FamilyCIClims . First
Amid Social Change
The
ANCHOR
PITTSBURGH (NC)-Pittsburg's Bishop John J. Wright empha,sized here that personality and family claim.~ "should be the last to be changed or challenged" in times of social upheaval. The family jig first. All other societies, the organized state included, are The bishop observed that "so subordinate; it is not the cial forms, in the nature of other way around," the bisn things; admit of change." He op told some 500 persons at offered as an example Alabama. the seventh annual diocesan family life conference here. When there is a conflict be tween the claims of society and the rights and purposes of the family, Bishop Wright said, "those of the civil society sho1l1d be the first to be changed or challenged." Bishop Wright declared the claims of personality and family "are always more nearly a part of that which emanates directly from God; the forms and pro grams of organized society are numbered among those things which may be changed and will be changed so that, if need be, nothing of them will be tomor row as it was yesterday."
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'fall River, Mass.; Thursday, March 25, 1965 ,·V0'I • 9, N o. 1©2 1965" Ti'le Anchor
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~
~Bishop
Connolly Asks Aid for World Poor "Ke""edare they who r.ear the word of God, and keep it.: St. Luke, 11-28
TO HELP HIM: Hungry children like little Paul, this African lad who lives along Beloved in Christ, the Congo river, love their I write again to ask your charity for our neighbors in powdered milk when it is Our prepared. need throughout the worrel. The Bishops' Relief Collection properly will be taken up throughout the country, next Sunday. Our American agency, Catholic Diocese has always shown a fine catholic sense in this Relief Services-NCWC, dis matter. We have risen above the level of cautious giving tributes food as well as clo and have tried to match our generosity to the needs of the thing and medicines in more homeless, the hungry, sick, impoverished people of the than 70 nations of the world. Plan to oontribute to this w-orld, regardless of race, 00101' or creed. project in In the past, I have caned this type of giving the "best monumental kind of good neighbor policy.'~ Because, mind you, these Christian charity on MarcIl Sunday. ii",\..~1.- vIles arE; Gur neighbor3,' even though we do not, see 28, Laetare the~. They are the one~ our Blessed Lord had in mind when he directed us to "love your neighbor as yourself." For He says in many ways: If you love only those, that love you, what reward do you expect? Do not even sinners do this? "If you greet only your own brethren, what are you. doing more than others? Why even the heathen do M much as this." No, my brethren and beloved in Christ, we Thefir~t of the Joyful must lift the measure of our charity and concern to take in Mysteries of the Rosary, the those who have no one to turn t'O, who cannot help them.,. Annunciation, is being cele aelves, but who have learned -to know that they are not fop brated today throughout the IrOtten. . Catholic World. Since Gabriel The Bishops' Relief Work is it fabulous thing. For every appeared to. the Blessed Virgin dollar contributed in this country we get the benefit of over 1900 years ago, the saluta about 'twenty dollars when our alms are distributed. Such tion "Hail, full of grace" hll6 repeated beyond count. an investment is impossible to beat. But we are storing been Whenever Mary is mentioned, up resources where rust and moth consume, or where which has been from time im thieves may break in 'and steal. Next Sunday's offeringa memorial to the second VaUcaR should prove one thing, and an important one, and that is: Council and' the first encyclical "Blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it," of Pope Paul VI, the world is sure of the strong faith that has Turn t<o Page Two been developed by devotion to
Feast· Stresses Mary's Plac'e In 'Church
not
Osterville Parish to Hold Open House Next Sunday Our Lady of the Assumption Church, Osterville, witt eonduct an Open House Sunday afternoon, March 29, from. I : 0 5 in order that aU members of the community, non Catholics as well as OathoHcs, might be enlightened in mat ters Catholic and see the Catholic form of worship hi !laving questions about the Cath a new light. On display win obc religion. Following the visitation of the be the sacred vessels, vest Church, all will be requested to
jl;ents and altar appointree11.ts used at Mass and other Catholic devotions. Statues and the va1' rous sacramentals will be elC p1ained as well as the religio.u "Ymbols found in the Church.' A display will be exh~:O:~etll ar.d guests will be instructem O~ the confessional and its func~;;::m.• The sanctuary with the a:~2lJ:' Y Icing the people together w~~i:~ "h,c '-'lass explanation win ;~ a h~::1tral point of the entire ~c?,,:oo \'( the Open House. Guides will be placed at stl!"il '/y"gic points of the Churcl1 !li'>-~ ~ be available f~r any visltix
go downstairs to the Church Hall where the Sisters, Missionary Sisters of the Most Blessed Trin i.ty, win be in charge of a cate chetical display. Th.e room for pre-school chit d>:e're and kindergarten classes wm also be open to the public. 1Re~lreshments will be served folLow5.r.g the tour. Rev. John J. Higgins, pastor, and Rev. Ronald A. Tosti, assist ac>.t, have announced that guests f,ltm neighboring communities 3n'd throughout the Diocese lll,~t welcome.
.e
Mary, the Mother of God, and
especially through man's devo tion to her Rosary. In these times, when Ecumen ism and the revival of the Litur gy has become the topic of man,. theological discussions, Mary's place in the Church's worship of God and in the devotional life of God's children must also be of concern. The devotion of the Rosary HI not unique to any nation or any period. During one of the ses sions of Vatican Council II last September, Archbishop Giusep pe Gawlina, a member of the Turn to Page Two
Bishop Approves New Assignment The Most Reverend Bishop has approved the nomination made by the Very Rev. Daniel J. Mc Carthy, SS.CC., Provincial of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, of the assign Inent of the Reverend Raph~el Flammia, SS.CC. to St. Mary's, North Fairhaven, as Adminis trator effective March 27tiL.
"where society changes with each footfall from Selma to Montgomery." "When there is question of whether to cut down the rights of the person and the life of the family to fit the demands of the state-or to alter, if need be totally, the patterns of soci ety to fit the needs of the fam ily and the person-there is no doubt as to where the revolu tion should be aimed," he said. "Whether in Selma, Alabama. or in social service bureaus of Washington, Harrisburg or Pitts burgh, the pressure must be on the changing economic or polit ical society-not on the unchang ing person," the bishop added.
Lutheran-Catholic Meeting Inaugurates New Era BALTIMORE (NC)-When Winston Churchill was asked to comment on the Allied invasion of North Africa in the early years of World War II, he remarked: "I can not say that this is the beginning of the end, but I would rather hold that it is the end ()f the beginning." Such a cedng this meeting will be the of papers concerning the statement could most pro- writing "status of the Nicene Creed u pitiously be applied to the dogma of the Church." The
meeting held in Baltimore (March 16) which brought' to gether for. the first time in the U. S. five Roman Catholic rep resentatives and five LutheraR representatives tor the purpose of inaugurating "dialogue-in,;, depth" discussions.
The meeting was preliminary in nature to be sure. It was in fact a discussion aimed at deter mining what will be discussed at future meetings. There were no theological points raised or an liwered. This was not the pur pose. Its aim was to etablish areas of particular Lutheran Catholic interest where discus si{)ns would prove most fruitful. Growing out of this meeting is a more formal dialogue sched uled to take place, again in. Baltimore, in early .ruly. Pre-
papers will attempt to ask ques tions concerning the other side'. understanding of tliis proposi tioR as well as supplying back ground information aimed at clarifying the pertinence of the questions.
The papers win then be ex changed so that at the July meeting· each side will have an understanding of what prompted the questions as well as havin« been able to do the necessary research work to answer them properly. A key point recommended at the preliminary meeting here tG insure the fruitfulness of future discussion is a projected dual re search into disputed matters and events which will lay commou ground work for the dialogue.
32 Year Career
Coyle's Burns To Retire As Head Football Coach Rev. Patrick J. O'Nem, Superintendent of Dioces,all Schools, announced today the retirement of James Burns, head football coach at Monsignor Coyle High School, Taun ron for the last 32 years. However, he will continue to ooach baseball and remain as
;ac~~~.b~n:rti::eo/~~~~e': r" port, Conn., Coach Burns
was a close friend of the late Bishop Cass~C;y, Lhe third Bishop of the Diocese, who founded tl1e Taunton secondary school. When the school opened in 1933, Jim Burns was there. A member of the football squad at Notre Dame University, the retiring football mentor started his coaching career at 'Holy Cross High School in New Orleans. 'Burns has had more than or dinary success at Coyle. His clubs are always among the best trained and best conditioned ill
this area. Five times h.e ~
directed undefeated and u!1~~e1i grid combines.
Tum to Page TWetlty
COACH
JAMJ'S
BVaNS
2
me ANCHOR-Diocese Of fon
Rlver-Thurs. Mar. 25, 196,s
taunton Speaker
Na rcotic Expert
Aid For World Poor Continued from Page One These are Christ's words. They bind up in brief every invitation, every command He has given us. "Blessed are \ the poor in spirit, blessed are the meek, the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself; for the Love of God. Amen, I say to you, as long as you did for one of these least, my brethren-who are hungry, homeless and helpless-you did it for Me." The measure of the good Christian is that he hears the word of God and keeps it. This means that we obey Christ, in his charity. It means that we love what He loves. He gave HisJife for all men. Now surely it is not too much to ask that we give of our substance for the millions of men, women and children so terribly in want. Our chance to keepr the word of God comes next Sunday, March 28th, when we join Catholics in most American Dioceses, and many Eur opean Dioceses, in giving to help relieve want in the world. One of the happy experiences I have in ROme is to be thanked, over and over again, by native Bishops and mis sionary Bishops from all corners of the world, for the great good that comes to them and their people from next Sun day's collection. We are not solving all needs, but we do keep hope and a true spirit of brotherhood alive by our giving. So I urge you one and all to continue to proclaim the great charity of Christ, and give assurance of my own .prayers, added to those of millions of beneficiaries, iIi thanks to all that support the Bishops' Relief Work. Faithfully yours in
Chri~
~~~~/:' Bishop of Fall.River
-a--'
·Program to Continue Chancery Says Changes Unnecessary
In Pittsburgh Ecumenical Plan
PITTSBURGH (NC) - The Pittsburgh diocesan chancery said no changes are planned or required in its ecumenical pro gram in the light of a directive on joint worship by Catholics with other Christians attributed to the Apostolic Delegate to the United States. Press reports-- said the Apos tolic Delegate, Archbishop Egi d~o Vagnozzi, had sent U. S. Or dinaries a confidential message advising them to halt joint reli gious services pending issuing of official guidelines. The letter was quoted as saying that the Holy See is concerned about some excesses taking place in joint religious services. The Pittsburgh chancery state ment said: "No changes of any kind seemed necessary or were contemplated on the basis of a communication attributed b)' I)t!ws agencies to the Apostolic Delegate." The chancery statement was.• issued after Auxiliary Bishop Vincent M. Leon~d was quoted
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
Mar. 28-8t. Boniface, New Bedford. St. Peter, Dighton. Apr. 4-Ou1' Lady of the Im maculate Conception, Fall River. Our Lady of Perpetual Help, New Bedford Apr.1G-St. John The. Bap tist, Fall River. Apr. ll-St. Paul, Taunton. Apr. 18----0ur Lady of the HoI)' Rosary, New Bedford. St. Michael, Ocean Grove.
in the press as saying that the directive attributed to Arch-' bishop Vagnozzi would not af fect growing collaboration be tween Catholics and non-Catho lics because it referred only to the question of joint worship. Last January the Pittsburgh diocese authorized a program for mixed prayer gatherings with Protestants and Orthodox. But Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts burgh specified at the time that such prayer gatherings should be held in "neutral" places rather than in church and that partic~pating clergymen should not wear the "distinctive litur gical vestments" of their denom inations. He did permit use of cassock.
ANNUNCIATION ARCHWAY AT IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION SHRINE, WASHINGTON
Devotion to Mary in Church
Continued from Page One Council Commis~ion on Bishops and the Government of Dioceses, said, "Mary as the Mother of the Church was the bridge and road to true ecumenism. Devo tion to Mary is evidently no ob stacle to ecumenism because the Orientals are' most zealous in honoring Mary." No Catholic should distort Mary's place in the ChurCh'S life out of proportion. Neither can her place as "Mother of the Church" be downgraded. On August 6, 1964, Pope Paul VI in his Encyclical "Ecclesiam Suam, declared that "devotion
N~cro'oQY MAR. 27 Rev. James W. Conlin, 1918, Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerset. Rt. Rev. Antonio P. Vieira, 1964, Pastor, ·Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, New Bedford. MAR. 28 Rt. Rev. Edward J. MoriartT, 195:', Pastor, St. Patrick, Fall River. Rev. Alfred J Levesque, 1960, Pastor, St. James, Taunton. MAR. 29 Rev. James H. Carr., S.TL., 1923, Assistant, St Patrick, Fall River. MAR. 30 Rev. Aime Barre, 1963, On sick leave, Fall River. MAR 31 Rt. Rev. George C. Maxwell, 1953, Pastor, SS. Peter & Paul, Fall River.
APR. 1
to Mary is happily flourishing in the Church today, and we, on this occasion gladly turn our thoughts· to her to admire in the Blessed Virgin as the model of Christian perfection, the mirror of true virtues, the pride of true humanity." Pope John XXIII of happy memory described his' devotion to the Rosary in his diary. Fol lowing morning Mass, he recited the five Joyful Mysteries; the sorrowful mysterieb in the after noon and the third set at 7:30 in the evening. During Mary's month in 1964, Bishop Wright of Pittsburgh' welcomed the new liturgical' prayer service at wakes but added "I certainly count on re membrance in the affectionate recitation of the Rosary by good souls who survive me. If b)' chance no one who comes to m)' modest wake has with him the beads with which to lead the Rosary, I suggest that an appro priate person search my pockets. Underneath m)' liturgical vest... ments he will find unless rve been robbed, m)' cherished beads • • • the Rosary," .
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Deplores Situation In Puerto Rico
SAN JUAN (NC)-The lead~ of the Catholic-oriented Christ ian A-ction Party said here healtti department statistics show 1,900 abortions have been performed in.Puerto Rico in' the last, fi_ years. But Jose Luis Feliu Pesquera, CAP chairman. said these stati9 tics ~o not ~cl~de c~~les at "tounst abortions which are not reported and have been . . timated in the thousands.
Pre-Cana Pre-Cana Conferences for ea gaged couples in the New Bed ford and Fall River areas 'wiD be held at 7 Sunda)' night, April 4 in Sacred Heart School, FaD River arid at the Catholic Com munity Center in New Bedford.
MONTHLY CHURCH BUDGET ENVELOPES
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Mncs Ordo FRIDAY-Friday of III Week of Lent. m Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Preface of Lent. SATURDAY - Saturday of m Week of Lent. m Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 2nd Coll. St. John Damascene, Confessor and Doctor of the Church; Preface of Lent. SUNDAY-Laetare Sunday, IV , Sunday of Lent. I Class. Rose or Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria; Creed; Preface of Lent. MONDAY-Monday of IV Week of Lent. III Class. Violet. Mass Propel': No Gloria or Creed; Preface of Lent. TUESDAY -Tuesda)' of IV Week of Lent. III ClaSs. Violet. Mass Proper~ No Gloria or .'Creed; Preface of Lent.. WEDNESDAY -'Wednesday of IV Week of Lent. III ·Class. Vi olet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Preface of Lent. THURSDAY - Thursda)' of IV Week of Lent. III Class. Vio let. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Preface of Lent. One Votive Mass in honor of Jesus Chris~, the Eternal High Priest, permitted. Gloria; .2nd con. Thursday of TV Week -of Lenti No Creed; Preface of Lent.
John F. Cleary Jr., ch~ of Coyle High School Fathers' Club third Annual Father and Son Communioa Breakfast, has announced that Walter A. McQueeney, captm. in the Providence Police Depan ment, will speak on "Proble~ Facing Our Youth Today" • the April 4th event in Taunton. Captain McQueeney, a weD known lecturer on the illegal Use of Narcotics, has given ov. 500 talks on this subject. . The guest speaker is a grad uate of the New York Police Academy's Narcotics Course snll in 1953 completed a course . . basic criminalistics at the Urn-. versity of Rhode Island. In January 1965, Captain Mo-o Queeney was chosen to be • special aide to President John son at his inauguration cere- monies in Washington. '
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Thurs., March 25, 1965
Declares Dct!ng Advice Reduces .Dro")(I)ut Rate
WASHINGTON (NC) Speedy pas~age in the House but a prolonged battle in the Senate appear the likeliest prospects for the 'administra tion's voting rights bill as the measure begins moving through Congress. President Johnson urged Con gress to "turn its attention im mediately to this legislation and to en<lct it promptly" in a letter accomoanying the bill sent to Vice President Humphrey as President of the Senate. It was clear that Congress was eomplying with the President's plea to turn its attention to the bill. as comment and maneuver ing mushroomed. The problem was enactment, in view of the prospect of a southern filibuster in the Senate. In the House, Rep. Emmanuel Celler of New York, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, in. troduced the measure and sched uled hearings at once. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach, a chief architect of the legislation, was the first witness. Bipartisan Support In the Senate, bipartisan sup port for the measure came from Majority Leader ~ke Mansfield of Montana and Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen. of nUnois. Dirksen was also reported (l principal author of the bill. But major obstacles loom ill ftle Senate. The first is the Ju diciary Committee, whose chair man is Sen. James O. Eastland of Mississippi. Next is the threat of a southern filibuster on the floor of the Senate. If the bill wins early passage in the House and then encoun ters a slowdown and utimate confrontation in the Senate, it will be following the same pat tern as last year's comprehensive Civil Rights Act. The 1964 legis lation was enacted only after a historic Senate vote to cut off debate.
Textln Says Council Epcch in History SAN ANTONIO (NC)-"Vati ean Council II marks the begin ning of a genuine new epoch in church history," Dr. Albert C. Outler of Dallas has told Protes tant. Catholic and Orthodox cler gymen here in Texas. The official observer at the Council for its three sessions and head of the Perkins School of Theology at Southern Methodist University, Dr. Outler expressed hope and enthusiasm for the re sults of the council in promoting Christian unity. "Vatican II has COme to be both the sign and the agent of a tre mendous change in the Christian community," he asserted.
Open New Catholic Stations in Bolivia LA PAZ (NC) - Two new eatholic broadcasting stations stations will soon start operating in Bolivia, giving this nation a total of seven Catholic-run transmitters. One belongs to the Oblate Fathers of Mary Immaculate and is located at Oruro. The other, belonging to the Santa Cruz di ocese, has been financed by a donation from Richard Cardin!l1 Cushing of Boston.
Legion of Mary . Mrs. Leo Lamarche, 1'1 Hope 'Weli St., Taunton, has been elected secretary of the Taunton t:uria of the Legion of Mary. She .,ill &erve • three ;year ter. .
3
THE ANCHOR-
Anticipate Fast Action in House, Se",ate Battle
" PHILADELPHIA (NC)Sound advice to parents on dating habits of their sons has been cited as one element
WHEN THE LORD CALLS, FORWARD MARCH! When Maryknolt Sister Maria Esperanza was a schoolgirl in Quinto, Ecuador, she decided her vocation was to go where the Lord would lead her~ The path was first to Nazareth College, Kentucky, then to Mary knoll, then to her mission in Quatamala, first at a hospital in the mountains at Jacalten ango, later at the Colegio Maryknoll in Huehuetanango and now she confidently follows . her watchword-: Forward march t NC Photo.
Proper of Mass for F.ourth Sunday of· Le-:tt
which brought abouT an "amaz ing decline" in freshman year dropouts at La Salle College here. Thomas N. McCarthy, coun seling center director, called th~ college freshman year "the graveyard" for dropouts. He said that through counseling, La Salle has whistled the "graveyar<\" and cut the dropout rate from 13 per cent in 1962 to three per cent this year. Parent Program The Summer counseling pro gram at the Christian Brothers' college for men includes a fun day of testing, another' day of personal counseling for each freshman and a session with parents at which their son's transition to college life with its difficulties and conflicts are dis cussed. McCarthy declared he gener ally tells the parents: "Give him his own room, if possible, away from the other kids, the radio and television. Urge him to date college women. It's not that we~re snobs and don't like the girl next door, but it's better for him to be with people who share the same education and experiences." , McCarthy said he is "certain the parent program has been a maJQr contdbuting factor. in the sharp decline in dropouts."
INTROIT: Isai. 66, 10 et 11
. TRACT: PS, 124, ,l-Z
Rejoice, 0 Jerusalem, and come together, all you who love her: rejoice with Joy, -you who' have been in sorrow: that you may exhult, and be filled from the breasts ~f your consolation. Ps. 121, 1. I rejoiced because they said to me, "We will go up to the house of the Lord." Y. Glory be to the Father. Rejoice, 0 Jerusalem, and come together, all you who' have been in sorrow: that you may exult, and be filled from the breasts of your consolation.
They who trust in the Lord are. like' Mount Sion, which is immovable; which forever stands~ V, Mounta.ins are round about jerusalem; so the 'Lord is round. about. ' his people, both now and' , forever..
Praise the lord, for he is good;. sing praise to his name, for he is sweet; all that he wills he does in heaven and on earth.
Rose E. Sullivan
Jeffrey E. Sullivan
GRADUAL: PS, 121, 1 et 7
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THE
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I
Ideas and Suggest.ions for Family Lenten Meals
SATURDAY, MARCH 27
Fast
Breakfast: Cold cereal, beverage, juice
Lunch' Tossed shrimp salad·, toast, beverage, pear half. Dinner~ Juice, frankfurts and beans, relish, JIOIIs and butter, beverage, squash cookies·.
Cook elbow macaroni according to directions on packagE. and drain. Mix macaroni, salmon, mushrooll' soup and peas and place in buttered casserole. Cover with chow mein noodles and dot with butter. Bake at 350 degrees 45 to 60 minutes. Serves 4. l\fiss A. Gertrude Gould St. Bernard's Parish, Assonet
Combine oil, lemon JUIce, salt, pepper, mustard, celery seeds, grated onion, beating well with fork Add to shrimp in salad bowl. Serve on lettuce leaves. Squash Cookies 1h cup shortening 2 eggs, well beaten 1 teaspoon baking powder If.l teaspoon ginger 1J4 cup milk 1 cup squash 1 cup brown sugar 2 cups an purpose flour lh teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup raisins :If.! Cup chopped nuts Cream shortening with sugar. Add eggs tmd beat. Mix and sift dry ingredients. Add alter nately with milk while beating. Add squash, raisins and nuts. Bake at 375 degrees for 10 min utes on greased cookie sheet. If cookies are made with one teaspoon of batter, this should yield about five dozen cookies. Mrs. Frank Lombardi st. Joseph's Parish, Fall River MONDAY, MARCH 29
Fast Breakfast: Juice, soft-boiled egg, beverage Lunch: Mozzarella toasties· beverage, fruit Dinner: Baked ham slice, eucumber ring ..old·. lima .beans, rolls and butter, banana eream pie. Mozzarella Toasties Four slices bread ¥. pound mozzarella cheese 1 tomato oregano olive oil Toast bread on one side lightly under broiler. Quarter each slice. Cover each quarter with • thin slice of cheese. Top with thinly sliced to mato seasoned with a dash of oregano and two or three drops of olive oil. Broil about three minutes or until cheese melts. Serves four. Cucumber Ring Mold lh envelope unflavored gelatin 1,4 Cup lemon juice 1 tablespoon cold water ¥4 Cup boiling water 1 tablespoon sugar 112 teaspoon salt 3 medium cucumbers, pared 4 ounces cream cheese :Ih cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon minced onion 1 tablespoon minced parsley Soften gelatin in lemon juice and cold water, then dissolve in boiling water. Add sugar and salt. Chop cucumbers fine. Drain and measure one cup cumbers. Add cucumbers, mayonnaise, onion, and parsle)' to cream cheese, mixing well. Stir in gelatin and pour into individual molds (this should make four). Chill until firm. Unmold and serve 9n lettuce leaves with mayonnaise to taste. Serves four. TUESDAY, MARCH 30 Fast Breakfast: Doughnut and beverage Lunch; Salmon bake·, toast, beverage Dinner: Meat loaf, bean panache·, cottage eheese, brf'ad and butter, beverage, custard. Salmon Bake 1h pound elbow macaroni 1 can salmon (8 oz.) 1 can mushroom soup undilute4 1 small can peas 1 can chow mein noodles butter
_. 'i
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Bean Panache
Tossed Shrimp Salad
1 box frozen green peas
lf4 cup salad oil Ilh tablespoons lemon juice 1 teaspoon salt '% teaspoon pepper '% teaspoon dry mustard % teaspoon celery seeds ¥4 teaspoon grated onion lh cup sliced black olives 1 tomato sliced 1 cup or can cleaned shrimp
""T'--".
1h . box frozen wax beans 112 onion chopped 1 tablespoon butter 1 box frozen lima beans salt and pepper parsley
Cook vegetables according to directions on packages. Drain. Saute onion in butter until tender, about 10 minutes. Toss with drained . beans. Sah and pepper to taste and sprink:e with parsley. Serve hot. Serves 6. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31 Fast Breakfast: Juice, cold cereal, beverage Lunch: Crab meat salad, toast, ice cream, beverage. Dinner. Butter-fried mushrooms·, fillets of sole in white wine·, beets, tartar sauce, spinach, cherry pie, bread and butter, beverage. Butter-fried Mushrooms 1 lb. mushrooms ~1,6 to 1h cup butter 1 tablespoon olive oil or salad oil
Salt Pepper monosodium glutamate Clean and slice mushrooms. Drain or: paper towel. Heat butter and oil in skillet. over low heat. Add sliced mushrooms. Cook slowly, turn ing with care until lightly browned and tender. Season with salt, pepper and monosodium glut amate. Serve immediately. Fillets of Sole in White Wine 2 lbs. fillet of sole 112 cup dry white wine ih cup chopped onion 3 tablespoons melted butter or margarine 2 bay leaves crushed 1 teaspoon chopped parsley lh teaspoon salt lf4 teaspoon pepper Wipe fillets with clean damp cloth and place in shallo~·, greased 2 quart casserole having a cover. Combine remainder of ingredients and pour over fillets. Cover casserole and bake at 375 degrees for 25 minutes or until fish flakes
easily. THURSDAY, APRIL I, 1965
Fast
Breakfast: Juice, waffles and syrup, ltevel'aA'e Lunch: Shrimp soup, toast, Old Spice Cook Ies·, beverage. Dinner: Stuffed celery, Meat Balls Deluxe-, I18lad, lima beans, riee, beverage. Old Spice Cookies 2 cups brown sugar 1 cup shortening 2 eggs 112 cup sour milk 2 teaspoons cinnamon 1 teaspoon cloves 1 teaspoon nutmeg 3 cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon soda 1 cup mixed nuts and raisins Cream sugar, shortening and spices together. Add beatel' eggs, milk and flour sifted with soda and salt. Beat well. Add nuts and raisins. Mix until blended. Drop batter on greased cookie sheet by teaspoonfuls. Bake in 375 degree oven about 15 minutes. Yields six dozen. Meat Balls Deluxe % cup evaporated milk (6 oz. can) 1h cup mayonnaise 1. can sliced mushrooms (30z.) drained 1/4 teaspoon celery seed 1 lb. hamburg 1 teaspoon salt Dash of pepper 2 tablespoons oil Combine evaporated milk, mayonnaise, rrmshrooms and celery seed and mix until blend ed. Shape hamburg into balls and season with salt and pepper. Brown in oil. Add evaporated milk mixture and simmer for 20 minutes. Serve over rice. Serves four.
TRIES RECIPE: Testing Anchor Lenten recipe is Mra. Raymond Doherty, St. Bernard's parish, Assonet.
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THE ANCHOR -
Thurs., March 25, 1965
Lessons of History Valuable For New Latin America
Human Rights Hold Priority Over Property
From "The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John 1. Considine, M.M. A minor crisis arose a few hours before the Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program conference was due to open in Chicago the morning of January 20, 1964. Bishop Marcos G. McGrath, C.S.C., then Auxiliary Bishop of Pan ama, had been detained in from the north. his home city. The riots over predominantly We have grown off separate the flag controversy between branches of a common trunk, Panama and the U.S.-con and only now, by reason of eco
trolled Canal Zone had proved
so serious that it would have been a grave impropriety for the Bishop to leave his post. Father Leo T. Mahon of the Archdiocese of Chicago who iq pastor of San Miguelito, the parish in Pana ma City staffed by Chicago priests, came to ", the rescue by arriving with the Bishop's text. "Sunday morning," explained Father Mahon to the CICOP delegates, "we buried the six teen boys who were killed on the first nights and days of the rioting. A hundred thousand people were at the funeral. It was a very tense moment. The Bishop headed the procession in the three mile walk to the ceme tery in the blazing sun. "Then I returned with him to his work on this conference paper. He could easily, I think, have written a very fascinating paper on the crisis in Panama. It is a tribute to his profundity that he did not because crises come and go in every country. As a fine theologian and good pastor he wanted to present you with something on a far bigger crisis that is going on in the Church in this modern day. "Imagine then, Bishop Mc Grath-tall, young, very d~nam ic-sitting on top of the keg of powder in Panama as he wrote these pages." Where Church Fits We are at present on the front edge of a great wave of inter American cOl)perative action, both civic and religious. in which the Catholic Church of North and Latin America must perforce exercise a determining role in what is to come, in the properly religious sphere as well as in bringing about that dy namic motivation for a better social order without which no Alliance for Progress can move fast or far. Although those of us here present would not share in this error, there are other errors which might be ours or, perhaps 1R0re accurately, there are other Vital truths which, for lack of analysis, we fail to appreciate. It is worthwhile to ,probe into some of these truths. We Are Strangers The first truth we must recall In all its bald reality)s that the United States and Latin Amer ica, in their civilization and cul tures, have been foreign to one another since they began. This is a simple fact, ,but of broad sig nificance. We should not be sur prised that We do not know one another; we have had little oc easion to do so. Even today the ordinary U. S. student learns much of European history, but almost nothing is taught him on secondary or university level bout the nations and territories to the south. In Latin America, despite the present might of the United States, classroom history often gives the meagerest report of her past. A man conceives history in terms of his ancestors. The peoples of Latin America came mostly from southern Eu lOpe, those of North America
nomic and political necessity, only now in this century, and particularly sil"ce Franklin Del ano Roosevelt, have we thought of ourselves effectively as neigh bors, and possibly good neigh bors and friends. Need for Understanding , It is fine that we do so, and even urgently necessary. But friendship to be genuine and to be helpful supposes a knowledge of our friend. So-called friend ship that is the fruit of religious or political expediency-for ex ample, aid to Latin America while Communism threatens, or the lending of priests to relieve a present local shortage - does not outlive the expediency. The services it renders are unilateral because it does not make real contact at the ::other end; and the same services are conceived at home and exported intact with out a sufficient feel for the "friend," his way of living, his way of thinking, the pattern of his problems. A case in point would be the a priori determination of a United States Catholic that Latin American bishops should build up a parochial school sys tem similar to that which the Church ,erected in this country. Such a determination would ignore the fact that this system in the United States originated in great part through a necessity which befell U. S. bishops to pre serve the faith of immigrant Catholics in a Protestant culture. It ignores, too, the absolute im possibility of means (personnel and money) in Latin America for a massive effort which would attempt to draw millions and millions of children, rapidly multiplying, i n t 0 parochial schools which do not yet exist. It is to ignore the fact that in many countries of Latin Amer ica the law provides, as it does for example in Germany, that religion be taught in the state schools. Seeing Church in Concrete A more exact and true knowl edge of the human situation of our Latin American neighbor will ,Permit us to understand better his religious problems 'and perspectives. This brings us di rectly into our second question: the role of the Church in Latin America. We must not judge the task of the Church merely in the ab stract. Her mission in the world is unchanged and unchanging; but the world is constantly changing-partly by her doing -and so it is that the manner,of her mission requires continual adaptation. If we are acutely aware of this fact we will not judge the action of the Church in Latin America in, let us say, the 19th century in terms of problems and situations which did not come into being until the mid-20th century; nor will we limit the Church's action now to the methods which were effective in the past. We should, in a word, be able to evaluate justly the action of the Church in Latin America in the period of the conquest, during colonial rule, throughout the republican era and at the present moment. There is a thread of continuity through it all; advantages and disadvantages which are created. and. passed on.
5
TOPEKA (NC)-The at torney for the Catholic hier archy in Kansas underlined the moral right which equa! izes all persons in housing at a hearing here of a Kansas Senate committee. Emmet A. Blaes, Wichita at torney, told the committeemen who are considering a fair hous ing bill for the state: "There are two sets of rights that enter into the questions of equal housing opportunities - property and human. Property rights have been overemphasized. The bish ops of Kansas believe human rights should have priority." Blaes, a former president of the National Council of Catholic Men, told the legislators much attention in the housing situation is given to social economie standpoints. He added, "fair housing is really a moral ques tion." It is "the conviction of the bishops of Kansas that all per sons have the right to equal housing opportunities," Blaes told the committeemen.
Archbishop Pleads For More Priests PLAN CONCERT: Final plans fo~" annual Spring con cert of Sacred Hearts Academy glee club, Fairhaven, are made by, from left, Julie Fortin, club vice-president; Oarol Eernard, president; Joseph D. Domenico, director. Program will be presented at 8 Sunday night;. March 28 at Keith Junior High School, New Bedford.
Higher Education Harvard Professor Poses Strategic Questions on Catholic Colleges FLINT (NC)-A Harvard Uni versity professor said here in Michigan that it is time to ask strategic questions about the future of Catholic higher edu cation. Stephen H. Fuller, a Catholic and associate dean for external affairs at Harvard, told the First Friday club that Catholics in higher education should start asking: "Where are we? Where are we going? How do we get there? What resources do we have and how should we mar shal these resources?" Fuller put higher Catholic education to the test of a suc cessful business venture and found it badly lacking. "We do not have the resources to maintain an exclusive Cath olic education system and at the same time meet the crying need for higher education," Fuller held. Qualified Teachers "We have a massive capacity for achieving mediocrisy in higher education," he added. He pointed to a survey that failed to list one Catholic college among the top 20 most prominent colleges and umversities in the U. S.
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MADRID (NC) -Archbishop Casimiro Morcillo of Madrid has called for more vocations, an nounced construction of a new seminary and declared there is a priest shortage in Spain's cap ital. In his announcement, made fo~ Seminary Day, he said that Madrid's 2.5 million people have only 1,100 priests instead of a needed 3,000. The archbishop al so said there are only 750 semi narians where there should be 3,000.
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He also said the Catholic sys tem is lacking in qualified reli gious teachers. He said that while there is one priest for 785 Catholics in the U. S., there is only one priest to 3,300 students in colleges. ' , "We can do as Catholics more good in the next 50 years then in any other 50 years in American history if we find the answer to these strategic questions," he asserted. ~
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It is recognized that there is and must be growing eooperation in the anti-poverty and mental health pro grams of the nation ,among public health workers, the clergy, and the' old-fashioned good neighbor. Very often the problem of an, individual is not simply that he is poor or that he is physically sick but that he is frightened or emotionally disturbed or spiritually upset. And here is where those who are kind and encouraging and proficient in matter of the spirit and the emotions have an impor tant role to play. Indeed, a leading. African psychiatrist, one who has had twelve years of training in English universities, re cently stated that he owes a professional debt to the vil lage healer-the witch doctor-of his native Nigeria. Said Dr. Thomas Adeoye Lambo, "These have been doing 'psy cotherapy for centuries-everything from gro~p therapy for a village afraid. of evil spirits to curing a schizophrenic ehild." This same type of healing has been going on in every country of the world-even though psychiatric terms may not have been applied to it. The good neighbor who looks in on the sick person on the block, the concern shown in times of trouble and difficulty, the knowledge given to one in trouble that he is not alone, the comfort extended in times of sorrow, the encouragement given in time of need, the advice from a priest or Sister to a perplexed individual, young or old-all these are examples with which all are familiar and they play a great role in helping people keep their balance and their values. This concern for one another is a virtue that has far reaching consequences in the life of a person and in the health and prosperity of a community.
Individuals at Fault In the four wars that the United States has fought in this present century, including the action going oil in Vietnam, there have been 576,268 Americans killed and 978,640 wounded. This is a tragic total and one that has touched the lives of untold millions more of their relatives and friends. The statistics provide a terrible commentary on the tragedy of war. In the same period of time, 1,501,000 Americans have been killed through traffic accidents and 52,850,000 have been injured. Americans are beng killed in automobileacci dents at the rate of nearly 1,000 a week, nearly 140 every single day. To this terrible price of human life and suffering, a bill of 3 billion dollars for property damage results from these automobile accidents, a loss more than twice the cost of all fires in the United States in any average year President Johnson has declared: "We cannot accept the intolerable drain on our human and economic resources that these accidents are causing." What is the answer to this frightening amount of suffering? Insurance rates are going up; courts are begin ning to crack down on offenders; auto designers are being ur-ged to initiate new safety features into new cars; more demanding tests are being introduced for new drivers; obvious hazards are being corrected and eliminated. But this is not the whole answer. Figures of the National Safety Council indicate that, the motorist is at fault in nearly 98 per cent of all auto mobile crashes. The answer lies with the individual driver. Nothing' will be significantly improved unless and until drivers be come aware of their moral responsibility when they get behind the wheel of a car. Parents must know well what they are doing when they give their children permission to apply for a license and to drive, much less to own, an auto mobile. The car itself must be considered as an instrument capable of inflicting pain and death instead of as a play thing or an opportunity to express hostile desires in speed and recklessness. Like so many other problems, the answer is in per sons, not in things.
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River
410 Highland Avenue
fall River, Mass. 675-7151
PUBLISHER
Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.,
GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER It. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOP Hugh J. Golde"
lEV. JAMES A. CLARK
. Assistant DIrector latin American Bureau. NCWC
TWO TOMBS Twe tombs are topics 01. ~nversation today in Santo DomingQ. One is occupiedt the other is empty. One is for the spiritual father of the coun try; one is for a former dictatOJlo Both are scenes of stormy con troversy. Hen rique Jimenez is the guide at the tomb of Col urn bus. "I don't think t his national monument should be dis turbed" says he. , He is one of few people who object to building a new shrine :for Columbus at the spot where Columbus stepped from his ship. The battle has been lost for the government has decreed that an appeal be sent to all Ameri ('an countries requesting aid Archbishop Hallinan Heads Opposition for construction of the new me morial. Henrique is consoled At Georgia Hearing with the knowledge that tourists ATLANTA (NC)-A so-called mutilate organs essential to that will still visit "his" cathedral "voluntary sterilization" bill has human life is not man's domin the first of the new world, and died in the State Senate after ion, whether he acts individually the place of the present tomb. public intervention against it by or the state acts collectively." The other tomb is across town. No public hearings had been. in a suburb of Santo. Domingo. two religious leaders and a labor held on the bill until Archbishop It is beneath the high altar of a representative. Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Hallinan made his request to parish church. It is a gorgeously Atlanta told the Senate Health speak. decorated crypt intended to be "Man's life, his human powers, the resting place of the Trujillo Committee he, could not ac quiesce to a situation whereby his good name, are within the family. Wrought iron flowers area of his human dignity pre "one doctor and one state of line the walls - unintentionally cisely because he is a creature of typifying the heartlessness of ficial played God." , God, not the state," the arch The bill overwhelmingly ap the Trujillo reign. The tomb is bishop said. proved in the House, was killed empty imd a mute casket stares "This bill would authorize the through the cracked top. The by being referred to a subcom mittee for reconsideration. The mutilation of innocent persons body of Trujillo rested here whether voluntary or not, mar measure would have permitted a temporarily after' his assassina ried or single, adult or minor, tion while his son sought to re doctor, with the agreement of a competent or helpless to prevent' gain control of the country. But local ordinary, a post akin to a justice of the peace, to perform their own defense. the people had enough. Seein, "Such punishment 'of a person the futility of his attempts he se a sterilization operation on "un innocent of any crime, uncharged cretly moved the body to the desirables." Archbishop Hallinan, joined, by any prosecutor, and uncon family yacht and sailed off. Hi! victed by any court makes our knew the vengeance that would by a Jewish spokesman and a labor representative, told the legislative tradition an empty be wrought on his father's bQdy committee that "to destroy the shell and juridical responsibility once the Trujillo terror was life of an innocent person, or a farce," the archbishop s!1id. completely over. Jose Carillo claims that this tom~where he is the guide-should be made the center of tourism (ahd tips) _ that people will never forget the agony of the country under the Philadelphia Archdiocesan Parish Schools "Caesar' of the Caribbean". But to speak only of tombs is To Admit Non-C'atholic Pupils to betray this country. Today an is alive in Santo Domingo in the practice has varied from PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Non preparation for the aproaching parish to parish." Catholic children will now be The statement accompanying Marian-Mariological Congress. admitted to all parish schools Lif/' pulses anew among these throughout the Archdiocese of publication of the norms for ad people who for 32 years were mission said the archdiocese Philadelphia, according to a pol not allowed to make a decision, wishes "to continue and to ex icy statement issued by the or register a dissent. Government Archbishop's Commission on pand, within its means, this ef fort toward the spiritual, moral, labor, church, students, all reli Human Relations. and int'ellectual development of gions, press-the entire commu The new regulations, formu the children of the community," nay is cooperating to make the lated in consultation with the with due consideration of the Congress a success. Diocesan School Office and ap The Marian Congress has be facilities available. proved by Archbishop John J. come the rallying point for civic Response to Grace Krol, note that "non-Catholic pride. This country-unbeliev The new regulations point out ably blessed by nature but in children have sought admission and have been accepted into that "conversion (to the Catholic credibly crushed by inhum3Jl parish schools in fairly large faith) is a free response to grace cruelty-is ready to welcome the numbers in the past; however, and may not be imposed as an world to its shores. The Con obligatory condition for any gresses will bring people from purpose." Conditions are set out the world over to share the regarding the baptism of the beauty and bounty of this Island. Hospital in Alaska school children. It will be only an eight day Resumes Operation Parents and guardians of non celebration but it will be the ANCHORAGE (NC) - Provi birthday of a new era. This wiD Catholic children attending pa dence Hospital, which suffered rochial schools must accept· the be the first time within memory the most damage of any Catholic standards of the school on mat that the community has freely institution in Alaska in the Good ters of classroom performance, cooperated to achieve greatness. Friday earthquake o~ 1964, is roster, dress, and discipline, and The tombs of the past will be now fully repaired and serving must accept some financial re- , empty echoes of a fruitful future Alaskans as usual. possible to these people wile sponsibility with regard to tui . The Anchorage hospital, larg tion. At least one parent mu~ have learned to unite in free est private hospital in the state, attend two orientation classes on dom. The Marian Congress is the is owned and operated by the the regulationS and standards cd symbol of the Dew Santo Do minaQ. Sisters of Charity of Providenee. ' tile school..
Sterilization Bill Dies
'See Expands Rules
THE ANCHOR -
Court Sustains Broad Belief
Test for Draft Exemption"
WASHINGTON (NC) - the 11. S. Supreme CoUrt: has unanl mously upheld ~e 'rfght of ConJress to grant exemptions from military service to' those who object on the basis of "religious training and belief." In doing so,' however, the court made it plain that It un derstands this· belief test In a broad sense as embracing "all 1'eligiomi" - but excluding "es sentiaUy political, sociological, or philosophical views." The court took this action In deciding the cases of three con · scientious objectors who .were denied draft exemptions because authorities judged that their beliefs did not conform to the belief test in the draft law.· The Supreme Court held that, on the contrary, their beliefs did come within the terms of the test. Associate . Justice Tom C. Clark, speaking for the Court, said this test is "essentially an objective one, namely, does the claimed belief occupy the same place in the life of the objector as an orthodox belief in God holds in the life of one clearly qualified for exemption?" Narrow . ~ The court's ruling - which was, in essence, that the three men were entitled to draft ex emptions because their beliefs conform to the test embodied in the law_as a relatively nar row one. It passed over some broader and more difficult issues. One of these was the question of the conflict sometimes said to exist between the free exercise
Canadian Students Work in' Mexico OTTAWA (NC) -Some 150 Canadian college students will 8J)end six weeks in Mexico this Summer under auspices of the Student Conference for lnterAmerican Projects. . The students are from St. Mary's University, Halifax; Loy · ola College, Montreal; st. Pat rick's College and the Univer sity of Ottawa, ottawa; St. Mi mae!'s College and St. Augus tine'. Seminary, Toronto; Wa terloo University and Resurrec tion College, Kitchener, Ont.. Christ the King College, Brescia College and St. Peter's Semi ury, London, Ont. The students will be based in the village of P1saflores,. near Mexico City, where several lIDlall groups were engaged last Summer. They will be asked to work in four other villages. They will install electricity in Pisaflores and erect a model home in each village to help amedy a housing shortage.
Gregorian Institute Sponsors Seminar SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The Cregorian Institute of America will sponsor a three-day sem Inar in liturgical music at Seton Hall University here starting Wednseday, April 21. Participants will Include Clif ford A. Bennett, institute presi dent; Father Gilbert Chabot, A.A., director of the liturgical choir at Assumption Prepara tory School, Worcester, C. Alex · ander Peloquin, writer, lecturer and composer, Boston College, and Berj Zamkochian, organist with the Boston Symphony Or chestra.
Protestant Meeting DAVENPORT (NC)-For the first time Catholic observera, were present at the annual meeting of the (Protestant) Council of Churches of Rock. Island, Ill., and Scott". Iowa,. Counties.· in. the First Presb~ . rian Church here 111 ~ow ..
of religion and the non-establish ment of religion clauses of the First Ame'1dmerit to the Cons~itution. . Some observers .had suggested that draft exemptions on grounds of religious belief, in accommo dating free exercise, at the same time might violate non-estab lishment. The court' made .no reference to this problem. Further, Justice Clark empha sized that the court W!Ul not called upon to conslder':"- and did not decide - the il!Sue of whether draft exemptions must be extended to conscientious ob jectors who are atheists. None of the three men in the cases before the court is an atheist, he pointed out.
Lauds European Educators' Work VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI told a group of Euro pean educators that their work is especially demanding "be cause it aims at training suitably those who are called on to be come citizens of Europe. "Far from weakening the at tachment of each to his own country, you strengthen it by placing it in its rightful place within the cultural patrimony which all nations have received as a heritage, a patrimony which is deeply marked as you well know by Christianity," he said in French. He spoke to members of the international ~xecutive commit tee of "European School Day" observance which periodically meets in Rome. It consists of ed ucators and education ministers representing 13 countries. The organization, whose aim is the unification of Europe, is cele brating its 10th anniversary this year. "While respecting the best tradtiions of the past you have a courageous ambition of raising spirits and hearts to • higher common good worthy of being proposed to everyone as an ex ample," the Pope said.
Rural Life Official .Supports Project DES MOINES (NC)-The ex ecutive director of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference has called for a "bold and basic attack on poverty in' the West and the Great Plains" through a "vast" water development pro gram. . Msgr. Edward W. O'Rourke endorsed the proposed North American Water and Power Al liance (NAWAPA) which would cost $80 billion over 30 years and, by harnessing five rivers in Alaska and Canada, bring water to seven provinces in Canada, 33 U. S. states and three Mexican states. Msgr. O'Rourke said In a statement from NRLC headquar ters here in Iowa that NAWAPA would be "one of the finest in vestments our nation ever made."
Thurs., March 25, 1965
College Honors .Divinity .Dean WINOOSKI PARK' (NC) The Rev. Douglas Horton, dean emeritus of Harvard D~vtnity School, has been awardelJ an honorary degree by St. Michael's College here in Vermont lit; the 'conclusion of a Workshop oli Ec ., umenism. Dr. Horton told the workshop participants, who included Gov. Philip Holl of Vermont, that "no union is going to take 'place between Rome and the rest of Christendom or any part of It next week, but I hope some groups will have the courage and imagination to ~t together not simply for the sake of ex changing Ideas, but in the defi nite determination to unite." Scripture profeSsor Fat her Paul N. Couture declared that "the common Bible is a worth ~'hile, even necessary, tool of the ~ ecumenical movement," and added "like all good tools it may YOUTH HOLY HOUR: Girl Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, take time to find the right metal Bluebirds and Brownies participate in' Holy Hour sponsored and hone It down to pl'QPer pre by Fall River Marian Committee at SS. Peter and Paul d-'-
Church. From left, Camp Fire Girl Joan Reed, Sacred Heart parish; Brownie Patrice Plunkett, 88. Peter and Paul; Rev. Peter F. Mullen, who preached at service; Junior Girl Scout Pamela Croteau, St. Roch.
Chang'ing Times Educators to Discuss Prospects
For Colleges
WASHINGTON (NC) - Col lege educators meeting at next month's big Catholic education convention are set to discuss the prospects for their institutions in the light of changing educa tional patterns. This was announced here from the headquarters of the National Catholic Educational ,Association whose 62nd annual convention will be held in New York during Easter week, April 19 to 22. Attendance is expected to to tal 20,000 teachers and adminis tratorsrepresenting all levels of, Catholie education. Sessions will be in the Americana and the New York Hilton hotels and the New York Coliseum, the NCEA said. The program of the College end University· Department re leased by the NCEA shows that cpening sessions will be devot ed. to identifying patterns in so C!ety and in the Church that will affect Catholic higher education.
Subsequent sessions win deal deal with how the various Cath olic Institutions of higher educa tion should deal with such "problems and prospects." Paul Munday, chairman of the department of sociology at Loy ola Unversity, Chicago, will speak at the opening session Tuesday, April 20 on the emer ging patterns. He will be fol lowed at the same opening meet Ing by Father William F. Kelley, S.J.. president of Marquette Uni versity, Milwaukee, whose topic -is: "How Catholic Higher Edu cation Can Meet These Changes;"
Slander of Reltgion JAKARTA (NC) - President Achmed Sukamo of Indonesia has issued a decree stating that slandering or abusing any rec ognized religion is a crime. Catholicism is one of the six rec ognized religions in Indonesia, along with Protestantism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and Con fucianism.
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WASHINGTON (NC) - The 0. S. Alliance for Progress will spend about $1 million in this fiscal year and a like amount next year to assist population growth studies in Latin America. Dr. Edgar F. Berman, a Balti more, Md., physician who is di rector of the Alliance's popula tion office, said the program is designed to help South Ameri can nations 'get facts on thek population increase. . In. an interview, Dr. aerman said no U. S. money will be sPent on dlstribu,tipl), of the means ol, artificial birth controL .
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Rlver-Thurt•.Mor. 25,1965.
Nurse Copping At St. Anne's
Moving Prayer Is Attributed
To Richard Cardinal Cushing
By Mary Tinley Daly Dear Mrs. Daley: The beautiful prayer "Slow Me Down,
Lord," was written by His Eminence Richard Oardinal Cushing. I came across it some time ago and have given it to friends. I have respect and admiration for His Eminence. I have several other writings of his, among them a book terprets the joYll of slowing down, but shows how one can entitled "Meditations of • restore imbalance through sim Religious" which is indeed ple and humanitarian consider
excellent, not only for a religious but for laymen as well, molt particularly for Third Or der member.-. M.R.E. Dear
:Mrs. Daly: Con
eerning your
inqurY about
the author of
the poem "Slow
Me Down, Lord,"
I IIJn enclosing
• copy of this
composition so
that you may see tor yourselfi'
Thank you. Sineerely, M.B., Re
cording Secretary, S eve nth
Grade Civics Club. (Leaflet en
closed with Cardinal Cushinp
lignature.)
•••
Dear Mrs. Daly: Having just completed a year and a half of graduate study ill ehemistry at Indiana University, I am very familiar with "the tension-filled segment of the Great Society" of which you IlPOke in your column. I am equally well acquainted with Richard Car din a 1 Cushing's "Busy Man's Prayer" which you 110 thoughtfully repripted ill your column. It has been a poignant reminder above my desk to "slow down" whenever I get caught up in my work. I expect it will be a treasured prayer even now that my har ried but happy days in grad Ilehool are ended and I am ready to face the Great Society's field of research with my M.S. ill lDJ' lalUld. Sincerely, A.M.W.
•••
Dear :Mrs. Daly: Our church bulletin earried the prayer "Slow Down" and It was written (per the bulletin) by Cardinal Cushing. Now who else could set forth such worth while thoughts? Keep wen, keep writing. God bless you and yours. M.E.G. Dear Mrs. Daly: You really pointed out and so IIJnply outlined the problem we auffer from in this "fast paced and oftentimes anxiety ridden" lIOciety of ours. Your column was a challenge because the more I read the more there came the hope that credit could be given to the man who is so deserving. Your honesty 18 to. be com mended. He ia none other than our illustrious Cardinal, orator, friend of the poor, a believer in and deliverer to all causes and funds for God'. Mysticll1 Body, and Prelate of Boston, Yes, Cu dinal Cushing. .. . lsn~t it a ,em? It no.t omy sa-
Mississippi WOfT;leR. ~ Progress in State ... JACKSON (NC)-Mlssissipp", lltatewide Catholic women'. __ ,anizatioD has expressed graU tude over the "forces of change and progress which have been let in motion" in their state. In a resolution adopted here, the board of the Natchez-Jack son Council of Catholic Women commended the "groups who have spoken in behalf of law and order" in the state's civil rights struggles. The resolution specifically commended Gov. Paul Johnson and the Mississippi Economic Council in this regard.
ations and interests of others. Cardinal Cushing is a great man. I only wish more of his works would be published. Thanks for sharing and printing this lovely piece of prayer and poetry. Sin cerely, N.M.
•••
Dear Mrs. Daly: You probably wlJ1 receive hundreds of replies regarding Cardinal Cushing'. prayer. If you want copies of it, write ., Daughters of St. Paul, Boston, Mass. 02130. Sincerely, Marjorie.
•••
ThU8 the mall hRl been nm ning since "Slow Me Down, Lord" was reprinted. in ths col umn some weeks ago. It is the theme song of 8 ''Cardiae Club" in one locality, is pasted over the kitchen sink by a mother of nine. Consensus in "At Our House" mail points overwhelmi!lgly to Cardinal Cushing as author. Dis senting letters attribute author s~p to an English writer and to American manufacturer. There is no disagreement, however, about the inspiring quality of the poem, ending with the prayer to "send my roots deep into the soll of life's endur ing values that I may grow toward the stare oi my greater destiny." M.T.D.
CAPPING CEREMONY: Student nurses receive oops at St. Anne's School of Nursing, Fall River. From left, Tamara Fernandes, Our Lady of Assumption parish, New Bedford; Sus'an Zych, St. James, New Bedford, class vice president; Sister Madeleine Clemence, school director; Con stance Martel, St. Theresa, New Bedford, class president.
Scores Proposed Law
Catholic Welfare Agency Offical Deplores 'StatedFia nced Promiscu ity'
WICHITA (HC) - A Catholic welfare agency official said here in Kansas a proposed law for state-backed birth control cen ters "does not set the moral tone tor the community" and is "a high price to pay for economy." Louis Antonelli, assistant dl :rector of the Catholic Social Ser vice here, said that "state financed promiscuity is hardly ansWer to either the popula Nuns in New Zealand the tion explosion or increasing wel Want Changes in Habit fare costs." His cpmments were directed WELLINGTON (NC)-A !UJ' against a bill introduced in the 'Yey of nuna hal showed mon, Kansas Legislature by Sen. support for modernizing :reli Frank Hodge of Hutchinson. An IPOUS habits to make them more comfortable, hygienie, practical tonelli called upon persons ol and adaptable tor the work of various religious faiths con cerned with maintaining moral the nun in the modern world. standards to conduct a letter The general consensus of Sis ters favored habits of simpler writing campaign to their legis design, with fewer. layers of lators. He said "only after a scholarly material, less starch and perhaps more color, but retaining the study" can the needs of the area be determined and the problem dignity which should character of the Hodge bill be solved. ize the Religious habit. "We're miles behind the tlmE!8 . Rushing the bill through the -we need updating," was a Legislature "would be bad pubcomment typical of the Sistel'l' views.
Plan New Paper EDMONTON (NC) - A new paper to replace the present Western Catholic will b. launched next September here in Canada, Archbishop Anthon;l Jordan, O.M.I., of Edmonton an nounced. The new paper will be ealled tbe Western .Catholie Reporter.
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lic policy ilnti; destructive of good public morals," he said. "If government bodies must deal with the problem of inegiti macy, then they must use means other than one which under mines the family fabric of our society," he said. This is not the time for "a great state to say we are not interested in the morall of our people," he. added.
:Presiding at capping exercfselt for 53 student nurses at . . Anne'. Hospital, Fan RiveJl, Bishop James J. Gerrard noted that nurses work tor God • well as man, and can be respon sible for the return to grace .. patients. Also at the ceremony we.. Rev. John E. Boyd and Re.. Robert L. Stanton, chaplains M Bishop Gerrard. Rev. John B. Hackett, viee-chancellor, aided in presentation of caps, witlli Sister Madeleine Clemence, di rector of St. Anne's School .. Nursing, and Miss Frances Cash, faculty member, pinning U. symbolic head eove.r1ngs . . students. Twenty girls from Fan Rivei' are included in those capped" Fourteen are from New Bedford, six from Somerset and four fro. Taunton. One girl each repre sents Lakeville, North Westpozt and Acushnet. There are six Rhode Islande. in the class, including two frD* Middletown and one each fr~ Little Compton, Tiverton, Pon. mouth and BristoL
Mountaineers Follow Balladry Tradition FRANKLIN (NC)-Instead .. an entrance hyrim at the beglD ning of the new "Mountala Mass" there's a "walking-m song," composed by Father Joha Barry of the Glenmary Home missioners. Soon to be published by tbe World Library of Sacred Musie, Cincinnati, the Mass closes witll a "walking-out song." These are "Tarheel" expr~ sions, said Father Barry, pastOl' of St. Frllncis of Assisi churcJa here in North Carolina. His Ap palachian mountaineer parish ioners have a tradition of baD ardry and "a tremendous love tor God," he said.
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"
Gardener Must Start Plans Now
For Beautiful,Autum.n Flowers
Pope' Says Mass For Workers
By Joseph, apd Marilyn Roderick Now that the early'Spring bulbs are in bloom, we are thankful for our foresightfu planting bulbs last Fall. To be equally thankful next' FaD, it is necessary to think about the Fall garden now. Among flowers which normally bloom in the Fall in this area are asters, mums and wind- can taste the first golden rose tomato warmed by the sun and flowers. Although not as lush with the smell of the warm popular as the first two, earth, or that first ear of corn, windflowers add a great deal of color to the I'all garden and de8erve some attention. Windflowers or anemones are tr0wn from tubers - which look like small pieces of knoUed wood. Although they are advertlsed as hardy, I have not been able to winter them outside, -and ' I suspect that our, Winters are 'ust too cold for them. This is not too ,mUch of :!l problem since they are well worth their price even. if ,they do not repeat. Anemones require a rich son and should be' planted in partial .hade. They grow to about a foot in height on thin stems which wave in the slightest breeze much like oriental poppies. They are In fact very simnar to poppies, having the same delicate petals, but differ In eolor, being at their best In whites and mixed blues and' reds. d i th They must be plante n e' Spring, any time now will do;: and except for a light mulch Ileed no special care. I soak the tubers ovemight in water before planting In order to help them prminate and to soften the hard coat which surrounds the em bryo. The tubers can then be d d planted about an inch eep an two inches apart. I have always bought mixed colors so I don't know how they look planted in ene-color groupings, but they ere very effective mixed. With a reasonably good start" atemones can be expected to bloom by the end of August and If planted in partial shade will last until frost. Unlike D;lumB arid asters. they cannot be moved, so you must plan on them flowerinl where tile)" are ~ted.
In tile Kitchen 'A couple of weeks ago In hls column, Joe mentioned that it would soon be' time to start planting our kitchen 'or vege table garden. Yes, in just a few weeks we will be able to sow the seeds for our personal green Il"Oceries, but even though the planting season is almost upon D, the harvesting season is still • long way off. We will be in the middle of Summer before we
A cake sale from 10 to I Sat tlrday, March 27 at Edgar's de partment store, Fall River,' wtJI be sponsored b7 the Sucordium Club of 8acrecl Hearts AcadelD7, I'all River. Proceeds will estab lish a memorial honoring the late Sister Joba Therese, S.U.s.C.. teacher Ul the aeacIeInTw ...
~dl"""
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DOMINILOG STAFF: Staff members of, Dominilog, yearbook of Fall River's Dominican Academy, are, from left, seated, Janice Costa, personals editor; Louise Lanne ville, photography editor; standing, Oatherine Imbriglio, eo-editor; Josephine Raposa, business manager; Valerie Stinton, co-editor.
no embellishments, such a cas serole as this will perk up your family's winter-weary appetites. 1 large can of green beans. drained -l large can fried onion rinp 1 can mushroom soup ,, 1) Preheat oven to 300· 2) In a greased casserole plaee alternate layers of the green beans and onion rings. 3) Pour over all the mush room soup, undiluted. 4) Bake for '20 minutes or un til heated through. This serves four and is delicious with chicken and rice.
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Closing Prep Schools For Aspiring Sisters
MILWAUKEE (NC) - Two local communities of Sisters have announced they will dis continue the i r preparatory schools for high school aspirants. The Sisters of the Divine Savior will close their school at Indiana Bus Bill Dies the end of the current semester, and the Racine (Wis.) Domini With Adiournment cans will accept no more aspi INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - The rants, closing when all present General Assembly adjourned ita students have been graduated. biennial session here w1thout Both communities said they completing ac:t1on on "fair school hoped the move would help bus" legislation. young women to develop a bet The House passed 79 to T a ter understanding of their true meaSure to authorize, publiC ' purpose In entering the religieua echool districtlt to 'carry private life. echool pupils OIl tax-paid lIcllooi buses. The measure died in the Alumnae Supper Senate. One of the bffi's problems was Alumnae of Sacred Hearts • determined cost-cutting cam Academy, Fairhaven, will spon paign. Gov. Boger D. Branigia sor their annual bean supper ~ught a $35 million cut In state from 5:30 to 7:30 Saturday eve • d to loeal education. The ning,' April 3· at the academy• echool bus bin would have cod Mrs. Frank Rogers is In charge 8bout $750,000 annually. of lUTaDgementS.
Sucordium Club
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI offered Mass in St. Peter's basilica on the feast of St. Joseph for 8,000 members of the Christian Associations of Italian Workers (ACLI) on the 20th anniversary of the organi zation's establishment. During the Mass, the Gospel and Epistle were read in both Italian and German because of the presence of some 1,500 work ers from German-speaking areas of northern Italy. In his sermon Pope Paul pr8tsed ACLrs activities and spoke of difficulties it has faced duriilg its 20 yE'ars of existence. The first, he said, was to de termine the nature and scope of ' ACLI. After much experiment:' ing, he continued, the organiza- ' , tion has arrived at a clear idea of its missiOn, which is "that the' worker affirms and expresses himself as a 'Christian' precisely at the same moment that he af firms and expresses himself as a worker - - "It is a question which in volves a real mission for our workers, a question of resolving in a new vital synthesis the faith and the impersonal, mechanized , technology which is the mark of modern work. It is question of forming a new type of man, both believer and worker."
dripping with butter and sweet beyoud bellef; and until that time, we In New England will have to content ourselves with the hothouse variety or those vegetables that are canned or frozen. Truthfully, frozen and canned , vegetables never have the flavor of those we choose at the height of their growing season and cook to just the right amount of per feetion. However, these conven ience vegetables, embellished with the right seasonings, garnished with that .. perfect sauce, or combined in a casser ole with. others to blend in a mysterious alliance become a dish for a "happy gourmet." Their length of storage time also chalks up points in their favor, as it is awfully nice just to reach Into that kitchen cab inet or that freezer compartment when we don't have time to go to the market. The following vegetable casserole is one that can be pre pared in minutes from cans and yet is delicious. I first enjoyed it at the home of Mrs. Donald Kelly of St. William's parish,
Fall River, and I was amazed as
,she e:'Cplained its simplicity. So,
until we can enjoy the Summer harvest of vegetables that need
9
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., March 25, 1965
Natlon-wide Moven
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Kiddie Style Show A children's style show will be presented by alumnae of Domin ican Academy, Fall River at 2:30 Sunday afternoon, April 4 in the school hall. Children of alumnae will model.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., March 25, 1965
'State to Operate Med ica I School At Seton Hall SOUTH ORANGE (NC) Seton Hall University says the decision to sell its medi cal and dental school in J er sey City to the state resulted from lack of cooperation -by Jersey City official and authori ties at the city-controlled med ical center. Bishop John J. Dougherty, university president, disclosed "we have been forced to face the fact that the responsible au thorities of the medical center and of the City of Jersey City have consistently failed to give" essential cooperation. He asserted this cooperation "had been pledged, and to a large degree, formally contracted for." Legislation empowering the state to purchase the school-the only medical school in New Jer sey-was signed into law last December. Bishop Dougherty said a formal contract to com plete the transfer will be exe euted shortly. Cites Differences Sale terms provide a purchase price of $8 million with the state picking up the deficit' in curredby Seton Hall between Jan. 1 and the actual transfer date. Deficits have been running between $750,000 and $1 million annuaHy since the school opened in 1956. Bishop Dougherty said that "heavy as these financial bur dens were, it is entirely possible , that ways could have been found of bearing them and of, contin uing the college under private auspices if other considerations had not made such a course of action impossible." He recalled that "over the years the college has'striven en ergetically and patiently to rem edy" its differences with Jersey City. He cited in particular a situation which found the' city and the college at odds over the, appointment of personnel at the medical center where medical students underwent eli n i cal training. Pioneering Pride The school was located in fa eilities at the medical center under a lease arrangement but laost year Jersey City dismissed a member of the faculty from a key hospital post without con sulting Seton Hall. Other faculty members resigned as department heads at the hospital in protest and the university had to con duct its training at other loca tions. While the university regretted necessity for the sale, Bishop Dougherty said it took pride in having pioneered in medical ed ucation in the state; in having educated more than 400 doctors and 200 dentists; in giving the state a 10-year advantage in es tablishing a state-wide system of medical education and in be ing able to provide the state with established facilities at great savings to the taxpayers.
Television Producer
Gets Short Answer
LONDON (NC) - Hugh Bur nett, television producer for the B r i tis h Broadcasting Corpor ation, decided he needed some professional help in preparing two satirical programs, one on "heaven" and the other on "hell." He wrote to' Father Agnellus Andrew, O.F.M" BBC's Catholic eonsultant, asking how he could get the official Roman Catholic' view 'f "heaven" and "hell." The memorandum he got back ronsisted of one word: "Die."
Student Nurses from St. Anne's Hospital Return from Month in Guatemala Bubbling over with enthusiasm for missionary life are three Anne's Hospital, Fall River. They returned Sunday from a month they offered nursing care and American sty Ie ~riendship t? SCOres ishes supervised by Rev. John Breen, M.M., DIOcesan natIve who Guatemala since his ordina tion as a Maryknoll Mission
student nurses at St. in Guatemala, where of Indians in. 21 pa~ has been statIOned In
er·
The girls are Jeanne Guil
beault, Jeanne Hebert and Bar bara Cross, all seniors at St. Anne's, who took a vacation month to fly South. "It was wonderful," said Jean ne Hebert, "and the work the Maryknoll priests are doing is just unbelievable." The three guls, who stayed together dur mg their missionary month, sI.ent two weeks at the tiny vil lage of Todos Santos in Guate mala. "By our second day we were part of the village family," selid Jeanne. "We ran a clinic on a 24-hour basis," she continued, "and we had no trouble at all, all the time we were there." Preventive med icine is the greatest need of the poverty-stricken Indians, she said. "There's no cleanliness, so f've:-y injury ,becomes infected." Anemic Babies The girls saw a great deal of anemia. "Babies would ha.ve no hair and their skin would be peeling off," said Jeanne; "but after a week of vitamin B~2 shots and the addition of pow dered milk to their diet, you ,,,ouldn't believe they were the same babies." The girls did an educational job in persuading mothers to use powdered milk for their child ren. "Once they llDderstood, they did it," reported Jeanne. "We feel we accomplished more as goodwill ambassadors than medically, however," sum med up Jeanne. ,She said that "ladinos," Guatemalans of Span ish-Indian heritage, look down cn purebred Indians,' and that the girls' willingness to hold and r:lay With even dirty Indian babies and the fact that, they shared meals with Indian fam ilies made, a tremendous im pression. "We had basketball game go ing in' which everyone joined,", €lhuckled Jeanne," and we :even bad several hootenannies.", The latter were truly international in flavor, she said. Two of the girls had ,brought guitars and they discovered that evel'yone knew songs like "Que Sera" and "Dominique," even though in four different languages: French, English, Spanish and the Indians' dialect. On Horseback Much traveling was done by horseback, said Jeanne. "Jeanne Guilbeault and I had done some r'ding and Barbara sort of learn ed in a hurry." Language didn't
Conduct Mission On Television COLUMBUS (NC) - A five day Catholic mission by televi ~,50n, first of its kind in Missis sippi where Catholics make up only three per cent of the state" population, was conducted ove]' tI:e facilities of station WCBI here. Father Bernard F. Law, editOl' of the Mississippi Register, No.. chez-Jackson d i 0 Ce san news paper, conducted the mission. Parishes in Columbus, Aberdeeli and Starksville and Catholics at the Columbus Air Force Base cc-operated in the project. The program each night, in. cluded a brief film on one of the parishes, a Scripture readin, and the mission talk by Fath~ Law. The priest-editor said reactiOJi: to the TV-mission was uniform ly good, especially among non Catholics. One elderly man said he was amazed to see a Catholic priest reading from the Bible. Father Law said.
Gives $1 Million SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Mz. and Mrs. John F. Healy of C:1i cago, owners of the Vanderbilt Better Tours travel firm there. have given $1 million to the University of San Francisco. Healy is an alumnus of the Jes uit institution.
CAPE COD'S LARGEST BANK MISSION RETURN: These three senior student nurses at St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing, Fall River, have just returned from spending their month's vacation ~elping Rev. John Breen, M.M. in his mission in Guatemala. Shown with Sister Madeleine Clemence, School Director, are left to right, Jeanne Hebert, St. Louis de France Parish, Swansea, . Jeanne Guilbeault, St. Anthony's Parish, New Bedford, and ~arbara Cross, St. Mary's Parish, Taunton. prove a barrier as the girls tl'aveled from village to village. "We picked up some Spanish q,lite quickly." , A picture also - crossed the language barrier. While the girls were in Guatemala they received a February issue of The Anchor ",ith a picture of their leave taking preparations. "The' In d~ans recognized us right' away 81.d said 'If only they could see you now!'" , The girls wore dresses or cu" lottes during their missionary month, but were nevertheless taken as nuns by many Indians who had never seen any other Americans. The Indians' own costumes were very picturesque, said' Jeanne, the styles in many ,'illages having remained un changed for hundreds of years. "One village wears red, white and blue and its people are call ed 'Uncle Sams,'" she said.
• : GRACIA ~
Magazine Editor CHICAGO (NC)-Timothy A. Murnane has been named execu tive editor of Extension maga zine published here. He was ed itor of Work; Magazine of the Catholic Council on Working Life here; and Act, publication of the Christian Family Move ment.
•:
Father Breen, said Jeanne, would be glad to welcoI\1e pther nurses to his territory. So would the people of Todos Santos,' who tnrned out en masse to say good bye to Jeanne, Jeanne lind Bar-' bara. '
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'PH! AHCHOR-I)iocese of·PcdI rtMf-?hws. Mar. 25,1965
ONE MAN SHOW: Brother Daniel Dupont, O.P., lay brother at St. Anne's Priory, Fall River, is holding his first one-man show at Truesdale Clinic, Fall River. Left, Brother Joseph Arthur Barolet, O.P. poses beside
Plan' 'Conference To Find Source Of Race Bias·
Dominican Lay Brother Mounts One-Man Show U~ges Prayer~ For' Race Peoce ,At' Truesdale Clinic, Fall River -WASHINGTON bishop Patrick A. O'Boyle
(NC)~Arch-' ~rgelll
ference on race hostility! anq 'myself in the afternoon," lJ,e says, "and that's when I do most of reconciliation was taken 'at the sixth annual meeting of the my painting." Till now Brother Daniel has concentrated on oils academy, an organization of: pro fessional persons in the fields of -"You can leave them and go back to them," but he thinks religion, medicine and the be water colors can also be fitted havioral sciences. Spokesmen said the planned into the available time slots of a busy religious schedule. conference is expected to em "I'm going to try them. phasize the neurotic origins of racial hostility and to outline They're quick and I can do a psychologically effective. means landscape on the spot," he ex... of promoting interracial good plains. good will. His first love, however, is likely to remain the oil portrait. Outlook on Sex Examples of his technique line III another development, sev eral speakers at the meeting the first floor, hall and reception stressed the need for developing room at the clinic. Prominent are portraits of the four children healthy attitudes towa'rd sex viewed in a specifically religious light. Deprlve . d 0 f Cor d Dean Samuel H. Miller of the Harvard Divinity School warned BOGOTA (NC) - A Cuban against making sharp distinc-" family that recently arrived here tions between the "religious" has reported that the pastor of a and the "secular" and said that Cuban city of over 125,000 in "an unhealthy religion divides habitants, who is the only priest existence, whereas a healthy re residing there, has not been ligion unites existence at every given a-government ration card. level." He gets his food from a number Dr. Klaus Thomas, a staff of Catholic families who give psychiatrist at st. Elizabeth's him part of the scarce rations. Hospital here and a professor 'at, the Gettysburg Seminary and Wesley Theological Seminary, called for an outlook on sex that sees it as being "under the guid ance of, the Holy Spirit.
Striking is a portrait of Rev.. Vincent Marchildon, O.P.,' re vered director of st. Anne's, Shrine. ' Artistic Background HI've always drawn,~ ,said" Brother Daniel. Canadian-born,' he studied drawing and com-· mercial art in Montreal fo;r three years before entering re~igion. Since being at St. Anne's he has studied in Providence for a year!,,' and has specialized. in oils the, past three years. The Brother's charge for a 20 by' 24 oil portrait, unframed, is a moderate $50. He requires five or six sitting of about two and a half hours each, he says, and he must have some magic means of persuading wigglesome small boys to sit still, judging by the number of youngsters included in his gallery of 27 paintings. Talent runs in the Dupont family. Brother Daniel's father does landscapes, a sister is a musician, and a brother is work ing on a doctorate in physics at Johns Hopkins. At first, admits Brother Daniel, other members of the Dominican community
SISTERS OF OUR LADY OF LA SALETTE
School For Blind
f
his portrait as Brother Daniel, right explains pe1'8pective. Right, Brother Daniel holdos study of Rev. Vincent Marchildon, director of St. Anrie'~ Shrine.
WASHINGTON (NC) A slight, bespectacled Dominican lay brother, stationed at St. Anne's Priory; Fall The Academy of Religion River, currently has a one-man show of oil paintings at Truesdale Clinic, 1030 Pr-esi- and Mental Health has voted dent Avenue, also Fall River. .He ,is -Brother Daniel Dupont,O:P;, who mingles mainten to call a conference of theo_-_ ance assignments at the Priory with a flour ishing artistic eareer..The exhibitidn, his logians and behavioral scientists first one-man show, was a1' &f Dr. and Mrs. Hughes, and were inclined 10 tease him. to study the sources of racial ranged by Dr,' Paul P. Dunn there are also several studies of about his artistic leani~gs, but, hostility and map guidelines for and Dr. Wilson Hughes. "1 parishioners of· St. Anne's now "they're rather proud o.f reconciliation. have about 'three hours to Church. ' my work." The decision to sponsor a: eon.,.
NEW YORK (NC) -Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York will bless and decllcatethe new $2.3 million buildings of, the Lavelle School for the Blind here Sunday, May 2. Foul).ded in 1904 and directed since 1913 by the Dominican Sisters of Blau velt, N. Y:, the Lavelle Schoof is one of three schools for teachinc the blind in New York state.
.,
THEIR MISSION:-To glorify God by recapitula ting all things in Christ as reconciliars with Mary. THEIR MISSION FIELD-The WorJd! TtiE TIME-NOW! Please Contad: SR. DENYSE OF JESUS, R.S. ,La Salette, Shrine Attleboro, Mass.
. In spari! moments, the Brother:' artist letters signs for St. Anne's Shrine and he also contributes illustrations to the Shrine' bulle':' tin. In the tradition of' 'another Dominican artist, Fra Angelico, Brother Daniel hopes to' contin ~ his assignment at St. Anne's, combining his duties with his painting. And in years to come, Fall Riverites m'ay be proud to say, "we knew him when."
Catholics here to offer prayer!! , wit.h other Christians that ·gov-. ernment leaders will be guided by God'in solving racial strife., The Archbishop' of Washing , ton, 'in a letter: read iii' an Cat.holic churches, said that, "aU Americans of good conscience' must have felt a sense of shame a,na outrage at the callQus de nial of justice in Alabama." "Not only were Negroes re fused their constitutional right ' to vote, but when they. at tempted to exercise another. con st.itutional right that of· peaceful petition, they were met with clubs, whips and tear gas," He deplored the death of "one brave minister," the Rev. James J. Reeb. "His only crime was to lJwtest man's inhumanity ie man.
.
'
SISTERS OF MERCY PROVINCE OF PROVIDENCE Invite young ladies to, sanctify their own souls through Serving God ~n the Apostolate of
Teaching Nursing Care of Orphans Training of Exceptional Children . Foreign Missions Write to
MOTHER 'PROVtNCfAL, R.S.M.
PROVtNCIAl HOUSE ,.
10 3 - CUMBlERILAND
RHODE 'SLAND
12
rtfl:
ANt.r10R-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 25, 1965
Not By the Economic Alone
Says C~"2urch Makes Litt!e
Progress in Modern Egypt
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, DoD. In one of the most frightening pages in an literature, OM toevsky pictures the return of the anti-Christ in our· times to taunt Christ: "You refused to turn stones Into bread, offering in stead Heavenly Bread. How few want that Bread now! You failed to win the mob by becoming a bread-King and you will never get the mob back!" This imager)' points up the intensi~·of Satan'•. temptation when Our Lord had fasted 40 days. Why not satisfy ma own hunger? Was He not seeking to be a savior? Then be an. economic Savior! The Cross bl not necessary. Men know tbe7 have bellies; most of them do not care about their ao1Wl.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy I have lately returned from a trip which began in Egypt, continued acroSs Tunisia and Algeria, took me through a good part of Morocco, and concluded in Rome with attendance at some of the ceremonies involved in the creation of the new cardinals. ways hovering in the vast Egyp This experience I should like tian sk;y, the cluster of houses is to share, so far as possible, simpl;y a set of dark, erouching with my readers. It was an shapes picked out. like the palm
new and most Interesting to me; I hope that it Will not all be old and most boring to you. There is a saying that
Egypt is the Nile. and the Nne is Egypt. To real ize.howactual ly truE! it is, you have to visit the eoun~r.y and travel ;¥ong the river. If you ar rive by air, as I did in the late .'afternoon of a February day, your first impression of Egypt is of the Cairo airport, set In the bleak and tawny desert but very up-to-date. YoUr second impression is of the city itself, in part modern, in part, relatively modem, but in no deep sense typical of the country. True, the Nile is present in Cairo. It is there, under your hotel window, the first thing ;you see when you open the blinds in the morning, obviously a considerable river, but not, un mistakably a mighty one. At certain spots in the city, you get a better idea of the riv ers breadth and depth. But )'OU must leave the city, and go lither north or south, to appre elate the unique importance of abe Nile. . River's lUehes Fly north, for example, over the delta, and )'OU see the im mense, divided and subdivided mouth of the river and the riches it pours out upon the land. Move south, b;y car or by train, and )'ou see what the river / means to the people of today, as to those of remotest ages, and to ill who have come and gone in tetween. Where the Nile flows, and par licularly where, in the flood sea 101l, it overflows so prodigiously, 18 well as where its waters are distributed by irrigation, are greenery and life, fertile fields and teeming growth. There is no gradual tapering of either sort of earth, the fe cund or the sterile, but an abrupt halt at a sudden, strict line of demarcation: on one side, lush 'plenty, on the other, sand and dust; on one side mile upon mile of vegetables and fruits, flower lng plants and shrubs and trees, en the other, not a blade of grass. Way of LIfe Quite as striking is the living presence of antiquity. I do not mean the remains at Luxor or elsewhere. or the overwhelming treasures of the Cairo Museum. What I have in mind is the IIU1'vival of a way of life whieh goes back: beyond the Bible. It is exemplified by the string of "mages down th' Nile where people pUrsue a daily round al most exactly like that of their remote forebears, and in a Bet ting hardly different at all. These innumerable villages, mostly velt7 small, and with an 1Il1finished, or even bombed out air, appear to be tightly shut in upon themselves The houses, of modest size, are of mud or of lIludbrick, identical in color with the dun or ochre earth to which they cling. Long, Stygian Nights At night, which comes down with the speed of thO' hawu al-
trees.
by moonlight. If there is light within, it is from a lamp or a fire. and none of It is al lowed to spill out.
The night is long and stygian.. The rising of the sun makes a dramatic difference. Then, amid the crowing of cocks, the people stream out of the villages, to go to work in the fields. Their dress is precisely that of ancient times. The men wear flowing garments and tumbled turbans; the women are swathed and veiled in black, their faces covered, although now and then a glimpse rna)' be had of a nose ring. The)' ride their beasts, or drive them before them. The donkey is everywhere, always heavily burdened. Sometimes one of these tiny creatures pulls a crude, flat, lumbering wagon on which as many as ten people squat. The farther south one goes, the more common is the camel. To see a donkey and a camel yoked for ploughing is not exceptional. Small. Poor Churches There is, of course, a very sig nificant difference between the way of life of the ancient Egyp tian and that of his contempo rary counterpart, and it has to do with religion. Egypt is today, and for many centuries has been, . Muslim. You are told that in CaIro there are a thousand mOsques, and even in the humblest village a crude minaret rises above the rest of the buildings. Five times a da)' the caD to prayer sounds, and the pilgrimage to Mecca is the .dearest ambition of every one, The Catholic Church counts for precious little here. Diligent inquiry leads to discovery of· a· small, poor Catholic churehfn towns like Assuan and Luxor. Those which I discovered were the charge of Franciscans, most of whom were apparently Ital ian. There are other Christian bodies. In old Cairo, for exam ple, one is brought to the old Coptic church. Here the guide is the priest's son, a plump, bland young man who has by heart a brief recital in ~English. This in cludes the assertion that the cave which one is shown under the church sheltered the Holy Fam ily during their sojourn in Egypt, a statement one is not strongly persuaded to credit. The fact is that, in Egypt, the Church is but a drop in a Mus lim ocean, and this is true in much of the rest of North Africa. After centuries, indeed millen nia, there is no appreciable Christian progress. "I'ri1UD~ ot Chureb" When the excp.llent gentleman traveling with me and I were going from North Africa to Rome, we had to fl7 from Casa b.lanca to Madrid, spend the night there, then get a plane for Rome. In the few hours we had in Madrid, we visited the Prado, to marvel once again at the EI Greeos, the Velasquezes, and the Goyas. I do not care much for Ruben's paintings, of which the Prado has a plethora. But I did look at some small canvasses by him, and was greatly interested in one entitled "The TriumpIL of tale Chsu:dL."
CANDIDATE: Peter La junior at Coyle High School, is candidate to represent Southeastern Mas achusetts at National Stu dent Council Convention in Kentucky. He is student councillor at Taunton school, honor student and noted ath lete. . c<~illade,
Rites to Ma tk Medal Jubilee
Later on in Rfs pubUe ute. Oar Lord did m1lltip1)' 1mJad .. feed the Inmgr)'. He looked OD those who had gathered te hear HJm and had compassion on them. But In the temptation satan used the areu ment of hunger as a proof that God wu not merciful because He allowed star vation. and that He. ,Jesus. was not the Son of God; otherwise He would immed iately have relieved Ills own hunger. Satan was no more Interested In dvfnc bread to the hQ.J1gr7 than ..the cOmmu- . nists are int~ed In the poor when they incite bread riots. The devU mere I)' wanted the absence ot the miracle to prove that Christ was not God. Sa tan was arguing: "Man lives by the economic and only that." Our Lord was saying, "Not by the economic alone does man Dve. but b:r eVerT word that comes from the mouth of God." Man's real SllPpOri .. not in gifts. but in the Giver.
Ask the average American what is most impOrtant in life and he will. say: bread, the economic, profit, the "almighty dollar, cutting comers to make money, and more and more of what can be seen, felt and counted. You. average American Catholics, with which side do you ally yourselves? Do you look, and looking have compassion? Or do you live by the dollar sign, saying that you are not your brother's keeper? Write to us and let your sacrifice be . )'our answer. God love you!
GERMANTOWN (NC)-Arch bshop John J. Krol of Philadel phia will offer Solemn Pontifical Mass in Mary's Central Shrine here in Pennsylvania today marking the 50th anniversary of the Central Association of the Miraculous Medal. GOD LOVE YOU to R.C.L. for $16 "ThIs Is pari of the mone:r Founded in 1915 by Vincen that I saved by giving up cigarettes. Knowin&' that b:r eencUnc tian Fathers of the community'. it to you I would be able to help the HolY Father aid my un U. S. eastern province, the asso fortunate brothers throughout the world, cave me the will power elation is dedicated to spreading to keep from smoking. It was MISSION magazine that helped devotion to the Blessed Virgin open IDJ' ~es to the suffering of the world" ••• to ILL. for $I through the Miraculous Medal, assisting the education of sem "I am not a Catholic. bat I read about lepen in :rour magazine inarians, and aiding the poor. and would like to help. TbJs Is so little to me that W. hard to In the past 50 years the asso- . believe U's a 7ear's cure for them!" clation has distributed some SO million Miraculous Medals and Strengthen your Lenten resolution to become more mission 4() million booklets on the medal minded by reading MISSION, a pocket-sized. bi-monthIy magazine devotion. It has helped build or edited 1»' Most Rev. Fulton ~. Sheen to keep you up-to-date on support several seminaries and mi~onary activities the world over. Let _ put you on: our chapels; including the Miracu 8U~ption list for only ~ dollar a year. ulous Medal shrine in the' Na .tional Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D. C. It Cut out this colUDin, pin :rour sacrifice to It and mall K to has provided aid to the poor and Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of TheSodev for needy in Vincentian mission the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York. New areas in China, Panama and the York 10001, or to your Diocesan Director, southern U. S. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considfne
. Mary's Central Shrine is the 368 North Main Street
center of the Miraculous Medal Fall River, Massachusetts
novena devotion which was be gun there in 1930 and is now conducted weekly at some 3,500 other churches throughout the RESIDENT C~ FOR GIRLS AGES 6-16
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•
VOCATION DIaCJOR
399 Fruit Hill Ave. It. "'"'......... t
Thurs., March 25, 1965
See Beatification For Fr. Sharbel
Congratulations ~ tbe math club of Bishop Stang High School, which hae placed first in Notre Dame Math Meets for this scholastie year. "Only once did we drop to second place," reports Frances Przybyla, "and then by only k . te one point." First among the 4_ .. 1 st St 'te P I R ...... a wee, companng no s f :_.· JnH. 18 angJ. au oy, on their organization and prog the only student at the last ress. Junipero clubs are spon math meet to solve the team IOred by Serra Club memben question. Also at Stang, junior Francia Dubreuil won $'7f\ as second· place winner in state finals of the annual American Legion 01'atorical contest. Other students in the news inelude Madeleine Brodeur of FaU River's Dominican Academy, who received honorable mention in an Exchange Club sponsored essay contest on crime preven1Ion; and Pete Lacaillade, juniO!' at Coyle High in Taunton, who has announced his candidacy _ a representative of Southeastern Mass. at the National Student Council Convention to be held later this year in Kentucky. "His excellent qualification.,,· says Anchor reporter Mike Dumoulin, "include membership iJ:l the Coyle student council and service as sophomore class president. He is a member of the National Honor Society and has a scholastic monogram. He. has earned awards in declamation and Latin, is a member of the debate team and writes for the school paper. "Track is his sport; holding a varsity letter in track, he is a' member of the cross country, Winter and Spring track teams and he holds the track record for high hurdles." Social Security They seem a little young te worry about it, but nevertheless students of business law and problems in democracy classes at Prevost High in Fall River heard a lecture on Social Security by Robert Weyland of. the local Social Security office. The honor society at St. Anthony's High in New Bedford ill conducting a poster campaign against improper moYies and reading matter. It will be cUmaxed by honor society president David St. Laurent. Also in progress at SAH is the annual vocation novena and students joined teenagers from all Diocesan highs in attendance at vocation Masses. At Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, Mary Lou Sullivan, school paper editor, has received a $2000 scholarship to Trinity College, Washington, D. C. Paula Powers, honor society president, has received a $5000 grant from the same college. . Novices and postulants from Mt. St. Rita Convent visited Mt. St. Mary Academy in Fall River last week. A hootenanny started the day, then students attended Mass with the young religious. After Mass a reunion took place, since several of the visitors were Mount graduates, and the daT ended with a Bible Vigil in tIM lehool auditorium. Spring's SPnlll« Spring's sprung at Btshop Feehan in Attleboro; where aD. athletic facilties are in use, baseball and tennis are in full 8Wiq and freshman and varsity cheerleaders are getting in voice for contests planned in Fall River Saturday, April 3 and at home Sunday, April 25. American history Itudents at Dominican Academy are planning attendance at a history convention to be held at Bridgewater State College during Easter vacation and at a United Nations Day at Haryard University. . Junipero Club members from B1Shop Stang, Holy Family and St. Anthony High Schools held their first interscholastic meet-
13
, - THE· ANCHOR'-'
Paul Roy of Bishop. Stang' Hi!Jh·
Places First at Math Meet,
.Aids School to Victory
Beatification of Father Shat' bel, famed Hermit of Lebanon, is anticipated at the next sessiOJl of the Ecumenical Council, ac cording to word received in FaD River by Chor-Bishop Joseph· Eid, pastor of St. Anthony of the Desert Church and vice-postu lator of. the hermit's cause :for sainthood. Father Eid said that an official bulletin issued by Maronite monks charged with care of the hermit's tomb announced that at a January session presided over by Pope Paul and attended by 15 Cardinals, 11 Bishops and 12 theologian priests, Father Sharbel was declared to have practiced virtue in a heroic de gree. This pronouncement is a preliminary to the procesa el beatification. Father Eid is author of a bloc l'8phy of Father Sharbel.
and seek to foster vocations 10 the priesthood. Dr. William Downey is chairman of the Junipero committee of the New Bedford Serra Club. Dominican Academy historY students heard a speech by Forrest Heckman of the ILGWU last week. He discussed the his tory of labor unions. Also along labor lines, students at Diocesan highs are preparing to take an examination Thursday, April 8 on the history ·of the organized labor movement in the United States. Sponsored by the Massa chusetts State Labor Councll, the exam wiU offer top scorer for the state a $1,000 John .,. 01. the Massachusetts Seconda17 Kennedy Memorial Scholarship. SChool Principal's Association. Many lesser grants will also be Holy Family was the only un made to college-bound students. defeated team in the tournament, The last round of Narragan winning all six of its debates. . sett Interscholastic Deb a tin II In conjunction with the de League play took place yester bating tournament, a speech fes day.at SHA FaU River, and a tival was also held. Cynthia novice debate was held last Sat Rego of Holy Family qualified urday at Bishop Feehan. ill the Girls' Extemporaneous study Commission category while Michael Kramer Many pro'ects have fiowed RECEIVES AWARD: The Mercian, school paper at qualified in Group Discussion. from a study of communism by Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, was cited by Columbia This marks the seventh time Government class students at St. Scholastic Press Association at annual student publications In the eight-year history of the Anthony High. Articles by J. Edgar Hoover has been read and convention. Examining winning publication, from left, regional tournaments that Holy a motion picture on Communism standing, Patricia Murphy; Cynthia Erdmann, editor; Family has won the Southe~ distributed by the FBI wiU· Carolyn Finell; seated, Louise Casavant, Sister Mary em Massachusetts tournament. soon be viewed. Students also listened to a tape recording of an Austina, R.S.M., faculty advisor.
address on the subject to the New Bedford Serra Club and Leading the lineup • Richard and suggested age groups for reading. Included are book con wrote letters to a Massachusetts Fournier, 242. CO. And at Bishop Stang the sidered desirable for college legislator who opposed the study bound students to have read. of Communism in the high nual faculty-senior basketball game is now a part of history, schools. Top Debaters The class will visit the State with the faculty winning for the The Msgr. McKeon Debating House next month, and will be third year in succession. This Society of Holy Family High taken on a tour of the building year's score was 38-35. Game School captured first place in proceeds benefit a scholarship the Southeastern Massachusetts ~ 365 NORTH FRONT STREET , by a New Bedford Representa fund, so "even the players pay." Regional Tournament 01. the 1Ive. , NEW BEDFORD ~ At St. Anthony High Jacque Also at SAH, 30 juniors took Massachusetts Secondary SChool National Merit exams and "are line Nolan has been cited as a WYman 2-5534 , Speech Leagu.e. The Speech ~ speed typist, earning a certifi eagerly awaiting the results, League is the official speech arm ~.." ' ~
not e s reporter Pauline La cate to prove it; and also at SAH, opinions differ on the weekly France. Science fair award winners at public speaking required of senior English class students. Sacred Hearts, Fall River in "Some feel that it gets them too elude Linda Pomfret, Mary Mis ~,......... "'''~
ka, Ellen Kroger, Laura Conrad, nervous. Others feel they are DADSON OfL BURNERS Sheila Beshara and Mary Anne getting used to it. Still others
Mooney. They will enter their look forward to having their chance to speakl" 24·Hour 011 Burner Service $~ SHELL' ~~
exhibits in a regional fair. Seniors are also deep in prep
Feehan High will hold its jun famous Reading HARD COAl "_.;..~ ~\Il CIl ior prom during Easter week arations for a term paper on a
and the school's first senior selected English author. Many NEW ENGLAND COKE ~ ~1ft:I~ prom will be held in late May. plan to spend "a few weeks" iD .... ... ... Sister Mary Frederick is faculty the library. Come now! Dads of students at SHA Fall
advisor and Susan Connors and River have formed the Sacred
Paul Capadanno share chair Hearts A cad em y Regional
masnhip honors. Take the "road less traveled Fathers Association. It'll meet
640 Pleasant Street New Bedford Tel. WY 6-8271 by" urged Dr. Walter English of. Monday, April 26 and electton of 01ficers for the next lehool year students at Bishop Stang High, as he' addressed them on race will be held in May. relations in the United state&. Hospital Aides Director of Inter-Group Rela Nineteen Feehanites have vol lions, in Springfield, Mass., Dr. unteered as .aides .. Sturdy·
English encouraged Stangite. Memori.al Hospital. They're serv
"to dare to be different" ill thew ing _ desk hostesses, dietary.
attitudes. aides, gift cart worken or Also on the 8lI6embly"program laundry service helpers, in addi was a glee club concert and a .1Ion to assisting in coffee shop, . .. '_.
presentation 17)' Fran~s. Do cafeteria, and gift shop and dis breuil of his prize-winninl tributing mail, newspapers and
American Legion oration. flowers.
Presentatiotl of the 8IeaecI VIrgin,
SportB News And hospital work last Sum
STAFFING
The volleyball seaSOll bee mer by Noreen Guest and Bar
opened at Fall River's Domini- bara Macuch, Feehanites from
St. Anne's .Hospital • Fall River
can Academy, with senior Ce North Easton, has been recog
Ond leste Gariepy heading the team. nized by certificates of commen
Schools on the DA schedule in dation from the United Commu
Marian Manor· Taunton elude Mt. St. Mary, Somerset, nity Services of Metropolitan
Fairhaven, D u r fee, Cassidy, Boston. The girls did vacation
Service to the Church thf'ough an apostolate of
Stang, Case and Dartmouth. volunteer work at Goddard
Mercy characterized by simplicity, joy and charity In intramural volleyball play Memorial Hospital, Stoughton.
at Prevost High the Falcon team Concluding a good reading
.Further informat;l)n may be ob'iained by contacting, leads, with Pines heading the campaign, honor society students
MOTHER PIERRE MARIE
. basketball league. Also at Pre at SHA Fall River have posted a·;
vost, 12 boys have received no book list in the school library,
Fan River
St. Anne's Hospital Tel. OS 4-5741 phiea for 200 or better complete with capsule review.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 25, 1965
Says. Population Expansion Presents Serious Problem By John J. Kane, Ph. D. I am a 17-year-old girl, a senior in high school. I keep reading in the papers about the population explosion. It has been mentioned in class and on television. I 'would like you to write. something abou~ it in your column be cause I get confused over it. Some say it is true, others laria and by 1956 only 144 per died from malaria. deny it. What is the truth sons In our own country death about the population explo rates from childhood diseases
,
-
lion?" Don't feel bad, Sarah. . such as diphtheria have just You are not the only one con about been eliminated. The fused over the death rate from it has declined term, popula 99 per cent since the beginning tion explosion. of this century. WI any adults Other Aspects als 0 wonder In general this is the story of how true it is rapid population gr~wth. Sci and even the ence and public health measures experts in the have lowered the death rates so field have some much that many more persons problems over live. They live long enough to it. Population have children of their own, and explosion is a so you get a sudden and dra highly dramatic matic increase in the number term, not a sci of people. This occurs to a much entific one. It is employed to greater extent in underdevel call attention to the rapidly ex oped. copntries which former~ panding population throughout ·had very high death ratea. many parts of the world but es So far as this goes, it is unde pecially in Latin America, Asia niable. But there are many other " and Africa. aspects to the problem. First, Statements are made that If can the world feed the popula this population expansion cOn tion of the future if it continues tinues we will 11ltimately reach to increase? To this there is no a point where each individual absolutely accuratt' answer. We would have only about a square do not know whether the popu foot of space in which to stand. lation will continue to increase Growing Fast 50 or 100 years from now. We Of course, this is ridiculous. It do know it will in the immedi Just couldn't happen because long ate future. before overcrowding reached But the major controversy .uch a state, some measures centers around how to halt pop would have to be taken to pre ulation growth, and here you vent it. But it is undeniable that face the religious beliefs of va population in certain countries rious peoples. Contrary to what is growing by leap& and bounds. some claim, it is not the Catho It is believed that it required lic Church's opposition to arti 2,500 years for the world popu ficial birth control that lathe lation to reach two and a half major obstacle to a solution. billion persons but if the present Birth Control rate of growth continues it will In most of the world' aside take only 30 years to add an from Latin America, where other two billion people. Natu there is a problem of over pop rally, these are estimates be ulation, Christianity, not to cause we really do not have ac mention Catholicism, is not the eurate figures on the population major religion. In Asia you have of some coUntries. But such es the Hindus who oppose birth timates cannot be lightly dia control. Youbave the Buddhists carded. and the Moslems whose attitudes Let's see just how this hap vary on this matter. pened. In some parts of the Some people always l~ok for world there are underdeveloped a simple solution to complex nations. They are living under problems. They urge artificial. conditions typical of the western birth control, abortion and ster world two or three hundred or ilization. But many nations re more years ago. They have had ject such solutiOns, and they 8 high birthrate and a high have been attempted In some of deathrate: Even in the colonial these countries. period of what is now the United Today "lere is no final word States, infant and maternal rates" on how to handle the population of death were high. explosion. Even the experts are Reduce Death Rate in disagreement. But among As a result, deaths cancelled some of the positive steps that out some part of the births so might be taken are emigration the population grew slowly. from overpopulated lands, de Then suddenly and dramatically, velopment of algae farming, in medical science and public creased food production and bet health measures began to reduce ter distrib'Jtion of it. Improved the death rate. Birth rates re farming methods and better fer mained the same, so the popula tilization will also add to the tion began to swell. food supply. One striking example of this Yes, there is a serious popu occurred in Ceylon. In 1946, lation expansion in some parts there were over 25:000 deaths of the world. It will require no from malaria. Then DDT was end of initiativt' and ingenuity introduced. This controlled the to meet its challenge. So far mosquitoes which' spread ma- many have not even faced up to It.
Prelate to Honor
Mi..:......a"'~, Rabbi
BALTIMORE (NC) - Law
rence Cardinal Shehan of Balti
more named two Protestant min
isters and a rabbi among eight
persons to ~ive the Cardinal
Gibbons Award Medal, conferred
by the Archdiocese in recogni
tion of merit.
He named the Revs. Frederick W. Helfer and Johr T. Middaugh
and Rabbi Alraham Shusterman,
who are active in TV "'rograma
which promote good wilL"
famous
for
QUALITY and
SERVI"CE!
FOR THE BLIND: 'Religion Lessons for Catholic Living' have been issued in Braille for use by blind children. The books, useful from pre--school to high school age, are issued by the Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart, Trenton, N.J. NC Photo.
Protestant Emphasizes Key to Unity Sees Need for Nature of' Church Definition .JERSEY CITY (NC) A Protestant ecumenist empha sized here that, for Protestants, a definition of the nature of the church is at the heart of the ec umenical question. Dr. William A. Norgren, di rector of the Faith and Order Department, National Council of Churches, traced the history of the Protestant ecumenical move ment at a study session here sponsored by ~t. Peter's College .alumni association. The Catholic history in ecumenismwps de tailed by Father John B. Sheer in, C.S.P., editor of the Catholic World magazine. Dr. Norgren said among Prot estants, ecumenism began with regional cooperation in the mis sions, which was put on a formal basis in 1921. This was followed by a "life and work" movement with the churches trying to do together some of the things. they
were unable to do alone.
Concept of Grace
In 1927, he said, the churches
began to consider faith itself and
in 1937 reached an agreement on the concept of grace. This and
the other two movements pro gressed along separate lines un til thE' formation of the World Council of Churches in 1948, Dr. Norgen said. Now, he continued, the coun
cil is trying to hammer out the answer to some doctrinal ques tions and has made progress in certain areas. Dr. Norgren said he views the doctrine on the church as the key, saying that "the service and work carried out by the church must assist it in defining its nature." This un-
Santa Clara Grant
LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET FALL RIVER"NEW BEDFORD "Where Service
" Is a·· ..tter of Pride"
SANTA CLARA (NC) - The
University of Santa Clara here
in California has received a
$250,000 grant from the National
Science Foundation to support
its Summer institute for high
school mathematics teachers
from 1965 to 1968.
JANSON'S Pharmacy
Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm.
DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM
SUPPUES 204 ASHlEY BOULEVARD New Bedford WY 3-8405
With Postal Group NEW YORK (NC) - William Holub, Catholic Press Associa tion vice-president. has been named to represent Protestant, Jewish and Catholic religious non-profit publications on the. Postmaster . General's Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee.
RICHARDSON
LINCOLN·
MERCURY
derstanding of the church and
of the authority of bishop and
pope is the great block now ex
isting between Catholics and
Protestants, he said.
University Loan WASHINGTON (NC)-A new residence hall complex to house 358 students at Gonzaga Univer sity, Spokane, Wash., will be constructed with a $1,425,000 college housing loan, the Com munity Facilities Administration .disclosed. here.
Plan To Build? -Low
See Us About ~ost Finaneing
WADFII4M
SAVINGS BANK Falmouth
Wareham CY 5·3800
KI 8-3000
Building Contrador Masonry
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FLEURENT
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Fall River
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BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0700
HYANNIS AMPLE PARKING :")( )( )( ]{]{ ]{ )( )( )( )(](]( It ]{ ]( ]( ]( ]{ )( )( )( )(
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CAT' 'H 0 Lie B ISH 0 PS' FU ND
FOR'THE NEEDY OVERSEAS
.
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..
S~RVING ALL I.N NEED WITHOUT REGARD TO RACE, CREED OR COLOR
t <'.
lor , was hungry ond you gove Me to eat ••• St. Matthew, XXV-3l
t
lIJIunger and misery, s;c"ness and ignorance ~ stm cll out for remedy. In tbis age of plenty
ami If brotherhood, we do ROt hesitate to IRake our OWl, once more, the pleas of the innumerable poor and suffering today, in need of genuine and substantial relief." PDpe Paal n-t:hristmas Message, 198( ..'
t
~~
You can give her HOPE through your HELP' This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals and Business Concerns in Greater Fall River: Ann Dale Produds, Inc Brady Eledric Supply Co. ' Cascade Drug Co. Gold Medal Bread Globe Manufaduring Co. Hutchinson Oil Co. .I
International Ladies Garment Workers Union MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Mason Furniture Showrooms Gerald E. McNally, Contractor a. A. McWhirr Company
Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. Sobiloff Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of Amer;ro. AFL-CIO Yellow Cab Company
16
'TTI:
I'\'''''-~-
Thurs., March 25, i 965
Says CO!l1fusion From Changes Is I,"~v;t~b~e VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul VI has pointed out that the confusion and the annoyances arising from
0"
the new liturgical changes are inevitable and spring from the very nature of a practical re form. Speaking at his regular week ly general audience, the Pontiff noted that the confusion and consequent annoyance experi enced by many people causes disturbances at' Mass and doe.> not permit the peace and q:.det of old, But, the Pope said, in some eases in the past there wa.s not really a "true devotion and a true sense of the significan~e and value of holy Mass, but rather a certain spiritual indo lence which did not want to ex pend any personal effort of in telligence and participation for a better understanding and a bet ter offering of the most sac:-edl religious act." The Pope warned his listeners not to believe that after some time they will be able to return to the "quiet, devout ane. lazy practices of the past." Must Participate He said the new approach must be different and must work to banish the "passivity of the faithful present at holy Mass. "Before, it was enough to as sist. Now one must participate. Before, one's presence was enough. Now attention and ac tion are required. Before, some were able to doze and perhaps talk. Now this is not so. One must listen and pray." Pope Paul said he had been delighted greatly to receive let ters from those who welcome the new changes in the liturgy, and told his listeners that they must understand that the new reform, "this spiritual renais sance, cannot come about with out cooperation, without your valuntary and serious partici pation."
Urges Jewish Women to Oppose Education Aid Bill WASHINGTON (NC)-Jewish opponents of President John son's education aid bill may feel lonely, but they should not be deterred, a prominent Jew said here. Speak out for what you be lieve without fear of antagoniz ing other groups or increasing "anti-Jewish feeling," Aaron Goldman told the biennial con-
New Seminary PATERSON (NC) -A minor seminary being planned for the Diocese of Paterson here in New Jersey will be named for Blessed John Neumann, first Bishop of Philadelphia , beatified by Pope Paul VI on Oct. 13, 1963.
vention of the women's division. of the American Jewish Con gress. Goldman is 'chairman of the National Community Relations Advisory Council, a coordinating body of local and national Jew ish groups. The council and the J~wish congress are the leading opponents of the Johnson aid bill on Church-State grounds. "Substantial differences in opinion between the Jewish community and other groups are not injurious to Jewish status or security," Goldman said. "On the contrary, it is evident that the hostility kindled by conflict subsides with the issue, while the respect that commit ment commands is enduring and
cumulative. So let us not be unduly concerned when our strongly held views are opposed to those of other groups," he added. 'Good Bill' The women took his words to heart when faced later with an appeal from a federal official to back the Johnson bill. There were cries of ",no, no" from the audienee during his speech. Hyman Bookbinder, de put y director of the President's War on Poverty, said that despite the shouts from the audience he would continue, saying: "I plead with you ladies not to have a doctrinaire position but listen to the whole story. I want you to know that there is
another position; that we have got to be liberal in every sense of the word." "I plead with you," he contin ued. "Be willing to underst~nd if not accept. I believe there will be Federal aid to education this year. It will be a good bill." As the noes continued to be heard, Bookbinder said sharply: "We will have the bill anyway."
Newman Congress WALTHAM (NC)-More than 300 students from 60 colleges and universities in the Boston area are expected to attend the annual Boston Province New man Congress at Brandeis Uni versity here, April 3 and 4.
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Urges Brotherhood Among Religions TOKYO (NC) - Brotherhood among men of different religions must take the place of mutual distrust to avert the threats of atomic warfare and the "bomb of atheistic materialism," a car dinal told Japaneses non-Chris tian leaders. Paolo Cardinal Marella, pres ident of the Vatican Secretariat for Non-Christian Religions, spoke at a reception for top Buddhist, Shintoist and other religious officials held in his honor at the Tokyo American Club. Prof. Masutani Fumio intro duced the cardinal to the gath ering and lauded the efforts of Pope Paul VI to spread good will and .understanding among reli gions by creating the secretariat for non-Christians. Miki Toku chika, director of the Japan League 'of Religions, expressed the satisfaction of non-Christian Japanese with the welcome some of ther have received at the Vatican.
Jesuit Congress MEXICO CITY (NC) - The first Latin American congress of the Society of Jesus on the apos tolate of mass communications media will take place here be ginning Saturday, May 15 in an effort to put into practice the ecumenical council's communi cations decree.
c
MILK FED Extra .
Tender, Full of Flavor LB
Cenler Cui
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(No Processing Please)
Chuck RoastB~~;29c
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Peaches
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall.River-Thurs. Mar. 25, 1965
The Parish Parade
lilT. AUGUSTINE, VINEYARD HAYEN Women's Guild members wI11 be guests at a breakfast served by the Holy Name Society fol lowing 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, March 28. Future guild plans include a food sale Saturday, April 10; a smorgasbord in May; food sales in June and July; and a fancy work sale, also in July. SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER Mrs. Milton Kozak and Mrs. Edward Tyrrell are in charge of a whist to be sponsored at 8 Monday night, March 29 in the church hall by the Women's Club. SACRED HEART, FALL RIVER Rev. Joseph L. Lennon, O.P., Providence College dean, will speak at a Communion breakfast following 9 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, April 4, for members of the Women's Guild. All par ish women are invited. The breakfast will be served in the school hall. ST. PATRICK, WAREHAM Women's Guild members an nounce a rummage sale for Fri day and Saturday, April 9 and 10, in the parish hall basement. In charge are Mrs. Thomas Mof fett and Mrs. Manuel Sylvia, aided by a large committee.
SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAIRHAVEN New officers of St. Anne's Sodality are Mrs. Irene Mont plaisir, president; Mrs. Jeanine Auger, vice-president; Mrs. Ger maine Tremblay, treasurer; Mrs. Florence Desrochers, assistant treasurer; Mrs. Margaret Parent and Mrs. Yvette Hevey, secre taries. New bylaws have been adopted by the unit. Members will receive corpor ate Communion at 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, March 28, and will hold their next meeting Monday, March 29, in the school cafeteria. Members of St. Anne's Sodal ity will receive corporate Com munion at 8 o'clock Mass Sun day morning, March 28. A meet ing will be held at 7:30 Monday night, March 29 in the school cafeteria. Mrs. Montplaisir will \ preside and an attendance prize will be awarded. Tickets are now available for a Spring chicken supper to be served from 6 to 7 Sunday night, April 4 in the parish hall. Mrs. Helene Frechette, general chair man, will be aided by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hardman, co-chair men. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER A barbecued chIcken supper followed by square dancing will be served from 5:30 to 7:30 Sat urday night, April 3 by the Council of Catholic Women in the school recreation hall. Thomas Daley will be caller for the dancing and Mrs. Roland St. Pierre and Mrs. Leo Gariepy are supper chairmen.
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER A mystery ride is scheduled for Saturday night, April 24 by the Council of Catholic Women. Miss Mary Vasconcellos, chair man, announces that participants IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, will leave from the parish hall . NEW BEDFORD at 6:30. Mr. Andre Tanguay, chairman, Other council plans include a has announced that Mrs. Mary rummage s a I e Wednesday, Terro will direct the parish March 31 and Saturday, April 3 Musical Variety Festival sched at the hall. Donations may be uled for Saturday night, April 24, left at the hall Tuesday, March in the New Bedford High School 30. auditorium. Tickets will be one dollar and may be obtained at HOLY NAME, the rectory or from any member FALL RIVER of the committee. A rummage sale ill planned Mrs. Lena Vieira will be in from 6 to 8 tomorrow night ill charge of decorating the stage. the school hall by the Women's Guild. Donations may be left at ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, the school from 1 to 4 this after FALL RIVER ooon. Square dancing will follow a ham and bean supper to be spon ST. STANISLAUS, sored by the Council of Catholic FALL RIVER PTA and Alumni will sponsor Women from 6 to 7:30 Saturday a cake sale following all Masses night, March 27 in the church Sunday, March 28. The unit will basement. The public is invited, hold a Communion breakfast at according to announcement made 9:30 Sunday morning, April 4 at by Mrs. Ernest Mercier, ticket White's restaurant. committee chairman. ST. FRANCIS XAVIER, HYANNIS The ann u a I Comrrl~mion Breakfast of the Women's Guild will be held Sunday mor~ing following the R o'clock Mass. Guest speakers will be the Victory-Knoll Sisters. The Guild will conduct a rum mage sale on Monday, April 26. The president, Mrs. Paul J.A. Antil, is requesting all members to start gathering articles as soon as possible. BLESSED SACRAMENT, FALL RIVER Mrs. Anita Joseph, chairman, has announced that a rummage sale will be conducted on Thurs day, April 8, and all members are asked for their full cooper ation. Plans for a whist party on April 24 are in the formative stages.
Loan for College WASHINGTON (NC) - The Federal Housing and Home Fi nance Agency has approved a loan of $987,000 to Biscayne Col lege in Opa-locka, Fla., 10 miles north of Miami, to build a new dormitory and college union. Biscayne is operated by Augus tinian Fathet:&.
Get Harsh Treatment 20 Young Catholic Doctors Imprisioned On Cuba's Isle of Pines MADRID (NC)-Twenty Cu ban doctors-practically all for mer members of the Catholic University Association - have been receiving particularly harsh punishment in a prison on Cuba's Isle of Pines, according to persons recently arriving here in Spain from Havana. The doctors are meted out the harsher treatment for allegedly
Racial Hatred AWARD: Augustin Card inal Bea, head of the Vatican Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, will come to Philadelphia in April to ac cept the NationalI?ellowship Commission Award for his contributions to the human rights cause. NC Photo.
Roving-Type Choir PUEBLO (NC) - A roving type choir has been formed for the 10:30 A.M. Sunday Mass in St. Mary's parish here in Colo rado. Instead of retiring to the choir loft, the new choir of young adults mixes with the congregation in the pews and encourages parishioners to sing.
RUMMAGE SALE
HOLY NAME SCHOOL HAll.
Read Street, Fall River
FRIDAY EVENING
MARCH 26
6-8
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•
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1343 PLEASANT ST. OSborne 3-7780
BALTIMORE (NC) - Law rence Cardinal Shehan asked Catholics here to offer their Lenten sacrifices in atonement for racial hatred.
encouraging prisoners to rest.. communist indoctrination. Some of the young doctors, who have been jailed for four ~'ears, are reportf'd to have beeJl for six months in a dungeon without light, ventilation 01' clothes. Their scarce rations are often taken· by rats before they can get to them. One doctor, Andres Cao, father of four children, is said to have lost his sight totally. It is re ported that an exiled Spanish doctor, a former member of the leftist International Brigade in the ·Spanish civil war, is in charge of the imprisoned doc ter's.
HOLY LAND: NEW REFUGEES t
NO LAND ON EARTH IS HOLIER THAN PALESTINE-AND ~ YET IT HAS ALWAYS KNOWN THE HOMELESS, THE WANDERER, THE REFUGEE ••• Jesus Christ H.imself was one of them. l Be ned before a tyrant into Egypt, bad nowbere to lay His bead, and died nailed on a eross outside the eity of Jerusalem . • . Today there Is II new crop of refugees in the Holy Land. There are a million of them-meA, women, and ehildren. They are refugees because of war ...,_ H J 11 h 'M" ,.,.J'" Look at this 36-year-old mother • ." 0 , co,,1 '" J 'SJ'OfT n" Jor Ih, Omnt"J Church who has no answer to the thin cry of her bungry ebild! Look at tbis deaf-mute boy In Lebanon, ibe blind 10-year-old In the Gaa Strip! The Holy Father asks help • • • For 15 years the Pontifieal Mission for Palestine bas eared for refugees. Midwives· are ai band wben they are born, priests administer Ute sacraments wben Utey are In daD&"er of death .• Make this your mission of merey during Leni! $4,800 will help briD&" into beine (in memory of your , ....ed ones) a new school the Holy Father hopes to build .. Lebanon•. $2,800 will pay for the school bus. $300 wiD establish I a memorial scholarship III the Salesian Fathers' sehool lor earpenters, tailors, shoemakers, in Bethlehem. . For only $1. (thanks to .harp economies) you Clan feed an entire family for a month! ••• Your Lenten saeriliee this week, In any amount ffl", $50, $20, $10, $5, $2), will erase the misery Christ sulfel'll .. His refuc-. Please eM 88 maelt 88 yo. eua.
I
YOU CAN DO A LOT!
o $600 ••• Feed five families for one year.
D $300 ••• Train a blind boy for one year.
D $50 ..• Teach four refugee girls stenography.
D $10 ..• Feed a refugee family for one month..
o
$5 ... Buy clothing for a refugee. $1 ••. Buy pencils, catechisms, fOO'
II
refugee-eamp schooL.
·SECOND REMINDER-EASTER IS LESS THAN, THREE WEEKS AWAY. OUR EASTER GIFT CARDS combine your Easter lTeetinp with a lift to Ute missions in .the name of the person YOU designate. Seleet a citt (from Ute list below), send _ the person's name and address with your donation-and we do all the rest. We'll send &bat person an attraetive gift eard. ill time lor Easter, explainine wbat you have done. Here are some eifts to seleet from: Mass kit ($100), altar ($75), monstrance <$40), ehaliee ($40), tabernaele ($25), month's supply of food for a relugee lamily ($10), aanetuary bell ($5). blanket for an orphan ($2). Dear Monsignor Ryan: Enclosed please find .•••••••••.. for .•••••••••••••••••
Name
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FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN. President
Sec"
MlfJr. JotepII T. R,an. Nat' Seacl .n __.lIleatlo•• '0:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
330 MocIl_ Ave. at 42llc1 St.
N_ York. N. Y. 10017
18
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 25, 1965
Only Mature· Persons Know Real Significance of Love
Super-Right Quality
PORK
SALE!
By Rev. Joseph T. McGloin, S. J.
"L ove."the man sal, 'd ".I S a f orce that makes· a person
seek the well-being of those he esteems." Now to some of you deep thinkers that might sound like a philosopher talking, but the fact. is that these words are the words of a 58-year-old peasant in a He will know that "marital love" tiny, remote Mexican village. is only one variety of love. He And the very interesting fact will also know that marital love that he apparently knows itself has to go far beyond frothy
is:
more about what love really is than any number of those with an infinitely more sophisti cated education. Of course, it cOuld well be that he just hasn't had the truth he knows instinc tively bombed out of existence by propaganda. The more you look ·around and the more you experience, the more convinced you become that the reasonable person is not necessarily the formally edu cated person - though this can help, of course. n is a person who penetrates tit the real meaning of words, apart from his emotions. Take a word like "maturity," for instance. Invariably, the shallow thinker will consider this to mean either sexual or physical maturity, without ad verting to what it really means • virtual synonym for human perfection. "Maturity" has to do with a scale of values. It helps one di rect everything to God; and to have the good sense to know that any other course i'8 stu'pid. The person who is genuinely mature will know the meaning of words, despite the pseudo-meanings blasted in his ears by propa ganda. He will, for instance, like the Mexican peasant, know what. the word "love" means. Obviously, our society has re ally loused up this lovely word. It has made synonyms of "love" and "lust," or of "love" and "physical attraction." We hear the word "love" today and it occurs to us only secondarily, if at all, that it just might some.:. times mean the love of God. Sole Criterion Of course, we do have this sort of propaganda shouted at us from every sidr today, and it is a mark of our national imma turity that we fall for it. We know only one happy ending to a movie or a play-boy gets girl, even if girl's husband has to die first. Teen-agers listen to songs that glorify "cuteness" -,from one source or another-as ~hough it had something to do with love. Some teens read the "true ro mance" magazines and begin to imagine that they are actually true, that life really should con sist in the pursuit of a sacchar ine, sentimental romance, and that this mutual, superficial at traction of two "cute" people really is love. Such an attitude is, of course, a dead giveaway to immaturity, since it fails to see, first of all, what love .is . essentially, and, secondly what mature, genuine love between man and woman really is. And, unfortunately, the imma ture, no matter what their age, will always look on sex attrac tion, or what they, pathetically enough, call "love," as the sole criterion of marriage. And, as we all know, immature people -.ke crummy marriage·· partners again, no matter what their age. Marital Love . The mature person, on· the Gther hand, will alSEI have a ma-: ture understandinl of "love."
sentimentality to include tl).ree types of love-love of the mind (or real friendship), love of the heart (or emotional love), and love of the body (or physical love). . All three of these types com bi~e in complete marital -love, WIth love of the body a culmina tion of love of the heart and mind. The mature person win know, too, that fidelity in mar riage is only assured by love of the heart, permanence by love of the mind, and the big pur pose of marriage-children and mutual help - by love of the body. But the immature person, thinking of "love," will never see all this, because to him-or her-"love" is true romance." Material Outlook But how did so many of us enlightened Americans ever get the way we are, when far less sophisticated peoples often seem to know instinctively what love is? There are undoubtedly many, many reasons for our change (and change it is, because it seems that we had mote sense in the early days of our country when l()ve seemed to· involve self-sacrifice rather than self seeking). Certainly, 0 u r increasingly material outlook has had much to do. with it. Our. dedication to our own comfort is involved, too. Our abject fear of "what people will think" is another reason. We are afraid it's not "sophisticated" today to dare to mention that there would be no love were there no God. Our "friends" would be hor ror stricken, we fear, if we men tioned to them that God is love, and that, until we love God above all things, we cannot be gin to love anything else in Him. Love of God· We are afraid to let ourselves realize that the love of God is what we really seek even in human, and even in inter-sexual love, and that the greatest de gree of human love can be only a vague shadow of the love which is God. And what we are actually thinking, in effect, is that it is really square to be mature, or to face reality. How different is the perceptive statement of still another simple, unspoiled Mex ican peon: "There are many kinds of love, for a plant, for the land. First, there is love of God. Second, for a father or mother. Love is to love a woman, the love that one's sons grow and develop. One has, many loves."
You can't say it better than
that. Like truth, love is simple. Or maybe it's that, like love, truth is simple.
FATHER STANTON
Prevost Mothers Plan Supper The Mothers' Guild of Prevost· High School, Fall River, will hold its first social activity, a family Communion supper, at White's restaurant Sunday night, April 4, following 5 o'clock Mass at Notre Dame Church. Rev. Roger Poirier will cele brate Mass and Rev. Robert Stanton will speak at the supper. Guests will include lay and religious faculty of Prevost and Mrs. Gerald Cloutier, program chairfman, announces that tick ets will be available until Fri day, April 2 from guild officers and all Prevost students.
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Madrid Cab Drivers To Get Saint's Relic MADRID (NC)-A procession composed entirely of taxicabs will bear a relic of St. Christo pher to the social headquarters of cab drivers here in April. The relics of the patron saint of travelers are venerated in the cathedral of Seville. By special permission the cab drivers ob tained a small relic for' their Madrid hostel. The relic will be carried to Madrid, and then a procession of cabs will bear it 34 miles across the city to the headquarters.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 25, 1965
Bartek Picks Two All-Star
Schoolboy Court Combines
19
By Fred Bartek
The Anchor today presents two aD-star basketban teams, one comprising the standouts on the clubs repre senting the larger schools in the area and the other is
made-up of players who excelled with the smaller schools. The larger school team: John Shoekro of Attleboro there was no need to worry about a backcourt man. And High. even now the Herrings don't Jim Bradshaw of Coyle have to worry because they J
High, Taunton.
Dave Loveridge cd New Bed ford Vocational. John Medas cd Taunton High. Ted and Bob Dempsey, broth ers from Durfee High, Fall River. An oddity in the all-star choices is the fact that the three back court men, Loveridge, Medas, and Bob Dempsey (chosen as a utility man) are all juniors while the big men of the front court, Shockro, Bradshaw and Ted Dempsey are seniors. The three front court selee tions represent the three teams that shared the Brlstol Coun~ League championship. Bid for Shoekro John Shockro cd Attleboro. one of the most y e r • a til e athletes ever to come out of this area. He has been chosen an all-star selection on the various coUnty teams as a center in football. He is an excellent high jumper for the Attleboro track squad. In basketball he led hiI team in rebounding as well as scoring.
have John Medas for another year. Medas, at 6 feet, is just right to play the back court be cause he has the height advan tage over most back court men. John is an excellent outside shooter but cannot. be guarded too closely because of his talent In driving. Great Under Pressure Bob Dempsey of Durfea is his team's floor" general. Bob is the type of player that refuses to panic when under pressure. He averaged close to 11 points a game, but it seemed as though his points seemed always to drop in at crucial moments. Like his brother, Bob also plays basebalL Last year, as a center fielder for Durfee, he was one of the league's top hitters with a .370 mark. In the selections for the smaller school scholastic;..team, Dartmouth High and DightonRehoboth High dominate, each placing two. . Gets Job Done " Mark Devitt of Dartmouth is 8-3 and averaged 22 points a game. He is not a flashy hoop ster, but rather the type that al ways seems to get the, job done thro.ugh llls abili.lty to ri~e' to the
occasion. Mark is extremely ac curate in shooting from around
the foul line. He was also chosen
as quarterback on most area all
sta~ football teams.
John is a good ball handler for is • difficult choice John will have to make regarding college, because· many schools are interested in him.. Second High Scorer
some for football, others for - Old Rochester will miss Tony
basketball. . Mello who has been the main-.
Coyle Stalwart stay o~ the Bulldogs for the past
three years. He was second in
The Warriors at Coyle win the Narry League in total scor
miss, big Jim Bradshaw. He has ing and led his team to ''upsets
been a starter for the past three over the league front runners
years and 'his strength in re throughout the season: bounding and shooting has been Excellent Playmaker the key to· Coyle's champion The second selection from ships in the last two years. Brad Dartmouth is Dick, Jenkins in shaw, who averaged 22 points the back court. Jenkins is a fine per game is a fine college pros pect. The 6-4 forward is noted ball handler and steady play for his second effort and also maker. He Ss • "clutch" type ball his abililty to lead his club to a player'that is comparable to Bob, substantial lead with a burst of Dempsey of Durfee. He averaged points and rebounds. 13 points a game and along with Devitt led the Indians to an 18-2 Ace Rebounder record. Durfee's Ted Dempsey is Dot quite as tall as Shockro or Brad AD Around Ability shaw, but he rebounded with the The only team to beat Dart. best of them. Ted. the only sen mouth, and they did it" twice, ior on this year's Durfee squad. was Oliver Ames of North provided the necessary confi Easton. The leader cd the Black dence attained through· experi and Orange is Bob Clary who is ence that his younger team chosen for the guard spot. It 111 mates looked to. Of an the big doubtful whether any area bas ger men in the league, Ted was ketball player could stay with probably the best in the defen Clary in a man-to-man defense. sive department. He is a fine Bob seems to possess every baseball player, too, having ,led move in the book. He shoots the Hilltopper mound staff with from the outside with extreme an 8-0 record. accuracy and drives with devas Best in Lone Time tating deception. Dave Loveridge of New Bed Loop's Top Cager ford Vocational brings back Ray Glynn of Dighton-Reho memories of the days when the both, the Narry League's leading Gomes brothers played at that scorer, led the Falcons to their school, for Loveridge is the first first Narry League champion player of such high caliber at ship. Glynn, for a big fellow, Voke since the Gomes era. Dave shoots well from the corners as is a true student of the game well as underneath. The Falcons. who shoats, ball-handles and de will have a big void to fill with fenses with exceptional ability. Ray's departure. What he does best of all is Leaving Big Role hustle. Dave had one of his best· .The last selection for the small . nights when he scored 41 points school team, as a utility man, is' . against Feehan High. He could Glenn Field, also of Dighton have broken all records but for Rehoboth. Glenn is not the the fact he sat out one quarter. spectacular shot. that his team His best shot ill • one-hand mate Glynn is, but he is • steady " jumper from anywhere outside. ban player-and finerebounder•. ' Rerring Star Dighton win have as much liecause Taunton had its great trouble replacing Glenn Field. Bruce Teixeira until last year, well _ Glynn.
a big fellow. It
PRELATES MEET: First meeting of the U.s. Bishops' Commission for EcumetnicaJ Affairs brought together at N.C.W.C., Washington, D.C., left to right.: Bishops Ernest L. Unterkoefler of Charleston; Bernard Flanagan of Worcester; and Francis P. Leipzig of Baker, Ore.; Msgr. Wm. A. Baum, executive secretary; Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore, head of the commission; Bishops Joseph Brunini of Jackson, Miss.; Chaflel& H. Helmsing of Kansas City, Mo., and John J. Carberry of Columbus, Ohio. NC Photo.
South African Problems ·Need Solutions Mission 'Superior Warns Time
i's
R"nning Out the
DE-lINER (NC)-Time is run- . Father Brem maintainea that· "sneering" attitude which he ning out .for finding a solution the U.S. press Is not presenting said characterizes the writing of to the racial and social conflicts the full story of the problems some American commentators. sweeping Southern Africa today. . of southern .Africa. He depored' ,
Solve Dilemma So says Father Francis E. Brem; ''We Americans tend to judge S.M.B., U. S. superior of the .other countries by our stand Bethlehem missionaries, who ards, H he said. "This is a misiake have headquarters here in Colo and creates ill will." . rado. The priest noted that commu BOGOTA (NC}--Government nists principally among students Just back from a six-month subsidization of private secon ·visit to southern Africa, most of dary schools could drastically and young intellectuals - are working constantly in southern it Spent at his community's mis reduce the total cost of educa Africa to undermine existing sion In Gwelo, Rhodesia, he said, tion in this South American na that either the white minority tion, according to Colombia'. governments and replace them with communist regimes. . and the black majority in. that National Confederation of Cath ''Time is all-important now h:I part of the continent will find olic Schools. southern Africa," he averred. II, way of living and working A statement issued by the con "We must solve the dilemma together peacefully, or bloody federation noted that a recent strife encouraged by communistl report said it costs the country soon." will engulf the region. about $15 a month to educate a Toay, he said, "the non-white student in a public high school. n""')~i1.TD~~e; But it costs only a little more African is developing a new con cept of self-respect and human than $6 a month to educate a private school student in the dignity. His tribal customs are Helen Aubertine Brough undergoing change, his standard Bogota area and less than $4 William H. Aubertina . monthly in other areas at· the of living is changing - every Brian J. Aubertine thing is changing favorably but country, the statement said. his social and political status in Thus, it added. state subsidies Spacious Parkin~ Area the eyes of the European." could eut costs by from more WY 2-2957 than half to more than two Deplores "Sneering" 129 Aile" St. Hew 8edford thirds. He noted the frequent accusa tion that "we missionaries are all wrong in educating the Af- . rican--that we are only hasten ing revolution and a communist.
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But the missionary superior. believes the people who argue this way "are really desperately trying to hold onto a way of life that is n1) longer compatible with the times." "Many Europeans are findinl that no longer can they use and abuse the African as in the past," he Baid.
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TH~ ANCH9~~Dioce". ef Fait Rlver-Thur•. Mar. 25,1965
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PROPOSED NEW ELEMENTARY SCHOOL TO SERVICE ST. FRANCIS XAVIER PARISH PUPILS IN ACUSHNET
Burns Retires
From FootbaU
Continued from Page One
Prelate Praises Johnson's Civil Rights Stand
Asserts Critics Misrepresent Chief Executive'5 Position WASHINGTON (NC)
Before retiring as head bas-· Msgr. GeOrge G. Hlggins ha.s ketbali coach a few years ago, accused some civil rights' ad- . the Warriors of Taunton were always a feared quintet: Quick- . vocates-, '. incllidingclergy ness and· "the good shot" were men, of misrepresenting' Presi alw<lYs characteristics of his· dent Johnson's stand on the courtmen. Selma crisis and other issues. Msgr. Higgins, director of the. But of all his victorious con tributions to th~ athletic annals Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Con of Coyle High School, the great ference, 'said the President "has est satisfaction and accomplish ment that Jim Bu.rns might list not been found wanting on the over the past 32 years are his . crucial issue of civil rights" and successful boys in the field of critics are wrong in saying coaching-teaching. He has been otherwise. "Civil rights demonstrators the mcubator for the coaching * * '" are perfectly free to picket \itaffs in the Diocese. and to make their views known," the Monsignor said, "but they It is almost like a litany and the Anchor is certain that many do not have the right to tell lies a prayer of thanksgiving has about the "President of the risen to the heavens by these United States, even--or espe boys for having been blessed cially-if they happen to be clerics or nuns or seminarians with knowing and being influ of any faith. enced by Jim Burns. Carlin Lynch, who will report Holy Cross College this year an assistant coach; Charley ... Connell and John O'Brien at Stang, Peter Bartek, Peter Gaz zola and Homer Roy at Feehan; Jim Lanagan, Bobby Laee, and Stan Koss at Coyle. The number of bo~'s in the regional and city schools are many. t~
as
In announcing Mr. lBul'ns' Il'esignation, Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Superintendent of Dioc esan Schools, said, "It is with deep regret that we accept Mr. Burns' retirement as head foot ball coach at Monsignor Co~e High School." . "Through the years, ite has been a Christian gentleman, a model of all the values we hope to inspire in our students, and an inspiration to all our teachers and coaches." Fat her O'Neill continued, "Apart from his obvious coach ing success, he hfls been a valued teacher for 32 years, and we a:',e grateful that he will conti:lI.:e :!IT. that capacity." "Indeed, Jim Burns cas~s " long shadow" was the Diocesan Superintendent's final statement on the dean of football cO:lches in this area.
"President Johnson's commit-' ment to the cause of civil righu' is just as sincere as that of any priest, minister or rabbi--or any seminarian or nun' - in the United States." Msgr. Higgins, writing in his' w.eekly .syndicated column "The Yardstick," particularly criti-
cized some pickets at the White House who, he said, carried signs arid chanted .slogans suggesting that Mr. Jo~nson is out of sym pathy with' the civil. rights movement. Referring to a meeting he and several other clergymen had .with the President on Selma,
Msgr. Higgins called it "con structive" and said the' church men went to the White House' "not to lecture to the ·President, much less to second guess hi. strategy in Selma, but to coun sel with him and to offer their assistance in solving the prob lem of racial injustice.'"
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Apostlesl1ip of Sea To Meet April 20 NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The Apostleship of the Sea, con cerned with the spiritual, moral and social welfare of maritime workers, has rescheduled its 20th annual three-day meeting. It will take place' in Baton Rouge, La., starting Tuesday, April 20, instead of April 19. as originally planned. The movement a Iso des ignated May 2 as Sea. Sunday, whose purposes. are "to focus thought and prayers on the large number of souls who live by the sea" and "to help build up ac tion for the Sea Apostolate."
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