -Irish diplomat Frederick H. Boland defined the "challenge of our times" in an address here. Ireland's Ambassador to the United Nations told the 18th San Antonio Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Men convention the challenge is "the appalling and enormous gap which still con tinues to exist between the standards of education, health and human welfare in the highly developed countries on the one hand and the underdeveloped countries on the other." The former president of the UN General Assembly lauded the U. S. Peace Corps program and pointed with pride to Ire land's record in efforts to cor-, reet the imbalan~e.. 'Although Ireland is in the smaller nations class, Boland said "she has been in this field longer and in far greater numbers through priests, nuns and Brothers (than any other nation) laboring in the cause of peace on every continent, in every nation of the globe." Underscoring his point, Boland said in Nigeria, for example, Irish missionaries have charge of educating more than 5,000 grade school and more than 600 high school students; "I doubt, whether we in the West have come to realize the
Believe Prelate Extortion Ta rg·et BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Bish op Walter W. Curtis of Bridge port has praised law enforce ment agencies for their work in III case which reportedly had the Connecticut prelate as the target of an extortion threat. "The alert work of our local and 'state police together with the FBI effectively prevented any danger to anyone," BIshop Curtis said in a statement which followed disclosure of an ex tortion plot involving' a threat to the life a "prominent Bridge port citizen," reportedly Bishop Curtis.
In New Haven, FBI agent
Charles E. Weeks said investiga
tion in the case had been un derway for several weeks and arrests may be made soon. It was reported that a letter had been sent to the FBI threat ening the life of the "prominent Bridgeport citizeR" if a man now serving III 4-to-30 year jail term for carrying a concealed weapon and being a habitual criminal was not released and given $50, 000. Weeks said the letter did not name the person threatened but investigation indicated it was Bishop Curtis.
Rural Life Problems Face Missioners ST. PAUL (NC) - Lay mis sionary endeavors "presuppose some acquaintance wi.,th the phil fisophy of rural life and related problems," according to Arch. bishop Leo Binz of St. Paul. "If on the international level our statesmen Rnd civic leaders cannot be isolationists, then surely it beh09ves members of the Mystical B....dy of Christ to have concern for their brethren wherever they be," Archbishop Binz declared, adding: "One of the focal points for the Church today is Latin Amer lea where the gravest of prob. lems arise from the soil. The Papal Volunteers for Latin America, the Peace Corps, and in fact our whole lay missionary endeavor presuppose some ac quaintance with the philosophy of rural life a:l.d related prob lems." "The message of Christ as re. corded in the Gospels is given to us from a rural background and in parables containing images such as the sower, the shepherd, the seed, the 'vi!le, the harvest," said the Archbishop, adding: "Mutual relationship between country and city people, although excellent for the most part, does admit of improvement."
Arkansas Bishop Scores Kennedy 'School Aid Bill
fuU implications of this problem with literally millions and mil lions of people living on the verge of starvation," he said. "Even viewing this matter on a practical level, and in consid eration of our own practical in terests, I do not think that the Western democracies" can afford to ignore this problem, Boland added. He said the danger of discon tent in underprivileged nations may erupt into revolution even apart from communist subver sion or other external 'influences.
LITTLE ROCK (NC) The Bishop of Little Rock declared that President Ken·' nedy's Federal aid to educa
Sons Officiate At Requiem Most Reverend James L. Con nolly, Bishop of the Diocese, at tended and gave the final abso lution at the Solemn Funeral Mass Tuesday morning in the 'Sacred Heart Church, No. Attle boro, for Joseph O. Chabot, father of Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa's Parish, So. Attleboro, Rev. Bertrand R. Chabot, assistant at St. Anthony's, New Bedford and Very Rev. Luke M. Chabot, O.F.M., supe. rior of Franciscan Friars of Montreal. . Father Gerard J. Chabot was celebrant of the Mass; Father Bertrand R. Chabot, deacon; and Rev. James F. McCarthy, sub. deacon. Father Luke Chabot is in So: America on a missionary visitation and was thus unable to be present. Mr. Chabot, husband of Mrs. Clara Gamache Chabot of 67 Eddy Street, No. Attleboro, died Saturday at the age of 83. In addition to the three priests, survivors include: Sister Ar. mande Marie, S.U.S.C. of the Sacred Hearts Academy Convent Fall River; Mrs. Agenard Des~ ehenes, Mrs. Normand L'Homme, both of No. Attleboro; and Mrs. Normand Hamel of Taunton. Chaplains to the Most' Rever end Bishop were Rev. John J. Casey of North Easton and Rev. Lorenzo Morais of Westport.
Need for Books In African Port New <t assignment for Brother Venard Blyais of the Society of the Divine Savior, native of St. Mathieu's parish, Fall River, is direction of a rest house for fel low members of his community in Tanganyika, Africa.
"I am in Mtwara," he writes, "where I have just opened a tiny rest house for members of our society." The Brother is also helping a Benedictine priest with founding a seaman's club. For the latter project, he is in need of books for a library. "Perhaps some of our friends in the Diocese would be happy to contribute new or used books for this purpose. If they sent even one book a month it would be a tremendous help. "The library will stock both English and Swahili books, but we expect a greater call fQr Eng lish books as it is amazing how many people know English well in this port town. , "Mtwaraboasts the best har bor in East Africa. At .present some 30 ships a month dock here but that is on the increase." " Address for sending books is Brother Venard Blais, S.D.S., Box 503, Mtwara, S. Region, Tanganyika, East Africa. t• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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SUNDAY,' MARCH 24 8:00 P.M.
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3
AWARD WINNERS: Among award winners in Anchor and magazine subscription drive at Sacred Heart parish, North Attleboro are Eugene Lallier and Martin Dubuc. Rev. Edmond Dickinson, curate, presents trophies.
Teach 10 Languages New Jersey Catholic High Has Courses In Hebrew, Arabic, Russian, Chinese FAIRVIEW (NC)-There's no telling how you'll be greeted if you visit St. John the Baptist School here. . Not that the children are impolite. ~t's because the school has courses in Hebrew, Arabic, Spanish, Greek, Chinese, Turk. ish, Armenian, Latin, Russian a.nd French. Some of the languages are taught during regular school hours. Others are after school or during the lunch recess. Russian and Turkish are taught on Saturdays when pub. lie school students are invited to attend. Nearly everyone of the 340 students in the school is studying the fundamentals of at least one language. The language experiment be. gan five years ago when a num ber of Hungarian refugees came to the parish. As they enrolled their children in the school, the problem of how to communicate came up. It was found that some of the young Hungarians spoke Ger man. So did a couple of the reg ular students. So the instruction was given in English. It was then
translated into German and from
there into Hungarian.
In the meantime, the young Hungarians started to learn English. And the American stu dents picked up some German and Hungarian. Things might have stopped there. But then the children of five Dutch families appeared. They were followeci by five Arab-, speaking youngsters. Add Arabic, Latin One thing led to another. Upon being introduced to an Assyrian priest fluent in seven languages, Father Charles McTague, school moderator, invited him to come and give formal lessons in Arabic.
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Later a young language major
came to teach Latin. Then an' honor student from Mexico who while studying here, exchanged instructions in Spanish for room and board. When he left, he was succeeded by a student from Venezuela. Even First Graders There followed an Armenian priest, a French woman, an Ar gentinian, a person fluent in Russian, a young Greek scholar from Rhodes, studying at nearby St. Peter's College, and a pro :lessor from Cairo. Hebrew _ was added next. Father McTague asked Rabbi Henry O. Griffel of Cliffside Park to take that class.
. Chmese was added this year through the help of the Far Eastern Institute at Seton Hall University and a grant from the Carnegie Foundation. A Chinese textbook being prepared for pUb lication for American students now is being tested chapter by chapter at St. John's. Even the lirst-grade youngsters are tak ing part in the study.
"
tion proposals would penalize parents of private school chil. dren. Bishop Albert L. Fletcher, in a pastoral letter read in all churches, declared the aid pro {losal "unjustly discriminates against parents who exercise their constitutional right to send their children to a private school of their choice." ,The Bishop also said he sees no constitutional difference be. tween Federal assistance to all colleges and their students and U. S. aid on the elementary and secondary level. The President's bill does not propose any help for parochial and other private grade and high schools but it would treat all four-year colleges and graduate schools equally, "As far as separation of Church and State is concerned, what fundamental difference is there· whether the government help students in private colleges or students of private elementary. and secondary schools?" the Bishop a.dded.
The President proposes a pro gram of $1.5 billion for "selec tive and urgent" improvement of public elementary and sec ondary schools which would end in four years. Bishop Fletcher said how ever, that "experience' shows * * * Federal aid programs of any kind seldom retrench, but always expand." This would mean, he argued, that more tax"!s would be re-" quired each year aIid that the parent of a private school pupil, between paying taxes and addi ~ional tuition for private school education, would be penalized.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar'. U, 1963
4";~;.iiiri:~~--· .:~~~~~ .. ~ . ·:;tt.·.·
The Parish Parade SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO Holy Name Society men are currently conducti.ng a member ship campaign A mailing to parish men includes a personal letter from Rev. E. L. Dickinson, spiritual :Hrector, a flyer ex plaining the work of the Holy Name SocIety, iilnd an applica-' tion blank for membership. The mailing wIll be followed by in dividual visits. from members.
ST. PAUl.. TAUNTON The Catholic Wom.en's· Gund will hold its annual eorpo.-ate Communion at 7 o'clock Mass (.his Sunday morning. Orville Smith will be organist.. Break fast will follow in the' church hall with Joseph Quill, manager ·Jf Radio station WPEP, Taunton, as speaker. Mrs Thomas Uns worth heads the arrangements committee.
ST. MARY. MANSFIELD The Carholic' Woman's .club will meet tonight. Program will fea lure a discussion of' flower arranging by Mrs. Chris Inman. Mrs. Ann Halbing will be chair man of the hostess committee.
ST. MARY'S, SEEK()oNK Miss Elizabeth Murby, Paw tucket, will be featured in the parish's 53rd variety show, scheduled for 2 and 8,. Sunday afternoon and evening, March 17 in Peter Thacher School, Brownell Street. Attleboro. Miss Murby, a lyric soprano, has sung with the U:S. Marine Band in Washington. In addition 'to singing herself, she will pro vide piano accompaniment .for her nieces, "The Three Little Murbys," in a vocal presentation. Other ~pecialty acts and a chorus of over 100 voices will also highlight the program. A free bus will p,ick up patrons at Bakers Corner at 1:30 Sunday afternoon and transport them to the performance. Mrs. Venita Cate is chairman, aided by Mrs. Marie Tetreault. Cast and aides will be guests of Rev. Cornelius J. Keliher, pastor, at a luncneon in the parish hall, to be served by 'Women's Guild members between performances.
ST. PATRICK, SOMERSET The Lawn Party' committee will meet Monday, March 18. A whist party is scheduled for Wednesday, March 20. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL InVER . The Holy Name Society will hold corporate communion at 8 o'clock Mas~ this Sunday morn ing. Breakfast will follow in the parish hall. Also on Sunday, an organizational meeting for ob servance of the feast of Our Lady of Angels will be held at 7 in the evening. ST. CASIMIR, NEW BEDFORD The Parish Committee an nounces a gala card party to be held on Sunday afternoon, 8t. Patrick's Day, at 3 o'clock in the parish hall. A variety of Polish foods will be served by the young ladies of the parish. ST. JOSEI'H, FALL RIVER Atty. Julia Joyce will address members of the Women's Guild at n tonight. Her talk wiiI be preceded at 6:30 by a potluck supper. This is, membership mQnth for the organization. S8. PETER AND PAUL FALL RIVER, The Women's Guild announces a cake sale in the school vesti bule this Sunday morning from after 8 o'clock Mass until noon. Mrs. William F. O'Neil is chair man, aided by Mrs. Everett C.' Cowell. Mrs. C.owell is also in charge' of an altar boys' whist party scheduled for 8 Monday night, March 18, in the church hall. Her co-chairman will be Mrs. James W. Wholey. ST. THERESA, SOUTH ATTLEBORO Chistian Mothers of the parish will hold a ham and grocery whist at 8 Friday night, March 22. SACRED HEART. FALL RIVER Mrs. Ja:r.es Dunse heads a nominating committee which will present a State of new offi cers for the April meeting of the Women's Guild The unit plans a fashion show at 2 Sunday afternoon, March 24 at White's restaurant Ticket returns may ce made Sunday March 17 from lJ till noon at Sacred Heart School. Next month's guild meeting will be open to parishioners and will featun': slides of Rome.
Striking Mi.. ~,s Continued from Page One disinterested when faced with it. This strike affects all of us. We must feel ourselves to be a part of all misery. "Prayer alone is not enough. A Christian must feel that he is a- part of his environment." With the approval of Coad jutor Bishop Pierre Rouge of Nimes, 10 priests have published a declaration supporting the de mandsof the striking miners. They proposed that miners, who exercise an unusually dangerous occupation, should not only be paid normal wages, but more Ulan normal wageF
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Continued from Page One Church. He has a foot in both camps." Thorman spoke at the fifth annual seminarians' Institute of the Apostola+ p , - _ .. " . - fifth year by Paulist students at St. Paul's COlii..oe . .. - - 250 seminarians attended. "The Church," Thorman said, "is no longer incarnate in so ciety. It is no longer a part of everyday life. Religion, like. other human activities, is sup posed to keep to its own little compartment. To correct this situation can be the job of the layman." Clergy 'Bogie Men' Another speaker, Joseph H. McMahon of YaIE~ University, told the seminarians that Chris tianity is already considered a "fossil" 'On many s·e cui a I' campuses. McMahon, an assistant pro fessor of French and assistant master of Pierson College at Yale, said that as a result "ministers and priests are looked. upon instictively al; 'bogie men' who win immediately condemn, but who will not listen or un derstand." To combat. this, he said, there is need of more priests and lay men professionally competent in a variety of fields and convinced that Christianity offers a per spective on modern troubles of mankind.
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Thurs., Mar. 14, 19,63
leltilllON Paper Scores Pl'OpOSeci Sterilization Bill
5
Recalls St. Paul Labored Among 'Less Edifying'
BALTIMORE (NC) - A
sterilization bill proposed in
Maryland's House of Dele
gates constitutes u a grievous
TORONTO (NC) - Mur derers, dope addicts, prosti tutes and alcoholics-these were the kind of people St.
assault upon the dignity of the
1a1lman being," the newspaper of
6e Baltimore archdiocese has
lltated.
'The Catholic Review says in
a front-page editorial that House
Bill No. 563 "is one of the most
radical proposalE. ever made to
a state legislature." The paper
states the bill "would authorize
both voluntary sterilization of
adults, and compulsory steriliza
tiOIl of adults and compulsory
sterilization of certain persons
lItlder the age of 21 years.
III proposing legalization of ~erilization operations upon persons 21 or over, the paper continues, the only requirement .et forth in the bill "is .that the physician explain .the mearting and consequences of the opera tion to the person to be steril ized." "'The mere whim of the adult . • sufficient reason for the oper ation under the terms of this proposed legislation. A desire to engage in promiscuous conduct is sufficient reason under the 6erms of this proposal."
Paul converted in the city of Corinth in the year 50. according to a Biblical scholar. Father R. A F. MacKenzie, S.J., said at the Catholic Lnfor mation Center here that St. Paul stayed nearly two years in Cor inth and made hundreds of con verts among the "less edifying class." "Providentially, it was these pepple who were the hungriest for the Gospel," "the Jesuit schol. ar added. "If you can imagine," he con tinued, "something like a group of beatniks, including many newly converto::d from atheism, Zen Buddhism;md other out-of llie-way seets; if you can imagine many former prostitutes, mur derers, alcoholics and dope ad dicts with just a few more reo spectable citizens; add to this a tradition of wild religious ex. citement--then you will have some idea of the difficult team St. Paul was trying to drive when he was handling his Cor. 'Werest ef Seciety' INSTRUMENTS OF THE PASSION: Three of the Angels that line Rome's Bridge of inthian converts" Once converted, Father Mac The paper says that the second the Holy Angel near the Vatican each bear one of the instruments of the Pa.ssion of Kenzie said, these people asked Jlortion o~ the bill "provides for Christ 'This one, holding the erown -of thorns is ·one of the two originally sculpted by the themselves: How much contact fierilization upon any person great artist Gianbattista Bernini. NC Photo. can we have vdth thieves and WIlder the age of 21 years, pro murderers? How much are we .-ided that the operation 'is in to cut ourselves off from the best intere::t -of such miner world? and society,' an::!, that the person "St. 'Paul," said Father Mac 'is afflicted with any hereditary Kenzie, gives them a plain an. ferm of ml:!ntal illness, mental 4eficiency or ·epnl:!psy.~'" swer-to keep themselves un spotted, but not to abandon the "In effect," -the -eClitorial states, CINCINNATl (NC)-The"poor :hard calculation. 'T.bey want to the candidates ~an learn more world." ....is constitutes compulsory ster in three months of this kind - of ola ·liberal .arts," according to know, what's in itlor mer" lllization where the wishes of the And too many adults, as well 'training than in four years of person to besterilbredcount wr F.ather RO.bert I. Gannon, S.J., whQ' wrote a book on the subj~ct, as students, think: of the liberal college." Ilothing." "Come, FQllow Our Feasts" In otber Direction arts as "an affectation, an an The paper also sayS that "the are "still -old, still poor." The New York ,Jesuit admitted tique," he went on. "They say ''The same is true in journal_ will be the theme of a bouse tour -.ery vagueness vf the iermsem planned f{)r Wednesday after things. like, 'We've got io be i5m," he said. "The beSt journal Jlloyeci in attempting -to set up to an interviewer that .his life noon, April 3 by New Bedford practical,' and they ask ques ist is the man witQ the best edu lftandards mak~ the proposed· lon-g campaign to generate en Catholic Women's Club. With tausiasm for .Literature =d his tions like,'What good is cul cation." And the best education, legislation a 'fureat to the bodlily he made clear, is tile result of proceeds to benefit the club's integrity of a· large segment of tory' and the classics hadn't led ture?' ~, scholarship fund,guests will to any great crusade. 1!'ather Gannon deplored the· "first-hand contact with first our population." visit nine homes and see table "The vast 1ruIjarjjy .of .stu-. tendency to crowd out liberal class minds." d'ents," he said, "regard educa arts courses with business After Wodd War n he thought settings honoring Advent, Christ mas, Epiphany, Holy Thursday, ti<m. -aa a :correlative ctI ineome. courses. there might occur "a counter Good Friday" Ho];y Saturday, Cellege is considenedjusta place ''Most companies worth join awon" 3Pinst the .so.,called Easter Sunday, Pentecost, Corpus that enables them iD get more ing," .he said, 'eJgleet to train '''practical'' subjects, Father money." . .their executive candidates, and Gannon said. "I thought people Christi and the marriage feast ' BALTIlIlOBE '(NC )-Au:ustin "With that pGin1 -of :view," he would get sick of the drive for .at Cana. Cardinal Bea, S.J., president of ?ldded, "they -are .bard to inter m ec han i cal and scientific
.-e Secretariat lor .Promoting est in Hocaoe, .Anacreon, or courses." .
Christian Uni1;y, will visit this Thucydides." . But as it turned out, "the .tty Monday and Tuesday, Ap!'il . The iormer president of .Ford trend was;all in the 1)ther direc 1 and 2, as the guest of Arch NEW YORK (NC)-A tele ham University, here to ,give re tion," and registration .in liberal fOR YOUNG WOMEN msbop Lawrence.J. .shehan. gram urging President Kennedy arts courses kept. declining. treats, declared: . 196 Whipple St., FaiRiver The 81-year-old p!'elate was to issue a statement on the perils Away Frolll .ldeaJs To creat a renaissance in the Conducted by Franciscan .lll.vited to come to ihe United With to day'S youngsters there of the pornography racket has liberal arts would require .an Missionaries of Mary. States some months ,ago by has been a trend away from been sent by more than 200 per extraordinary "conjoining 01
Richard Cardinal Cllfihing, Arch ~OOMS - MEAlS i.deals. They .are given to wise, sons who attended two :rallies of c.ircumstanees and personalities,"
OVERNIGHT HOSPITAlITY bishop of Boston. He will speak Operation Yorkville, a 'Commun he said. lnquire -OS 3"2892 at Harvard U.niversity on Thurs- . ity-wide effort to bl{)ck the flow G.ay, March 28 and ftiday, March of indecent literature. 29 and' also will give an address 'The "telegram -also recommend to -en TuesdaY,March .26 at Boston ed to thePresid~tpendingleg College whieh is conducted by WASHIN.GTON (NC)-.Father Islation for a citizen's council to 1lBe.Jes,uits. Gustave Weigel, S.J., Df Wood fight smut Which would enable Prescriptions ~aMed 40r
stock (Md.) College 'said a pre Cardinal Bea will be the over householders to barl.l:nwanted Clftd -deli\llered
Bight guest of Archbishop She vious speaking engagement pre mail. HEADGUMJERS I=OR
han. On April 2 the Cardinal will vented him from accepting an The rallies concluded the first effer Mass at the Cathedr.al of invitation to give the commence IHBEnC 5UPI'UfS phase of the Operation Yorkville Mary Our Queen, will give an ment address at the Catholic 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 campaign. Organized by Father address on "The Priest -as the University 01 Arne-iea gradua New Bedford William T. Wood, S.J., and Jew Minister of Unity" in the ·after tion exercises here .'June .9. ish and Protestant clergymen in 1100n at the Cathedral auditorium Father Weigel was one of four Thomas f. Monagnan Jr. the Yorkville area of Manhattan, and will speak to students at St. priests refused clearance to ad the movement had previously Treasurer Mary's Seminary, Roland .Park dress C.U. students, during a operated through house meet in the evening. Lenten lecture series because ings. REST HOM'E FOR'TME AGED
He is scheduled to leave here the four hold definite views on M1:N A'ND WOMEN
April 3 for New York where h~ issues being debated at the Sec 142 SECOND STREET 8eawtiful S....oundings
....ill enplane for Rome.ond Vatican Council. Clean. Comfortable. living
Father Weigel had been in NO JOB roo BIG OSborne 5-7856 WONDERFUL FOOD vited to give the commencement Antoinette Picard, Prop. NONE TOO .sMALL address by Msgr. William J. FALL RIVER ME 6-4921 McDonald university .rector. The Russells' Mills Rd. & Slade Cor. Rd.
Jesuit told the rector he had DAll1MOUTH
TAYLOR (NC) - A shrine to :ilccepted an invitation to speak St. Dymphna, patroness of those at Alfred (N. Y.) University on afflicted with mental and ner the same -day. . POUs disorders, was opened in .this Michigan community. Metin OffiQ! -and Plcmt The shrine is part of the new .lOWELL. MASS. Christ the King Hungarian Byzantine Rite church in this Tetetihoae Lowell
at Detroit suburb. In.c.
Gt. '8-6333 and GL 7.;7500
Solemn dl:!dication ceremonies fUNERAL SERVICE
will be conducted in the Spring ~uxiliary Plants by Bishop Nicholas Elko of the Pittsburgh Byzantine Rite dio BaSION 549 COUNTY ST. Cll!se, Father Emery J. Nemeth, OCEANPORT, N.I. pastor, said. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDfORD, MASS. 'PAWTUCKET, 'R. t A relic of St. Dymphna was sent to the shrine from Rome.
.e
'Poor Old liberal Arts' Are Still That Father Gannon Is Discouraged
To Honor feasts
're'ateslnvite CantinaJ Bee
Manhattan Residents Fight Smut Racket
Fr. Weigel Declines CU Bid Speak
St. francis Residence
LARIVIERE'S
Pharmacy
MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE CORP.
• AITOIIETT'S •
New Mental Disorders Shrine in Michigan
SUWYAN BIOS.
Michael C.. Austin
I'Save With
S~'fety"
NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET
CO-OPERATIVE BANK
.6
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River...,..Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963
-A New,
Patron of the ,Council
Day for the Bible
Going and almost gone is the day when the Scriptures
are considered almost the exclusive property of Protes
I, tantism.
REV. JOHN .. Understandably, the emphasis that Catholics place on
FOLSTER. any aspect of the Faith is influenced by heresy. When the
· religious reformers of the sixteenth century rejected the. St. Anthony's Church. Rew Bedford authority of the Church and took to themselves the Bible Readers are invited to submit que. as the sole Rule of Faith, Catholics reacted by placing lion on religious matters oj general heavy and needed emphasis on the role of the living interest. As evidence 0/ good faiti, teaching Church. oJl questions must be signed. Namee will not, however, be published. An unfortunate corollary of this action was to make Address inquiries to Rev. John ..1. it appear that Catholics reverenced the Bible less than Folster, St. Anthony Rectory, 1359 · their non-Catholic brethren. And this mistaken attitude Acushnet Ave., New BedJord, ·Mass. · was shared for years not only by non-Catholics but traces My mother died recently ami · of it lingered in many a Catholic mind as well. I would like to do everything An unhappy dichotomy was built up - Catholics and in my power to release her : the Pope versus Protestants and the Bible. soul from Purgatory. Won't a plenary indUlgence release a But that unnatural and untrue division is collapsing soul from this suffering and : and this present age is presiding over its burial. permit it to enter into the · Many of the countries of Europe, especially those pre Kingdom of Heaven? Can I dominantly Catholic, are experiencing a renewed interest gain such an indulgence for · in the Scriptures. A Spanish Bishop recently wrote in a my mother? M.L., TauntOn · pastoral letter to his. people: "It is disgraceful that our How many d i :ff ere R t · separated brethren should know the Bible while Spanish agencies there are which ..:... Catholics still continue to regard it as a forbidden zone or
each in its own particular a hunting-ground requiring special permission." The Bishop
way - help men to better suggested that "No home without a Bible" should be the
his state heFe on earth. EveI7 slogan of every Catholic.
new threat to man's health eveft The work done by Catholic Scripture scholars over the tually com e s face to face past decades is beginning to bear fruit among Catholics with a united and is receiving respectful and brotherly approval from effort to ex non-Catholic scholars. In the language of the Holy Spirit, terminate it.This acrimony and uncharitableness are lost in the common real and effec By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University de.votion to truth and the Word of God. tive expression of Brotherhood The Ecumenical Council has focused attention on the exists in the Bible, since many Council Fathers were quite forceful TODAY - Thursday, Second chosen, in Baptism, to "gather spiritual world in pointing out that Church doctrine is best expressed Week of Lent. Lent's rehearsal with" Him, renew that choice in also. What we and can be received most easily and with an almost sacra of the great themes of the Old 'every celebration of the Eucha can do (and in every public and private sometimes are mental communication when put in the language of the and New Testaments, its ex rist, prayer. posure of salvation history, of commanded to Scriptures and of the early Church Fathers. fers us another chance to "listen Pope .John, in a Letter to the Bishops of the world to Moses and the prophets" MONDAY ---: Third Week ill do) for our neighbor can orilt" be multiplied and intensified ill (Gospel), to place our trust Lent. The rich baptismal sym called "Mirabilis Ille" and dated from the Epiphany, ad value when we help our neigh.. bolism of the story of Naaman where it belongs (First Read vised the Bishops to make the work of the Council their and Eliseus is evident in the bor in the spiritual realm. ing). Lazarus' poverty is a sym chief concern and then told them that the' Council must re bol To soothe a burning fever II of the helplessness of the First Reading. A spokeman for main, during this recess, "the apple of their eye." And, in human raoe, a helplessness the living God sends a pagan to merciful and, thanks to ChrisS:. reminding the Bishops of their place in the Council, the which has great potentiality for bathe in the Jordan, and this meritorious; there is nothing greater to express Brotherhood Pope wrote: "In this connection close attention should be receiving and responding to figurative entrance into the than to do our best to save oUr promised land brings. cleansing, paid to what the fifteenth chapter of the Acts has to say God's blessings. health, and above all, faith. "I neighbor's life. But no one cd give anything in exchange of . . (vv. 1-22) about the Council of Jerusalem ... In this simple TOMORROW-Friday, Second have learned * *. * past doubt * * * soul. Therefore, how great' it ill narrative we have had for twenty centuries a perfect model Week in Lent. Even our sins of there is no God * * * save here in .if one can help our neighbor ill of a Council." which we repent especially dur. Israel." The Gospel further em the spiritual! phasizes this event, making the Such stress on- the Scriptures is a happy one. It shows ing this Lenten retreat (Collect, Not Automatic point of the :r>."'ew Covenant's ex Tract), cannot frustrate the that the Holy Spirit Who inspired the Pope to call the To help our brother is' n~ tension to the Gentil nations. providence and the design of something to be taken lightl3J,. Council continues to guide him in advising how the Coun God. His messengers, and even We truly have to have his inte.. TUESDAY-St. Joseph, Hus cil work should proceed. His Son (First Reading 'and GOBin mind and not some self_ Catholics rejoice that a new day for thE~ Bible and its - pel), we may reject, persecute band of Our Lady, Protector of ests ish intent of our own. Thai: the Incarnate Word, Jesus, Jo and kill. Yet that stone "has be influence on their lives is dawning. seph is also and consequently would truly not be help but on.
erhnou.9h th£ CWEdt CWith thE Chu.nch
come the chief stone at the cor ner" (Gospel) .. Our confidence and trust finds expression in Arab philosophers defined a human being as a "talking today's Communion Hymn: "You will watch over us, Lord, and a,nimal." They recognized that the ability to communicate keep us safe from this world for abstract ideas and subtle concepts was a uniquely human eternity."
"Talking Animal"
ability. Modern sociologists insist that wholesomeness in a person, a family, a community and a nation demands that the bond of communication be established and kept open. People must talk to people if there is to be under standing and love. Parents are cautioned to establish such a relationship with their children from cradle days. Parents and children must be able to talk to one another with freedom and mut.ual respect especially in the early year!! if this com munication is to remain in the growing up years when the topics of concern are the greater import and impact. A noted anthropologist, Margaret Mead, has expressed concern that the children of the nation' are being "reared by the mass media." Child-raising is' being done by the televiilJon and advertisers rather than by parents.. Miss Mead has concluded that soon the community may have to do what the parent can no longer do - give ethical direction and content to children's lives. Parents should not surrender this privilege that' they have - to communicate with their children - to mass media.
@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5··7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR HU9h J. Golden
SATURDAY-Second Week in Lent. The failure of Israel to re spond with love to God's love, generously to His generosity, is held up to the New Israel, the Church, frequently during Lent. Both Scripture lessons today, as yesterday's Gospel, tell the same story. Esau, the first-born, loses his blessing to Jacob-come-Iately. And the repenting wanderer dis places' with the passion of his return even the complacent habitue of God's household. THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT. The superiority of faith and of the supernatural order to which faith introduces us over the powers of evil and even over human ties of flesh and blood is the message of the Gospel today. And the First Reading instructs us in some of the moral aspects of our thanksgiving for the gift of faith. The other texts of the Mass stress the baptismal theme of our cleaving to the Lord, our defini tive choosing of "sides" against Satan and evil. Whatever tempo rary victories the 'Tempter achieves, the Christians's orien tation is firmly Godward. "Upon you, Lord, have I set my heart" (Entrance Hymn). We "fix our eyes upon the Lord, our God" (Tract). "Happy are they who dwell in your house" (Commun ion Hymn). The Lord's dominion is no un certain thing, no momentary upper hand in a balance-of power situation, but rather an eternal truth. We who have
patron of Christ in His II!embers, a cunning self-seeking. The same is true for spiritual patron of the Church. Today's Mass hymns this just man who help. First, the act done musli was providentially entrusted be a truly religious one meri with the task of providing that torious of a reward as promised family situation necessary for by Christ. One cannot gain aD Christ's total humanness.. We Indulgence as one turns a key who ask God today to hear his or dials a telephone. Indulgences prayers :for us become in the are never granted unless one • process more aware of the heartily sorry for his sins and _ Church as a family,. of its build- . in the state of grace. Furthel'oo more, the one interested in gam. ing as a home, of its public wor ing an indulgence is also en ship as a family celebration. couraged to further prayer, fa~ WEDNESDAY - Third Week ing, almsgiving, frequent recep. in Lent. The prayers and hymns tion of the Sacraments (Penance and especially the Euchari~ of today's Mass express our spe cial Lenten consciousness of sin, and renewed visits to chtrches our need of forgiveness. And where Ghrist is really present. One must first perform a sin both Sinai account· (First Read ing) and burning criticism of cere act of rel:gion. Then, one takes the benefits of the act pharisaical tendencies in reli gion (Gospel) tell us to be sorry (Indulgences) and gives these to for the real thing, for real sins his neighbor in an act -of charity -quite different sometimes from and mercy. However for it to be the breaches of habit, social cus . truly fruitful, the strictly de tom, systems of etiquette, which fined conditions must first be it is so easy to place as a shield fulfilled. Transfer to the Dead between ourselves and the living Such a transaction, an expre... God. sion of charity, is possible. Death is not the end-ail of life but on~ a change in the manner of our life. It is a dread and bitter change but tha' only because at. OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) Adam's sin. There is no reasoa The Board of Education of the why the deceased should be cld off from us. On the contrar,;. Oklahoma City and Tulsa dio cese has been changed from an there is every reason why reJa,. advisory board to a regulatory tionship between us should be better cemented and true chid' organization.
In addition, Bishop Victor J. ity be extendeci them. Their time of trial, the m.o Reed has added three laymen to its membership. The board now ment' of merit, their divineJF consists of six laymen, 10 priests allotted time to work out theil salvation-all has come to aD and four Sisters. The board's new powers, said end. Now the talents must be the Bishop, will include making counted and the reward e. decisions on planning and build. tended. They can no longer do anything to better their re" ing .of schools and convents, ad tionship with God and God Him dition of class rooms, consolida tions, dropping of grades and self has done all that DiviDe Turn to Page Seven closing of schools.
See's School Board Gets Wide Powers
;- Philadelphia See . Plans Expansion Of High Schools PHILADELPHIA (NC) A five-year, $20 million high school expansion program to provide facilities for an ad ditional 16,000 secondary school students in the Philadelphia archdiocese has been announced by Archbishop John J. Krol. Archdiocesan h i g h schools now enroll 53,659 students. The expansion program would make possible ..an enrolment of some '10,000. The expansion program calls for the construction of five new schools and additions to four existing ones. The new program parallels a $26 million high school expan sion program undertaken in 1954 by . the late John Cardinal O'Hara, C.S.C., Archbishop of Philadelphia. E n r 0 I men t in archdiocesan high schools at that time was 27,381. The current 52, 659 enrolment figure represents an increase of 96 per 'cent. Underlining the need for ex panded high school facilitities, Archbishop Krol noted that there are now some 70,000 more pupils in archdiocesan grade schools than there were in 1954. Catholic high school enrolment here is expected to increase by 1~,000 students by 1967. Students a t ten din g high schools of the Philadelphia arch diocese (as distinct from private Catholic institutions) pay no tuition. Each parish pays a $100 annual subsidy to the archdio . cesan schools for every student from that parish enrolled in one of them.
Questions
Continu~ from Page Six Wisdom, Mercy and Justice permit. But we can come to their aid and the normal way is by ex tending to them the Indulgences we might obtain for good works, prayer, etc. In reference to such an application, the Church is super-merciful and has multi plied the means in which the faithful may extehd charity to their brethren in need. No Map,'ic
But the Church has been given ao true jurisdiction Ovea ,.,e dead. Her power to loose and bind ceases with the termination of the time of trial on this earth. And then, we do not know ex actly "how long" a person must atone for their shortness of pen :mce (not for unforgiven sins, remember). Therefore, our ig norance engenders difficulties. Indulgences t:an be transferred to the dead. But not by "but by God alone. We can but ask Him to accept indulgences on their behalf. But we can cer tainly offer them with the con viction of their normal accept ance by God for those we lave, even as we can share our goods in this life with more needy friends • • • A plenary indul. gence, of coursr!, would be able to liberate a soul from purgatory. but we cannot know that we have satisfactorily fulfilled all the conditions necessary for the gaining of a plenary indulgence, and we cannot know for certain that God has actually accepted it, if gained, on behalf of the particular soul we have in mind. We know this general principle that indulgences are beneficial to the souls in purgatory, and we gain and offer them to God, leaving all questions as to their application to them." (Rumble, Radio Replies, 1938, 997-998)
us···
Maryland Planni~g New Marriage Law
7
Weekly Gatherings' at 'St. Joseph's HaU Study Social Justice, Mater et Magistra Encyclical
THE ANCHORThurs., Mar. 14, 1963
15 appeared anyway. "It amazed me," the Rev. Philip C. Kelly, C.S.C., director of St. Joseph's Hall and seminar moderator said last Wednes day n i g h t. Father Kelly made his comment to some
. WASHINGTON (NC) Inadequacies in the District of Columbia's public welfare program was termed a "trag
,
.
Welfare Program One Wednesday night last Winter a group of 15 men and women were' invited to Is 'Tragic Blot' attend the first seminar on Social Justice conducted at St. 'Joseph's Hall North Dart On Washington mouth. The night before the first meeting there was a blizzard. But 12 ~f the invited
ic blot" on the nation's capital' in a joint statement by eight 25 men and women -the out Catholic, Protestant and Jewish growth of that· first group-of churchmen. varying ages. and backgrounds, The churchmen's statement who were present at St. Joseph's deplored the fact "that our com hall to continue discussion of .munity has not seen fit to pro Pope John ~I1I's encyclical, vide adequately for the fulfill "Mater et Magistra." ment of the responsibility of , The group comprised teachers government to the public wel and lawyers, a union leader, the fare." daughter of one of the "regu ''To be miserly or subminimal lars," business women and home in providing funds for the wel makers. They all had one thing fare program qf our city is to in common-a keen interest in serve poorly the cause of free learning more about how they dom and progress in our so as individuals can make the ciety," they said. world a better place in which to The joint statement. was signed live. by Arc h b ish 0 p. Patrick A. "Purpose of this encyclical is O'Boyle of Washington; Epis to outline a constitution for re copal Bishop William F. Creigh~ construction of the society of ton; Methodist Bishop John mankind," Father Kelly said. Wesley Lord; Rabbi Lewis A. "It involves improving our rela Weintraub, president of the tionships one .with another in Washington Board of Rabbis; today's life-family, with fam Rabbi Norman Gerstenfeld of ily, in business life, in science, 'the Washington Hebrew Congre politics and religion. gation; Rev. George M, Docherty, "It is an attl!mpt to put into pastor of the New York Avenue the modern world love of our Presbyterian church; Rev. Earl neighbors." L. Harrison, pastor of Shiloh Disc:ussion began~ith the note Baptist church; and Rev. David that' "Our Father-not My NORTH DARTMOUTH FORUM: Participants in Colwell, pastor of the First Con Father" imlicates the true rela tionship of hum a n beings, weekly forum at St. Joseph's Hall, North Dartmouth chat gregationalist church. The churchmen condemned an " • • • that we are brothers and with Rev. Philip Kelly, C.S.C., moderator. From left: Mrs. sisters. It shows the union we' Owen P. Devlin, Mr. Devlin, Mrs. Antone Quintal, all of attitude toward the poor which insists on "denouncing them and must have, one with another, to St. Mary's parish, New Bedford. . applauding every effort to · be real children of God." punish and hUmiliate." Marx VS. Pope Leo They said such an attitude is "Are we trying to make boys Noting that there are many fruitful and multiply. Fill the too girlsterous-so they won't be , contrary to belief in man's dig · people in the world who "do not . earth and subdue it.'" Research is fulfilling the sec 'too boisterous in the classroom, nity as. a creature of God and have a decent meal a week, or a year, or ever," Father Kelly said ond commandment today, Father meaning too noisy?" Father stressed that welfare programs, public or private, "must en true love of neighbor would re . Kelly said, but modern-age Kelly as~ed. deavor to impart to those whom Sit on Them sult in feeding people of the pagans are laughing at the first. it serves a sense of dignity and Noting that the contraceptive , world· with food both for their "Oh,' Father, you've got to sit self-respect." market today is a $200,000,000 · on them or they'd run the class bodies and souls. Declaring that "public welfare a year business, Father Kelly How is this to be accom room," one harassed-·sounding is everybody's concern," the said that according to birth con plished? teacher explained. churchmen described as "essen The Holy Cross Father pointed trol advocates it might· seem that Everyone laughed. ' tial" a "sound and adequately the "greatest enemy of America out that Karl Marx and Pope More laughter greeted Father supported" public welfare pro Leo XIII "both saw the evils' of today is not the gangster but the Kelly's sally that: gram for the' nation's capital. baby. their day in Europe. "Teachi:J.g is one of the most "We have to see God's plan in . "Marx became bitter and delicate and important vocations · wrote his 'encyclical' against the everything or we'd all be like in the world-it is a drawing out animals, fighting to be king of wealthy:He advocated class war of God-given talents. That's why the forest,' Father said "Every you're paid so well." fare, class hatred. "Pope Leo, on the other hand, human being has dignity before The clock on the. wall of the advocated warfare not against God and a~ eternal destiny from big conference room at St. Whether the damage involved an the moment of conception. classes or people but against in Joseph's Hall had moved quickly automobile or a truck the place to "And the main power of an in justice and lies. · from 8 P.M. to 9:30. It was time call for price and workmanship is "Marx stirred up hatred. Pope dividual i.s his ability to speak · to adjourn. Leo was concerned more with the words of truth and uphold "Mater et Magistra" had been the welfare and the rights of all the dignity of mankind." touched on again, for the 50th Noting ~ontinuing attempts to people." legalize birtn control, Father week in a row-with the excep Answer to many of the prob 1693 Pleasant St., Fall River tion of Thanksgiving, Christmas 'lems of modern life, Father Kelly cited Chesterton's defi ,and New Year weeks. 24-Hour Wrecker Service nition: "BIrth control-no con Kelly stressed, is a return to in Before the discussion ended sistence on the fundamenta). trol aBd no births." One of the reasons often given there was a summation. of points dignity of man. . covered during the hour and a "We must respect every man," for preventing births is inability half session. he said, "including the child in of the world to support new "Examine the facts, evaluate the womb of the mother as much humans. them and actuate them in your "But while on the one hand as the Pope himself. we read 'lbout people who are daily lives," Father Kelly said. "If we sell as man short, we're hungry," Father Kelly pointed "See you next week." doing harm to ourselves." Chairs were pushed back and Carrying on with the theme of out, "on the other hand we read people stretQhed, They still were about the :remendous stockpiles the dignity of man, Father pointed out that every human of wheat we have and the in a talkative mood. Conversa tions flourished over coffee. abundance being destroyed." being deserves respect-includ Next Wednesday night at 8, When the discussion got into ing a child. "Today everyone is talking and school-age children, it broadened. they will be back again. "Children today no longer writing about a 'population ex plosion,''' Father said wryly. "I have any respect for a teacher" didn't know that you or I were one of the participants said. ' "That's the fault of the home," here as a result of an explos10n, featuring
I thought we were here in fulfill. another replied. "Could be it's a lack of disci ment of a plan of our parents ''The Gaslight Room"
pline in the schools. They look and God. Ideal for Communion Break "There :Ire those who say too at you and say, 'You can't do fasts. Organization Banquets
many children are being born :mythlng to me,''' one teacher said. today. They don't add that tech 386 Acushnet Ave.
The group got into a free-for nological advances have in New Bedford
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room. '. world. ~. • • • • • • • • + • • • "This' world could feed mil lions more and has the capabil ity of doing even more." Baby Enemies "lIt was pointed out that God "made the whole world for man, not vice versa. And God said to the first man and woman: 'Be 46 Taunton
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ANNAPOLIS (N C) - The Maryland Senate has passed by a 22-3 vote a bill to permit civil marriages in Maryland, where marriages b e for e clergymen have been required up to now. The bill, which had been ap proved ettrlier by the lower' House has been endorsed by Catholic, Protestant and Jewish JERSEY CITY (NC) ~ Stu spokesmen. . Maryland is the · dents at St. Michael's High only state that requires that School here in New Jersey have marriages be perforemd by the been warned it's out-you-go if clerg1'. you go steady.
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THE ANCHE>R--piotese of Fa" 'Ri~er-.!h.urs: Mar. 1~, 1963 . ,
Resurrection Nun
StudiesEducation
Joyous Grandma Fin'ds Dozenth
Grandchild Wonderful As First
By Mary Tinley Daly Like automobiles and boats, like cakes and shoes, grandparents come in all shapes and sizes. ~rhere' are the comparatively young and 'those advanced to the great grandparent category; the nonchalant and the anxious; the' interferers and the let-'em body in my arms, watching him aloners. But if there's one smile, studying his face, feeling characteristic grandparents the grip of sturdy fingers around have in common, seems to one of mine. The other grandma, me, it's the excitement over seeing a new grandbaby for the first time. The Head of the House and I had that ex perience a few days ago when we traveled by ellr to Charles ton, S. C. to meet three month - old Timothy J'ohn Gorman, Jr., son of Ens. and' Mrs. (nee/Daly) Gorman. Too Eager We traveled by car, all right, but in the hurry to eat up the miles, that foot became heavier and heavier on the accelerator and we almost landed in the poky, "flying low" as the officer in the radar patrolled zone put it. "Take it easy," the Head of the House warned after that in cident. "Grandpa. and Grandma in jail, or in a ditch, won't be much of an asset to little Tim!" I noticed, though, that he bounded up the steps of the small house in Charleston just as fast as I did, eager for re union with Tim and Mary and a look-see at our newest grand child. Solemnly, little Tim's enor mous deep blue eyes went from one grandparently face to the other, then a big toothless smile as he seemed to welcome these kinfolk from up-north. "Never startle a baby," was my wordless admonition to my self, "Don't take him from his mother's arms," "Let him get to know you first," and "Quit acting as though this were your first grandchild!" All this sage and self-administered advice re strained arms that were acting to· hold that precious bundle. The Mary said, "Want to go to grandma, T.J.?" Ah-h-h! This was something euphoric, holding that firm little
Mary Gorman, had seen the baby, described him to us though how ca,n one describe a baby? There had been pictures, of course, but this was the real thing. ' Let's see: Those eyes are just like his mother's, so azure that even the whites are blue, and he is long - going to be tall like his parents. "And I do believe there's a glint of red in. his hair, Mary. See here, at the back of the neck?" . "What hair?" Mary and Tim laughed together. "He's got as much as you'd find on a good sized peach." Sees Red Never mind. I could see red in that fuzz, and goodness knows he'd come by red hair naturally enough, being a member of our family. The three-day visit went all too quickly, as such fun times always do. We took pictures, of course, color slides to show to the rest of the :family - one a gag shot with a red cap on the baby. "Grandma's little red head," Mary dubbed it. Day we were leaving came a letter to Mary from our Johnny who had paid a flying visit to his new nephew the week be fore. "Know the folks are having the time of their lives," wrote Johnny. "Those two are push overs when it comes to babies. Bet you five to one, Mary, that before Mom had her coa.,t and hat off she had discoyered red in the baby's hair! She 'dis covered' it in each of ours, even the brunettes. And she and Dad found resemblances to every Daly and every Tinley for gen~ erations back? Bet you, too, that when Grandma Gorman . was there, - she could see Gorman liknesses. ,That's grandparents for you!" . Maybe so, you observant young parents. Per hap s all grand parents, regardless of their a9 sorted shapes and sizes and other differences, are alike in this particular aspect of their lives. But just wait till you are first introduced to your grandchil 'dren! You've got a big thrill conUng to you some da1l'1 .
S~merset
,.
Women
Somerset. Cath01ic Women's · Club will.hold its monthly meet · mg ,at· 8:15 Tuesday night, March 19 in the: Old Town Hall. · Rev. William·D. Thomson, pas · tor of St. Mary's parish, Norton, .will speak on the role of parents , in' education of children. Guests of honor wiil be former moder ator Rev. Patrkk J. O'Neill and newly appointed moderator Rev. Joseph D'Amico. Mrs. Arthur Marchand will head the coffee 'committee for the social hour.
GIRL SCOUT BREAKFAST: Na.ncy Riendeau, Jane St. Pierre and Denise Prefontaine are among attendants at Girl Scout communion breaktast at Sacred Heart parish, North Attleboro. Event is part of observance of national Girl Scout Week.
Cost-Free Education
Total of 151 Foreign Sisters Are Now Study'jng
In U.S. Catholic I~omen/s Colleges
CHICAGO (NC) - A total of American and Indian Sisters, 151 Sister-students from foreign are attending 45 colleges. nations are now receiving cost The project is designed to give free education at U.S. Catholic Sisters from needy areas of the women's colleges, an increase of world a general education, but 70 over the total for the past also to equip them with special academic year. skills which they can pass on to The value of the scholarships other members of their commu involved is now about $1.4 mil nities when they return to their lion, according to the director homeland. of the pioneer project whiOh was Sister Josetta said there are begun in 1959. now 92 Indian Sisters and 53 Sister Mary Josetta, president 'Latin Americans in the program. of St..Xavier College and chair There are also. two Sisters each man of the program, reported from Burma,. Thailand and Ni the stUdents, largely Latin geria.
/Si~ter Barbara Zulinska of the Sisters of the Resurrection, whose newest foundation is SL Saviour's Day Nursery, New Bedford, has published a study of Catholic education. Titled "Ad ResurrectioneIm New Perspectives in Catholic Education," the work has beea translated into English by Sister Mary GertrUde, also of the com_ munity. It presents the educational principles that guide the work of the teaching congregation by means of a general discussion of the aims and problems of educa tion, followed by a study of teacher personality, character formation and the culture <Ii moral and intellectual forces. "The. book is a happy combi nation of educational theory and practice interpreted in terms of the splendidly reasoned system of scholastic philosophy," notes one critic. It is available from the Sisters at 405 County Street, New Bed ford.
Alumnae Concert Alumnae of Sacred Heart Ae-. demy, Fairhaven, will sponsor a concert by junior and senior glee clubs of the academy at 8 Sun day night, March 24 at Keith Junior High School aUditorium, New Bedford. Guest soloists will be Adam Furguiele, tenor and Miss Donna Dalphin, soprano. Mrs. Joseph Cataldo ,Jr., general chairman, will be aided by Mig Pauline Davignon and Miss Pris cilla Gautreau, co-chairmen.
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THE A~CHORThurs., Mar. 14,1963
Satisfying Children's '-Wants"
Dereliction" of Parental Duty
Alumnae Officers At Beatification
By . Father John .L. Thomas, Sol. Asst. Sociolol'J' Prol_St. Louis UnlversitJ'
"What do you think of these pre-teenage mixed parties Chat are becoming so popular in some neighborhoods? Some people argue that it keeps the kids off the streets. Surely· It isn't that difficult to keep young children busy and llappy with home and family Many different forms of early activities. I feel that even cross-sex relationships, ranging when these affairs are care from permissive promiscuity to fully supervised - and all strict segregation, at one time
or.another have been regarded as normal or "natural;" and young people have accepted them accordingly.
Basically, people have devel·
oped and promoted these dif.
ferent patterns because they
held different conceptions of
human nature, of the meaning. and functions of sex, and of the social roles for which they were
preparing their children.
'Good for Them'
I have stressed these points,
JOlin, because I am convinced
that many of the shallow people
who promote the parties you
describe feel that because chil. dren enjoy, or can be taught to enjoy, such forms of entertain ment, they are necessarily good for them. As you have probably discov ered in discussing. this matter with your neighbors, most of them have never bothered to consider the long range conse quences of fostering these prac. tices. Although they may claim they are helpless, what they are really saying is that their chil dren want mixed parties, and who are parenti to refuse their children anything. The fact that their children have been offered no other in terests or forms of entertainment and are consequenUy only' de. manding what they have been encouraged to demand never seems to occur to ·them. Easy WaJ' Oot Experience shows that as lorig as parents and relevant others feel that their major function, is to keep children entertained and happy rather than to provide them with the training and· de velopmental experiences 'needed to prepare them for adult par ticipation in our complex, tech. nically advanced society, it is useless to point out the harmful effects of fostering pre-teenage mixed parties,~ly dancing, and dating. People who argue tha·t such activities are good because they keep "the kids off the streets" show that they'" have given' no thought to promoting the best interests of their children. Giving children what they want, though their "wants" are socially- generated and' bave no MeaaiDp Redefined As YOur observatiGns suggest, relationship to their real needs, _d as comparative studies- of constitutes a serious dereliction of parental leadership. qrious societies. and recent !re You are correct in assUming .arch findings affirm, Ulese _ges were ·the result of cultural that such parties. are- entirely un•. patterning and may not be as necessary for boys. and girls in '!'natural" as: thesr once appeared. tbei.- p.re-teemk However-, unless. Not s& 10llg ago, pre.teenager. ·parettts start taking: a more would have been ashamed to serious view of their obligations, admit all active interest in the ~ wilt centinue to take the eas.y way: out by giving, their epposite sell; no.w that this il\o terest is being fostered and ap children what they want. Itl'Oved, the assumed "natural" antagoniSlft between the selle& at ' 10 New ScholarShips tIlis age seem to be rapidly dis appearing. Honor Mother Seton This need not surprise us.. for CINCINN:ATI ( N C) - The ean's reactions. ve not deter ained by blind, "natural" ia. Sisters of Charity· win comme .inets. As. •. rational being he morate tbebeatification of their reacts to the meanings that foundress, Mot her Elizabeth things have for him. and in this 8et6ll, by establishing 10 schol _ee, ~ "meaoi~ hP'e ~ arships, worth $2,400 each, at the College of Mount St. Josepll, . .lturally redefined. here. ·Different Patteraa
The scholarships. made pos In other words, children tend
to accept the social patterns llible b,r anonymous donors, will their parents and' society offer .be 'given annually to 10 yOUDg them. If they are encouraged to women of "superior academic tIlgage in mixed parties, dancing ability," They will be designated IIld dating~ they learn- to u the. "Seton Scholars.H tIljoy them; if other patterns. &l'e. promo~~ the7 will accept those.
too frequently they aren't-they
ean lead to premature dating and other problems. Am I right in assuming t hat
such parties are
entirely unnec
essary for boys
and girls in
their pre-teens." I don't know how widesp~ead
this practice of
fostering pre'
teenage mixed
parties has be·
come, Joan, but judging from l'eports coming in from variGus sections of the country, your Ileighborhood is not untypical. It is interesting tG note that ftle reasons usually advanced by parents, teachers and youth leaders to rationalize the pro motion of early dancing and d.ating practices are now being ased to justify these pre-teenage parties. "It keeps the kids off the streets-it teaches them how to ,et along with each other-it's harmless, since they're too young to experience any serious emo tional or sexual problemS;" 'Natural' Stages The sudden shift downward of the practice of paired, cross-sex association to ev;er earlier age. groups has. revealed the inade quacy of many previous theories about the development of boy girl relationships. It W'a& as .-amed, and many current text books still affirm it, that there "'ere "natural" stages in. this deVelopment, proceeding some. wnat as follows. During infancy, interest is Iocused primarily on oneself~ in early childhood children seek companionship regardless of sex; beginning around the age- of eight, boY'S p.refer to play- with boys, and girls with g,irIs; marked antagQnism between sex ,roups appears around the aces of 11} to 12. At lit or 14 .girls become in terested in boys, boys remain .of; boys start 'showing some interest in girls between the ages of 14 and 16; and after this. . period "going O1:It in couples'" 1aecomes the general practice.
will
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, Four Make '50' : MIAMI SHORES (NC)-Smit ten by the hiking fad, IT YOUftg ~en students of Barry Col. lege here /let_out OD a 5O-mile tlrek to Fort Lauderdale. Four eOmpleted the hike - resting ebout three hours and ehalki.nC . . 14Ya houI'8 walkiOC Ume.
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PLAN CONCERT: Miss Priscilla Gautreau, Mrs. Joseph Cataldo Jr., and Miss Pauline Davignon make final arrangements for concert to be sponsored by alumnae of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven. Junior and senior glee clubs of academy will be heard at 8 Sunday night, March 24 at Keith Junior High School auditorium, New Bedford.
It Just Isn't Easy New Jersey Nurse Gives Up Good Job and Material Comforts to Work as Missioner in BoliviOl PATERSON (NC) - The de cision to become a Papal Volun~ teer for Latin America isn't an easy one to make - especially if you have a good job and many material comforts. "It took long days and nights of thinking," in the case of Marie Tuozzo, a nurse who has just completed a four-month training course at the Center of Intercultural For mat ion in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Miss Tuozzo. who worked in, a doctor's Dffice- for 17 years, said she- had "an e x c e I len t paying job" and her own car. "I love good times and beautiful clothes. I knew what it would mean to: give it all up and live on $10 a week." She recalled that thoughts of mission service first came to her during a pilgrimage she took to Jerusalem in 1961. She spoke to
Taunton Women Plan' SupPer \ The N.C.C.W.. District 1\"0. S held a meeting last night at St. Mary's. school in Taunton to plan a Communion supper to be held April 16 at Roseland in Taunton. Mrs. Helen Dona-hue is chairman, Mrs. Edward F. Galligan is co chairman, Mrs Aristedes AA-' liJ:ade- is. treasurer, and Mrs. J ohll ~uddick is secretary. Further plans will be made at an open meeting to be held at St. Paul'. Church in Taunton on Marcil ~4th. The topic of discussion at this meeting will be the Chris.:. tian Famil7 Movement,
the pilgrimage chaplain, Msgr. Fenton Runge of St. Louis. In a letter he sent her later, Msgr. Runge called attention, to the need for n u r s e s in Latin America. . "I guess t·hat was when I was awakened by the Holy Spirit." Miss Tuozzo asserted. Shortl7 after, she applied for the training course in Cuernavaca. She will report next month to Auxiliary Bishop Gennaro Prata of La Paz, Bolivia, to lltart a three-year period as a Papal Volunteer. Her.job will be to set up a series of medical· dispen saries for the poor.
NEW YORK (NC)-The mar. ble sarcophagus in which the remains of Mother Seton will be placed after her beatification at the Vatica'n next Sunday, is a gift of the International Federa tion of Catholic Alumnae. Mrs. John F Hennessy, IFCA president, who with a group of federation members will attend the beatification ceremony, said: "The IFCA executive committee agreed to call upon members to contribute the fund for the Sarcophagus and its installation. It is a privilege to provide the permanent casket for the foun. dress of the American Sisters of Charity who have educated sO many of our members." The IFCA was founded in 1914 by two alumnae of St. Joseph's College, .Emmitsburg, Md.,. on the site of the motherhouse and school begun by Mother Seton where her remains have rested since her death in 1821: Started Campaig-n In 1930 IFC:A began a cam. paign for Mother Seton's ulti mate canonization. The federa tion's Mother Seton committee secured 152,000 signatures re questing consideration of her cause, which were presenteti to Pope Pius XI in 1931. The IFCA presented a bronze commemorative tablet for the wall of St. Peter's church, New York City, where Elizabeth Seton, a convert, made her pro fession of Faith. She also was memorialized by IFCA on a col umn in the National Shrine of the ImmaCUlate Conception ill Washington, D. C.
Requests Rosaries Miss Dorothy Braudis, 508 E. 6 Street, South Boston 27, re quests rosaries, broken or ill good condition, and medals, which she repairs and sends to missionariell. .
uilding Contractor Masonry.
Hyacinth 0 of I Mrs. Katherine LeTendre ia ia charge of reserv·ations for • CommUnion breakfast planned to/ follow Mass. at Holy Name Church S •.mday morning, March 31 by Hyacinth Circle, New Bedford' Daughters of Isabella. Mrs. Alice LaFrance haSl been named 'chairman of an April penny sale, to be held at HDl7 Name Hall.
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"0
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963
Guertin, committee member, at "praying hands" sculpture emphasizing role of family rosary in home devotions. Right, Peter Kryptowicz, cultural committee, and Claire Poirier, exhibit committee, relax in home setting highlighting promises of Sacred Heart to those honoring Him, as weI as place of entertainment, reading, in family life.
FAMILY BEFORE GOD: With theme "The Family Before God," members of Sacred Heart parish CYO, North Attleboro, present exten sive exhibit. Left, James Murphy, CYO president, and Irene Desautels, secretary, at booth depicting place of sacraments and sacramentals in Christian life. Center, Rev. Roger D. LeDuc, moderator, and Maurice
Slum Elimination Program .1 Must' In Montreal
North Attleboro Parish CYO Members Oller
Outstanding Exhibit on 'Family Belore God'
Layman To Ju~ge Seminary Courses
WASHINGTON (~"'C)-A lay man will give seminary educa. CYO members of Sacred Heart parish, North Attleboro, could well feel entitled to rest tors his impression of the edu MONTREAL (NC)-The cation offered candidates for top Catholic Charities official on their laurels the remainder of this year, after the outstanding exhibit they presented the priesthood during the 60th here says an aggressive pro this Lent for fellow parishioners-and many interested members of other parishes. But anniversary convention of the gram of slum elimination is ' they won't. Hardly pausing for a breath, they'll get going on the next item on their busy National Catholic Educational Association in St.Louis' next necessary for strengthening fam agenda. Outstanding even in home formed the motif of the periodicals, as well as Sacred month. . ily life in Montreal. a parish noted for the scope second part of the exhibition, Heart's many parochial ciub He is William H. Conley, di "Father, Patrick 'J. Ambrose, and excellence of its activi- which hart as its theme "Christ publications. rector of the Study of Catholic director of charities, said slums ties, the 'CYO youngsters consciousness." In a dining room Also shown in the home set-· should be replaced by buildings chose as· their exhibit theme setting were ~ound such home ting were booths offering infor. Schools beirig conducted under which families could rent with "'the 'Family Before God." devotions as the Advent Wreath, mation on the Attleboro Area a Carnegie Corporation grant' and the new president-elect of an option to buy. Booths in the parish hall empha- grace before and after meals and Catholic Young Adult Organiza-' Sacred Heart University, Bridge_ He said that 143 families have l'~zed the idea that family unity the family rosary. tion and Sacred. Heart's newly port, Conn. ~ome to his agency in the past is greatly enhanced through Cdb of Vocations organized Home and School Conley wiJI adgress a joint year for help because they have family prayer and devotions Association. A display on religious vocameeting of the NCEA's minor been evicted or forced to live Uniting church- and home and major .seminary depart Prepared. under direction of' tions. was titled. "The Home, Crib in substandard housing. In all Rev:Roger D. LeDuc, moderator, for Vocations," and a living scenes was a mall covering the cases, there was bad effects upon the project was dedicated. to the room scene formed the _"stage" center portion of Sacred Heart's ments on April 18, the third day of the four-day convention. the family, he said. parish hall. It depicted hands Blessed Mother. Booths them for such devotions as the En "Frequently, people look upon. selves were arranged by, adult throneme'1t 'of the Sacred Heart, joined 'in prayer and was sur good housing as a contributing advisors to the CYO and the as well as offering the opportu rounded by a giant rosary. Dom. factor to the prevention of de boys and girls themselves. ' nity of emphasizing acceptable inating the complete setting was Where A linquency,'" he said. "This is a statue of Our Lady of Fatima. One section dE~picted a church' radio and television programs. true, but good housing is not ~o divided into three outstanding The place of family reading Providing a carry-over of the much a matter of preventing de sections with attention focused was shown through display of linquency as a matter of plain on a chapel scene. Its aim was to The Anchor and other Catholic exhibit's effect was appropriate literature available free at each social justice." explain importance of uniting booth. Parishioners interested in Means A with Chr;st through the' Holy Lack Central Heating joining any of the organizations Schedule Meetin
Eucharist. Devotions such as 40 represented were invited to reg "Good city planning and true Hours, visits to the Blessed. ister at a central table. social justice," he said, "take . Sacrament and. Benediction were On Lay Volunteers
SYRACUSE (NC) -A confer precedence over other welcome highlighted, as were the Stations ence on lay Volunteers and the developments such as neighbor of the Cross. Jesuit college will be held at hood and community centers and L~Moyne College here during a complexity of social agencies." Christ, LiIl'e of Soul Easter week. Father Ambrose said that 81 "Christ the Life of the Soul" The conference will survey per cent of the homes in Mon formed the theme of another existing lay programs on Jesuit treal are rented. He said 73 per New England's Playground booth, where attention was called college campuses and consider cent of them have no central t9 the sacraments and their ef the theology of action within the heating. fect on the soul. SacramentalS Church and secular institutions. "We have seer. how complete too were depicted and in partic ly dependent our poor and low ular the place of Holy Week in income families are on propri Christian living. etors and how helpless they are An exhibition on apostolic when a proprietor is unscrupu .. . leadership honored parochial so lous," he said. cieties and showed how Christ MAKES YOUR
should guide ~very phase of CAR RUN BenER
leadership, giving those in . BC Gives Training Open Evenings charge of various activities the At New Car Deal.... For, Peace Corps spiritual qualities needed for and Service StatioM their work. BOSTON (NC) - Boston Col herywh.... lege has started a 10-week train Also included. were slides of ing program for 54 members of the CYO's 1962 sxhibit, which the Peace Corps. They will be had as its theme the lay apos sent to Peru. to work among 'im tolate. Famous Reading HARD COAL '~~l,) c~ poverished natives. ~~i Electrical God as head of the Christian NEW ENGLAND COKE ~.Q:V~ o~ In charge of the program is Contractors Father John V. Driscoll, S.J., on DADSON Oil BURNERS ~{:! ,~~ DRY CLEANING leave of absence from his duties 24-Hour Oil Burner Service ~ SHELL 0 as dean of the college's school of and .#~~, ~\II&~~~ social work. FUR STORAGE Charcoal Briquets ~.~~ Several leading colleges in the Bag Coal - Charcoal ~""'h" __",,,= Boston area are contributing more than 70 professors to in struct the volunteers. The insti ~utions include Harvard, Yale, 944 County St. 34-44 Cohannet Street Brandeis Massachusetts Insti. New Bedford tute of Technology, Simmons Taunton VA 2-6161 640 Pleasant Str. .t New Bedford re" WY 6·1271 and Boston University.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963'
11
(,
a-.. ... ~-
..
SISTERS OF LA SALETTE: French-founded community of Sisters of La Salette who have been at Attleboro's La Salette Shrine since 1959, aid Fathers in many ways. Left, Sister Beatrice, postulant; Sister Mary
.
Refusal to Serve On Jury Brings Jail Sentence ST. PAUL (NC) - The Minnesota Supreme Court has upheld the conviction of _a woman sentenced to 30 days in jail because she refused on religious g-rounds to serve as a juror. Mrs. Owen Jenison of Preston Lake Township maintained that jury service conflicted with her religious beliefs. She was sen tenced to 30 days in- jail for con tempt of court. She served seven days of the term, then was freed on bail pending the outcome of her appeal. Writing the decision for the Supreme Court, Associate Justice James C. Otis stressed the im portance of trial by 'jury in the democratic system. ; "To sanction the disqualifica tion of a juror because of a con viction at variance with such a basic institution is to invite the erosion of every other obliga tion a citizen owes his commu nity and his country," he said. Mrs. Jenison has admitted that she served as a jurQr in 1948 but she says she later changed her religion. Questioned about her religion, she said: "I am a believer in the Bible, but we listen to the radio Church of God."
Parents Association Saves Sc hool $7,500 HOHOKUS (NC) - St. Luke's parochial school in this New Jer sey community introduced a new "first"-Paint, Repair and Clean-Up Saturday. It proved such a shining success school officials and parents are consid ering making it a regular semi annual event, St. Luke's Parents Associa tion recruited the volunteer "bring your own paint brush" workers. Fifty were expected but 95 showed up. With $500 worth of paint, tile soap and other sup plies, the parents did a reno vating job which a contractor estimated would have cost more than $8,000 if done by profes sionals. A "boss" of the "one day wonders," Eugene Macchi, a father of seven, said the parents used more than 100 gallons of paint, 18 pounds of compound cleaner, laid 2,500 tiles, replaced 800 coathooks, made eight new coatracks and repaired all locks. He said: "We painted 15 rooms and more than 500 feet -of hall ways. It's a different sc~!ool now." ,
,
J
r
I .
James, novice; and Mother Mary of La Salette, superior, prepare book covers for shrine. Right, Sister Raymond Marie, novice, and Sister Theresa, postulant, type in office.
'
First American Recruit Completes Training 'Physicians Take Places At' La Salette Sisters' Novitiate in Attleboro Mission ST. LOUIS (NC)-More than GO By Patricia McGowan Eight La Salette Sisters at La Salette Shrine, Attleboro, are sole representatives of their community in the United States. In other parts of the world, however, the Sisters, f~>unded some 34 years ago in France, staff schools and hospitals, engage in social work and serve as auxiliaries to La Salette Fathers in their varied apostolate. Or, as Mother Mary of La Salette, superior at the Attleboro foundation,' Denise Champigny of' Woon a path which many will follow in years to come." • socket. expressed it, "We do every A special poignancy attached Following formal enunciation thing that women can do for to her recent profession of first of. the vows of poverty; chastity people." At the Shrine, where -the Sis ters have been since 1959, they help the La Salette Fathers in many ways, working behind the scenes in the busy Shrine office and serving in the religious ar ticle store, associated with it. They are also on call to give any aid needed by the many invalids who make pilgrimages to the famous Marian site. The eight religious include three professed Sisters, three novices and two postulants, one from Worcester and one from Springfield. They are domiciled in a convent on the shrine grounds and are the second com munity to be associated with the La Salette Fathers in Attleboro. Sisters of St. Martha staff the domestic department of La Sal p.tte Seminary, next to the shrine. To Spread Message
Primary purpose of the Sisters of La Salette says Rev. Rene Sauve, M.S., director of La Sal ette Shrine, is "to spread the message given by the Mother of God at La Salette in 1846." First American recruit to com plete the cycle of training at the Sisters' novitiate was Sister Denyse of Jesus, formerly Miss
vows at the shrine chapel, for al)d obedience by Sister Denyse, the congregation assisted at a her mother had died the day be fore. "She was experiencing a ' Mass of thanksgiving. Thus a pioneeJ;'ing Sister of La Salette moment which contained a' mix ture of both human sorrow and initiated the American chapter divine joy," said Rev. Roger of the history of the community. Plante, M.S., information bureau Girls interested in further in director at La Salette. "It was an formation on the life of the Sis hour of joy for after many ters may contact Mother Mary' months of preparation she was of La Salette at La Salette taking the three vows of pov. Shrine, Attleboro. erty, chastity and obedience, thereby to become full-fledged Sister of Our Lady of La Sal- , ette." The profession ceremony in Maintenance Supplies
eluded intoning of the "Veni SWEEPERS - SOAPS
Sancte Spiritus" by Very Rev. Philippe LeBlance, provincial DISINFECTANTS
superior of the La Salette FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
Fathers, and rendition of the
SCHOOL
DAHILL CO.
full hymn by the La Salette Seminary choir. A sermon based on the Mag nificat followed, preached by Rev. Rene Chabot, M.S., spiritual director of the Sisters. He noted that Sister Denyse had "blazed
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The Federation of CathoJie Physicians, which is now con ducting a membership drive, has 7,200 members and includes 102 local guilds: It publishes the Linacre QuarterlY,and a news letter. The Federation's annual meeting- will be held June 15 and 16 in Atlantic City. Jll
a
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12
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar" 14, 1963 . .. . -. .' i.' ~
'Pistols and Pedagogues',
Hard-Boiled Performance
God Love You
md
a:
Hospital Gets Grant · SAN ANTONIO (NC'} - The santa Rosa Medical Centel' here 1Js Texas has received a minion laollar Federal grant to help bUild a 140-bed addition to its _ildren's hospital. The mediCal center is conducted hy the Con ...egation of Sisters of CharUy ol the Incarnate Word~ .~
.
D.D.
Our government has spent 97 billion dollars on foreign aid within sixteen years. If you handed out $185 a minute night and day for 1000 years to get rid of that sum, you'd still have money on your ha~ds!
kempt, unscrupulous, and irrep
ressible.
He is also penniless. He has
come to St. Felicitas Colleg~ to
give a lecture, as a substitute for
Mortimer Adler who declined t(\
appear even for a $45 fee and
expenses. ..
Upon his arrival, he is asked
to take on for awhile the classes
of a quiet, shy, but much re-
spected and admired teacher, JIm Downey, who has suddenly disappeared. The puzzle of Downey's disap CRUSADER: Father Dario pearance is complicated by that of a student named Linda Bru Zanini of' Sacco Marconi, sick, daughter of a Chic:ago gang Italy, is a real-life version of chief. Some believe that the two the famous fictional charac eloped, others pronoune:e such an ter "Don Camillo," as he en idea ridiculous.
gages in miniature cold
Solves Mystery Withers is assigned Downey's war with local red leaders in
house as his living quarters, and, the heavily communist Emi~ in his nosy, acquisitive search lia region near T " , ' - , . " . . . NC of Downey's effects, makes a
Photo.
possibly sin i s t e r discovery. Probing the question e,f Linda's
whereabouts, he makllS a like.
discovery concerning her. Continued from Page One Despite some pretty strenuous discouragement from the chief for the past year indicates that of local detectives and the hench_ there are' 23 Praesidia in 15 par ishes of the Diocese, 7 in Fall. men of Linda's father, he con tinues his amateur and perilous River, 8 in New Bedford and 8 investigation until he solves the in Tacnton, with 217 Active members, 516 Adjutorians and mystery. ' As with practically all mystery 5,643 Auxiliaries. Legion members assisted in stories, the solution is something of a let-down after the furious "the validation of 119 invalid pace. and the slick deception of marriages, prepared 120 persons the narrative. But not much of a for Communion and Confirma let-down here. The book is tion, assisted in making the par tightly constructed, wit h 0 u t ish census, made inquiries about truancy from religious instruc padding. And it is expertly w'ritten by tion, visited the sick, called on one who uses the language deftly, lapsed Catholics, visited in men. has a neat and consi!rt:ent wit, tal institutions and in facilities and has not disdained putting a for destitute men. They made over 1;300 visits to hospitals and high· polish on a whodunit. nursing homes and visited Bris Memorable Character Mr. Evans has stinging shafts tol County House of Correction for all manner of nonsense, from almost 100 times. They also major courses in art !l)·beatnik undertook catechetical instruc joints. In Red Withers he has tion. created a memorahle, if not ex Other works included instru~ aclly lovable, chlU'acter'. tion of retarded children, re This brash and raffish speci cruiting for pilri~ societies, men is given to lying, stealing, Rtaffing a paris~ library, En. cheating, and beer gwz1ing; he thronement of the Sacred Heart, cannot be shamed or :Eazed; he ,welcoming new parishioners, is as sentimental as a cat, and visits to non-Catholics, Apostle his tongue has all the softnllSs ship of Prayer crusade, Rosary of a well honed knife. crusade, invitation to parish This is a brisk, hard-boiled, Missions. On a limited basis they glittering. frequently hilarious also did clerical work in par performance, . 9(}methinl~ new in ishes, sent greetings to the sick, ·the. line of mystery stories with recited the Rosary for dead' a Catholic seeting. parishioners, assisted in caring Father Breeder Jl.e·lW'll8 for Church sanctuaries (Juniors). 'An old friend returns in DeHvNeW' Bed~ord Legion Director er Us From Wolves by Leonard Father Shovelton givllS a 5 min.: Holton (Dodd, Mead. $3.5~). He . ute message every da,' over . is Father Bredder, here identified Radio WBSM. In addition U1ere as a Franciscan (I hadn't realized· is a Lenten message .and Rosary that before). Father Btedder, as by Legionaries of New BedfOl'~ . readers of previous Holt.on books aDd Fairhaven. know,. is chaplain at a girls' The New Bedford Curia pub school in Los Angeles.. That .is his official assignment;: he does lishes quarterly, and. dUJtributes a lot of detective work: on the throug)lout the Diocese 1,500 side, reluctantq 'but .e~tremely . copi~s of a Worthwhile Book Ust. eff~cti.,.ely. '
a
Legion of Mary
~nfirms Chang's
Shee~
By Most Rev. Fulton J.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy The managing editors of America, T~e Commonweal,
and The Critic may, for all I know, be going around with
lugubrious ,faces these days because of the respective bank
balances of these publications. If so, they can cheer up.
. taking'courses,
I am about to review a novel is, who keeps on published by Sheed and year after year, with no thought
Ward. The last time I re- of finishing. He is 5'3" in eleva
viewed a novel published by tor shoes, has a red beard, is un
Sheed and Ward, each of the three magazines enjoyed a windfall. For Sheed and Ward took, in each, a full page in which to clobber me, leaving my reputation a weed and shard wilderness. I had given an adverse opinion of that novel. To my min d it was .»retentious and preposterous, as well as sophistical. I still think it so, confirmed in my view' by .' person whose judgment I respect as objective and acute and who kept reading the thing just to see what fresh absurdity lay in' wait on the next page. Sheed and Ward, unwontedly s h ri II, hot-eyed, and 'hamhanded, paralleled an adverse opinion of this opus with the adverse opinions pronounced' on some of Graham Greene's' earlier DOvels. This was like saying that 00cause Bernard Shaw's plays drew unfavorable comment from some quarters, and Abie's Irish Rose got, similar treatment, the ref 0 r e Ann Nichols was actually a' second Bernard Shaw, a conclusion which the event has somehow not fully justified. Also, it was suggested that no literary evaluation of the novel was proffered in the review; the suggestion was baseless. Novel Not Too Ba4I :r was amused to be' the object of an attack in adverti9ingspace at regular rates. Usua1l7 people don't have to pay to pillory me. But I was a bit mystified, too. I didn't know at too time that tbere were some changes in the firm, and that David Merrick .bad gone to·work for it. Well, here we 'go again. But . before those managing editors get their hopes up too high,. and 'before Sheed and Ward start throwing things, let me say that I found this novel not too bad. Such a pronouncement can't ·he good for more than a hiss or two in a few lines of agate type among the classified ads. · Poor Title ,,: The novel is called Pistols Pedagogues, a poor title and not very apt, and it is the w6l'k 01. Fallon Evans' (Sheed and Ward. $3.95). It measure. '$~" x $% " x ~", has a vet':7 smart ,jacket, and is well printed on reasonably opaque paper. : It is. of the murder mystery glmre, and, admirably, eoftfines -ltseu to one murder, one attempted murder, and one suicide. These pleasant happenings. oceUI" iii an Indiana town in wbieb St. Felicitas College for young ..tomen is located. · "Introducing Red Withers,· tile jacket proclaims, like a fight lIibIlouncer. Witbers is. the nar ' ...tor, and this fact the unwary lDay take a& proof positive that, although shot' a( and savagely beaten, on various occasions, lYlthers will not be- diSpatched. : The' assumption would be, cor reet, yet it is never safe to forget • certain maslerpiee:e b7 Ute peerless Miss Christie. .: Twe Disappear · Withers describes bimselt as, professional stUdent, one; that
I
The Lord on .Your Side'
Smoke Screen
Religious people believed in and practic~ foreign aid 10111' before governments did. And they do a much better job than governments. Why? I 1) Because they give to the people in' foreign lands, not to the politicians. 2) Because there is less overhead in charitable organizations. Some 200,000 of our workers throughout the world reeeive no salary! 3) Because the charitable groupS live with the poor people, speak their laDguage, share their miseries and love lhem, which ~vernment officials do not. Why' not, then, amend foreign aid in some such way as this? to a recognized charitable organization which specializes in aid to poor nations, the government should allow the whole of that deduction. Setting a limit on what is tax deductible is to penalize the hungry two-thirds of the earth who are helped by such charity. Consider The So ciety for the Propagation of the Faith, for example: Its aid goes everywhere - the Near East, the poor parts of the United States, Africa, Asia, Latin America, Northern Europe and Oceania. It helps support 10,000 hospi tals and dispensaries, 80,000 schools, 2,000 orphanages and 400 leper colonies.
If Catholic, Protestant or Jew gives any amount
On reading such, a plan as this, the first thing the American people are told to do is, "Write your Congressman." We wan't that to be second. This would only prove that you were more interested in getting a deduction than in being charitable. So first write to your Na tional or Dio'Cesan Director, sending a check to help the poor. Then write to your Congressman. It will be the first lime he ever received a lelter from 'a constituent who did an act of charity for the poor before he asked for an act of justice! If you have tbe Lord on your side, maybe your Congressman will try to be on the Lord's side too! . GOD LOVl~ YOU to E.A.B. for $113 "I am 79 years old and offer this in !hanksg.iving for not having to have an operation on my eyes. Please use this for your lepers." .. ~ to Anonymous for $25 "My motto is 'Sacrifice now and trust to God's goodness.' .Please have the Holy Father use ·it as he sees fit." ... to a Thankful Teenager for $11 "I am a very lucky teenager who is blessed with a large wardrobe.' Now I want to sbare my blessings. and help buy clothes for the poor." '" to E.A.M. for $5 "I saved these few dollars for one of' many litUe things I need. After reading your column, I find ,I don't need a thing." '" to R.P. and Father f« $5.35 "The local Pepsi-Cola distributor gave balf a cent to a worthy charity for every bottle cap. We collected 1.()'70 Pepsi caps, sO the Missions are that much richer." HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW ISSUE OF MISSION? U's • Special Message to th& Catholics of the United State. bF Bishop FUlton 3. SbeCIl! II you are on our maUlIII' list. 708 Imow that MISSION is our bi-monthly magazine containing articles, &nee dotelJ, eaJ100ns and pictures. II you're not. write In and be pat on our UsC;. A subscripUoD is only $l! Cut out· this column, pin YOUI' sacrifice to It and mail It to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. National Director of &he Soeie'~ for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue. New York I, N. Y., or your Diocesan Director, itT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street Fall RIver, Man.
YOURS TO LOVE. AND TO GIVE! .... lit. of • DAUGIfI'EI O' ST. 'AUL
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Continued from Page Goe· ~'k true," the prelate cont;ia\led. SEOUL (NC)-Gen. Chong~O "For Congress to be • party to . Kim. Korean Army chief of . it plan that may rid the country , staff, has confirmedtb.e three of American schools is discrim . year . suspended jail .sentenee . inatoq." given' to fo~er Premier John The Bishop's observations Went'. M. Chang, leading KOrE~an Cath Earn the hig..... rate on regular made in his column in the cur olic layman. . savings with each accc»unt insuNd
rent issue of the Advance .Regis! The sentence was handed ter, newspaper / of the Dodge: safe by an agency of the U.S. Govt. CURRENT
down in February by a military 'eourt of appeals here. Chang in City and Wichita dioceses. RATE,
"os&tJ~.
tends to appeal the court's ver diet and the 'chief of staff's ap. Q If Congress restricted Federal I Resources over $24,000,000 proval to a higher court. aid to public schools only, the· Chang, head of the govern Bishop said, he would be more ment ousted in May, 19m., by' the than ever conVinced that would militarY junta now in power in be the most discriminato.r)r, un:"· this Far Eastern nation., wasre fair * • • policy that CoDgre88 tried by the military appeals could lo11ow."He said to know .. HOME OFFICE 1 North Main St., cor.lecffonf - 0peII Fri. this and say nothing about it SOMERSO OFFICE 149 G.A.•• Highway, to..ute 6 court on a charge of aiding a would be wrong. plot to overthrow the j,mta.
Prison Sentenc.e
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FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS , OF FALL. RIVER
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Saint Patrick's bay'C«deb'rations' At Diocesan Schools Feature Minstrels, Weari~g Green
:'THE ANCHOR~ Thurs.;' Mar;' 14, 1963
Everyone is Irish on St. Patrick's day and this is no
exception at our Diocesan high schools. Students every
where will be _wearing the green and will be singing the
praises of Ireland's saint. Particularly will this be true at
Bishop Feehan High in At- Academy in Fall River comes tleboro when the Feehan the announcement that Margaret Frolic will be presented. The Donnelly is first place winner faculty and the students in a contest· sponsored by the
LONDON (NC)-The Bishop of England and Wales hav. fixed tomorrow as this year', voluntary "Family Fast Day." All Catholics are being urge4 on that day; to abstain from a . principal meal and to pass OD the money saved to relieve world hunger. The money will go to a new Catholic Fund for Overseas De velopment which the HierarchJ has set up to assist projects for the relief of urgent material and social needs in. various .parts of the world. The Bishops in announcing the setting up of the fund said it 1S not intended iIi any way to re duce Catholic' support to the Freedom From' Hunger Cam paign itself.
13
Britons to Fast·
For'Relief Fund
have worked for weeks pre- Portuguese Arne ric a n Ciyic paring for this event and now League. Margaret received $50 look forward to Sunday, March plus a trophy. Second place 17 and the showing of "Days of winner was Cameron Shea. the Kerry Dancing.~' The enMission Club tertainment will feature Irish A retreat for all students at airs and dances woven into a Bishop Feehan High began yes delightful story. There will be terday at the school and will two performances, both on Sun- continue through tomorrow. The day, one at 2 in the afternoon, - retreat is being preached by Rev. another at 8 in the evening. F. Reddy, O.M.I. Each day the And at Dominican Academy in students will attend Mass, listen Fall River a special St. Patrick's to three conferences preached by day program will be featured at the retreat master, assist at Ben an assembly tomorrow morning. ediction, do spiritual reading and The orchestra will play those recite the rosary. In addition same Mass will be celebrated at favorite Irish tunes and the stu- they will carry on private devo dents will join in the singing. tions. Bishop Feehan High on Thurs.-·,;;, day, March 28. Among the soloists will be Linda Students at Coyle High in Purdy, Ruth and Kathleen Mur- Taunton were recently privi The first volley ball team at ray and Paulette O'Gauthier. A leged to listen to an address by Cassidy High' was organized this group of seniors will entertain Rev. James Clark on the work. week by Mrs. Marsden, the gym with a demonstration of the Irish of the Papal Volunteers in Latin . instructor. The teams, made up reel America. A discussion period of freshmen and sophomores, Science Fairs followed the talk. will represent the school in' the The faculty at Bishop Cassidy . Meanwhile, at Holy Family Bristol County League games. High in Taunton has announced High the' sodality is planning a The .first g,ame will be played that three seniors and seven jun_ religious vocations panel discus tonight at Somerset High School. iors will attend the Massachu- sion for girls to be held Monday, The current activity of the setts Youth Citizenship Confer- March 18. Several members of mission club is getting bandages ence to be held at Bridgewater the faculty will speak after STUDENT COUNCIL: Student Council officers at Mt. for use in the forf,lign medic.a! State Teacher's College on Mon- which a discussion period will St. Mary Academy, Fall River, include, from left, Susan missionaries. During the past day, April 15. . be held. Science fairs are very much in Also at Holy Family the Partington, secretary; Myrna Santiago, treasurer; Judith week, "get.,.the-goods week", the girls collected the materials. Bednarz, vice-president; Linda Ferreira, presidEmt. the news at many of our Dio- Junipero Club has made ar This week they will be rolled cesan high schools. Winners at rangements with Auxiliary Bish and sent to the missions. Sacred Hearts Academy in Fall op Gertard to say a Mass for Also at Stang, by special ar an assembly progl'amcenterlng The members of the debate River were Susan Johnson,' vocations on Tuesday, March 19. rangement with the Dartmouth on vocations. wiH be held at Susan Penrose, Elizabeth Fred- The entire student body will be High School Concert Band, the Bishop Feehan High later this team will attend the Stonehill High School Debate Tournament rickson, Kathleen Raposa and invited. . Stang High School Band and the month. It is being planned under on Saturday, March 23. Ann Lou i s e G i b bon s. Ali And the'mission club at Jesus Dartmouth group are partici the direction of Sister Mary winners will represent the Aca- Mary Academy in Fall River pating in a reciprocal program Frederick, RS.M., head of the demy in the Fall River Regional has been active. Three missions of concerts. At a Stang assembly Gu.idance department. Speakers Science Fair to be held the week- have been the beneficiaries of the Dartmouth band presented a will address students on qualifi,. end of March 22 at the Dwelly their endeavors. Clothing has program which ranged from cations "'n e e d e d for varioUfi Street Armory. The following been sent to a Trinitarian mis . semi-classical to popular. High careers. from Sacred Hearts Academy re- sionary in Mississippi; used lights of the .afternoon were Also at Feehan and at Stang, Est. 1897 ceived honorable mention: Joan books have been sent to a Jesus ·selected from "Gigi" and "The vocation Masses will be cele Camara, Maureen Toomey, Linda Mary mission station in Pakis Builders Supplies Music Man." In return, the Bish_ Johnson and Rosalie Gray. tan; and a va·riety of useful op Stang band will play at an brated by His Exc:ellency, Most Rev. James L. Connolly. Bishop 23...3 Purchase Street
Meanwhile at Prevost High in materials has been sent to a mis April assembly for Dartmouth Connolly will celebrate the Mass New Bedford
Fall River announcement has sion in Africa. High. of the Holy Ghost on Wednesday, been made of winners in that The Catholic Students Mission WY 6-5661
Since March is vocation month March 27 at Stang High and the science fair. Paul Moreau won Crusade at Bishop Stang High' first prize in the senior division, has recently nominated a new Robert Potvin, sec 0 n d; and slate of officers for election Maurice Levesque, third. In the in the near future. Those junior division Paul Garant was nominated are: for president, first; Michael Santos, second and David' K 0 ran e k and David Roger Jusseaume, third. All six Deans; for vice-president, Mary winners will' represent Prevost Griffith and Maureen Parker; in the regional fair. for secretary, Paul Alves and And at Dominican Academy Josef Bartek; and for treasurer, seven projects have been selected Donna Plays and Mar cell a for entry in the regional event. Augustyn. . . , . Winners inclUde Jeanne PinsonJournalism Classes neault, Pamela Perrault, KathStudents from Bishop St'ang Ieen Murray, Janine' Chouinard will participate in a series of and Claire St. Marie. math meets at Notre Dame AcaThe annual science fair at St. demy in Roxbury on Wednesday, Anthony's High in New Bedford ,March 27. Members of the team is being held today< Open to'- will be chosen by competitive -' anyone interested, it will run examination during the pre to from 3 to 5 this afternoon and ceding week. . again this eveningfrQm 7 to 9:30. Today at Bishop Stang the NaNational lIono()r 'Society tio.nal Math Exam is -being taken Several St. Anthony -High. by students selected for their School seniors have' submitted - ability in this field. poems in the 1963' Anthology of This same exam will also be High School Poetry ~ontest. The administered at Bishop Feehan • best from the school will be pub- High to all students in Freshman lished by the coriteSt sponsors. I and Sophomore I and n. It is Paul Hinchcliffe ot' Fall River, sponsored by tlle Mathematical a member of the freshman class .. Association of America. '''''' at Bishop Stang High is winner Also at Feehan, staff. m~m 'in a newspaper essay contest on bers fo~. the forthcoming isSue "Why Newspapers make a Dif- of the "Feehan Flash" have been ference in People's Lives." annoU1).ced.. ,Co-editors . wil~ be First prize winner in Susan Connor and ·paih"·:Mc poster contest held ·recently at Gowan; layout editor:-~will be Holy Family is Francine Filipek. Kerry Horman. J 0 u r na lis m The theme of the contest was'the classes. are' enlivened by a study a oleaner. oooler Family RosarY Crusade. All of' The Anchor and local news automatio GAS range with the .....· winning posters ~ill' be on dis- .. papers. Models of vaJ;'ious types . GOLD STAR AWARD play at the schoot of journalism' are studied for . The follow i n g.. girls from" methods and imitation. Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall . Band Ccmcert River, have belm ele'cted to the French students at Mount st. National Honor Soci~ty for 1963: Mary Academy are participating LIVE MODERN ... FOR LESS ••• W'ITN GAS I , , Joan Camara, Ann Louise Gib- in. the National French Contest bons, Jean Smith, Rita SUllivan, which will be held at Harvard . Margaret Donnelly, Marybeth University on Saturday, April Donovan, Mary Beth Furze, Jane 6. One of the p r i z e s to be How aye c k, Susan Johnson, awarded will be a Summer trip Aileen Moloney, Ellen Mooney, to Paris. .. Nancy Power !I, Joyce Petit, " And on Thursday, March 21. Kathleen Raposa and Kathleen ,'Bishop Sta,ng High will hold its: 155 North Main 51•. ' Tel,phone OSborne 5·7811 Sequin. . second annual Junior Career And also from SacrSd Hearia Day(
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 14. 1963 '
-Sees Need of Developing New Economic Theory By Msgr. George G. Higgins,
Director, NCWC Social Action Department
Recently the Columbia Broadcasting System presented' a une-hour program on Government and the Economy in the American Democracy. Eric Sevareid, well-known CBS com 'mentator, was moderator. Mr. Sevareid and company turned . in a, reasonably good per considerabl~ -, magnitude may de : ~ormance. Their program velop without resulting in a re was a cut above the, general vision of an admin.i!itered price. run of public service tele Nothing New ,vision programs, but I felt I might have learned more, if I had spent the - same amount-of
- .time reading a
good book on
. ·the same sub.
ject. One such - book is' "The CorporateRevo. I ._ lution in Amer -ka" by Gardi~ ner C. Means. Dr. Means may not be a better ...,.,_ economist than 'the members of Mr. Sevareid's panel, but I think he says much more in a few closely reason!'!d pages of his book than all of them together said in the hour's program. The real trouble with the CBS program was that the panelists ' never really succeeded in de , fining their terms. Mr. Sevareid, iA his opening question, asked each of the panelists to define . the kind of economy under , which we are operating in the United States at present. Some' of the panelists answered fhis question more satisfactorily than others, but none as well as Dr. Means does in ''The Corpor ate Revolution in America." M"ISSed Target One of Mr. Sevareid's panel. ists was content to say-in al most the exact terminology of Ulth century classical economics -that we are operating under a private, profit-motivated, free enterprise, capitalistic economic , system. Other members of the panel defined the American economic system much more realistically and, with much greater subtlety. Two of them definitely had their eye on the target, but they never managed to hit it. The basic weakness of the CBS program was the failure of the panel to come up with an adequate definition of the Amer ican economy. By contrast, the particular J!lerit of Dr. Mean's new book lies precisely' in the clarity and the accuracy of its definition of our economy. Administered Prices Dr. -Means says, in summary, 1c' that ours is not a free enterprise economy :>perating according to the so-called law of supply and demand but is predominantly one of administered. prices Under this system, he says, "A company will set its price for a product and hold it constant for a period of time, selling what. ever amount is demanded at the ,administered price." Demand at the administered price may be in excess of supply, as was recently the case with' steel. 'Or demand may be less than. the company is willing to supply at the administered price. As a result, an· administered price will equate supply and de~ -mand on).y by chance, while an excess of supply or demand of
.Stores
~~. GREEN
There is nothing new about Dr. Means' definition of the American economy. It dates back, in his case, to the early 30's when he and Dr. Adolf Berle first proposed it in "The Modern Corporation and Private Prop erty." But the "corporate revolution" described in that classic book one of the great landmarks in the history of American eco nomic thought-is still going on and we have yet to develop an adequate theory of economics to cope with it. " "As for collective capitalism," Dr. Means points out in his new book, "no comprehensive eco nomic theory bas been devel. oped in terllls of such an econ. . omy, m spite of the fact that the collective enterprise of our great corporations .sets title tone of today's economy. Obsolete Base As a result, we stand with a great deal 'of economic theory, but a major part of it was built on an obsolete base, and another part has been diiiproved by events. It is clear to me that a major reconstruction of economic theory is in order." Until we develop ~ new eco nomic theory to COPE~ adequately with "the corporate revolution" in America, we will not be pre pared to discuss intelligently the topic assigtled, to the panelists on the CBS television prosram referred to above. or The panelists on that· program zeferred only vaguely to the need for a new theory, and one C!f them went so far as to imply, that we don't really need a new theory. Makes Better Sense ,All we need, he suggested, is a series of pragmatic experi ments aimed at solving specific problems as they happen to arise. Dr. Means would not agree with this point of view. "Fortu nately," he says, "our practices in seeking to maintain full em ployment has run ahead of de pendable theory. But a depend able theory of employment could greatly clarify the e:seential role of government and greatly in crease the efficiency of practice in this field." ', That seems to me to make better sense than anything I heard on the CBS program.
"
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Canadian Missic)Ders Number Over 1,200' OTTAWA (NC) - There are 1,264 Can a d ian missionaries working in variouS countries of Latin America, according to Archbishop M.J. Lemieux of Ottawa, president. of the Cana dian Catholic Conference Latin American Commission. Of this total, 417 are priests, including 350 members of reli ~ giOllS communities and. 67 are priests from Canadian dioceses; 212 are Brothers; and 509 are nuns. There are some 42 members of secular institutes and 84 lay mis sionaries from Canada.
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Menus, Recipes for Fourth Week of Lent
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963
15
By Nancy Carroll THURSDAY, MARCH 21 Fast
Shrimp and Macaroni Salad
.1* C uncooked elbow macaroni 34 C diced celery
Breakfast: Orange juice, hot cereal, muffins. Lunch: Egg and "Vegetable loaf,* whole wheat bread, brownies. Dinner: Broiled hamburg, hashed brown pota toes, buttered corn, chopped spinach garnished with lemon wedge, mixed fruit and pound cake. Egg and Vegetable Loaf
lf4 C butter or margarine ¥4 C flour
cooked diced celery *:Ih* CCC cooked diced carrots cooked peas
2 C milk
2 hard cooked eggs, chopped few sprigs chopped parsley 1 T instant minced onion salt and pepper grated cheddar cheese or curry powder Melt butter, remove from heat, add flour and mix to form smooth paste. Return to heat. Grad ually add milk. Cook until smooth and thickened sauce is formed. Measure C of this sauce and mix with all but last ingredient. Pour into greased 8" x 4" x 3" loaf pan. Bake in 350· over about 45 min. Unmold on small platter. Heat remaining sauce and add cheese or curry powder to taste. Serve hot on sliced loaf.
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FRIDAY, MARCH 22 Fast and Abstinence Breakfast: Half grapefruit, scrambled eggs, wheat toast. Lunch: Asparagus on toast with cheese sauce (use canned cheese soup for sauce), pound cake. , Dinner: Baked whole stuffed haddock,* pars ley potatoes, peas, scalloped tomatoes, fruit juice snow with custard sauce.* Baked Whole Stuffed Haddock Stuff cleaned whole haddock, weighing 3 to 5 lb,. lightly with well-seasoned bread stuffing. Close opening with skewers laced together with string. Place on oiled or buttered ovenproof platter or baking pan. Cut 3 or 4 gashes on each side to keep fish in shape during baking. Sprinkle with cream, french dressing or melted butter. Add' more 2 or 3 times during baking to pre vent drying out. Bake at 400 until fish flakes easily with fork, about 45 min., depending on thickness of fish. Fruit Juice Snow 1 envelope unflavored gelatine
:Ih C sugar % t salt 1% C water 1 6 oz. can frozen concentrated fruit juice of your choice (if pineapple juice is used, boil for 2 min. be fore combining with gelatine) 2 unbeaten egg whites Mix gelatine, sugar and salt thoroughly in small saucepan, add :Ih C water. Place over low heat, stirring constantly until dissolved. Remove from heat, stir in remaining % C of water and frozen f,ruit juice. Stir until melted. Chill until slightly thicker than unbeaten egg white con sistency, add unbeaten egg whites and beat with electric beater until mixture begins to hold its shape. Spoon into dessert dishes, chill till firm. Serve with custard sauce. Custard Sauce 2 egg yolks 2 T sugar :Ih t vanilla dash salt 1 C milk Scald milk in double boiler, beat eggs slightly~ add sugar and salt. Pour scalded milk into egg mixture gradually, return to double boiler and cook, stirring constantly until custard coats spoon. Place top of double boiler in pan of cold water to cool custard quickly. When COOl, add vanilla. SATURDAY, MARCH 23 Fast Breakfast: Bananas on cereal, buttered toast and jam. Lunch: Fish. hash,* shredded lettuce with thousand island dressing, cookies. Dinner: Baked beans with frankfurters, suc cotash, cole slaw, raisin brown bread, jelly roll. Fish Hash Mix equal parts of cold, leftover cooked fish and cold boiled potatoes chopped fine. Season with salt and pepper. Melt fat in frying pan, add fish and potatoes and stir till heated. Cook until well browned u'nderneath, fold and tmA like an omelet. MONDAY, MARCH 25 F~
Breakfast: Steward prunes, English muffins with marmalade. Lunch: Shrimp and macaroni salad,* baking powder biscuits, fresh pears. Dinner: Ham steak, sweet potatoes, spiced eabbage,* pineapple salad, ice cream with hot milk sponge cake...
3 sliced radishes
lf4 C sliced onion :Ih C mayonnaise 1 T vinegar 1 t prepared mustard t celery seed 1 4* oz. can shrimp, drained and rinsed salt and pepper Cook macaroni, drain and cool. Mix remaining ingredients, except greens. Season to taste with salt and pepper, chill until ready to serve. Serve on crisp greens. Spiced Cabbage 1 ta,rt apple 6 C shredded cabbage 3 T butter 6 whole cloves t salt % t pepper t celery salt 1f.l C water 2 T sugar ¥4 C vinegar Chop peeled apple coarsely; combine with· other ingredients; place in greased, deep 2 qt. casserole. Cook covered in 350 oven 1 holli'. Hot Milk Sponge Cake 2 eggs 1 C sugar C milk 2 T butter '1% C flour 1 t baking powder % t salt :Ih t vanilla Heat milk and butter together in saucepan, beat eggs thoroughly, add sugar gradually to beaten egg and beat thoroughly, sift in dry in gredients and fold into egg mixture. Add heated milk and butter. Beat by hand just long enough to mix ingredients, add vanilla. Pour into greased 8" square pan and bake in 375 oven 10 min. Reduce heat to 250· and bake 30-35 min. longer.
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TUESDAY, MARCH 26 FaSt Breakfast: Cranb~rry juice, fried eggs, toast. Luch: Cream of celery soup, tomato and let tuce sandwich, sponge cake. Dinner: Currant glazed lamb patties,'" curried rice, buttered beets, mixed gi'een salad with blue cheese dressing, squash pie. Currant Glazed Lamb Patties 1 lb. ground lamb . 1 small onion, chopped 2 t salt 1 T capers (optional) melted butter or margarine 1f.l C currant jelly Combine lamb, onion, salt and capers; mix well. Make into patties about I" thick, cook In frying pan in small amount of butter or ma!l" garine until browned on both sides. Add jelly and cook, covered, oven low heat, to desired de gree of doneness.
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WEDNESDAY,MARCH~
Fast Breakfast: Orange juice, French toast with maple sYrup. Lunch: Crabmeat sandwich, fruit gelatine. Dinner: .Baked chicken, baked potatoes, Italian beans, braIsed celery,. Dutch apple cake with lemon sauce.* Braised Celery 8 clery stalks 1 can beef consomme % t pepper 1 T butter 1 T chopped parmey Preheat oven to 350·, wash celery, remove leaves, cut stalks into 3 inch pieces. In medium saucepan, combine celery with' beef consomme, pepper and % C water. Bring to boil over medium heat, transfer saucepan to oven, bake covered 25 to 30 min. or until tender. With slotted utensil remove celery from saucepan, strain cooking liquid, stir in butter, pour over celery, sprinkle with chopped parsley. Dutch Apple Cake 2 T sugar 1/4 t cinnamon 3 apples rich baking powder biscuit dough Prepare rich baking powder biscuit dough from mix according to pkg. directions, using slightly more milk, pour into greased cake pan '1" x 10" or 8" square. Cut apples in eighths in wedges and place apples, with pointed adges pressed slightly into dough, in even rows. Mix sugar and cinnamon, sprinkle oven apples. Bake in 400· oven 30 min. Serve hot with lemon sauce. Lemon Sauce :Ih C sugar l:lh T cornstarch dash salt '1 C' boiling water juice and rind of :Ih lemon 1 T butter Mix sugar, salt and cornstarch together.in saucepan, gradually add boiling water, cook til mixture thickens, stirring constantly. Boil 5 min., continuing to stir. Add lemon rind, juice and butter, reheat and serve hot.
READIES CASSEROLE: Mrs. Romeo Charest, St. Roch's parish, Fall River, readies casserole for dinner, fol lowing instructions in Anchor Lenten menu series.
Now
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In
20 Nations
Organization Honoring Sacre4 Heart
Observes lOOth An,niversary
BROOKLYN (fI."'C)-An organ ization founded a century ago to pay honor and reparation to the Sacred Heart today is offi cially established in 20 countries as it marks its centennial. In the United States, the Guard of Honor of the Sacred Heart numbers 480 confraterni ties affiliated with the national center here. The Guard of Honor was founded at the Visitation Monas tery in Bourg, France, on March 13, 1863. Before the end of that year the devotion had spread to Belgium, England, Italy and the U.S. Today there are 20 national archconfraternities of the Guard of Honor. The devotion flour_ ishes particularly in Italy, Spain the U. S., Switzerland, England' Mexico, Urugu~y, Canada, Ger~ many and Portugal.
Pius IX, Leo XIII, St. Pius X and Pius XII. The devotion seeks to pay honor and reparation to the Sa cred Heart, particularly by the daily "Hour of Guard" during which members direct all their thoughts, words and actions to :ltone for the sins of the world. Visitation monasteries are the official centers of the devotion and membership requires regis tration at one of them. The U. S. national center is at the Visita hon monastery in Brooklyn.
'Hour of Guard' Four popes have been mem bers of the Guard of Honor
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THE ANr:HOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963
Organizes Modern Society, rrhe Infant Bonds of· Joy' By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno
"Ours is an age of societies. For the redress of every oppression that is done under the· sun, there is a public lIleeting. For the cure of every sorrow by which our land or our race can be visited, there are patrons, vice-presidents, and secretaries. For the dif- . may trace its parentage to a fusion Qf every blessing of group founded in 1812, The So 1VhJch mankind can partake ciety of Young Ladies to Sell ill common, there is a com Clothes at Reduced Prices, anq mittee." Curious, isn't it, that illUs should have been writt~n, Dot yesterday,· but very early :In the 19th cen ~y, and that :its author, Sir lames Stephen, should haVE: de scribed our con temporary Americasoaccu sately. We have eoined the term "Organi ,- .tion Mall" to describe ourselves, but" the or ganization and manipulation of mankind long ·antedates our IIlinting. Perhaps the only really signif teant forward step we have taken in this process of mass tor ture is th':! development of the eonvention. This we have accom plished with rare ingenuity. We Can gather together more people in a given place to listen to more ~eeches and consume more liquids and solids in a given time than in any previous gen eration. It may well be our chief eontribution to culture. James a Joiner It is nostalgically pleasant, therefore, to look back to those simpler days described by Sir .lames. He was himself in the thick of social organization, and tor all his complaining mani festly took immense delight in joining movements or in launch-. ing others. England then was in transition trom the Age of Elegance to that Age of Moral Seriousness which lIShered in Victoria's reign. The Prince Regent still carried on his outrageous flirtations in the Brighton Pavilion and the great Whig magnates were still cheer 'iully assured that a benign Prov idence ruled the world for their lPecial benefit, 'but there were already audible the rumblings of an uneasy conscience. Methodism had troubled the slumbers of the Establishment; William Wilberforce had been extremely stuffy about the Slave Trade; and now the Anglican eburch herself was experiencing the first fervor of the Evangel -- ical Revival. For All Dis Reform, clearly, was a matter ei. organization. For each speCific ill of society there should be a specific organ ization. There was, for .example, the undeniable fact that prostitution was rife in Georgian London and fhat precious little had been done about it by the Hanoverians. . From 1787, with the establish ment of the Lock Asylum for the Reception of Penitent Fe males, until 1840, at least a round dozen of such societies were founded to deal with the problem, including the Forlorn Female's Fund of Mercy and The Maritime Female Penitent Refuge for Poor Degraded Fe males (which was by way of . rubbing it in). . For Poor Clergymen Widows and orphans figured prominently in these organiza tional projects, particularly if they were respectable and well connected. Thus, in 1802, was launched The Friendly Female Society, for the Relief of. Poor, Infirm, Aged Widows, and Sin gle Women, of Good Character, Who Have Seen Better Days. -.> Some years later the London Orphan Asylum was opened for The Receotion and Education of D.estitute - Orphans, Particularly . Those Descended from Respect able Families.. Our modern Junior League
this was tollowed in 1821 by The Clothing Society for the Benefit of Poor Pious Clergy men of the Established Church and their Families. Juvenile Vagr~mcy Juvenile delinquency disturbed t.he Evangelical conscience quite as much a~ it does ours. The frightful condition of those waifs employed as chim r-ey sweeps was recognized as early as 1803 by The Society for Superseding the Necessity of Climbing Boys, though long 'lfter, in the. 1850's, Charles Dick ens would still be denouncing the brutalization in Bleak House. There is a contemporary sound to The Society for the Suppres sion of Juvenile Vagrancy, though its date was 1808. And any great metropolis of today would acknowledge the utility of The Institution for the Pro tection of Young Country Girls. Olistinate Irish The Irish, naturally, we.r:e a standing rE:proach to Evangelical zealotry. After more than two and a half centuries of the Prot estant Ascendancy they still re. mained obstinate in their Pa pistry and even threatened now to revive it in England's green and pleasant Lana, as they swarmed as immigrants into the slums of Liverpool and London. Surely it was the purpose of the British and Foreign Bible Society to flood unhappy Ire land with God's printed word, and of the Church Missionary Society to speed angels and min isters of grace to her benighted shores, but even more specifi cally designed to meet the need were such organizations as The 1. 0 n don Hibernian Society (1806) ,. The London Societr for Educating Native Irish in their Own Tong'Je (1821), The British and Irish Ladies Society for Improving the Condition and Promoting the Welfare of the Female Peasantry in Ireland (also 1821), and The Society for Irish Church Missions to Roman Catholics (1841). The Jews, too, weighed heavily on the Evangelical conscience, and very nearly as many soci eties were established to bril).g them around as were launched for the salvation of the natives of Boriaboola-gha. Those price less paragons of Dickens' parody, Mrs. Jellyby and Mrs. Pardiggle, were actually drawn from the life. . Other days, other organiza tions. So saying, we firmly put our hat on our head and march forth firm of foot to attend a meeting of The Infant Bonds of Joy, that delectable society pledged never, through life, to use tobacco in any form. We are the Organization Man.
TEN-YEAR·OLDS LEARN THE MASS: Two students of St. Matthew school, Seattle, exhibit their junior-size altar and vestments all completely hand-made by the St. Gerard Guild of the parish. The altar, mounted on wheels for easy storage, will be used by school classes and CCD classes in their study of the Mass. Taking the part of the priest is Joseph Kenney while the altar boy is Phillip Knudsen. Looking on are Sister Irmalita, left, prin cipal of St. Matthew's, and Sister M. Agnes Lucille, both Holy Cross nuns. NC Photo.
Take Courage From Spirit of Unity
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Understanding, Brotherhood Increase ST. LOUIS (NC) -\There are many kinds of unity and some are more easily attainable than others, Joseph Cardinal Ritter reminded here. "We can take courage in the progress that has been made," _the Archbishop of St. Louis told 1,000 persons at the 35th annual Brotherhood Dinner. "Some forms of unity," he said, "will have to wait upon the consultations of experts, but there isn't a person in the world who is not qualified to be an expert in matters of mutual re spect, trust and".tolerance. There is neither time nor reason to
curse the darkness. If The divisions of creed are be ginning to unite in a "spirit of undetstanding" because "we are beginning to rea liz e what mutual respect and good faith really are," the Cardinal said. The Second Vatican Council convened by Pope John "with out a doubt" has' contributed greatly to the spirit of under standing and brotherhood that "is happily abroad in today's world,". the Archbishop of St. Louis said. Common Bonds "NQr can it be doubted that the consistent ]~cumenical efforts
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Heads Council MIAMI (NC)-Msgr. Bryan O. Walsh, director of the Diocese of Miami's Catholic Charities, has been elected chairman of the Florida Cooperating Council on Children and Youth. '
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of the W 0 rId C 0 u n c i I of Churches have done the same thing," the Cardinal added. The dignity of man as a human being is "our common bond and our bond of friend ship," the Cardinal said. He added: "We do not calculate color or culture in our judgment of one another. There are di visions of creed but these are beginning to unite us in a spirit of understanding." The prelate said "we are now in an age of transition" and the Second Vatican Council has been a highlight in the "era of change."
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Izvestia Buries Adzhubei.Papal Aud ience Story.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 14', 1963
BERLIN (NC)-The Mos cow daily Izvestia gave only a brief two-sentence report of the audience of its editor
ROME (NC)-A dozen years ago Willem Gran crossed the mile of open water between 'the southern coast of Wales and the tiny monastic island·of Caldey. He was 30 years old, a Norwe gian and a convert. Behind him lay a cosmopolitan career: in Rome, where he studied opera production and found the Catholic Faith; in Eng land and Norway as an intelli gence officer in the Norwegian army; in France and Norway as an assistant director in the movie industry. Before him lay a life 'of con templat"ion and hard physical work in Caldey's Monastery of the Cistercian Reform. Whatever he hoped to accomplish for the conversion of his native land would have to be done through prayer. . Now Pope John has plucked Father John, as he is known in religion, from the Cistercian life
in-chief Alexei Adzhubei, with Pope John. The Soviet newspaper carried a three-paragraph story on page two about the general audience at the Vatican at which the Pope was formally awarded the 1963 Balzan Peace Prize. It reported that the Pope made a brief l'peech of thanks. and concluded: "At the ceremony there 'were some 50 Italian and foreign newspapermen including the vice president of the Soviet-Italy Society and the editor-in-chief of Izvestia, Adzhubei, and his wife, who are visiting Italy at the invitation of the Italian So ciety for Cultural Relations with the Soviet Union. At the end of the ceremony, Adzhubei was re ceived privately by Pope John XXIll."
Johnson Tours Oldest Mission ST. AUGUSTINE (NC)-Arch bishop Joseph P. Hurley, Bishop of St. Augustine, escorted Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson and other dignitaries on a tour here of the old~st mission in the nation. Accompanying the Vice-Presi dent on the visit to the mission of the Name of God were Spain's Ambassador to the U.S., Antonio Garrigues; U.S. Senators Spes sard L. Holland and George Smathers of Florida, and two representatives of the Spanish government in Madrid. Archbishop Hurley conducted the Vice-President and his party through the old mission groUIlds, the site where the Spanish founders of St. Augustine landed to establish Amr,rica's oldest city in 1565. . The Archbishop displayed for the Vice President and other dig nitaries the oldest written rec ords in the U. S., the Catholic Church registers dating from 1594 in St. Augustine.
Chapel Novena Opens Tuesday The Thirteen Tuesdays in honor of St. Anthony of Lisbon and Padua will begin at Our Lady's Chapel, New Bedford, on Tuesday, ,March 19. This tradi tional devotion in honor of Everybody's Favorite Saint will extend through the Tuesdays previous to the feas~ of St. An thony, June 13. The devotions at the chapel will consist of the Novena prayers, a short sermon on, the life and virtues of the "Wonder Worker," Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament, and veneration of the relic of St. Anthony. Rev. Eugene F. Malek, O.F.M. will conduct the services. Devotions will be held every Tuesday after the 10 o'clock and 12:10 Masses, at 3 in the after noon and 5:10 and 8 o'clock in the evenin~.
Form~r
Mo·vie Maker Leaves Monastery for Bishop's Rest
SCIENTISTS CONFER: Dr. Arthur Kornberg, center, co-recipient of the 1959 Nobel Prize for medicine and head of the biochemistry department at Stanford Medical School, confers with two faculty members at the University of Notr~ Dame following his completion of the annual Nieuw land Lectures. Shown with him are Dr. Ernest Eliel , left' , professor of chemistry at Notre Dame and Dean Frederick Rossini of Notre Dame's College of Science. NC Photo. .
Lin,guistics Course. WASHINGTON (NC) - An eight-week linguistics program for missionaries will be offered at G e 0 r get 0 w n University, starting next June 18.
of silence and seclusion. The Pope is sending him back to Norway as Coadjutor Bishop oil! Oslo, with the right of succes sion. He is the first Cisterciatt of the Reform to. be named • bishop 'in more than half a century. Sail to Leave How does a Cistercian monk feel.when he is taken from his monastery and brought into the administration of a large (bigger than Georgia) and busy diocese? "Sad," Bishop-elect Gran r.e plied without hesitation. "I feel sad to leave the Reti gious life. But personal feeling. don't really matter. The imp~ tant thing is to follow the pIaa of Providence."
Summer Camps WASHIJ.'I,~GTON
(NC)-In!oJl mation on more than 400 Catholic Summer camps in the United States and Canada is included ill the 1963 directory of the NlatioJUli Catholic Camping Associatioa. .. The directory is published ann. . ally by the association, a sectiee of the Youth Department of .... Natienal Catholic Welfare ee-. ference.
Classes for Gifted See Proposes State Permit Private
School Students to Attend
PORTLA]',~ (NC)-A propos al has been made here to make available for students of all schools classes for gifted chil dren now conducted for public school students only. Attorney Leo Smith, acting for the Portland archdiocese, filed the proposal to amend the state law with the Oregon Senate Ed ucation Committee. Smith said that opening up the classes for pupils of' all schools would parallel a statute now in effect which makes spe cial class:'$ for retarded children available for all children who reside in a school district. The action was prompted by a decision of Ali Mekvold, su perintendent of schools in Jack son County in southern Oregon, who ruled some time ago that students attending St. Mary's High School in Medford could not attend special classes for gifted children at Southern Ore gon College on the ground that state law restricted the enroll ment in these classes to public schOOl students only. Partial Solution Father Mark Thielen, director of education for the Portland archdiocese, said a partial solu.
tion to the situation was worked out in Medford so that the top
students from the Catholic high school could be made eligible for the special classes by enrolling for one.hour a week in a public school. .
Father Thielen said he re ceived a copy of a letter ,written by the Rev Dean Kelley, execu tive director of the religious liberty department of the Na tional Council of Churches of Christ in the United States' ex pressing "dismay" at' ba~ring private school students from the special classes. The Catholic ed ucator said that the Rev. Mr. Kelley wrote: "I should like to express my concern for reconsideration of this development." Attorney Smith in his proposal filed with the Senate committee asked that an amendment be added to Senate Bill 97 by which the law regarding the pro gram for gifted children be changed in favor of all students residing within a school district.
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THE ANCHOR
1·8
Report Pope John Willing to Meet Soviet p'remier
Thurs., Mar. 14, 1963
Pope John Grants. ~·e~ ~ndulgences
VATICAN CITY (NC)
Pope J ohri is reported to
have said he is willing to re
ceive Soviet Premier Nikita
;VATicAN CITY (NC)-Pope John· has granted indulgences for· recitation of the invocation: "0 Mary; Mother and Queen of Christian families, pray for us." :A _partial indulgence of 300 days can be gamed by reciting the invocation with a contrite heart; A plenary indulgence can be gained once a month by re citing the invocation daily for a month, and fulfilling the usual conditions: Confession, Commun_ ion - and prayers for the inten tions of the Pope. Indulgences are the remission of temporal' punishment due for sins which have been forgiven either in Confession or by an act of perfect contrition.
Cure Girl , Continued from Page Orts This week Ann and her· mother packed their bags, ex ... changed go 0 d bye s with Mr. O~Neill and the four children staying behind in the suburban Catonsville home and flew to Eu·rope. . Ann is already known in the Vatican because her complete recovery has been accepted by the Holy See as a miracle re sulting from the intercession of Mother Seton. It is one of the two mil' a c I e s approved for Mother Seton's. beatification. Things are much different for the O'Neills now from the Easter Sunday in 1952 when the parents knelt in the semi-darkness of the chapel in St. Agnes Hospital and begged· Mother Seton's in tercession for their daughter. Since public announcement of Ann's miracle, the telephone at _ the O'Neill house "rings all the time," according to Mrs. O'Neill. Ann has been interviewed by one reporter after another. She has seen herself on televIsion in . her. class at Mother Seton High School and at home. Newspapers have published her photograph and repeated her story. Neigh bors and friends have inquired about the trip. "I think she wishes she didn't have all the pUblicity," said Mrs. O'Neill, "but she is bearing up under it pretty well." .Ann said she has been told that His Holiness Pope John XXIII will receive her in audi ence. "I don't remember when it will be exactly perhaps March 18 - but mother, Sister Mary Alice and some other Sisters will be there too," she· said. Sister Mary Alice, who will accompany the O'Neills on the l»- trip, was supervisor of the chil dren's ward at St. Agnes in 1952. It was she' who suggested the parents pray for Mother Seton's intercession. The· O'Neills traveled on one of several chartered flights from New York which carried nearly 450 Sisters, all of them members of communities descended from Mother Seton's original founda tion in Emmitsburg. The Sisters represented the Daughters of Charity in the United States, the Sisters of Charity of Halifax, Nova Scotia, the Sisters of Charity of Convent Station, N.J., the Sisters of Charity of New York, the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati and the Sisters of Charity of Greens burg, Pa. After the Rome beatification, the Daughters of Charity delega tion, a c com pan i e d by Mrs. O'Neill and Ann, will visit estab lishments· of their community in Paris, Lourdes and Dublin.
Drops First Grade COLUMBUS (NC) - A third Catholic school in the Columbus diocese will abandon its first grade next Fall, the diocesan -, school office announced. Pius X school in Reynoldsburg will not enroll first graders next Fall be cause of the growing student body. First grade classes last Fall were dropped at St. Philip 'and St. Andrew schools here. .:.-
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POSTULA!ORS GET POPE'S BLESSING His Holiness Pope John XXIII congratu .ates Father NIcholas B. Ferrante, C.SS.R., right, postUlator of the cause of Mother Eliza beth Seton, following the Holy See's approval,of the beatification of Mother Seton on Sunday, March 17. At left is Archbishop Enrico Dante; secretary of the Sacred Congre gation of Rites. Mother Seton will be beatified March 17 and Bishop Neumann's beati fication is tentatively set for June 23. NC Photo.
Khrushchev if he visits Rome. According to a reliable source, the Pope expressed his willing. ness during the private audience he gr~nted to Premier Khrush chev's son-in-law, Alexei Adzhu. bei, editor of the Moscow daily Izvestia. The informant said he had learned from a contact close tq Adzhubei that Pope John gave the Sovie( newsman a sealed message for thE" Premier at the audience. It was also reported that Premier Khrushchev may visit Rome at the. end of June at the invitation of the Italian· government. Form e r Italian President Giovanni .Gronchi ac cepted an invitation to visit the , Soviet Union in 196i. The Pontiff's message to Pre mier Khrushchev was written in Russian, it is reported, and it expressed the Pope's thanks to the Soviet leader for the latter'. . letter of congratulations on the awarding of the 1963 Balzan Peace Prize to the Pope.
Mother Seton Beatification Sunday Continued from Page One letter dated at Leghorn, Italy, on Jan. 3, 1804, which mentions that her c h a r ita b I e Roman .friends "have even taken the trouble to bring me their best informed 'priest, Abbe (Peter) Plunkett, who is. an Irishman" in an attempt to convert her. It was a young Irish-born curate at St. Peter's .Catholic church on Barclay Street, New York, Father Michael O'Brien, O.P,. who ·had much to do with counseling Episcopalian - reared Mrs. Seton during the soul searching period the year pre ceding her conversion. One of the books he loanect her was Father Robert Manning's "Eng land's Conversion and Reforma tion Compared." On March 14, 1805, he received her formal adjuration of Pro testantism, in the presence of her close Italian friend and benefactor, Antonio Filicchi. Mrs. Seton, in a letter to his wife, Mrs. Amabilia Filicchi, immediately following the joy ful .event, refers to Father O'Brien as "the kindest, most respectable confessor -- with the compassion and yet firmness in this work of mercy which I would have expected from Our Lord .Himself." Father Michael HUrll~y, O.S.A., another young Irish priest, who came to St. Peter's as a curate in July, 1805, took a serious in terest in her spiritual and tem poral affairs. He aided her at her Confirmation on May 26, 1806, and also received her sister-in law, Cecelia Seton, into the Church, and.instructed Anna Maria Seton, oldest daughter ot' Mother seton, who in 1812 joined her sisterhood. Pious Catholic Friends Mr. and Mrs. James Barry, pious and well-to-do Catholics of New York City, befriended her from her conversion and re mained loyal and he I p f u I friends. '
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Among the many Irish women
to join Mrs. Seton in the forma tion and expansion of the Hrst American religious sisterhood, the Sisters of Mercy of· St. Joseph at Emmitsburg, Md., were Cecelia O'Conway and Maria Murphy of Philadelphia. Thomas Kelly of the faculty· of Georgetown College recom mended and took a kindly· in terest in Mrs. S~ton's two sons, William _and Richard, during thek brief stay at that school (1806-08).
Captain and Mrs. O'Brien of the American brig Shepherdress, who befriended the Setons on their voyage to Leghorn from New York in 1803, remained life long friends. They are men tioned for their kindness to her on her last sad trip abroad. 'Daughter of New York' It is said that Mrs. Seton's father, Dr. Richard Bayley, phy_ sician and army surgeon and first health offieer of the Port of New York, was· stricken while aiding the gravely ill from a fleet of -Irish· immigrant ships which brought a plague of yel low fever to New York. He died in 1801. On the main bronze door of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York, is a full length relief figure of Elizabeth Ann Bayley seton. It b e a I' s the title "Daughter of New York," the city where she spent the greater part of her life. Participants in the annual St. Patrick's Day parade there have added cause to salute her as they pass the church this year.
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LEGION OF MARY ACIES
(CONSECRATION) CEREMONY
SUNDAY, MARCH 17 at 2:30 P.M.
ST. MARY'S CATHEJ)RAL, FALL R.IVER His Excellency, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O.
Presiding
Very Rev. Roger M. Charest, S.M.M., Preacher
Active and Auxiliary Members I to attend
PUBLIC INVITED
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IT'S ALONG WAY TO ERITREA •••
lifo. ERITR£.A isn't 'NPPERARY spelled backwlll'ds. Ws- • hot, hoopieal couotQ' along the Bed Sea ••• At TESSENEI, IHIIII' ibe Sudan border, the pastor is __ ing to make do wUh one poor build ing for a church. rectory and MhooL T.JIe Catholics are ashamed lICK to have a decent chureh • • • The)' aN trying to build one with mtle money and their own labor. The paMor", IS' accepts the torrid climate, the ~ posure to insects. reptiles and tropical disease • • • Will you make ·a seerlficle to pve him a proper chUl'ClhT $1,001 ,'lit Hoi} PaJhri Missiott NtI . is needed to complete the baIIdiDc • • . Your help in any ItII1OUD& is ..... Jiw. Chm-rb esB,. asked.
Orim""
THE COMING OF PATRICK "God'. eel" to hear me, God's word to speak for me,
Cod's hand to guard me, God's Waf to lie before me •••" With this spirit ST. PATRICK landed in Ireland 1ft m A:f). to begin one of the most amazing missionary apostolates of all time. In 30 years, he and his helpers built 700 chapels and churches, consecrated 700 bishops, ordained 3,000 priests • • • W. feel a strong missionary kinship with him, for O\lr ASSO eI-ATION, with your generous help, has been building chwchell 8od~hapels for almost forty years, sometimes at the rate of !GO a year .... Would you like to build one as a MEMORIAL 'JK) A. LOVED·ONEt
EASTER· FIRE HIGH OM A HILL a& Tara, PATRICK boldly kindled ftIe Pasehal fire befOfe the Druid high-:priest could light his puaa blaze. Thus tu FIRE OF FAITH was lit In Ireland never to burn oM ••• You can help this same fire burn in our Near East lands through an EASTER GIFT to the missions. If you give in some one else's name. we shall notily· them with our gpecial EAS.TEB GIFT card ••• MISSION CHAPELS: Vestments ($50), Monstrance ($40), Chalice ($40), Ciborium ($40), Tabernacle ($25), Stations of the Cross ($25), Censer ($20), SanctUH-Y Lamp ($15), Altar Linens ($15), Sanctuary Bell· ($5). FOR SISTERS:· A nun's habit costs $12.50; her shoes, $5; incidentals for' a year. $'7.50.
MEDICAL NEEDS FOR A MISSION: $'75 provides •
complete MEDICAL KIT. For $5, $10, $20. $25, you can
provide DRUGS, SPLINTS, INOCULATIONS.
SCHOOL SUPPLIES: A desk costs $4. A mission school
BLACKBOARD costs $1.50. For $5 we CIUl proYide
BOOKS, CATECHISMS or SCHOOL SUPPLIES.
A STRINGLESS GIFT enables lIS to place the· beIp
where most needed.
MASS STIPENDS: Olten the priest's only daily support.
FOR PALESTINE REFUGEES: $10 buys a FOOD
PACKAGE which lasts lor a month. $2 provides a
warm blanket.
FIRST COMMUNON~ It costs $10 to outfit a ohild . .
:FIRST COMMUNION.
select the GIFT you prefer. SEND US, with yoUt' check or money order, the NAME and ADDRESS of the person in whose favor you al'e making the gift. WE'LL SEND A GIFT CABD '1'0 THAT PERSON IMMEDIATELY, enclosing a eBd with pressed flowers from the HOLY LAND.
.'l2earSst Olissions
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19
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~II R'iver-Thurs. Mar. 14,.1963
Tech Crown Caps Winning Season for Falmouth High Trials ofa Tired Tech Tour~ey Trekker By Lynn Kennedy By Jack Kineavy Thank goodness it's all The 37th Tech Tourney was indeed a memorable one. over. I mean those tourna Scoring records were set, attendance marks were shattered that annually turn ments and the son of the Tourney Director achieved a life ambi.., Boston Garden into mad· tion when he coached his team to the 91ass C title. Hanging ness. I'm a nervous wreck after upa new four-game scoring Frank Nightingale sparked the last Saturday. Two hockey total that will take a bit of Crimson of New Bedford to a g,ames, three basketball games, challenging was Falmouth's final round victory over Durfee. several Ion.:; flights of stairs (to the second balcony) and two fabulous Mike Lopes who Rindge's toughest game of the
ten-year olders and I had had it. proved the bellwether of the tourney proved to be the quar Cape quintet's successful quest terfinal test against the Crimson Twelve and a half hours after it of Class D hon. of New Bedford. Neither team all began, I haa tired legs, acid stomach, a pip of a headache, ors. The talent- was able to hit stride in the first and enough basketballs and ed pivotman's half but the tempo picked up 138 point per- after intermission and the Can- pucks to last me until next March. On top of that I had to formance easily tabridgians were really ex era eke d the tended to take a 52-50 decision. drive better than a hundred Again the missing big man made miles to get ill. . overall record Not that sports isn't healthful. of 119 set by the difference. Nor ten-year olders funful. They Rindge's Larry N.E. Tourney are. But, oh the questions and Stead last year And so we now look toward an~ completely the New England tourney which requests. And the embarrass ment. We were perched in a obhterated the really is a misnomer in that the pocketful of Walpole rooters Class D mark State of Connecticut' is no longer when Dave (he's mine) ups and of 104 which . t h' bl l'nce . represented. T IS, presuma thy, pipes, "Arlington's gonna win." had been i n eXlS ence s 1957. Falmouth's 59-50 victory wlll be the last ye~r. for e Sure they're going to win, I · thought, fending off the glares over defend mg c h am pI'on West - New England competItIon. wood enabled the, Clippers to Representing Western, Mass. from ten pairs of alien eyes. But close out their season undefeated will be St. John's of Shrewbury, I didn't say so. Instead I said, -a comparative rarity in this N.E. Catholic Class A Champion peaceful-like, "I think W:alpole's round ball era; the defeat was, and'skin-of-the-teeth conqueror got a better team, particularly their' goalie." That eased the Westwood's first of the season. of Coyle. Bishop Bradley of Garden personnel were exManchester, also a N.E. Catholic pressure, but one fat, l5-year tended to the nth degree from tourney participant, will carry older aside of me turns and Thursday through Saturday with the New Hampshire standard in pipes up. "Where'd you get the both the basketball and hockey a match against Morse High of funny kid?" I laughed, but Dave tournaments drawing capacity Bath, Maine. Tolman High of ilidn't..He was too absorbed in a crowds to the North Station Pawtucket and Rogers of .N~w box of popcorn. arena. The hockey' semifinals port. are the two R.I. entrIes. Mark, who had never seen a drew 13,909 on ThurSday; Tech ' Durfee's Ed Berube and Bruce hockey game, was glued to the officially attracted another capa- Texeira of Taunton were named ice. He wanted to know why the city house - and then some on recipients of 1963 basketball ref didn't toss the puck in the Friday; the icemen came back awards by the Southeastern air like the basketball goes up in with a Saturday matinee of Mass. district board of Approved on jump balls. 12,000 and the hoopsters sold the B'asketball Officials at the or "Because someone might get place out again that evening. In ganization's windup .banquet in hurt if they happened to get in aU, Tech logged 86,836 patrons, Somerset last Sunday. The the way of one of the sticks," I a 3000-plus increase over the whistle-tooters voted Berube the bounced back, figuring that previous Garden high estab- most valuable player in the area; would hold him. It didn't. lished in 1961. Texeira was awarded the board's "Well, if one did get banged, And finally adding a bit of sportsmanship trophy. they could always give him a human interest to the proTaking over the reins of office foul shot," he pleaded. ceedings, C h elm s f 0 r,d High for the '63-'64 season was Walt "He might not be able to take coached by Henry McCarthy, Jr. Dermody of Taunton. Walt suc it," I countered, "Besides there's whose father founded the tourceeds Joe Camacho of New Bed no 'such things as foul shots in ney in 1926 and still directs it, ford. Both Joe and Walt offi- defeated defending champion ciated in several Tech Tourney this game. There are penalty Plymouth, 64-59, to capture the contests the latter working the shots." He was right back again. Class C title. The loss prevented Class A championship final on Plymouth from becoming the Saturday. Paul Duval of New "What's a penalty shot?" first school ever to win three Bedford is the new, vice-presi Just as I turned to reply, a consecutive Tech championships dent. John Needs of Taunton and kid from Walpole scored. I and snapped the school's tourney Ben Wilson of New Bedford re missed the play, but was in time skein at 11, a mark equalled only tained their respective posts of to see the lamp light. It was by Winchester. secretary-treasurer and official Dave's turn. Durfee-Rindge interpreter. , "Dad, why did the little red Saturday night and a powerful light go on?" Before I could Rindge Tech ,squad marked the wiggle an answer off my tongue, end of the line for a spirited Mark had his own. Durfee High team that gave the "So th~ goalie can see better." defending champions all they That brought a few chuckles could handle for a half before WASHINGTON (NC)A Feder from the Walpole fans. At least succumbing 'to the superior al official says a group active in Mark took the sting off Dave's height and the uncanny marks disputes over alleged 'Church. first "smart" play. Walpole was manship of the Artisans from State issues is guilty of unwar back with another tally less than Crambridge. Rangy Bill Hewitt, ranted charges about Catholic two minutes later. That goal I Rindge's 6-6 mirach'!man, spelled involvement in urban renewal. saw,but the kids didn't. They the difference in this ,one as he Urban Renewal Commissioner were crawling around on the poured 38 points through the William L. Slayton said the cement looking for suitable ma strings, despite being held to group is Protestants and Other terial for making airplanes. just one field goal in the first Americans United for Separation "You don't make those things period. of Church and State, a Wash The Hilltoppers, mainly on the ington-based organization self. here, much less throw them," I ' strength of cap t a i n Woody desscribed as defender of total admonished. "Everybody else does," they Berube's shooting and Ed Sieg Church-State separation. chorused. fried's rebounding, played the In a letter to Glenn L. Archer, "Well, 'you're not everybody champs on better than even executive director of POAU, else." And that was that. terms until just before the first The hockey was fine, but they half ended. The Toppers lost Slayton said the organization has got a bigger kick out of the man playmaker Bob Bonalewicz on made charges o~ special treat the last play of the first half. ment for Catholic churches and that refreshed the ice. The guy schools in its monthly magazine, . who drives around in the cart and while it would be unrealis "Church and State," and in a and picks up the snow, you tic to contend that his loss made pamphlet, "Urban Take-Over." know. He always gets a big the ultimate difference, it is un Expressing "concern" over cheer when he drives out of the deniably true that his disability these accusations, Slayton says rink, and Dave and 'Mark were affected the club psychologi they are "unwarranted on the among the cheerers. It seemed cally.
To coach Tom Karam who in basis of ascertainable facts" and the proper thing to do.
When it was all over, they his three years at Durfee has may lead to misunderstanding of wanted to the know the score. Federally assisted renewal ef guided the Toppers to a 63-7 re "No runs, no hits and pleJ;1ty of cord, a salute for a job well forts. done. The absence of a big man
again placed the Hilltoppers at
For Lenten Recipes ... For Calorie Watche~s • a distinct disadvantage, as was the case two years ago when For Homemakers In A Hurry. ~ •
Urban Renewal Head Denies POAU Charge
Serra Convention SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The 1963 convention of Serra Inter national, laymen's organization which seeks to promote voca
tions to the priesthood, will be
held here July 7-10. !\lore than
2,000 persons are elCpected at the meeting. Emile Maloney of
San ~rancisco is general chair
man.
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SCENE OF MADNESS
errors," I told them. "It was not . . . it was 2-0," Dave said. "But you're right about the errors. The Arlington goalie (he called him goolie) made two." After a light snack, several hamburgers and fried clams and cokes, we scrambled back into the Garden for the hoop portion of the day-night affair. I deposited them in two choice seats, second balcony-mid-court, right behind my broadcasting vantage point. You'd have thought they were a couple of engineering students, the way they studied th~ Garden crew laying the basketball floor over the ice. "When does Durfee play?" Mark wanted to know. "Late," David reminded him, gleefully. "We won't be home until at least three in the morn ing." That made Mark happy. 'I winced at the thought. When Chelmsford and Ply mouth came on, they forgot me. They were too busy making fun of the pilgrim hats the Plymouth band was wearing. Then while one went for hotdogs, the other minded the fort. They were too smart to lose their seats. That game slipped by and into the record books and Woburn and Framingham took over. Framingham's nickname is the . Fliers. But neither saw any air planes. "Is that an air station team?" Mark wanted to know. Dave ignored him, he was asking me for paper so he could salute them with one of his special flying models. That game slipped by, too. They were bored, and leaned over the railing to tell me so. I agreed. Woburn did the flying. At last it was Durfee's turn. This, they had been waiting for. I had told them all the way up that Durfee was too tough for Rindge. But when they saw those two big guys dunking the ball, they reminded me that I ~%:%:g%SS%S
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had better think twice. When Durfee shot out tn front 25-19, I turned and wink. d. They smiled. A few minules later, when Rindge had gO'le ahead 35-31, I turned to a tap .In the shoulder. It was their turn to wink around faint smiles. I f~lt sick. It was worse sixteen minuf~s of action arid several dOz.'ln baskets later (most of them 'ly Rindge). "One of those thing," I ab nounced, sizing up the pair of them (and hoping that I had headed them off at the pass). "Just one of those thing." they sang together. They knetv enough to let well enough alone. Either that or they were tired. But down the long flights we traipsed back to sanity, both hanging onto my coat tails. After a quick trip to the Durfee lockerroom to offer my best to the losing Hilltoppers, it was the dash home with a time out for eats along the way. I couldn't eat a thing, but they did. More hamburgers and fried clams, and ice cream sodas to boot. 'On the last leg of that perilous outing, it was relatively quiet. Two spent kids and a broke adult (or was it broken?). Mark did have one final offering. He figured Walpole could have licked any of those basketbaU teams. What are you going to do?
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20
THE ANCHOR-,.Dioceseof Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 14, 1963
• A
CATHOLIC BISHOPS RELIEF FUND
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Five out of Six People in the World go to Bed Hungry Every Night
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Hunger is a Greater Danger to the Future of Mankind than is the Atom Bomb
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There is More 'Food in the World Today Yet Most Men Do Not Eat Better ,
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BISHOP·S' RELIEF FUND COLLECTION
SUNDAY, MARCH 24 This Message is Sponsored B'y The Following Individuals and Business Concerns in Greater Fall River:
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