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Archbishop· Krol Hits
Attempt to Pervert Gospel Narrative
The CHOR
PHILADELPIDA (Ne) - Archbishop John J. Krol of Philadelphia told a Jewish audience h~re that the New T.estament gives "no basis for hate or anti-JeWish feeling." Archbishop Krol said that "in recent 'years' some have dis torted the Gospel account of about the fate of these two the Crucifixion, and have declarations. used the distorted version as He said, however, that there a pretext for persecuting the is "no reason for doubt" that the
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, March 19, 1964
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Vol. 8, No. 12 ©
1964 The Anchor
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Hub Doctors In Tribute To Sister Members of the St. Luke's Guild of Greater Fall River and friends of Sister Maur een Thomas, M.D., of Mary knoll will be among the hun dreds and hunCireds planning to attend the charity dinner dance of the Boston Physicians' Guild of St. Luke in Boston on Friday night, April 3. Richard Car din a 1 Cushing, Archbishop of BOi;lton, will pre side at the social honoring the Fall River native who is re turning from her religious and medical labors in South America for the outstanding annual event of the Hub Catholic physicians. The Maryknoll physician, who was 'Anne Marie Higgins before she joined the religious, curTurn to Page Fifteen
Monsignor Vieira Seriously Sick Consecrated Auxiliary Bishop of Fall River Diocese
March 19, 1959
.. Bishop Gerrard Marks
Episcopal' Anniversary
Five years ago this morning, Most Rev. James J. Ger rard, D.];}., V.G., rector of St. Lawrence Church, New Bed ford, was consecrated Titular Bishop of Forma and Auxiliary Bishop of the Fall River Diocese. Consecrating prelate was the Most Rev. James L. Con. nolly, D.D., Dr.Sc.Hist., Bish- New Bedford on June 9, 1897, C1I. op of Fall River. Most Rev. the late William and Elizabeth Livesey Gerrard. He attended St. Russell J. McVinIJ.ey, D.D., Mary's Parochial School, which Bishop of Providence and Most Rev. Jeremiah F. Minihan, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of Boston, were eo-consecrators. Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, was the preacher at the consecration. Heading official witnesses was Monsignor Achille Lupi, Charge d'Affaires at the Apostolic Dele gation in Washington. He rep resented the Apostolic Delegate who was in the Far East on of ficial visitations. Seventeen Bishops, in addition to those taking part in the rite of Consecration, were present in St. Mary's Cathedral, in addition to scores of other prelates, priests, representatives of reli &ious orders and laymen. Bishop Gerrard was born ia
is attached to St. James Parish, and graduated in 1914 from Holy Family High School, whioh is the Parish High School of St. Lawrence Church where he .. now rector.
The Auxiliary Bishop attended St. Laurent College, Montreal, Can a d a, and St. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester. He was ordained to the Priesthood in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, D.D. second Bishop of the Dio cese, on May 26, 1923. After his ordination, Bishop Gerrard was assigned to Sacred Heart· Church, Oak BlUffs, for the Summer. In October of that year he went to St. Patrick', T~ to page Sevea I.
- Rt. Rev. Antonio P. Vieira, pastor of Mt. Carmel Church, New Bedford, and the oldest ac tive pastor in the United States, is reported in fair condition at St. Luke's Hospital, New Bed• ford. The latest medical report stated that Monsignor Vieira had a restful night and his heart seemed stronger. However, he is still d,angerously ill. A spiritual bouquet was for warded to the hospital yesterday by the children from Mt. Carmel School 'in honor of his 98th birthday.
Legion of Mary· Acies March 22 At Cath'ed ra I Most Reverend James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, will preside at the annual Legion of Mary Acies Ceremony Sunday afternoon, March 22, at 2:30 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. The Acies is the Legion's Con secration ceremony d uri n g which all Legionaries, Active and Auxiliary, renew their feal ty to Mary their Queen. Taking part in this year's ceremony will be the members of 23 Praesidia in the Diocese, together with their Spiritual Directors. Preacher at the function will Turn to Page Fifteell
Jews." He said a proposed statement on Jewish-Christian relations pending before the second Vat ican Council "should help to eliminate future attempts to pervert the Gospel narrative from a Gospel of love into a Gospel of hatred." Archbishop Krol spoke on the ecumenical council to 300 Jew ish leaders at a meeting spon sored by the B'nai B'rith Anti. Defamation League and the Federation of Jewish Agencies of Greater Philadelphia. He is one of five undersecretaries of the council. . He told the Jewish leaders that the ecumenical council's proposed statement on the Jews rejects the idea that the Jewish people are "deicides--slayers of God" and makes clear that the New Testament cannot be used as an excuse for anti-Semitism. Noting that the council's sec ond session closed last Fal'. with out taking conclusive action on the statement on the Jews or on another statement of religious liberty, the Archbishop said this fact had led some "skeptics" to rna k e "gloomy predictions"
two·-statements will eventually get a full airing at the council But, he added, it is "not a fore. gone conclusion" that they will remain in their present place as sections of a larger schema on ecumenism, since the council has rearranged subject matter in the past and may do so in the future. Discussing the proposed state~ ment on religious liberty, he said it "restates" a longstanding teaching of the Church that "all men who follow their conscience have a natural right to truly religious liberty; that every man has a God-given right to the free exercise of religion without coercion or interference from the state." But, Archbishop Krol empha sized, this "does not mean that man is free to solve his religioul problems by personal whim and caprice and with no moral obligations to God." He said it would be "f061 hardy" to make guesses about when the council will end. How. ever, he added, there are "cer-' tain indications that the conclu. sion will be reached more quickly than anticipated."
Cincinnati Auxiliary
Cites Liturgy .Import
By Rev. John R. FoIster
St. Anthony Church -
New Bedford
The great modern divorce is that which makes "religion only one phase of man's life rather than its very substance." It shows itself in a certain passiveness in regard to modern separation of religion and ordinary daily life. With this real threat in mind, Bishop men-independent of the Curia Paul F. Leibold, Auxiliary -to work out all the changes in of Cincinnati, pointed to a texts and rites as proposed by weakness of Catholic law the Council. The members of organizations and the remedy as offered by the Second Vatican' Council. "No group of men is so poor ly organized as our Catholic laity to constitute a real influ ence . . . in all things which concern our social and public life," the prelate explained. Then, turning to the Council's Constitution on the Liturgy, the Bishop explained that it is the liturgy which should provide the light and strength which Catho lic men need to accomplish their role in the Church. "It is the liturgy that is today a distin guishing mark of the Church's life, indeed the whole tenor of comtemporary religious thought and action." "The council envisioned the' renewal and revitalization of the Church's liturgy as the first step in instilling the life of God in man and accomplishing the mission of the Churcp," the Bishop said. He added that the liturgy is the "key to our aposto lic action as an organization of Catholic men." Progress in getting this needed vitamin into the bloodstream of modern Catholicism was re corded with the establishment and first work of the new litur gical commission formed by Pope Paul VI. . In January, the Holy Father formed a commission of three
the commission were Jacomo Cardinal Lerearo, Archbishop of Bologna, Italy; Arcadio Cardi nal Larraona, the present Pre fect of the Congregation of RiteS; and Father Annibale Bugini. C.M. a consultor of the Congre gation and a Council expert. Recently, the Pope expanded Turn to Page Twenty
Cardinal Alfrink Warns Against Indifferentism
v lEN N A (NC) - The head of the Catholic Church in the Netherlands has warned that the ecumenical movement should not be allowed to lead to indifferentism. . Bernard Cardinal Alfrink of Utrecht, speaking in this Aus trian capital, said: "The purpose of the ecumenical movement is not to promote Christian indif ferentism or a leveling down process in which each party abandons part of its heritage of faith in order to accept a common basis of a commoa truth." Cardinal Alfrink noted that for members of different churches to celebrate the Eu Turn to Page Twelve
2
THE .'
"~r:Ho.R-Dioc,eseof
Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 19,1964
Scripture Scholar Speaks Sunday In No. Easton
Says Critic!;· of Catholic
School Conlfuse Parents
Rev. Eamonn .O'Doherty. professor of Scripture and rector of St. Columban'• Major Seminary in Milton"
ROCHESTER (NC) .- Catholic parents are being con .fused by talk that the Catholic school system is a big white elephant, the superintendent of Catholic schools said here. Father William M. RochEl' said in an ,interview that some . parents think the path of meates all phases of the cur least resistance in facing the ciculum, and the preparation af e h a II eng e s to parochial forded them in a public school, schools today is to enroll under the present interpretation
will discuss "Theology and the Bible" Sunday night at Immacu late Conception Church's parisla hall to conclude the' series of Lenten Forums for Adults, Fr. O'Doherty was born fa Ireland, attended school in New children in public schools lind of the Constitution." York City before entering col give them their religious in Father Roche heads a 55,000 lege at St. Columban's Semina17 struction after school hours. student school system in a dio in Silver Creek, N.Y. He wu . "This may be a stopgap," he cese which has declared a mori or d a in e d in the ColumbaB said, "but it is no substitute :for torium on new school construc Fathers in 1948 and started m. Catholic school education. Those tion and which has· attracted na postgraduate studies in Rome in who say it is do not understand tional attention because of an 1949, receiving a Licentiate in experimental "catechetical cen the philosophy of Catholic edu Theology at the Angelicum ill ter." cation. 1950 and a Licentiate in Scrip.. The center, located in Fair "There is no comparison be ture at the Biblical Institute ill tween the preparation afforded port, was built by Our Lady of 1952. the Assumption parish next • Catholic youngster in a Catho He taught. scripture at st. door to a public school. Catho lic school where religion per Columban's Seminary in Miltoa lic children receive about two from 1953 to 1957 when he re hours a week of religious' in turned to Rome and the Ho):F struction in the center. It is Land for further study. He re FRIDAY - Friday of Passi.on staffed by four Sisters. sumed teaching scripture in MJL Week. III Class. Violet. Mass Short 01 Justice ton in 1958. Proper; No Gloria or Cre,~d; Father Roche said new school Fr. O'Doherty is. member <II Second Collect The Sev-en construction is stalled in Roch the Catholic Biblical Assocja' Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin ester "until we see what the end the Society of Biblical LiteJI Mary; Preface of the Hc)ly future has in store," but he is , . POPE'S CANDLE FOR SHRINE: Archbishop Egidio sture and has published arU~ Cross. convinced after-school cateche Vagnozzi, right, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, ... and reviews in,the Catholic Bib tical instruction or shared-time SATURDAY-Saturday of Pas ptesents a four-foot candle bearing the Pope's coat-of arms,licaJ Quarterly,. the AmeriC8a sion Week. III Class. Violet. education do not offer the an to Msgr. Thomas J. Grady, director of the National Shrine Ecclesiastical Revi~, Tbeolo" swer. Mass Proper; No Gloria. or leal Studies, The Bible T,od. . of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. NC Photo. and the Pilot. Creed; Second Collect' St. He would rather see that the Benedict, Abbot; Preface of Catholic people "not rest short Bia talk will start.t 7:.30P", the Holy Cross. of 'the goal of obtaining equal ".l'be series of talluI Iwt bets tax aid for every, child, wher presented since Ash Wednes~ SUNDAY-II Sund11y of Passion by the Confraternit)- of am. tide or Palm Sunday. I Class. ever his parents send him to schoo!." tian Doctrine. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo "Our schools perform the same ria; Passion; Creed; Preface public fun c t ion as public of the Holy Cross. In Masses that immediatc~ly schools," he said. "That we add religion is a plus, not a minus follow the Blessing and Dis WASHINGTON (NC) -Aa • ond Vatican Council. Other tribution of P a I m s, 1ihe· factor in our education." gift from Pope Paul VI to the blessed candles were sent by the Prayers at the Foot of the "Released-time religious edu people of the United States, a Pope to Church leaders, includ Altar and the Last Gospel ~Ire cation and shared-time arrange four-foot candle bearing· the ing Orthodox Church prelates, omitfed. In Masses that do ments are pitifully short of equal papal coat-of-arms was pre and to churches throug1)out the not immediately folloW the. justice for all children," he said. sented to the National Shrine of world. 19 CLAPP ST., NORTON Blessing of Palms, the L.ast the Immaculate Conception here. A statement said it. was the Gospel is taken from the cere':' The presentation was made by AT 5-4402 or ED 9-2783 Tel. Pope's wish that the dis~ibu mony of the Blessing of the Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, tion of the candles will have Serving All Faiths Palms. The following films are to be Apostolic Delegate in the United an ecumenical significance 1IO The Blessing and Distribution States, to Msgr. Thomas J. added to the lists in their re "wherever they will be received of Palms. Grady, the shrine director, at Ipective classification: these candles will be resplendent the Apostolic Delegation here. MONDAY - Monday of Holy Unobjectonable . lor General with the good light of Christ.· The candle was shipped from Week. I Class. Violet. Mass Patronage-The Seven Faces of the Vatican on Candlemas Day Proper; No Gloria or Crec~d; Dr. Lao. FUNERAL HOME to be placed in the shrine as a Preface of the Holy Cross. Unobjectionable lor Adults reminder that all peoples should Six Missionaries of Our Lady TUESDAY-Tuesday of H()ly and Adolescents - The Quick pray for the ~uccess of the See986 Plymouth Avenue . of La Salette from Attleboro Week. I Class. Violet. Mass Gun. will be ordained by Bishop Fall River, Mass. ' , Proper; No Gloria or Crel~d; Unobjectionable for Adult& Connolly on Saturday, April 4, Preface of the Holy Cross. For Those Who Think Young. Tel. 0$ 3-2271 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall Objectionable in Part for All WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of LONDON (NC) - More than River• Holy Week. I Ciass.· Violet. . -Yesterday, Today and Tomor 32,000 Britons took a booklet in-. Mass Proper; No Gloria or row (Objection: .Although this struction course on the Catholic Creed; Passion; Preface of the film is a comedy with satirical Faith in 1963, the Catholic' En overtones, the amoral theme of quiry Center announced. Of that Holy Cross. its third episode is treated with number, 1,025 wrote to say they THURSDAY-Holy Thursday.. I ~UNERAL HOME unnecessary emphasis upon sug_ had become Catholics, and 1,813 Class. White. Mass Proper; gestive costuming and situations. a,sked for the address of their 469 LOCUST STREET . Inc. Gloria; no Creed; Preface of Moreover, the context in which local priest, presumably to ,et FALL RIVER, Mass. the Holy Cross; Communi this episode is presented may be further information. '. FUNERAL SERVICE
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Mar. 22-St. Joseph, Nortlll Dighton. Espirito Santo, Fall River. Mar.29-St. Boniface, N e"tv Bedford. St. Peter, Dighton. Apr. 5--0ur Lady of the Im_ macu~ate ConceptioJ:1, Fall River. St. James, Taunton . Apr. 12-St. Paul, Taunton. St. John the Baptist, Falll River. THE _IICHOR Second Class postage PaId It Fill Rlver~ Mass. Published flvery Thursday It 41u Hidllano Avenue Fall River Mass. by tile Catholic: f'ress Of the Diocese of fall River, Subscrlptl. .,laallr lilli, _tIlIllI ••••00 per yelr
Necrology MAR. 20 Rev. Francis A,. Mrozinski, 1951, Pastor, St. Hedwig, New Bedford. MAIt.3!
Rev. Joseph A. Martins, 1940, Assistant, St. John the Baptist, New Bedford.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 19, 196.c.
American Policy Forbids Protest On Jews
3
Resolutions Should 'Yield to Actions
WASHINGTON (NC) - The government of the United States, as a matter of policy, refrains from protesting officially to Moscow over the persecution of .Jews in the Soviet Union. To do so, it is felt, would only worsen (he plight of Jews in Russia. This is an interesting revela tion at this time, when the high ly controversial stage play "The Deputy" has been brought to this country. The play seeks to put Pope Pius XII in an unfav. orable light by indicating that he did not protest as much as he might have over the persecu_ tion of Jews in Germany under Hitler. Authorities on the subject have replied that if the late Pon tiff had done any more than he SODALIST: Louis K. Ho did, he would only have spread and deepened the sufferings of gan has assumed his duties as executive secretary of the the Jews in Germany at the hands of the nazis. National Federation of So Sen. Kenneth B. Keating Of dalities of Our Lady, with New York revealed :>a the floor of the U. S. Senate that he had his office located in the head quarters building of the Na received from the State Depart ment a memorandum on the tional Catholic Welfare Con "Situation of the Jews in the ference in Washington. NC Soviet Union." He introduced Photo. ftte document into the Congres .ional Record. The memorandum says that J"ews, along with others, suffer under antireligious laws that have been in force since the es Most Rev. James L. Connolly tablishment of the Soviet regime ,gave the final absolution Satur in Russia in 1918. Citing some particulars, it day morning at the Solemn High adds that, in the case of the Requiem Mass for Mrs. Rose .Jews, these pressures "prevent Ferris that was celebrated by her son, Rev. Norman J. Ferris, the normal maintenance and de velopment of their religious, assistant at St. Mary's, Taunton, in the St. Anthony of the Desert eocial and cultural life." Church, Fall River. "In the past, the Soviet gov Assisting Father Ferris were: ernment has often accused So viet Jews of susceptibility to Rev. Gerald T. Shovelton, dea subversive foreign influences con and Rev. Francis B. Con and agents of foreign states, nors, subdeacon. Chaplains to the Bishop were: most particularly of the United Rev. William F. Morris and Rev. States and Israel. It would hard ly be to the interest of Soviet Albert F. Shovelton. In addition to Father Ferris, Jews for the United States to take actions which would seem surviving are: Monsour J., Fer to lend credence to this charge. rIs J., Horace J., Mrs. Clara "Formal actions by the U. S. Pontes, and Mrs. Anria Catalan. Internment was in St. Patrick's government or its official repre sentatives could have this unfor_ Cemetery, Fall River. tunate result and also lose in effectiveness because of the Marquette to Honor tendency in many areas to dis Former. Diplomat lIliss U. S. moves involving the MILWAUKEE (NC, - Former Soviet Union as motivated pri. lIlarily by cold war considera- ' diplomat Robert D. Murphy' will be' honored by Marquette Uni tions." versity at a dinner tonight in New York City. Asserts Democracy
Father William F. Kelley, S.J., Needs Good Press
the university's president, will QUITO (NC) - The secretary present him with the Pere Mar of the International Union of the quette award for examplifying Catholic Press, Father Emile outstanding traits in his per Gabel, A.A., of Paris, said here s<mal life and in his work. in Ecuador that a democratic Murphy, retired from govern government requires good press ment service in 1959 after 39 reporting. years of worldwide diplomatic To ,have' true democracy, he assignments. During the Eisen said, it is necessary for all citi. hower administration he served zens "to consider themselves re. for a time as 'undersecretary of Ilponsible for national affairs. state for political affiars.
SAN ANSELMO (NC) -Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, a top Presbyterian Church official in this country, told an interracial convention here in California "now is the time to act," instead of adopting more resolutions. "This means more demonstra tions - not because anybody wants to demonstrate-but be cause it has become clear that things aren't going to change unless we do," the Philadelphia Presbyterian told the Marin County Conference on Religion and Race.
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Despite Dr. Blake's admonl. tion against resolutions, the con vention adoptf,ld a series of them. One favored collecting open occupancy pledges and actively supporting the Rumford Fair Housing Law which is the tar get of a repeal movement. Another resolution recognized that "full racial equality is a basic religious responsibility" and called on "Marin County citizens to be responsible "for remedial action even outside the county."
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Bishop Presides At Requiem Mass
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Archbishop Joseph T. Mc Gucken of San Francisco pre. sided at the session during which some 300 persons of various re ligious faiths discussed segrega tion and discrimination in Marin County. Remedial Action Churches are late-comers in the fight for racial integration, Dr. Blake said, but they cannot solve the problem alone. He as serted: "We cannot con fer equality on Negroes, but we must go with them to help them obtain it for us alL"
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese
4)f
Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 19, 1964
Mel1US,
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Recipes for
THURSDAY, MARCltl 26 Fast Breakfast: Applesauce, French toast. Lunch: Spaghetti and cheeSi~ tomato sauce, lettuce salad, canned pears. Dinner: Stewed Chicken and Drop Dump lings,* cranberry relish, lima beans, diced carrots, Cheese Cake.* Stewed Chicken and Drop Dumplings 1 stewing chicken 1 small onion Pepper 1 c. sifted flour 2 t. baking powder % t. salt Sprig parsley, minced % c. milk Clean chicken and cut .into portions; pl~e In kettle and partly cover with water. Add onion, salt and pepper and cook until tender, 2% to 3 hours. Mix flour, baking powder, salt, minced parsley, and milk to a thick batter and drop from spoon into boiling, chicken broth, eover tightly and cook for 20 minutes without raising the lid. Place chicken on platter and surround with the dumplings. Serves approx. 6.
'" * '"
Cheese Cake Make graham cracker crust for the pie shells. Mix 1 lb. cream cheese, 2 eggs, 1h cup of sugar, 1 t. vanilla. Pour into crust and bake for 15 minutes in moderate oven (350 F'.) Take one pint of sour cream, and mix with 1 T. sugar and 1 t. vanilla. Pour over first layer and bake for 15 min nutes' more - turning oven off and leaving the cheese cake in the oven for at least 25 minutes. Let pie cool and top with cherry mix ture. To make a topping of cherries - 1 can of cherries drain the juice and bring this to a boil add 2 T. cornstarch and eook until thickened, add the cherries and put on top of ,chee~ cake.
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FRIDAY, MARCH !7 Fast Breakfast: Pineapple juice, !loft-cooked egg, bot cross buns. Lunch: Fish chowder, crackers, oatmeal eookies. Dinner: Tuna casserole, Spinach-Rice with' Cheese,· chef's salad, Spice Cupcakes.· Spinach-Rice with Cheese 3 T. butter 1/4 c. chopped onion 1% c. rice 1% c. water 1 t. salt lh c. hot chopped cooked spinach Dash of pepper % c. grated Cheddar cheese Melt butter in a saucepan. Add the onion and ~ute for a few minutes over medium heat until onion is golden brown; stir frequently. Add rice, water, and salt. Mix just until all rice is moistened. Bring quickly to a boil over high heat. Cover and remove from heat. Let stand for 15 minutes. Add spinach and pepper, mixing lightly with a fork. Serve with grated cheese over the top. Serves approx. 4.
Last Week of Lent
Spice Cupcakes
1h c. peanut butter % c. butter 1% c. firmly packed brown sugar 2 eggs . 2 c. sifted flour 3 t. baking powder lh t. salt 1h t. ground clover th t. cinnamon 1 c. milk 1 t. vanilla Cream together peanut butter and butter. Add sugar graduil1ly and cream together until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add dry ingredients which have been sifted together, alternately with combined milk and vanilla, beginning and ending with dry ingredients. -Spoon batter into greased and floured cupcake pans. (or use paper bake cups to line pans) Bake in moderate oven (350 F.) for about 25 minutes, cool and frost as desired. Makes about 2 dozen.
'Nation's Star Boarder' SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A good student enthusiastic about school activities is the way the "nation's star boarder" is re membered at Incarnate Word High School. This is 'the description given by teachers of 19-year-old War rie Lynn Smith who has gone to Washington to live at the White House with her close friend, Lynda Bird Johnson, daughter of the President. "She was more than a good, loyal student. When she volun teered for a school activity, she did it with enthusiasm. She was dedicated to her school," one of Warrie Lynn's former teachers recalls.
Warrie Lynn, a Catholic, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WaJIIoo field Smith, Jr., of San Antpnio. She roomed in a dormitory with the President's daughter at' the University of Texas, Austin. She has remained clore te Incarnate Word High School since her graduation in 1962, corresponding with f a cuI t 7 members and making occasional visits, one just before leaving for Washington. "She was very humble about moving into the White House,· one of the Sisters said. "I re member hearing her say, 'I hope it doesn't go to my head,' and "I don't know how I'll do it. Frankly, I'm a little scared.' "
SATURDAY, MARCH 28 Breakfast: Grapefruit juice, fried egg, Streusel-filled Coffee Cake.· Lunch: Corn Fritters,'" tomato soup, canned pineapple tid-bits. Dinner: Fried fillet of haddock, baked pota toes, creamed carrots and onions, raisin pie. Streusel-filled Coffee Cake % c. sugar lJ4 c. soft shortening 1 egg % c. milk Ilh c. sifted flour 2 t. baking powder lh t. salt Heat oven to 375 F. Combine sugar, shortening, and egg. Mix thoroughly. Stir in milk, sift to gether and stir into mixture, flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside while preparing the following -streusel mixture. lh c. brown sugar 2 T. flour 2 t. cinnamon . 2 T. melted butter lh c. chopped nuts .Combine all ingredients and mix thoroughly. Spread half the cake batter in greased and floured 9" square pan. Sprinkle with half the streusel mixture. Add the remaining batter and . sprinkle the remaining streusel over top. Bake 25 to 35 minutes. Cake is done when a toothpick stuck into the centet comes out clean. Serve warm, fresh from the oven.
Serve it
during Lent
because
it's good!
Delicate Corn Fritters 4 well-beaten eggs , 2 t. flour 2 t. sugar lh t. salt coarsely ground black pepper 2 c. canned, whole kernel corn 4 T. melted butter Combine flour, sugar, salt, and a little black pepper with the beaten eggs. Add corn and mix thoroughly. Stir in melted butter. Drop by table spoonfuls onto a hot, buttered griddle or in an iron frying pan. Cook until brown on one side, then turn. Serve a few at a time, as they should be eaten immediately.
Yon get just about as much protein
from
Hood Cottage Cheese as you do from meat. So, some people serve it as a meatless meal. But that's not the only reason you should serve Hood Cottage Cheese. It happens to taste good. In fact, its fresher flavor improves a casserole, or a salad - or even a bowl of soup" Serve it often during Lent. Not because of Lent, but because it's good!
MEALS FOR REFUGEE CHILDREN: Free hot meals for 500 refugee children five, times a week will be provided by this new US $16,000 food kitchen - run by the Mary knoll Fathers at Chaiwan, a resettlement area of Hong Kong. Left to right, Fr. Stephen B. Edmonds, M.M. parish priest; Miss Pauline MacGuire, Hong Kong C.R.S.-N.C.W.C.; Sister' Jean Theophane, a.p., Maryknoll Sister and Robert Aylwood, Director of the U.S. Far East Refugee Program, Hong Kong. NC Photo. '
COTTAGE CHEESE
-. TH£ ANCHOR-Olocese ofFen River-Thurs. Mar. 19, 1964
Warns Machines Rob Employees' Self-Respect CINCINNATI.(NC)-Comput may steal personal self-re spect as well as jobs. This is the warning sounded by Robert S. Payne, a systems analyst with a large New York business firm, in the April issue of the Shield. Payne said business adminis trators have an obligation to protect the dignity of their em-' ployes from the psychological threat of automation. The Shield is a magazine pub_ . Dshed by the Catholic Students' Mission Crusade. Payne is for mer chairman of the CSMC's African Research Committee. In his article he argues that "the possibility of dehumaniza tion" is a problem that results when an employe "finds his job more and more determined by the requirements of data proc essing department. "It is painfully demeaning for people to believe that their lives are machine-oriented," he states. Members of Mystical Bod,. In the face of increasing auto mation he says, "management must, 'through education and communication, make every ef fort to see that not one ounce of self-respect and ambition is lost by the clerk, the accountant or the typist." Payne says young men and women being educated for man-, agement positions must develop "sensitivity to their obligations as human beings and as mem bers of the Mystical Body of Christ." "There is no more fruitful and satisfying apostolate that a man_ ager can engage in than that of seeing that the dignity and self respect of the employe is pre served and increased wherever possible," he said. .
Pope John's Private Journals Reveal Innermost Thoughts VATICAN CITY (NC) -The spiritual journals of Pope John XXIII, described as perhaps unique in world literature, will appear soon in bookshops of many nations.
en;
Offers Requiem For Father Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, presided at the Solemn High Mass of Requiem celebrated Monday morning in St. Lawrence's Church, New Bedford, for the repose of the soul of Patrick J. Moore, father of Rev. John F. Moore, assistant at St. Joseph's Church, Taunton. Father Moore was celebrant of the Mass and was assisted by Rev. William F. O'Connell, dea con; Rev. Barry W. Wall, sub deacon. Chaplains to Bishop Gerrard were Rev. John F. Hogan and Rev. Walter A. Sullivan. Surviving in addition to Father Moore are his widow, Mrs. Rose M. McCabe Moore; Kevin P. and Miss Rosemary Moore, both of New Bedford; and Mrs. Philip Grandchamp of Newton.
Chicago Watching
Cincinnati Schools
CHICAGO (NC) The Chicago Catholic school system was described here as watching closely developments in the ·Cin cinnati archdiocese whose parish 8Chools will open without first grades in September. Msgr. William E. McManus, IUperintendent, said no drastic action such as that taken in Cin cinnati is contemplated, but that ·we will keep a close watch on developments in the Cincinnati archdiocese." The Chi c ago archdiocese's schools enroll about 365,000 pupils. The system is the na tion's largest private one and the fourth in size of aU U.S. systems, exceeded only by public schools in New York, Loa An geles and Chicago itself. .........
5
Entitled "Diary of a Soul," the book traces the spiritual devel opment of the late Pontiff in his own words, from his early years in the seminary until one year before his death in 1963. Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna and a former confidant of the Pope, told a press conference here that the book is an "extraordinary document." He called it "a confession so lively, so sincere, so revealing of the depts of a soul as has rare ly . been' the case in literature."
EARLY FLORIDA SPANISH RECORDS FILMED: In Washington, prior to microfilming, officials of the Library of Congress examine original documents of 18th and 19th century Spanish Florida with Father Michael V. Gannon, director of the Mission of Nombre de. Dios Library in St. Augustine, Florida. Left to right are Dr. Daniel J. Reed, Assistant Chief of the Division of Manuscripts, and Stephen R. Salmon, Acting Chief of the Photoduplication Service. NC Photo.
Strictly Educational Teachers Approve Use of Dice, Alcohol
For Science Projects
MADISON (NC)-Almost any d'8y you'll find a pair of dice in Daniel MacNamarra's pockets, but his teachers don't mind a bit--in fact, they even encour age him. The dice are his "tools" in a prize-winning mathematics proj ect he devised for the science fair at Bayley-Ellard Catholic High' School here. MacNamarra's project was ·Analysis of Random Frequency of Freely Falling Cubes." A science.minded student, he
iast year won the top prize at Bayley-Ellard with a model wind tunnel. This year he also took first place in the biology division with a project on "The Effects of Ultra-Violet Wave lengths on Living Things." He recalls that when he told his math teacher about hi'S prop ect with dice, the Sister, who also teaches chemistry, said jok ingly: "I don't know what this school is coming to. Some of the seniors are working with proj ects involving alcohol."
RESTAURANT and LOUNGE 1499 BAY STREET-TAUNTON, MASS.-Telephone 824-9367 New Dining Hours: Monday thru Saturday 5 to 11 P.M. Sunday 12 noon to 9 P.M.
$2.95
Nestled in one of New England's most beautiful settings. High atop the peninsula overlooking beautiful "Lake Sabbatia Enter. directly across from Paul A. Dever State School and Watson State Park.
SPECIAL FAMILY DINNERS
BROILED HAM STEAK BAKED STUFFED LOBSTER,
1~
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MEMBERS OF THIS ASSOCIATION share every day bi the Masses of Pope Paw VI, Cardinal Spellman, and the 15.008 priests who look to us for help. By your prayers and your dues ($I-a-year for an individual, $5 for a family) you have an activ. part in the good our priests and Sisters accomplish . . . Why not enroll your family or a friend as a gift at Easter? We'll lend an EASTER GIFT CARD telllng whd you have done.
_
$1.95
1.95
2.50
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WISE PEOPLE remember the missions In their wills. In mak Ing your will please mention the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. (That'. our legal title).
(Sherry Wine Dressing)
T-BONE STEAK
THE IRISH MISSIONARIES HISTORIANS MARVEL at what they accomplished. They poured out of Ireland centuries ago, building churches, schools. model farms, medical clinics, monasteries and convents. People as far away as Russia BPoke of Ireland then 8S the land of saints and sclrolars. The Irish were missionaries supreme! •.• Here's how you can be a mIssionary right now: By supplying a FIRST COMMUNION OUTFIT to a child preparing for the joyful. The cost: $10. Your reward: grace and happiness. . o By paying the educational expenses of a seminarian Uke . TESFAMARIAM AMMENE. Cost: $100 a year for siz years. Your reward: A priest In the family. D By training a Slster-to·be such as SISTER A. AGATA NE GRI. The cost: $150 a year for two years. Your reward: Th. joy of knowIng how much she Is doing for Christ. By building a chapel or school In the missions: Cost: $2,500 to $6,000. Your reward: The prayers of countless famlliel for years.
OFTEN ON IRISH TOMBSTONES one finds a quiet phrase, a gentle request for the prayers of people passing by . . . We share the spirit of such requests when we have Masses offered for the deceased, especially those we love . . . Our missionary priests wlll offer promptly the Masses you request. The offering you make is quite frequently a missionary's only means of daily IUPPOrt.
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A JEEP FOR ERITREA
PITY THE PRIEST IN FEHREN, ERITREA, WHEN HE IS CALLED TO CARE FOR THE DYING! •.• He must iravel for miles by donkey or on foot, because the mouniain roada are Impassable b:r car. He carries ihe Blessed Sacra ment with him, despite the rain, the sun, heat • • • The Franciscan Fa tillers care for our Cdholics in Ute entire FEUREN area-and ihey de. perarely need a jeep. To buy one for them, delivered in ERITREA. will COlt $2,600 . • . In rerms of a missionary's heaUh, and the ,.ean • Jeep can add to hi. Ute, $2,600 II Til. '1101, PMb.,', Miuw" ANI a very small investment. U's a sinan lor Ih, 0,;"",,1 Chllr,h invesbnent indeed if one counb u~ the ilme the jeep will 'save, and the additional people the pried can care for! .• .Please help os make it possible to give these Franciscan pries" a jeep. If you'd like to give it all by :fOUl' self, write. to us Immediately. Remembering what it costa fOl' gaa and oIl, tire. and repairs, please send whatever you can at ford-$l, $5, $20, $100 .•. Our priests and people in ERITREA. will be &TlItefw to you forever!
A GENTLE REMINDER
CHOICE OF:
SOUP DU JOUR CRANBERRY JUICE
TOMATO JUICE
(~ushroom
He
HAVE YOU JOINED?
Every Sunday Lobster in the rough (2 lobsters)
BROILED SWORDFISH STEAK JUMBO FRIED SHRIMP FRIED GOLDEN BAY SCALLOPS SOUTHERN FRIED HALF BROILER
~ WANTED:
The book contains the fun. text of notes Pope John made for his own edification from the age of 14 to that of 81. Nuns copied the text from a stock of notebooks the Pope left his sec retary, Msgr. Loris Capovilla. Scholars then checked the text against the originals. Cardinal Lercaro said it was the first time a pope has bared his innermost thoughts to the world in simple private notes instead of in the solemnity of pontifical docu ments. said the book is the jour nal of "an open soul which seeks the will of God, but 'seeking His will in obedience." He said the Pope's writings show an "evan gelic simplicity" and constitute "a singular encounter of inti macy with the soul of the Pope."
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(Mushroom Sauce)
GIANT CHOPPED SIRLOIN
THE WILL OF THE WISE
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BROILED CALVES LIVER TENDERLOIN STEAK (Filet)
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TOSSED GREEN SALAD - CHOICE OF DRESSING
FRENCH FRIED POTATOES - LAND'S END POTATO
VEGETABLE OF THE DAY
FRUIT JELLO, WHIPPED CREAM - ICE CREAM
BEVERAGE SURPRISE DESSERT
CmLDREN'S PLATE 900
CHEF'S SPECIAL - WESTERN BAR-B-Q CHICKEN _ 2.45
Friday, Saturday and Sunda,. evenings enjoy ihe piano st,.lIngs of Phil in our new Port 0' Call Coektail Lounge.
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~r tBstOOissions~ flANCIS CAIDINAL SPEllMAN, Pr••ld."t: M"r......,. T. _;.a.M.t, Sec'y SetHI all _.aIC4ltl_ ...,
CATHOLIC NEAR lAST WELFARE ASSOCIAnON , --480 lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17; N. 'to _
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-.
6
THE ANrHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 19, 1964
1-'erspectIve
Ellensi.1
Lay Preachers Qualified and specially trained laymen have Deen authorized by Cardinal Silva Henriquez to preach at Sun day Masses in the one hundred and fifty-four parishes of the Archdiocese of Santiago in Chile. In this way the Car dinal is trying to cope in some measure with the most pressing and frightening problem that confronts the C}11Jrch in Latin America - the shortage of priests: This action should not seem revolutionary. True, people are used to hearing the Word of God preached to them by their priests. But laymen make up the Church as well as do priests. And the Bishop - the preacher and teacher of the Faith in every diocese - can commission lay people to help him in the apostolic work of feeding the minds and hearts of the faithful on the Word of God. These lay people are already preaching religion by their lives. Their conduct in the course of the day, in their homes and stores and factories and shops and at recreation, is al ready preaching an eloquent sermon of committal to Jesus Christ or neglect or betrayal of Him. Why not extend this in its logical development and let the lay people who are living Christ in· their lives proclaim Him by their tongues in the pulpits of churches? .
Great Warmth A recent meeting between Pope Paul and Label A. Katz, international president of B'nai B'rith, brought out a personal aspect of the Holy Father that is worthy of notice. . Mr. -'Katz, after' hearin:g the Pope express his under standing of the Jewish community's interest in the Ecu menical Council and its declarations, applauded the "great warmth" shown by the Pope in both his words and actions. This is an aspect of Pope :Paul's nature that is becoming apparent to more and more people. It is a fact, unfortunate but true, that many persons look on a man of slight stature and ascetic mien as a cold impersonal .individual. When Pope Paul first ascended the Throne of Peter there were those who made such a judgment of him. But the Pope's natural warm-heartedness is coming through more and more clearly. And those who both listen to what he says and see him in his dealings with all manners of people are struck by the way he enters into the lives of others and seems to think and feel and suffer with them. It is good that this quality is being recognized.
Spent for Souls One of the greatest undertakings that the United States has ever engaged upon is the Peace Corps - the willingness of men and women to give not of their be longings but of themselves to help those of other nations whose claim upon their services is the dual one of brother- hood and need. . It is a happy aspect of the Peace Corps that many Catholic men and women, mostly young, have entered upon it. And many others, without becoming members of the Corps, are giving their services for a time to helping those less fortunate than themselves. A group of Loyola University of Chicago students, for example, are going to exchange this Summer their "book" work for "back'" work. They are going to Mexico for eight weeks to build homes for Indians. This is Christianity in action. And the students have already found out and will discover that their own goodness will increase and their own Faith will be strengthened as they give to others. This has always been so. That is why St. Paul ex pressed his readiness to "spend himself and be spent" for souls. . Americans Catholics should be challenged to give more of themselves. The results will be good both for those they help and for themselves.
@rheANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER 'OF: THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by TheCath,:)licPress of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOP Hugh J. Golden
PIVLA
REV. JAMES A. CLARK
Assistant Director
Latin American Bureau, NC'NC
Latin America Calling
Sister Stanislaus. That ttl quite a name for a nun with an Irish brogue. uTell me, Sister; how did your order happen to come to Guatemala?" "Once Pope John XXIII made his appeal for foreign mission help, especially for Latin Amer ica, our Mother Superior began watching for' an opportunity to do something. Bishop Gerber man, MM. was a patient in our hospital in Houston and he asked our Mother Superior for edt thE ChU1tc~ aid for his diocese here in Hue huetenango. . By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University "Sister then asked the nuns for volunteers-200 offered to come. But we four were the lucky oneil TODAy-st. Joseph, Husband even man's apparent loss of .and we got to come." "What did of Our Lady. Patron of the himself in death, to' share the' you do when you got here? Church, as he was' guardian and starkest aspects of our human "We began to visit the hospi foster-father of the Church's existence. tal right away. Gradually with Lord, Joseph reminds us of a the help of the local Lions' Club host, we may presume of ob MONDAY IN HOLY WEEK. and the Legion of Mary of Hue scure saints. They are those "The Lord God is my helper; .huetenango, as well as many whose sharing in the priesthood and that help cannot pla'y me' fine and generous people here of the Son of God has been ex false" (First Reading). The abouts, we were able to move traordinarily luminous and ef trust that springs from living into our new home and work fective, even though not always faith changes the complexion on a permanent basis. Now we in ways recognized by their fel of our suffering and averts are in charge of the local hospi low Christians. despair. Just as we see the Cross tal." in the perspective of the risen Malnutrition Heads List TOMORROW-Friday in Pas- . Christ in glory, sO all the pain "What are the most comrnoa sion Week. Jeremy is today's and passion of mankind 'are shot sicknesses that are found among figure of Christ in His passion through with hope "not only on these good people?" (First Reading). The. rejected account of Jesus, but '" '" '" of "Malnutrition, of course, heads prophet and the rejected Son. Lazarus, whom he raised from the list. Then would come T.B., Rejection seems to dog the steps the dead" (Gospel). anemia and much osteomyelitis of mediators, priests, the minis (due to bumps that are not prop. ters of reconciliation. TUESDAY IN HOLY WEEK. erly cared for). M·any people What beautiful innocence How hard it would be to see 'suffer from worms and intesti there is in the words of the Gos_ Christ's pilgrimage through hu nal troubles due to poor diets. pel villain: '* * '" it is best for us man life and death as in a real Then ioo, there is typhoid be if one man is put to death for sense our own, were it not for cause of the poor water." the sake of the people." All His suffering! His in.nocence, "Sister what are your pIami things are in God's hands, and His guiltlessness, we do not for the future?" "'Well we hope .even these words of a tawdry know. But we have suffered, to eventually have a nurseli plot we hear, in faith, as an un too, and His suffering is a bond training school here to teach witting proclamation of the as real as His humanity. ·local girls how to care for the Gospel. sick. Then too we expect to have WEDNESDAY IN HOLY more Sisters 'Com~ng down to SATURDAY IN PASSION WEEK. Another reading of His help staff the hospital and ~ WEEK. The triumph of the Gos Passion today, as we approach are anxious to obtain Papal pel entry into Jerusalem pre t~e holiest days of the yearly Volunteers. pares us for tomorrow's proces cycle. We who have died and "For all of these things we CaD sion and pledge of allegiance. risen again in' Him through And Jesus' calm assessment of baptism, and again every time orily pray God's help." . Beacon of Help the need for the grain of wheat we gather aJ,'ound the altar for The Sisters of Charity of the .to die and the hour of trial to the Mass, have yet another Incarnate Word in Huehueten come puts Jeremy's human ti means of sacramentally identify_ rade against His enemies (First ing ourselves with His saving ango for whom Sister Stanislaus Reading) into the perspective of deeds through the four days that i,s the spokesmaJ;l now conduct the local hospital in Huehue providence. . 'lie ahead. tenango, Guatemala. This hospi The light is still with us, en tal serves as a focal spot for abling pur journey-the light of sickness not only for the com Faith, of .Church,Word ··and President of Korea munity but also for many Indi Sacraments. But there is urgen ans living far and wide and cy, for these things are of time. Greets Papal Envoy scattered through the mountains. SEOUL (NC) President Many of these people go SECOND SUNDAY OF THE PASSION. "Blessed is he who is Chung Hee Park in welcoming through life without ever real Archbishop Antonio Del Giudice izing that a doctor is available coming in· the Lord's name" (Blessing of branches). The two_ as first Papal Internuncio to to them. They never give a fold rite of today's liturgy-tri . Kore~ voiced the hope that thought to how a doctor could umphal procession and Mass of friendly relations between Korea help because there 'were never the passion and death-is our and the Holy See "will continue doctors to be had. With the Sis entrance into the Holy Week of to flourish in the spirit of mutual ters available in the hospital the the year and our immediate understanding and cooperation." people 'are beginning to realize the advantages of modern medi preparation for Easter. The first The Archbishop had previ part is a pledge of allegiance .to ously served more than a year cine. The hospital has become a Him who will receive our re and a half as Apostolic Delegate beacon of medical help for the whole countryside. newed baptismal promises at the in Korea, a nondiplomatic as Would you like to work iJl Easter Vigil. signment. With the establish But the victory we will then ment of diplomatic relations, this or other Latin Americaa hospitals. We are looking for celebrate follows the Son's' ex Pope Paul named him Inter nurses, doctors, pharmacists, perience of the depths of finite nuncio. Korea appointed its Am man'li suffering, even unto death. bassador to Switzerland, Han medical assistants a·nd all cate gories of talented medical peo The Cross, more than symbol of Bin Lee, as Minister to the Holy our common guilt, is symbol of See. He is to serve in both posts ple. Can you answer this call for the next three years? God's will to share in total love concurrently, ..-
._-_.-'~
ClhnouClh thE. CW
CWith
THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFan River-Thurs. Mar. 19. 1964
Holy Family High
Tops Debaters
... II
Bishop' Gerrard's Anniversary
The N arragansett Deba~ing
League held its third meeting of
the year at Bishop Stang High
School in North Dartmouth to .
play the fifth and sixth rounds
of its 1963 competition. Once
again, all l"1 schools in the
League assembled with each
!lChool represented by an Affir
mative and Negative team.
Holy Family was able to main
tain its overall 11-1 League
lead despite a loss to New Bed
ford High. Holy Family was
successful in defeating Durfee,
St. Catherine's of Newport and
Sacred Hearts Academy of Fall
River. Honors for the day went
to undefeated teams from St.
Anthony High School and Bish
op Stang, each of whom won all
4 debates. St. Anthony's per
formance gave them an overall
record of 10 wins and two cle · feats for the year and sole pos session of second place in the League. Bishop Stang moved, into a two-way fie for third place with St. Catherine's' of Newport with an overall record of nine wins and three losses for the year. Other leaders include Monsignor Coyle of Taunton with an eight and four record , · and Monsignor Prevost of Fall River with a seven and ~ive UNIVAC AIDS EXPERTS: First. such equipment record, in fifth and sixth places be installed in th~ Vatican, a UNIVAC punch machine, front, · respectively. . The final meeting of the operated by Dr. Ivo Mataloni and ~ sorting machine, rear, League will be held on April 1 tended by Father Godfrey Poage, C.P., of Chicago, aid the at Sacred Hearts Academy' in . workers in the office -of the Pontifical· Organization for Fall River where rounds .seven - Religious Vocations. NC Photo. and eight will be played to com plete the regular League sche · dule. At the conclusion of the 'next meeting, the top foUr teams will be designated and will enter into a two-round playoU to de termine the winner of the Sister M. Ignatius, O.P. first place· trophy. MONROVIA (NC) "Holy He cited four main influences reciprocity" is needed between developing spirituality in Latin The topic of debate is "Ex Catholics in North America and America: the cursillos or Little tension of Social Security .Bene in Latin America, a veteran mis- Courses in Christianity; the fits to Include Complete Medi sionary said here. Mundo Mejor (Better World) cal Care." ''This means," according to Movement; the Christian Family . :rather Hessler, M.M., "that we Movement and CENA'MI, Center must be ready to give and also of Aid to the Mexican Indian. to receive." "Many say this is the age of Father Hessler is a native of the laity," Father Hessler noted. ALBANY (NC) The Natiol).al Detroit who served seven years "I used to say that, but I don't Association of Hebrew Day hi the Chinese missions. After anymore. It's the age of the School Parent-Teacher Assoc'ia . the fall of China, he was assigned Church. "There is a new spirit now.
tions has endorsed two bills to to Mexico. He is now stationed provide state aid for pupils In at San Geronimo church in The bishops are guiding the lay
Mexico City working with the people in ecclesial t.eam.
church-related end other pri nation's Christian Family Move- never the laity alone, never the vate schools. ment. There are 9,000 CFM hierarchy alone. But both toThe organization represents tBmilies in ~exico, he said. gether." 54,000 students ia more tha·n 300 "The C h u r c h of North Jewish schools throughout the America," he said in an inter"All these movements.· !'ather eountry. view at Maryknoll General Hos- Hessler said, "bring the whole of The organization expressed pital here, "can give Latin the Church to life. No problem .. Itrong support for a bill to pro America trained technicians, insoluble when the Church fuDctions as a Church." Yide annual grants to students in formed people." high schools which charge tui North Americans, in turn, will
tion and another to loan text receive new insights and stimuli BEFORE YOU books in mathematics, science from the growing spiritual vita
and foreign languages to stu BUY-TRY
lity of Latin America.
dents. in nongovernment high
IChools.
Colle~s
to
Continued from Page One Church, Fall River, where he served until June 1, 1932. Named Chancellor On June 1, 1932, he was appointed Chancellor of the Diocese and Secretary to the Apostolic Administrator, the late Most Rev. James E. Cassidy. When Bishop Cassidy succeeded to the Ordinary of the Diocese on the death of Bishop Feehan, Bishop . Gerrard continued as Chancellor and Episcopal Secretary. Bishop Gerrard served as a member of the Diocesan Matri monial Tribunal from July, 1930, until 1941. Cathedral Rector OIl April 20, 1939, Bishop Gerrard became Rector of the Cathedral and remained in that position until June 6, 1956, when he was appointed Rector of St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford, following the death of Rt. Rev. John F. MeKeon. During his priestly career, the Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese
has served as Episcopal Representative for Religious. In addition to serving as VicSf' General of the Diocese, Bishop Gerrard, is a member of the Dio cesan Board for the Legion of Decency in Motion Pictures and the National Organization for Decency in Literature. He is also Moderator for Theological Con ferences. In 1951, Bishop Gerrard wu 'named Vicar General of the Dio cese and on September 6, 1952, was named a Domestic Prelate by the late Pope Pius XII.
Honor Actress BUFFALO (NC) Actrtw Rosalind Russell has been pre sented with the 1964 Pe*k' Canisius Medal of the CatuSiutl College Alumni Association in recognition of her humanitarian work. Miss Russell is the sixth recpient of the annual award named for the· 16th century Jesuit saint who is the patroD of the college.
:low sail from Boston
io Ireland or England
on a great Cunarder
.'Holy .Reciprocity'
Tells North American, Latin America Catholics to Give, Receive
Jewish Group Backs Education Aid Bills
Loans for
ArchbishopO'Donnell Lauds Irish Priests BRISBANE (NC)-Coadjutor Archbishop Patrick M. O'Don
nell of Brisbane has paid tribute
to the Irish priests laboring in
much of Australia. Himself an Irishman, the Arch bishop said it would be "impos sible to contemplate how the Church could have performed Its ministry here" without priests from Ireland.
Penance Marches LONDON (NC) Several thousand members of the Young
Christian Students Cat h 0 11 e movement will make penitential marches in various tow n I
througout Great Britain oa
Maundy Thursday, each group carrying a large cross to
churches in ita town "in repara. tion for their own sins and the sins of the whole student world.·
OTTAWA (NC) - The Cana dian governmen.t bas lent $74,
182,000 to 76 colleges since 1960
to help build student dormi tories, $33,850,000 in loans going to 40 Catholic institutions.
RETREATS
FOR PRIESTS
Between April 5 and
December 11, 1964-
THIRTY (30) FIVE·DAY RETREATS UNDER JESUIT DIRECTION Apply to Director of Retreats
SACRED HEART RETREAT HOUSE Auriesville, N.Y., 12016 Telephone: 518 FO 3-7381
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'"
TAD ADVANTACE of ~ ex:ceptiODaI travelop portunity: For the convenience of passengel'l from the New England area. Cunard has- ar ranged two special sailings: difoectly from Boston to Cobb; Ireland, and Liverpool. England. This means you can DOW' enjoy all the advantag.. of a famous-Cunarder, withocdthe bother and expense of going to New York and putting up at a hotel In stead, leave straight from Boston May 29 or July 31. for a restful six-day crossing in spacious luxury.
t
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Getting there is half the fun On the stabilizer-equipped Sylvania. youll enjoy deck space galore, beautiful public rooms, superb interna tional cuisine and the courteous care of Cunard stew ards. Your passage also includes a festive round of
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PRINTERS Main Office and Plant LOWELL, MASS.
01852
Telephone lowen 458-6333 and 457·7500
Auxiliary Plants BOSTON
OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, R. L
shipboard activities, including parties, games, nightly Since there are only two sa~ from Boston, the demand will be great. So make reservations early. -Minimum rate Tourist eta..
For details aboul cunard salling', see yow travel agent
or Cunard Line, McGrtlUl-HiU Butlding, 607 Boylston Str~.
Boston, MCI88tJChusetll (Tel: cOmmonwealth 6-2(00)
Fall River Travel Bureau
Henry J. Feitelberg, Pres.
29 North Main St. - Tel. OS 5-7408
Established 1906
." VoCafion' Sunday On Cape Cod
New Nameda], Volume,Stresses
Vocation Day on Cape Cod II being observed Sunday at Hol;' Trinity School of Religion ill West Harwich. A panel com posed of Sisters active in Cape parishes will discuss principia of religious vocation. Communities taking part m elude the Trinitarians and the Sisters of Mercy from Hyannis, Sisters of Divine Providence from Orleans, Sisters of the Love of God from Provincetown, Sis ters of St. Martha from LaSalette Seminary in Brewster, and Vie tory Noll Sisters from West Harwich. . In addition to the talks there will be an opportunity to visit exhibits' and meet the Sisters in formally, a question period, and a Bible devotion, conducted by Rev. Ronald Tosti of Our Lad,. of the Assumption parish, Oster ville. Refreshments will be served.
The meeting, which will be held between 2 and 4 P.M., III open to high school girls from all parishes on Cape Cod, as well as to young women 'out of school, and to parents interestecl in the subject of I'eligious voca. tion.'
Importance tCI Child of Patron By Mar;y Tinley Daly HNaming the baby," that game perennially fascinating, fraught with the utmost significance, is once more in the forefront of interest at our house. This time, it is Mary and her husband Tim who are prime movers in the game as they consider naming their sec 0 n d child, due The aut hoI' gives short sketches of saints' lives. In shortly. The rest of us ,-- listing the most popular names grandparents, uncles, aunts at the present time, she finds,
,et
- whose business it is not, for instance, that John leads _ nevertheless are good-humoredly to the number of six million boys eonsulted. Perborn in the last decade carrying , haps the fact the name whioh is that of over that the deci200 saints. (Probably the name sion is not ours will become even more popular, engenders a in memory of President Ken relaxed atmo- nedy) sphere of let's-, As for girls, if you think the survey - the name Mary is tops, think again. Top favorite is Linda, followed field. Most reeent instance by Mary, then Deborah, Susan,
was scanning Carol, Patricia, Catherine, Mar the lis t 0 f garet, Barbara and Karen. Saints in the "In the coming decade," sur Canon of the Mass. Ginny notl~ mises the author, "Carolyn will that Mary, Peter, Paul, Andrew, in all probability become Caro James, John, Thomas and the line because of President Kenlike bad been used in the family nedy's· daughter, and the name EUCHARISTIC CRUSADE CONTESrr: At the narather regularly. will become more ,popular. Fads tional headquarters of the Eucharistic Crusade in New'
"So how's about Simon?" she in girls' names," she adds, "are York, Father Thomas Diehl, J;ight, Qh:ector, examines
Taunton D of I asked. "Or Thaddeus, Lintls, more common than among boys' 'some of the hundreds of entries in ·the fifth annual contest, Cletus, Clement, Sixtus, Cyprian, names." ' , . Car din a I Gibbons '. Circle, <:hrySOgoDUs, Cosmas, Damian'?" Mrs. MeLoughliii also include!' assisted by. Father Lincoln J~ Walsh, ~.J.,. editor of the Taunton Daughters of Isabella, .. Sixtus' is,out,n Mary de- in her book appropriate hymns' Sacred Heart Messenger. N(i; Photo. : . will hold its 'annual Communioi elared. "!I'liat's for, the six,th son for naniedays ,and· recipes to in , breakfast Sunday, April 12, at and this will be only our second, trigue the imagination of any Bishop Cassidy High ' School end maybe it 'woJ).'t even be a cook. "There are:, Crown Cake, eafeteria, 'following attenda~ eon. Any fancy girls' names 4>11 with instructionformakirig the at 9 o'clock Mass at St. Mary'. your roster, Ginny?" crown; M u fJ i c a I Cake,' St. Chu'rch: Sister John glizabetli, Back to the Npbis quoqlle pec- Joseph's, Cream PuHs, SnowPo'rish Schools of- ~incinnati Archdiocese ]lrincipalat Bishop' Cassidy wiil ,eatoribus, Ginny came, up with balls-on-Fire, Sta-r of David Pie, ' , , . " , epeak. Res-ervations may be Try to' ,Solve 'Rising Cost Problem " " Perpetua, Agatha, Lucy, Agn4ls, and traditional.Lamb € a ke', with made until- Monday, April' • ingenious tricks for keeping the ",, ~: ". Cecilia, Anastasia. 'with 'Mrs. Alben Nunes, ebaJ.;. CINCINNATI, (NC) - Parish, I Although no lay teachers will man. , . "Um," M: a ry eommented. lamb intact. ·There is even' a re~ ' "'Well, maybe.", cipe for Irish coffee, not for the elementary schools of the.Cin-: - be dropped,school board offiSo the discussion goes Cl>ll, ehildren, but for thOse whO:bring cinnati archdiocese will drop.the' eials' noted that there is an an partly in fun, greater partin the children to the celebr.atio~ first grade beginning nextSep-' nual turnover of about 30 per earnest. Giving a child a narne There is a 'day-by-daycalen-' tember fil an effort to, solve.the cent among lay teachers in the ~ will, 'bear for a ~ifetime, a dar 'of patron saints And' their problems of rising cost' and en parochial schools. ' ONE STOP
patron. saint to emu~te, 11 a namedays.," ;, . ' . rollment. The reduction of some 10,000 aeriou8 step.- " The' ,last index, l!IOme 1500 The Cincinnati archdiocese, is pupiis' from -the current elemen _ SHOP,PI~G eEN'I,'ER
,Along this line, a :book just names' of recognized saints; with' the first U. S. See to drop the tary sCli601 enrollment 'of more • TELEVISION • FURNITURE off the press came to attention, various versiohs of their names, first grade on an acros'~the-', thaD 75;000 therclore'will enable • APPLIANCES • GROCERY , '"My Nameday. ~ Come for DE~S- is an eye-opener. , " . board basis, though grades' ha.ve: the 'schools to· reduce the lay .ert" by. Helen McLoughlJin, So, from' Abina, Adalbert,· been' dropped in' indiyid\lal, teachirig force by about '200 104 Allen St., New Bedfonl, ]lubJjshed by the 'Liturgi(:al Adam,' ·Adamman to Zachary, - Catholic' schools in scatte~d, teachefs-, with a saving of 'an '.¥Vman 7·9354 Press, Collegeville, MiIlDesota. Zeno, Zita, Zoe - there: must' areas throughout the country. ' estimated $640,000 aniluall7. Nameday Celebration be somewhere a name of the The action follows a sharp de- new Master or Miss Gorman. bate on the issue, in Catholie. 'Ilheme of the book is celebra 81FTS ,FOR tASTER • MOTHER'S DAY • '"ADUArIOM • BIRTHDAYS tion of a child's "Nameda~"H ' educational circles for the past eommemoration of the feast of few years. In tbe debate some the saint whose name he I'e- Sisters of Mercy PI~n prominent Catholie educators eeived in Baptism. Says Mrs. Mc- Secretarial School said it would be d.sastrous if any Loughlin, "Namedays enrich a Catholic elementary g r a des
ehild's thinking, create feelings SWAMPSCOTT (NC) - The were dropped.
of security, reverence and love Sisters of Mercy will open a The Cincinnati archdiocesan
of tradition which come from secretarial school in September decision to drop the first grade
links with the past. They bind here in a 39-room former man- was announced at a press con
members of the family elof:er sion which in 1925 served as the ference at which members of
to each other, to God, and the Summer White House for Presi- the Administrative Council and
saints. They sanctify the hom'a." dent Calvin Coolidge. of the School Board of the arch-
Reverently, she suggests the The white stucco mansion diocese were present. Archbish nameday start with the vigil, a with seven acres of landscaped op Karl J. Alter, of Cincinnati,
quiet, prayerful period the eve- grounds long has been a show- emphasized that the changes
ning before, and family partici- place of the North Shore resort came with the unanimous ap pation in Mass on the feast day area.. proval of the council and the
itself, seeking God's graces for board.
the nameday child through in. , "I Reduce' Teaching Force
tercession of his patron. . District to Instal tt was immediately 'stated that ,
Come 'for Dessert Fall Riverl>istdct of the Di- 'Suminer vacation schools of reli-'
As for the "Corrie for Desse:l't" . ocesan . Council ,; o.f eatholie gion 'will be set up for the ap;'
. " part of the- title; the practi~al- '\IVomeJl will ho~d.m5tallationof· proximately 10;000 children who minded ,author r~ommends t;l1i$ . officers' Thurs!iay, April HI, would hlive ~ntered parochial as a 'festive 'way of celebration' ,following a-- di,aln~ue~ MaSs at ,schoolS· in the first grade neJd ,"without in f ti n g lasting 0urLady of)'ealthChurch. Fall. , .... 'Wounds on the' budget." ... '. book, amply niustrated
:' .• '." and' obviously the product of,.
extensive research,' offers :in " epirationand a wealth'of,prac1i-'
eal help for familie!;, especililly
mothers; who. try ~o spiritualize
the daY-by-day lives of their
. ~ildren. .
f?;r,.,
Drop ',First.· prade
CORREIA
It SONS
lie
'The
.
;
···WIIITE .SPA ..... ,c A'TERE-RS •
Hyacinth. D of I Members of Hyacinth Cire1e,
New Bedford Daughters of Isa
bella, will see slides of a Euro
]lean trip shown by Miss Lillian
Ross at a social meeting Tues~
dayy, March 24, Guests may at
tend. Secrpt Pals will hold. a
rollcall dinner Tuesday, Ma~, 5
at White's restaurant.
t,·
'
•
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'All IIVIR
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·,Wa,rns. ~.P'recocious Youngster Ofl lDange'r, i~' Bratty Conduct,
:.T.H.I:,.ANCHOR-
ThUI'$., March .. -
_.~-
,,
19, 1964' . -
:9
He', ped '11 5' Gi rl:'s To Become Nuns
started' I have changed:' When I go ice-skating I smoke with the boys. I also flirt with them. I am not spoiled like a lot of kids, but when I get around boys I act that way. My parents don't know this an inside track with them. In but it is getting so no one view of recent reports on likes me any more. Please smoking, It Is quite clear it is help me." fraught with serious health
Joyce, I want to complIment 70U for the Insights you seem to have. At last ~u rea I I z e, 'eomething 'Is
I
.
./'
:' , ~' ,) ".".'.' \ '; '"By' Joh~ J. Kane, Ph. D. , ~'I 'am :a girl, almost 13 years old, and since Winter
problems.
The earlier you begin to
smoke, the more dangerous it
Is. In fact" any young person
today who has never smoked,
wrong but you should never do so. It is far
can't qUite pirleasier not to begin than to try to
point it. Furstop.
thermore, your' These boys are probably not
problem Is, not permitted to smoke, so when
unusual. ~n, fact, you join with them, you are
it 'is aim 0 S t both doing something secreUy
which is forbidden. Have you
Chronic 'among' ,iris of your ever wondered what these boys
age. Let's put it think of you? I am reluctant to
this way - it tell you, but they probably con ls a combination of being a clude if you do one thing which
70ung adolescent, groping your Is forbidden, you may readily
way to wbat you think Is maturi- do other things. Among them
ty" trying too hard to comp~te selves, they probably criticize
with' the other girls, ,and beIng you and wonder just what kind
• lJrt "pree<x:loUs. "" .. ' :\: o~ ,girl rou :~allyare. Precocious Is a big word~'so .. Of course, you are. unpopular rm going to begin by explaining ~itli the girls. Some girls are what' it- ~ealiS. It Is ,at~~mpting 'viCiousi y 'catty, not only at this to think and act much older age, 'bUt especially at this age: thlni you reallY are. It is' ti'yin,g Girls' compete.. with 'other girls to' btl 18 ;wheh"you are'onlY"l!j. for boy friends, just as' boys 'It 'II! alwaYs 'aUttle ,sUly" 'if' ~t compete with other boys for girl downright 'ridiculous. ", :,:: friends. Basically this is the way , Have you ever watched 'youtrg things are. , ' The big difference with you ChUdreh 'dressing' up like' ,men ~nd,: wo~en; playing ,.the ,PaJ;ts is that you are using unfair of 'hustiand 'and Wife? YOU methods., I refer to, your smoking, probably"smiled at them as' we with 'them in order to get closer all do. It Is harmless. After' a to them. I also refer to your while they will tire of it, take flirting which I suspect is ex off the long'dresses and trousers travagant. and turn to another game.' Rules of Game In a way you are doing the same thing but it just isn't There are certain rules of the funny. You are not a young chilcl game in dating and courtship and you are 'not playing. You are which you will have to learn In earnest. when the time comes. You don't take unfair advantage, as you Ma~ity Years ~wa,. haVE! already done. You, have : Yo~ have reached ,a stage iil probably antagoniZed' your girl 'life ~henyou have left,~hi1d,- friends,' so 'start right now to hood b'ut fiot yet entered 'upop win them back. You 'need them. adultllool;l. f9f the Il~~' ,five o.r 'You' need them because soon six years; possibly, ,long:r, YO}! 'these' girls will'be having parties will vacillate between chlld~OO~ and "socials to which they will and adulthood, probably at tImes 'invite boys but not you. We all to the despair of your parents, ne~,d, friend:;; of the same sex as teacliers and everyone else, in- coilfidants, as companions, espe cluding yourself. Some of this cially before marriage. You will is inevitable but it can be made lack them and with whom will a little easier if you understand you associate most of the time? yourself. , If you continue as you are, It would be strange if you you will be an outcast from the were not beginning to become group, a lonely, dejected girl, interested in boys at your age. just the type who can meet and You have reached the age of . marry the wrong boy_ pUberty, i.e. you are maturmg sexually. God placed the sex Begin by having a talk with drive in men and women so that your mother about the problem later in life they can marry and you mentioned. Be frank with become mothers and fathers. It her. She may, be angry about Is part of conjugal love, the kind your smoking and if so, she is of love a man and woman have right. In your case it is both a for each other in marriage. But health hazard' and possibly a .ex' while part of this love, is moral hazard: not' all of it. Herein' lies,. Ask her about associating with danger. ' boys. If she has never given you The sex urge begins long be- any sex instruction, ask her fore boys and. girls in our society q,uestions. Some mothers are a are, able to marry. You have bit timid in this respect but years of educlltion ahead of y6u. nearly all will rise to the occa You must grow up, mature and .ion if asked. be ready to accept all the reNext, begin to cultivate your ,ponsibilities of marriage be- girl friends. You can ellsily do fore you'enter upon it. All of this this by' proving you will not Is some years away 90 it is enter into unfair competi~ion disastrous to try to behave now with them for boy friends. Un as though fOU wer~ 19 or 20. less you feel very iriferior to all At your age you should know the other girls, you don't have many boys 8S casual friends, to do things they refuse to do to companions with whqm' you gain boys' attention. This means skate, slide, talk alld .joke. ,you smoking with them. are a bit young even to date.' And finally, try to relax a bit. Hold that for a few years. There, Some of the changes you note will be plenty of time to date in yourself are all part of young later, and you will undoubtedly adolescence. You 'are not the have plenty of dates when the only girl of your age experi time comes. But of f;his I am encing them. At any rate, you certain you are ullfertain. That realize you have a problem, and is why Y.QU smoke with the boys. this i$ half-way to solution, if Smoking with the boys, which you do something about it. If apparently the other girls do no~, you don't want to become a giv~ you - Or so you think real brat~ stop acting bratty now.
-' ._"
CANONICAL VISIT: Rev.1,\1other Mary Basile, C.S.C., superior general of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, visits Sr. Mary Amedee de Savoie, C.S.C., superior at St. Anthony's Convent, New Bedford, in her tour of the Congregation's convents in the Diocese.
'Noodle Queen' :,':
Q,ue~ec Nun "Will Produce a Ton' Daily ',' ' " For p'oQr, ,of Lima' SI~i1'Is' , ' "
LIMA (NC)-The ~oodlE!, lQng In Peru .is .a q\leen., , , ! " " ,Sister' Sainte Adelelde~ O'f' tilf Missioners of OurUady of 'the, 'iAngels:o£' Sherbrookel Que.; will , soon begin to produce a ton of noodles daily W be distributed free to the poor in a vast slum here. The story began in Hong Kong. Msgr. John :Romartiellol'-M.M., ,of Y'Onkers, N. Y., head of Catholic Relief Services-National Catholic Welfare Conference there has been making noodles for years for refugees fleeing from communist China. , The Yonkers' monsignor dis· covered that the U. S. surplu! flour handed out to the poor Will being sold instead of consumed, because the, people did not know bow to prepare it." ; !, ,He -came up with the~dea of making noodles from, the flour., and liistributing, them~eady ,made to the hungry. " :, , During ~he last 10 years, Msgr.. Romaniello ,haS' distributed thou'sands of tons ofooodies ,and ,was nicknamed the Noodle King by the British colony. " When he heard of the prob~
lems of malnutrition In LIma,
he raised money on American
television programs tob~y ",a noodle machine for, the teeming
Lima slum called Pampa de O::OIJlQS, , He then sent Sister Sainte ';-lucien,to Lima' to supervise the installation., Sister Sainte Lucien b.ad ,been baking and distribu.. ~g 10.,000 loaves of br.ead a day I>ll the ,Portuguese island terri ttQry,pf Macao near Hong Kong; ,She is presently, in Lima organ... Izing. Operation Noodle, and will "eturn shorUyw Hong Kong. ',,' Sister Sainte Adeleide will nanage the noodle factory in Pampa de Comas. She plans to (eed 1,800 families of six per rons daily. The flour is supplied free through CRS-NCWC.
::ommittee of Dominican Acad IDlY, Fall River, will sponsor '8 iliicken pie: supper from 5 to'f Saturday night, April H, at the academy; and a 'rummage sale from I} in the morning to 8:30 at night Wednesday; April 29;' at 308 .East Main Street.' Next lIleeting of, the unit will baat 1:30 Tuesday night, April T.
HATHAWAY
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BAR-B-Q CHICKENS,
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While out for a Drive
Stop at this delightfUl Spot
JACKSON (NC).-More, than 1QO qat!wlic", Protestant ,and J~wish women ,and many' clar ~men of ,f;he, three,faithsw:ere present, for, ,the, .first meeting he,re of the Jack-son In~erfatth fellowship. ,,,A~, atttenduig, were three bishops-Catholic Bishop, Rich.. ard O.,Gerow of Natchez-'-Jaclco son, Miss., 'Episcopal Bishop John Allin, and Methodist Bish. op Marvin Franklin. ' Purpose of the women's Inter faith Fellowship is to foster mu tual understanding and respect among members of different church ~roups.
, Fund-Raisers
Junior Daughters of Isabella, New Bedford Circle 71, will hold
its annual cake sale Saturday.
May 9 at the Star Store.,
WashingtQn ·St..~ajrllaven " : '
" 'Jl.Ist ~ft, Route 6 ",',
WY 7-9336
rnterfaith Fellowship f,t"Mi~s~ss,ippi Ci,ty
st. Catherine's Fund-Raising
Junior D of I
i 45
CINCINNATI (NC) - During 42 years in the priesthood, Father Mark Hoskins, C.P., esti mated that he assisted 115 young women to find their vocations as nuns. Last September nine of his proteges joined sisterhoods. Father Hoskins said he em ploys a simple technique. He detailed: "Whenever I meet a girl who seems a likely prospect for a religious vocation I ask, her if she ever' thought of being a nun. If she says yes, I take her ,name and address, and write to her." " Since his -ardin'ation In 1922, Father Hoskins ,said he has written thousands of letters to possible candidate for, the sister. hood; The Passionist pries~ is chaplain at Mount St. Joseph-on. the-Ohio College conducter~ for women by the Sisters of Charity here.
,501 COUNTY $TRE':T, NEW BEDFORD WY 3-1751
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, '9 a.m. tt 10 p.m.
South Dartmouth, Mass. Dial WY,8-S691
10
THE ANEHORThurs., March 19,
19~,4 .• •• 1 -
Jewish Leader Praises Pius As Savior NEWARK (NC) - A na tional Jewish leader dl~ pieted Pope Pius XII as a savior of thousands of Jews
Diocesan Missioner. to South Afri~a Preaches Montreal College Have Home
Before Basutoland J(ing at J(ennedy Mass To In .Skyscraper
Last year hundreds of Catholics in the Fall River area became interested in the work of Rev. Robert ,Sevigny, O.M.!., on home leave from his missionary assignfnent in Basutoland, South Africa. Now returned to the missions, Father Sevigny is stationed at St. Benedict ,Catholic Mission, Rama, Basutoland. "I'm still in the mountains," he writes, "but not quite so far Africa since the end of Septem I was right in the center and from the cities. I once was ber, returning via Rome where made good my four days to visit 14 hours on horse from the he was present at the opening the Vatican Museum, the Sistine auto road, now it is only one of the second session of the Ec Chapel, St. Peter's, and the
from nazi slaughter durir:g World War II and condemned hour. So far we have been very the hostile characterization of much jack of all trades. We have the Pontiff in the controversial cleaned the' rectory thoroughly Broadway plaY, "The Deputy." and are bringing water from a . Benjamin R. Epstein, national nearby spring to it with 1,000 director of the Anti-Defamation .feet of plastic pipe. "We have completed the grade League of B'nai B'rith, in a.n ad dress at the league's annual New school: it was still lacking two Jersey regional meeting here grades, although my parish is al said "there is no need for the 'most as big as the whole Diocese Catholic Church, to defend, its of Fall River. I have five out record of aiding the Jews in station schools, arid with' that of the mission, have about 800 Germany." .. : 'He said "'the Deputy" is "a children in' them. All this is visited on horseback, rain or 'bad play in which the character shine. ization of the Pope is unfortu Eventful Trip nately very poor. Epstein added: "All this is of course 70 per "The record of Pope Pius XU is clear in relation to the Jews. cent God's work for all the ac The Pope as well as many of his tions of today's missionary have cardinals, bishops, nuns and ,to be guided by patient charity priests did many things that rE~ rather than business efficience: suited in saving thousands of the Africans have had it of being pushed around. Then I would 'Jewish lives." put 29 per cent to the name of Stories Legion "Stories are legion," Epstein the charitable persons who back said, "of the actions of priests us by their prayers and alms. who falsified birth certificauis Truly has someone said that of Jewish babies and had them Fall River is a little Diocese with labelled as Catholics so' they a big heart! God ~elp us again could survive. And there ate '~or the remaining one per cent!" countless instances where Jew. , The missionary has been in iSh men and women were' shel ,tered and hidden from til:le , nazis." The Jewish leader predicted "1964 will find Jewish-Cathol:ic cooperation developing to a dll gree we,have never before seen." He said this will be brought about partly by several sympo WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen. sium programs 'involving some Thomas Dodd of Connecticut great Catholic universities." said here that the U.N. fact finding mission to South Viet nam has revealed the relig'ious persecutions charged to the Diem 'regime were "at the best, vastly exaggerated,at the worst, a MEXICO CITY (NC) - A sordid propaganda fraud."'. Catholic weekly news magazin~, The U.N. study was' shelved .Mundo Mejor, charged here that without any conclusions being despite the shortage' of teachers drawn, but the t es tim 0 n y .in Mexico the Ministry of Edu gathered by the mission in South cation is hampering private ef. Vietnam was made available to forts for the training of teachers. the Senate Internal Security The publication said that :In Subcommittee by :(:>odd. " the course of a year various pri_ , In a letter to Sen. James' O. vate groups have petitionll~ Eastland of Mississippi, subcoJ;ll:" public officials to obtain recog. mittee chairman, Dodd said the nition for new normal schools American people h~d been "grie_ directed by private citizens. vously misinformed by some of The state normal school cannot their newspapers" in regard to accommodate all who wish to be the alleged persecution of Budd hists. teachers, the magazine said. Mexico has seven million chil 'Suicide Promotion' dren of school age but only '1:.2 As a result, he continued, the million attend school. They are Diem government "has been de taught by about 110,000 teachers. stroyed and a chaotic situation Private schools educate 500,000 has been created that will make students. More such schools could be opened if there were teachers to staff them; it H claimed.
umenical ,Council. "It was my first time in Rome," he notes, "and since ihe mother house of the Oblate Fathers is only 10 'minutes walk from St. Peter's,
U.S.A. Woman Wins STD Degree FATHER ROBERT SEVIGNY
,'Persecution -Exaggerated 'UN Mission to South Vietnam Reveals Newspapers ,Misinformed. Americans
Charges Teachers'
'Training Hampered
Teachers Condemn
School Boycotts
Study Compulsory Chapel Attendance WASHINGTON (NC) - The Defense Department is studying the question of compulsory chapel attendance at the three service academies. A spokesman said the depart ment began its review of the traditional requirement after the Supreme Court first held in 1962 that prayers and Bible reading are unconstitutional in public schools. No decisions have been reach,~d and none is expected for several months, the spokesman said. The study was described as a lengthy one because,of the "strong fee,l ings" among various parts in volved, chiefly the academy staffs, the cadets, religious groups and organizations in. volved in Church-State issues.
• BROOKLYN (NC)-TheCath. olic Teachers Association of the Brooklyn diocese has condemned school boycotts "and other com parable demonstrations" because they "defy the law, incite vio lence and disorder, and substi tute pressure tactics for national approaches." The teachers also criticized the iarge s'ums of money being spent to transport children to distant schools in an effort to end de facto segregation. They said the money could better be used to improve "the total school program." The teachers said they did not support segregation, asserting that "every constructive sug gestion should be considered and eve I' y promising experiment should be tried in the. hope of ameliorating a grave social evil."
other three main basilicas." Once in Africa, said Father Sevigny, "he found the roads "dusty and bumpy. Basutoland had not seen rain for months. "I then served in various parishes in the absence of their respective pastors. One sad duty was to preach the eulogy at the funeral Mass of President Ken nedy, attended by the King of Basutoland, Her British Majes ty's Commissioner and 'the, An glican Bishop of Basutoland." Father Sevigny is a native of Blessed Sacrament parish in Fall River and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Sevigny, 565 King Street. While in the Diocese last year he pre a c h e d at many churches and addressed varioUs Catholic groups on his work in South Africa.
a communist takeover more dif ficult to resist." "While the report made no formal finding," said Dodd in his letter, "some of the testimony presented in the report 'raises doubts about the authenticity and spontaneity of the series of suicides by self-immolation." He pointed out that the report reproduced at length the testi mony of a 19-year-old monk who told the mission howl1e had been recruited by a:"suic,ide promotion squad." "The mission," con tin u e d Dodd, "was able to interview a numbe,r. of Buddhist leaders and youth leaders who had been re ported killed. It could find no evidence to substantiate pub lished reports in the press that Buddhists had been thrown from upper stories during the raid on Xa Loi pagoda." Summarizing the report, Dodd said: "What all this adds up to, in my opinion, is that the Ameri.,. can people have once again been grievously misinformed by some of their newspapers on a foreign situation that vitally concerns them."
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FRIBOURG (NC) - Mary' F. Daly, 35, of Schenectady, N. Y. is the first American woman to win a full-fledged doctorate of Catholic theology, according' to authorities of the University of Fribourg. Miss Daly earned her S.T.D. degree summa cum laude last Summer' with her dissertation on "The Problem of Speculative Theology, 'a Study Of St. Thomas;" , A careful search of the rec ords which was made here re vealed that women theology students in American Catholic institutions of, higher learning can receive the Ph.D. degree 'but not the S.T.D. Miss Daly is the only American woman' who has thus far obtained a doctorate in sac~d . theology at a European university., , Miss Daly, now teaching here, did her undergraduate work at the College of St. Rose' in Al bany and earned her M.A. from the Catholic Univer,sity of Amer ica.
MONTREAL (NO) -'- A new skyscraper home for a Catholic college will be part of a $28 million building com plex to be erected in the heart of Montreal under an unusual agreement between -a religious community and a labor union. The College of Ste. Marie will be housed in a 20-story sky scraper that will be built on a ,downtown site along with twin 34-story office buildings. Under the agreement between the Jesuits, who operate the , college and own the site, and the . National Syndicate of MWlicipal Employees, the syndicate will , erect the' buildings and admin , ister the complex for 60 years. At the end' of that time the Jesuits will take over possession of all three buildings. While construction' of the project will cost some $28 mil lion, a net return of $30 mil lion is expected after 60 years. Downtown Site Announcement of the plan was made here by Father Real Lebell , S.J., rector of the College of Ste. Marie, and Gerard Shanks, pres ident of the syndicate, which is .the union for Montreal's 4,000 . 'white collar city workers. The building complex will be "erected on a choice downtown site which has been occupied by the college for 115 year,S and iI valued at between $5 milion and $7 million. The school's' present building will be demol ished sO'on. Plans call for the project to be completed by 1967, in time for the Montreal World'. Fair in that year. Shanks said priority in the twin office buildings will go to la-bor organizations, credit unions and cooperative ,movement groups.
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,:Newspaper Asks Woman's Church Status Talk MUNICH (NC) - Catho lic theology must not seek an easy answer to the question concerning the position of woman in the Ohurch, says the Klerusblatt, official organ of the Catholic clergy association of Bavaria and the Palatinate pub lished here. "Certainly," says the paper, "this question may not be an swered in a negative mood only. The very fact of the extraordi nary role of Mary in the history of salvation should make' one ponder. Also .the early Church' knew how to avail itself of the services of woman. "In the days of the Apostles there were deaconesses, virgins and widows performing im portant tasks a 1 tho ugh the priesthood was not accessible to women. In the history of the Church abbesses erudite and pious nuns, also saintly wives and mothers, women of the nobility and those of lower social status have exercised greatest influence. "However, it was not up ,to them as it was to the priest .to represent Christ. Rather"., as brides and handmaids of tlle Lord were they images in,' a sense, of the Church. They, set examples in the field of charity, especially in serving the poor, the weak and the little ones with all the warmth of their heart~!," Klerusblatt adds. ' , Obstacle The paper deplores that some Protestant churches in Scandi navia, Germany and Switzer land have ordained women as ministers. It sees in this develop ment an inconsiste'ncy with the very Scripture Protestants hold in so high an esteem and an 'obstacle to the further improve 'ment of interfaith relations. Th~ article goes on to say: "It may be that in our day the churCh will assign new tasks to women which WQuid go b~ yond the traditional' custom$, even beyond the functions of , parish helpers, but we shou~d , uphold that the Savior did not intend to abolish what the Creator wanted to exist, in ,bringing to life two different sexes, e s p e cia 11 y since the groom-bride relationship be tween Christ and the' Church ,reveals the dee pes t divine meaning of human sexuality which should be represented in the Church, within and without marriage." ,
Seminarian Mission Effort Permanent LITTLE ROCK (NC) - A Latin American missionary e~. fort that grew out of a private venture by five students at St. John's Home Missions SeminarY here has been put on a formal basis by a $500 anonymous gift. Msgr. James E. O'Connell, seminary 'rector, said the money would be used to send "student missionaries" to Latin America next Summer. Plans calI for the project to be a regular summer_ time enterprise of the local sem_ inary. The venture originated with five students from St. John's who last Summer went on their own to Mexico and spent sev eral weeks doing mission work in a region 200 "miles west of Mexico City.
Record Donation LANSING (NC)-eatholics in the Lansing diocese donated a record $73,625 to missions in 1963, chancery office statistics dis. closed. The total Ul $11,000 more than 1962 and more than double the amount collected in 1959.
'Diocesan CYO Members Sponsor Weekly Radio Program Explaining Activities : ; ; Under the dynamic gu'idance of Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, director of youth organiza tions for the Fall River Diocese, the program 01 the Catholic Youth Organization has become outstanding. Only one of many successful activities was the Lenten Youth Forum, concluded last Sunday at Franklin Street CYO in Fall River. Capacity crowds of up to 900 teen-agers heard is "problems 'and successes of vited to address the teen-age a series of talks on youth CYO in their particular local audience, noted that Pope Paul problems by R~v. Joseph ities." VI recently addressed an audi Last week's guest took a ence of youth group delegates Lennon, O.P., dean of Provi
dence College. Teen dances, a broader view of youth activities, and told them that not even varied sports calendar, publica however. Father· Sullivan, in- families or schools could replace such organizations, because only tion of a yearbook and the spon they' could supply the training , sorship of dramatic, cheerleading
. needed for future adult work in and declamation contests are
Catholic Action groups. other parts of the' CYO program.
Youth organizations must pri 'They are reported on and "tied marily be teachers of the Chris , in a package" by a weekly radio tian life, stressed the Pontiff, 'program. , adding that it was also most The radio project, started 'some , salutary, for recreational ac . five months ago over Fall River 'tivities to come under the direc . 'station WSAR, is quite unusual, ,tion of members of the clergy. '·this'Diocese being one of the "Our recreation program has few to sponsor such an activity. been a splendid one," said Father The program, heard at 6:30 Sullivan, in commenting on this each Saturday night, "endeavors portion of the Pope's address. He to fill the wide gap existing be said further that the keynote tween the parish CYO and the of CYO activity is progress: area unit." Topics discussed have "Pr{)gress in leadership, progress ranged from teen-age driving to in unity of action, progress in · a report on the National Catholic hope for the development of .\ Youth Convention. ' Catholic leadership." Moving Spirits Moving spirits include Brian Corey, Fall River area CYO president and a Providence Col lege freshman; James Gibney, senior at Durfee High School; META (NC)-eatholics of this Patricia Lackey, senior at Mt. small town across the bay from St. Mary Academy; and Michael Naples went to the polls to McNally, junior at Bishop Stang elect their new pastor. It was High School. ., the first time they had done so · . They have had many parish in 40 years. CYO representatives as guests and a favorite discussion topic FATHER WALTER SULLIVAN , The ancient privilege for the people to elect their parish priests-calIed the right of pa tronage-still exists in a few localities in Italy. 'Meta's parish of Santa Maria del Lauro is one. .- The privilege of choosing the parish priest here by secret bal lot traces back to. 1543. That was when two citizens, Nardello del VATICAN CITY (NC)-Vati_ Barcelona Radio named Vati Polo and Raffaele Falifani, gave can Radio had a record year in can Radio recipient of the' 1963 the land for the new basilica of .1963 in reporting on three his "Ondas" award '.'for. services' 'st. Mary of the Laurel, Their toric events, the death of Pope 1'Cndered to Christianity in the donation of the land was made John XXIII, the' election and days of the death of John XXIII on the condition that 'the faithful 'Coronation of Pope Paul VI and and the election of Paul VI to would have the right to elect ·the second session of the Se(:ond the supreme pontificate." their pastor from a list compiled ,Vatican Council. 'by authorities of tpe Sorrento Iii 1963, Vatican Radio broad: . - Reporting in the' annual year cast 3,683 weekly programs.' Of .archdiocese. book, "Activities of the Holy , The reason for the 4O-year these, 231 were directed to Euro See", Vatican Radio recalled pean countries; 47 to Africa; 42 iapse in exercising the franchise tpat it issued news· bulletins and is one of lo~gevity. The last pas to Canada, the United States and medical communiques around tor, Father S,tefano Porzio, died Latin America; 22 to Asia ahd the clock beamed to all parts of this past January after serving the world during the death of 14 to Australia' and New Zea 'two. ,score years. land. Pope John. , During the year, Vatican The radio station, which is op_
Radio broadcast about 15 hours erated by a special team of Jes
uit priests, gave technical assist 'a day in 30 languages, 16 for ance to 27 foreign broadcasting Central and Eastern Europe and companies and systems during 9 for Western Europe. Five non, the conclave which elected the European languages were em present Pope and during his ployed for regular broadcasts in coronation.
,addition to the usual language~ 15 Hours Daily
of English, French, Spa.nish~ Another special service, be.. German and Portuguese. During yond the regular round the clock the second council session spe,;, ,magnetic tape recording of all cial daily programs were .initi~ the interventions of the council ilted in French for' Canada and 944 County St. schedule of the station, was the in English for India. ' New Bedford Fathers during the second ses sion. More than 250 other Fathers were given use of Vatican Radio facilities to inform their faithful of their work in the council..
Parish Members Elect Pastor
Record Year
Vatican Radio Yearbook Recalls Reports Of Historic Events
Casey-Sexton,
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The Catholic Hour is produced by the National Council of Cath",\ • olic Men. The series cited by the NCCJ was broadcast last May on the National Broadcasting Company radio network. .. ~.
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THE ANCH0R
Thurs., March 19, 1964
11
Wheat Host Use For Communion Now Increasing SUPERIOR (NC) - The
Franciscan Sisters who make
most of the hosts used at
Masses in the Wisconsin'dio
cese are now producing natural
wheat hosts in response to their
growing use here.
The hosts are made with un
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than white hosts.
Father Robert M. Urban, edi tor, Catholic Herald Citizen, 'wrote in the paper that "the .practice is growing in many par ishes of revertiIig to the use of 'natural wheat fiour, that is, flour that is not bleached and bas a tan or beige cast to the bread." , ~." Must Chew He said that the new host Im- -: presses one with the idea that this bread has a closer resem blance to the bread of the Cen 'acle and of all the ages of the . Church prior to the introduction of the thin, shiny-white hosts we have been using. "Because of the slightly thick er size of the host," he added ,"we have to now eat, which means chew, and that is not only permissible but the logical man ,ner." Father Urban wrote that no where in Church law is there .any law insisting that the bread to be used at Mass be of white color. "Natural ground wheat flour," he said, "does not have the whiteness we now associate with wheat flour. Due to improve. .ment of milling processes, such as bleaching, wheat flour today is white· due to technique and not nature."
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··12
. ,Christ ,Uvesil'l.he·'POQl','· . .,"..-
.! • ~ ,
~.
Shcarp'ly Divelrgent Views
God Love You .. :.ls
. By Msgr: George G. Higgins Pope John XXIII, in his closing address at the first session of Vatican Council H, noted that the Fa,thers had expressed "sharply divergent views" in the Council, Parti .eularly in early days of the session. This, he said, with char acteristic tranquility, was Rome and a number of others anderstandable in such a that were airmailed to my hotel vast gathering. Indeed, he everyday from Washington. added, the expression _ of Fr. Sheerin Disagrees
to
•
'I
. , ,
'By M08t'Rei. Fultoil'J~ Sh~, D.n~
Show Liberty in Church
honest -differences of opinion in the COuncil "has -a ProVidential place in the tri umph of truth, for it has shown' all the world the holy liberty' that the sons of GOd enjoy' in the Chllich." It' is' .a' matter of record~ of course, that the ... Fathers again exercised t his "'holy liberty" of the sons of' God during the ~ond session of the Council; in'receIit 'wee'kss'ome' Of the C~i..l'\i:!il Ijexp~rtS;' have 'be~i1li:i f~1l6W' sUit. • " '.' .,, ' " ,; On _a' ntiinber" of'imJ?ilrtarl-t ~urieii' m'a'tte¥~tocite 'but ljri~i <en.mple-Msgr. Rudofph ,,' 'G: IBamias; a Coun1:il eJq)ert· from fthe A;rchdfocese -of St. Paul; sees the troth somewhat differentl~~ 'than" 'SOme' 'of his -fellow.:Amei... ' ~an experts;" . notably Fathe:e loh~,Sheerin,.:9.S.P., ¢i~~ of l1"he Ciltholic World. ,._ TWo VieWpoints·: . In the course of a widely pUb Ucized speech on the second ses sion of ·the Council, Msgr. Ban 'lias made a number of state~ ments which, in Father Sheerin's 'judgment, constituted ,ea clea.r 'and unmistakable expression (,f the extreme conservative point of view." In my opinion, this is a fair Jw'ay to characterize Msgr. Bani !das'over-all approach to COllCof Igiality.ecJ,unenisIn,. I,3iblical rei ,search, and a number of otheJt !conci1i31' matters to which h~ jaddressed himself.ra·ther blunt:j ,in hi~ recent speech. " : ! With regard to Msgt;Bandas~ 'outspo}{en treatment of most of :these topics, 1 have nothing to iadd, to what Father Sheerin has ,already said in last week's re !lease of his sylldicated NC col 'umn, Sum and Substance. : On the other hand, I should like to reinforce and elaborate upon Father Sheerin's gentle manly disagreement with Ms!(r. Bandas on one specific matter, namely, his severe criticism of '* the manner in which the Amer ,lean press covered the second session of the Council. Msgr. Bandas' View Msgr. Bandas has charged that "three-fourths of· the informa tion (on the Council) you got from .the. secuia~ press is incQr rect '-or completely false": ~'ri,d that !'in' the' measUre CathoHc
papers have copied the·, $ecILlar press they have Q)ntributed -to the spr~ad o-f. m}sipformatIon." The trouble with most report mg, hp added, ,ts that "these newspapermen are not interested in. what the Council did in>1:he morning.. What. they want..is the . hidden. meaiwig of what' ":he '. bishops did that morning. They want the :>ignificance of ~what . the bishops did, and they .get into all these wild theories abi:mi conservatives and liberals." Father Sheerin disagrees with Msgr. Bandas' unrestrained' criticism of the secular' pr4~sS. - So do I. I don't kno'w how many American newspapers and mag azines the Monsignor manaJ"ed to read during the second session of the Council, but I do 'know that I read as many as I could possibly lay my hands GQ in
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~~,Churoh in the Up.ite~ St,tes getting fat? Americans pay
«J 1riillion dollars a year for piUS to take -off fatl IS there' not Some need of the medicine of the Gospel to take of! our spiiitual fat? Do we need large gymnasiums hi our high schools when Africa needs a Eucharistic hut? Can we afford· elevators in three-story rectories when an Asiatic diocese needs its first dispensary?, Can a missionary society be justified in making Wall Street investments while their missionaries struggle to live on the' interest? DOes th~ Church in America resemble the Church of Laodicea of the ~ ·colypse? A frightening thoughtl ' '
A few of them, in my judg ment, were guilty of oversim plification and over sensational ism, as charged by Msgr. Bandas, but, by and large, they did a remarkably good job-"f covering a very difficult and very de: mandingassignment. I am not trying to score a cheap debater's point against Msgr. Bandas :when I xl'lcall, for the record,- that Cardinal McIn tyre - and, to, my personal knowledge, many other Ameri. can bishops also-felt that the KEYNOTER A T A mer i c an correspondents : UX1 lary accredited to the Council turned Bishop John J. Dougherty, of iIi, '. on . balance, a: first"rate pet•.. Newark,. and President of formance.. , •. , Seton Hall University, South .; .Cardinal Mcintyre has pub. Orange, . will be. the keynote li~ly described Anieric;in' pr~ss h· coverage Of' the '. as . ~peakerat·t e opemng ses.. "phenomenal." The news media, sion of the Glst annual meet in pursuit of their normal func- ing of the National Catholic tions, he said in Q!recent speeohi Educational, Association~ , tp '!have given .a· presentation ,of be held at Atlantic City, N.J., the. Council that could not be 'ill' h 31' A'l 3 64 given by any. official, Church l-Uarc.'· to.' prl , 19 : agency." ~C, Ph~tQ. " . . "
COuncil'
Catholic people. we call on you to preserve the spirituality of the Church in the United States. This Is -the way to do W Start with this troth: "This Is My Body" are the words which' proclaim the Eucha ristic presence of Christ In the Cburch. But remember that Christ also has au 'other body, anotlier presence which might -be called a Sociological Presence. He- lives In the 'poor: "I was hungry •••. thirsty , ••• naked." What' was? Bis Botly. The . 'Eucharist is the ''Fractio' Panis" or the 'Breakin&' of Bread, and chatit;- to the poor . is the sharing of our dail,. bread. In the earl,. Church, 70U' would -not have re ceived the Eucharist without briBdng an otterin&' to the poor. Now for the application. The next time your parish, your diocese. your alumni association has a "drive~ for money, tell them:you·Will' give'on :condition that·two per cent of 'it is given to,-the HoI,- Father for· the .poor of the.worldt ;If you need ·a school which costs a rt\illion, give $20;000 of: it' to the Vicar of Christ. You catholic:'peopie are the 'sheep which supplr the 'Chureh' <With its' financial' wooL"If ,:vO-e priests who, on touclling the ·Eueharistic:·Chri~ forget His Sociological, Presence in the. POOl', you mlist remind us (if' our dUty! You laity· helped save thl'i Churcll when .it- was in danger of being swept into Arianism.. This time you are called upon·to save' uS from'our .prosperity! You are the givers; therefore, the power 'is"in your· hands.' Even if .we: ask Y'O'l1 to make' a donation fora tabernacl.e,teU Us that five ,per cent ~ it must be given for ·the;Christ tabernacled in an·African-leper. Christ is not in the rich because they are rich; He· ill 'in them only because they' ate :virtuous~ But Christ in the' poor because they are poor! Help save the Church in America! Send- your sacrifice to the Holy Father's Society for the Propagation of the Faith, which helps the poor and' poor chUI'Ches all over the world.
Press' 'Panel Sessions' "It OCcurs tome ihilt" Msgr, Ba:nda-s wol11d be iii a better po sition to comment on American Continued from Page One Press coverage - of the Council charist together would be a if he had attended at least a few striking expression of the desire of 'the dailY sessions of the for unity. But he ruled this out, NCWC press panel which; by saying that "in doing so they GOD LOVE YOU to Rev. R.F.E. and teenal'ers.for $58 "We: want the' Missions ~ have 'ten per cent of our weekI,. Inceme/' the way, was 'ejltablished by 'and "{ould be givlnithe appearance was accountable to the Aml'!r • •• to Mrs. N.F.K. for $25' "I IOId II1J' cut glasspuncb bowl. of a unity which does not in fact ican hierarchy; set, and 1 am enclosing one-half· 'of the amount· 1 received for, exist." the Missions." ••• to a Grateful Student for $6 "I promise•. As one of ihe American : The Dutch prelate reiterated priests who served on this- press ;that .tb,e tr~e Chris~ilm unity to S1: Francis thatI'd double the cost of a lost book if he would. . . ,.: panel":-'ahd who,' if the"trtiih be 'sought is umty in belief, hot • help me find' it, and 'give' the: money' to the Missions.".·,· must be tOld, did so'red~c'tant.; a "superfici;11, lnor.e 'or. less ex ly, 'at first, because Jtwas : so ~~inal;·..urii;ty" ,cif . organization: Find out how 'an' annuitY With The Society for the Propagation of the Faith: helps' both y'ou1a'rid the poor of the world. Send.your time conSimiiiig-I'Cattie to have ~~ ~dg.~c;l:, . .' . . ., ,,' tr'erilenaous adID.iratioh '-:.:' pace " .'.'Of cQ4rse the· faith ,in ,tpe request for our pamphlet oil 'lItmuities, including ·the ·date. of 'your Mggr; Bandag;.....-not'·on!y for the Lord 'to Most Rev: 'FultOn J. Sheen;' 366 Fifth Avenue, New' York, shared by all Christian/! Js birth, New York 10001; .. :- . '. otii.-ermembers Of . the ,. panel a .p-r~.cious posse·ssion. B_ut. 'also (and' notably for the late Father important is what one beiieve~ Cut out this cOlumn. pin your 'sacrifice to it· and maD It to Weigel) but also for the report about this Christ, about His . the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Societ7. ers who attended its sessions so mission, purpose and message." faithfully. for the Propagation of the Faith. 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1~ N. Y..; or FOur Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T., . ,. Interested in F.:verythlng· CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street. Fall River. Mass. Philadelphia Priest· It isn't accurate. to say, for example, that they were not in THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTS terested in what transpired at Ch~"lain of Year WASHINGTON (NC)-Father
ANt' OF PERPETUAL ADORATION the morning session!l of the (Capt.) John T. McLaughlin,
InVite generous young ladles to loin them In leadlllll a deeply Council. religious life of love. adoration. and reparation. In tIIat spirit, They were intensely interested Navy chaplain and Philadelphia
the Sisters devote their time to the education of youth. retreat archdiocesan priest, was pre
work. and domestic duties. in everything that was said and For further Information,' apply to sented with the Chaplain of the done on the Council floor, and, Sisters of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, Mass. by and large, they spared no Year Award at a dinner climax effort to get their facts straight ing the Reserve Officers Asso ~ ciation annual meeting here.
and to put them in proper per spective. T hi:!' organization's Minute
Lobster Boats are I have genuine admiration for Man of the Year award went to almost all of them and, frankly, a woman-Sen. Margaret Chas~ "I sincerely regret that Msgr. Smith, retired lieutenant cQlonel Bandasfelt it necessa~ to hold in the Air .Foree Reserve, ,Pl them up to ridicule. : ... recognition of her congression~ action on: defense bills.
UaefW PD.rpOse· '[ honestly doUbt that ne would
have done sO if he~ had had an
o.Pportunityto get to know' them
personally.and to size them up , OTTAWA' -(NC)-Archbishop
Sebastiano' Baggio, Apostolic
at close range. , In. summary;, then, my views Delegate to 'Canada, was the . UNION WHARF; fAIRHAVEN on. the, performance· of the Holy See's ambassador extra· .••• i ••; ,.~••• ~• ., ~ ~ ~#• •#.~ ... American secular press at the 'ordinary fol" the inauguration of Dr. Raul Leoni as President· of second session of Vatican Coun Venezuela yesterday. U' are "sharply diver-gent" from FOR· fAMILY BANKING tQose of Msgr. Bandas. Is it too much to hope that he and I (and Father' Sheerin, w):lOse profe!lsionl:l1 competence
in this matter is far. greater
than that of either of us) may
.' Est. 1897 have served a useful purpose in ATTLEBORO publicly airing -OUr differences Builders Supplies of opinion-the purpose, namely,
'SO. ATTLEBORO - SEEKONK 2343 Purchase Street
of again showing, in the words
New Bedford
of Pope John XXIII the "holy
MEMBER fDfC liberty" that the sons of God
WY 6-5661 fm,ioy in the Churela.
Indi'ffereritism
is,
....
coming
. .: -R.epr.esents
'ope
8'ringing
.La rge .Live. •••
MacLean's Sea., Foods
.Sturtevant & Hook
--'THE ANC'HOR
,Stu~~tFrom So;"t;· Anthony' H'igh
, Thul'$., March 19, 1964
To Participate in' State· Finals, Of Legion Oratorical Conte'st
13
Conduct S~rvey On Vocations
Charles Levesque of St. Anthony's High in New Bed ford has won the right to represent this sector in the state finals of the American Legion oratorical contest. Competi tion for the state title will be held SundaYr March 22. This win be the fourth competi than half of the seniors tion in which Levesque has at More Cassidy High have been actaken part. If successful cepted at various colleges, here he will go to the na schools of nursing and business
PEORIA (NC) - An unusual survey to ascertain the views of parents regarding vocations to the priesthood and religious life is being conducted in the, 50 parishes of the Peoria diocese. Described as the first poll of its kind in the nation, the survey was launched Sunday when tional competition. The contest schools. Thirty-nine have been members of the Diocesan Coun cil of Catholic Men distributed consists of a prepared oration accepted at 12 liberal arts colan eight _ page questionnaire of no less than eight nor more leges, seven at nursing schools among some 12,000 parents who than 10 minutes on some phase and two at business colleges. Science Fairs have children under 21 still at of the ronstitution. St. Anthony Winners of the senior dtvision home. High has been well represented '75 Questions all along the way. In the zone at the science fair held at JesusFathers John J. Sweeney, dl contest Levesque placed first Mary Academy are Christine rector,and Eugene L. Finnell, and Henry Pelletier, also of St. Demers, first place; Marguerite assistant director of the Peoria Anthony's, won second place. In Camuso, second; Marie Clo~tier, third. In the junior division first Diocesan Vocation Office, said the rounty competition all con prize winner is Collette Riohard, the study has been planned for a testants were St. Anthony stu second Suzanne Lagarde, and year. They said some 200 quesdents. Glee Club. third Catherine Diniz. Fourth tions were suggested for the pon Sister Stephen Helen, S.U. prize went to Jeanne Chabot. and were reduced to 76 carefu1l1 worded queries. , S.C., director of Cassidy High Judges for the fair were Mr. glee club in Taunton has an- Robert Richard and Mr. Roger Father John H. Fichter, S.J. nounced that the school will pro- Dubois, teachers at Durfee High sociplogist of Loyola Universit1~ vide singing groups for several School, and Brothers Roland New Orleans, who helped pre events in the near future. The Augustus,' and Raymond from pare the survey, will analyze girls will sing at Lovering Prev'ost, High. Trophies were' RING CEREMONY: Students at Jesus-Mary AcademY,' and interpret the results. The Colony and also at the conven- awarded to the two first place,' ,F'all-River,' receive class rings from Rev. Bernard A. Lavoie,' questionnaires were distributed tion of the Diocesan eouncil of winners and a larger one was spiritual director. From left, kneeling, Lorraine· Ducharme, to. one,..third of the parents ~ ill Catholic Women on May 1. given the ,school. ' Diane Lachance, Patricia Dugas; standing, Patricia, Laberge, :' ~e 4i C?ce!le, selected. so as ~ 10 And from Mount St. Mary's Prevost High in Fall River. J 't'te R 'b'd " " ~lV~ the, best representation 01 Academy in Fall River,coines the now holding a science fair in the eann~ 0 1 OUX. opinions. ' report that Sister Mary Mercy, same auditorium. And tomorrow'. ..,.
R.S.M., Sister Marie Lorraine, Holy Family High ,in New' Bed-. demY· in Fairhaven will breathe, Exam, ·Paul Roy ranked, ftrst,
TAKE . TIM~ OUT R.S.M. and the cast of "One ford will ,hold its annual science ·a8ign of relief when·. April followed, by- 'Richard' Turcotte Family Sings" presented a re- fali'. .finally rolls around. Their long, in second, place' an<l Richard For Per.onal Inventory , peat of the musical for the guest. Spiritual Bouquet .term papers, due ,this month, will Rhellume in third place." , .. ana Renewal ' of Catholic Memorial Home. Students ·at· Holy Filmiiy High' iha've' been handed in by that First prize winners ·in· Stang's' , Make A We~k.End . "Aptll In Paris" presented,a spiritual bouquet to time. : " science fair were Vincent Boirdi,' At Sacred Hearts A.cademy b1 BishopGerrard:i~l: honOr. of his:, . Marilu Galvan, a senior at, James ~rsin. John 'Albert, ~8Il : Retr:ecit 'at the, . Fall River the committee for the fifth' anniv;ersary'as auxiliaty . Jesus-Mary Academy, has been Roszkiewicz, and Geraldine 'Mc- . junior prom has decided on Bishop of Fall 'Jliver. Se,nors .awarded a complete set of Bride., Holy· Cross' Father•. "April in Paris" for :the theme atH()ly Famil¥, lOOk forward, to:, Shakespeare's w 0 r k s. Marilu Members of the Shacady staff : Ritr:eat House for the dance, to be held Monday, religion classes'since the"Bishop won'the Time ,magazine current at Sacred Hearts Academy' in' April 20 in the schOOl gym. The is ,often present to help them. ,events test ghren to all seniQl'I Fall River· have been·· choosing' Rte...138, No. Easton, Mo••• ' idea was suggested- by Barbara· understand a little more -fully at the Academy. " the best pieces which have ap-' , Men -Women -.- , .. - _Co'uples .. ' .' Furze, Olga Carroll: and Gail the theological 'questions that' ," Latin students at Mount st. ,peared in past issues of the; '.' .Tel. 238-6863 ' Carden. 'Other members of the eome up. . ::l\ofary.'s Academy participated to- ' paper. ,The best of, the best· ,committee working :under the From Bishop Stang High 1ft. 'day in the- A.P.S;L. Latin exa- (everything 1ft Shacady ranlu· Write: Fr. Kelly,' esc, Dw.' direction of Sister Mary Hor- North Dartmouth comes the an- 'mination.. One hundred and high) will be submitted in the tense, S.U.S.C. include Nancy, nouncement that the third tour-: 'Beventy-six students. from, the annual St. Bonaventure contest. Regan and Norma Pe~ira, chair- nament,·rounds five 'ahd slX,'of 'Academy took the test. Awards Anyone who ·has' anything pub men. ! the 1963-~4 Narragansett:Debate 'which can be won include certi- lished in a school newspaper- is . Problems In Deniocrac~ League was held at the 'schooL" ficates 'of merit, medals and eligible. ' . ,Mc.'intenance .Supplies Students at Jesus-Mary Aca- TWo Dioces,an, s~ools, St, An- ,trophies. Trophies are awarded ' Almual !letreat demy In Fall Rive~ are still thony's and 'Bishop Stang, had 'when three medals have been 8tudents at Dominican Aca-" SWEEPERS· SOAPS
talking about the pattel discus- • perfect day with four wins :won and so far the Mount hal demy will make their annual re- . DISINFECTANTS
sion held there on M6nday. Five in the four rounds held. This won four trophies. treat at the Academy on Tues- ' fiRE EXTINGUISHERS
students in the Prpblems of tournament leaves three DioThe student body from Cassidy day, Wednesday, and Thursday' Democracy class, under the di- cesan schools in the top places High sang the ordinary of the of Holy Week. The students will rection of Mother Mary Fidelis, in the league. They are: first Vocation Mass at St. Mary's take part in a dialogue Mass' prepared a panel discussion on place, Holy Family; serond, St. Church yesterday. A group of which will be said facing the' 1886 PURCHASE STREET
Communism, whioh was pre- Anthony's; and third, Bishop volunteer sodalists sang the congregation. An offertory pro NEW BEDFORD
sented to the entire student body Stang. proper. cession will also be held. Rev. and later at a PTA meeting. Fordham Tournament Dialogue Mass Richard Delisle, M.S. will preach WY 3-3786
Chairman was Donna Thibault The debate team at Coyle High A number of students from the retreat. and others participating were in Taunton will be going to the Holy Family High participated Louise Demers, Denise Gelinas, Fordham Tournament to be held in the dialogue Mass which was Patricia Laberge and Diane at Fordham University on Thul;S- televised last Sunday on WTEV. Lachance. The girls covered day and Friday, April 2 and 3. Father Edward Duffy, director their topic from its origination Those planning to attend are of the New Bedford CYO, re with Karl Marx to the modern Daniel Hoye, David McGovern, quested them to do so. problems which it presents 10- Timothy And l' e w s, Donald Student Councils day. Lewis, and Richard Robinson. On Friday and Saturday, Meanwhile Doreen Kruzcek, a Accompanying the group will be April 3 and 4, the Massachusetts sophomore at Cassidy High, has Brother Thomas Keefe, e.s.c.. Association of Student Councils received honorable mention in moderator of the club. will have a convention at Cathe radio station WBZ'S "Dear . "Around .the .world" dral High School in Springfield. . . .
Ivan" contest for her original London, Paris, Rome are but Bishop Stang High' will send letter to an' imaginary "Ivan": .trteps (dance steps, that is) away three representatives: . Charles
behind the' iron curtain'. for, those planning to attend the 'O'Connell, Lili-Ann Motta, ,and.
,latest $eVEmteeners' dance at' Jocelyn Marcoux. Jocelyn ie" Coller:e ::Qound . From Mo.unt St.. Mary's Ail~ sacred Hean.,Academy in Fall Stang's nomination for vice ehor girl Jane Sullivan reports, ~iver. The ,8O(lial ,group has president of 'the Massachusetts that sen i 0 l' S Joanne BaileY, selected, "around the world" as General Council for the 'M-'65.
Eileen Carreiro and Susan Me- the theme for ,this 'second dance' ,school year. The convention will '
GreaVY. have been notified. ,they, of. the. school. year. to, be held. last. two days. Participating , receIve training In
ar.e semi,.finaLists in the Rhode Thursday,· AprU 2., IlChools will ,discuss Student
varIous fields such Island State Scholarship Com. New Bedfo~d~ CathOlic Theatre Government: its functions and.
petition. Eileen plans to attend ' Guild hils annoUnced 'the winnerS operations. ·The theme will be
Rhode Island College, ,where ~ b1'itS annual radio script ron- "young adults meet.!' she will major 'in' elementary ,test. NancY '.RYan, a senior at Essay Contellt education; Joanne, who is presi- Bishop,Stang,High,was awarded The. English Speaking 11nlon,
dent of the student council, will first prize for ,her pia,..· entitled Southeastern Branch,iIi sponattend Miserirordia College and "Why Me?" 80ring its annual essay contest on
major in mathematics; and Susan Panel Diseussiou the subject of "The Difference
rot lurthw IttformatJon, write b
will attend either Regis or Salve Tomorrow at 'Holy Family between a Democracy and a Regina College where she wiH High a panel discussion will be Republic.It Several seniors at BROTHER JOSEPH PlI£TROSANTE, U.C.
major in political science. held. Severahl0vices and poStu- St. Anthony's High are sending
. 'T. JOSEPH RETREAT HOUSE And the following Mounties lants from Mount St. Rita's win In essays, which may not ex VALATIE, NEW YO,RK' .A have been dec I a l' e d school speak and answer questions ceed 1500 words. Prizes will winners in the National Mathe- about the religious life. The range from $100 to illustrated matics contest: Ann Doran, Holy Family Sodality is spon- bistory volumes. Cheryl Grail and Cecilia Polka. soring the affair in observance A number of prizes were Their papers will be entered izl of vocation month. awarded at Bishop Stang High the national contest. Seniors at Sacred Hean. Aea- last week. In the National Math '
" . SCHOOL·.
DAHILL CO.
you...
can serve Christ , .a's I ..•'
illOO®iJOOlfl1
s.
TEACHING, 'I ACCOUNn.' -. ' .MISSIONI ' .OCIAL WOilK: ,
,. TRADES - . WRITING'· :
BROTHERS
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OF HOLY CROSS
14
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THE ANCHOR-Dioces,e of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 19~ 1964 ··ffi,,,,~lMiiIm1··iltliiii_.~::;!IJI!!OIii!iliin_?"'ffim!lllll]illiliII!l
. mil'!!!mml·
l'lIgIIIIP-------.-1
'
.II·n!ll!!l.
The Parish Parade.'
SACRED HEART. NORTY" AT1'LEBORO The Holy Name Society will participate in an all-night viltil Holy Thursday night. The uni·t also announces a father-slln meeting for 2 Sunday afternoon, April 5. Catholic approaches to sex problems will be discussed and boys from grade 8 onwards are invited to attend, provided they are accompanied by t!l(lir fat.'lers. ST. KILIAN. NEW BEDFORD A bean supper is to be served at the school ball from G to 7 $aturday night, April 11 under auspices of the Woman's Guild. Mrs. William Richard is ticket eharman. · . The unit will be hostess group tor a district meeting at 8 Tul~S day night, March 31, also in l:he
ball. New oHicers wID be lioeni aated at the meeting set :for Wednesday, April 1. . . OUR LADY OF ANGELS~ FALL :t(IVER The new boys' high school will benefit from a turkey sup Per and dance planned for Sat urday, April 25 by the Holy ·Name Society. Manuel Fllll'ia, .ticket chairman, requestS that returns be' made by Sunday, April 19. ·SACRED HEART, "NEW BEDFORD OHicers of the Confratern.ity , of Christian Doctrine are Ray mond Larocque, president; Don ald Dufresne, vice-presidlmt; Mrs. V. Rita I.efraneois, se(:I'e tary-treasurer; Mrs. .Jeanne 'La rocque, chairman of helpers; Pierre Hebert and Lorrnine Vanasse, co-ehairmen of teach ers; Lionel Bouchard and Edgar Boyer, co-chairmen of fishers; Mrs. Lourette Forgue, chairman of parent - educator; Richard Nerbonne, chairman of c:Iiso~us ~on club; Rene LaFrance, chair_ man of aposUes of good will.. ST. ELIZABETH. FALL BIVEB The Women's Guild annoulnces • spaghetti supper for Wednes day evening, April IL In charge' are Mrs. Irene Cyr and Mrs. Mildred Cantin. A meat pie sup per will be held Saturday, May Z3 with Miss Ro8e Macbad[) as ehairman. ST. JOSEPH. FALL RIVER The parochial schoo~ has or ganized a Civics Club with Pa tricia Smith as president; Ftich ard Wilmarth, vice-presient; Susan Kennedy, recording sec retary; Michael Zinser, ser~:eant at arms. Purpose of the club is DIe development of infOrmed, !responsible young citizens. The Women's Guild annOUDcetJ • whist party Thursday, J~prU 16, a rummage sale Thursday, April 30 and Friday, May 1 and a Spring frolic: Saturday, May 16. Installation of officers will be held at a June banquet. SACtED IlEAtT, "" OAK BL1WFS The Women's Guild will tlold a food sale Saturday. Marl~h 28 at Reliable Market ProceedlJ will benefit the Rev. EdJnund Neenan Seholanbip Fund. Mrs. James S. Rego is chairman. Easter plans Include a dona tiOD to the church for flc)wers and distribution of Easter ba& kets to shut-in members. ST. W1LLIAH.-
FALL RIVE.
Th~ parish aD,.purpose room will be the scene: of a cak,~ sale Sunday, April 5, followUlLg all Masses. In charge is Mrs. Ed ward Turcotte. Next rElgular meeting of the Women's Guild will be held Wednesday, April 8 and will feature presentation of a new slate of officers. A guildola is slated for Wmme& day, April 11>
.' ~lIn,It PI? DaSf\ . Just IICI \
ST. MARY, NEW BEDFORD A Communion breakfast is an
nounced for 9 Sunday morning,
April 26 by the Women's Guild.
A penny sale will be held Fri
day, Aprir 24 at Gaudette's Pa
vilion, Acushnet. Mrs. Joseph
Boldiga is in charge of arrange
ments. Next regular meeting of
the unit is set for I Monday
night,April 13.
ST. JOAN OF ARC, ORLEANS Next Women's Guild meeting will be held Wednesday, April 1. Two public socials wiJJ be spon sored by the unit monthly, with one get for tomorrow night and others to be held Friday. April 3 and Friday, April 17. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
NEW BEDlfORD
The parish will sponsor a mu,. sical variety festival Saturday, April 11 at Keith Junior High Sehool.Portuguese fados will be sung by Mrs. Maria Alves. Also to be heard are Versa Tones of Harmony, the Women's Barbetshop Chorus' and several other performers.
,VISITATION GUILD, EASTHAM A penny - sale is slated for Saturday,' April 18 with Mrs. Terry Walwer in charge of do nations. Summer plans include a July auction and an August penny sale. A coffee hour wiD follow cor porate Communion Sunday morning, March 29. SANTO CHRISTO. FALL IUVEB A communion breakfast has been set for Sunday. AprU' 26 and a Mothers' Day supper for Sunday, May 10 by 1he Council of Catholic Women. Next meeting will be held at '7:30· Tuesday night, April 14 in the church hall.
NOTBE DAME, FALL RIVEB The Council of Catholie Women will sponsor the last in a series of Lenten whist! at 7:30 Satur day night, Mareh 21 in Notre Dame school hall. Tickets are available from Mrs. Raymond Boulay, chairman, and will also be on' sate at the door. Tombola chairman Mrs. Ray mond Roy announces that 50 Tombola prizes wiD be drawn aot this whist. Miss Gertrude St. Laurent, eouneil spiritual chaIrman, re· quests members who are to take part in the Palm Sunday pro- . cession at 11 o'clock Mass to meet. in the church basement at 10:30.
.~ .~ ..\.. . .,.J~/ . NatiOnal first ""eatl ,: I
I
SPEED T Y PIS T:Con
stance Sauve, senior at St.
Anthony's High School, New
Bedford, who holds proficien
cy certificates in typing and
shorthand, will receive a vo
cational proficiency diploma
in addition to her high sehool
diploma at June graduation.
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Normand Sauve,
Cottage Street; New Bedford.
.Starts $15 Million lSuilding Program LOS ANGELES (NC) L High school construction totaling $15 million has been undertaken' by the. Archdiocese of Los Angeles through its current youth edu cation fund campaign, Two new high schools are nearing completion. Five others are to be built. Our Lady Queen • of Angels Seminary, arohdio cesan high school seminary, is being doubled, in capacity. The new schools and additions will provide room for 4,200 more stu dents.. Major classroom unib and multipurpose buildings are being constructed at nine other high schools. Five other high schook are being renovated.
• SEGUIN.
~ "IIL:-1IDl
1st Two Ribs
L8
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55
3rd thru
7th Rib
18
OVEN READY - .4 to 4% LB Average
Roasling Chickens
LB
Mildly Smoked, Lean and ~USciOUS, Speciany Priced
33c Thin Cut LI6ge e Corned Brisket Thick Cut LI 4g
Shoulders
I.OKID
LB
'Fancy, Choice Grade
FLORIDA - VALENCIA - Ful
of Sweet, Tangy Juice
c
ORANGES 4:G 49 c 19 Tomatoes Red Ripe Beauties
CEUO PKG
or Steel
WY 2-6618
FlNAST - Always Light and Refr.shing .
Pineapple Juice 3'~~OZ 95e RICHMOND - Light Chunk
styi.
Tuna Fish FlNAST - Always Fr.sh Tasting Mayonnaise NORWEGIAN - Bristling in Olive Oil
King Oscar SARDINES .
4
4
6V.oz
CANS QT !1M
~
BAY PRIDE - lent.n Seafood· Favorite
365 NORTH FRONT eftI~~
NEW BmFORD WYman 2-5534
ag
.Ju.be Shrimp !:N ANAST - Rich, Creamy - FuR of Country Sw..tness Corn CREAM mu 4 ~I CANI
BANQUETS TESTIMONIALS FASHION SHOWS
•
WYman 9-6984
6ge
Sweet Peas 4 FlNAST - The Ful Bodied Juice To.alo Juice Oatmeal, Sugar, Iced Spice, Macaroo"c Assorted 4'9c Mo.s Cookies ~': 1Ll1oz.
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION. NORTH EASTON Rev. John P. Driscoll, Assistant General Managa- of The Anchor, will speak to the Women's Guild on Monday evening.
e
4ge $1·GO 5ge 4ge
flNAST - fresh from the Field Flavor
~
VALLEY FORGE (NC) Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York is one of six men named to the board of trustees of the Freedoms Foundation here, an organization dedicated to bring about "a better under standing of the basic prlneiples underIyini our republic"
SIRLOIN TIP
944 County Street NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
FALL ltlV:E&
On Freedom Board
RIB ROAST
Truck Body Builders
ST. &0011. Mrs. Pierre Gagnon, chairman, and Mrs. Delphis Monast have announced that plans for the whist on Monday, April I, have been completed. The pubUc is invited and refreshments wIll be served. Mrs. Claire Carbonneau, pres ident, requests that prizes be left at the rectory or a call made and they will be eollected.
Aristocrat of Oven Roasts - Heavy Steer Beef
Same [ow Self.Servfc. Mea In All Storu In ThiI Y1clnltt 3 (We ~ tIie RlgIiI to DmIt Quentltl..,
ST. LOUIS (NC) - A picture of growing isolation and hope lessness among America's poor was painted here by a national official of the St. Vincent de Paul Society. Dudley L. Baker, executive secretary of the Catholic chari table organization's.s u per i 0 r council, said the new poverty in America destroys hope among the poor. Today, he said, the poor have been isolated from everyone else, with the result that hope for joining the rest of society has virtually disappeared for them. Across the Tracks "The American city has been transformed," Baker said. "The poor still inhabit the miserable housing in the central area, but they are increasingly isolated from sight of anybody else * * * The failures, the unskilled, the disabled, the aged, and the minorities are right there across the tracks, where they have al ways been. But hardly anyone else is." He said in the midst of America's affluent society "ex treme suffering" is being ex perienced by millions.
Medical-Moral From Doctors KANSAS CITY (NC) A group of Catholic doctors here has established a center to as sist clergy of the Kansas City-St. Joseph (Missouri) diocese with medical cases that raise moral questions. A spokesman for the St. Luke's Physicians' Guild Sodality said the "pilot study" project would provide consultation for persons who have "acute and crucial" medical problems with moral implications. Physicians of the guild will staff a center at St. Joseph's Hospital here. The center will be open for consultations on Sun day mornings. A spokesman said it is recommended that an in dividual or couple seeking a con sultation be referred through a confessor and with the permis sion of their private physician.
Legion of Mary Continued from Page One be Rev. Joseph Delaney, Taun ton Curia Spiritual Director and assistant at Sacred Heart Parish, Taunton. Also present at the ceremony will be Rev. Albert Shovelton, New Bedford Curia Spiritual Director, St. James parish, and Rev. Edward A. Oli veira, Diocesan Moderator and Fall River Comitium Director, Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton. Rev. James Clark, Director of Our Lady of Good Counsel Praesidium, Fall River, will lead the opening Prayers and Rosary. The Sophomore Choir of Bish op Cassidy Memorial High School, Taunton, will act as guest choir under the direction of Sister Stephen Helen, S.U.S.C.
Maryknoll Nun Continued from Page One rently serves as a surgeon in Riberalta Hospital in Bolivia in South America. She has been singled out by the Boston doc tors because of her deep reli gious devotion and medical com petence in her great humanita rian work for the indigent, sick and poor in Latin America. The proceeds of the Boston social will be given to Sister Maureen Thomas to further her work among the underprivileged who are desperately in need of assistance in Bolivia. The work being done by Sister Maureen Thomas is probably the best demonstrative evidence of the need for vocations and Papal Volunteers to assist our less for tunate neighbors to the South.
-. ',,)R-
THE Thur5..
Says Poor Grow
More Hopeless
:"ch 19, 1964
15
NC r:'Aembers
To Hear Donovan
AN INAUGURAL PRAYER: Bishop Paul Leonard Hagarty, O.S.B., of Nassau, a frequent vesitor in the Diocese of Fall River, reads the opening prayer at ceremonies marking the inauguration of the new Constitution for the Bahamas recently. Three Cath olics hold portfolios as Ministers in the Premier's Cabinet. Left to right: Sir Roland Symonette, Premier; Sir Robert Stapledon, Governor General; Bishop Hagarty and Hon. A.R. Braynen, chairman of the Constitution Day Committee. NC Photo.
Business Girl Secretly NEWARK (NC)-She's a sec retary. But we'll have to call her Jane Doe because she is a mem_ ber of a secular institute. She has taken a vow of chastity and promises of poverty, obedience and the apostolate as a Mission ary of the Kingship of Christ~ No one, however, knows this about Jane Doe-not her friends, not the people she works with in a large firm, not even her mother with whom she lives. She submitted to an interview under obedience and on condi tion that her dentity be kept secret. Why the· secrecy? "I would lose my effectiveness if people knew," she said simply. Her apostolate: to bring Christ to her particular world-her business, her family, her society. Part of Mainstream You wouldn't suspect Jane Doe .is a member of a secular institute. Not when you see her wearing a crimson dress with a heavy gold bracelet, a stylish coat, makeup; not when you see her order a cocktail. But as she explains, to be effective in her apostolate she has to be a part of the mainstream of a business girl's life. Secular institutes were ap proved by Pope Pius XII in 1947. Nine of those which have been canonically approved are estab lished in North America. They are associations of people dedi cated to Christian perfection and saving souls while living in the world. "Mingling with people and being friendly" is part of that task, Jane Doe explained. Sparing With Self Jane renews her vow of chas tity each year. But inwardly, she believes she will never marry; she has espoused the single state for life. While she is obedient to a superior-it was this obedience that brought her to the interview -the demands on her are not many. She makes a good salary. But because of her promise of pov erty, she and a superior work out an annual budget which al lows her to stay suitably 'dressed and equipped for her social and professional position. The idea, she said, is to "be generous with others and sparing with your self." As part of her work in the apostolate she teaches Confra ternity of Christian Doctrine classes and promotes retreats, as well as exercising the day-to day apostolate that is her pri mary responsibility. How do you exercise that apostolate? "You
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believe your Faith and you live . joining is between 21 and 35. it to the fUllest," she explained.: Jane Doe· J:terself has been a Prayer member for eight years. She was She spends two hours a day ·asked by a priest-friend, ·who in prayer to fortify herself .for knew: she was a member of the this work. There is daily Mass . 1'hird Order of St. Francis, if and Communion, meditation, a' she would be interested. She visit to the Blessed Sacrament, said yes and there followed' a the Rosary, the Office of the three-year probationary period before, dressed in white, she Franciscan Tertiary (all mem bers of her institute are also made h.er vow and promises and members of the Third Order of was accepted as a Missionary. St. Francis), examination of con Now, she says, "my life is science and spiritual reading. more joyful. I have a greater Dawn is breaking when her spirit of contentment. Trivial prayer ritual begins with medita things that used to be upsetting tion and partial recitation of the are now no longer important Office before the drive to church because I· have a larger view of for Mass. How does she find the life." time? "You just make a sched ule for each day and try your best to keep to it. You learn to use your time well-you can't fritter it away." More Joyful Lfe In addition to her daily prayer she is required by the rule she has accepted to go to confession, make the Stations of the Cross and perform an act of devotion to the Blessed Mother each week. Monthly she makes a day of recollection. Annually she makes a five day retreat and completes a study course in the ology. The institute to which she belongs, the Missionaries of the Kingship of Christ, is composed' of women in a variety of profes sions. When there are seven in a diocese they constitute a group, with a superior. The aee for
WASHINGTON (NC)-James B. Donovan, president of the New York City Board of Educa tion, will speak to elementary school teachers at the National Catholic Edqcational Associa tion convention. The association of Catholic school teachers and administra tors said that Donovan, who ne gotiated the release of prisoners after the abortive Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, will speak on Tuesday, March 31, the first day of the convention, which will meet in Atlantic City, N.J., until April 3. About 14,000 educators are expected to attend. Dopo van's topic will. be: "Here on Earth God's Work Must Truly be Our Own." Another major speaker to ele mentary school teachers will be Bishop Gerald Emmett Carter of London, Ont., who will discuss "Aggiornamento - Its Signifi cance for Elementary School Religious Instruction." Also scheduled to speak Is Sister Mary Richardine, an of ficial of the NCEA, who will dis cuss, "What's New in Research and Experimentation in Catholic Elementary Education?" Sister Richardine is the NCEA's asso ciate secretary in charge of the Elementary School Department.
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16
THE ANCHOR-Dioc,ese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 19, 1964
Fr. S'erra Medals Struck in Mint
Critics of C:atholic College Use Gratuitrous Arguments By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. There's ~ lot of difference between telling a man how to build a house before he starts, and tearing down the whole building when he's through because you don't like the chimney. Sometimes, too, it would take so long to point out the errors in his inexpert Yes, we could say a lot of criticism that you'll DEiVer things like that, all of them un get any house built if you doubtedly untrue. And yet, if we bother with him. Take some did say them, Messrs. X, Y, and
Z would have to waste a lot of of toda"y's secularist ravings, for instance: "The Catholic time refuting them, _, even if they're false. Imagine Mr. X, for Church is subversive * * * Cath instance, setting out to prove olic schools are that he did not have any delu divisive and a sions of artistic grandeur. contradiction to ,Has Shortcomings democracy ** *" To rational peo Catholic higher education has ple, those are' its shortcomings. So does any a b sur d state higher education. But let's not ments. But to readily believe every over disprove them imaginative accusation in print, would take a nor overlook the points of excel lot of time. And lence in our education system besides, you'd either. never convinc~ It may well be that Catholic their irrational higher education does not mass believers anyhow. produce artists. No educational But there are other critics, system does. sometimes more ratior.al than Nor would it be either possi "rationalists," who somel;imes ble or desirable to do so. It is use the same sort of gratuitous quite possible that Catholic edu. argument but still manage to cation should be giving the confuse some otherwise intelli world a few more artists, espe gent people. . cially genuine artists. Half-Truths, Falsehoods Narrow Concept Take, for instance, the criti But to say that Catholic high cism of Catholic higher educa er education does not, of itS tion on the part of some Cath very nature, produce leaders is olic educators, genuinely so and another matter. otherwise. Now, certainly, con Such a narrow concept of structive criticism of Catholic leadership would limit it to the education is a very good thing, tub-thumper or even Castro and may it never cease. But types, and would overlook the some of the half-truths and genuine leadership of the doctor whole falsehoods which "Cath who, by his example, helps his olic critics" come up with, with patients and fellow doctors to out proof and often only be achieve their goal iI). life, of the cause of some personal )lique, business-man ·who is a real asset are absurd and should be recog' to his community and his church, . nized as such. of the mother who raises her Air of Infallibilit:r children in an intelligent love A recent news release, for in and dedication to God, and, yes, stance, states with an air of in even of the cop or librarian or fallibility (and thereforE~ not law clerk or the unheralded and stooping to any proof) that (a) unartistic teacher whom such the very training in Catholic critics apparently despise. college'S is contrary to the pro The Catholic college in Amer_ duction of Catholic leaders; (b) ica has produced scores of great Catholic colleges may produce - people like these. Maybe their good law clerks and librarians greatness neve~ made headlines, but can hardly come up with an but they had it and were influ artist of rank or' even a criminal ential because of it. The Catho of imagination. lic college has also, from time The same news releaSE~ goes to time, been blessed with a on to point out that Jesuit col genius of sorts, (which only leges in particular are avoiding God and no college could the intellectual challenge of the "produce") . 20th century and producing pro 'Appalling Aversion' portionately more policemen As a Jesuit, I was most sur than artists. Jesuits, the article prised to read that I have an ap goes on, have not been willing, palling oversion to anything or able possibly to fit in with sexual and I know at least a new ideas. Furthermore, they thousand of my former students have an appalling aversion to in marriage courses who would anything sexual * * * be still more startled'. This is, of course, the sort of But this is a case of being thing one can state gratuitously damned if you do and damned off the level to!, of his head, but if you don't, and I have no in. it would take 20 pages to begin tention of trying to prove that, to refute it. Lest, however, any_ far from having an aversion to one be deterred from a Catholic anything sexual, I or any other or a Jesuit (also Catholic) edu Jesuit, have an absorbing inter cation because of such publicized est in anything sexual. remarks like these, let's not pass It is, of course, quite possible them by without a few remarks. that a given Jesuit could have Waste Time Refutilll~ an aversion to anything sexual, The' easiest way to deba te' is, appalling or not. He would, of course, to make so many gra-' however, presumably' be such because of some quirk of his in tuitous statements your oppo nents have to waste all their dividual nature (just as some crites have a few quirks of their time refuting them. Here, for instance, w(~ could own-such as shooting off their say that Mr. X makes so much mouths without any ":acts, for instance.) rather than because of the dearth of artists ill Cath olic schools, because he features of some exhortation to be such himself one and never made it, in his Jesuit trainng. or that Mr. Y was given the dis. I'm sure men such as Fathers John Courtenay Murray, S.J., tasteful task of teaching Fresh Gustave Wegel, S.J., David. man Rhetoric, couldn't handle it, and therefore figured he must Stanley, S.J., and John L. have been made for higher Thomas, S.J. would be surprised things, or that Mr. Z teaches to hear that Jesuits are not able only matter connected with sex to fit in with new ideas. But in his classes, and this is why then, being men who are humble as well as wise, they probably he feels that Jesuit facuUies are averse to the subject. wouldn't IlaY much about it.
'LEARNING TOGETHER': This cover on a recent issue of the Duchesne College (Omaha) magazine won an honor certificate award from the Freedoms Foundation, Valley Forge, Pa. The negro girl, Lynn Johnson and the white girl, Becky Stormberg, are seated side by side in the second grade classroom of Duchesne Academy. NC Photo.
WASHINGTON (NC) - The first medals in a commemora tive issue honoring Father ,Junipero Sera, O.F.M., founder of the California Missions, are being struck at the U. S. Mint in Philadelphia. It is a limited minting in silver, bronze and platinum. The medal, authorized b'y an act of Congress last year, marks the 250th anniversary of Father Serra's birth, which occurred last November. Congress said the Mint could make up to 300,000 copies of the medal, but at no cost to the U. S. govern. ment, the usual provision in such actions. The cost of minting the medal is being borne by the Father Junipero Serra 250th Anniver sary Association, of which Father Noel F. Moholy, O.F.M., of Old Mission, Santa Barbara, Calif., is president. Hearings Impressive Hearings held or{ bills to au thorize the medal, held in April, 1962, by the U. S. House of Representatives Committee on Bankingand Currency were most impressive. One after another, members of the California dele gation in Congress appeared be fore the committee to praise Father Serra and to urge au thorization of the medal.
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Haitian President Duvalier Expels Jesuit Fathers
LIMA (NC)-"The Amer ican priests and Sisters and Brothers are the' best am bassadors of good will be tween our country and the United States," said Juan Cardi. nal Landazuri Ricketts in an in. terview here. In his office alongside the Plaza de Armas in the bustling and growing capital city of Peru the Cardinal emphasized agai~ that "it is a pleasure for me and for the Peruvian hier archy and for the Peruvian peo. pIe to have the aid of the Amer ican priests and Religious." The Cardinal Archbishop of Lima and Primate of Peru said that "the Peruvian people see the people of the United States through the American priests and Sisters and Brothers, and see the .generosity, the good qualities, the high education of the American people through them. "And when the communists want to speak against you and to propagandize against the United States, the people say, 'That is not true,' because they have seen what the American priests and Religious have done." Cardinal Landazuri described the Church in Peru speaking "with reasonable optimism" and "with great hope," as in "good condition." First of all, he said, '"we are improving our vocations and seminaries." Lauds Cardinal Cushin~ Then he added, "We are build. ing a new seminary in Lima for 200 seminarians. We have built this wonderful building for the good education of all those stu dents through the wonderful help of Cardinal Cushing." Cardinal Landazuri paid high tribute to Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, for his interest in and aid to the Church in Peru. "We have really no words to express our deep gratitude to our great friend and benefac tor," he said emphatically. "From the first moment he came to Peru, we have found a real father promoter, a protec tor, a guardian of the whole Church in Peru."
Plan $12 Million
Expansion Program
COLLEGEVILLE (NC) - St. John's University here in Min nesota has announced a $12 mil. lion expansion program repre senting the second and third phases of its comprehensive de velopment plan. Abbot Baldwin W. Dworschak, O.S.B., of St. John's Abbey, university chancellor, said the two phases will see construction of a number of new buildings at the university and establish ment of a $3 million endowment to provide income for student scholarships and lay faculty sal. aries. The first phase of the develop_ ment plan, begun in 1953, also involved construction of a num ber of new buildings, including a monastery building and church. The ch.urch and the gen eral design of the future campus are the work of architect Mace! Breuer, who designed the UNESCO building in Paris.
Members of the Jesuit community.in Haiti-expel led in toto from that Carib bean nation on Ash Wednes·
LAY APOSTLE: Robert Dray, lay apostle from Sacred Heart parish, Taunton, ad dresses Catholic Students' Mission Crusade members at Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton on importance of teen-age apostles.
Catholics Must Discuss and Pray With Others ST. LOUIS (NC)-Joseph Car. dinal Ritter has called up Cath olics to "discuss and pray" with Protestants at every level con cerning common elements in their Christian heritage. First bishop ever to address the St. Louis Rotary Club, the Cardinal Archbishop of St. Louis told the members that even
See Wants Qualified Religion Teachers CLEVELAND (NC) - Auxil iary Bishop Clarence E. Elwell, d i 0 c e san superintendent of schools has warned that next September the diocese's mini. mum requirements for teachers of high school religion will be strictly enforced. Speaking at a Diocesan High School Teachers Institute, he emphasized that the diocese now requires religion teachers to, have at least 16 credit hours in various phases of doctrinal studies. "If the Catholic School Board doesn't enforce these standards, who will? If the State Board of Education can set up and stritcly . enforce rules and standards gov erning math, science, history, and others, why shouldn't we enforce the regulations on teaching of religion?"
bishops themselves have a great deal to learn about the nature of the Catholic Church. "I think this subject-the na ture of the Church itself - will be the most important topic the council Fathers will take up when the Council reconvenes this Fall," Cardinal Ritter said. "The Church should review and reappraise herself, in her own being, in her membership, and also in relation to the world." This subject, because it con cerns membership, and relation to the rest of the world, has a direct bearing on ecumenism, he said, and consequently is being eagerly watched by both Ortho dox and Protestant Christians. Work, Pray Together "One might have expected that that should have been de fined long ago," Cardinal Ritter commented. "That is why the council wants to understa;nd the
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day - have revealed details of their last days under the author itarian regime there. Those who were jailed suf fered major discomforts but no torture. Others, only under p0 lice surveillance, apparently were treated with relative courtesy. But the Church was forced to pay $2,000 in connec tion with the Jesuits ouster two missionary bishops having to promise the money. The ex pellees otherwise were threat ened with mass imprisonment. Disregard Rights Haitian officials gave as the reason for the expulsion only the nonspecific charge of con spiracy against the government. One immediate cause, it ap peared in retrospect, was that one of the priests was found to have in ,his possession a copy of the August 1963 report of the International Commission of Jurists declaring that Haiti un der President Francois Duvalier is oppressed by a tyranny .ill 'which "human rights and funda mental liberties are totally dis regarded." Canadian Clergy But the basic reason for the ouster seemed to be that the members of the Society of Jesus were servants of the people of Haiti, not puppets of the Duva lier regime. And, as the jurists' report declared, Duvalier sees the Catholic Church as "the only organized force capable of standing up against him."
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Church herself better." He told the Rotarians he was aware of the interest of other Christians in the general subject of ecumenism. "We know how the Protestants have been promoting union among themselves for many years," he said. "Their own in terest in ecumenism has had a great part to play in explaining the worldwide interest in the Second Vatican Council. "And now the council is au thorizing Catholics on every level to have dialogue with those not of their faith. This is so that men will come to an understanding of the common . things they hold as Christians. We should all study, and work but .above all pray together."
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Helps Mission BERN (NC)-The Swiss gov ernment has announced it will donate $33,400 to the Paris (Catholic) Foreign Mission Soci ety to set up an auto repair shop in Basutoland. The grant, part of the government's aid pro gram to developing countries, will cover about 40 per cent of the total cost of the project.
17
THE ANCHORThurs., March 19, 1964
Prelate Asserts Missioners Best Good Will Envoys
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18
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 19, 1964
Hits Interracial
Marriage Ban
Withholds Bla,nket Opinion On Conditic)ns in Brazil
ST. LOUIS (NC) - Repeal of Missouri's century-()ld law against interracial marriage has been urged by the St. Louis Archdiocesan Council of Catho lic Men.
(Msgr. Kennedy recently returned from a trip to Brazil. Instead of reviewing a book he gives us another interesting column on conditions that have a great bearing on the future of that Latin American country.) Two things are commonly said of the population of Brazil. One is that it numbers a great many Negroes, and that these suffer none of the discrimination and disad· vantage experienced by Negroes in the United States. The other is that Brazil is a Cath olic country, indeed that it one large city I was several times in a principal church. It has the largest Catholic was old, but not ancient, and in numbers of any nation in the a deplorable state of shabbiness.
.
world. Both statements prove, A high-ranking .prelate offered on investigation, to require con Mass at the mairi altar each siderable quali morning at the same time. He fication. The proved to be a stickler for min Negroes cam e utiae of the law where the vis ta B I' a z i 1 as itor was concerned, although not s I a v e J, and inhospitable. The attendance was early in the last scanty, but there were always century consti men around to serve Mass. tuted a 1m 0 s t O n e morning the congregation half of a popu at this prelate's Mass was larger lation of some than usual, made up almost en f 0 u I' million. tirely of women, some young, Today there are some middle-aged, some old. I are great num took it that the occasion was bel'S of persons some sodality celebration. The of, mixed race in Brazil, and it organist performed throughout is difficult to determirie who is the Mass, in a way reminiscent of completely white or complete or what theatre organists used 'ly black stock. .' to perpetrate during silent . But the 1950 cerisus listed movies. more than 60 per cent of the Benediction followed immedi_ po'pulatior as white, 11 per cent, ately upon the conclusion of the as 'black, and 26 per cent as Mass. There were suffocating 'brown. The distribution' varies, clouds of incense, and 'an in.' with Negroes predominating in· viSible choir shrieked as if be . Some areas and almost insigni. 'ing savagely pinched or jabbed ficant in others. with needles exquisite and red It is quite true that the Negro hot: The whole thing was, to put is not penned behind legal bar it mildly, depressing. riel'S, that there is no feeling Come in Throngs against him, and that free a8SO A few days later, however, elation and interracial marriage there was an altogether differ obtain wthout prejudice. ent experience in Belo Hori. Some South African Negroes, zonte, a city in the state of Minas able to get to Brazil and expe Gerais, which all too few rience its social climate, acclaim Americans visit. We arrived in this as ideal for them in com Belo Horizonte on a -Sunday parison with what they must en· morning, offered Mass in the . dure at home. But .thoughtful house chapel of the Redemp '-Brazilians are not so sure that torist Fathers who have charge, perfect equality is the rule in of St. Joseph's Church, went practice. across the street to the hotel for' They admit that Negroes have breakfast, and then were off. by had a considerable cultural in car to Ouro Preto. fluence in Brazil, and that We returned fro m Ouro blacks, or at least people of Preto sometime after five in the color, have occupied prominent afternoon. My hotel room' positions in many sectors of Bra fronted on the plaza an which zilian life. They point out that the Redemptorist church stands. while legal equality does indeed At about 5:30, the church bells exist, and social equality is un-' began to sound, and I went to questioned in theory, the actual the window to see what this situation is that Negroes are might signal. It was the first call under heavy handicaps econom to an evening Mass at six. And ically and in respect of E~du people began coming in throngs, cation. white, black, brown, the women Shortage of Priests very colorfully dressed. Of. the 70 to 80 million people To the side of the church was in :Qtazil, more than 90 per cent the parish hall, and some were is Catholic. There are other re streaming in there; the~e, it ap ligions which represent a bizarre peared, were all young people. blend of fetishist elements and I decided to go over to the bits and pieces of Catholic be church to assist at Mass and ob lief and practice. Spiritism has serve the congregation. many adherents. Protestantism is Respond Well making noticeable headwa),. By six o'clock the church was Protestant churches, of a num_ packed. Every seat was taken. bel' of denominations, are to be The aisles were filled. All seven found in all parts of Brazil. doors were blocked. People were Thus, the biggest and best look standing on the steps, on the ing of all the permanent pavement beyond the steps. churches in Brasilia, the new I elbowed my way in, and capital, is Baptist, financed by found that Mass was being of. an American millionaire. l!:ven fered not at the altar at the rear in a remote and tiny· town like of the sanctuary, but at a simple Iguacu, which has a strong look altar far forward in the sanctu and flavor of the frontier, there ary, and the celebrant was fac are Protestant churches. ing the people. The people were The shortage of priests is ap making the responses, not feebly palling. A Brazilian has written and raggedly, but loudly and in that even India has a higher concert. Evening Mass proportion of priests to people than does Brazil. Nor does the I next visited the hall. This was thronged with young peo critical insufficiency of clergy tell the full story. Of such' ple, from, say, 17 to 25, several priests as there are, a good hundred of them. There were as share is concentrated in the many males as females. Here, too, the celebrant was facing the cities, and not a few of these are engaged in teaching rather congregation; the congregation than in pastoral ministry. was making the responses; and As one goes about Brazil, one at the offertory many scores of encounters amazing contrasts. In the young people went up to the
. The council said racial dis crimination is "contrary to the Creator's plan." It called laws against interracial marriage "op posed to the divine will and the natural law." The men's group urged repeal of the anti-miscegenation law in one of two resolutions on human rights adopted at its an nual convention. . In the other resolution, it called for all of its affiliates to work for equal housing, educa tion and employment oppor tunities for Negroes. The Missiouri law against in terracial marriage dates from the Reconstruction period after the Civil War and forbids mar riages bet wee n whites and Negroes or "Mongolian" per sons. Repeal would require action by the State Legislature, which will convene next January for i~ biennial session. Eighteen states besides' Missouri have laws against interracial mar- riage.
BEFORE SUDAN'S ANTI-CHRISTIAN DRIVE:' An Italian missionary, priest of the Sons of the Sacred Heart (Verona Fathers), hears confession in the' African bush.' The .scene pictured occurred in southern Sudan before the Moslem-dominated government issued. a decree ousting all foreign missionaries, the climax of a nine-year-old anti Christian campaign. NC Photo.
Back to Supreme Court Florida Parents Asks Reversal of State Court Ruling on Public School Prayer: NEW YORK (NC)-The issue of religion in public schools 'is headed for the U. S. Supreme Court again. Four Miami parents have taken preliminary steps toward . obtaining a Supreme Court rul ing on prayer, Bible reading and other practices in public schools there, according to an announc~ ment by the American Jewish Congress. Leo Pfeffer, general counsel of the AJC, is representing the front and each put a host into a ciborium held out by the priest. I walked back to the hotel, with some idea of taking little rest before dinner. But the church bells began t{) ring again. There was another ,evening Mass at seven, and the crowd seemed but little under that at the six o'clock Mass. The following morning, a weekday of course, I went into the church at about 7:20. It was filled to the seating capacity with perhaps two hundred standing. When I had finished my own Mass, another public Mass was in progress, and the crowd had changed but not dwindled. There was'a leader in the pulpit, reading the scrip tures and cuing the responses. A Brazilian lady in Rio told me that the priest at the church she attends was, each Sunday, reading a bit of Vatican Council II's constitution on the Liturgy and commenting on it. That will take months! Her only complaint was that the priest's Portuguese wasn't very good. There is more to be said about the Church in Brazil, including architectural de\,· what Bishop Elder Camara is doing in Rio, but this must wait until next week. Here it need only be remarked th~t a blanket opinion is well nigh impossible.
parents - a Unitarian, an ag nostic, and two Jews-without fee, the' organization ~aid. Pfef fer has written and lectured widely on Church'-State issues. The parents will ask the U. S. high court to reverse a ruling handed down Jan. 29 by the Supreme Court of Florida. The state court upheld the Florida statute requiring Bible reading and prayer in public schools. . The Florida court said the law's' purpose was "secular rather than sectarian" and thus did not violate the First Amend ment's ban on an establishment of religion.
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By Jaek KiDea", The eurtain will be rung down Oil New England inter
seholame basketbaD and hockey competition this weekend at Boston Garden wlwre the sehoolboys have the great sports palace to themselves for the next three days. And the occasion ·becomes +-_ - RAO rd' state t the f reco m com . th all more histonc m a or petition over the past two sea basketball, at least, this 39th sons. Bradley posted a 23-0 mark annual extravaganza win be this year but was rudely jolted OI'Z'-
the last. Vermont joins Connec ticut on the sidelines this year and ~ir com. bined lack of participation is about to write finis to the com petition t hat goes back to the 20's. Ironicolly, Vermont's with. drawal deprives a Somerset native of the opportunity to bring his cham pionship quintet to the Garden in quest of Regional laurels. Bob Sullivan, ex - Raider athlete, coached Spaulding High of Barre to the State title in his first year at the helm. . Representing Massachusetts, will be St. John's of Worcester, Western State titlist and upstaft Malden High, Greater Boston League champions who tight roped their way to suecessive victories over Somerville and Catholic Memorial en route to Tech honors. The Golden TorDll does' 64-61 overtime netory over CM has to go down .. ODe of Tech's greatest upsets. Bearing the standard of SoutA eastern Mass. baskeiball reso lutely to the summit iJl Classes C and D were Plymouth-Carver and Provincetown, resp£ tively. For Hank Rogers' :£a,ks tbJa was their third title in four years and in defeating Chelms ford, 44.42, they regained the crown from the clubs that had wrested it in '63. Aa a matter of fact, 'Plymouth and Chelmsford have not met for the past three year in the ehampionship round. Concord Great The physically strongest, moet disciplined team in the toUl'De7 appeared to be Concord.Carlisle, Class B champions. This club ac tually destroyed a capable Mel rose quintet Friday, night, hold ing the Raiders to It mere 15 point total in the first half. Coach Hayes' ru,ged squad he two-platOOned effectively jarred hitherto uttbeaten Brain tree, 58-39, for the title Saturda7 night. Looking forward to the New England tourney which geu underway tonight at the Gard~n defending ch~pion Stearns of Millinocket, Maine will engage St. John's of Worcester in the inaugural contest which will be followed by the East Providenee_ Bishop Bradley (N. H.) match. The third game of the evenina pits Bishop Cheverus of Port land, Maine against R. I. cham pion Tolman of Pawtucket and Malden-Spaulding of Rochester, N. H. will conclude the lenethY program. The semi-finals will be played on Friday night and the 'finals on Saturday. Bishop Bradley, N. H. champions, will bear watching. The club boasts a fan-
Ski Country Chapel WAITSFIELD (NC) - Built along the lines of an Alpine chalet, Our Lady of the Snows chapel was dedicated by Bur. lington's Bishop Robert F. Joyce here in the heart 0': the Vermont ski country. The $100,_ 000 church in addition to serv ine area Catholics also will serve skier. and tourists. Three ~s will be' qffered eecll ~ dwiq __ ak.iiq aeasoa.
in the opening round of ,the N. E. Catholic Tourney at Law renee. BoekeI' Pidure All but one of the four teams in the hockey hoedown are fa miliar to the post season scene. Wearing the rookie label and making its first start in N. E. hockey competition is Cranston East, :&. I. State champion. Rep resenting Mass. will be four-timt; champion Arlington High whose big scorer i· a fellow by the name of Charley Toclowski. His dad, many of you will remem ber, was the great blocking back on B.C.'s Bowl teams in the 1940's. Representing Maine and New Hampshire, as they do almost perenially, are St. Dom's of Lewiston and Notre Dame of Berlin. The teams met four times over the course of the sea leOn, splitting the series daht down Ule middle. These two losses, incidentally, were the only ones- sustained by St. Dom's over the course of a 23 .came slate. P.C. Ne. 1 And 011 the collegiate laoclle:r front, a well-done tc coach Tom Eeeleston and his Proyidence Friars who proved their right 110 the number one spot in Eastern rankings by copping the ECAC Tourney last weekend in Boston. Second place St. Lawrence coached by George Menard-an EcclestOJ! product at Burrillville High-declined to represent the East in the NCAA finals at Den. yft. Hence, R.P.L, 7-2 victors oyer Clarlt80n in the consolation round on Saturday will be the East's second standard bearer on ~ Broadmoor's ice pond. Western titlisb Denver aDd :Hichjgan are likelY to be load ed. with Canadian talent, if past history is any criterion. The ele-, fttion of the city of Denver also may be a decided factar. Eastern teams unused to the rar efied atmosphere are unable to take a nonnal length turn on the ice and the use of oxygen OR the bench is a sine qua non. Only twice in the past 16 years has an Eastern team won the title. B.P.I. pulled it off about 18 years llI« B. C. went an the way in '48. And beginning to be beard throughout the land' the aT7 "Play Ball!" '
Record Attendance
At CCD Institute
HOLLYWOOD (NC) - More than 4,100 laymen and women participated in the 'Confraternity of Christian Doctrine's two-day institute a,t Immaculate Heart College here. . The largest registration for a local CCD program took part in 30 workshops. They were con ducted to sharpen catechetical personnel for . teaching 180 000 Catholic students in public schools here - and recruiting an additional 70,000 not yet en rolled.
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lhurs.; March 19, 1964
Scores Dismissal Of Surgery Chief JERSEY CITY (Ne) - Seton Han University has protested the dismissal by Jersey City Mayor Thomas J. Whelan of the chief of surgery at the Jersey City Medical Center, which the university operates jointly with the city. A suggestion that the dismis sal of Dr. Kenneth H. Judy wa& a ''political patronage" maneu ver was made in a telegram sent to Whelan by James P. X. O'Brien, chancellor of the' uni versity's college of medicine and dentistry. The university is an institution of the Newark arch diocese. In dismissing Dr. Judy, the mayor appointed Dr. Earl J, Halligan; personal physician 1xl former Mayor John V. Kenny, an influential figure in local VOCATION DAY IN NEW BEDFORD: Joanne Robi Democratic politics, to the poat doux; St. Joseph's, New Bedford; Kathleen Kennedy, St. of chief of surgery. 'Real Issue Francis, Achusnet; Timothy O'Leary, St. Joseph's, New O'Brien said in his telegram Bedford; and Richard Pariseau, St. James, New Bedford, pause on the steps of St. Lawrence's Church, New Bedford, to the mayor that ''the real is sue is whether the city's hospi before attending the Pontifical High Mass. tal is to be medically or politi caVy controlled. Political pa tronage has no place in the 'op eration of a hospital." Dr. Judy is chief of the surgi eal department at the Seton HaD . me~ical school. He and univer sity officials contend that, under The 1964 Easter Basketball Tournament, under the . the contract between the city sponsorship of the Cathedral Men's Club, Fall River, will aD<:i the university for operaiiOll the medical center, the open in four cities simultaneously tomorrow night. This of cal chief at the medical school. year tournament will be· played over eight days. Regional must abo be surgical chief at qualifying rounds for the 54 Newport; 51. Patrick's, Somerset. the medical center. !enior teams will be staged St. Augustine's, Newport; St in Attleboro, New Bedford John of God, Somerset; and the Joint Fast and Fall River. Taunton will following teams from the host MONTBELLARD (NC)-Cath be the scene for the elimination city, Fall River: olics. and Protestants here ill 55. Peter and Paul,. St. Wil. among 'the 37 junior teams ree,.. liam, 51. Anne's, St. Patrick, St. France have agreed to fast 011 istered. Friday March 20 and to collect Louis. All contests must be completed Holy Name, 81. Anthony of the money for the district of Didi· by Wednesday evening, April I, Desert, Notre Dame, St. Mich motichon in nortliern Greece when the finals will open at .the ael's, Holy Rosary. where people can afford meat CYO Hall, Fall River. Santo Christo, Holy Cross, only twice a year. A coUeetiOll Paul Borkman 01 the Cathe Cathedral, ,Espirito Santo St. will also be taken to cover one dral Men's Club will act as third of the cost of building • SanislaU$. O. L. O. A., O. L. 6. Ii. ToUrnament director for th. youth training center there. "_ni.r Division sixth year. St. Margaret's, Buzzards Bay; Senior Entries 81. Joseph's, Fairhaven; Blessed St. Margaret's, Buzzards. Bay; Sacrament, Quincy; St. Joseph's, St. Mary's, Onset; St. Joseph's Taunton; St. Mary's, Plymouth. Where A Fairha.ven; St. Theresa's New St. Pius X, South Yarmouth' Bedford; Blessed Sacrament, St. Patrick's, Wareham; Qui.ncT. Paul's, Taunton; O. L. P. H., New St. Peter's, ~vincetown;. St Bedford;. Mt. Carm~l, New Bed Means A Mary's Plymouth; 51. Peter'. ford. Plymouth; st. Pius X, sOuth Sacred Heart, Taunton; ·Im Yarmouth; Our Lady ot Grace, maculate Conception, Taunton; .Westport. Hoi y Name, Providence; St. 51. Patrick's, Wareham; St. Mary'S, Pawtucket; St. Patrick's, Jaaes-, New Bedford; O. L. P. H., Valley Falls. St. Agatha, Milton; St. Mary's New Bedford; St. Edward'. Brockton; St. Joseph's Taunton. Providence; St. Theresa, South. 81. Christopher's, Tiverton; 51. Attleboro; 51. Jude's, Waltham; Patrick, Valley Falls, R. I.; Holy St. Mary's, Nortou. S1. Peter's, Dorchester; St. Family, Woonsocket; St. Mich . ael'a, Georgiaville, R. L; Ass~p_ Augustine's, Providence; st. John's, Attleboro; St. Dominic's, tion. Bellingham. St. Mary's Pawtucket; St. Swansea; St. John of God, Som Theresa's South Attleboro; St. erset. Our Lady of Fatima, Swansea' MILL John's, Raslindale; St. Peter's, St. Christopher's, Tiverton and Dighton; St. Paul's, Taunton. the following from Fall River: St. John's, Attleboro; Sacred Cathedral, St. Michael's, St. Heart, Taunton; st. 'Joseph'., William's, St. Anne's, SS. Peter Woonsocket; Immaculate C0n and Paul. ception, North Eas.toni St. Open Evenings St. Patrick, St. J'oseph's, St. Jude's, Waltham. .AniboBy of the Desert, Bo17 Mt. Carmel, Seekonk; St. Jo Rosary and Boq Name. seph's, Dighton; Our Lady of Fatima, Swansea; St. Joseph'..
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Liturgy Import Continued from Page One this commission to 42 members including 10 Cardinals, 28 Bish ops and 4 other prelates. Nine teen of the members had helped draw up the Council results. The new commission which. "by competence of all its mem. bers is in the. best position to carry out its task with depth of study and with great experI_ ence" is truly. international. It has representatives· of all th.e world's continents. The Amer ican members are Joseph Cal' dinal Ritter and Archbishop
Paul Hallinan. The Canadian member is Bishop Joseph Martin of NIcolet, Que. Its work was outlined'.S (1) the preparation of general litur. gical reforms on the basis of the norms contained in the Council's Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, and (2) the ap plication of the Constitution "in the letter and spirit of the COUll cil which approved it." First Meeting At its first meeting 19 of the prelates were able to arrive in Rome for debate. Carlo Cardinal Confalonieri was voted vice chairman of the Commission. The work accomplished since the .recess of the Council was reviewed: numerous stu d y
fields will. also be consulted. The predominant interest will be the liturgy as it will affect the pastoral life of the Church. "Persons in immediate contact with various phases of pastoral work, even in the mission fields, will be called on to organize the work of the experts," stated the Secretary, Father Bugnini. U. S. Preparations The Bishops of the United Cardinal Knighted States will·meet in Washington, NEW YORK (NC) -Francis D. C., on April 2-3 to discuss the· Cardinal Spellman has been·· implementation. of the Council made a knight of the Greek OrHowever, following.this meet der of St. Dennis of Zante. The ing, there will be another for honor was conferred for his all diocesan officials to help "fraternal good will and Chris- carry out the same reforms. It tian love" for members of the will be spimsorea by the Na Orthodox Church. tional Liturgical Conference and groups have been formed to investigate and prepare docu. ments for the revision or new version of various rites, the Benedictine monks of Mont Cesar have been compiling needed Bibliographies. It was" disclosed that besides the experts who will work in these study groups, other stu dents of the liturgy and of allied
-will be held in Kansas City, 1\10., • April 27-30. All diocesan liturgical com missions in the country and all Ordinaries in dioceses without such commissions have been in vited to send representatives to the meeting. Among the Liturgy reforms is a requirement - that every diocese establish such a commission. One such commission was re. cently formed in Rockford, Illinois. On it t~ locai Ordinary named four married couples and eight priests. On the Sacred· Art Commission, the Bishop named three priests and two nuns. The Music Commission has six priests, one· nun and three laymen.
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