03.18.65

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Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 18, 1965 Vol. 9, No. 11 ©

1965 The Anchor

PRICE lOc $4.00 per Year

THE POOR NEED HELP NOT PITY:. An African mother receives needed vitamins at a CRS-NCWC medical eenter because you were charitable on Laetare Sunday in the past. The annual Bishops' Appeal on Laetare Sunday will take place in all parishes on March 28. NC Photo.

Pope Urges Catholics Help World's Hungry, Homeless NEW YORK (NC)-Pope P·aul VI appealed to U.s. Catholics to assist him in caring for more than a billion persons throughout the world who "are hungry and home­ less, cold and sick, lacking those basic needs which minister to human dignity and spirit­ ual growth." The Pope reminded Americans they can aid the gigantic mission of

Bishops To· Draw­ Ecumenical Guidelines

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WASIDNGTON (NC)-The seven-member Bishops' Commission for Ecumenical Affairs took steps here to plunge the u.s. Ca tholic Church intO the mainstream of ecu­ menical encounter. Under the guidance of Lawrence Oardinal Shehan of Baltimore, the commission briskly advanced. Catholic involvement by approving nearly a dozen ·projects at a one-day session. decided by local episcopal the Canonical Orthodox Bishops At the conclusion of the be authority, unless otherwise pro­ in the United States. The chair­ private meeting, Msgr. Wil. vided for by the Bishops' Con­ man will be Bishop Bernard 1. Ham W. Baum, executive di­ ference according to its statutes, Flanagan of Worcester, Mass. rector of the Commission, said these actions were taken: Approval of an effort to draw up suggested guidelines for U. S. bishops on matters of common prayer and worship; Establishment of eight sub­ commissions to. explore the pos­ sibilities of formal conversations with Orthodox, Protestant and Jewish bodies; Endorsement of a workshop in Boston in June for officials and representatives of dioceses en­ gaged in ecumenical activities; Approval of a similar work· shop for representatives of the nation's seminaries, perhaps held in conjunction with the Boston meeting; Exploration of a proposed Inter-Confessional Institute for .Ecumenical Research; Agreement to seek the ser­ vices of clerical and lay experts to assist the work of the bishops, especially in the subcommissions dealing wilth other religious bodies. Msgr. Baum said the course now being steered in ecumenical affairs is. being determined on the local level by individual bishops guided by the Vatican Council's decree on eCUlllenism. This, he said, is in line with the decree which states: "The course to be adopted, with due regard to all the circumstances of time, place and persons, is to

Vocation Masses Vocation Masses will be cel­ ebrated in the following areas of the Diocese: Monday morning, March 22nd, Notre Dame Church, Fall River at 10. Tuesday morn­ ing,' March 23rd, also at 10 o'clock: st. Anthony Church, New Bedford and Bishop Stang High 'SChool, No. Dartmouth, Wednesday, March 24th, at 10: St. Mary Church, Taunton and Bishop Feehan High Schoo~ . Attleboro.

Latest Project

The Orthodox group recently or by the Holy See." . . The Vatican's Secretariat for voted to engage in formal talks. Subcommission for conversa­ Promoting Christian Un i t l' • tions with the National Council pressed by matters directly re­ lated ·to the Second Vatican of Churches. The council is the Council's work, has begun con­ nation's federation of Protestant and Orthodox bodies. Catholic sideration of a directory of ecu­ menical practices, but has not· 'involvement will be guided by completed it, Msgr. Baum said. Bishop John J. Carberry of La­ The U. S. ecumenical office, ,fayette, Ind., soon to become launched in January, will draw bishop of Columbus, Ohio. up its own recommendations in · Subcommission to explore the the meantime, Msgr. Baum said, possibility of conversations With and submit them to the nation's the U. S. Conference for the bishops. They will be suggestions World Council of Churches. and not statutes, he emphasized. Bishop Carberry will head also The subcommissions formed this body. Subcommission for talks with by the parent ecumenical unit the Episcopal Church. Bishop include these: Subcommission on dialogue Charles H. Helmsing of Kansas Turn to Page Sixteen with the Standing Conference of

Soci~ty Ys.

mercy by generous contributiona

BISHOP JOSEPH BEGAN:

Crime

Nation to Watch Urges Citizen'

Capital's Fight Solve Country's

Against Crime Crime Problem

WASHINGTON. (NC) This city is to have a special commission on criminal just­ ice, similar to the President's

WASHINGTON (NC) President Johnson has called upon citizens to interest themselves in the crime.

Commission on Law Enforce­ ment and Administration of Jus­ tice, which will be concerned with the crime problem nation­

problem in the United States. In a message to Congress an­ nouncing establishment of • presidential commission to probe "fully and deeply" into the crime situation in the nation, the President said the "starting point" in crime prevention and crime fighting "is the individual citizen." "Law enforcement cannot suc­ ceed without the sustained-and informed-interest of all citi­ zens," he said. "The people will get observo­ ance of the law and enforcement of the law if they want it, insist · upon it, and participate in it," he said. President Johnson e a 11 e d crime "a malignant enemy ia America's midst," and reported ·that the crime rate in this coun- '" had doubled since 1940, and in­ creased five times as fast as the population since 1958. The message-outlined ways III which the problem might be at­ · tacked, and the Justice Depart­ ment began preparation of legis­ lation .based on the progrllD Tum to Page Seventeen

ally.

This is of particular interest because, since it will deal with a restricted and relatively small area, the District of Columbia commission might well complete its work before the national group makes its "comprehensive report" to the' White House in the Summer of 1966. Presumably both groups will make interim reports as they are able, and this city will be watched for its findings as a tipoff as to what will be found nationally. Turn to Page Sixteen

Regan P. I.

to the Laetare Sunday collection

for the U. S. Bishops' Relief Fund which will be taken UP. generally, . in Pllrish churches throughout the country on Sun­ day, March 28. The papal plea was made in • letter to the U. S. archbishops and bishops, released here at headquarters of Catholic Relief Services - National Catholic ~elfare Conference, worldwide agency maintained by Americ81l Catholics. The agency, which gets its principal support from. the Bishops Relief Fund, oper­ ated a program last year which assisted 40 million needy persona in 73 countries of the world. ''Laetare Sunday will find 1'08 again asking your generous people, themselves also noW' more deeply conscious of the plight of their needy brothenl and sisters of God's great fam­ ily, to contribute to the Bishops' Relief Fund," Pope Paul said Ir hia letter. Turn to ;l>aie Eighteea

.

Club members, the prelate said: "We are finishing off our hospi­ tal building and the Sisters gave us a list of equipment necessary for beginning. So I am taking the list, which includes labora­ tory, operating room, X-ray cen­ tral supply, nursery, delivery . room, etc., dividing it and send· ing copies to people I think might help. I am enclosing the laboratory list for you." Thus the club received its new assignment, the latest of many in its 25 year history of aiding the Bishop. Previous projects have included sending him flour for Mass hosts during World War II and'*the Korean War, and when he was a prisoner in Communist China, investing money in war Turn to Page Eighteen

Irish Vocations Serving Church Around World DUBLIN (NC)-The tiny nation of Ireland, which once sent its sons to convert Britain and much of north­ ern Europe, still has more thall its share of men and women who leave home to spread the word of God in Africa, Asia-and the United States. The remarkable fact about Irish vocations is not only that there are so many, but that their number has remained so consist­ ently high. While many counTurn to Page Sixteen


2

THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River~Thu!s. Mar. 1~, 1965 ."

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'Sc'ores Selma Gross Brutality CHICAGO (NC) --' The Na­ tional Catholic Conference for Inteuaclal Justice has denounced the "gross brutality" of Alabama state troopers who attacked Negro voting Qrights demonstra­ tors In Selma, Ala., and Injured scores of them. , A statement by Die conference compared the action of the state troopers to the behaviox: of nazi storm troopers and said: ''Viru­ lent racism is as, evident in the Alabama brutality as it was In Dazi Germany." The NCCIJ called for'steps by the Federal government to pro­ tect peaceful civil rights demon­ strators, as' well as new Federal legislation to guarantee the right

to vote. The text of the' statement fol­ lows: "The National Catholic Con­ ference for Interracial Justice was shocked by the gross bru­ tality of the troopers in the State of Alabama. The behavior of " these men reca1lll·the days of the, nazi storm troopers. Virulent racism is as evident in ,the Ala­ bama brutality .. it was in nazi, Germany.

Urges Cooperation

In Literacy Driv·e.

, MEXICO CITY (NC) - Arch­ bishop Miguel Miranda y Gomez of Mexico City has urged Cath­ ." olies to c:ooperaU> in the national literacy campaign launched in March by President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. The archbishop noted that illiteracy is one of this nation's major problems .and stated that '"to teach those who do not know is a duty that ennobles him who fulfills it." He added that ''this problem calls fot: a solution which,to be effective, must be systematic and requires the joint efforts of all citizens in an en­ thusiastic, generous and friencnY CC)operation." , Statistics for 1964 show that' the1'1i! are more than rime' inIllion .. illiterates in Mexico in' a totat; population of about 40 million.

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"The Alabama situation dem­ _onstrates t'le clear necessity for Federal protection of the right of American citizens to demon­ strate peacefully. Ask Federal ProtectioD "The Negro citizens of Selma are merely attempting to secure their long denied right to vote. The barriers to voter registra­ tion constantly placed before Negro citizens in some southern location-as in Selma---' require strengthened national legislation protecting t b e constitutional right to vote. Such legislation must establish clear national nteracy standards, and aIso pro­ vide for Federal registrars which would make it unnecessary for each citizen denied his" right to go to court to secure it: ' ,"The National Catholic' COn­ ference for Interracial Justice has great respect for the leader­ ship of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and for Dr. Martin Luther Kirig.. We also support the effort to secure strengthened FElderal' vothig leg­ islation." .'

,Catho'lic Negroes' Top747iOO~. ·

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WASHINGTON (NC) - Cath­ olic Negroes in the 'q:. S" now number 741,598. a rise of three per cent over 1963, and com­ prise four per cent of the Cath­ olic population, according to the annual report of the secretary of the Commission for the Catholic Missions Among the Colored People and the Indians. The Indian missions serve 130,­ 122. Indian Catholics with 401 churches and chapels, 53 schools, and 185 priests. accoring to the report by Father 1. B. Tennely, S.S. Although only one. parish ,Priest in 46 'serve!i iii pre­ dominantly Negro pari~h, o~e In every nine converts is a N,egro'" says the report, and ~~. whole number of Negro conye$is . rising, while that. ofwpites is­ falling. . ' , , ", The report says three out of four Catholic Negroes belong to '. the '·520 missions and 'parishes" that serve predominantly Negro' congregations. Staffed;, by 767" priests, these missions and par­ isbes maintain 520 schools with an enrollment of 99',245,· and'

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Girls~' Holy Hour Girl Scouts, Bluebirds, BroWD­ ies and Camp Fire Girls will meet at SS. Peter and Paul Church, Fall River, lor a holy hour from 3 to 4 Sunday after-' noon, March 21. Rev. Peter F. ::::er:.ooo religious and lay Mullen and Rev. Thomas E. Morrissey will preach at the MnC4; Ordo service sponsored by the Fall River Marian Committee under FRIDAY-St. Joseph, Spouse of direction of Rev. John F. AD­ the Blessed Virgin Mary and " '. drews, area Scout chaplain. Pat ron of the Universal Church. I Class. White..Mass Proper' Gloria 2nd Coil. Fri­ Necrology day ofiI Week'of Lent· Creed; 19 ~'. Preface of St. Joseph. ' Rev. John J. McQ\1aide, 1905, SATURDAY -:' Saturday of II

Assistant, st. MarY, Taunton. ' Week of Lent. III Class. Violet.

Mass Proper; N~ Gloria. or

MAR. 20 C:reed; ~reface of Lent.

Rev. Francis. A. Mrozinski, 1951, Passor, St. Hedwig, 'New SUNDAY-III Sunday of Lent.

I Class. Violet. Mass Proper;

Bedford. No Gloria; Creed; Preface of

MAR. 22 Lent. ,

Rev. Joseph A Martins, 1940, MONDAY-Monday of III Week

Assistant, St. John Baptist, New of Lent. III Class. Violet. Mass

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Preface of Lent.

TUESDAY - Tuesday of m

Week of Lent. III Class. Vio­

FORTY HOURS

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DEVOTION

WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of

III Week of Lent. III Class.

Mar. 28-5t. Boniface. New Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo­

Bedford. ria or Creed; 2nd ColI. St.

St. Peter. Dighton. . Gabriel, Archangel; Preface of Lent. ' THURSDAY - Annunciation of,

the Blessed Virgin Mary. I

fIlE utC~ lIeeOllll Class Postage Pilei It Fill RIver. Class. White. Mass Proper;

.... Putlllsheo eyery Thursday It 410 Gloria; and Coil. Thursday of

IUdIlano Avenue, Fall. Rlye, .,~. 'n till CllIIeUe Press OJ tile DIocese fif Fall RIver. III Week of Lent; Creed; Pref­ SUbscrlptla erlca ~, Nit. ~141 84.00 ace of Blessed Viram. .

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Cardinal Cushing s-aid the death of the Rev. James Reeb of Boston will eventually be­ come a force which will achie". justice for all men. The cardin8l, still recuperat­ ing from an operation in st. Elizabeth's Hospital in BrightoD, issued a statement the morning after the Unitarian minister died ., , "frpm .injuries received when be and two othE:r ministers were at-­ ' "; tacked and beaten inSelm.. Ala. Earlier, the cardinal had ,referred to th~ Rev. Mr. Reeb .. '''a man of deep compassiQn f~ the underprivileged..." . '''Now,'' said Cardinal Cushing, ','the ; word has come that the Rev. James Reeb •.. has died from his wounds. The whole pie­ ture of brutality with its accom­ .. pairlment of cheering onlooken and its bleeding and dying vie­ tims is more than dimly remini... cent of a Friday long ago that carrie to be known as 'good.' '."" ; . Force'~o~ Justice "We moumthe,death of ~ " ': :Q.eeb and we express our sadne81 and sympathy to his loved one-. . h'·'" ~t the same, tilne, we know 1* SUPPORT MARCH: Cnergy of. Cat olIc,. Pro~e~~~t " 4eath transcends all present SOil­ and Jewish faiths marched Sunday In FaD· River In: el~ . ,row. From his death springs lifti ,rights support demonstration. -his, OWD eternal life in the uti , ~ ,freedom for which he died. . ''The sense .of outrage that , trips this land today will, by tM . ;mystic alchemy .Qf·his death, be­ come a great and added force .. achieve that justice for all m~ Johnson requesting his inter­ Fall River Catholics were the justice for which he di~ , among ,500 citizens who marched vention in behalf of Selma dem­ from St. Anne's Church to the onstrators. city post office Sunday in a Participants included an eight­ ATTLEBORCYS

dem9nstration supporting Selma, week old baby whose mother Leading Garden Center

Ala. Negroes seeking voting rocked him to the strains of ''The rights. Battle Hymn of the Republic," Rev. Edmund T. Delaney of uniformed Girl Scouts and teen-' St. Joseph's parish, representing age Beatle fans. They 'stood Bishop Connolly, led marchers shoulder to shoulder with' ser­ South Main & Wall Sts. in prayer and also among march-' ious-faced· doctors and other, ers was Rt. Rev. Henri A. Hamet; "professional men, united for a . paS~or of St. Jean 'Baptiste. commOn goal.' ", CA. 2-0234. .Church. The Christian Family " , At the demonstration's' end, Movement was represente(i by they heard a participating min, !' Paul Dumais of Notre Dame ister's exhortation: "GQ on and parish. Membe~s ot In an,. " seek to bring, ot1;ler people,with" other city parishes were ~ong y,ou-those who were on. th~ , Truck· Body Builders­ ftivil rl'gbts sympathizeJ:S.' .' who', . . " • sides of the stree~ during the' Aluminum- or Steel climaxed the 'niile-Iong march march. They must be convinced."'" by mailing letters to President 944 County Street . , .:. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. ' WY2-6618 Plan Concelebration

Clergy Among Fall River Marchers Supporting Negro Voting Rights

CONLON 6'

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ATTLEBORO

'. S EG'U I N' •

On Holy Thursday CINCINNATI (NC) - Arch­ bishop Karl J. Alter and 12 priests will concelebrate Mass in St. Peter in Chains' cathedral here Holy Thursday, April 15. , The Constitution on the Sacred' Liturgy adopted by. the Second Y.atican Council provides, for concelebration, but the Holy See has not given permission for ita: general practice.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Rivet"-Thurs. Mar. 18, 1965

Predicts' Council Approval Of Liberty Declaration

Extension Volunteers Head Says Critic Misinformed

WASHINGTON (NC)-A declaration on religious lib­ erty will be approved by the ecumenical council "in one way er another," according to Father Aniceto Fernandez, O.P., master general of the Dominican order, who raised objec­ tions to the council's first good. It therefore must be com­ · t I t d ra ft on the subJec. n er- patible with public order. viewed at the Dominican Approach to God ,House of Studies here, the 'IO-year-old Spanish priest said "Subjective conscience - the he approved the intentions and conscience of the individual-is aims of the religious liberty . not the supreme norm and rule document. of action. Every subjective con­ science ought to act or seek to "But one could not approve the manner in which it' was act in conformity to the supreme, formulated," he said, "because objective norm of divine law. it contained errors or dangerous "This does not mean that the formulae that could be inter­ state or any other authority has preted 'in the wrong way." the right to force any individual Asked to enumerate the "er­ con,science to adhere or not to rors or dangerous formulae," adhere to any determined reli­ Father Fernandez said he was gion. Such authority cannot do DR• .JAMES F. McCOURT bound by the secrecy at the this. On the other hand, it does council not to talk or speculate not follow that the individual on the document. But he said is thereby licensed to conduct he could describe what every himself in any way that' he Catholic declaration on religious pleases. liberty ought to have. "Every approach to God is not Unbalanced Ideal of equal validity and value," said Father Fernandez. "Expo­ "First," he said, religious lib­ Dr. James F. McCourt, erty should not be treated solely nents of almost every world re­ ligion will agree on that point. in the context of problems prop­ Supervising Psychologist at er to human organizations such Any other position would lea~ the Veterans Administration to the dangers of individualis(ic as the United Nations. Hospital in Brockton, will "The Church is more, than a subjectivism and indifferentism. speak Sunday evening at 7:30 at human society, and consequently An increase in atheism, already the Hall of the Immaculate Con­ a most powerful source menac­ must present her supernatural ing society, could all too easily ception Church, North Easton, as insights deriving from divine the third speaker in the Annual be the result." revelation. She is not thereby Adult Lenten Forum sponsored', prevented from expressing her by the Parish. Dr. McCourt's view on the principles and norms topic will be "We Neurotics." of the natural order, but must Dr. McCourt's principal area above all communicate her vi­ of involvement at the Hospital sion derived from the Gospels. has been with the Self-Care and "We should not permit our­ NEW YORK (NC)-A dozen Exit Unit, in which he has de­ selves to be dominated by an religious leaders, including two veloped and supervised a unique unbalanced ideal of liberty," he priests and a nun, have joined treatment for the rehabilitation continued. "Exaggerations lead in a statement urging end of the cf mentally ill persons. to negation of true liberty, as peacetime draft "at the earliest Dr. McCourt resides at 25 sometimes happens in modern opportunity" and praising the Coughlin Road, North Easton, times. Liberty, in fact, is an es-, U. S. Supreme Court for broad­ with his wife and daughter and sential element of ,the common ening draft exempti~ provi­ i" a member of the Immaculate sions for conscientious objectors. Conception Parish., He is cur­ rently on the continuing Studies The statement said the Su­ preme Court had "upheld again, faculty of the State College at the rights of minorities too often Framingham and is Clinical Supervisor of Counseling Train­ condemned as insincere or pe­ culiar because their beliefs are ing for Boston University. He is WASHINGTON (NC) not understood." . a frequent lecturer on psycho­ Catholic youth across, the The Supreme Court held that logical and human relations nation are being invited to a provision of the draft law problems among such diverse groups as the Industrial Man­ participate in a National granting exemptions to men who agement Clubs of New England, object to war because of "r,eli­ Youth Adoration Day on Sun., gious training or belief" should the Federal Safety Council and May 2. be interpreted in a broad sense Parent-Teacher Associations. Msgr. Frederick J. Stevenson, Dr. McCourt has served on the to include various unorthodox director of the National CYO religious positions. Governor's Special Committee Federation which sponsors the on Problems of the Mentally HI, Signers of the statement laud­ event, said Catholic young peo­ and currently serves on the Pres­ ing this ruling included Father ple will be urged to attend ident's Committee for the Han­ Mass, receive Holy Communion Philip Berrigan, S.S.J., theology dicappel, the Greater Brocktoa professor at Epiphany Apostolic and spend part of the day pri-' College in Newburgh;· N. Y., United Fund, and is research, Yately before the Blessed Sacra­ consultant to the BrOckton Asso­ Father Herbert Rogers, S.J., as­ lIlent. ei~tion for Retarded Children. The theme for, this year's sistant theology professor at Fordham University, and Mother ebservance is "Confirmation, .Jogues Egan, president of Mar,.­ Sacrament of Christian Matur­ It,.," he said. Other intentioM mount College here. are that the Holy Spirit· guide CO. ' ( the Fathers of the Vaticari Coun­ cil, ana that God grant to youths Oblates of St. Benedict will , the light to know their vocatiOlt hold a Lenten Day of Recollec­ and the grace to follow it. tion Sunday, March 28 at Ports­ mouth Priory, Rhode Island. The sChedule will begin with a con­ ' __ 365 NORTH FRONT STREET \ ventual Mass at 8:45 Sunday morning, will include confer­ NEW BEDRORD ( ences and final oblations of WYman 2·5534 ( members, and will conclude at \ Rev. Roger P. Poirier, assist­ ant at Notre Dame Church, Fall 3:15 with Benediction. River, was celebrant of the Solemn High Funeral Mass cel­ ebrated yesterday morning in St. Joseph's Church, New Bed­ ford, for the repose of the soul of his mother, Mrs. Irene Poirier, who died Sunday. Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, presided. Officers assisting Fat her Poirier were Rev. Louis R. Boivin, deacon, and Rev. Roland Bousquet, subdeacon. , Mrs. Poirier. was the former Irene Audette and the wife ei UNION WHA~, 'AIRHAVEN loseph Napoleoll Poirier.

North Easton

F'orum To Hear

Psychologist

Urge Early End

Of Draft Law

Youth Adoration Day May 2

Benedictine Oblate$

Curate Offers

Mother's Mass

3

CHICAGO (NC)-The national director of the Exten­ sion Society Volunteers has accused Dr. Joseph T. English, Peace Corps medical program director, of being grossly misinformed or unacquainted in his recent criticism of the Extension Society Volunteer our teachers in strug­ movement and program. In a agencies, gling mission schools,' and . Be speech at Marquette Univer­ forth, can be succeeded by do­ sity, Dr. English said the mestic Peace Corpsmen, but this Extension 'Volunteer and the Papal Volunteers for Latin America programs are compet­ ing with the Peace Corps by creating Catholic equivalents, rather than complementing the Peace Corps. "Dr. English reveals a lack of understanding of what he criti­ cizes," Father John J. Sullivaan, director of the Extension pro­ gram, said. The Extension Society Volun­ teer program was organized pre­ vious to the Peace Corps under the direction of the American hierarchy and sponsored by Albert Cardinal Meyer of Chi­ cago to supply personnel for the American home missions; The Extension' pro g ram doesn't want to duplicate the' work to be done by the gov­ ernment volunteer program," Father Sullivan said. "We would be most eager to hear tpat our volunteer nurses in mission hos­ pitals and in migrant camps, our social workt;rs in diocesan

Quick Brown Foxes Have Date April 10 Quick brown 'foxes will be jumping over lazy dogs on their way to St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, Saturday, April 10. Along with the foxes will be some good men coming to the aid of their country as top typists from Diocesan high schools participate in. the first Diocesan-wide typing contest. Two students from each par­ ticipating school will compete for a first prize of a portable tYPewriter. The Business Club of St. Anthony's, with Sister M. Yvette as moderator, will be host unit for t,he occasion.

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is surely not likely to happen." Even if this were accom­ plished, Father Sullivan· asked, how can a government volunteer program, for instance, provide corpsmen to promote the liturgy, to be specialists in religious ed­ ucation, to labor' full time in the Newman apostolate? "Furthermore, the noble hu­ manitarianism of the govern­ ment is not out to establish a personal, Christian commitment, which is the only way to revital­ ize the spiritual dimension of this massive problems," Father Sullivan said. With regard to recruiting on the Catholic and state campuses, Father Sullivan said that "Dr. English should see that our ef­ forts in promotion will contrib­ ute to the prosperity of all these programs." . He said that Dr. English ma,. have intended simply an indict­ ment of the Catholic school sys­ tem for not producing more volunteers, but that is no criti­ cism of our volunteer program. We agree that the Catholic col­ leges are not producing as man,. volunteers as they should."

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 18, 1965

I

Ideas and Suggestions for Family Lenten. Meals

SATURDAY, MARCH 20 Fast Breakfast: Stewed prunes, French toast, bev­ erage. Lunch: Manhattan tuna chowder*, common crackers, beverage, rice custard. Dinner: Vegetable soup, broiled steak, bunny salad·, mashed potatoes, lima beans, pineapple upside-down cake, rolls and butter, beverage. Manhattan Tuna Chowder 2 cans tun~ (7 oz. each) in vegetable oil 1 large onion sliced 2 cups cubed potatoes 1 cup diced carrots lh cup diced celery 2 cans (1 pound each) tomatoes 2 cups water Ilh teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon thyme ¥4 teaspoon pepper Chopped parsley Drain oil from tuna into saucepan and heat. Add onion; cook until tender but not brown. Add potatoes, carrots, celery, tomatoes, water, salt, thyme and pepper. Simmer, uncovered, 30 min­ utes. Add the tuna; simmer five minutes longer. Serve sprinkled with chopped parsley. Serves 6. (Recipe from Brother Hel'man E. Zaccarelli, C.S.C. Stonehille College) . Bunny Salad l' package orange gelatin 1 cup hot water 1 cup pineapple juice and water 1 teaspoon orange rind 1 % cups drained crushed pineapple 1 cup grated carrots Dissolve the gelatin in hot water. Open can of crushed pineapple, drain, reserving juice. Put pineapple liquid in a one cup measure and fill remainder of cup with water. Add to the dissolved gelatin with orange rind. Chill until slightly thickened. Fold in pineapples and carrots and pour into mold. Serves 6.

MONDAY, MARCH 22 Fast Breakfast: Juice, fried eggs, toast, beverage. Lunch: Pear half, toasted bagel and cream cheese, beverage, ice cream. Dinner: Macaroni salad"', Salmon croquettes·, peas, whole kernel corn, bread and butter, bev­ erage, prune whip. Macaroni Salad 4 cups cooked elbow macaroni (:Ih lb. uncooked) Ph cups sliced celery lh cup scallions or chopped onion 6 radishes sliced 2 tablespoons parsley 1 cup mayonnaise 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 teaspoons mustard % teaspoon celery seeds 1% teaspoons salt J,8 teaspoon pepper Combine all ingredients and refrigerate for at least an hour. Serve with lettuce or raw car­ rots, tomatoes or hard cooked egg wedges. Serves • to 8. Salmon Croquettes 1 egg, slightly beaten 1 cup leftover mashed potatoes 1 can salmon 1 tablespoon chopped pimento 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon grated onion ¥4 teaspoon salt Pepper ¥4 cup dry bread crumbs 1 egg slightly beaten % cup bread crumbs Mix egg, potatoes, salmon, pimento, lemon juice, grated onion, salt, dash of pepper and ¥4 cup bread crumbs. Shape as desired. Dip in slight­ ly beaten egg, rolled in crumbs and refrigerate for at least an hour. Fry in hot fat about five minutes or until golden brown. Serves 4. TUESDAY, MARCH 23 Fast Breakfast: mixed fruit, corn-muffin puffs·, jelly, beverage. Lunch: fruit juice, crab meat salad, rolls, brownie. Dinner: onion soup, pickled beets, carrots, creamed potatoes, onion-pork saute*. rolls, baked apples with sweetened whipped cream. Corn-Muffin Puffs % cup sifted flour 2 Tablespoons sugar 2 teaspoons baking powder 1f4 teaspoon salt ¥4 teaspoon celery seeds % cup corn meal 1 egg 1f.l cup milk 2 Tablespoons salad oil

Sift flour, sugar, baking powder and salt to­ gether into a medium bowl, stir in celery seeds and corn meal. Beat egg with the milk and salad oil in a small bowl. Pour over dry ingredients, stir just until blended. Spoon into well greased muffin pans, about 2f.I full. Bake il1 a 425 0 oven 10 to 15 minutes or until golden. Onion-Pork Saute 6 rib pork chops, cut 1 inch thick 1 large onion, peeled and cut in 6 slices 1 envelope instant beef broth 01' 1 beef buillon cube ¥4 cup hot water lh cup evaporated milk Brown chops in a large skillet; top each with an onion slice. Dissolve beef b;-oth or bouillon cube in hot water in a 1 cup measure; pour over chops; cover. Simmer 40 minutes or until chops are tender. Remove with onions and keep hot. Stir evaporated milk into pan drippings. Heat, stirring constantly, until bubbly hot. Serve in separate bowl to spoon over chops. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24 Fast . Breakfast: Ih grapefruit, toast and jelly, bev­ erage. Lunch: Skillet salmon*, salad, beverage, turnovers. Dinner: Tomato juice, minute steak, noodles, creamed onions, broccoli, beverage. Portuguese creamed ononsi, broccoli, beverage, Portuguese or Italian bread and butter, toll house cookies. Skillet Salmon 1 can salmon 1 tablespoon margarine or butter 1 small onion, chopped 1 clove garlic 2 tablespoons chopped parsley Ih cup catsup salt pepper Fry·onion and garlic in margarine until gold­ en. Remove garlic. Add catsup, parsley, salt and pepper. Simmer about ten minutes. Add salmon and simmer until heated through. For more sauce add lh cup water to catsup. Serves. four. THURSDAY, MARCH 25,1965 Fast Breakfast: Orange sections, toast and butter, beverage. ~~ Luneh: Deviled eggs·, toast, beverage. fruit. Dinner~ Pork ehops, sauerkraut, beets. salad, beverage, apple pie. Deviled Eggs 3'hard~cooked eggs 2 tablespoons sour cream 1 tablespoon salad dressing Vol teaspoon grated onion 2-3 drops tobasco sauce dash garlic salt dash celery salt da8h white pepper Cut eggs in half after cooling. Remove yolks and chop. Mix remaining ingredients and .tuff eggs. Chill. Serves three. FRIDAY, MARCH 26 Fast and Abstinence Breakfast: Juice, muffins· and jam, beve!'3l'e. Lunch: Grilled eheese sandwich, beverace. eookies. Dinner: Fruit eup, Halibut alIa Marinara·, rjee. &,reen beans, beverage, tapioca pudding. Muffins lJ4 cup margarine 2 cups sifted flour 1f3 cup sugar 1 tablespoon baking powder % teaspoon salt 1 egg 1 cup milk Prepare muffin pans (grease lightly). Melt and set aside margarine. Sift dry ingredients together and set aside. Blend egg, well beaten, with milk. Blend in -melted shortening. Add liq­ uid mixture to dry ingredients all at one time. Quickly and lightly stir until dry ingredients are moistened. Do not overmix. Fill muffin pan wells 2f.I .full. Fill any muffin wells which are empty half full with water. Bake at 425 degrees until done. Yields 12 muffins. Halibut alIa Marinara 2 Ibs. halibut steaks 2 cups (No. 2 can) tomatoes lf4 - cup pitted and chopped green olives 2 tablespoons capers 1 tablespoon chooped parsley. ], teaspoon salt 1h teaspoon pepper lh teaspoon oregano Combine all the ingredients except the fish in saucepan. Bring to boil and simmer gently for five minutes. Place halibut in greased cas;serole. Pour sauce over halibut and bake in 350 degree oven for 30 minutes or until fish flakes easi17. Serves fOUL

\

\~ TIME FOR DINNER: Attractive table settings needn"a be forgone during Lent, says Mrs. Gerald DesJardins, St. John the Evangelist parish, Attleboro. Clockwise around table are Philip, 8 (nearest camera), Elizabeth, 9, Stephan, 14, Richard, 11, Mrs. DesJardine, Susan, 3.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 18, 1965

Parish Action Should Follow

Knowledge of Latin Needs

Mass More Uniform

From ''The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. The Papal program for Latin America certainly calls for practical action on as substantial a scale as the bishops of Christendom feel it advisable to request of their faith­ ful. The Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program is basically educational, but as to Msgr. Bordelon's ques­ a n integl'31 part of the over- !lwer tien. •n Latin American effort of A high school boy in his par­ the Church in the United ish approached him recently. "I

Korean Catholics Make Ready Adjustment

To Liturgical Changes

States it is logical that action want to give this to one of our should follow from our newpriests who is going to Latin found appreciaAmerica," he said, putting a wad Cion of our felof bills in the priest's hand. It low Christians was $125.

below the Rio "Why are you doing this,

era n de. The son?" the pastor asked.

EDITOR: Raimondo Man­ Ileed for educa"Because I think it's so fine zini, editor of L'Osservatore tion on a parish to help the people in Latin Romano, Vatican City daily 1 eve I w a • America who need priests."

and president of the Inter­ emphasized by The boy, his pastor explained,

M s gr. Marvin belongs to a family that works national Union of the Cath­ B 1) l' del 0 n a small farm. He had earned olic Press, will preside at the of Shreveport, this $125 over a period of more 8th World Congress of the L tJ U i s ian a , than a year by raising pigs and Catholic Press in New York, at one of the a couple of cows on his own. He May 18-21. NC Photo. CICOP s e s s ion s . had other plans for the money,

"Why do we not give proper but recent events in this diocese co!:sideration to communicating of farmers had changed his Indianapolis Closes these urgent needs of Latin mind. America through our parishes? "It is astonishing," the pastor First Grade Classes There are currently 17,296 parremarked, "what a flurry of ex­ INDIANAPOLIS (NC) -Two lshes in the United States. Is the citement passed over the Dio­ Indianapolis parish schools will Latin American problem going , ,cese of St. Cloud when Bishop ,refuse first graders next Sep­ to remain merely a top level Bartholome announced that he tember. consideration, or is it going to was sending several of his The Catholic School Office get down to the grass roots of priests to help the people in one here estimates 200 potential first our people? of the dioceses in Venezuela. graders will be turned away "As a pastor, I wonder if our Everybody wanted to have a from both St. Simon and St. ftriotls parish budgets do not part in it." Gabriel parish schools. reflect a great imbalance of inPopular interest in L a tIn terest. In our parish in ShreveAmerica has been growing Guild for Blind port we spent last year 28 per among Catholics of the United Mss Vivian Zerbonne will ad­ eent of our total budget on capStates during the past several dress the New Bedford Guild for italization of our parochial years. The recruitment of the Blind tonight at 8 o'clock in school. We spent 43 per cent -on priests, Brothers and Sisters the Knights of Columbus Hall, operating that same school. We touches relatively few individ­ New Bedford. Her recent Euro­ spent 19 per cent of the total uals. The call for lay volunteers pean trip will be the topic. budget on the general needs of involves many more persons, the people of God in the parish. but it· still affects only a small Finally, 10 per cent of our inpercentage of the total Catholic come was spent on the deanery, body. Thus participation by the fte diocese, the national and ingreat mass often is limited to ternational programs of our bringing Latin America into world C h u l' C h . I question one's prayer and into one's giv­ whether this 10 per cent reflects ing. The Catholic laity will re­ a sufficient ~atholicity of interply with sacrifice if their leaders es~. , sound the call. "::.\;Iy thoughts along this line "Nobody," Pope John XXIII ~ 'AI. WYman were prompted recently when once declared in a message to .)& 3.6592 I 1earned that Broadmore Bapthe Food and Agricultural 01'­ tis~ Church in Shreveport, Louganization, "can nowadays offer CHARLES F. VARGAS

lsiana, is giving thirty-three and the excuse, in a world where 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

a third per cent to extra-parodistances count for nothing, that NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

enial projects, and some of its he is unaware of the needs of members lament that this figure his far-away brother, or that it does not reach 50 per cent." is not his job to help him. WeOffers Answer are all collectively responsible A pastor in the environs of St. for the undernourished." Cloud, Minnesota, offers an an-

SEOUL (NC) - The liturgical changes of the first Sunday of Lent made the celebration of Mass in Korea more uniform rather than more varied. The bishops of Korea had de­ cided to allow the use of the Korean language in parts of the Mass starting last Jan. 1. But the situation differed throughout the country, as some dioceses began using Korean in all parishes, postponed the use of Korean until March 7, and some left it up to local pastors to decide whether to use the language of the people instead of Latin. In nearly all churches in Korea public Mass is now said facing the people, most churches hav­

ing installed table altars some distance in front of the old per­ manent altar. The Korean text of the ver­ nacular parts of the Mass was translated and prepared by the Bene:iictine Fathers of Waekwan in Taegu archdiocese. The Korean bishops recently asked Rome to allow more Ko­ rean in the Mas~verythingex­ cept the Canon to be in Korean. As of March 7 there had been no reply to this request. Korean Catholics have no trouble a5ijusting to the ver­ nacular in the Mass. For 10 yean a lector has read both the Ordi­ nary and the Proper of the Masa just a step behind the priest.

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Salutes Cardinai NEW YORK (NC)-The Red eross of New York has honored Francis Cardinal Spellman with a leather-bound citation saluting him for his "gracious and sincere personal support." The presenta­ tion was made in a courtyard of St. Patrick's cathedral following • Mass at which 400 Red Cross -.olunteers assistf'd

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.6

,THE ANC:HOR.-Di~eseof Fall River-::Thurs. Mar. 18, 1965

Work Is Holy

c

Bright Rags Neither racial justice nor charity are to be served in piling epithet upon epithet in deploring the truly tragic events of recent days in Selma. The very name itself of that community will livelong in American history as a synonym for shame and-what is worse-:-the sickening perversion of cloaking evil in the mantle of the law. But, thank God, there are bright rays rising from the gloom of Selma-purchased, indeed; at a terrible price: the almost miraculous patience and long of inhuman treat­ ment; the aroused consciences of most decent people in the entire nation. An aspect of present events that has caught the in­ terest-and the photographic lenses-of many has been the appearance of Sisters on picket lines and in protest marches. Sisters heretofore have not had a very good press; o!,?rather, they have had a kind but not a true one. They have been pictured as good and dedictated women but ones somewhat out' of step and definitely out of touch with 'contemporary events. The sight of Sisters singing "We Shall Overcome" and walking in grave and determined protest against evil has made many people realize that these religions are very much involved with present re­ ality and very much aware that they are their broth~rs' keepers. Perhaps now more people will realize the contribu­ tions to the Church and to society made by these women whose one fault has been that they prefer to do the work of God without publicity and with a selflessness that has understated their labors and accomplishments. Their works and prayers for racial justice through­ out the land are a strong contribution in helping-as President Johnson in his truly magnificent address of Monday evening said-"to end hatred among fellow men." Meanwhile all men must urge passage of the voting bill sent to Congress by the President. It will be a significant step in helping the whole nation "overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice." These are the gravest problems facing the nation. And, as President remarked, We shall overcome.

Excessive

Stres~

From many quarters of the world and, indeed of the United States, there is clamoring for the increased use of contraceptives as a solution to the pressing problems of population growth and the failure of living standards to grow proportionately. Quite apart from the basic objection to the use of contraceptives on moral grounds, a Catholic demographer­ Donald Barrett, assistant professor of sociology at Notre Dame-has pointed out that some developed nations are pushing for contraceptives because it is to their econ­ omic .advantage to do so: "Industrial countries have been buying low and selling as high as possible in ... develop­ ing countries, without concern for distributive justice and social progress." This has caused poor nations to search for a cheap means of limiting their population growth and they turn to contraceptives as a means that entails com­ paratively little expense for the rich nations, no tam­ pering with the profit system in international trade, and an easy selling job to the leadership in developing countries. . As Barrett said, "If rich nations simply will not s'a­ erifice one or more per cent of their national income to aid the poorer nations, then we cannot blame the plight of poorer nations exclusively on their lack of birth con­ trol." '. There must be this willingness of rich nations to help develop poorer nations along with guarantees of inter­ national prices for export products of underdeveloped nations and more effective programs within developing nations to aid their poor and distribute wealth and ad­ minister their political functions more efficiently. Barrett rightly argues that "birth control has been excessively stressed asa major yet simple solution to' very complex problems."

®rh~ ANCnOR

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. 675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James l. Connolly, D.O., PhD., GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rt. Rev. Dani,el F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden

C D By Armand 1. Goulet

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War on Poverty Pet Theme Of Modern Editorialists By Msgr. George G. Higgins The Saturday Evening Post used to be a kind of nat­ ional symbol of safe and sound midde-of-the-road conser­ vatism. It was as American as baseball and apple pie-and Warren G. Harding. Apparently, however, those days are gone forever-if one can use the word "forever" with ner, Jr:, writing in the Washing­ Post in favor of an adequate reference to a magazine ton minimum wage law for the Dis­ which, from all accounts, -is trict of Columbia.

in perennial danger of going out Mr. Lardner pointed out that, of business. Under its present according to a special 1962 study manage­ by the Bureau of Labor Statis­ ment, it is pre­ tics of the U. S. Department of dictable t hat Labor, 38,000 out of 87,000 Dis­ almost eve r y trict of Columbia workers in low issue of the re­ wage industries and trades were organized and earning less than $1.25 an hour reoriented Post and that many were getting less will include at than $1 an hour. "/\ war .on pov­ least one arti­ erty that can't guarantee job cle or guest ed­ holders $50 a week," he con­ itorial which is cluded, "doesn't make sense." outspokenly in­ :When you come right down dependent, from to it, even the $1.25 minimum the political and wage advoca~ed by Mr. Lardner economic point of view. doesn't make much sense either, Favor Minority if we are really serious about A good example of this new eradicating poverty in the. trend is Christopher Jencks' United States. The $2 minimum guest editorial, "Do We Want currently being advocated by to Win the War on Poverty?," the AFL-CIO would seem to be in the March 13 issue of the Post. a much more realistic figure. The basic weakness of the ad­ Compromise ministration's program, he con­ tends, is that it is aimed almost It is perfectly obvious, how­ exclusively at the young and the ever, that, from "the political unemployed, wherea.s "most poor point of view, '1 $2 minimum is Americans are neither young presently out of the question, nor unemployed." People, he but perhaps in due time the la­ says, who earn low wages or, for bor movement will be able to one reason or another, cannot persuade the Congress to ,go work at all account for most of along with a compromise figure the poverty in America. somewbere in between the pres­ To illustrate his basic argu­ ent minimum of $1.25 an hour ment, Mr. Jencks cites the fact and the long.-range goal of a $2 that there are still more than 20 minimum. tnillion jobs in the country But if Mr. Jencks' reading of which pay less than $60 a week. public opinion is correct, this is "This is the basic problem," he going' to take a lot of doing. maintains, "which any attack on Jencks maintains that "whether poverty must solve." or not we are conscious of it, In his judgment, the reason we most of us affluent Americans are not facing up to this prob­ have a stake' in keeping the in­ lem is politicaL "It is easy," he come of poor Americans down." says, "to mobilize support for. ef­ By that he means that we are forts to put the unemployed to unwilling to see the wages of work, or at least to keep them the poor increased because we out of trouble ':' * *," but "there know that this would involve at is no such consensus in favor of least a slight increase in our raising wages or providing big­ own cost of liVing. ger 'handouts' for those who This being the case, Mr. can't work." Jencks is, if anything, guilty of Low Wages in Capital an understatement when he says Several weeks before Mr. that, under present circum­ Jencks' measured criticism of stances, the war on poverty "has the war on poverty was pub­ about as much chance of achievlished in the Saturday Evening : ing 'totaJ victory~ over poverty Post, a similar line of argument as Brigade 2506 had' in the Bay was developed by George Lard- of Pias."

Father Joseph L. Powers, Dl­ rector of the Diocesan Office 01 the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine has announced the in­ tiation of a bi-monthly columJl to be published in the Anchor beginning with this issue. It ill anticipated that this opportunity of frequently communicating with the laity will help to foster the apostolic zeal which is fast developing in our c han gin I times. This a p 0 s to 1 i c zeal, through the work of the confra­ ternity of Christian Doctrine, .. the mere taking up of a Catholie layman's innate responsibilities as a member' of the Mystical Body of Christ. To face squarely this responsibility and to devote one's untiring efforts to the ed­ ucation of God's children is the aim of the confraternity move-' ment. By offering sug~estions and news items to parish execu­ tive board members and to an ti).ose affiliated with the confra­ ternity, this column then win be a useful tool to parishes now developing the religious educa­ tional program of its parishion­ ers. This column will offer an answering service to any ques­ tions relative to the six phases o~ the confraternity movement presented by parish boa rd. throughout the diocese. Corre­ spondence may be directed to the attention of the Anchor. At a recent meeting of the Diocesan Executive Board, Fa­ ther Powers announced the ap­ pointment of Miss Jean Sullivan of 'Sagamore Beach, Masachu­ setts as a new member of the Executive Board.' Miss Sullivan will serve as chairman of. Spe­ cial Education whose duties it will be to develop a Confratern­ iiy program of religious educa­ tion for the mentally retarded of the diocese. Miss Su'livan's broad background in this field should be of great service to those parishes planning to in­ tpgrate an educational program of this type into their parish school of religion. With the lenten season upon us and since we are all in the process of preparing ourselves for the great feast of Ea~ter, we in the CCD might do well to ex­ amine our preparedness in con­ junction with our Confraternity program. Children in the school of religion, as well as the adult group in the Discussion and In­ quiry Clubs, should be briefed on and encouraged to attend the Easter Vigil ceremonies. These ceremonies are the prime ser­ vices of the Easter celehration. They should be well understood in order to be well apprrciated. Parent-Equcators too have a program to prepare. Included ir the program of general in­ structions to parents is the crea­ tion of proper Catholic atmos­ phere in the home. During East­ er week there are several simple table place settings which can b~ prepared depicting the cru­ cified Christ and affording par­ ents the opportunity of quickly and easily explaining to their children the ceremonies of Holy Week. Parent-Educators might CAO well to prepare a few settings for demonstration purposes to be given at home visits. Holy Week ceremonies should not be confined to the Catholic: pop u 1 a t ion. Non-Catholics, through the Apostles of Good Will program, should be encour­ aged to attend, arid if the cere­ monies are. properly., underst~ by -thein, should be invited .. J)articipate whenever possible.


. l'RAYER OF THE FAITHFUL

"THE

10 ~ said' laily!iduring the Vocation Novena

'. Mareh 19-28,. tl965

,_ t • Prlest'~ The Lord be with you. An~ with yotir ispirit. AD: Priest: Let 'us pnty/ : . Beloved in Christ, since God is our Father and the the source of our life and our strength, let us ea.ll upon Him for assistance in an our needs. Lector: That you rule and preserve your Holy Church. We beseech you~ hear us.

All: Lector: That you preserve our Holy Father and an the

clergy in Holy Religion.

AD: We beseech you, hear us.

Leetor: That you direct: all civil authorities in the paths

of wisdom and· righteousness.

We beseech yoti, hear us.

AD: Lector: That you guide"the young men and women of this

Diocese in the choice of their vocation..

. AD: We beseech you', hear U8.

',Lector: That those you Call to the Sacred Priesthood will

courageously accept the ehallenge to share more

fully in the vocation of Christ.

AD: We beseech you, hear us.

Lector: That those you call to the religious life will gen­

erously seek to follow Christ in search of per­ fection. )

AD: We beseech youi hear U8.

Lector: That mothers and fathers win rejoice as you their children to your service.

AD: We beseech you, hear us.

Lector: That all may reverence and aid those who labor

in your vineyard.

We beseech you~ hear us.

AD: Lector: Christ, hear us.

Christ, graciously hear us.

All: Priest: God, who called the Apostles to become fishers ,of men, now call the ardent and generous hearts of our youth to make them Your followers and ministers. Through Chriat Our Lord. AD: . Amen. I

ANCHOR Thurs., March 18, 1965

'.. '.

Stresses' Effe~fs

.

,Of Vatican II

On Canadians OTTAWA (NC) - The Second Vatican Council has had a tremendous effect on the lives of Catholics in Can­ ada from the highest level of the hierarchy to the grass roots of the parish laity.. The Chair of Unity Octave eaeh year has become a particu­ lar occasion for public expres­ Sion of this new meeting of reli­ gious leaders and their respec­ tive congregations. ' The Ottawa Journal, leading Canadian daily newspaper, com­ menting editorially on the tre­ mendous benefits of the week of interdenominational gatherings during the octave, expressed hope that the coming would not be restricted to that period . of the year. Events across Canada have shown that in most areas there has not been any letdown. The death of Sir Whiston Churchill brought memorial ser­ vices in which Catholics prayed in Protestant churches and Prot­ estants prayed in Catholic churches.

can

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CENTER

Paint and Wallpaper ACIES CEREMONY: Ren~wing consecration to Our Lady at 13th annual Acies ceremony of Legion of Mary at St. Mary's Cathedral, are Miss Clotilde Nason, left, past Comitium secretary, and Miss Ann Tracy, present secretary, both from Taunton.

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Evansville Progress Closes Cathedral EVANSVILLE (N C) - As­ sumption cathedral here in In­ diana has been closed. The last Mass in the church was offered by Bishop Henry J. Grimmels­ man, who also preac):led the final sermon. The church, erected in 1870, was designated as the cathedral When the Evansville diocese was ereated in 1944. It was sold to make way for a proposed Evans­ 'V'ille civic center. Holy Trinity Church in the downtown area bas bee desig­ nated as the pro-cathedral, pend­ Ing construction of it new cathe­ dral.

FATHERS and BROTHERS

of ,the

SACRED HEARTS of JESUS and MARY

(ss. ce.)

Congregation of the Sacr~d Hearts of Jesus and Mary and of

Perpetual Adoration of the Most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar

AMERICAN PROVINCE

.Brothers Priests Perpetual Adorers Perpetual Adorers Foreign Missionaries Foreign Missionaries Teachers Cooks - Carpenters Parish Priests Builders· Gardners '?reachers- - Missions, Printers Retreats, Enthronements Clerical Assistants Chaplains Diocesan Schools Bishop Arnot High, LaPuente, Calif. Pomona Catholic Boys' High, Calif. Japanese Mission Stations in: Ibaraki Prefecture Yamagata Prefecture

LARIVIERE'S

Pharmacy

Prescriptions called for and Delivered LOFT

CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 New Bedford

WlIle

Death 01 KennedY

TIll. Ia..lnatln. booll ~ tIIe _ _ -the unusual colneldencn surroundlnl UIe Issasslnltfonsof Abrahim UncoIn IndJotln F. llannad1. Two 01 tile liliie .._ In Amarlcan hIa1ooJ ••• lor onlr 51.00. Sond ch",*

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Ju.llne~ 1IIc.. SURe 100 _ . , . . . . SouVI. _ UQ, _

.

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A1& a member of this Congregation you will wa Ik in the footsteps of the modern day

apostle~­

fATHER OAMIEN, 5S. cc., of Molokai, and FATHER MATEO, ss. cc., founder of the Enthronement Of the Sacred Heart Crusade. Ptovinciol Houses of Study Queen of Peace Mission Seminary, JaHrey Center, New Hampshire Sacred Hearb Novitiate, Wareham, Mass.

Father Damien Seminary, Winona, Minn. Sacred Heart. Seminary, Washington, D.C.

'W. to: Director of Vocatfons, I Main Street, Fairhaven, Mass• .-,

7


8 '

Taunton. Women

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 1-8, 1965

Name Officers

It's Occasion to Fly Old Glory

When Markie Becomes Bride

H.

By Mary Tinley Daly The morning sun was easting long shadows from the east as we unfurled the flag, hung it out front of our house. Surely this, Markie's wedding day, warranted flying Old Glory. Juice and coffee in the kitchen and not much conversation, like but unlike "May she be dear to her hus­ those many morning .ses­ band like Rachel, wise like Re­ sions when our "lady in becca, long lived and faithful white" was on the hospital's like Sara·"'''' may she be well

early shift: stiffly starched white taught in heavenly lore"''''·'' (What a beautiful wish • * *) uniform, perky cap atop the red hair. white ". • • So that you may see your children's children unto the stockings and third and fourth generation sensible, low heeled nurse's * '" *" (Let's see, we've seen our shoes ("the children's children - but two more generations? And Lu Anne, gruesome two­ some"). Today . the oldest, only eleven'" • *?) was different­ Recessional • • • Later a gath­ quite different ering 'round of friends and rela­ -and now there tives to wish the young McKaigs was a sense of happiness-among those friends unreality about and relatives, at Markie's re­ it all. The busquest, many, many children: tle began shortly: everybody nieces, nephews, cousins and donning ."wedding garments," Markie's baby-sitting "clients" photographer snapping like mad, over the years. frantic search for Ginny's left Day Goes Fast contact. lens.

Toasting the newlyweds, read­ "Come on, now, the car's here

for Daddy and Markie. We can't ing of congratulatory telegrams,

cutting the cake with its small be late!" .

Mary, the calm one, slipping family gold cup atop for the a coat over my shoulders, "I'n bride and groom w toast each other-usual traditions-throw­ drive you to church, Mom. ing of the bride's bouquet, Where are the keys?" caught by niece Lu Anne, throw­ . ''The keys?" Where had I put ing of the blue garter-caugbt 1be keys? by nephew Sean who, at age "Right in your hand, Mom. nine, will have a long wait be­

eome on, let's go." fore becoming a bridegroom.

The church aglow with can­

How quickly this day was go­

dles, filled with friendly peo­ ing ... • • Time for the young ple; soft strains of Cor Jesu from couple to change into going­

the organ - then the wedding away outfits·· ... A somewhat

march·· • misty-eyed embrace as Brad and

'Lady III White' Markie took oH amidst a shower Solemn-faced ushers, one ~ of rice. one; then Ginny, maid of honor, The little red sports ear turned looking so dignified and grown the corner, zoomed out of sight. up. Finally, the Head of the We folded the lacy white veil, House with our "lady in white" laid it in a drawer beside some on his arm. No starched uniform nurse's caps; shook out the elab­ this time, but the treasured fam­ orate wedding gown and hung ily wedding gown with its ca­ it in Markie's closet alongside thedral train. No 'perky white crisply starched white uniforms; cap but a graceful lace mantilla slipped the frivolously high­ on that red hair. And the "grue­ heeled white pumps in the shoe" some twosome" replaced by a bag next to the "gruesome two­ pair of high heeled white slip­ some""'· • pers. The evening sun was casting Now for the new-type nup­ 11>n!{ <;hadows from the west as tials, starting with the Mass, we furled t~e nag, brought it familiar as ever, and in English into our house. -then at the Gospel, the mar­

riage ceremony.

Annual Mass "I, Brady Piersol McKaig • • ." Fall River District One of the ('HoW straight and young Brad Diocesan Council of Catholic looks, standing there). Women will hold its annual fl • • • For better, for worse, Mass and installation of district for richer, for poorer, in sickness officers Thursday, April 29 in and in health, till death do VI SS. Peter and Paul Church, FaR River. A nominating committee, part·· ." The return' to each prie-dieu, headed by Mrs. Patrick J. Hur­ . Ginny adjusting Markie's long ley, will present a new slate at . train. Lucky thing we found that a meeting of presidents to be eontact lens * • • there it was held Thursday, April 8 at Our right on: the kitchen floor where Lady of Grace parish hall, West­ we'd been having coffee! Heav- pori. i ens! The coHee pot-still plugged : in? Nobody in the house··· Fund-Raisers' Would it burn itself out? Those Spring plans of st. Catherine'. eoHee makers are supposed to Fund-Raising Committee of Do­ be foolproof-aren't they? p . minican Academy, Fall River, attention! include a rummage sale Tuesday and Wednesday, April 6 and 7 at 314 East Main Street. Tues­ Day of Recollection day hours will be from 6 to 9 in For Cape Cod Women the evening and Wednesday District No.5 of the Fall River houl'lil will be from 9 to 4. A Council, NCCW, will hold a Day ham and bean supper, followed of Recollection on Saturday in by square dancing, iA; announced the Holy Trinity Church, West for Saturday night, April 24. Next regular meeting will be Harwich. Rev. Kevin O'Brien, 5S.CC., will conduct the event. Wednesday, April '1. Mrs. John McCabe, president

Junior D of I of the Association of the Sacred

Junior Circle 71, New Bedford Hearts, will head the members

of the organizatIon as hostesses. Daughters of Isabella, will hold Mrs. Nestor Robidou, president its annual Communion breakfast of District,No. 5, has sent out an Sunday morning, April 4, fol­ appeal to all affiliate members lowing 9 o'clock Mass in HolT Name Church. to attend.

Mrs. hines Williams fit . . .Joseph's C h 11 reb ia NortJj Dighton was elected president of the Taunton District Diocesall Council of Catholic Women all the March meeting held at Im­ maculate Conception SChool in Taunton. Mrs. Williams, the currell vice president, will assume oJ­ flce in May for a two-year ter,. She was selected by the mem­ bers of the board. other officers, who we!'ll named fo~ two years, included Mrs. John Ruddick of St. Ann" Church, Raynham, vice presi­ dent; Mrs. Theodore Alexio ell St. Anthony's Church, Tauntoa, recording secretary; D ian n. Renaud of St. Jacques Church, Taunton, corresponding secre­ tary. Also, Mrs. William Alger ell Immaculate Conception Church, treasurer; and Mrs. Richard Paulson of Immaculate Concep­ tion Church, diocesain vice president from the Taunton Di$o trict. Members of the nominati~ committee were Adrienne Lem­ ieux, chairman, Mrs. Helen ])eo. Costa, Mrs. Roger B. Cham­ pagne, and Rev. James F. Lyon-. district moderator. Plans for the annual Mass aucl Communion supper were dis-­ cussed. Mrs. John Ruddick and MN.

Edith Page will serve as eo­

chairmen for the annual Ma.

and Communion Supper sched­

uled. for Thursday night, April _ .., at 6:30 in the Immaculate Conception Church, Taunton. The Attleboro District will join the Taunton group to. sponsorship of the supper.

OUR LADY'S HAVEN IRISH: Mrs. Marie Lenhart, 91 years of age, Mrs. Mary I. Mason, 86, and Patrick H. Meany,. 93, lead the guests in the Annual St. Patrick's Day P'arty in the Fairhaven Home.

, Hyaci nth D of I

Assumption D of I

Hyacmth Circle, New Bedford Daughters of Isabella, plans a rummage sale Thursday and Friday, April 'I and 2 at 1027 South Water Street. A social meeting will be held Tuesday, March 30 and a Communion breakfast is announced for Sun­ day~ April 4 at Holy Name HalL

Assumption Circle, Fall River Daughters of Isabella, will hold a corporate Communion at 9 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, May 2 at Sacred Heart Church. A breakfast will follow. Also slated by the circle are an April card party and a dinner dance Saturday, June 19 at Venus'de Milo restaurant.

Dance Program The Spanish Club of Salve Regina College, Newport, will present an interpretive dancing program at 7:30 tonght in Mercy Hall auditorium. Six dances will trace man's spiritual develop­ ment in his ascent to God.

Slate Convention The annual convention of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women will be held Saturday, May 8 at Stonehill College, North Easton.

OVEN.FRESH DAILY your NEIGHBORHOOD STORE


_ti~rt~~~o~~Ot<;~-, f~~~~,:: >":: ; . "B;r J9)lep~ I'bd M,arilyD Roderick ;.~..' C,gm.Petition ':Among, gardeners is fuefltable. :Most' tab J. •ueh.,pride in what they 'grow and will .gO'1lo great pains. to make sure you are aware of their,skill. HJlave you. ever ,Men better tomatoes than these 1" . is a typical question . 'which one has to learn to one as a gift, is a blender. Now 'tlDBWer 1Betfully or end up it would take an act of ContIress ,losing a friend. Of course, if to remove It from my Idtchen. _e haa tomatoes of one'. I had heard of the value of a ~

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THE ANcHORTWrs., Mar:ch 18 1965

Names NatiQnal

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Secretary',

WASHINGTON (NC)-Philomena Kerwin. who spent the last 1'1 ;years cheering up veterans at hospitals throughout the nation. now is going ~ devote her attention to worting with young people. Msgr. J"rederick 3. Stevenson, director of the Youth Department. National Catholic Welfare Conference, announced that Miss Kerwin will take over as executive &ecretal'J' of the Nationd Catholic Youth ~tiOll )'edention Ja April. A Dative of LyJtens. Pa.. and . . alunma or College :Miserkor' . • die, nan... Pa., Miss lCerl!riIl tJNJl'ORGETI'ADLB V1SlT: Students of the Pia IX Wli8aetlw! Ja CatboUc- ~ In:stitute, a secondary aehooI ill RQlne 'under the superviaion ,work with at. PhilIp's ~. of the Clnistian Brothers, rejoice with' Pope Paul on hH 70Uth organIzation in Battle . ·t 1;& their institution. NO Phc* Creek.. 1Ildl., from IM2-44.. V18I • She a&o served OIl a' national eommittee conductlna a two-

blender . . a drink mixer orm maJdng purees but what 1 didn't , tile .....er. ~ wu that this remarkable ~tion may take R¥eraI machine would become another ~'tmu. ,t I1ke the competitor 'Who arm. NGt emIT doeII it grate, ,: ... to· show 'you that he grOWs mince, -chop with amutng ease, ~"getable8 abd flowers in sucb tuminC· these mtmdane chore. - ~ that he cannot pOai_ into II breeze, but It can help - ;1dy use the harvestS whlda,he 701' turn leftoven into monq· _lleats daU7 aud deposlta OD .'riDg ~ and.. dips. In ,.eat ~:tourdQontep. •' tritleal ~ Ndpea. ~ ita amazing mi.zInc JIbeRtis"It would be'a shame to power. it removea the tiresome "'le1:thse vegetables '110 badin'the kneading. and all Ja aU I tblnk prdea." He ays 1:h1s efta it Ia the blggen boost to the 'though he knows full wen that housewife alnce frozen foods. pu have the very same weeOne ~ ~ I did encbunter 7eU' stu4J' 011. partlelpatiOll of tables in your garden. wu the lack of bleDder recipe J'OUtb volunteers in 'VA 1lospita1tI ADotber Wpe of friendlJ' com- boob. 1 received one packecl-ln and was a de1epte to the White petitoi' ia the pessimistic l7Pe my gift by the manufacturer. but Bouse Conference OIl CbfldreD , Who knows that the new plant' it was more In the nature of a Alabama Priest Reports on Police' Violence md Youth. pu have just planted is a ~ brochure and was limited Ja In Wolk fOt' Freedom .,to failure. He' has no reason fOr ~. There was a card with m,. Miss Kerwin has served with: ibis but a slight pang of jeal- I\I8l"lUltee stating that if I anSELMA (NC)-"Many of them The pollceJDen, swinging clublr, the National Catholic Commu:c'~, 'but nevertheless he is sure "swered .~; enclosed questiOlUl kept saying, 'I'm blitl,d, Father. whips and ropeS. chased scream- nity Service here since 1941. She ~,~ _your plant will never suc- . pertaining to reasons _for buy1 can't see! My curate, the S~s­ ing. bleeding marchers nearly a was named director in 1948 of ;.~ 'fbis type•. becomes quite fng t?e blender I. Wp~ld be sent tel'S and myseif helped the Dlile back into Sebna. clubbing aproeramfo.r ,volWlteer wodt· eptbiiistic when you ten him ,a reclpe book.I,dil,i this but they nurses carry in the injured. , them as they ran and charging em to service VA hcspitaJa · that you plan to propagate the mustn't, bav~ ·Uke my answers. , Some were ve:ry badly hurt." them. both on foo.t and on horses. thro~out the copnu,-, .,~ .~ 1ftaDt':and ihat hi! bave the beeau~ no bc;lok was fortl;lcomThis is the memory of Sunday. according to eyewitnesses. ,usirlng .tbe N~ p~ ia '.;teed'tni:nsPIant; . . . . U \ g . , '. .. ,J4areh 7. of .Father . .M~uript . Acting under orders of Ala- J~.. VA hospitals., But 1 think the corriPetitor Finally, however, 1 cijd get lUl Oue~, S.s,E.,. pastQr , ,of St. bmna Gov. George. Wallace, the " . t infuriates me is the oue.:who : ,e~e~lent j~ook, "The Blender Elizabeth's church here ana lo- policemen weze aent to break up ,~ds ali his plantsfn a: cloud Cookbook, by -IUm ~ 4I1d cal superior of the Society of ,the march designed to' prqtest ,:jd"~. When asked where Eileen Gaden. published by St. Edm.1,Illd which operates , lack of Negro voting rights. sev. ..,.; .... 1RY. Iae bought a particular plant. he Dou~leday~d Co., Inc. Not only . Good Samaritan Hospital. eral hundred. white b)rstanders laimediately responds NOh. tbiJl is there an excellent selection of Father Ouellet was inter- hooted. and cheered as the police II the lut one the;' had." or dips. soups. maln dishes and sal- Yiewed after AIabaDUl state charged the marchers. .you eatI.>t buy this in this area... ads, but there ia a section of in- troopers and mounted dep.uties Father Ouellet. whose parish • if he had a secret source of ternational specialties that in- fired tear gas and charged into 1Ierve8 Negro Catholics, said hia tmowtedee which you are for- cludes such lteJns as Pecan nut • crowd at 600 praying Negroes parish encouraged the mardlers, OlDSMOBIlE bidden to use. I refuse to com- torte, chili con carne and tab- who were beginning. "Walk fDr DllIny of them parishioner., held Oldsmobil,' - _JOI-Renault pete with this type. Ac1:ua1J,--. bouleh (Lebanelleparsley salad). FreedOm" from Selma to Mont- prayer aenices far -them lI,Dd -the best way to handle such a The followtnc recipe will tomery. a diStance of 50 milea. provided material RIPPOn. person is -to ·lavish ;your planta show with what ease you can . _ ilim IrO that be becomes add 'extras, such as this fresh Uhamed of what he has done. cranberry-orange relish, to your al1:houg1t be will probablJ'.ua meRD for '])ennies. answer 70U Ja,' the lJIIJne·.,;q Fresh CEaIlhel'l7-Orall&'e BeIIlIIa when-he does .~ • nelt plant 1 orange' Witlt which ;you ate unfamiliar. 2 cups raw cranBerries At.arq rate. competition .. Ja~ cup sugar ev.itable. In many casea it mq (L) Reinove peel from. ~ of 1M! wholesome. leaaingto josh- the orange. Quarter and relDOve IDg and tale spinning. which in seeds. Itself can 1M! delightfuL On the (2.) Put orange and sugar in other band, pride Ja ~ first 10blender container; cover • n d mato or Iarge$l rose or rarest puree at low speed (about four JU,r is .ratIJer childish and laM seconds). ~ place Ja the garden. (3.) Add 1 cup cranberries. Half tbe fUn of gardeJ,liDg Is Cover container and blend at ~ : new plants. new tech10.. Speed until berries ~ Idqaescnd new .frieuds. WholeehomJed (3 -ECODds). 'KJnptJ' Jato 8Dme COIIIPetItlon can be • W. bowl. ef Am ~. Ilbarlng can >1eId -. (4.) Add ~ g cranheraore Teal jot. rles to containet and blelld .i . . tile Kficlum low . speed until berries are 'nIere UI a.~sbop oe coarsely chopped (1-2 secomIs,) • • ,.lston street blBoston that (5.)!tdd to mfxture to. bow! lIJ,leclalizes Ja unique and luxand chIn. llrioas ttem. for the kItcheD. AetualIJ" it take. longer ~ ~~m, ( 'Ibe:r __ from the, ""''IiIM!fIiil'' ,fIl!areeipe te peel ~ or-p, &D!flIL\. ~ l ~ prlic prea to tbe~ ,bre..utuJ ' . . . . It,~~*~.J!Inishthe -rest '01. eopper cbaflng dish IJDacinabte. -.~. , '.," It ka~lor,~.who1o'¥e .. aIOft. . . . -'Or;f,tiOe':'........-: .w;it~~,,""'fJI expression

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MOTORS

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REQUIRES

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...~erqt ',oinlcter CIft4 . . Ern&,~lmer . NNATI PARKING AReA TB.. WY 6-8098

Hook

SHEET METAL

2343 Purchase Street New.. Bedford WY 6-5661

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Norris .H~ Tripp

Bui'ders Supplies

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YOY'LL GEl IT FAST,'W'lTH DEPeNDABLE, .lQW-COST ~ '. ..

GAS (OCEANS OF 111

. J. TESER, Prop. 1l£SIb@NTW.

INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAl !A Cedar St., New Bedford WY 3-3222

FALL RIVER GAS Companv 155 NO. MAIN ST.

FAIl. .lIVER, MASS.


mE. ANCH(),,-

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Great· S."cceis

,Countrymen',Talk Of ·ReHgion .

On .- Rit,th.m

GeO~g1C1 Prela~~ .

WarnS' Catholics On IRigidityl

,,~,·:aOME··-(NC)""':'An taJl priest working

PROVI.DENCE. (NC) ,;-

The Rhythm Clinic of Rho~ Island, Inc. isn't a year old yet, but it has been cla8s~

ATLANTA (NC) - Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta, stressing t hat "change is natural to us," has cautioned Catholics against giving a new mark to the Church-"rigidity." Archbishop Hallinan said that "those who read history, those who study the reasons for Pope John's updating, those loyal to the· reality of Christ in' His Oh,rch" are not upset by the renewal and reform of the Chg,rch. , He maintained that adaptation is ~sential if the Church is go- • ing:; to meet the new needs and challenges of the modern world. The archbishop expressed these views in a Lenten pastoral letter-''The Church and Change ••• In the Age of Renewal"published as a 19-page pamphlet , and distributed to Catholics throughout the archdiocese at STAR TO APPEAR IN ATTLEBORO CYO SHOW: Discussing th~ program with TV Sunday Mass. great, Jimmy Dura.nte, front left, for the show scheduled for Feehan High Auditorium on IUs theme was change in the Church - its necessity and the ~unday, March 28 at 2:15, .are CY()ers Peter Holbrook, seated·right, and standing, attitude Catholics should take Charles Metsger and Roger Waite. ~ob Blasser of' .Candid Camera will be one of the to"l'ard it. entertainers. . On the one hand he cautioned against excessive impatience for change, the idea that "everything must be done now." He 'said: "ecuinenism is not an " invitation to togetherness; i~ iJ God's unseen providential plan. INTROIT-Pt. 24,IS-{8 TRACT ~ Ps. 122, 1·3 LitJ,lrgical renewal is not for novelty, but for understanding to you I lift up my eyes, Who are' enthroned My' eyes are ever toward ·the Lord, for he win and participation. The present in heaven. V. Behold, as the eyes of servants reexamination of marriage or free my feet from the snare. Look toward me, and missions or Mariology is a stern .. , are on th'e hands of their masters. V. As the duty of the Church, not a bid have pity on me, for I am alone :and afflicted. eyes of a maid are on the hands of her mistress; for popular approval··· "The impatient Catholic today Ps. ibidtt 1-2 To you I lift up my soul, 0 Lord. In so are our eyeS' on the Lord our God, till he should realize that 'fire on the have pity. on us. V. Have pity on us, 0 Lord, earth' must be kept under con- you, 0 my God, I trust; let me not be put to trol, that the experience of 20 lIave pity on ·us. centuries is as vital to the shame. V. Glory to the Father. My eyes are Church as the insights of today, and that Christ's presence with ever toward the Lor~, for he will free my feet OFFERTORY - Ps. 18, 9; ·10; l1ef 12 us is the guarantee of our final from the snare. Look toward and have pity .uccess." The precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing At the same time, ArchbishQP the heart, and his ordinances are sweeter than Hallinan added, Catholics m~t on me, for I am alone and affHcted. approach their tasks todaY with syrup_or honey from the com~i therefore Y9lJr "courage and imagination ail servant is careful. thellt ' _ we;t! as .prudencE' and trust." ~'Those ~ho oppose all change : do not realize that they are serv.- COMMUJUtJN 83, 4~5 GRAOUAl-PI. ',' 20' et 4 ing, not the Church, but only ~ir own tastes." he said. "Some' Tile ,sparrow a and- the'.· swanow .Rise, 0 Lord, let not man "prevail; fet the have simply grown used·. to ,old· ways; their faith is more nostal... in your presence: 'V~' Because .a nest in .which s~ P9ts her you~g; your. al~rs~' gic than dynamic. Others con~' O' Lord of hqsts, my :k~ng and. God! Happj demn the renewal because they have read neither history nor my enemies .are; tUrned back, overthrow~ and they whO' dwell in your housel continuany· they the work of the present coun-

Proper 'of Ma~s for Third Sunday of Lent "

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Thvrs., March 18, t 965

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as a· success. . Formed with the endorsement ()f Providence'" BiShop Russ~ J. McVinney in Jl1l!e, 1964,. thJ non-sectarian, non-profit org~ ization is open to members of . . religious faiths, and' .designed 19 teach the rhythm method at .f~y ..plannil)'. or : liinita~ I~~~one~,; \l.Y; . the .. Cath9Ji1'. Church.' ..~. ,.... 0' ~••. C~~etine .';t'r~Y, voltm;

reiuctance to talk about rellgion: Fat her Thomas Str8Il$ky. ~B.P.. of Milwaukee, an: official "!f,:tilel!'ecretariat for Promoting ~1lJi Unity, told the Amer-. tciIIIl Club of Rome that tOo .~c People follow the "preva;' . . commandment of the ~r;' .

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Spontaneous ~ng the ecumenical GOUJli:fl and religious unity, I'.uter Stransky asked members _ _ "overformalize the dia-:0lUe (between Catholics - a nel, ne-QathoUea) by thinking that COQ,vezn.tion ·a 'P 0 u t· religiousPJ»~ and convictions lIhould· . , plaoe on.y ia an organi.zed" dPct.P1Ined Btqdygroup -or, .".n plawled lecture lleries. _ (;~ the contrary, the most: fnttfal di~ogue should take, pJaoe ~ntaneously iIl. the eallY;' tree day-to--day contactsbe-! tweeA 'Deighbors who work tQ.; pther, .bare the same entel'!". tllinmeRts and belong .to ~e . .-me U)!lUllunity organizations. ''You do not have to telephone "he local pastor, minister or rabbi for permission to answer c(iIestions about your faith Q1' to, express a religious conviction a In 0 n g fellow bJls~pes~men, workers or neighboring' bouse;. Wive.... ' .

Worker for IndiaM' To Jleceive Award . '

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WASHINdTON (NC) ..;.. The lOOth anni~ersary of the sokol organization in the U. S. wWbe marked by Americanil of Czech'descent· frorn: many pan., of the country'during a threeday -observance here startittl Saturday.. Two Catholic group&.-the 'Slovak Catholic" 'Sokol; Passaie," N. J., and the Union of CzeCh!: Catholic Sokols. Chicago - aN among the six ,leading U. a; sokols. A aokol physical fitness st~' will be issued next Monday ~ mark the anniversary. There wiD, be 120 million .f thefive-e.... ... .. Pampa.

.

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our:

Plan, to Observe Sokol Centenary

~".llfe, nah;lely'~~t

:_'~eC1alfi1'-~ ate.~llfH~1 . ' mueh about relfgion,'; hi a8id. "A more honest admis-s16n W'Oiddbe that ",e do'- not ta1k ~ about- r,ellgion in everY.l _life;":he' ~id club member~" '-ho Include embassy officia~ JPititar7 personnel and bUSlneu':'

A. film, "From Qeneration.t4J

Generation," tu,l;Uall~: il sho~' and questhms answered. " Referrals Most case referrals origihilte with the clergy, Mrs. Tracy saicL Some response has been reali~ as a result of advertising. ThJ8 DIan is a purely educational pro;;., gram, she added. , "Upon receipt of a reterral, . .' a direct request· for an appoin'-' ment,. meeting is arranged bei-. tWeen' the couple ilnd one of doctors," Mrs. Trac~ related.,. i' desired that both parties at' tend. However if there'.are iln;v cbjections, on the part of one the parties, ~ will see the hUllband or the wife alone. . ~~Usually. two evening vlsi. are sufficient;" Mrs. Tr~ci added. f'All married and engagecS' couples are welcome. The in~ structions are. private and are given by well. tr8Ined obstetn"!' cians and gynecologists. There is no physical examination . . volved."

w.y

~cm is not a sUbject ~ '?On;. .

~ executi~e d~~ector.said. 1~'f, C9upleshav~. ,been,~ounsel~~ Inaddr~on.~2 lP;oUPIl.have helU'Ci,

speake!,'s .supplied

Amerl-

i~ (NC)-:QobSavage.'

aJoe~ a;.vertising executive and; ~rker fo.,r Indianmisojo·· c

loDa-time

a1I;)RB, .bas been

:',

'J'.J.,

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namedreclpie~t"

of the fourth annual Blessed, PhillPpine D.u.chesne Missionary Award by Duchesne ,College hete' m .Nebl'al!ka.. '. ., .i_vage ww. be cited for hi.) WOrk mneng the IndiansatJlol)F Bo8a1'7 Missicln, Pine Ridge, S.D" . . . the first non-Catholic to . be lJelected for the highest· noneeadende honor given by Du.. .. . . . .Jt will be presented OD . . . . . . . ".. May 21.

SO. YARMOUTH' PAST PRESIDENTS MEET: Eight of the ten past leaders 'of St. Pius X Women's Guild, So. Yarmouth, meet and discuss the history and accomplishments ~of their organi~tionand plan ·:for a greater future. Seated, left to rigllt:· Mrs. Hollis Batcheldor, Mrs. Che~ter ;

Savery, Mrs. Thomas Conway and Mrs. James Quirk. Standing, left to· right: Mrs. Charles Still, Mrs. Philip Dempsey, Mrs. Louis Parks, and Mrs. Frederick Hatch. The present president iJJ Miss MaJ(Y Leary.

"

C'EF Asks Support .

PlanConfereneeon 'U nited States and, China .

:',.

Moran said the conference WASHINGTON' (NC)-A two- of the conference, said it would day conference on "The United -lieek to "alftlie whole question planners hope that 500 to 700 States and China" will be spon- of China, a matter of urgency persons will attend the meeting sored here ~ginning ·Thursday, to _the .nation" without adopting . in· the lnternatiQnal,Inn. ProApril 29 by the Catholic Associ- . iecdmmendations or resolutions. gram particIpants will come . from the sc~olar, and. business atio~ for ~ternational. Peace, GebtgetOwn ,UniverSIty· and the ;Pion 'Enthron'tuttedt.·· -. 'communities and' government. Schoql of. Interp~tional·Seniee C SAN, JUAN; (NC.)-:-:"h~ MC>St. . .A1n0ng the speakers :will be of the' American Univeritity' at ~v. Rafael Grov&8' J'eUX, 58, 'Ha~l8n Ct.evelluid;·A8sistantSec~ the 'request of the American will .be enthroned as the first· retary of State for International Friends serviie CODnnit,tee, bishop of Caguas at afternoon Organization Affairs.. who will ,W,j,lliam .E. -Iforani .president ri:tes on SURdaY, April 4, here discuss the questiQn of China ., the CAlP and a eochairmlUl bl Puerto Rico. . and the United Nations. (

Of School Aid Bill DETROlT (NC)...;... The Cittzens for Educationaf Freedom (CEF) here' has initiated Jl campaign for letters to members of the Michigan delegation in Con-, gressin Washington, urginC support of Prelliden~ Johnson" school aid 'bill. >

. A statement ,by the orgapi~~ tion, .sent to parents of parochial 'icti60f ~hildreJi, s.aid CEF is 4~ termined to work for presenta1ion of all equitable provision. . futhebill. CEF also said it wiD "vigorously oppose" crippling ·,amendmen.ts.. "WPil:;h would ex~ clude ,parochial school children from their rightful share of assistance," . )

CEF cited particularly the ju.diCiai review amendment which calls for' a court test of the bill as it applies to' private schools. The statement- said: 'If adopted;; this review would stall the dem", ecratic 'processes' and block aid to non-public schOOl students for possibly .five ,or six' years, Meano: while the bill, will be passed with benefits going .only to pu~ lic schoOl students;" !

Crime Increl1ses . W'.<\SHtNGTON· (NC)'::-:Major erim~ in the' U$ed' States in~ c~~ l~ per, 'i:~nt during 19~

F13!

}'.: ~

Dire~tor

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;? ~ l'eP0I1l!.RaPe iJlcreased 1~ per. :. cieAt; jggra".~assault, ~lJ pet' . . ~;);.utol1\obi.iei thefts, 16 . . Ja)'dny:ipvolving mar.. .~,_~:~t cent; robb~!tj ,. ..'

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'2

THEANCHOR-Diooese of Fan River-thurs. Mar. la, 1965

Use" Mon~y To Make Frien~,. ..

'God "tove' You" ': ",:) " ,

=::a:~~:~'

,~>"

"By

boo k 'bargalns. As always, the Al,,1baDaC leads off with a SUIIIDlIll'i

er

news eventa

IT Incre88ed, and with lIOIIle.,

~

"

.................... .... -. '

ee..ter -Lecture On March 24

ef Catholic inteNSt, month by month from ~ Rev. I'rederick R. 'McManus. eember of 1961 President of the North Aaiericaa t h r ~ ugh NoLiturgical Conference. will be vember of 1964. menta-). . It is gratifying So, too, with the ayled. guest speaker In the CbristIan to . . that "CathoUc American Cathollc Biographies. Culture I.ecture Series at the assumed to be wide and 1nteD1- This, It strikes me. Is too IIklmpy Pau1ist Center, Park Street, B0spnt. , a n d certa:IDl7 arbltraly. ,Babe ton. on Wednesda,. even1n& . There is no word about. Ruth, for example. is inclUded, March 24" at 1:15, on the .topic. Catholic's winDing • pie-eatiDg but .Tohn A. Ryan Is excluded. "In-Depth ~ at L1tuJogical Changes.,~Q.test, but there Is word of, RutIl was undoubtedJT more 18Pather Robert Y. QoiIm. C.s.P.. PathoUc aetlvity in the field of mous, but Ryan SIIl'e1y had • d:vU rights, and even of Cath~ more profound and lasting In- of the Paulist Center, will be Program Cbairman. 1ics' admissioo of some failure fluence., Ja tWa reSpect. .: ., PatroD S.lIIte , :rather IlcJ!rlanUS is a c0nsultant to the' Vatican Council ComVatleaa n '. AgaIn. we are enthralled by Considerable space Is liveD the liSt of patron lt8ints. One ,.. mis8ion On ;tIle Liturgy; Secrertothe .tblrclBe8ldonof'VatlcanJI. pearsoWl'worked. He 18 st. tar,. of ·tIle American .Bishopa Liturgical Conference and a j~he proceedlngs areweU outGenesius, who Sa patron of lie,~ 'and the decrees promultors" lawyers, secretaries. ·,and Vatican Ccl~cil Ex~ He is ated at i~ dose are presented ~iuaphen. It would be In- Professor of Canon Law at Catholic University of Am.rica. ~ full. Also, Pope PauJ ·vr. terestlng, to know why. 'firSt encyclical is printed· In i . Also, why St. Sebastian .. and Editor 01 the inagazi!J.e. The entirety, .. is the Constitution patron of athletes! He ended US» .Turist. He has written many en the Liturgy. Probably no- 88. target, but not as an archer. books on the Liturgy, lncluding where else can OIle find all \0-. Brewers, I note, have three pa- -rile Revival of the Liturg,-pther theee extremely Impor- troDs... do butchers, .viators, published last year. Information and tickets an tant documents, 80 indicative laborers, lawyers, teachers, and ··.and definitive of the updating of weavers. But sailors have no available at the Paulist Center. the Cburch's address to man lind :fewer than U, soldier&. not to S Park Street, Boston. te1epheoe tile world. be discriminated .gainst, haft 'la-4t8G. Othel subjects of particular half-a-dozen, too. . lDoment get extended treatment. As to statistica, one is liveD. The current situation of Cath-' pause by tboae on conVerts bl at~ olic schools, for example, is here the various American dioceses. excellently summarized. Facts T h u 9, Mobile-Birmingham In are recited, and controversy Is Alabama had 4,196 infant bapfairly reported. In another sec- tisms In 1963, and 1.485 COIlVerts STEUBENVILLE (NC)tlon, Supeme COurt declsiooa received. But a northern diocese Bishop John King Mussio of touching education are re- which reported m the same yea,r, Steubenville said the great Jaearsed. about 1,500 more baptisms of In- burd f ns1ibility f There is food for thought In fants, had almost one thousand success en of0 pornography l'e8JlO . In this .or the reminder that diocesan oHi- • fewer converts. nation rests on the U. S. SudaIs in St. Louis and Rochester One wonden why, What fac- preme Court. last year stopped school CCIIl- tors account for the disproporHe told the Parent Teachers .truction pending the availabil- tion? And this quest!0IIperalsts, Association 01 subJJrban lCnox_of more Sisters and resources; indeed sharpens, as one exam- ville: "While an entire nation of that in Green Bay. 15 ichoobl IDes the table further and makes decent citizens is wen aware of dropped the first grade; that other comparisons. wIIat pornography is and isD'to CIncinnati did the same through~ A..the court has found &!'eat dHIleat its entire S7lItemi that ItanA M _~ of Catholic aaoela- eulty In determinlna what it is.. . City, Kansas m.tructed ...... pastors to drop ~ first ~ tiona and societies 01 more than The Ohio prelate, a, frequent If more space were required tor local scope fills 12 pages of sman critic of the court's trend toward Jdgher gradea' and that in lUckprint, and a Dstlng of Cathole excessive freedom of \be PftSB, mond there ~ • definite' tread ' awards takes no fewer than six classified' pornography alongside to drop primary grades. pages. Several of these honors treason and subversiveness. ,He Also in the fleld 01 educatlou. are for literar7 achievement,°auggested it "be treatM as. 'a there is an excellent cbroDo1oI£r and for writers who are more common enemy of our: Ameftcan of school desegregation, showiQ.g interested in bread ~d' butter good order." 'He' elaimecl "1Oc1wbat has been done. both to 'than inedible brvnze. there is . , depends 1IPOD :Jhe eUminapablic ~Ja an~ In CathoDe extenrn:e chartlq of the Jnl;'%keit tiona! ~~.. , 1lCheols, befoze and 1Iioce. the ,far writing on e.thoHc subJect.. . BiIbiJp ~. 'd' the' ' I!klCourt deciBiOll of 1154. Did you know that there are preme Court GIlCe stated. ~ 2'ds compendious pre-entatioa. 14 secu1llr instIt1Jts operatiBg . u.t ob8rceniV "is 1Itted7 withwbleh Is useclln eonnedlon w:ltb In this countrt?· that four Gut soda1 i&upodance ad ~ etber vital subjects . . well. en- America uniftnitles en' be forbiddea Ity law,- He . . . ables one to . . at • glance what pontifical status? tbat tbeftt are that the court onee ~ p&'OgreSS has been made (or were at tb& bqhudn, of tIe:fbied ob8cenity, aad tIleD DeAnother helpful ea~ treat- 1964) but 722,601 HellO 'CatIao- pn to bac1L'track b,. -.cIopUnc ment is that of the ecameaical lies in the U. s.? ' "'working bot In COIimovement, showing what are Inescapably, the AIman_ Sa formity with right concept. of the developments in this hopeful not up to date as to the number truth and justice." He1added that and healing process. Amon& the of American Cardinals (Cardinal this move by the court is ''1IDInabundant statistics those Shehan was named oalJ' • few tentioaal • • • bat true.eon cern i n g the Protestant ,weeks ago), and as to the num- 116t'Declsion Churches in the UDited states, ber of CathoDc:a wh? have letting us see their number and. ~rved In the presidential cabThe gre~ amount 01 coofaTariety, as well as the size of met. (Mr, John T. Connor's nom- " .Ion, said :BishOp "Mussio. came their resPective memberships. matlon came toe late tor this from the court's 1984 deeiBioa Ia , ' edition). ' .TaeobeIlis ,.. ,()bjo (lIM), BiopapQ Seetioa But the faul. are few and whereiD it Interpreted its own There is a glossary which runs .minor as compared with the terD4 "offensive to contempofroin page 329 to page 36'7, from treasure of exael and manifold rary community standards" ia' -abbess'" to "zuchetto" (and information whiCh this iIidiepen- measuriDe potPosraphy, to me. . MVer the twain shall meet). Ail lable volume provid.es. a national cOoimunity Raad.ard.

lDterest"...

,

aboat It III tile ~ II 8Rletlmes ........... _ "\he Mamoa 01 IaIfl1dty." If . . . . . not bow 01U' Lord', are weD, aad . . . .Ia • p _ wW lie , . . . aal4 about lDOIle~, tile pessea would ra.ace fro.: "lie . . . . 1& 'fIWaJ' lacre',". "Be 'Don't to1leb W," "It will . . . . ~. ." er "'There wID be De 1IIltil tile power 01. DIOJIeJ" II . . . . .,....- Bat Be Ib' Ilene of 1Iaene tIdIIa Be .... . . . . . .bIe .boId _ 8JM ~ who . . . JaIn .. . . ..... WIdIe the Len1 eoadeDllle4 Ids eldeaael7. Be . . . . . . IIba for 1Isinc IJl8Jle7 te -.ake fdeIldn ami lnIIaenee 'I'Ilen ill,. ,...... et l1Ifferenee between aivInc .....,. ... ..... 01 • cOlI (wIdcrIt II what Mammon IDellllPt ..a Ita pdIIke )IOWen WI' 0111' dIrtT pat. It Is nod .... mene~: It 'Is be .-ned by It. In tile parable. the _ _ . . . . ltd eaIF • -..& time left • eoJlCIaae .. . . . . . Se ",lei .....,. fb'. Be cave It .. · ·fa . . . tImaed Inte works oImerer te .

at least. of the laity presumabIT reading boob and perlodlcak OIl the 8ubied, 'It WOuld be Yel7 uelu1 were tIiere deflnitioaa of terms Jlke "'aDaphora,- "epIk'" . . . ." and -mom.m,-, which· ant qatte f.requentJT 1I8ed by writ. . OIl the JltarU. It ill muda IlION Important te know their meantn • than that of "buIsolaDtl- ("lQmeD aervIDe .. attend8nta In the J'C)()IM JeadiDIf 10 -the PaPal apart..

i

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Every sO often in this column we have a look at that very valuable publication, The National CathoHe Almanac. In an eye-eatehing dust jacket, th~ 1965 edition baa lately landed on my desk, and I have left off other .business to have a f asci nat e d trip with eYel7 eb J1atiD& It is through its 696 pages. It ~ dble to _ eertain ~ by the way, published by the Por example, with 1Q" ~­ St. Anthony's Gund' ~ patioa In the Uturb 80 Dlarked-

biggest

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By Most ~v. Fulton J. 8h..., DoD.

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a'Rev..... 'Job 's. .~

and distributed by ,DoubledQ". The price is $2.95 which JIllIkM this one of the

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. BI . ames SUl)reme Court

Supreme

. OUr Lord app]l8!l the parable' by ~ "'.Now. IfF . . . . to you is to . . JIMD!!J"' tainted .. It Is, to make ~ friends, no that wbeD ,-our life COIM8 to ' an end, the7 mq recdft you into eternal

habitations.- In

om'

modern language this

means: "Do not live ;your lDOIley to the deb who put it into their pile. Give it to the homeless, the lepers, the poor miaslonaries. the slum dwellers, the refugees, the, orphans. By doing this.. you will make tbeni 7.OUl' ~~ yOUr intercessors on the Day ol.TJldgrJtent.Do·not tblnk we' '. . solitary anet to Ood for judgment. We brin. with us SOmeone we have pulled· from the gatea 01 helJ, or·,the hungry in. I.,atin Ameiica",the JtwvinC.1n India;'the 1eprousln The;D.tJJe Lerd will say . ,-. .. to ~1J, "You have. made yQUr unrtghteous Mammon rigbteoaabecause ,.ou ..w.~ In the bungry.and naked. Ent,er ~to My '• •-

alone

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. .I t NOW't H ~. . . . Gle ~e. ,tIM, Bo.17' ~ . . . few' tile ~ of Gae FaItII will Da7 ft to J'OII lIwu'IDc Bfe wltla01d 8IQ" HduettOll for nervIee,-ea4 at cJeatI&' ~ JllOlle7 . . . te tile Bob Father • be cJIstriIIateI ..,. . . . • the peer 01 the worIcJ. Write • me GOIIce1"llfD&" 1'011I' wID _ ~CMI1" lIIIInIib". Ynr eaa ... ~oa in. heaWD w· In. lIeD.... fI1dekb' .... ~0111' h7mabeok. BlessecJ lIN rfeJa wile IIeIp tile poor! Y. . 1IIla~ send ~01l1' Ietter.for oar .. pillet on aanafties, lIIeluc1lDc the ·elate et 79_ ltlrtll. • . . . hi*- S. 8JIeeIt. National Dlreeter. The ~ fer ... :..~tt_ tile PaItII, I68Jl'1ft1a A.yeau, New York.' &T.

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GOD LOVE YOU to rio ~r '$50 "PIeue _ tJdS tOr . . KIsldone---ao strinp atfaehed. In thia Hob' Season.' I feel UuIt I get more out 01 spending It th1a way than. anyfbing else 1. can think of." ••• to Anon; for your offerina 01 $5 'for the k!Pen , , , to T.A.M. for $25 "This is 1rom stock In the CODIP8D7 w:bel'e I worked for 53 ye&1'll. Now I want the CCIIDP8D7 to work .... the Ilissions.. . . , Cat Old tills .,....... pill ~01U' . . . . . . . . te It . . . _ ... - . Bey. PIIIioa S. Sheea, National Diredor of The 8ee1ety fw tile I'roJtaIatien .. the PaItIt. 166 Jl'IftII Aven8e. New, yo.... New York 1...1. .. te 7 - Dloeepa DIrectGf', • Ill. ......... KayDl8lld T. c..w1Dit . . JfertIl . . . . SInet ............. M _.......

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THE ANCHORThurs., March 18, 1965

Melodies Fill Air As 'Fall River, Fairhaven Academies Schedule A.nnual Concerts for March 28 Both S'acred Hearts Academies in the Diocese, the one one ill Fairhaven, have chosen 8 Sun­ day night, March 28 for their Spring concerts. Fall River's program will be given in the school auditorium and Fair­ p haven girls. will assemble at of. eeIs 'm capt·· F d' t . . h Sch ol Ivny. or leKeIth Jumor HIg. 0, conscious people, Jane Chicca's New Bedford. SolOISts for project was Nibbling vs. Garg-_ the Fairhaven school will in- ing. .

m Fall River and the

clude Ronald Remy, tenor, and There were two first grants irl. Miss Rita Souza, soprano. Mean- the junior division, Mary Beth while, the Fall River orchestJ:a Soares and Margaret Morgan. will offer a program of classical Both girls did their project in and modern selections, ranging the field of physics. Margaret "from Bach and Beethoven to . Morgan built her own ham radio. Lerner and Loewe." Also joinBudding scientists at Domini­ ing in Fall River's concert will. can Academy, Fall River in­ be Coyle High School's jazz en- eluded, in the senior division, semble. The Taunton boys will - Pamela White, "PKU - The present music from the Dixie- Prowling Varmint"; Catherine land blues era to tOOay's jazz. Imbriglio, "The Study of Ion Ellen Demetrius is orchestra Exchange"; Elaine Talbot, president for SHA Fall River "Blood Group Identity Using and Norma Pereira is concert Plant Lectins"; and Suzanne mistress. Ratte, "Anesthetics vs. Marine Narry Baseball Life." Winners in the freshman Preparations are under way at division included Sharon Cor­ Prevost High School. Fall River, reia, Denise Janson, and Nina for Narragansett League base- Ouelette. ball. With the first game schedCollege Acceptances uled for Thursday, April 8, College acceptances continue there's not much time left to to make glad the hearts of Di­ choose and drill team members, ocesan seniors. Accepted by notes reporter Normand Dube. SMTI are Timothy Jewell, Nor­ Active practice begins next week man Lavoie, Richard Laprise, under coach Ray Carvalho. Timothee Maynard, Normand And at Bishop Stang in North Dube and Ronald Banville, all of. Dartmouth boys' intramural bas- Prevost. And at Dominican ketball games are top sport news, Academy Diane Paquette hal with jWlior and senior home- had good news from Salve Re­ rooms competing against each gina; Pamela White from St. other and sophs and freshmen Joseph's Hospital; and Diane La­ ditto. voie from Johnson and Wales. Coyle High School's yearbook, Juniors at Bishop Feehan in "The Viking" announces it has Attleboro are sponsoring a con­ passed the half:-way mark ill certby the Balladeers tomorrow production and will hit the night. And juniors are also busy presses very shortly. I!rother planning their prom, slated for, Richard O'Brien, C.S.C. 16 fac- Tuesday night, April 20. Miss ulty advisor. Eileen McSoley, class moderator, Still in first place in Narra- has directed organization work gansett League debating actioll and decorating committee mem­ are the varsity debaters from bers are mum about the theme, St. Anthony's, -New Bedford. which is to be a surprise to They are now in round six of everybody. Still with the busy league play. In second place is Feehan juniors, two have been Prevost. chosen to represent their school At Holy Family High in New in an annual English contest Bedford first place winner in the _ sponsored by the National Coun­ school science fair was Maureen cil of Teachers of English. Selec­ Normandin, a sophomore. Her tion was based on the writing of project was entitled "A Con­ an autobiography and Feehan's tinuous Supply of Oxygen for two winners are Thomas War­ Astronauts." burton and Maureen Miconi. Second prize went to another A family fashion show will be sophomore, Louise Lafleur, held in Mt. St. Mary auditorium whose project studied the effect at 7:30 Sunday night, March 21, of hormones, radiation and under sponsorship of the Mother growth substances on plants. McAuley Guild. Commentator "Pharmacidical Emulsions" will be State Sen. Mary L. Fon­ were the topic of junior Mare seca and models will be Mount Mathieu, third prize winner. Ten seniors. students merited honorable men­ Civies Winner tion awards. Dominican Academy's winner At Jesus-Mary Academy ill in a recent current events con­ Fall River science fair winners test conducted in Diocesan highs were Suzanne Lagarde, who was - Patricia Odynecky. Her demonstrated the effects of • paper will go to New York for "smoking machine" upon plants; further competition. Michelle Dupont, who studied Also at DA Rita Cantin and production and pasteurization of Paulette Petit have earned -gold milk; and Colette Richard, whose pins for taking shorthand at the exhibit dealt with mental retar­ rate of 120 words per minute for dation as attributed to infectious • five minute period. Mary diseases and' environmental Bento and Diane Methot earned genetical factors. pins for five minute, 100 words Nibbling VII. Gorging a minute tests. Bishop Stang's glee club wiD 'Some 150 girls entered the Mt. St. Mary Academy science fair participate ina music festival at in Fall River. "Judges remarked Emmanuel- College in -Boston on the neatness of the projects Sunday, March 21. All high and the difficulty of choosing," schools in the Boston area taught said Anchor reporters Monique by the Sisters of Notre Dame will be represented. Stang's of­ Demers and Lynne Chrupcala. First grant winners were: ferings will be "Choose Some­ Biology: Lynne Chrupcala, Joy thing Like a Star," a poem by Lacombe, Jane Chicca, Noreen Robert Frost which has been set Pingley, Anne Sullivan, Sonia to music; and a march from Uchmann, Gail Kerrigan, and "Where's Charlie?" As a finale, Janice Waskiel. First grants in all the glee clubs will combine the chemistry division were: to sing "Ours Is the WorId." Coyle's student council is plan­ Janice Novo, Elsie Pelton, and ning a "gigantic intramural bas­ Denita Grygiel. In the mathe­ matics division was Diane Viera. ketball program" wtih 260 stu­ Noreen Pingley has been work. dents and more ~an 25 teams ing on the problem of drugs for participating. Excluded are three years. Sonia Uchmahn's freshinen and varsity and 'jay­ project dealt with the behavior vee pla;yellilw although the latter

SENIOR OFFICERS: Senior class officers at Holy Family High School, New Bedford, are, from left, Gerald Guerreiro, vice-president j Jeannine Dumont, secretary ; Noreen Lowney, treasurer; Warren Sanford, president. two groups may be called on for consulation. Aso to be sponsored by the student council is a rec­ ord raffle. Approximately 300 records will be raffled off, with the first prize winner to walk home with 100 records. Wonder what Mom and Pop will say? Faculty-Student Games Faculty-student games are on tap at many schools. At Coyle, faculty handily beat students with a basketball score of 41-30. And faculty and students at Dominican Academy feted prin­ cipal Sister Mary Gerald on her feastday, with the program in­ cluding a playlet, a special cheer composed for Sister, and the presentation of gifts. National Honor Society recep­ tion ceremonies are scheduled for April at SHA Fall River. Theme will center around "In­ spiration of Great Americans: Washington, Lincoln, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Kennedy." Also at SHA, the student council is completing work on a student handbook, designed for incoming freshmen and "covering every facet of life at SHA, from activ­ ities to the team system." Choirs at Diocesan highs, charged with providing music for vocation Masses are practic­ ing diligently and also in the ·spirit of Vocation Month, four postulants and three novices, re­ cent graduates -of 'Holy Family High,spent the day at the school. Students and faculty attended Mass with the girls, who then

MONAGHAN

ACCEPTANCE

CORP.

THOMAS F. MONAGHAN Jft. Treasurer

142 SECOND STREET

OSborne 5-7856

; FALL RIVER

1·3

still further enhancing his abB­ ity by taking a 15 week course on foods at Stonehill College. Also at Feehan students wiD take a national Latin examina­ tion tomorrow, sponsored bIr Auxilium Latinum. Last yeai' the school merited a trophy and hopes to equal its record ~ year. Student of the mOnth III Dominican Academy is sopho­ more Susan Gagnon, whose pet peeve is "being taken advan.­ tage of," and who thinks tbe world needs more polite people. Amen to that, Susie. :_ And DA girls enjoyed their annual St. Patrick's Day asseI),l­ bly with a play presented by tbe orchestra entitled "Oh, no, n~ no!" and audience participatiQll in singing. Feehan Honor Society mem­ bers are tutoring students ita need of extra help under diree­ tion of Susan Connor. The ratio of teacher student is one to one, an ideal arrangement. Feehan's Sister Mary Urban will participate in a panel dis­ cussion Saturday, March 20 at a National Catholic Educational Association meeting at South Catholic High, Hartford, Conn. Other panelists will be Re". James Kelly of St. Mary's pal"­ ish, Mansfield and Dr. Joseph Kerrins, St. Joseph's pariBh, Attleboro.

enjoyed dinner with Bishop Ger­ rard. In the afternoon, the young religious visited each classroom, explaining and demonstrating Bible Vigils, ther. made time for a trip to Holy Family's grammar school division. Latin Test At Bishop Feehan Henry Se­ quin, the cafeteria's able chef, •

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I tft ANCHOR­

Thurs., March 18, 1965

Prelates Oppose Proposed Birth Con~,ol Policy

'Teachers 'Become Stude~ts, Every Saturday Kepple to Open NCEA Meeting' ms. As They Participate in Training Program

WASHINGTON (NC) Commissioner of Ed u cat io n Youngsters attending the schools of the Fall River Diocese are probably unaware of Francis Keppel Will give the keynote address- at the 62nd lin­ it, but on Saturdays their teachers become students. Nearly every Sister, Brother and lay nual convention of the National teacher in the Diocesan system is involved in a massive in-service training program be­ Catholic Educational Association ALBANY (NC) - Bishop gun two years ago by Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, superintendent of schools, with the aim of next month. William A. Scully of Albany, providing a quality education Keppel will speak at the open­ along with the inductive method ing meeting Monday, AprIl 19 as chairman of the New "to better prepare all of our of reasonIng. How the scientist in New York. The convention York State Catholic Welfare children for the modern, works, explain the Sisters, may will continue until April 22 un­ Committee, criticized the State oomplex society hi which, be more important to our chil­ der the theme: "Peace and Un­ Board of Social Welfare's pro­ dren than what he has learned, derstanding Through Education." posal to provide birth control with God's grace, they will work out their salvation." due to the rapid obsolescence of Francis Cardinal Spellman of advice and materials to unmar­ The in-service program in­ scientific knowledge. New York, host to the 20,000 ed­ ried relief recipients more than cludes courses in religion, sci­ Sister Mary Lucretia holds a ucators expected at the conven­ 18 yeal,"S of age. Master of Science degree from tion, will preside at the opening The New York State Catholic ence, mathematics and art, held the College of St. Rose, Albany, Pontifical Mass on the same day Welfare Committee is composed at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall N. Y., and has been awarded a~ in St. Patrick's Cathedral, the of the New, York Archdiocese River, and Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton. Classes are grant from the National Science NCEA said here. and the Brooklyn, Buffalo, Foundatton. Presently head of The celebrant will be Arch­ Rockville Centre. Rochester, given in conjunction with the College of the Sacred Hearts, the science department at st. bishop John P. Cody of New Syracuse, Albany and Ogdens­ conducted by the Holy Union Xavier's Academy, she is asso-. Orleans, president-general of burg dioceses. ciate editor of the Junior Acad­ the association of catholic Bishop Scully's statement was Sisters in Fall River. Teachers attend the courses emy Science Newsletter, a chair­ teachers and administrators. directed against the proposed man for the National Association Auxiliary Bishop John S. Spence "family planning" services and from all parts of. the Diocese, of Biology Teachers, and head of Washington will deliver the materials to unmarried relief some traveling more than 50 miles to be present. Their efforts of the biology committee for the sermon. recipients. Providence Diocesan Council of Speakers at the three general He pointed out the present are rewarded, for hand-picked Science Teachers. sessions of the convention will policy effectuated last year, professors offer them the cream Sister Mary Incarnata heads' be: Homer D. Babbidge, presi­ which provides suCh services to of new material and methods. the science department at Bishop dent, University of Connecticut, Theology Curriculum married persons· on relief, is not Feehan High School in Attleboro Storrs, Conn.; Auxiliary Bishop REV. PATRICK S. O'NEILL All elementary school teaehers now at issue. and is a candidate for a master's Clarence E. Elwell of Cleveland; BiSHOp ScUlly said the "New in the Diocese took Saturday "We look forward," says and Sister Margaret, president of York State Catholic Welfare morning courses in theology last Father O'Neill, "to a change· of . degree from Creighton Univer­ Committee reiterates the right academic year. They were based attitude towards mathematics on sity, Omaha. Her memberships; Trinity CollegeJ Washington, include the New England Assn.", D.C,. of married persons on relief, as on the "Our Life with God" re­ the part of both teachers and contained in the rule, to follow ligion series, and were offered pupils, from one of insecurity of Chemistry Teachers, the Na­ the dictates of their conscience" by Rev. Edmund T. Delaney of and fear to one of confidence, tional Science Teachers' Assn., the American Association for the in such services and materials. St. Joseph's parish, Fall River; 'Advancement of Science and the. Rev. Peter N. Graziano, St. enthusiasm and challenge." Common Good These desirable qualities ra­ Fall River Diocesan Science "However, the proposed Mary's Cathedral, Fall River; diate from the teac':1ers of the Curriculum Committee. arid Rev. John R. FoIster, st. manges in the rule pending be­ teachers. They are Sister Bar­ Art Course fore the board goes beyond the Anthony's parish, New Bedford. bara Mary, S.U.S.C. and Sister Just concluded is this year's matter of private conscience. It The in-service art course, theology course, which was held Mary Richard, S.U.S.C. Sister taught at Bishop Cassidy High involves public morality. It con­ CITIES SERVICE

Barbara Mary, who is teaching cerns the common good." Bishop in double session" on Monday seventh and eighth grade math, School by Sister Mary Teresita, DISTRIBUTORS

afternoon. Slanted towards high Scully said. is a member of the Sacred S.U.S.C., aims to help experi­ school teachers of religion, it "The proposal before the enced teachers to stimulate, plan, Gasoline

also attracted teachers of many Hearts College faculty and a promote and evaluate pupils' art board wollid endorse and pro­ math teacher ~t Sacred Hearts other secondary subjec~and mote promiscuity and extra­ work. The course proVides the Fuel and Range

Academy. Active, in several pro­ marital sexual relations 'by sub-· was based Oli the text "Jesus fe·ssional associations, she holds "teacher students" with the op.. Christ, the Lord of History" by , sidizing the provision of contra-. portunity to explore and experi­ degrees from St. John's univer­ eeption for unmarried relief Vincent M. Novak, S.J., ~hich sitY, Long Island, and Harvard. ment with various media, mate.. was newl1 introduced to Dioc­ recipients," he stressed. OIL BURNERS Sister Mary Richard, teacher rials, and modern creative tech­ "To protect the community . esan high schools in September. niques. Emphasis is placed on for the intermediate and lower Sessions, held at Bishop Cassidy For prompt delivery

and the public interest this pro­ grades, holds degrees froni developmental stages of creative posed change in public welfare High, were conducted by Father and mental growth in children & Day & Night Service

Providence Catholic Teachers' policy must be conscientiously DelancY, with the exception of College and Catholic University. and their art work. the last meeting, at which Rev; opposed by all men and wOlI}-en Sister Mary Teresita holds a G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS Philip J. King, professor of New Her master's thesis in mathe­ of good will interested or con­ bachelor's degree from Seton matics was published by the Testament theology at Weston cerned with public morality and Rural Bottled Gas Service Cuisenaire Company and last Hill College and is a eandiate the common good in our state," College and St. John's Seminary, Summer she taught in the grad­ for a master's degree from Notre Brighton, was guest lecturer. Dame University. Bishop Scully asserted. 61 COHANNET ST.

U An understanding of the uate school at Catholic Univer­ Religion dasseL: have con­ TAUNTON

sity. Bible and how to approach it is cluded for this academic year absolutely necessary to the un­ Importance of Science to for the teachers, but mathe­ Attleboro - No. Attleboro

derstanding of the whole Chris­ Science courses for interme­ matics, science and art eourses Taunton tian life," noted Father Delaney, diate and Seventh and eighth will continue through June. AUSTIN (NC) - A program in explaining that the course grade teachers are conducted by designed to improve and expand material was solidly scriptural. Sister Mary Lucretia, R.S.M. and the Catholic school system in New Math Sister Mary Incarnata, as.M., Texas was drawn up here by the Modern mathematics was in­ respectively. bishops from the state's eight troduced into first, second and Stressing content, method and seventh grades of Diocesan theory, they ai>n to show teach­ Sees. The program calls primarily sch<lOlS' in September, 1963. Last en how to present interesting for Catholic elementary and high September it was added to the And valuable science lessons and schools to meet the same aca­ third, fourth and eighth grades to demonstrate that science is AND demic standards as public and the in-service courses in not isolated, but can be corre­ lated with all other subjects. At schools, required for accredita­ new materials and methods were the same time the Sisters strive tion. The bishops decided that designed especially to aid teach­ all Catholic schools not now ac­ to deepen the teachers' own un­ ers in these years. • GENERAL TIRES • DELcO"BAnERIES credited must attain this status Hasty introduction of the derstanding of science and its • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS

as soon as possible, "but in no "new math" to elementary importance. Discussed are concepts of mat­ case will the time be extended schools without proper training FAll RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

for teachers can have disastrous ter and energy, physical and beyond five years." "The bishops of Texas are results, authorities point out, chemical properties and changes, firmly committed'to excellence therefore emphasis throughout and measurement. Experimen­ in Catholic schools, and far from . the teachers' course is on the tation, investigation and the in­ considering any phasing out, as discovery method of teaching, quiry method are emphasized, suggested in a few recent publi­ rather than on rote memoriza­ cations, they intend to continue tion ot rules and principles improving that system both in characteristic of t r a d it ion a I quantity and quality," said courses. It is hoped that pupils will be Callan Graham. executive direc­ chaIIenged to use and develop tor of the Texas catholic Con­ CONVENTIONAL - G." - F.H.A. FINANCING creative powers and to under­ ference. stand better why they perform Can on us anytime and tark over your prans mathematical operations as they do. "To the 'how' is added the NEW BEDFORD PUEBLO (NC)-Maybe Pope 'why'," says Father O'Neill. Some 500 elementary teachers John XXIII wasn't an Irishman, ·but-the new Catholic ltigh meet at Sacred Hearts Academy school here in Colorado was weekly for the new math course. .named Roncalli HIgh in honor Within each 75 minute class 'Of Pope John, (Angelo ROncalIi), period they learn that coplputa­ but the old school team name tion and mechanical operations 'Itt Parehaae Skeet .was retained - the Shmnrocks, !Ue not. abando~.'~. that Betweea there is more emphasis. on ori~ ~~ow the team membel'$, jnSist WYman 9-6984 WIIUaJa A 11.... s-. the school namt i< r~ally pro- gina! thinking. understandinc Bnd structure. DOuneed "Ron Kelly."

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YHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Fon River-Thurs. ,. - -. 18, 1965

1 5

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16

nn:

ANLHUI(­

Thurs., March 18, 1965

Guidel,ines

Continued from Page One

,

-,

eity-St. Joseph, Mo., will head the group. Preliminary meetings already have been held. Subcommission for dialogue with the National Lutheran Council. This is the most ad­ vanced project. A meeting be':' tween Lutheran and Catholic • pokesmen already was set for March 16 in Baltimore. Subcommission for conversa­ tion with the Presbyterians. This unit will be directed by Bishop Ern est L. Unterkoefler of Charleston, S. C. Subcommission for dialogue with other Christian churches. Auxiliary Bishop Joseph B. Brunini of Natchez-Jackson, Miss., will head this group. It win deal with churches with which there have been no l)re­ liminary conversations. Subcommission to explore th~ question of the relationship be­ tween the Catholic unit and. Jews. Bishop Francis P. Leipotig of Baker, Ore., will dired.

Teachers, Students in JAMAICA (NC) - Faculty members supported by students are engaged in a controvers)· wit h administration officials here at St. John's University, largest Catholic institution of higher learning in the nation and located here on Long Island. The differences came to a head when some 200 teachers walked out of a general faculty meeting after Andrew Robinson, associate professor of philoso­ phy, read a protest 'statement. The controversy was height­ ened when some 700 students staged a protest rally during which a priest-teacher was booed after he remonstrated that the university's "dirty linen and garbage should not be thrown out into New York City."

Controv~rsy With

Administrative officers and deans held a closed-door meet­ ing, then issued a statement which called the teachers' walk­ out at the faculty meeting "hasty and precipitous." The statement also said that prior to the faculty meeting "salary adjustment for a sub­ stantial number of the faculty had been worked out and was in the process of being commu­ nicated." The statement also said "the academic senate had also au­ thorized a study of methods for greater participation in univer­ sity matters." Lists Complaints The 200 teachers are members of the American Association of University Professors. Robinson,

University Administration

chairman of the AAUP chapter at the university, in his com­ plaints listed: lack of voice by faculty members in shaping

university policies; rejection of a request for across-the-board salary increases; withholding automatic tenure upon promo­ tion to associate professor.

K of C to Honor Father Hesburgh

Father Edward J. Burke, C.M:., president of the university conducted by the VincentilUl Fathers, expressed regret over the faculty protest. He said the university was aware of the problems outlined by the teach­ ers. He added they were "internal problems" and expressed hope "we will be able to resolve the difficulty a m 0 R g ourselves." The president was not present when the students protest ra1lJ" was staged. He had been called away from the university bl' a death in his family.

BOSTON (NC)-Father Theo­ dore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., presi­ dent of the University of Notre Dame, has been named for the 1965 Lantern Award of the Mas­ sachusetts Knights of Columbus. The presentation will be made at the 65th annual PatriotsPDay dinner Monday, April 19, here. Father Hesburgh is the first educator named for the award given annually in recognition of outstanding service to God and country.

V.ocations Continued.from Page CJne tries are struggling to acil:'e,/c some modest increase in VOC:l­ tions, Ireland continues to have more than the Church needs at home. As a result, Irish priest'l, Bmthers and nuns leave her:.: daily for all parts of the wor}:!l. Statistics for 1963 reveal tih.:l!; 404 priests were ordained in Ire­ land. Of these, only 93 were 3'1"­ dained for Irish dioceses. An­ other 106 were ordained for "foreign" dioceses, 46 were mem­ bers of missionary societies, an;!! 159 belonged to other relig:'3:LS orders and congregations. Nuns, Brothers :vIost Irish dioceses have an the priests they rieed, and i1 i3 very rare that one of them :r::a:;r have to borrow a priest from ar..­ ot:'er diocese. Consequen~::J. many young men are orda5.r.eil to serve in dioceses overseas. :1::1 1953, for example, 34 wer.~ t<J dioceses in Britain, 61 to t~'l~ United States, nine to Austra::3 ami! one each to Canada ar.::i South Africa. Of the 159 ordained for reli­ gious .orders, only 66 remair.e:!! in Ireland. The rest were sen~ to foundations in other cmm­ tries. Besides the priests, hun­ dreds of Trish nuns and Brother.. are serving in mission )and3 throughout the world.

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Nation To Watch Continued from Page One It is President Johnson's hope to make this city a model for t:ne country, not only in outward ap­ pearance, but also in law abi:ii­ ance and enformcement. In fad., he announced his intentior. to name a local crime commission before he told Congress of h:'s plan to appoint the national gr.aup. Acute Problems Washington was singled out for special treatment because it is a Federal jurisdiction with crime problems similar to those of other large American cities. President Johnson· sa i d it "shares with our large cities the .special and acute problems as­ sociated with rapid urban :1)09­ ulation growth." The President's crime message to Congress coincided witb a Federal Bureau of Investigatian report that there was a 13 per C!ent rise in the national crime Index in 1964 as compared witl1 1963. Washington showed dis­ ttnbing increases in virtaaUy all categories of crime.

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ST. AUGUSTINE, VINEYARD HAVEN The Women's Guild and Holy Name Society will attend a Com­ munion breakfast following 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, April 11. A guild meeting will be held tonight. ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER New Women's Guild officers include Mrs. Frank Krauzyk, president; Mrs. Paul Batchelder, vice-president; Miss Grace Flan­ agan, secretary; Mrs. Michael Biszko, treasurer. A guildola is announced for Wednesday, April 21.

ST. THERESA, SOUTH ATTLEBORO The parish will sponsor a variety show at 2 Sunday after­ noon and 8 Sunday night, April 4 with proceeds to benefit the building fund. Rev. Roger L. Gagne is general chairman, with Mrs. Ann Gawlik and Martin McCann representing the Con­ fraternity of Christian Mothers and the Holy Name Society as co-chairmen. Mrs. Eugenia Pig­ gott is director of specialties and Thomas Piggott is in charge of music. ST. JEAN BAPTISTIt, FALL RIVER A ham and bean supper It! planned for Saturday night, March 27 by the Council of Catholic Women. In charge of arrangements is Mrs. Ernest Mercier. The unit's next meeting will be Monday, April 12. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER The annual mystery ride of the Council of Catholic Women is announced for Saturday, April 24 by Miss Mary Vasconcellos and Mrs. Mary Lou Silvia co­ chairmen. A rummage sale is planned for Friday and Saturday, March 26 and 27, at the parish hall. OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP, NEW BEDFORD The Women's Guild will hold an auction Saturday, April 10 in the church hal. Mrs. John Izdebski, chairman, will be aided by a large committee. A regular meeting is set for Sunday, March 28. ST. PIUS X, SOUTH YARMOUTH Mrs. Lawrence Jasper, former Massachusetts Mother of the Year, will be guest speaker at the annual Communion break-' fast of the Women's Guild, to be held Sunday, March 28 at the Captain's HOUSE: Buffet. In charge of reservations are Mrs. John Doherty and Mrs. John Crawford. The unit also plans a semi­ formal dinner dance at Cape Towne House in Harwich from 7 to 12 Saturday night, April 24. SANTO CHRISTO, FALL RIVER A membership social is planned for Tuesday night, April 27 in the church hall by the Councll of Catholic Women. ST. MARY'S, NEW BEDFORD A rummage sale will be spon­ sored by the Women's Guild Thursday t h r 0 ugh Saturday, MarcQ 25 to 27, at 1610 Acushnet Avenue. Hours will be from 10 in the morning to 9 at night Thursday and Friday and from 10 to 1 Saturday Donations will be received from 2 to 4 and- 7 to 9 Monday, Tuesday and Wed..; nesday, March 22 through 24. The unit plans a Communion supper for Sunday, April 25, with Mrs. George Rothmyer in charge of arrangements. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies Guild announces a rummage sale from 9 to 4 Fri­ day, March 26 and from 9 to noon Saturday, March 27 at the ebureh hall. Mrs. MaJ'7 J. Bo.

ta chairman.

-------------Offers Congress Prayer

ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild plans a ham whist for Saturday, April 10, and a Mother's Day corpor­ ate Communion Sunday, May 9. Mrs. Alice Correira is chairman for the whist. In charge of the Mother's Day pro­ gram, which will include break­ fast in the parish hall, is Mrs. Dolores Amaral, who announces that other parish groups will join in the breakfast. ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold a cake sale from 8 to 12 Sunday morning, March 28 in the parish school. Doughnuts and muffins will also be available. Donations may be left at the school fro~ 1 to 4 Saturday afternoon or before Masses on Sunday morn­ ing. A penny sale, open to the pub­ lic will be held in American Legion Hall, Third Street, at 8 Monday night, April 5. In charge of arrangements is Mrs. Wilfred Callaghan. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER A special Mass at 9 tomorrow morning will honor St. Joseph. The Women's Guild will hold a rummage sale tonight and to­ morrow night from 6 to 9 and also from 9:30 to 2 tomorrow, in the Brightman Street parish hall. Boy Scouts will sponsor a parents' night and court of hon­ or at 7:30 Sunday night, March 21 in the school hall. Also on Sunday the Caecilian choral group will sing at the 11 o'clock Mass. ST. PATRICK, FALL RIVER A living rosary and a_ motion picture, "The Shroud" will fea­ ture the Women's Guild meeting Monday, April 5. In charge of arrangements will be Miss Sheila Higgins and' Mrs. Mary Kwarcinski. A guildola is set-, for Tuesday, April 20 and a Communion breakfast and cal­ endar party are planned for May. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women announces a chicken barbecue supper for Saturday night, April 3. Mrs. J. Roland St. Pierre is chairman. Square dancing will follow the meal. Next regular meeting is set for Monday, April 5. SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAIRHAVEN Parishioners interested in join­ ing a new CCD dscussion group are requested to contact Alfred Furtado, 26 Brown Street. Both men and women are eligible for membership. The CCD will meet at 8:15 Monday night, March 22 in the school cafeteria. Girl Scout Troop 20 will meet at 1:15 Sunday afternoon, March 21 in Oxford School yard, to depart for a concert in Boston Symphony Hall. Girls are re­ quested to bring a bag lunch. Drinks will be provided. Return time will be between -6:30 and 7. SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER The Women's Club will spon­ sor a whist in the church hall at 8 Monday night, March 22. Mr. Paul Griffin, chairman, will be aided by Mrs. J"oseph Gamacho. The unit is forwarding plans for a Communion breakfast Sun­ day, May 2, with Mrs. Thomas Cahill and Mrs. Rocco Postig­ lione in charge. An installation banquet is being arranged by Mrs. John Pacheco and Mrs. William O'Neill for Wednesday, May 19 at Coachman Restaurant,

'1'ivel'ton.

17

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Mar. 18,1965

The Parish Parade

Negro Benedictine Prior Stresses

Greatest Good for All

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father Bernardine Patterson, O.S.B., first Negro to head a Benedictine monastery in this country, implored, "Teach these Thy chosen legislators, that the greatest gain for each is found in the greatest good for all" as he opened a session of the House of Representatives here -- with prayer. Father Patterson is prior of the interracial St. Maur's priory in South Union, Ky., which is considering moving to Indianap­ olis, Ind. The 40-year-old Benedictine is a cousin of Floyd Patterson, former heavyweIght boxing champion, "and was a top ranked

P.C. HEAD: Rev. William P. Haas, O.P., 37, becomes the youngest president of Providence College among the eight heads of the Do­ minican institution. The Newark native will take charge on July 1.

Urges Citi%ens Continued from Page One which will be sent to Congress item by item. The President emphasized that "basic responsibility rests on lo­ cal, authorities,' but said we must "recognizE" the burdens they now bear." To help local authorities, he called for: In­ creased Federal law enforce­ ment efforts; a comprehensive, penetrating analysis of the o:ri­ gins and nature of crime in America. He also proposed medical treatment instead of imprison­ ment for some drug addi~ts; leg­ islation forbidding mail order sale of firearms except to im­ porters, manufacturers and deal­ ers licensed by the Treasury De­ partment; and expanded and strengthened Department of Jus­ tice fight on organized crime; broader and stronger approaches in the fight on juvenile delin­ quency; assistance to state, local and private groups, develop­ ment and testing of experimen­ tal methods of crime control.

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amateur boxer before he went to the seminary. In his prayer before the House, Father Pattersol! implored God to guide the legislators in "their deliberations amid the pressures of domestic developments and foreign turmoil" and to inspire "their hearts with a brighter tomorrow."

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ST. LOUIS (NC) - St. Louis Vniversity here in Missouri has received $1,806,500 from 13 firms and corporations toward the goal of $35 million it hopes to raise curing its five-year 150th anr.i-' ,'el"sary "Leadership Program."

BLIND BOY: WHATfS HE WORTH? GAI\IAL, WHO IS ONLY SEVEN, "'AS BORN BLIND. HE WILL BE BLIND AS LONG AS HE LIVES ••• Three months .1'0 in Gau (where blindness was eonsidered a "family disgrace") lae trlUl kept bidden behind closed doors. 'IOOlt7 he Is a pupil at the Pontifica' Mission Center lew the Blind. Be Is learning how te read (with his fingers) and write, how te play with other children, and how to make baskets and rUgs. In the playground during recess he plays ball (the ball has a bell 7~, Hol, P"h..', Mission' Aitl Inside) with blind boys Uke him· lor Ih, om","1 Chllrch .elf. In yean to come, please God, Gamal wlll marry, have healthy children, and support them with what he earns . • • The Pontifical Mission Center Is tbe only school for the blind In the entire Gaza Strip (population 400,006). Gamal is a Moslem, not a Christian. The Center Berves on the basis 01 "need, not creed," since blindness plays no favorites • . . The Holy Father asks our help. $2,488 trill b1l7 a bus to take blind 70ungsters safely to and from the Center. $300 will JNl7 tor Gamal's training tor one yeaw. $14 will buy a blind lIoy'. noontime lunch lor OM year. $5 will buy his clothes, $3 a pair of Ihoes • • • Please help. Christ died for Gamal. Your Lenten lacrlfice tow the blind will brighten YOUF E..ter Sundu.

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WHAT OTHERS ARE DOING 21,1100 nuns (ReligioU3 of the Sacred Heart) have lold their gold rings of consecration and Iliven the money to the Holy Father for the poor. Like to do the same? Sell the rings, brooches, old gold you no longer want, and we'll use the proceeds where help is needed most. 1,000 Catholics In Europe have pledged $8 a month to train priests overseas. In India, Iraq, and Ethiopia, poor boys who want ttl be priests cannot pay their own ex­ penses. Like tb sponsor one of them? It costs only $100 a year ($600 lor the entire six-year course). We'll send you Ills name and he wlll write to you through us.

o REMINDER-EASTER IS LESS THAN A MONTH AWAY. OUR EASTER GIFT CARDS combine your Easter greetings with • ..ift to the missions in the name 01 the person you dellipate. Select a gift (from the list below), send as the )lerson's name and address with YOllr donation-and we do all the rest. We'll send that person an attractive gift CDi'd, In time lor Easter, explaining what you bave done. Here aro lOme gilts to select Irom: Mass Kit ($100), Altar ($75), Mon­ Ikanee ($40), Cbaliee ($40), Tabernacle ($25), m(,nth's supply ef tood for a refugee family ($10" Sanetuary Bell ($5), blanket for an orphan ($2).

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City ...•••••••••••••••••••.. State .•••••.. Zip Code . . ..••

~'l2ear5stOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPElLMAN, President

.11_........... Sec"

Magr. Jo.." Y. I,. . Nat1 Settd to:

CATHOLIC NEAR lAST WELfARE ASSOCIATION

HO Mad"" AM. Of 42JN1 St.

No. Yorll, N. Y. 10017

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18

THE AN':FJR~Dio<:_ aHa" Itiver-Thurs. Mar. 18, 1965

World's Hungry

-G~nuine Education Leads To Knowing Serving God l

By Rev. Joseph T. McGloin, S. J.

-'

Continued front Page One "We would have you con ve,. tG them our warm appreciatiOll for shouldering with us the bur­ den, increasingly heavy, of feed­ ing and caring for the flock of Christ, His people everywhere." On his historical visit to India last December, the Pope told the U. S. bishops, he saw firsthand "some of the fruits of your prac­ tical love of neighbor." "We are moved by the effec­ tiveness of this brotherly assist­ ance, and we cannot but encour­ age you, venerable' brothers, to continue and to increase this program on behalf of the poor and undernourished peoples of the world. "Such proof of fraternal af­ fection and sympathetic under­ standing cannot but contribute to bring about peace based on justice, charity and mutual re­ spect," Pope Paul wrote. In its globe-girdling work of mercy, CRS-NCWC dispenses food, clothing, medicines and other relief materials solely on the basis on need-without re­ gard to religion, color or na­ tional origin. Our Brothers "We all realize ·more vividl,. that these hungry and sick, these who are without home and with­ out hope, wherever they 'live, are the fatherly concern of all of us .who have the pastoral care of souls, and the fraternal concern of mankind. in general," Pope Paul wrote to the U. S. bishops. "The poor, and those in whatever need, are not mere ab­ stractions, not mere numbers, not only ,staggering statistics. Like us and our flocks, they are flesh and bone, heart and soul. They have eyes and ears, they walk and talk and hope and yearn. Like us they suffer when in need, and their .needs are greater and more elemental than we can really appreciate. In a word, these poor are our broth­ ers," Pope Paul continued.

There was this businessman who sent out three of his employees to see what they could do about increasing his capital for him. He gave $500 to one of them, to another $200, and $100 to a third, telling them to see what they could earn with it. The $500 . own propaganda. employee soon came back It is, as a matter of fact, con­ with another $500, and 80 sidered "freedom of education" " the boss was pleased and to. have a Communist explain made him a vice-president. The "Why I Am A Communist and second employee also did 'well, an atheist," but it would be vi­ . doubling his

olating that "wall of separation '..working money,

between church and state" to : too, and bring­ have anyone dare to talk on " ing in another

Why he believes in God. $200. So he was

There is, too, the exaggerated 'given a raise,

assumption, even among so­ . too. The $100

called educators themselves, that character came

credit is a synollym for "educa­ back happy, too,

tion"-so many hours, so much - the reason be­ exposure to learning, and you tn g t hat h e

get a diploma or a degree as BISHOP REGAN CLUB: Among active members of hadn't lost any proof of it. Bishop Regan Club, currently working to supply laboratory of the money. Even where knowledge and for prelate's projected new hospital in Philippines are, from He hadn't earned credit do coincide, there is like­ left, Mrs. Arthur McGaughey, Miss Margaret Goggin Mrs. any either, but lie had at least ly to. be knowledge only about Philip F. Tripp, Mrs. Dennis Munroe. '. kept the money intact in a one's "field," so that (a) conver­ safety-deposit box. And for that sation in other fields is impossi­ , stroke of genius, he's still emp­ ble or (b) the expert in one fiel:! tying wastebaskets. comes to consider himself an You'll remember Christ's par­ expert in all fields. Continued from Page One

been busy since coming back. I able of the talents-five talents Adult Example bonds against his release.

have visited 13 of 19 parishes. to one man, two to another, one Club members also shipped . We had a day of recollection for to another; with the poor one­ It isn't just teen-agers who are books to the Bishop, carefully .priests, a pastors' meeting; a i talent kook coming back happy immature- in their outlook on chosen to interpr~t America to meetihg of the heads of schools. . 'that· he hadn't lost it, when the education, and it isn't surprising teenagers, and presented him We plan on building one high: . whole idea had been to put it to they sometimes stay immature with a station wagon, predeces­ school-if we can get the land" work and earn something with because of adult example. But it sor of the jeep now in service. and we shall make additions to is important that you teen-agers There are 22 women in the four or five high schools. Thus it. Intellect First do pick up a mature attitude Bishop Regan Club, said Miss we have 18 diocesan high God has handed out talents towards the intellectual life, so Gertrude Stiles, treasurer. 'From schools; three colleges and five to us in pretty much the same that you don't grow up to know Fairhaven, New Bedford and grammar schools. We have 41 way-five to one, two to an­ very well that two and two are Mattapoisett, they meet monthly boys in the minor seminary and other. And it's quite obvious four, but completely ignorant five boys in the major." that it isn't the number of tal­ of the relation of that isolated , in each other's homes for recita­ tion of a rosary for the missions The Bishop's major project at ents that matters. We one-talent fact to other facts. You don't and a social period, highlighted the moment, however, is the new people are not responsible for want to know just the "What?" with the latest news of the hospital and assistance for this five, but you five-talent charac­ but also the "So what?" Bishop. may be sent him in care of Miss ters are. And the important Now there is simply no intelli­ His late;t report outlined his Stiles at 120 Chestnut Street, thing for all of us is that we gent way of educating yourself current busy schedule. "I have Fairhaven. use whatever talents we have (and no one else can really ed­ been given instead of burying ucate you) unless you begin them. with the most fundamental of Now in this realm there's one facts-that the only purpose you talent we're all responsible for,' have is to get to God, and that in varying degrees not just for you accomplish this by knowing, keeping it safe from harm by loving and serving Him. burying it. This talent is, of B u i 1 d you r "education" course, your intellect. around any other fact or seem­ . Now most teen-agers are old ing fact, and you can never be enough to understand that their really learned. So soak up all the intellect is supposed to be de­ facts in the world, and never put veloped and used. But you still them together to come to know run into some who seem to think God, and you'll be nothing but that this whole education busi­ a dismal unintelligent failure. ness is only' chore, an unpleas­ See God even in the fact that ant period of their lives when two and two are four, and you've they have to be exposed to got a good start on genuine "learning" in order t9 mark time learning. in between recreation periods­ Education Privilege sports. 'dates, whl\t-have-you­ - You're not intellectually ma­ need young Americans with a spirit of 'sacrifice and the and before marriage. ture until you're genuinely in­ Ridiculous Attitude tellectually curious, until you will to dedicate themselves °to the' salvation of the "most To these zombies, education is want to know about everything ·sheer drudgery, rather than a there is--or, as some wit has abandoned souls!H privilege. Homework is some­ phrased it, "about everything thing you do-when you can't knowable, and a few other get out of it-with the radio and things." With this attitude, you The Redemptorists work in the U.S.A.-in the West TV set and telephone within can see that yOUI' formal school­ easy reach. The only benefit of ing is not something to endure, "school" is that you' met your but something to cherish as a Indies - in Brazil - in Paraguay. If you are anxious to friends there - and if you're privilege (one not enjoyed by l!-1cky you might even get to sit everyone by any means), be­ know more about the Redemptorists - write to or visit­ next to them in class. Occasion­ cause this schooling guides you ally, too, one might even be and gives you the framework able to cause some anguish to for that real learning which you "the enemy," the teachers. must accomplish by your own lEV. MICHAel L. DILLON-Vocation Director-REV. TERRENCE M. MURPHY, C.SS.R. Now most teens know that this will and industry. sort of attitude is ridiculous. So grow up intellectually, and And yet, it's probably also true forget this stuff about school that "most" don't give anywhere being just a bore or a chore to near their top ~fforts to devel­ be endured between days off. oping their intellects to the full. This attitude is only for the Freedom of Education childish-no matter what their There is, too, the myth that age. Think, too, of how silly THE REDEMPTORIST FATHERS "freedom of education" or free­ you'll feel if you have to stand Basilica of Oyr Lady of Perpetual Help dom of thought" is somehow before the throne of God one linked up with getting every day and take part in a conver­ 5 East 74th Street 1545 TREMONT STREET propagandist ~ no matter how sation something like this: narrow he is intellectually - to GOD: "How did you use that New York 21, New York ROXBURY, MASS. "address the student body," not intellect of yours?" to give them the sort of objec­ YOU: "Just fine. I was smart tive truth a trained teacher can enough to bury it so I wouldn't offer. but to .expose youthful, lose it. Pretty cool, huh?" impressionable minds to their GOD; "coon"

H·elping Bishop Build Hospital

THE REDEMPTORIST FATHERS AND BROTHERS

..

The Redemptorist Fathers


-'fI

..

,'

"

By

'. ·March '18, 1965

lJ~ace

.Acid' r-~st Of, Christicorrn.s

Fr~,~ek

If any local high' school athletes are in a position to learn a sport through a process of osmosis, the basketball players at Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro are. If ever a process of learning was possible, it would be in this case, for the head bas­ player on the team. He was ketball coach at Bishop Fee­ , chosen twice to the All Catholic han is Joe Hughes 'whos~ All American Team and the All personal talents brought him New England Team.

CINCINNATI (NC)-Thf: nation's racial conflict was characterized as the ."acid test of our Christianity" by

San Francisco F'ooba II $ta r Relates Steps. to Conversion

Scholastic Honors

'famOU$ for"

Closed Ret'recit

C. Austin

,QUALITY 'ond SERVI'CEI

Mortgage Service

"Save With ,Safety"

Alumni of Merrimack College, Andover, will hold a Commu­ nion breakfast following 9 o'clock ~ass on the campus Sun­ day morning, March 28. Hon. Maurice A. Donahue, Massachu­ setts Senate president, will be auest speaker.

at

NEW BEDFORn~'ACUSHNET

CO-OPERATIVE BANK

115 WILLIAM ST.

Cc~ntry

In

Upon graduating from Holy as far as a brief stay, as a player, with the professional champions, Cross Joe entered the armed

· forces and served as a personal

the Boston Celt­ specialist in the Dental corps.

,ics. But Hughes

While in the Army Joe con­

himself admits,

tinued his basketball career by

"that such a

playing for the base team that

p.rocess of

·played semi-prQ ball in the learning basket­

Trenton City League and the ball is highly

New, Jersey State League. He improbable and

was selected to the All Regi-. that the true

mental Service Team and All athlete learns

Army Tournament Team: Being and develops

discharged from active duty, Joe t h r 0 ugh con­

returned to Boston in time for stant practice

the trial period for the Boston and a personal

, Celtics, who had drafted him the desire to excel."

The Feehan mentor added previous Spring. Joe was kept that he thought that the ,whole by the Celties until the deadline key to success for an athlete 18 when he was the· last man not necessarily talent, but rather dropped from the team for the all out effort.: '''We' receive our 1958-59 season. Joe did not enter the teaching individual talents as gifts 'from 'I; field immediately. He worked , God, but boys involved in" ath­ JOE HUGHES letics must supply the hUstle ·for two years as a personal Bishop Feehan High School manager for the Service Bureau 'from within themselves." The Central Falls native might r Corporation which is a subsid~ not be well remembered in the tar:v of the IBM., dataproces'" Fan River Diocese (except 1ft sing company.. In 1960 Joe began the Attleboro area) for biB high 'his teaching and coaching pro­ school exploits. But those that' 'fessions at Central Falls Junior High School. In the following follow college athletics will re­ SAN FRANCISCO (NC) ....,. and his wife, Mary, started ... member him from bis days at year he was appointed 'head 'bas­ rious' discussions about religion, F~back J.D. Smith of the San ketball coach and physical edu­ Holy Cross. eation director at Feehan High, Francisco 4gers called it tbe which eventually led them to Six Letter Mall Joe is the IOn of Joseph and which was then in its second most important TD he'll ever take instructions in the Catholie seore when he, his wife and Faith beginning a year ago. The Alice Hughes of Pawtucket. He · year of existence. Feehan com­ Smith children were prepared their three children were re­ attended Central Falls High pleted its first season in the for baptism by Sister Bernard­ School from 1951 to 1954. While Bristol County,League this year. ceived into the Catholic Faith ette of the St. Agnes school staff. In speaking of baskeball, the at St. Agnes church here. Joe was in high school he left The pro gridiron star said he game which has played such a a record that will in all likeli­ Ipadias Godparent. hood never be touched by any large part in Hughes' life, Joe has been interested in Catholi­ Lou Spadia, 4ger general man­ basketball player at Central' says "Basketball is definitely cism since boyhood. Smith said Falls High. He earned six letters, secondary to academics, but it his interest was whetted in high ager, and his wife were godpar-. provides a foundation in some school days through association· ents for the Smiths. Two of three each in baseball and bas­ ketball. He was chosen for three boys' lives that ,might' not· have with priests at a Catholic higb, Smith's teammates, Jim John­ consecutive years to be on the ever come through academics. school in Greenville, S. C. His son and. recently acquired> Abe All Blackstone Valley Team and Basketball did a lot for me, but public school team, lie recalled, Woodson, witnessed the 'cere­ to be on the All Rhode Island in the end it was the education played against the Catholic, mony at which Father Daniel Class' B Basketball Team. In his that I gained through my high school, but the priests allowed Sheehan officiated. 'The' 1965 season will be, senior year he was chosen to be' school and college days that is the public schoolers to use the Catholic school field and gym Smith's ninth with the 4gers. a starting member of the All ·now providing my livelihood. I '. He is one of the' few performers hope, in other words, that all for practices, Smith said. State Basketball Team. Smith said a few years ago he, in the National Football League In the Rhode Island State ,athletes in high school keep . "who gained mOre' than 1,000 Tournament he was selected to things In their proper perspec­ . the All Tourney Team. and also tive." yards in one season - 1,036 in 'Joe has not abandoned com­ as the most valuable player of 1959.

Diocesan students cited at an,

the tournament in 1950. Joe set pletely his role as an active honors assembly at Stonehill

the school scoring record of player. He still plays occasion­ more than 1200 points that stood ally for the Pawtucket Colts, a College, North Easton, include

semi-pro' ball team. Last year Mrs. John J. Sullivan, Fall

for ten years. In his senior year he received he was selected as the most River, bighest average in philos­

the Max Labida Award for the valuable player in the annual ophy; and Donald N. Cloutier, New Bedford; Judith E. Con­ best stu!lent-athlete, and the M.I.S.F.I.T.S. Tournament (fac­ ulty tourney) held at Norton way, Taunton; and Jeanne B.' Daughters of the American Rev­ Morris~ette, Fall River, inducted.' High School. " . olution.. Award for the best stu­ In June of 1963 Joe married as new members of the campus dent at Central Falls. Although Joe was a standout in basket­ the former Diane. DeStefano of cbapter of Delta Epsilon Sigma, , ball, he was also a fine baseball Pawtucket and they presently . nstionQ1 Catholic honor society:, player, chosen to be the All Star reside in that city. first baseman on the..All Rhode .. / Islan'd Class B Team in 1954.... Hoop Captain ,Mi~hael . After sifting tbrough muner­ " SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Twen­ ous athletic scholarships, Hughes ty-six l?rotestant ministers from Inc. entered the Jesuit institute of . 1~ Texas cities made a closed Holy Cross. While at the Cross, retreat conducted by Msgr. Roy , FUNERAL SF"VICE . COMPLETE Joe played for three years and Rihn of St. Pius X parish at St. played all three positions ­ Joseph's Retreat House here. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. guard, forward and center ­ The ministers were from Episco­ anywhere on Cape Cod attesting to his versatility. He pal,Methodist and Lutheran 549 COUNTY STREET is presently listed as ninth in the churches. all time scoring column of Holy • RESIDENTIAL Cross hoopsters. Joe was the cap­ tain of the Crusaders in 1958 and • COMMERCIAL also in that year was given the • CONSTRUCTION George Kaftan Award for being • SEASONAL selected the most valuable

Merrimack Alumni

19

,'TFf'E ANCHOR -

Joe'· Htig~~s'{%~Past· Exploits~"'''';''

'$p'urr~f~r,"',F~ehan Courtmen '

NEW BEDFORD, MASS~

Call EX 8-2266

,Bass River Savings Ban~

the catechetical office of the Cincinnati archdiocese. Religion teachers were chal­ lenged to discover new ways of ,teaching interracialjustic~ to students. A special bulletin of the office said: "The reiigion teacher must go out of his way to bring in the racial issue be­ eause usually the religion, test­ books do not treat the subjeet adequately." In the Cincinnati area there are some 100,000 Negroes.. but "only 2,000 are Catholics~",,said the bulletin which is circulated among catechists. Disillusioned "Some of them used to be Catholic but have left the . ' Chpreh in disillusionment; ,they hav.e. been scandalized ,by. the terrible silence of the decent," ,*he..bulletin continued. "Negroes have nev~r been welcom~d by white Catholics into the city parishes or into the sub~rban , neighborhoods." , The problem. iF "not one of s~nding missionaries' to the ,Ne­ groes, but ·rather of changin. the attitudes of white Catholics,· .the bulletin stated. Attitudes "Our religion teachers must .go out of their way to be sure that their students bave the pro per Christian attitudes toward Negroes. What a calam­ ity if the teachers themselves are prejudiced!" it added. Textbooks usually are not deliberately anti-Negro, the bul­ letin noted, but "they are slanted to the middle-class white men­ . tallty, particularly in the ,iJ1W1­ trations."

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20

THE ANCHOR-DioceM of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 18, 1965

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