04.01.65

Page 1

l'AMILY OF CCA CHAIRMAN 1965: Front: Craig, Bruce, Mrs. Nancy Regan Martin, and Neil Mar­ tin with their father and husband, Atty. Richard K. Martin, chairman of this year's Catholic Charities Appeal that will open May 9. 1'~or

The ANCHOR

I

fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 1, 1965

Vol. 9, No. 13

© 1965 The Anchor

PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year

Liturgist Predicts Added Mass Structure Changes SAGINAW (NC)-A top U.S. priest-liturgist said that to.e future will bring a number of additional changes in the liturgy of the Mass. In. a Iecture on the Second Vatican Council before a capacity auclience at St. Paul's Seminary here Father Frederick JR.. said he looks for some modifica­ MCJ'ianus, a council expert taons with possible elimination and director of the Secretar­ of the Gloria, except on major . iate of the U.S. Bishops' occasion.

He said at the Offertory there is a series of prayers said silent­ ly by the priest. These more properly pertain to the Canon, are out of order and probably will be eliminated, Father Mc­ Manus said. He also said he ex­ pects some changes will be made in the liturgy following the Lord's Prayer. Father McManus said there is difficulty in introducing "com­ mon song as pad of the Holy Mass." He observed that this dif­

ficulty "suggests how hard it is

to recover something that has

be~n lost-and the difficulty in­

dicates how much has been lost."

WASHINGTON (NC) Father McManus defined lit­

The president of Citizens urgy as "prayer, worship, sac­ ror Educational Freedom rifice offered to God." He said says he was "very pleased" the revision in the Church wortha.t the education aid bill passed . ship gives attention to diversity the House without "crippling and adaptability. He said the bishops are permitted to make amendments.'.' . ; "I am very pleased that efforts changes or adaptations in line with the culture of their people, to prevent children attending in­ "It would be a grave tragedy dependent schools from partici­ pating in the benefits of the if we achieved outward reforms and these did not have an effect Education Bill were defeated," CEF national president Stuart on inner worship, faith, holi­ ness," Fath':lr McManus said. D. Hubbell said in a statement. ''This does not mean, however, "The effect of the liturgy is de­ t.hat CEF is completely satisfied signed to overflow into every with the bill which passed the deed and every act of the Chris­ tian. House. Our principal objection "Our response must go beyond is that it fails to treat all chil­ the immediate act of worship dren equally. into the lives of the people­ "In some eases, children at­ throughout, each one's day, tending independent schools win throughout his life," he asserted, have to leave their own schooli in order to participate in some programs. "Citizens for Educational Free­ dom has just started its fight for equality in education. The edu­ cation bill is a move in the right direction, We will continue our efforts until the day when chil­ HARTFORD (NC) - The dren attending all Americam Cathelic chaplain at Yale schools are given fair and just University has told a gather­ treatment in the distribution of ing Qf Catholic college stu­ tax moneys for educational pur­ dents·that the "new breed" of poses," said the Traverse City, young American Catholics must Mich., attorney. develop a deeper understanding of the Church as a community. The younger generation of American Catholics, particularly those of college age, are openly The Sacrament of Confirma­ critical of a "clergy-dominated" tion will be administered· to Church, Father James T'. Healy adults, recent converts and said. Their approach to the -others who have not had the problem is too often injudicious, opportunity to be confirmed and as long as it remains so, in their home parishes, at St. their efforts will be ineffective, Mary's Cathedral, Fall Rivell'. he commented. on Sunday afternoon, April ~5, Father Healy, a Yale alumnus, at 2 o·clock. Candidates shouUd told the Intercollegiate Council contact their pastQl' immedi­ of Catholic Students that critics ateb'. Turn to Page SixteeA Commission on the Liturgical Apostolate, said changes made in the liturgy of the Mass have J>een aimed at eliminating duplication. . He said there are still several parts of the Mass which are in need of revision. The beginning of the Mass, he 'said, is "a little ~p~heavy," Fat her McManus

Citi%ens' Leader Pleased at Bill On Education

Chaplain Proffers Word of Advice To New Breed

Confirmation

Pontiff Approves Simplified Ceremonies for Holy Week Pope Paul VI has approved changes that win go into effect on Holy Thursday and Good Friday, this year. The changes aim at simplifying the Mass of the Chrism, giving that impressive ceremony a well-understood theme and emphasizing the institution of the Priesthood at that morning ceremony just as the Commemoration of the Lord's Sup­ per, in the evening, empha­ ~~~;;:~~K~;:?~:;:;t~;t;:~~~;:;mf:i?i.?:~:r$i:~@~~mt?;:~~:~i=.m~~;¥f. ~:'f~t~ sizes the in s ti t u tion of the ~>~~~;::~:*;=%r:®r.~;~~t~~~:;?;f;;r:t~t:'f$;:~H~R~~:~~2~~~:~?-;tn;:gJl Holy Eucharist. On Good Friday, changes have been

Concelebration

In a decree of the Congre­ gation of Rites dated March 27, 1965, the new rite of con­ celebration is permitted on five different occasion beginning with the Chrism Mass of Maundy Thursday, April 15th. In a commentary on the changes, Rev. Annibale Bugnini, C.M. Curia and Council official com­ mented as follows: The Constitution on the Sa­ cred Liturgy specifically' calls for concelebration for Holy Thursday. The ~ecree permits concelebration on that· day (April 15) at both the morning Chrism Mass in diocesan cathe;' drals and at the evening Mass of the Lord's Supper in parishes on Holy Thursday evening. o the l' occasions at which priests may concelebrate are: councils, synods and bishops' conferences, and at the Mass for the blessing of an Abbot. With the local bishop's permission, priests may concelebrate at a conventual Mass and at the prin­ cipal Mass in churches when the needs of the faithful do not re­ quire that all priests celebrate individually, and on the occasion of any gathering of priests. Priests may not join in a con­ celebrated Mass once it has be­ gun. However, they may cele­ brate Mass more than once on the 'same day on the followinl: occasions: M a u n d y Thursday, Turn to Page Fifteen

. made in the wording of the Sol­ emn Prayers so as to "remove every stone which might consti­ tute however remotely, a stum­ bling block or a cause of discom­ fort." Thus, references such ail "heretics and schismatics," "in­ fidels," and "pagans" have been removed. The result is that "in the prayer of the Church, no one will experience prompting or s p i r i t u a 1 uneasiness." The changes are described as "re­

touchings" and it is pointed out that they were kept to an "in­ dispensable minimum". Holy Thursday In a commentary on the changes, the Rev. Annibale Bugnini, C.M., secretary for li­ turgical affairs of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, showed Turn to Page Twelve

Forgotten_ Only VATICAN CITY (NC)­ "Thanks be to God" said after "Go, the Mass is ended" at the close or Mass must still be said even though the response was overlooked in the new Missal and- ritual issued by the Con­ gregation of Rites. - The Rev. Annibale Bugnini, C.M·" undersecretary of the Congregation for liturgical af­ fairs, said the failure to in­ clude the response in the Iitur­

cicallHHlki was

ala oversi~h~

Dual Species

A degr.ee entitled "EccleB­ iae Semper" by the Congre­ gation of Rit~s permitil priests, religious and laity to receive Holy Communion undell both species (Body and Blood. on eleven different occasions.· The undersecretary for liturgical affairs of the Congregation of Rites, Rev. Annibale Bugnin4 C.M., commented on the change. Holy Communion may be

given in the following circum­ stances, provided the local bish.. op gives approval: (1) to newly ordained priests during their ordination Mass; (2) to the dea­ con and subdeacon in pontifical or solemn Masses (even if as priests, they have or will cele­ brate Mass); (3) to an Abbess during her blessing; (4) to women religious during the - Mass of their consecration as virgins; (5) to men religious at the Mass of their profession,

provided they take their vows

during Mass; (6) to the new hus­

band and wife at their wedding

Mass; (7) to adult converts in

the Mass follOWing their Bap­

tism; (8) to confirmed adults at the Mass of their Confirmation; (9) . to Christians readmitted to communion with the Church; (10) on the jubilees of the above 3-6; (11) to priests in large assemblies who are not able to celebrate or concelebrate and lay Brothers who attend TurA _~Q Paie ;Fifteen


2

1 ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 1, 1965

Pope Explains -

Role of Mary

'l.! .!.,!,!.i:.i,:.;I.i!. !.I:.!.:!..

I',. I.~.I.!i..I:.·.I.i,I....,.j. ;,.I.i.~.~0'~'RlJ~.;1.:.i.:~.~r.~,ltJff;IN(;s ..,~_··:.:....:.·:~JZ.,"'-{ ~~. -

VATIGAN CITY (NC)-Pope

Paul VI told the International

Marian Congress in Santo :D0­

mingo that the Church proclailDl

Mary's common motherhood of

mankind "in order to call mett

to greater and more conscioU8

brotherhood."

The Pope said in a Spani~

language radio broadcast to the

final congress session that the

Church hopes in this way "to ed­

ucate men to more frequent use

of understanding and forgive­

ness, almost as if compelling

them to behave in their mutual

relations with that solidarity

and collaboration .which tm;

presence and serene glance of a

mother inspires and vivifies in a

family.

"The human family will find

in Our Lady 'the door through

which the Light came into the

world,' justice, peace, liberty

and sweetness. Supported by this

motherly protection, Christians

will be more closely united b)

the Mediator and Saviour, Jesus

Christ, in order to live more in­

tensely with Him, and through

Him in union among them­

selves."

l.:.!:..

_ Morally Unobjectionable for Everyone

Apache Rifles Atragon Boy Ten Feet Tan Brass Bottle ") Cheyenne Autumn Day Mars Invaided Dear Brigitte Disorderly Orderly Dream Maker Drum Beat Duke Wore Jeans East of Sudan Emil and the Detectives Fall of Roman Empire Fate Is the Hunter Father Goose Ferry Cross the Mersey Finest Hours First Men in the Moon Fluffy

Guns of August. Incredible Mr Limpet Indian Paint lillies of Field Man From Button Williow Mara of the Wilderness Mediterranean Holiday Modern Times Mouse on Moon Murder Ahoy Murder Most Foul My Fair lady Never Put it in Writing One Man's Way Only One in New York Outlaws Is Coming Papa's Delicate. Cond:tion Patsy. The Romeo & Juliet Sampson & Slave Queen

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians Secret 01 Magic Island Sergeants 3 Taffy and the Jungle Hunter Summer Holiday Sword of Ali Baba Those Calloways Train Truth About Spring Topo Gigio Voyage to End Universe When the Clock Strikes Who's Minding Store Wild & Wonderful Windjammer World of Abbott and Costello Yanll in Viet Nam, A You Have to Run Fast Zebra in the Kitchen

!

['i#~ .~

Unobiectionable for Adults, Adolescents Act I Advance to Rear Aphrodit. Baby the. Rain MIISt Fan Back Door to Hell Beach Blanket Bingo Behold A Pale Horse Black Spurs Black Zoo Captain Newman. MD Chalk Garden Children of Damned Citizen Kane Come Fly With Me Crack in the World CUl'$e of the Fly Curse of the Mummy's Tomb

Dr. Terror's House of Horrors Fail Safe Gorgon Horror of It All I'd Rather Be Rich Kimberle) Jim King of Sun lawrence of Arabia Man From Galveston Mary, Ma.TY Miracle Worker Moni Witch Doctor .Night Walker None but the Brave Point of Order Ring of Treason RoustaboUt

SanJuro Satan Bug , Seance on a Wet Afternoon Secret Invasion Secret of Blood Island Shock Treatment 633 Squadron South Pacific Taggart Taxi for Tobruk 36 Hours TWice Told Tales Unsinkable Molly Brown Voice of Hurricane Wa1k Tightrope Walls of Hel! Weekend With lulu Wheeler Dealers World of Henry Orient

Morally Unobieetionable for Adult~

.

America. America . How to Murder Your Wife Rounders "Ape Woman HUd Signpost to Murder flay of the Angels. Hush, Hush, Sweet Slave Trade in the World ·Bebo's Girl . ' Charlo~e Today· . . Hedtime story HypnotiC Eye Strange Bedfellows 'Blind Corner II Bldtini! Soft Skin ·BUddha lipstick Term ot Trial •BIIS Riley's Back In Towa Ltmeliness of Long. . Three Penny Opera · Bye Bye Birdie .Distance Runner Thunder of Drums Cardinal Los Tarantos To Bed or Not to Bed Cod" 7. Victim 5 luck 9f Ginger Coffey Town. Without Pity. trooked Road Mafioso Two on a G:Jillotine . "Darbv's Rangers .. Mail Order Bride Umbrellas of CherboiIrg ,

Die, Die My Darling Man's Favorite Sport Very Specia: Favor .

No. My Oarlin~ Daughter West 'Side Story

facts of Murder Flight from Ashiya Nothing But a Man Hard Day's Night

Goldfinger Pillow Talk Where LOIJe Has Gone

Guide Pink Panther Wild Affair

· Horror Castle Rage to live Woman of Straw Rio Conchos Y.aunj! Lovers

For

Adu~ts (Wi~h Re$ervcdco~13)

This classification Is given to certain films. Which, while not morally offensive . In themselves, require caution. and som e analysis and explanation as a protection to the uninformed against. wrong Inter Dretations and false conclusions. Anatomy of a Marriage Lilith Suddenly last Summer Best Man love a la Carte This -Sporting Life Black Like Me Marriage, Italian Style Under Yum Yum Tree Divorce: Italian Style Martin luther Victim Collector Organizer Visit. The Cool World Nothing But the Best Walll on Wild Side Dr. Strangelove Pumpkin Eater Yellow Rolls Royce Girl With the Green Eyes Sky Above & Mud Below Young & Willing Strangers in the City Zorba. the Greek

Morally Obiectionable in Part for Everyone Americanization of Emily Kitten With A Whip ·Black Sabbatf> Lady in Cage Comedy gf Terrors Les Abysses Curse of Living Corpse Love Has Many Faces Devils of Darkness love.. the Italian Way Diary of a Bachelor Masque of the Red Death Female Jungle Nutty, Naught) Chateau 4 tor rexas .Pajama Party Frightened City Pleasure Seekers Get Yourself A College Girl Psyche 59 Girl Happy Quick, Before It Melts House Is Not A Home RaCing Fever Jessica Raiders From Beneath In Harm's Way the Sea Joy House Sex and the .Single Girl John Goldfarb, Please Shock Corridor Come Home Small World of Sammy lee

Soldier in the Rain Splendor in Grass Sunday in New York Sylvia The Devil and the 10 Commandments Three Fables of Love Tiara Tahiti (Bri Time Travelers Under Age Vice and Virtue Viva Las Vegas What A Way· To Go Nhy Bother to Knock Yesterday. Today and Tomorrow Zombie

_k

Monda Pazzo Silence Sweet and Sour

eI:

._ ...._.-_ ....__......1

HOLY SEPULCHER BASILICA: Repairs and restor­ ation go forward under supervision of an architectural com­ mittee with representatives from each church which has rights in the building. Offerings on Good Friday in all churches help' to defray these expenses. NO Photo.

Chin~se

and American CYOers Exchgnge Vi~its in: Ta!pei

TAIPEI (NC) - Chinese and American youths. members of separate CYO organizations in Taipei, have been trEding visits designed to create understa,nding of their different backgrounds and culture. The program was started by ··ak F .a t h e r Edward J . W OJnI, S.V.D., of Chicago, who began a CYO group among the young

Chinese in his suburban parish.

They have traded visits With the CYO attached to the Amer­

ican community church of St.

PAVlA C@nter A national training center .for Papal Volunteers to Latin Amer­ ica will be opened in June on the campus of Catholic University, Washington, D. C. It will be di­ rected by Rev. Raymond A. Kevane and will o::":fer home training for prospective volun­ teers.

FORTY HOURS

l)rEVOTION

Apr. 4-Our Lady of the Im­ maculate Conception, Fall River. Our Lady of Perpetual Help, New Bedford Apr.lQ-St. John The Bap­ tist, Fall River. Apr. 11-St. Paul, Taunton.

Apr. 18--0ur Lady of the

Holy Rosary, New

Bedford. St. Michael, Ocean Grove.

Apr. 2~;Holy Ghost, Attle­

boro. St. Joseph, New Bedford.

Condemned 'EmDtv Canvas let's Talk About Women Love Goddesses

~

Terrace' To Love 'Woman in the Dunes

~~""~~

Christopher's in Taipei where Msgr. (Navy Commander) Fran­ cis J. Fitzpatrick is pastor. "Youngsters who have prayed together, sung songs and per­ form1:!d folk dances together have gone a long way toward overcoming the barrier .of dif;' ferent culture~ and back­ grounds," said Father Wojniak.

Vincentian' Council To Meet-Tuesday

- The monthly mf'eting of Fall

. River Particular Coun,cil, Soci­ ety of St. Vincent de Paul, will, be held at 8 o'clock next Tues­ day night at· st. Vincent's Home. . Benediction of the Most Blessed S3crament will be giver. in the chapel at 7:45.

For this meeting the Ozanam

Committee is preparing a pro­

gram on the life of Frederick Ozanam and will report on the steps being taken b promote the cause of his beatification. Plans for the IS65 season at St. Vincent de Paul Camp will also be discussed.

Prevost Alumni Alumni of Prevost Hi g h School, Fall River, will hold their eighth annual reunion at 7:30 Saturday night, April 3 at White's restaurant. Honored will be the class of 1945. Dinner will be preceded by a social hour and followed by a dance. v

ANTONE S. FEND , JR.

Williams' Funeral Home EST. 1870 1 . Washington Square NEW BEDFORD Reg. Funeral Director and Embalmer PRIVATE PARKING AREA TEL. WY~ 6·8098

0'11'«1.0

FRIDAY-Friday of IV Week 01

Lent. m Class. Violet. 'Mag

Proper; No Gloria or Creed;

2nd ColI. St. Francis a Paulo,

Confessor, Preface ofLenl.

'Two Votive Masses in honor

of the Sacred Heart of Jesua

permitted. Gloria, '2nd CoD.

Friday of IV Week of Lent;

:lTd ColI. St. Francis a Paulo.

Coiifessor; no Creed; Preface of

Sacred Heart. Tomorrow is the

first Saturday of' this month.

SATURDAY - Saturday of. tv

Week of Lent. III Ciass. Violet.

Mass Proper; No Gloria" 01:

, Creed, Preface of Lent. . .SUNDAY-I Sundlly of Passion­ tide. I Class. Violet. Mass ~roper; No Gloria; Creed; Preface of the .Holy Cross. ..MONDAY - Monday of Passion Week. III Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; . 2nd ColI. St. Vincent ::!'errer, Confessor; Preface of the Ho17 Cross. . TUESDAY-Tuesday of Passion

Week. III Class. Violet. Mass

Proper; No Gloria or Creed;

Preface of the Holy Cross.

WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of

Passion Week. m Class. Vio­

let. Mass Proper; No Gloria 01:

Creed; Preface of the Ho~

. Cross.

THURSDAY-Thursday of Pas­

sion Week. III Class. Violet.

Mass Proper; No Gloria .011

Greed; Preface of the HoJJ:

Cross.

DISPENSING

OPTICIAN

Prescription.

for Eyeglasses

Filled

Office Houri

9:00·5:00

excePt Wed.

Fri. Eve.

6:30·8:30

Rooln 1

7 No. Main St., Fall River OS 8·0412

Pope Paul Praises Soviet Cosmonauts VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope :paul VI paid tribute to Soviet

Necrology APR.! ltev. Adolph Banach, O.F.M. CONV., 1961, Pastor, Our Lady 01 Perpetual Help, New Bedford. tHE ANCHOR !ecOIIlI Class Postage Paid

.ss

at FaU River. Publisheo Ivefll Thursday at 410

.. "".

Hlglliano "venue, FaU River Mass. by tile catltolll: Press of tile Diocese of FaU River.

8ldJscrlptloll .,Ice '-' l1li0. JOI1IiaItI '4.00

spacemen's latest triumph and expressed the hope that "all this progress may serve to make men better, more united and intent on serving the ideals of peace and the common good." He called the flight of the Voskhod II, during which one of the two Russian cosmonauts be­ came the first man to leave an orbiting craft and float in space, "an accomplishmentwhieh tcMIa7 _tin U1e worlGo·

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'II


Pri~sts,

Doctors Oppose Siamese . Tw;n O peration

THE ANCHOR­

Thurs., April 1, 1965

McG~~~ ~r@~$es' Catho~BC Clnarch I Invo vem~~t

I ,I

-HOUSTON (NC)~A mor- .11' al theoligian- said here that an operation on the Pantale­ - r' on Siamese twins that would

.."

Ie

3

ATLANTA (NC) _ Ralph McGill, publisher of the Atlanta Constitution has prais­ ,I ed the involvement of Cath-

I

take the life'of one so the other epuld ,wrong.-live normally _~ould be The opinion was express~d by olic priests and nuns and other. 1 -.-churchmen in Father James F. Towns,' C.M., .. civil-.rights 1 dem­ professor. of moral theology at onstrations in-Selma, A.a. -St. Mary's Seminary in Houston, ~. McGill, writing in his syndi­ in reference to Dulce and Ruth ­ 'cated column, said the presence . Pantaleon, twin 'girls born in of nuns in the Selma demonstra­ Puerto' Rico and' flown to Texas_ ...i tions was "a spectac~e which inChildren's Hospital -here to de­ IF spired the committed a n-d termine if they could be sep-· shamed the timorous." arated. ."The Roman -Church has not Opposition to the opera~iQn been without its failures," he on moral and medical grounds said, "but more- than any other was also voiced by a spokesman single- division of the Christian fur a team of doctors at the hos­ faith it has, from the Vatican to pita!. . the lowliest priest and nun, been After - examining the twins, more forthright in its participa­ speCialists at the- hospital -con­ tion and pronouf\cprnents against eluded that separation would al­ racial injustice than any other most .certainly . result in the group." death of one 'and possibly both; The major .difflculty· iii tha~ the Local Chn-rehmen twins have a- joined heart conONE MASS, 16' PRIESTS: Fifteen Holy Cross .Fathers and their Oblate retreat McGill contrasted the ihvolv~ IIIsting - of five chambers.. , The -' - . ment of olit-of-state churchmen -llOrmal-heart has four, master concelebrate a Mal'ls at" St. JosephShrirte, North Dartr:nouth,.t;o cwse .a'superiors' in-' the 'Selma demonstrations Parents Catbotie- retreat held at the Holy Cross Mission House. Rev. Richard E. Sullivan, C.S.C., center, -- with the non-participation Of . "For' a surgeon tQ Separ/lte . provincial of the Eastern Province of the 'Holy Cross Fathe~, is presiding priest._ '. loCal churchmen. ­ them," - Father To~ , ~ i d , _ He quoted an unnamed source ·would be in effect·~ destroy in-.Selma as saying tha~ it i. "e 'life of one of children, , "almost hysterically amusing. and -this_- would constitute'· th~ . . that these Selma churches have ,",lawful taking-of the life of an , for years been eontrib\lting to .mOe·ent· person." African missions. They would Because the. parents of 'the t ; . . , ., ~ welcome a colored foreigner if twins are Catholic, physicians . . ,. he wore a turban and a bright eonferred - With the Catholic --A :religious '~fi~st~ i~r Greate~ ~ew Bedf~rd took place whenMa~s conceiebrated . colored robe. But they will not ehaplain_at. th~ hospital'-,F:ithe~ by-16 priests at-St. Joseph Shrine-on Tucker Road, North Dartmouth. Rev. Richard H.opeD their doors_tQ an American 8eorge Spnnger. C.SS.R. . S II; CSC . -. I f th E -t .P' f th HI· C ·F th d f' Christian 6f color· nor will the,. - Father Sptinger- issu~a state- - . - u. iVan,_. _: :- " provmcI~ __ 0 '. ~'. as ern .. :o~mc~ e 0 y . ross', -a. ers an .stan~ up for -his right to have a .ent to the preSs after consutta:" - ~er preSIdent of: Stoneh~ll College, WaS pr_esI~nlg prIest at.: t.h~ afternoon' -Mass' whIch part in the pu!?lic lj~ of his &ion with Father Towns. - "The closed a-re-treat for ~uperlOrs •. . . .. ' - 7......:.: .' ·d· th i '. Country." " . t· ... F th S ' ger f th H I C d -.p . MannIS dIrector- of the Famil,. • - ,L_U". _suenors rna e e r _re­ .. ~es ~,on 1~, a er . prn~_ . ,0_ . .e 1)'y ross or er.. ~r- Rosary' House. Alban 'N: Y;, :treat at the Ho~y Cross Retreat _ "We are ashamed. S<5me of out' .'Iud, can we take the lIfe of one mISSIon for the concelebra­ - ...' y,. H T .k R d ' people 'wept when the Roman of these babies? The' € h urch . .. ­ - Also Rev. Herve A._ LeBla:ne, ouse o~ uc er oa. . -. _ d _ feel 't" oial to kill a'child tlon vva~ granted by. BIShop dean of King's College' R v .. - Followmg the M~ss, they _I'e- CatholIc nuns. ca~e, ser~ne, .. e . s 1 ISthink lDUD -. . . . _, •e.of. t u moo to th' I. don't anyone could sal'' . C <mno.11" y. . . _ Joseph F.' WIseman, pastor elr va r'o'''' I.... posts _ ' . termined ' secure In their .falth. "at that one should die when; The bishop - concelebrated Sacred Heart Church, Bennirig-.­ if left together, it appears-they Mass. with newly ordained ton, Vt.;. Rev. John _T: Corr, would Ii ve _ for q,uite a_ few ·priests at the last -ordination in president of Stonehill College; Fears." " St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall Riv:er. Rev. John F. Murphy, superior Father Towns noted that there The North Dartmouth Mass, of Holy Cross Seminary,. North .. no .assurance, ac<:ording to' however,. is -beUeve!'i the first in _Easton;_ Rev. Aloysius E. Cussen, ­ :INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC doCtors, that either child would the are.a to be 'so celebrated by dean, Stonehill College; Rev. . survive if the other w-ere killed," a group of priests at a parish -James. F. Murphy, superior and he said, "such' an operat!~n church or shrine. p~incipal of Notre Dam~ High would still be morally wrong." Father Sullivan led the group Scho.oli Br-idgeport, Conn.;- Rev. Two Persons in joint recitation of the prayers Alfred F. D'Ah:mzo, principal of Father _Towns was also asked of the Mass. -Each priest conse­ _the new St. Peter High School, whether the twins constitute one crated his own bread and wine Glouce.ster, -and Rev. Phjlip. C. person- rather than two, since -and all received ~oly Commun­ M. Kelly, director of Provincial

312 Hillman StreetWY 7-9162 New Bed'ord they have a- common heart and ion at the same time. Development and the Associated

are joined physically. . Participating, hi. addition to Families of Holy Cross. ~ "Doctors have stated," he re­ Father Sullivan, were Rev. Wil­ plied, "that the twins, personal­ Ham A. Robbins, O.M,I., who ities are different and they are - conducted the· retreat and Holy individuals. They· are twodif­ ·CrossFathers Rev. Joseph F. ferent persons, each with her Hanna, steward -of the Eastern distinct soul, and therefore each Province; Rev. John F.' Foley, has an equal right to life." superior of the Holy Cross Fath­ , "If a baby's life can be snuffed ers Mission Band; Rev: Law­ out for the sake of another rence P. Sullivan, director of baby," Father Towns said, "then Holy Cross Retreat House in you have a form of deciding North Easton' Rev. Lane Kil­ JUNE 30th through AUGUST 10th

whose life is Unnecessary. This burn, preside~t of King's Col­ is a line of thinking similar to lege, Wilkes Barre, Pa.; Rev. E. via

Hitler's with regard to the Jews Edward Hoffman, novice master • • ,., It is wrong." _of Holy Cross Novitiate, Ben­ QUEEN ELIZABETH

nington, Vt., alld Rev. James B. .1

I

the~

.. ---F. ath' One M_a.ss_,_ -1.6.-P_riest.s as -H 0·Z·y' C . :ross ers C_ZlJ's~ R- e-tr'-ea_t _~_. :t_h C- on~-_ceZebrate-d Sacr":f: pe

.

w:as

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ANDERSON .: & . OLSE'N

-HEATING-·PIPING and ·.AIR. CONDlrl'ONING_ -CONTRACTORS·

..............•................. ............•..

1965

PILGRIMAGE TO EUROPE

Diocesan Nurses Prepare Awards Applications for the Mary E. McCabe N u r sin g Scholarship award given each year by the Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Nurses are now avail­ able for high school seniors . planning to enter nurses training. Awards are made ort the basis of scholastic accomplishments and financial need. The applications may be ob­ tainedfrom anyone of the fol­ lowing committee members: Mrs. Charlotte Robinson, 7 Perry Ave_, Attleboro; Miss Alice Moran, .187 Whipple Street, FaiR River; Miss Sheila Mahoney, 85 Bay Street, New Bedford; and Mrs. Mary McCabe, 110 Broad­ .a1', Taunton.

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4

I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 1, 1965

I

Ideas and Suggestions for Family Lenten Mea Is

FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1964 Fast and Abstinence

Breakfast: Orange sections, English muffins with butter. beverage. Lunch: Open faced tomato and eheese sand­ wich'", green olives, potato chips, beverage, choc­ olate pudding. Dinner: Clam appetizer'", Baked stuffed fish'" rice, green salad with Italian dressing, Italian bread and butter, sherbet. Open Faced Tomnto and Cheese Sandwich 4 slices bread 4 slices cheese 1 tomato oregano Parmesan cheese Toast bread slices on one side under broiler. Cover untoasted bread slices with a slice of cheese. Place a tomato ring on the cheese. Sprin­ kle the tomato ring with oregano and parmesan cheese. Place under broiler. Broil until cheese is brown and bubbly. Serves 4. Clam Appetizer 1 can minced clams ].-4 cup butter or margarine 1 teaspoon anchovy paste Lemon juice lf4 cup minced green pepper lf4 cup chopped onion Blend together butter and anchovy paste. Spoon into shells or small oven-proof serving dishes. Cover with clams and sprinkle lightly with lemon juice. Spoon green pepper and onion over the clam mixture. Bake at 450 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes until thoroughly cooked. Serves 4 to 6. Baked Stuffed Fish 3 to 4 Ibs. striped bass, mackerel or blue fish 2 cups fresh bread crumbs made from Italian or Portuguese Bread 1 small onion chopped fine 2 tablespoons chopped black olives 1 teaspoon salt ]14 teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons chooped parsley 1 tablespoon Parmesan cheese 1 large can plum tomatoes If.! cup olive oil 1 teaspoon oregano Mix bread crumbs, onion, olives, salt and J)epper. and Parmesan cheese. Have fish cleaned with center bone removed. Stuff fish. Brush with olive oil and cover with tomato sauce. To make tomato sauee, combine tomatoes, olive oil and oregano in saucepan, cover and simmer for about 20 minutes. Bake in 400 degree oven for 1 hour, eover with foil first half hour. MRS. F'RANK BARRESI Holy Rosary Parish, Fall River SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1965 Fast Breakfast: Orange sections, oatmeal, beverage Lunch: Baked egg sandwich deluxe'", junket, 1»everage Dinner' (:hilled tomato juiee, roast beef, browned potatoes, orange glazed carrots, salad, toasted hard rolls, vanilla pudding with flavored whipped cream. Baked Egg Sandwiches Deluxe 4 hamburger buns (unslieed) 4 slices tomato Salt Pepper 4 Eggs 1h cup grated cheddar cheese lf4 cup light cream 3 tablespoons. chopped nuts lfollow out hamburger rolls by cutting thin slice from top of each and removing most of crumbs with a fork leaving a shell about half inch thick In bottom of each shell place a. thin tomato slice, sprinkle with salt and pepper and break egg over' it. Sprinkle then with cheese, cream and onions. Arrange in a shallow baking pan. Bake thirty minutes in a 375 degree oven until P.ggs are of desired firmness. MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1965 Fast Breakfast: Doughnut and beverage. Lunch: Shrimp and fish casserole'", salad, 1»everage, ice cream. Dinner: Broiled steak, golden salad'", whipped )N)tato, frozen peas, bever.age, rolls and butter~ pane whip. . Shrimp and Fish Casserole 1 lb. haddock fillets 1h can frozen shrimp soup Ih can shrimp buttered bread crumt»>

Place fillets of haddock in flat py:.-ex dish. Cover with frozen shflmp soup. Add half can of shrimp. Cover with buttered bread crmr. OS. Bake at 350 degrees for one hour. Serves fo:;:!'. Gvlden Salad Jl tablespoon unflavored gelatin {1

envelope) cup cold water % cup sugar % cfip cold water ',4 cup lemon juice :1 ~A cups orange juice 1 cup seedless grapes 1 cup sliced cashews Put gelatin in 1(1 C:.Ip water over low heat. When gelc:tin is dissolved add sugar and stir until dissolved. Remove from heat. ,Add second quarter cup of cold water and lemon an:1 orange juice. When cool c:.dd grapes and cashew nuts. Pour into :r.old. Refrigerate. When ready to serve unmold and slice. Serve on crisp lettuce Ie1l7es with c:-ea:u:ed mayonnaise. ~~

MRS. CHARLES HARGRAVES S1. Louis Parish, Fall River TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1965 Breakfast: Half grapefruit, cold cereal, bev­ erage.

Luneh: Tuna salad, cauliflower salad'", bev­ erage. Dinner: Pear half, Roast lamb'", rice, green beans, beverage, pecan pie Cauliflower Salad Jl head lettuce 1 bunch Spring onions sliced in circles

1h small cauli110wer Ih can slivered almonds Tear lettuce into salad size pieces. Slice cauliflower in crisp slivers. Brown almor-ds in oven until light brown. Toss lettuce, onions, cauliflower and almonds in French or :i:talian dressing. Roast Lamb 4 Ibs. lamb (leg preferred) :1 pound small onions 6 potatoes halved 1 bunch carrots 1 can tomatoes (No.2) 1 can peas (No.2) 1 can string beans (No.2) 1 can wax beans (No.2) 1 small turnip Boil lamb for half hour in water to cover. Remove from water, reserving water. Cover lamb with salt and peppered flour. Bake in 325 de8l"ee oven until tender (about three hours) in a deep roasting pan. During last hour of cooking place in pan around meat carrots, onions, potatoes and turnip. Cover with foil. About fifteen minutes before end of cooking add tomatoes, peas, string beans and wax beans along with reserved w.ater. Bake uncovered last twenty minutes at four hundred degrees. MRS. RAYMOND MORIN, St. Patrick's Parish, Fall River

PLAN AHEAD: Planning and shopping ahead are aide in preparing varied Lenten menus, says Mrs. John Fletcher, St. Lawrence parish, New Bedf~rd.

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1965

Fast Breakfast: Juice, baked eggs'" toast, beve~e Lunch: Royal sardines'", beverage, fruit Dinner: Broiled lamb chops, cheddar eheese slice, asparagus, whipped potato, salad, beverage, brownies. Baked Eggs 3 tablespoons margarine 2 small onions thinly sliced salt and pepper 4 eggs 2 tablespoons bread crumbs 4 slices cheeseCook onions in skillet in margarine untft' tender. Arrange in pie plate. Salt and pepper lightly. Break eggs over onions. Sprinkle with bread crumbs and top with cheese. Bake un­ covered for ten minutes in 350 degree oven 'Serves four. Royal Sardines 6 slices bread 6 tablespoons butter or margarine 4 anchovy fillets, minced 1h teaspoon paprika . 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce 2 tablespoons tomato paste ]h teaspoon salt 6 sardines (1 can) drained -i tablespoon lemon juice Toast bread slices on both sides. Cream butter and beat in anchovies, paprika, Worcester­ shire, tomato paste and salt. Blend well. Spread on toast. Top each toast slice with sardine aDd IlprinklE" fish wth lemon juice. Serves six.

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R~al Appreciation of Church

~~eded for Pastoral Action

THE ANCHOR -

Urges Cltu rches Work Together

From "The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M.

For Justice

Our catechisms are often deceptively pat in their des­ cription of the church's threefold mission to teach, to rule and to sanctify. Since the time of St. Robert BeUarmine, in reaction against Protestant rejection of external Church authority our manuals of theology and our catechisms ferent situation than was known by the theologians of past cen­ have fixed their attention turies. The Second Vatican sometimes too exclusively on Council set out for pastoral re­ the visible aspects of the Church. form a thorough-going aggioma­ (Take for example St. Robert mento. It, quickly found that Bellar min e ' s this required a re-expression of definition of the the Church-in her mysterioUs Church: "The inner life, in her members, in • 0 c i e t y com­ her episcopal constitution and in posed of men her sanctity and mission. united among It is' well to note how much themselves by we have grown in the Iilst cen­ communion 0 f tury in our appreciation of the the same sacra­ Church. The function of the lay­ ments, under man, his proper independence in the jurisdiction the temporal order, his active participation in the liturgy and of the legiti­ m ate pastors in the religious apostolate; the call of all Christians to sanctity; a."ld above all of the Roman Ponti:Cf" [De _the community of all Christians around their bishops and the Ecclesia II-Il.) The Church is a mystery; it is Supreme Pontiff-the visibile re­ an object of faith which we can minders of Christ-in the one, li ving Mystical Body-these are only partially understand and all doctrines packed with power which therefore, in the words of for a world desirous of ideals, PO~2 Paul VI, "permits ever new of progress, of unity and of and more profound inquiries human well-being. The over­ intc its nature" (Allocutio:l to flow of it all into the temporal the Council Fathers, solemn b.­ o=der is envisaged already in auguration of the Second Session the Council's Constitution on the of Vatican Council II, September Church, and will be made more 29, 1963). explicit in the coming Constitu­ God Reaching Temporal It: is God who acts through tion on the Churcl: and the Mod­ em World. Christ in His Church. Toward Robert Ricard early in his what end? Toward unity: the unity of all men in the love of classic entitled The Spiritual God: in the unity of the living Conquest of New Spain (1492­ 1572) remarks that the first dec­ God. All born and yet unborn are to be incorporated into ades of Spanish occupation in the new world set the basis for Christ: with Him they form the so~ial and religious patterns Church, they are the Church. there for centuries to come. This He acts upon all, near and afar, remark is a valuable guide. We through the invisible Spirit of can divide the 472 years since God and through the visible min­ Columbus's first voyage into istry of His members. It is a four handy periods. It is the "truly tremendous mystery," outline proposed by Father said Pope Pius XII, that we de­ Egana, S.J., in his two-volume pend upon one another for sal­ vation. We are not saved singly history of the Church in Spanish but in society-in dependence on ~erica, soon to be published. so many around us for all that 1. 1492-1566--the seeding pe­ riod: the mud and thatched-roof we have, all that we know, all Ch.ufch. that we desire. In the Church we receive that spint of love which 2. 1566-1700 (from the acces­ sion of Philip II throughout the will enable and bring to fruition all our single natures, desires rule of the Hapsburgs)-period and efforts. The Church is the of consolidation: the age of instrument of Christ which cathedrals and universities. would make us divine together 3. 1700 (accession of Philip with and in him; but it does so V, the first Bourbon) to 1815-­ in the full social and historical relaxation and decline. The context in which our salvation is Church's will is sapped by the to oe wrought upon earth. decrepit state of Catholic The Church as a religious so­ thought in Europe, the rising ciety is distinct from the tem­ mockery of the rationalists and poral order. Christian men, how­ the insistent pressure of the so­ ever. live deeply embedded in cial revolutionaries against the temporal order. Christ makes order the Church had long Himself present in each of these known. The suppression of the two manners: indirectly, through Jesuits ruins many mission and doctrine, and directly, through educational centers across the continnent. its personal and prudential ap­ plication. In this area we run 4. 1815 (the independence of into many of the problems which the various nations is assured)­ have typified in one age or an­ until the present-contemporary other the question of the Church republican history. Throughout and the temporal order: the the 19th century the nations re­ problem of Church and State, main rural and aristocratic. of censorship and all forms of Politics opposes the anti-cleri­ Church monitoring of morals, of cals (liberals or radicals) and collaboration between Churches the conservatives ilJ. economic for social welfare, of active tol­ and social affairs. The issue is eration for all Churches, etc. We Church influence in all civil Ileed only mention them here and social affairs - sometimes and point out how situations and aggravated by the opposition of human criteria over the cen­ some bishops to the movements turies bring one or another prob­ of independence. The Church lem to the fore. As in all mat­ suffers a serious collapse due to ters of dynamic human relations, the protracted period in which especially when complicated by bishops could not be named by the divine, an active balance is the Holy See. Seminaries are required. closed or they significantly fore­ 'Clear Appreciation of Church shorten their period of training. To plan the pastoral action of Somewhere in the present cen­ the Church, we must be clear on tury, a new period should be her nature and purpose-as clear marked off in which charac.ter­ as the mystery permits-espe­ istically the social problem be­ cially when we would adapt her comes central--even to religious pastoral action to a radically dif­ considerations.

5

Thurs., Apri I 1, 1965

LAUSANNE (NC) - Ex. perts representing the Cath­ olic Church and the W orId Council of Churches at the

PALM SUNDAY: In South Florida's tropical clime, native palm plants grow abundantly. Fulfilling requirement that palms to be blessed must be obtained from evergreen trees, gardener of the Church of the Little Flower in Coral Gables cuts the bud or heart in a thicket of palmettos. NC Photo.

Judges .Study Alleged Miracles Of Canada's Brother Andre MONTREAL (NC)-A special tribunal of five judges working under the authority of Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, is study­ ing two reported miracles in the cause of Brother Andre, founder of the St. Joseph's Oratory shrine. Cardinal Leger was delegated to initiate this inquiry by the Holy See,' which now has a heavy dossier dealing with the apostolic process regarding the virtues of Brother Andre. Msgr. Louis Aucoin, rector of the Montreal cathedral, is pre­ siding over the inquiry.

One of the reported miracles has to do with a nun who was allegedly cured of painful bur­ siti!> which she had suffered for several years. The cure came during the night of Jan. 7, 1937. The other reported cure in­ volves Joseph C. Audino of Rochester, N. Y. He allegedly was cured in 1958 of an ad­ vanced cancer. While he had been treated with all the re­ sources of modern medicine and the cure was not instantaneous, it has been remarked that since that date there has not been any reappearance of the disease.

Honors Statesman NOTRE DAME (NC) - Hein­ rich Krone, 'Vp.st German Minis­ ter for Special Affairs, received an honorary doctor of laws de­ gree during a special convoca­ tion at the University of Notre Dame Tuesday. Krone delivered two addresses during his visit to Notre Dame on German foreign policy.

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Native Members RABAUL (NC)-Eight young men, the first native novices to be trained by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart at a novitiate at Vunapau, took first vows as members of the congregation here.

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6

THE A~CHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., April 1, 1965

;\ggiornamento Pain~

c

Stars and Bars

A newspaper photo of the automobile' Mrs. Viola

Liuzzo was driving when she was brutally murdered in

Alabama also showed near by the car of an Alabama State Trooper. It was decorated with a replica of the Stars and Bars the flag of the Southern Confederacy. As an emblem this may be a harmless harkening

back to other days and other times with-perhaps-nothing

'more to it than that. But its full meaning should be in­ vestigated a little more deeply. It is time that. the myth of the Confedera~y as a noble and worthy institution be shjlttered. The Oonfederacy was dedicated to a" two-fold pur­ pose-the break.ing up of the Union and the upholding of slavery. There is little chivalry or glamor or worth in such "ideals." Those who picture the old" South as a happpy land of courteous Southern gentlemen and gracious ladies and

benevolent life on the plantation should remember that this institution was established and run on the basis of human slavery-of evil and suffering and the trading in human persons. There is nothing in that picture that deserves pres­ ervation or enshrinement in the hearts of true 'Americans, men who accept the fact of the brotherhood of man under the Fatherhood of Gqd. No one is calling for a renewal of the Civil War. But Americans should understand cIearli why the Civil War was fought. This nation is one country. The sove­ reignity of the indiVIdual States is a limited one. And when a State refuses to extend to any group of its citi­ zens their rights as human beings and Americans then thank God there is a Federal Government to guarantee what the State refuses or is unable to do. The surest way .for any State to see slipping away whatever sovereigpity it has left is to use that authority to perpetuate wrong or to refuse to use it to 'protect all its citizens in the pursuit of their legitimate aspirations and rights. The anguish of many people in Alabama at seeing ·the strong presence of Federal power in their midst is largely of their own makirig. What the State will not do, the Federal government must do.

,The Need The Mayor of Los Angeles recently invited the citi­ zens of that sprawling metropolfs to meet with him face to face, to discuss his budget of well over three hundred million dollars, and to' ,offer criticism of his administra-' tion and its policies." .. , A daring offer, one might think! But at the meeting last week just sixteen' citizens' were interested enough' to show up. -' Just a year ago the nation was shocked at the re­ port of how almost forty persons in New York were aware of an attack on a young lady and her subsequent murder and not one even phoned the police while the at­ tack was going' on, much less made any direct interven­ tion. An'interview with many of those same persons in that neighborhood just the other day indicated that there was still that attidude of not wanting to get involved. The interviewer was of the opinion that the same incident could happen in the same neighborhood once again with probably the same apathy on the part of the' on-lookers. It is not that the people are evil. It is not that they are completeiy unfeeling of others. It is just that all too often the world of the ind~vidual is himself, his family, what is of immediate concern to himself, what delights or pains him right here and now. Too seldom do people realize their importance to others, their influence on and in be­ half of others, their responsibility for their brothers, their fellow men. Recent weeks have seen more and more persons a­ wakening to the needs of their brothers and sisters in Selma and in other areas where civil rights are involved. That concern must also show itself in less spectacular areas and causes-on a neighborhood and family level. The need is there, too.

@rh~ ANCnOR

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Moss. 675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD." GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll "AANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden

C D By Armand

~.

Goulet

A reader writes '4you men­ tioned in your last article' that parents should create the proper Catholic atmo­ sphere in the home. I think that your suggestion of creating table centerpieces with a timely litur­ gical theme is an excellent one to do just that. Would you give us suggestions on how these may be made?"

Well, since we are in the Len­ ten season, and since we win· soon be in Holy Week, it is not too soon to gather the materials needed to teach children the meaning of Christ's death and resurrection. Parents are the natural teachers of their chil­ dren and since the home offens an informal atmosphere condu­ cive to learning, the combination of ,both coupled with parents taking advantage of the oppor­ tunities of the liturgical season will impress upon a child's mind the truths of our faith. To prepare a simple setting for Holy Thursday, the table may be covered with a white table cloth on which is centered a Bible or missal open to the gospel of the day. On these By l\fsgr. George G. Higgins pages may be placed a few Last week's column defended President Johnson against blades of natural wheat (which the unfair, not to say irresponsible, charge ()f being weak most florists have in abundance-) or irresolute in his handling of the tragic civil rights crisis and a bunch of artificial grape:J the LastSupper in Selma, Ala. It is one thing, we pointed out, to disagree to Arecall white lighted candle sYm­ with,the President's strat­ bolic of the presence of ChriSt egy but quite another thing record on the issue of civil at th,e table and the setting of aa rights, has also come to the de­ to question the sincerity of fense of, the President in a extra place depicting the his personal and official ,signed article by Morton Minti Church's hope for the return 01 commitment to the cause of entitled "Potential Harm' Is our separated brethren. are alse meaningful. ' . , interracial justice. This week, Seen in' Sending U.S. Troops.~ Good FrIda,. going one step Mr. Mintz, '8 'Eost staff writer, further, I should For Good Friday, a small piece says, that "one can imagine like to suggest of .purple cloth ,placed, in ~ ·troopsarrivirig' in Selma'* * * that even some Theil what? Their," 'presence center of the table will sta~ of the criticism c,ould ,be used by' segregationists your table setting. Again the leveled against to build . new hatred. Precisely missal can be used, on whicb the President's what would the troops do? How may be placed a crucifix draped strategy - by would they hasten the full grant in purple and a piece of palm prominent woven into a crown of thorns. of voting rights for. Negroes-­ clerics among The children of the house wiD the cause that the agony is all others - was derive a great deal of pleasure about? ' vastly oversim­ in making preparations for Holy "How long would they stay? plified. I have And when they were withdrawn. Saturday. These may be started in mind specif­ -as ultimately they would have by centering the display wi th the ically the in~istent demands by to be-would amity then ulti­ missal topped by a crucifix-un­ some of the President's critics mately reign?" covered this time. Children will have fun making their own col­ that Federal marshals or Federal Admires Decision orful paschal candles. This may troops be sent to Selma to re­ Considerations of this kind dur­ be done by heating colored store law and order and to pro­ stones, which mother may pro­ tect the Negro citizens of that ingthe early days of the crisis­ plus a number of knotty Consti­ vide from some of her old cos­ community. I am not referring here to the tutional problems--led President tume jewelry, over an open flame. Once heated, the stones final march to Montgomery, but Johnson to conclude that send­ ing troops to Alabama would may be individually placed or to the events during the two probably do more harm than imbedded into a candle to pro­ weeks preceding he march. good. duce artistic designs. Five beads Complicated Issue I thoroughly agree with the from an old rosary may be used It is my impression that the President, and I admire his to simplify the explanation of President weighec the pros and statesmanlike dec i s ion - ex­ the ceremony of the blessing of cons of this very complicated pressed so convincingly in his the new fire. issue much more carefully and masterful address to the Con­ The liturgy makes use of the objectively than many of his gress on March 15-"to fight this fire or light as a symbol of critics. It remains to be seen, of battle where it should be fought Christ, whose) teaching enlight­ course, whether or not he acted -in the courts, in the Congress, ens the minds of the faithful and prudently and wisely in refusing and in the hearts of men." whose grace enkindles their to send the troops to Selma dur­ hearts. The use of holy water ing the initial crisis, but he cer­ at this meal will allow parents tainly ought to be given the Establish Council the opportunity to explain itS benefit of the doubt. use both on a daily basis and at On Religion, Race It is interesting to note, by the the ceremony of their baptism, way, that the New York Times, LOUISVILLE, (NC) - Catho­ a time also apropos to the re­ which has consistently and lics, Protestants and Jews have newal of each child's baptismal wholeheartedly supported the established a permanent Coun­ vows. cause of interracial justice, cil on Religion and Race here. Easter Sunday agrees with the President on this The council is an outgrowth The Easter Sund83' dinner usu­ issue, of a religion and race conference ally is quite a festive one where "President Johnson," the Times sponsored last October by the there ar~ children. New clothes, editorialized on March 4, "has Archdiocese of Louisville, the the Easter Bunny and eggs aH been widely criticized in recent Louisville Area Council of add to these wonderful festivi­ days for failing tc send Federal Churches, and the Louisville ties; however, as Catholic par­ troops to Selma. This criticism Conference of Jewish Organi­ ents we should not let material­ seems to be unmerited. The zations. istic customs overshadow the armed forces ought not to be The council's constitution says real meaning of Easter. The in­ used until all other solutions its purpose it to "promote good troduction of the cust'Om of serv­ have failed." will among all people" and to ing a cake made in the form of Ultimate Result "increase the influence of re­ a Paschal Lamb will do much to The Washington Post, which, ligion in ending all forw" 01 impress your children with tlw> vue meaning of Easter. like the Times. has an excellent racial discrimination."

Supports Johnson's Stand On Use of Federal Troops


THE ANCHOR-Diocese of 'Fan River-Thurs., April 1, 1965

Calls' AgricultJure Channel To Economic Growth

Catholic Edu~ator Advises Calmness on Crit~~Bsm

UNITED NATIONS (NC)-The key sector in econ­

omic development in developing countries is agriculture,

according to Dr. B. R. Sen, director general of the United

Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. In an address

before the U.N. population ganization, whereas in the inter-

Commission, Sen said: Crash • national field too little is done,

programs of industrializa­ often too late, to find positive

tion, however attractive po­ solutions to these problems·· •

ntically to those who are under­ standably' impatient for change, eannot meet all these basic con­

ditions for economic growth, un­

less they are also accompanied by an agricultural revolution."

Industrialization and agricul­

tural development must go hand

in hand, he said, "but in devel­

oping countries it is agriculture

that has to protiuce the leverage

IDr economic giowth."

Enough Food According to Sen, there is no doubt that' ''the world could grow enough food to meet all the needs if we made rational use of nature's bounty." But ag­ ricultural fevolutions take time, and in the intermediate period adaptive measures are neces­ sary, many of which cali be brought about through external , aid, while the "increasing sur­ pluses in the developed coun­ tries could be of invaluable help." - The real impediments to prog­ ress, according to Sen are polit­ Ical, institutional and psycho­ logical. "Many societies are still prisoners of their past and are , reluctant to adopt new ideas and new techniques. Progress ill the national sphere is held up by re­ sistance to institutional changes, by lack of' education 'and train­

ing and of investment and' or-,

ColI~g~ tQ

Honor

"Meth~dist ~ishop

ANNAPOLIS (NC) - The

Maryland Senate has passed and sent to the House of Delegates a bill to bring the state's movie censorship system, in line with the U. S. Supreme Court's latest ruling on the issue. The high court on March 1 struck down the state's film licensing law as unconstitutional in a case involving a Baltimore theater manager. It did not, however, rule out all movie censorship but instead required that censorship system observe procedural safeguards. The legislation approved by the state Senate puts the burden of proof on the censors by re­ quiring them to seek a court order to sustain any decision of theirs rejecting a film or order­ ing cuts in it. Previously, it was up to the would-be exhibitor to initiate court' action. The' legislation also would

speed up the entire process by ~uiring them to seek a court ruling within 15 days from the time that a film was first sub­ mitted to the censors.

JERSEY CITY (NC) ....; 'The Archabbey to Drop

Petrean Medal, awarded by St.

High School Classes

Peter's College here to those "who best exemplify the ability;

ST. MEINRAD (NC) - St. eharacter, vision and leadership Meinrad Seminary, a 12-year in­ of St. Peter," will be given to stitution conducted by Benedic­ Methodist Bishop Fred Pierce tines of St. Meinrad archabbey Corson, president of the World here in Indiana, announced its Methodist Council and a 33rd high school department will be degree Mason. discontinued. The seminary high school, or­ Father Leo McLaughlin, S.J.. acting president of St. Peter's, ganized in 1874, will be phased said Bishop Corson was chosen out over the next three years. for the award "on the basis of Effective in September, 1965, the freshman class will be elim­ his performance since the begin­ ning of the ecumenical council. inated. Archabbot Bonaventure Knae­ Bishop Corson was an official bel, O.S.B., said St. Meinrad Protestant observer at the coun­ cil and, said Father McLaughlin, would concentrate in the liberal has helped explain its meaning arts and theological training of seminarians. to the Protestant world. Bishop Corson is the first non­

Catholic to receive the honor

from the college.

Honor Priest NEWARK (NC) - Father '!'bomas J. Carey, pastor of Queen of Angels Church in a Negro apostolate parish here, was presented 'with a brother­ hood citation by the Newark Human Rights Commission for work in the civil rights field. The ,presentation was made by Mayor Hugh Addonizio.

WASHINGTON (NC)-An 'educator whose specialt)" is evaluation of high school programs said ,here teachers and parents too often get "unduly disturbed" by criticism of Catholic schools. Brother E. Anthony told teachers of 35 area high schools at a Catholic Teachers' Institute course offerings of Catholic high here that publicity about the school which seek assistance. He has visited dozens of schools schools have brought a "can­ in the past year.

The sad story is that there is

yet no real feeling for world

community among governments.

In fact, in this respect, t.he gov­

ernments seem to be very much

behind growing public opinion in many countries."

Moves to Revise Censor System

c~~ ~ CO. . C

did self-appraisal" that offers "satisfaction, hope and confi­ dence in the future." The Christian Brother is di­ recting a special three-year year project under auspices of the National Catholic Education Association to evaluate the

MEDALIST: Dr. Fred­ erick D. Rossini, dean of the College of Science, Univer­ sity of Notre Dame, is this year's recipient of the Lae­ tare Medal, awarded each year on the fouith Sunday of Lent by the University to an outstanding American Cath­ olic layman. Dr. Rossini was cited for "nearly 40 years of dedicated service to science, higher education and govern­ ment." NC Photo.

Student 'Pilgrimage LQ~DON (NC) - Led by a priest, more than 100 students from London, Nottingham and Oxford Universities will walk' 120 miles to the famed Marian shrine at Walsingham during Holy Week carrying a 7-foot wooden cross in a revival of a tradition begun in the 11th cen­ tury during the reign of King St. Edward the Confessor.

PrelClte Leads ,Rights Ma rch WICHITA (NC)-Bishop Leo C. Byrne led more than 1,000 in an interfaith silent march for civil rights here in Kansas, and joined in a memorial service for ~ late Rev. James J. Reeb. The Rev. Mr. Reeb, 36, Uni­ tarian minister from Boston and native of Wichita. died following injuries received in a beating by Selma, Ala., segregationists. The service took place on the steps of the Federal Building here after, a march from the Sedgwick County Court House. Bishop Byrne, in the invoca­ tion, asked God's mercy for

America and said "somehow all

of us are guilty." ' "As long as such conditions are allowed to endure, we are part of that terrible conspiracy ••• We beg mercy for Selma, for Wichita, for all of A:merica," he prayed.

"We have discovered," he said, "that we are not complacent and simply marking time, but that our personnel are engaged in the most extensive in-service programs ever witnessed in. American education." -roo often," he continued, "teachers and parents are un­ duly disturbed by random and unsubstantiated criticism direct­ ed toward our Catholic schools. "Simply because some journal or the daily press selects for publication an isolated criticism of the work done in our schools, we tend to exaggerate the im­ portance of the criticism by giving it far more attention, than it deserves. "We should welcome criticism that makes us pause and analyze the outcomes we are seeking and achieving in our schools. If the criticism is valid, we should do something about it. But let us not forget that all education, public and private, is the favor­ ite target for public opinion."

Bible Exhibition HONG KONG (NC)-Protes­ tants and Catholics here are jointly promoting a Bible exhi­ bition featuring the various tYJ;?es of translatio~ of the Sa­ cred Scriptures into Chinese.

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,Tountonjans' Aid 'Loca,' Novitiate

8 ,

,

Family, Enjoys Annual ,Lenten Treat of 'Oozy Oyster'

'Edward Franco and Mrs; . . thur Botelho will serve as c... chairmen for the annual peIU17, sale sponsored by the Knights of Columbus Council No. 82 «It Taunton and the Villa Fatima Helpers for the benefit of t~ Sisters of St. Dorothy Vil1aoo Fatima Novitiate, Taunton. The event will be held ThunJoo day evening, April 22, at • o'clock in the C.Y.O. Hall 011 High Street,.Taunton. The proceeds will be used foe! the education of the sisters ill order that their work with the training of youth might expand. Anyone wishing to make a d0­ nation of a prize may contact the Sisters at the Villa or eit~ of the co-chairmen. A very large committee fJ'OJlll each organization is assistinS ~ this vast undertaking.

By Mary Tinley Daly Poor Richard, quoting John Gay (1716) spoke truly when he said, "That man had sure a palate cover'd o'er, with brass or steel, that on'the rocky shore First broke the oozy oyster's pearly coat, and riq'd the living morsel down his throat." elf te At " our house the Iingers WI'th the knife or the OOzy oys r and many of oyster shells." Its companions as we can Newest convert to the art at round up get warm, almost our house was Brad, bridegroom uproarious welcome. At least once during Lent While the months with the ' "r" in them are' :still with us, we hint-just hint, mind you-that a ~amily oyster JOast is being con t e m ­ plated. That's all it takes to eet the ball roll­ ing. "We're free n ext Friday," :Mary telephones "or almost anF Friday * * *" ' "We have a baby sitter lined up for Friday," calls Pat, "Or maybe the Friday after?" I'll be down by the wharf on Friday afternoon," Johnny tells us in his practical way. "Sup­ pose I pick up a bushel of oys­ ters and we'll get the thing roll­ lng." Settled. A bushel of oysters, a keg of heer sliced tomatoes crackers and 'cheese and we'r~ in busi­

ness.

Dress do-in manner casion:

for dinner? Of course we the rough and ready appropriate to the 00­ sneakers. slacks, sport

lIhirts.

Arena for the feast? The kitchen, where else? We cover the breakfast alcove table thick­ ,with newspapers set out the ~ sliced tomatoes, the crackers and eheese--that's for the "formal" part of the meal. for the oysteJ'l!l after they've been roasted. We set the oven to 350 degrees, load the oven trays with as many of the "succulent bivalves" as they will hold, then gather 'round for the first course, the -raw bar" at the kitchen sink during the half-hour or so it takes to roast the main course. Question of whether they're better raw or roasted has never been unanimously settled. You pays your money and you takes ,your choice. The Head of the House, an old Chesapeake Bay man, reared on oysters since boyhood" is presid­ ing prelate of the raw bar. Armed with sharp oyster knife, he opens bivavles quickly and adeptly, instructing neophytes in the art of cutting the muscle, saving the good juice to drink. and ,"Watch out, don't cut your

,

Issue Activity Books For Blind Children TRENTON (NC)-The Missioll Helpers of the Sacred Heart here in New Jersey have issued in Braille the activity books they publish for Catholic children at­ :tending public schools.: The community's; "Religion Mssons for Catholic Living" have been duplicated :,in Braille on plastic film for use by blind ehildren from PJ"..-school to high ~ool age. '

To Instali Dames Patronesses :of Sacred Heart Home, New Bedford will hold their annual meeting and installation at 1:30 Suqday after­ noon, April 25 in the home audi­ torium. ' In charge of arrange­ ments is Miss Edna .Langevin. The unit's 40th anniversary will be marked Wednesday, May 5 at New Bedford Hotel.

of a few weeks, attending his first "rough and ready" and getting quite a few nicks along the way. So a box of bandages was added to the paraphernalia over the sink. Lenten Treat Pretty soon, the aroma from the oven of those fat juicy oys­ ters popped open in all their delicious flavor sends us from the raw bar to the newspaper covered table. Unceremoniously. Tim, the hot oyster handler, dumps the. dozens of roasteds onto the mIddle of the table and we all dig in. Some like 'em in a plain vinegar-salt-pepper dip, others ta~e to a stronger ketchup-horseradish accompan­ iment. At any rate oysters raw, oys­ ters roasted, plus the salad and as final fill-up. crackers and a couple of kinds of cheese, plus the finest component of all-good companionship-add up to a real Lenten tr~at. By tradItion at our house, the "Oyster Poem" by the Head of the House is always recited by, its author, part of it going like this: "Oystel'l in May are passe, In June, July, August, they say. Here's what was told me today In a highly respected cafe: 'A man who'd eat oysters out of season Must be a chap who'. lost hill reason.

J.

DOMINICAN WINNERS: Scholarship winners to D0­ minican Academy, Fall River; are, front: full tuition win­ ners Virginia F. Rivard of St. Anne's Parish; Madeleine P. Delisle of St. Mathieu Parish; Elaine Desrosiers of St. Anne's Parish; rear:partial tuition winners Lucille I. Gauvin of Blessed Sacrament Parish; Paula A. Labounty of St. Dominic Parish; Elizabeth A. St. Amand of Blesed Sacra­ ment Parish j Carol A. Bernier of St. Jean Baptist Parish.

Second Mistake Sisters of Charity Gets NASA Invitation

To Train as Astronaut

CoNVENT (NC) - For the aecond time in as many days, a nun received an "invitation" to apply for training as an astranaut. Sister Jane Edmund Callanan of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth said it "would be nice to qualify" but she couldn't­ she doesn't have 20/20 vision. A spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Admin-

istration said the whole thing was a mistake--just like the in­ vitation to Sister M. Margaret Bealmar, a Benedictine studying at the University of Notre Dame was a mistake. The invitation, he said, was one of "hundreds of form letters sent to members of scientific and professional organizations all over the country." There were too many names to check, he said.

Asks Students Help Pay Selma Expenses PURCHASE (NC) - Cathol'­ college students have been asked to help pay expenses for n~ and priests involved in Selma. Ala., protests against denial ~ voting rights to Negroes. In a letter sent to student b~ presidents, Mercedes McGann. vice-president of external affai1'll for the National Federation of Catholic ColI e g e Students (NFCCS), said the National Catholic Conference for Intel'­ racial Justice (NCCIJ) had spent almost $15,000 for expe~ so far.

London Center Aids Irish Immigrants LONDON (NC) - The ~ hostels operated here by the London Irish Center accommo­ dated 1,073 persons during the past year, most of them yoUDIJ immigrants.

Says Jewish Decree

Test of Good Faith

PITTSBURGH (NC)-Promul­ gation by the Second Vatican Councll of "the Jewish decree remains unfinished business of utmost importance," Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, director of inter­ religious affairs for the Ameri­ can Jewish Committee, said here in Pennsylvania. Rabbi Tanenbaum told the AJC local chapter "millions of people have come to invest the passage of that declaration' with symbolic meaning, as an ulti­ mate test of the good faith of the Catholic Church toward the Jewish people and the Church's commitment to clarify 'orbi et urbi' (for the city and the world) its ancient contradictions and ambivalences toward the people , of Israel."

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New Bedford Women New Bedford District of the Diocesan Councll of Catholic Women will sponsor an evening of recollection Wednesday, April 21 at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth. Diilner will be served following a 5:30 Mass. Next district meeting is sched­ uled for Tuesday, April 27 at St. Therese Church, and wiD feature election of officers.

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Now'ls Time to' Plant Roses,

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., April 1, 1965

,Also Gay Easter Egg Tree It's rose planting time again and for those people who J.'OSe8, I will be presumptuous enough to name a few. I say presumptuous, because there are so many good roses on the· market that it is difficult to make a choice and roses eggs from her apron. 'l"be eggs are really a matter of pe~­ rolled out to the farthest corners aonal preference. However. of the world to ten of the cmning fire goes: Besurrectlon. JlaJTs tears which

.-e not sure about names of

had laDen upon the eggs formed the brilliant dots of eolor and pattern that have since beeD . .-ous plant. Yellow tinged with used to decorate them. pink. Should not be confused '1'here are two ways to prepant with Pink PeaCf" or Chicago -. egg for decorating; (1) it can Peace which are both good roses be hard-cooked ..Dl' (2) its eonand are oHs»rings of Peace. tents Dl87 be blown from the Crimson Glory-This is a red. shell. In the latter process. a IIybrid tea of medium. height. It pin hole is placed at either end .. a gOOd bloomer with ~ of the shen and. by blowing flowers which hold their shape through one hole the contents of and do not purple in hot the egg are forCed out the other :weather. hole•. I prefer this method since Tropicana-An orange hybrid the empty shell uia7 be kept for tea rose of medium height. The Jelll'S. out of reach of cl1ildren of !lowers are not overly large but course, while the bard-cooked we long lasting and of a bril- YUiety bas a much shorter life. liant colM. I find it a little difTo color the prepared egg. lieult to shape. , food eoloring may be used full Queen Elizabeth - A grandi- strengtl1, or if poster paint is tiara rose about six feet talL available, it does a handsome Pink flowers of IIledium size but job. Last Easter we made a tree in unbelievable numbers. A using eggs decorated with Liturvery vigorous favorite. gical designs. These we drew on Circus-A floribunda. Multi- the colored eggs using a small brush and poster paint or eolorett. eolored., with fIoweI'll ranginc from yellow to orange to red. ink. This will help the children place the true importance 1IPOIl A proUfie lIIIlall plant (to a height fif two feet) which lo&ks Easter, for as they draw the dove QIDbolizing the Holy Spirit. they lovely as a hedge or alone. Ivory ~()D,-Anotherflori- will come to a greater underllanda w1Iicl1 graws to a height standing than if they . , aboat two feet. This is all!IQ .iIrawing Bugs :BumI7 or Mother • prolific blDomel: but its bea1lt7' Goose. lies in its almost white flowers' A few LIturgieat SJJDbols are: which· open gadually .10 a 3dABcension---the golden crown low celltel'. "Dds iS1l 1i:ttIe standiQgfor tile vietory al Peace-ThIs is probab17 the

1test rose of all time. Large magllificent blooms on a tan. \fig-

were

1Ieauty.

Paddon -

Christ Penteciost-4be· dove. S7mbol

-.Rstanding

of the Holy Spirlt 'l\iDity - An equilateral tri-, -eJe of three equal circles In triangular form. are the reminder of the :rather, S<Bl and Holy Spirit These designs may be embel~ with glitter, 8equins Dl'

Considered· one of. the best ~ TaIler til-. most, it stiD retains the prOlific ebaracteristic of floribun4u while its color III a subtle apricot. . This small Jist does l'lOt evea IICl'lrtch the surface of available JOBeS. For a listing and rating of

,.

roses. write

to ·the

MOUNT SCHOLARS: Award Scholarships ti) 'Mt. St. Fan River, are, front: fun tuition winners Anne Louise Hefko of St. Patrick's School; Patricia Anne Talbot of Cathedral School; Cynthia Joan O'Connell of St. Jean's School; rear: Anne Louise Bibeau i)f St. Antoony'a School, Portsmouth; Mary Regina Crosson of St. Louilf School; Christine Ann Wilding of SS. Peter and Paul School; and Cheryl Anne Flll'tado of HolT Ghost SchooJ, Tiverton.

Mary Academy.

How-to-Do-It Two Veteran. Chicago Policemen C~nsel Nuns On Best Ways to COmbat Crime and- Evi1 TECHNY (NC)-Two veteran t:biago polieemI!n were epeHem who ·eouDlJeIled 500 Illinois DUDS about invading sordid fields of eveI'7da7 life in tbe war .against eviL Sgts. Bernard Brown and .John Bouzan of. the DUeOti.ea divisiQD at the police departmeat, eaJightieiled the Sisten OIl what to expect if they decided to enter.the battle againsi drag ad-

amor.ac

Chi.

diction. ston~ from old jewelry. The American Rose Society, 4048 BiUed as "how-to-do-it" proRoselea Place, Columbus, Ohio stones adhere very well with gram of personal involvement in model glue. One way we found G214. The list is free and is individWll parishes and neighYery useful. Or better yet, go to to display our eggs is to glue a tile New England Rose SocietTs Peele of ribbon to one end of the borhoods. the meetiDg was IPOIlW'Iower Show held in Boston. egg aDd attach it to an Easter sored by the Holy Spirit . . ftis is aI8D free of cllarge an4 eM tree. easil)' JDade by placing si0Dar7 Sisters. win give ~ the opportmrlt7 011. a pleasingly ~ tree branch . Sister ThereseM.arie GIl U. ..m.g roses and selecting 1ho8e into a plant pot. secariDg it wit1J. dirt or clay. Both branch and wdeties wbieh appeal to you. College Receives Grants pot can then be sprayed Iold. m t1le JDteheD salve Begina College. NewaIvel' or aDY ClCber eolor FOIl As the beauti:ful seaIJOD .of desire. 'ftte chiJdl'en'. master- port, bas received a gnmt of IIIiiIfer ~s, the dare pieces (eracks included) are $10.000 from Robert Goe1et. 1dDdows are fiDed with the DOD- then bung on the bTllDch. This donor of the school'. original Christian .,mbols of this day. makes a striking and meaningful cpnpus, to develop its proBaonies,. balfkets and P69l' Eater. decoration and is fun for gram for teachers for the men) ~ y tiw eb1cks are everytally retarded. Also r~ived all ,the family. where. The motber Of the house was a $7100 grant from the U.s. Tbe'E!gg8 ma,y.be stored in . . ~ r s at the ,nsion of chocoegg carton Mid takeR out Public Health 5er9ice in Clm1liiie rabbits and. decorated beDS eDlPtT aeetion wi1h a coane on Imagain at Christmas time, fDl' UIe7 ,-.at will crowd the refrigerator make charming trilOlllin,p Jar . . JX'!lIftd methods of JWl'lIihg care. . . weeks to come. These me;m.. wbieh will be open to aupenis.everJlreen tree. .......,. decorations have ,a tenKT uunes unable tID IIDderbke ~ to obaiiw:e the true sig,. . . . periods of full-tIMe st1Id:F. ~eo fJiI. 1he ioY we sbDuld NewQedford Foresters .~ Methe I!eIIU1'ftlCtion of ,Chriai.. at. Ewau." Court. !lew .... Bow; t.owe. ., is a good time ford As8ociBIIOll al F6UJ:, .. to idart1;hlnJdng ,of ODe Bater will attend . . eftIdng al'reeoI4IIIriWoI UIat em. restoft t1Ie IeetiaIl W ~ . April U .& Clljr.istian . . . .ing of Easter, the Bisbop stang Bi&b School. NOI'Gl ~ eg.. It III a true rembuier DuImouth. AD. auction is .,ftbe Resarrectton. for i - • planned We~, June 16. . . dUcken breaks the shen at ..... so Chriit came forth from

ti

tomb. There is a Jovel7 Je~ that tells how th~ Blessed

.either came before Pilate to ptEiJid for ~ lIOn, earryinc In ~ apron a' gift of fresh eggs.. IJpbD he~ of Pilate's rebuke. . . . fell on . . knees spilling the

, SHA Alumnae Alumnae of the class of 1950 .. Sacred Hearts Academy, Fan Bii'er, win hold a reunion SaturdaY., May 29 at the Officen'< Club, Newpon Naval StRtiOA.

HUTCHINSON'S ART lHOPPE 135 FRANKlIN STREET fAll RIVER OS 2-0211 .' Picture Framing • ~rf

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Plan Homes Tour In Cape Area

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

9

ho.t .,..muni17 said that mms, If ~ *ould be eoaoemecl mel effeetlve in helping 10 ClClIDbat, evil in work with the Spanillb-lpeaking. Negroes. lDlwed -.Rbel'a, the poor,the rkh. divorcees. drug addfction. prostit1ItlGD. akohoU- . . hoepiUl ~

In mauy areu, Sister Therese J4:ar1e &aid. nl.JIlli could venture w1iere it is culturally impossible for a priest to take the initiative ID. CODiacting people involved.

St. Patrick's Circle of Wareham and the Catholic Woman" Club of Marion will co-sponsor a tour of homes, "Come Follow Our Feasts," from 1 to 4:30 Palm Sunday afternoon, April 11. The tour will begin in Marioa at the home of Dr. and MI'lI. Robert Johnson on Holmes Street, where the Advent Feasts win be depicted. Next will be the bome of Mr. and Mrs. William Begley on QueUe Lane, Marion, for the feasts of Christmas and the Epiphany. Holy Thursday will be observed at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop Baylies, Allen Street; and Good Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard mile. The hOme of Mr. and MI'lI. RIchard Sullivan Sr. on Cromesett Road, Wareham, will be decorated for Holy Saturday and the home of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Moore, 154 High street, Wueham, for Easter. Pentecost, Cerpu Chrtstl Tbe tour will proceed to the home of Mr. and Mn.Edwani Tamagin•• Wgh Street. Warebam. 1m: Pentec:ost; and to the home of 1IrIl. ,Joseph Stott, 3M Main street. lor Corpus ChristL Mrs. Emile C. St. .Jaceiues. 114 JIiQ. street, wfll IIbow the feast of Cana anad .the tour will cliJDaJ[ at St. PaU1ek'a IIaJl. High Street. Wuehaat ... refftsbmen. 8nd a dilIpIaT of ..-_tL lim. .IotIepb W. Moore Ia ~ en! dIainDan, aided .bJ' 11m. Bobert S. . . . . alld JIlL William Lera..... Rev. SolID Z. Smith ill 1IiiOderataa' lor boIIl

eJaI&

Plein SUpper, Hat Show Besenatio.- will dose . . . . .

da7, April Ie lor a meatple· supper aDd ~ hat abow scheduled fDl' Thursday, AprU !2 in St. AJuln BOlIPita1 eafeteria by the Fall River CathOlic Nurses' Guild. The public is invited and prizes will be awwded.

ThiDking

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-·i'j~~,."·,, ... ·' "".'~"-"I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April " 19.65 . ,

~e~o~ship HGI~s

Cardinal Shehan Sees Cau'se .For Optimism About Unity

Youth Magazine

ARTIST: Victorio Emmanuele Mariani, VaticaJf Press Office doorman for 20 years, devotes himself to his first interest, sculpture and medal designing. NC Photo.

:MADRID (NC)~Two weekly issues of Signo, the publication of the Spanish Catholic Youth movement, were not permitted by the Spanish government to be printed here, presumably be';' cause of articles commen{ing oft disturbances among university students. The official pretext used for . the news blackout was that Signo's editor, Rafael GonzaleZ, did not have professional documents required to carry out his duties. 'Spanish journalists niusi be approved by the National Press Association before they Me recognized .. professional journalists. Two issues were withheld from publication. The magazine had prepared comments on the disturbances among university students who were discontented with the student. union con':' trolled by the F8Iange movement, Spain'. ority political party. Nea'rly all Spanish jotirna~ are subjected to prior censorship by government authorities.~ Twice before, in 1964 and 1958, issues of Signo have been with':' held by the government. Oil other occasions the magazine haa left blank spots on its pages all a silent protest against the censorship ot certain articles.

Sister To Wear Secular Garb As Job Corps Consultant

Belief Necessa ry For Citizenship

. WEBSTER GROVl!:S (NC)- government assignment she Sister Francetta Barberis has again will don. the religious retired as president of Webster habit. College here in Missouri to bePermissionto wear secular dresS come a civilian-garbed consultant ~o ~he U.S. government's came from the Loretto nuns' headquarters 'in Nerinx, Ky., Job Corps. Sister Francetta has received through Sister Mary Luke Tobin, permission to wear secular dress sup~ior general. dress in her,post with the Office With the Job Corps it is ex-, of Economic Opportunity. in peeted .that the nun will serve. Washington, D. C., in place of centers being established in the habit of the Sisters of Loret- , urban. areas to provide training-· 10 which she has worn since in homemaking and, working joining the comm\lnityin 1918. skills to girls between the ages . When she returns to ,the col- of 16 and 21 as Part of the govlege and is off duty from' her ernment's war on poverty, '

OTTAWA (NC) - The Supreme Court of &tario has ruled tha~ Persona who apply for Canadian dtizenship must believe in God..' " . The- provincial SupremeCouri upheld a lower,. court ruling against ,an. athl!ist eouple. denied, citizenship on the grounds that they were ineligible to· take the oath of allegiance, which, .in.,., eludes the w..-ds ~'so· help me God." , The couple, :Mr. and Mrs,Ernest Bergsma of Caledonia, Ont., came 10 Canada nine years ag. from HOIland.

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore said here that there is reason for a "degree of optimism" about religious unity. "Obstacles of greatimportance" still remain, he said, but "we can hardly believe that we would have come so the endowments which go to far without the blessing of of build up and give life to the God and. His grace." Cardi- Church itself-the life of grace; nal Shehan is chairman of falth,hope and charity; together 'the U. l;l. Bishops~ Commission for Ecumenical Affairs. In midMarch a group of theologians ,-,epresenting'the commission' and the National Lutheran Council engaged in discussion in his archdiocese and mapped plans for further Lutheran-Catholie talks. The cardinal spoke at a civic l'eception celebrating the bestowal of the pallium-a woolen band worn over the shoulders ,and symbolizing episcopal authority-on Archbishop John P. Cody of New Orleans. Protestant and 'Jewish representatives were present for the occasion. He spoke in detail of the ecumenical council's decree .on ecuinenism, .calling it "undOUbtedly the first hopeful and effective step the Church has taken in many centuries in the directiOn -, .f universal Christian reunion." He said the ecumenism' decree makes it clear that there can be no compromise by Catholics on matters of doctrine and warns against "false irenicism which eould so easily lead to excesses and abuses." , But at the same time, Cardinal Shehan declared,' the council " uocument takes a "new look" at . non-Catholic. Christians and the .' Church's relationship to 'them. ., ,"Besides being incorporated •.. iDt.o Christ ~y Baptism'-a thing ··t)teChurch has always .held"'~tlr separated brethren, also" ',. '!!bare with the Church cettain " , fqndamentaJ doctrines," he said. 'Among , t~ese ,hf' listed belief in the . Trinity and hi Christ as Savioj,lr, and veneraUon for 'sacred Sc_riptures and for Mary. . "They have moreover m,any

with the internal gifts of the Holy Spirit," he said. On the subject of joint worship, the cardinal said that ,"in certain special circumstances," such as prayer services foJ:' unity and ecumenical gather-ings it is "allowed" and even "desirable" that Catholics pray to gether with others.

Support Nuns In ··Marches NERINX (NC):.-.A prorninent U. S" Sister said here in Kentucky she supports the participation of nuns in the Selma, Ala.; protestlIlarches and in the sympathy demonstrations h e 1 d elsewhere 'in the country. Sister Mary Luke said she rated the nuns' presence as "very much in line with the pastoral eoncerns of thf! Church." Sister Luke is superior general of the Sisters of Loretto, whose motherhouse is here. She is also chairman of the Conference of Major Superiors of Women's Religious Communities and was the first U. S. woman auditor at the Vatican Council. 'Irian inter~iew, she explained that the 'conference, which 'rep:' resents some 425 sUPeriors of l!isterhoo~s, :has t.aken no 'stanel . cmdemo,nstrations. assuc:h and ClQn&equently she'. could. , Jlot spepkforthat body.. '. DeCisions .to send Sisters Alabama, or, to permit them 10 m,ar(;h in sympathy demonstra-' tions, she said~ w.ere made on,the local level by. heads of Vidivid-'-1 communities..

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"Brown,Student Interest In' Religion Runs High

1'HE ANCHOR.... Thurs., April 1, '965

University Figh~ Brings R'equest By Trustees

PROVIDENCE (NC)---:-Daniel Callahan, first visiting professor of Catho.lic studies_ in the history of Brown University, said here that he has found "considerable interest" in religion among university students. CalIa-him, 34, who i8 also an associate editor of this develQpment reflects "a Commonweal magazine,' said ,general response to the spirit .,. this Interest includes the' renewal afiii unity" and a "grow.Catholic Church in particu;' . ing awareness that CatholiciSm Jar as well as religion in gener-

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has:.l1ot: in' the past been adequately,represented in the religion departments' of non':'€atholic,.universities." ·"The appointments are also in keeping, with the ecumenical spirits, oj : our . tiIne," he ,said. '''I'hey show that Protestants, the Greek Orthodox, Jews and Ca~ho1i.cs,arewUling to continue in this dialogue."

He sai$! in an interview that it is bis impression that "reli'. cion has a new academic re,speetability"on campuses today. Rebellion, "From time immemorial," he aid, "students have rebelled against religion during collegeusually as, a rebellion against pgrents. 1 think there is perhaps less of this now, if only because a genuine concern with religion. " CI . eafi be part of the rebellion of students against parents who PoU~ical treat religion as just one more PITTSBURGH (NC)-Bishop ~ulturally necessary item. -John 'J; ,-Wright advanced a "I WQuid further guess th_ .three-part suggestion for imthe fact tllat not only the Cath~. ,provemen,tof., political morality elic Church but also the Protin the ~nited States. . .tant churches .are less smu, "Fhst;. tile - general level of 'ROW, less cocksure of them. selves, has been 'a good' thing~ 'morality· in·the United States One feels that the churches are must'be raised. This is basically tterhaps more approachable." an individual problem, but it is Assistant' . «me which is part of theresponc8nahan served as assistant to sibility of government, as well Bristish historian Christopher as of all constructive social inDawBon several years ago when stitutions," the bishop of PittsDawson was' first holder of the burgh told a Chamber ot ComStillman chair of Catholic stud- merce breakfast meeting. ies at Harvard University. Since Second, ethical standards in then similar professorships of business and in the professions, too, must be refreshed and even Catholic studies ·have peen., etl- . raised, primarily for the sake of tablished at Yale and Brown. business and the professions . Callaban, a: former teaching h I b I fellow in Catholic stUdies at the t emseves, ut a so for theeffects which improved standards arv,ar." d. ' ivin1ty school, Nid ~ '4' in these fields wilt have on morality in government," he added. TOLEDO (N€) ~ 'Some4t ''Third, we must seek and imnuns, several priests -and mem- plement means to.develop in the },ers of the€atholiclnterracial United States a code of ethics for Coul\cll here in Ohio joined in men in public office and lay a ,downtown march of 2,000 per-, moral foundations upon which sons demonstrating sympathy we can build a legal tradition of for Negro vote registration' ef- the high honor and responsibil"forts in Alabama andadvocatinl ity of government office,'" the bishop' stated; .-.ederti intervention:.

Pre I' te De • ·crles Morality

For Civil Right$

1,

JAMAICA (NC)-A fOFWIer dean of the law school at New York's St. John's University has been appointed by the board of trustees te study and recommend changes in the university's organizational structure and educational, administrative, managerial and liJlancial policies and practices. With his appointment Fathel' Joseph T. Tinnelly, C.M., als. received power to consult virtu':' alJy anyone he wishes on the subjects, inclUding the university's administrative officer~ staff, faculty, student .a n ci alumni. ! ... The appointme~t came in the wake of a controversy betweeJi ihe administration and some PIETA: One.of several studies for a composition on the faculty members and students. subject of the Pieta, the work of Victorio Emmanuele MarProtest 'iani. NC Photo. The controversy came ~ .. Bead when some 200 teachera walked out of a general faculty meeting after one professor 'read a statement of protest-. . The state~nt complained. 0:1: ARLINGTON (NC) - The great issues now being debated, Christian Excellence Medal of and .not shun them "because yo. lack of a voice by faculty members in the shaping of univer,sity Marymount College of Virginia are not 'directly' involved." policies; rejection of a reque'" has been awarded posthumously "Perhaps the involvement of to President John F. Kennedy. religious groups in the cause of for across-the-board salary inereases, and refusal to grant auIt was received by the late Prescivil rights is one of the greatest ident's sister-in-law, Mrs. Rob- evidences of respect for human tomatic tenure upon promotio. to associate professor. . ert F. Kennedy, the first recip- dignity," he said. Three days after the teachers" ient of the medal in 1961. "Catholic schools have risked protest, some 700 students stagell' Speaking at the award ceremony, 'Msgr. Francis T. Hurley, their clientele in desegregatingi a protest rally, at which they Assistant General Secretary of pastors of many religions have recommended: greater academie the National Catholic Welfare risked their pulpits in speaking freedom, especially the lifting .. Coilfe'rence, emphasizea the im- for open' housing; men and administration censorship of stu-' ponance of making persenal de- w9mell of all religion,S' are risk· , dent pu'bli c a ti OIU; an. end inJ safety and their. very lives _ adnlinistration·"paternalism" cisions in Christian life today. - He asked the students: "Are to demonstrate to the world that- ~oward stUdents;· securing fae-, you going to inforinyourself see voting is a basic right. :Why? ..lty advice in' shaping seboot you. can make a decision en· the They respect the dignity (}f AU- policies; higher faculty salaries, merits of the iAue and' net . Irian beings who have for years aJld abolition (>f, the mandatory been the victims of discrimina- , retirement-at-65 rule for faculty m..el~ because someone mil so?" ' ,. tion.These demonstrators haw. membera.. A week Jater anothe. .. He urged that they makeup high personal spiritual motives, rally waS held, at which faculty' their own minds; aSsume. their but the object of their action ill members and students attacketl the administration. personal responsibility iii the the human being."

Receives Posthumous Award For Late President Kennedy

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·The H"manity of Christ-

Knowledge of Egyptology Aids Proper - Appreciation .

God ·Love -You By Most ReT. FaJton J. Sheen, D.D. One wonders if we heed aufficiently the human nature ol Christ. It was, indeed, the Temple of God, for Divinity dwelt IaHim enfleshed. If you put an electric light bulb in an alabaster vase, the vase glows and becomes incandescent. Why then should not Christ's Humanity have had the same irridescent beauty? It did on the Mount of Transfiguration and it probablT would haw at all other times If He had not prevented. It. But, more important still, this human nature He took was related to every human person who would ever live. We were in Him--our flesh _ blood; for all the human race both before Him and after Blm was coDeentrated in that human Ark of the Covenant. He was the representative of every man; every African. every Aldatie, every Buddlust., every Communist, every Christian.

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. KeBDedy

What country besides Egypt has a science named for

it? I know of none. There is a vast body of slowly assembled . and systematized knowledge about. respectively, Greece and Rome, for example, and about ancient China and the Sumerian e~iza.tion. B~ and honored in death. One waJb Egyptology 18 Unique. It 18 along the wide crepuseular coralso rich and complex. And ridor hewn· out of .tid rock, the present-.. day visitor to stopping at Diche after nlebe in Egypt who wants properlT 'appreciate the rem 8 ins of ancient Egypt which he will Re, should have a smattering of the findings of tbis science. For the guide serYice is woefUl17', indeed scandalously, inadequate. With so much to show why does ~t show it 80 wretchedly? We met a group of Germana who had been provided with a splendid guide, a very lntell1gent-looking you n g Egyptian woman who spoke fluently in a wen modulated voice. She liecompanied the party of 210 throughout their tour of the - country. This, however, is the enviable exception.' . The EngHsh..-pea1dng pel"8Oll . . group, by eontrast, is Hkel7tD have a series of guides, one ill Cairo, lIIlOther in Thebes. a tblrd in Assuan. ~ so on. '!'be)" ~ be colorfully cbessed, but ...t is about the extent of tbeir

which is set an enormous granite sarcophagus. The . sileDee is absolute, the gloom. ielieved only by a few electric Jigh1s at intervala, and as one paces and stares, one ~onders the strange beliefs and practices of men. To return to the pyramids, the most- famous are at Giza. again not tar from Cairo. And of these the greatest is that of Cheops, which came into being only a Uttle later than the Step Pyramid. Until relatively recent times, it was the tallest structure in the world, and your guide is sure to tell you that it could swallow up not only St. Peter's in Rome but half-a-dozen of the other principal churches in Christendom as welL The weight ofeacb of ~ more than two million stone blocks whic1' it comprises, is estimated at twt' and one-half tons. Prodigious Temples Several hundred miles to the south is Luxor, which the Greeks called Thebes. Its beginDings have been set at 225fJ B.C., and it became one of the greatest of the cities of Egypt. It was, and MCOJIlPlishments. iIJ, a double eity: a city of the Jiving on the east bank Of the Sarwhbc WODc1en. But the surviving wooden. at NIle. a city of the dead 011 the . ..dent Egypt are not lost eftll westbank On the east bank, travelling In . . (lIle so outrageously (and ex• carriqe drawn by a pitiabq pensively) m-eerved. He shoaJd haft doDe some reading before boaT horse. hi the bright sunIds .trip, and If he has, be will - light which becomes JntolerabIT bOw that Egyptlar. history &'OelJ hot by aftemoon even in winter, bIck to, roughly, 3,000 B.C. Spe- ~ !lee the ruins of two prodicialists date f:he prehistoric pe- gious temples, eonsiderabl7 reriod in Egypt as beginning about moved from each other but onee connected by a broad, stone1,500 years 'before that. . paved sphinx-lined a ve n u e In this land, by tUrns barren and prodigally fertile, there de- which is gradually being reconveloped a civilization almost structed. Many kings .had a hand in completely original, and one that reached a level of brilliance fashioning these marvels and are long ages before Europe was memorialized in and by them. eivilized. The glory of Egypt And one of these k:inp was • Ihone dazzlingly for almost woman. She W88 not a queen, three millenia. Some put its ex- for, although the rOyal inheritinction at the Persian conquest tance was through the queen,. in 525, some at thl'! conquest by queen did not rule. Hatshep9ut, Alexander the Great in 322, both to whom we refer, did rule. and B.C. masterully. Hany Mysteries Defaces HoalUlllllllta _ . There are still many gaps in She held the throne for some the story, and many mysteries, 20 years, probably in the late but the astounding thing is that Bixteenth and early fifteenth. ... SO much of it has been retrieved, centuries B.C. She was known • and there is almost as much fas- king, and representatiODS of her cination in the methods of dis- depict her, despite her obviouslT covery (archaeological, for ex- feminine form -aJJd ~J~ ~ ample and philological) as in the gree of beauty,."wearing some discoveries themselves. garments which only men wore Synonymous with Egypt in tile and ~e false. ~rd 'W"ith wbidl popUlar mind are the pyramids. the king, a ciivnd17 ..... ~ But the popular mind is pnlb- shown. ably unacquainted with the earGealus of BcQIBest of'these,erected shortlY·after The obelift. is' the fin8t me1'700 B.C. and located at sakkara, morial of Hatshepsut CIIl the east aot fat from Cairo. This is the bank of the Nile, but wheD. GIlle, Step Pyramid, so call,ed because crosses those wlde.greea 1P1Ileu; tu sides were not finished with to the west bank, where t8e fana smooth· stone facing. A build- tastic necropolis Is situated, with bulging l1eJ" ing of such magnitude had never before .b~en attempted. crowning - tt.,' Mention should be made here temple at Deir el Bahrl. _ ef the Serapeum at Sakkara. Here one grasps' the. fact tbl:tt This is much later in date, but the 'Greeks did not inveli\ the while we are in the neighbor- temple form as we know it froql hood we can take note of it. n is Greek aP.d Roman remains. Im--; a huge subterranean vault -in disputably, the Acropolis owes: which are the sarcophagi of 24 something to Hatshepsut. One'I&cred ' bulls. astonishment at the genius of 'Absolute Silence Egypt in antiquity is heightened There was only one sacred. as, in the dry air and under the bull at a time, the Apis Sull, the glittering sun, one pRiI on painstakingly identified by the this epitomization of beauty and sages of the kingdom, then set majesty, -so nobly proportioned apart, defied, pi/mpered in life. and lIO' exilUisitely deeorate«L . ~,

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,SPEAKER: J3.ev. Bernard Haring, C: SSe R., moral theolo.gianof the Academia AIphonsiana, -Rome, will speak at the Paulist Center,Boston, on Tuesday evening, Apn1 20, on "The Church Emerges from Vatican IT".

Holy Week Continued from Page One

that the JIass of the Chrism. offered by the Bishop in his cathedral on Ho17 Thursday m0rning, will clearlT do three thirigs: (1) it will be the setting for the eonaecration of the various on.

Used thrOughout the dioeese for the administration of the s8cnlmenta; (2) it will be • fitting invoduetion, to the solemn litur... gy of tbe 80~ days of. Bo17

We know we 'are aD In Adam. We need only to look at tIae effect of his sin In us: our disordered appetites, our llarkeneel minds, our weak wills, oar battle to preserve Ideals acafDat the world 01 the ftesh .... the devil. Now If AdaD! has this effect on bamaniV, shall Christ' have less? Does He not A1T01IIId aD of us, more than -radar waves floating' In tile air. Though few are Wned In to them, the ID1Ildc and the apeeeh are 'still there, .. the merfta of Cbrist's C1'08II are available to Us II we but "tune In.'' During Lent as the Church concen-

trates on the Humanity 'bf Christ, you faithful identify yourselves With the Passion and Cross by your fasting and sacrifices. Why not make this "'tuning in" complete by identifying yourselves with Christ as Be suffers ~ in the poor, the sick, the homeless of' the world? Whatever 70U have -given up. or decided to "do" lor Lent, you can turn into alms. Whatever you Iiend to the Holy Father goes immediately to IIid TOU1' brothel'll in Christ. Turn your sacrifices into doDaraand RDd them to '!'be Society for' the Propagation of the Faitb. 366 I'iftIl Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. God Love ToW

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GODLOVE YOU to a Jaror for eaelosecl .......... wIdIe on juy tIat7 and PlIh! to _ - in adlUUOD Ie _ ~ alan'. Ws the tll'lIl cJumee that rve bad to work' for Gad _d 1117 e8IIIdlrT at the same 1Ime.'" • • • to JI.C. lor $5 ""PIeue IlMept DQ' - U offerbtc few help in ;VCRII' zreat JIdasi. . lie.... I . .~. lIP amekfnc for 18 dan so faa'!" ••• to a »IISSIoN wIdler .... . . -After readbrc IIISSION I pl'Olllise4 . t fie bu a ow . of _1Itereo Qeakera 1IDtiI I eeuId &'Ive 1'1 per eeM til a.e ... fie iIIe Mlaicms. I bave been wIBlIlnc for the far' nro 7 &nil jut _ _fat - . Here IaGod'. per eentr'

Week; (3) it will be t1Ieocca.on lor a concelebration of . . . . by. the c1erIY' ,-gatllered around: their bishop in hia cathedral. :Besides Bilnplifying the -actual rite of the consecration of tbe. various oils" the Mass will celebrate the -Institution of the Do you pride ;J'OIII'8elf on being "'up on the DeWIt?" Then . . Priesthood which also occurred during Our Lord's Last Supper. 70111'Self this question: "How much do I know about what ill haP":' pening OIl the frontiers of the Church?" Find oUt In the 'words The Epistle and Gospel of the of missionaries living and wo~ng on the scene who write of Mass, together with the Offertheir experiences in WORLDMISSION. This quarterly magazine, tory and Communion antiphons, have been changed so that they edited by Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, can be sent to you for only teach more clearly the ministry .$5.00 • year. Write to WORLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, New --the service-which the Chris- YOJ:k, X.Y. 10001. -uan PriesthoOd is to be In tile Church. GoeIl FricJ&J' Cai . . tbIIJ eeIIInuI, pin your sacrifice to B . . . . . . . . . The changes in the service are lIost ae•. hUon I. Sheen. NatioIuII DIreetor -., The 8eclel7 for mainly revisi~ in the wordin« tbePropantiOll ., ae PaWl. 366 FfftIt AftDUe. New Y.... New of the Solemn Prayen--the secIork leOR. or to 7..-r DIG a . . DJreetor, ODd part of the daTa - seriice coming immediately after the JU. ..... MsCr. ltQmolMl T. COIIIdalne aarratioD of the Pasdon aecord. 3U I I ' " ..... 8Veet Ing to St. Jolm. Pall atvel', .·_doweUll There are 80IIle 01. the mod ancient of the Church.. prayen. taking the fonD of a lIOlella PnQrer of the FaithfuL Of the Dine pr8¥ers ehanes weft made in. the ~ 'lieventb, eighth aDd ninth Ill'ayer. In the first prayer, referencell to the Q1un:ta.. "makin• .-bled to her prindpelities and powea»as »eenetim1nated. TlloU8JI it refen to the Old Tes'" =t, • eouId be fafel:preted _ 1lf:DtIDI' 454 MAIN snEEr • SOMERSET, to temporal powers 'for' the ChurdL Thus" to :lII8b it ~. 'IEI.BltIONE 675-7992 it hal been eliminated. 'The seventh pr~yer dealJl witll Church Unity and sba1l now be called: "UnitT of ChrIstIans.,- It, _ "" """' ""'''I

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GERALD E.

McNALLY

CO~STRUCTION

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ask$ ;God's for ..all brothel'll who believehelp in Chrilt.· '1'he prayer 'Tor the Conversion of the Jews" sball DOW be entitled: "For the JeWs." and aD reference to "darkness" and"blindness" has been suppressed. The' last prayer that used _ be "For the Conversion of Unbelievers" is now termed "For Those Who Do Not yet Believe la' Chrtst-. Befereuces tottle banning of wickedness from the hearts of the paggnB ,has beea ~ppecL-

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·Mt. St.. MCllj'Acad~my to

Present·

" . THE ANCHOR.... Thurs., April 1,1965

~erbert's

'Babes in Toylancr Tonight, F.riday Afternoon

Trudy Rousseau, Anne MMit FoISter. Volleyban playerS at DA have been victorious against Stang and Taunton, dropping a game to . Case High. Cassidy art students won first, second and. third prizes in a poster contest sponsored by the Taunton Citizens' Scholarship Fund, appearing on television in connection with the awards. The winners: Nancy Cornaglia, Ann Reill~ Anna Gomes. Cassidy girls also took four of sevell honorable mention awards.

Welcome Spring announcements ~re that the band and glee club of Msgr. Coyle High School Taunton will hold a concert in the latter part of May; a~d that Mt. St. present a Victor Herbert Mary Academy in Fan River operetta; "Babes in Toy. Following the Diocesan event, land," at 7:30 tonight and S:45 tomorrow afternoon. a New England CYO cheerleadAn typists are tapping lng contest will be held Sunday,O

will

April 25 at Bishop Feehan High busily throughout Diocesan high in Attleboro. Diocesan CYO's school business departments in throughout.New England will be preparation for the first Di- represented at this program. ocesan typewriting contest, to be held from 9 to 11 Saturday College acceptances include morning, April 10 at St. Anthony Kevin Healy, Mary Anne Mc­ High in New Bedford. Quillan, Donna Dauplaise, ChrisPreliminary contests are ~ tine Saulnier, Gloria Harrington der way in participating schools and James Muldoon, all students and two students will represent at Holy Family who've been each school at the finals. First given the nod by SMT!. prize will be a portable. type"April Showers" is the theme writer, . announces Sister M. of a bazaar to be held at Jesus­ Yvette, C.S.C. of St. Anthony's, Mary Academy from 1 to 5:30 ehairman of the Diocesan Busi- Saturday afternoon, April 3 in ness Education Curriculum the school auditorium. Booths, Committee. St. Anthony's busi- games, plants and home-made ness club will host the event. taffy will be among attractions. Sister Mary Bernarde, Room Mother St. Antoinette is general 8 Freshman Homeroom teacher chairman for the affair, aided by at Holy Family High in New other faculty members, students Bedford, will be in Belize, Brit- and parents. Proceeds, says ish Honduras this Summer, Mother St. Antoinette, will ben­ where she will offer a remedial efit the acdemy renovatioll8 reading course to lay teachers, fund. under sponsorship of the Belize Not ·taffy, but chocolate fB 1ft mission staffed by the Sisters of the news at Dominican AcadMercy. emy, Fall River, where the anDebate NeWII nual candy bar drive is under Top debaters in the Diocese way, complete with special are eagedy awaiting final play- cheers and prizes for top sales­ offs in the Narragansett Debat- women. Priests Speak ing League. Schools participat­

LaSalette Fathers from Attle­

ing are first-rated St. Anthony's; boro addressed Prevost High

second place Holy Family; third­ ranking Prevost of Fall River; School boys on the priestly vo­

and fourth place Sacred HearU cation last week and students

also had the opportunity of ex­

Academy, also Fall River. In math tests held recently at amining a large vocations dis­ Diocesan highs Coyle High play in the school. At Bishop Stang High School School reports that junior Den­ nis Callahan placed first out of in North Dartmouth students heard a vocations talk with a 30 juniors and seniors partici­ pating. At St. Anthony High, Japanese accent as Sister Julie David St. Laurent was school St. Anne, S.N.D., on· six month winner, followed by Charles leave from her mission station in Japan, addressed girls as Serra Lambalot and Cecile Le Clair u Club members spoke to boys. runners-up. Sister Julie began by singing A Bible Vigil and a sodality­ the Japanese national anthem sponsored party marked observ­ with Therese Miyata, Stang stu­ ance of the feast of the Annun­ ciation at SHA Fall River. The dent from Nippon. Among interesting points she day is the patronal feast for the discussed: there's no datirig Sisters of the Holy Union. At Bishop Cassidy High . among Japanese high school stu­ School in Taunton, students dents; Japanese girls do not curl heard Rev. Robert Stanton their hair; many marriages are parent-arranged; to marry well speaking on "The Christian Vo­ a girl must be skilled in the tea cation." Also attending the spe­ cial assembly called for Father ceremony and in flower arrange­ Stanton's talk were juniors and ment; and, most surprising, says. our reporter, "the Japanese stu­ seniors from Coyle. Cassidy girls also heard a dent love's to study." Winners in a poster contest at panel discussion by young Sis­ Dominican Academy in which ters from the Holy Union Jun­ participants illustrated a Scrip­ iorate in Fall River on the train­ ing and work of a religious; and tural quotation are Denise Jan­ Taunton Serra Club members son, whose selection, taken from spoke in each classroom on the Psalm 32, was "The Lord looks layman's role in encouraging down; He sees all mankind"; and vocations. Sister Leobin of the Diane Cloutier, ''The Lord is my shepherd:' Sacred Hearts Sisters in Fair­ The Prevost Mothers' Guild haven explained her communi­ will sponsor a family commun­ ty's work to students. ion supper at White's restaurant Supervisor Visits this Sunday, following 5 o'clock Sister M. Jeanita, C.S.C., com­ munity supervisor for the Holy Mass at Notre Dame Church. Students and their parents will Cross Sisters, was a recent vis­ itor at St. Anthony's High. She be welcome. The guild is also noted that she was a faculty planning a pre-Easter candy sale, in which it will be assisted member at SAH before begin­ ning work on a doctorate--"and by National Honor Society mem­ that was one of the sacrifice. bers. Top-Ranking Studenw that purchased the doctorate-­ my leaving SAH." . Senior Dianne Majkut of The second annual Diocesan Bishop Cassidy High has been Cheerleading Contest, sponsored awarded a $700 tuition scholar­ by the Fall River CYO, will be ship to Northeastern Universit.ls held at the Fall River CYO Hall, Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John 403 Anawan Street, at 1 Satur­ Majkut, she's among the top 10 day afternoon, April 3. in her class and is active in This jamboree is open to an many school clubs. parish CYO cheerleading groups Other top-ranking Cassidyites and all .Diocesan high school at the end of the second term are cheerleading teams. Applications Joanne Gregg, senior; Catherine are available at CYO headquar­ Gazda, junior; Janet and Joyce ters in Fall River, Taunton, New DeMello, sophomores; and Bedford, Attleboro and Cape Donna Cole, freshman. Cod. The Coyle glee club it plan­

13

Also at Cassidy, parents at­ tended a potluck supper and model student council meeting, and the school's mission unil held a shoeshine, polishing over 100 pairs of shoes at .15 a paiw. with proceeds going to the Ed-. mondite Fathers in Selma, Ale.

SCHOOL L~ADERS: Senior leaders at Jesus-Mary Fall RIv~r, a~e .seated from left, ~uriel Mongeon, Cathohc Students MISSIon Crusade presIdent· Nanette Gelinas, student council president; standing, Mo~ique Bou­ lay,. s?dality t~easurer.; Janine Fusco, Confraternity of C~rIstlan Doctrme preSIdent; Pauline Fo:rcier, school paper edItor. Acade~y,

ning to entertain residents of Taunton's Marian Manor on Mother's pay next month, and in the athletic department track and baseball teams are fully active. Also at Coyle, 33 juniors and seniors made a retreat at East­ ern Point retreat house last week. A group of St. Anthony High students heard an address by Astronaut William Anders, member of the team training for a moon launch. His appear­ ance was sponsored by the New Bedford Teachers' Association and he brought students up to date on "space language," and described trainiilg routines and his reactions to flying faster than Bound. College-bound students at D0­ minican Academy are taking a notehand course, personal-use shorthand, together with In­ · structions on how to take lecture notes. Recent Speakers Recent speakers at Diocesan highs and their subjects: At DA, a representative of the ILGWU, · who spoke on the history of · unionism and showed a film. At Bishop.Cassidy, Rev. Edward · Mitchell, ''Teenage Dating and Marriage"; and Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, "Fostering Religioua Vocations in the Home." At the · latter program, Sister Mary Hor­ · tense also presented a slide showing of Holy Union SChOOM : in Europe and America. . I Honor Society members at st. Anthony's are sponsoring a bet­ ter-our-school project with post­ ers and leaflets carryiIig out the · theme, and a public address pro­ gram and a film scheduled for this month•. Parents' forums were held at Bishop Stang this week for soph­ omores and juniors and their parents. Test scores were inter­ preted and guidance 'Offered on choice of studies for next year. All faculty members were pres­ ent. Also at Stang, juniors held a eollege forum with Sister Maq

Alice, guidance director, speak­ ing on college entrance require­ ments. Further such assemblies are planned. Carrying out their "doggy" theme for this season, basketball team members at/DA have pre­ sented their coach, Miss Nancy Walsh, with a five week old beagle pup. The team partici­ pated in a sportsday at Ports­ mouth High School, winning three out of four games and having three team members picked for an All Star lineup of 12 girls. The three: Mary Bento,

Representing Cassidy in tbI Massa.chusetts Region III sciene. fair tomorrow through Sunday will be: senior division, Andrea Trzcinski's "A Problem in His­ toric Archaeology"; Donna Ma­ guire's "A Comparative Study of Color Perception"; Elizabeth Moitoza's "Comparative UrinalJl'­ sis among High School Stu-, dents"; and Donna Perry's "Ea~ ern Engine Encephalitis in Bril!l­ tol County". Lone student in the junior division will be Celeste Hall with "Geology - Mineral Identification."

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14 .

Scouts Get Joint · Prayer Rules

.

·Misunders.tands Warning "On Steady Teenage .Dating

LONDON (NC)-Catholic Boy Scouts may participate in joint prayers with· their comrades and leaders of other faiths, but are not permitted to attend ser­ vices in churches of different denominations, according to a new ruling made by this' coun­ try's bishops. The ruling states: "Catholic scouts may take part in prayers said at the troop and district level by scouts and scoutmasters. it is suggested that the Catholic chaplains should discuss with the religious' advisory panel what prayers and hymns could · be said or sung on these occa­ sions. "It is understood that they would not be held in places re­ served for religious worship, and that a non-Catholic minister of religion would not be present. "Catholic scouts may take part on the occasion of an annual event, such as St. George's Day, at a service conducted by min­ isters of different religions in the open air, or at a neutral meeting place, and with an agreed form of worship. Catho­ lic scouts may not attend a reli­ gious service conducted by a non-Catholic minister, either in · a non-Catholic church or in the open air." . .

By John J. Kane. Ph. D. "Our pastor says that steady teenage dating is a mortal ·sin for parents who allow it. When I tell my 16-year-old daughter this she laughs. Why? Because I was a teenage bride, so was my sister. My five brothers married in their teens. My grandmother and at 18 if she and the boy :great grandmother married steady" were in a position to marry ,in their teens. Perhaps I just within a year. As a matter of ·don't believe what the priest fact, more girls ir. the United

Isays, but I do want to be a good mother." Mary, I am afraid you misun­ 'derstood what your pastor said. :No one can say that steady teen­ age dating, and .lncidental­ ]y dating is not go i n g steady, is a mortal sin for parents who (:: ,allow it. What :;'/

:he'probably said

.~as that going

.steady in. the

early teens may be a serious DC­ ·casion of sin. Parents should .keep their children from occa­ ·.mons of sin. He is certainly right .about that. If you doubt him, .ebeck into the number of pre­ marital pregnande!'l in your city•. The reason for "going steady," .courtship or whatever term you want to use to describe going exclusively with a person of the opposite sex is to determine whether or not the boy and girl wish to marry. Therefore, per­ :sons should keep company. of this type only when there is a reasonable possibility of mar­ riage in the very near future; Sees Distinction There is, or· at least there ,should be, quite a distinction be­ ·.tween "going steady" and datIng. Certainly a 16-year-old ·girl I should date if she wishes to do so. But she should be dating several boys, not one. A date is supposed to be boy-girl associa- . · tion for the purpose of social · pleasure, such as a dance, a party or a movie. Dating serves. a most. useful· purpose and :': have written of it before. It teaches boys and girls how to get along together, to understand the opposite sex. It helps those who have a vocation for marriage to make a sensible ehoice out of a reasonable num­ ber of acquaintances. Going steady from 14 to 1'1 and then marrying would be like going into a store to buy a dress when there was only one dress in the store. It might seem rather good since it was all the merchandise available. But you might look better in a different eolor or style. It might not fit as well as other dresses but how could you know? There is no basis for comparison. Reason for Failure One reason for marital failure, but not the only. one', is that youthful "going steady" leads to infatuation which is mistaken for love. Furthermore, once a boy and girl begin "going steady," others tend to le·ave them alone, and it becomes more difficult for both, but especially the girl, to get to know and date other boys. In other words, she takes herself out of the running far too early in the game. I don't think your pastor would object to a girl's "going

Drive Inaugural OMAHA (NC) - Francis Car­ dinal Spellman of New York will launch a fund drive here Thursday, April 1 when he speaks to the general inaugural meeting of the Omaha archdio­ cese's education fund, which is seeking S".5 million for school expansion.

States marry at age 18 than at any other age. So there is a great deal of "going steady" at this period of life which culminates in marriage and hence is quite permissible. But whether marriage at 18 is desirable is quite another ques­ tion. On the individual level it may work out well. Some girls are quite mature at this age and they tend to marry boys two or three years older. But it's not the, chronological age which matters. What really eounts is whether a couple is prepared to accept the very serious obliga­ tions of marriage be they 18 or 80. BISHOP OF ROME COMES TO CALL: These choir Tilnes Have Changed boys at St. Joseph's parish in Rome show varied reactions The fact that your great­ grandmother and grandmother to the presence of their Bishop, Pope Paul VI, as the Pontiff visited them on the Second Sunday of Lent. NC Photo• married in their teens is irrele­ vant. They lived in a completely different. world. It is highly . probable that one 'or both lived PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Phil­ on a farm. adelphia Common Pleas Judge In those days an eighth grade Earle Chudoff struck down a education was more than suffi­ state law barring exhibition of dent for most men to make a D · C h0 1°Ie 0 obscene movies and dismissed living. It isn't today. Even high indictments under' the "law school may not be enough, and .' DETROIT (NC)-Despite op­ of Detroit, chairman of the Mich­ against two theater managers. incidentally, 18 per cent· of the position by Michigan's Catholic igan Catholic Conference, op­ Judge Chudoff held that the 1963 high school graduates were leaders, a new policy on family posed the new policy,. charging statute does. not provide ade­ still unemployed a year later. _planning and birth control as­ caseworkers would be vested quate safeguards for non-obscene It is ironic that the age at sistance for indigent persons has with power to guide and suggest films. A spokesman for the dis­ marriage in this country has been put into effect here. . the !rlze of a pe~on's fami.ly. · met attorneY's office said ·the dropped about two or three ruling would be appealed. . Daniel J. Ryan, welfare su.;. Violate Conscience years since 1940 just at a time perintendent, said the policy, In his ruling Judge Chudoff when automation is eliminating Which pen;nits welfare workers A statement by the conference said that to be constitutional the the kinds of jobr most peopie' to initiate family piannirig said: "This is a license granted law would have ·to contain a pro­ get with less than a high school . conversations' with welfare re­ by the state potentially to vio­ vision for "prompt judicial de­ diploma. You can't use the past . cipfents, was put into effect late a person's conscience in termination" of the obscenity as a criterion for the present or after adoption by the city wel­ civil rights." question after seizure of a film particularly for the future in fare commission, which rejected The new policy allows welfare by the district attorney. which our young· people will restrictions proposed by ~atho- workers to refer women to ap­ live. lie leaders. proved birth control clinics, Advises Talk' public and private, with ex­ I strongly suspect you don't Archbishop' John F. Dearden penses paid by thE' commission. believe not only what you think It permits availability of the priest said but not even my birth eontrol information to Prescriptions called for

explanation of it. Your daughter anyone desiring it, unwed motb­ and Delivered

laughs because she is quite ers as well as married couples. lOFT

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But even if you do believe it, program by reaching $15,276,000 objectives of society. I admit it is difficult to prevent in its fund drive. this too early "going steady". Father Michael P. Walsh, S.J.. The best approach is not to op­ pose it outright but quietly try . president of the university, said to persuade your daughter to see $7,173,000 was contributed by featuring ONE STOP

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rtfE ANCHOR-Dlocese of

GIRL SCOUTS SERVE: As part of requirements for Marian Award, members of Girl Scout Troop 1065, Fall River, aid in sacristy duties at Holy Name Church. Left, Marilyn Duffy ,positions altar card; center, the roles of Martha and Mary ~re recalled by. Beth Harrington, mopping sanc­

Dual Species Continued from Page One eoncelebrated, .M.asses in their religious houses. _ , The reception. of the Precious Blood may be by,·drinking· from a ~halice, sipping through a reed or by dipping a spoon containing the Host into the chalice and then consuming it.

Concelebration Continued from Page One Easter Vigil and Easter Day, Christmas, during synods, pas­ toral visits or clerical gatherings with the bishop or his delegate when, in the judgement of the bishop, another Mass should be celebrated for the convenience of the people. The occasion of a solemn Mass is not the same as a concelebra­ tion, however. If the deacon and subdeacon of a solemn Mass be priests, this does not entitle them to automatically concele­ brate. They may, however, re­ ceive Communion under both species even if they have offered Mass the same day or will do so. In the new rite, the Canon will be recited aloud and pro­ visions have been. made for the chanting of the Canon from the "Hanc Igitur" to the "Supplices" inclusive. The decree permitting concel­ ebration and the reception of Holy Communion under both species is effective April 15, 1965.

Youths ·Attack Nun In Chicago Convent CHICAGO (NC)-Sister Alma, a teacher at St. Bernard School, was beaten with a wooden ~lub when she surprised two youths in the corridor outside her quar­ ters at Loretto convent here. The nun, who received a broken wrist, a head cut and ex­ tensive body bruises, was ad­ mitted to St. Bernard's Hospital. Her assailants fled whim her screams awoke some of the 12 other nuns on the second flou.

1'....

,

.'

College Group

working on the award, she noted. Beginning next year, only Ca­ dette Girl Scouts, the age group above Juniors, will be permitted to start work on the admittedly rigorous medal requirements. "We just got under the wire," she said. Other requirements for the Marian Award, presented to Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, Junior Catholic Daughters and Junior Daughters of Isabella yearly on the Feast of Christ the King, are a knowledge of fundamentals of the faith; attendance at Catholic

St. Francis

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Explains Strength . Of Democracy

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Theavera'ge Mass..:goer doesp't 'realize -how much work behind the seeries is necess'ary to ensure a shining sanctuary, immaculate altar linens and aspic and span sacristy. But .five Junior Girl Scouts, members of Fall River Troop 1065, do. For the past few weeks they've been aiding members of the Altar and Rosary Society of Holy Name Church, Fall River, in their dedicated la­ . "They can hardly waft for religious ac~ivities planned for bors of love. Under the di­ sacristy days," she said. troops or groups on a parish or rection of Miss Mary E. The youngsters are probably Diocesan level; participation in Hart, president of the soci~ the youngest group in the city a troop pilgrimage involving a

ST. LOUIS (NC)-Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., St. Louis Uni­ versity president, has been elected president of the Missouri Association of Q>lleges and Uni­ '\lersitiea.

IS

tuary floor, and Joanne Dunn, with rosary. Scouts take turns recitin. rosary in course of their work. Right, Mary Ellen Farrell and Cathy Shay prepare vestments for Mass. Girls must aid in sacristy twice a week for three months to fulfill award requirement, but aU wish to continue work.

Junior Girl Scouts Aid Altar Society, Learn What It Takes to Keep Sanctuary Shinin~

ety and also supervisor of ele­ mentary education for the Fall River school sytsem, the girls are fulfilling part of the require­ ments for the coveted Marian Award, a medal which signifies that the Scout wearing it has a wide knowledge of her faith and has given active service to Church organizations. Twice a week, for a total of nearly four hours, Cathy Shay, Mary Ellen Farrell, Beth Har­ rington, Marilyn Duffy and Joanne Dunn report· to Holy Name's sacristy. There they aid adult Altar and Rosary members in such chores as washing and polishing cruets and altar vases, dusting, preparing vestments for priests' wear at Mass and check­ ing up to be sure that altar boys' equipment and the sanctuary are in apple pie order. Say Rosary Spiritualizing their work, the girls take turns saying the rosary as they mop and dust, with one girl at a time kneeling behind the altar on "prayer duty" as the others continue their assign­ ments. The Marian requirements will be fulfilled in three months, says Mrs. Paul Dunn. assistant troop leader, but the girls are unani­ mous in wanting to continue their sacristy service.

"-'s., April t. . .

hike of at least two miles; knowl­ edge of liturgical syrp.bolism; and putting of Catholic practices into use in the home. A by-product .of the girls' work in the sacristy: all their mothers are pleased at their in­ creased competence in dusting and polishing.

TORONTO (NC)-A demoe. racy's strength rests in its recog­ nition of the rights of minorities, 'Coadjutor Archbishop 'Philip 'F. Pocock of Toronto said here. ' , At the blessing of the new sep­ arate school board administra­ tion building, he observed: "A minority school system in itself is a tribute to our democratic

system." The archbishop said he

regre1ted Catholic children are

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entire school system, public and private."

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16

rtn:

ANl.HUR­

Thurs., April 1, 1965

Chaplaira Proffers

Word of Advic·e

Continued from Page One of the Church should remember the American priest has inher­ ited a 150-year tradition which dates back to the first great wave of immigrants who came to this country. "The priest at that time,,,e. he said, "was usually the only Cath­ olic among the immigrants with more than a grade school educa­ tion. His people looked to him not only for spiritual care but also for counsel and direction in virtually every other phase of their daily lives Priests took it for granted that they were ex­ pected to exercise this multi­ faceted ministry, to do in the eommunity what their insuffi­ ciently educated people were not equipped to do. Re said a pro'cess of "unlearn­ ing" will now be necessary for priests. While it is being carried out young people will have to have "patience, humility, and maturity," he added. Lay Apostolate . .;' Father Healy said the Church must change frorr. "a clergy­ centered .communit~' to an altar­ centered community." "The priest WIll have his dis­ tinctive role of absolving from sin, bringing the Mass and the sacraments to the people, and teaching them. Hopefully, then, the priest will see the advantage of utilizing the layman who is ready and qualified to take his rightful place in the apostolate," he said.

~atican

Pavi~ion

NEW YORK (NC)-The tiara of Pope Paul VI and a Guten­ berg Bible will be the major ad­ ditions at the Vatican Pavilion of the World's Fair when its sec­ ond season begins Wednesday, April 21. . Msgr. John J. Gorman, pavil­ ion director, also announced that the Good Shepherd statue, on loan from the Lateran Museum in Rome, will be repositioned for better viewing. Michelangelo's famed Pieta, viewed in 1964 by 13,823,037 vis­ itors, will remain in its unaltered setting which was designed by Academy Award winning de­ signer Jo Mielziner. Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, and Bishop Bryan J. McEntegart of

MOHor Additions Include Pope Paul's Tiara, Bible Brooklyn will preside at an opening-day ceremony. A Mass will be offered in the Good Shepherd chapel at the altar which is being arranged to con­ form to changes ordered by the Second Vatican Council. Msgr. Gorman said the tiara and the Bible will be displayed in the crypt area, the heart of

Trinity Professor To Edit Collection WASHINGTON (NC)-Nancy P. Brown, an English professor at Trinity College here, will edit an important group of manuscripts by Blessed Robert Southwell, S.J., 16th century English Jesuit martyr and poet, the Folger Shakespeare Library has announced.

The manuscript collection, purchased last year by the Fol­ ger library, includes a hitherto unknown letter from Southwell to Sir Robert Cecil, Lord Treas­ urer, after the poet had been sentenced to die under an Elizabethan law barring Jesuits from England.

ing the third session of the coun­ cil had offered the tiara for the poor. Printed In Germany Msgr. Gorman said that for the present there is lio intention to encourage direct donations for this purpose from viewers. The Bible, which will De on loan from the General Theolog­ ical Seminary here, a training house for Episcopal clergymen, is one of 46 of the first printed Bibles still in existence. It fits into two rarer categories, being one of 35 printed on vellum and one of 22 which is complete. The Bibles were printed in Germany about· the year 1455 by Johann Gutenberg (c. 1398-1468) who is considered the inventor of printing.

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Sister of Mercy Forum Speaker The Adult Lenten Forum of Immaculate Conception Parish, North Easton., will present Sister Mary Urban, R.S.M., principai. of Bishop Feehan High Schoo~ in Attleboro as its speaker on Sunday eveI'.ing at 7:30 in the Hall. Sister will speak on "The Nun in the Modem World." Sister Mary Urban, who holds a Master's degree from the Cath- . olic University in Washington, has taught on thE' elementary and secondary level, has taken guidance courses at Fordham University and Boston College, and was selected four years ago to direct the newly-built Dioc:' esan High Schoo!. She has made an impact in the Greater Attle­ boro community with her en­ thusiasm and wise guidance and is active in many professional organizations. She is a member of the Advisory Board of the National Catholic Educational Association.

the pavilion which contains an exact replica of the tomb of St. Peter. Cardinal Spellman brought the jewel encrusted triple golden crown to the United States in November, 1964, for the purpose of using displays of it to raise money for the world's poor. Pope Paul earlier that year dur-

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

The Parish Parade

VISITATION GUILD, NORTH EASTHAM April events for Visitation Guild members will include a penny sale Friday night, April 9 with the sale beginning at 8 and doors open at 7. Mrs. Judy Allmon and Mrs. Evelyn Babbitt, co-chairmen, announces that there will be door prizes and chance prizes and other awards will "suit the Easter season." A food sale will follow Masses Sunday, April 18 at the Churc.h of the Visitation, MassasOlt Road, and a buffet supper is scheduled from 6 to 8 Saturday night, April 24 at the church hall. HOLY NAl\m, NEW BEDFORD Wornell's Guild members will receive corporate Communion at 5 o'clock Mass Sunday after­ noon, April 24, followed by a Communion supper with :V[rs. Russell Nelson in charge of res­ ervations. 'The unit plans a penny sale Wednesday, April 28 in the parish hall. Contributions of prizes and stamp books are being accepted by Mrs. Elmer Paul, chairman. OUR LADY OF PURGATORY, NEW BEDFORD New officers of st. Joseph So­ dality are Mrs. Joseph Attallah, president; Mrs. Anthony H. Thomas, vice-president; Mrs. Everett Pittsley, secretary; Mrs. Arthur M. Thomas, treasurer. Members will hold a Commu­ nion breakfast Sunday, April 4 and a Lebanese supper and "hafli" are scheduled for June. ST• .JAMES, NEW BEDFORD Msgr. Noon Circle plans a cake sale Tuesday and Wednes­ day, April 27 and 28 in the church hall. BLESSED SACRAMENT, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women has as officers Mrs. Berthe Du­ tilly, re-elected president; M~. Constance Hamel, vice-presI­ dent; Mrs. Esther Lavigne, sec­ retary; Mrs. Barbara Leboeuf, treasurer. A rommage sale is planned for Thursday, April 8 at 308 E. Main Street, and a whist for Saturday, April 24 in the church hall. Ticket returns are requested by Wednesday, April 21. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT Mrs. William Darcey is chair­ man of a whist party planned by the Women's Guild for 7:30 Saturday night, April 3 in the school auditorium. ESpmlTO SANTO, FALL RIVER A mission is in progress for an parishioners, conducted .by Rev. Robert E. McDonald of the Holy Cross Fathers Mission Band. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER Cub Scouts will serve a baked ham dinner in the school hall Saturday night, April 10. Tickets are available from den mothers. It is also announced that the Cub Pack is in need of more committeemen. Volunteers may notify the rectory. A men's choir is in process of formation, directed by Rev. Ed­ mund T. Delaney. Public school students in the last three years of high school are invited to attend an after­ noon of recollection from 1 to 5 Sunday afternoon, April 4 at Boly Cross Fathers' Retreat Bouse, North Dartmouth. Parish participants will attend 11 6'clock Mass at 8t. Joseph's, pro­ eeed to the parish school for . breakfast, and continue to the retreat house. 5S. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER The Women's Club will meet at 8 Monday night, April 5 in the church hall. Chairmen ·are Mrs. William O'Neill .and Mrs. Albert Feijo.

Brothers' Provincial Learns Flying, Swahili for New Job

HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER Elections will highlight the Tuesday, April 6 meeting of the Women's Guild in the school hall. Mrs. Charles Leonard heads the nominating committee which will present its slate. Tableaux of the seven sacraments will fol­ low the business session, pre­ sented by a committee headed by Mrs. Herm'ln Mello. ST• .JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN Memb,ers of the Association of the Sacred Hearts are reminded to check their hours of adoration for the First Friday. Due to the Lenten evening Mass, the adora­ tion period will be extended to 7:30 Friday night. Corporate Communion' £ 0 r members will be held at 8:15 Mass Sunday morning, April 4 and the unit's regular meeting is scheduled for 7:30 that evening in the church hall. A program on the New York World's Fair will be presented. Dues are payable to Mrs. Eliot Bennett, treasurer, and it is re­ quested that names of sick mem­ bers be reported to Mrs. Joseph Porte, newly appointed sick committee chairman. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER An illustrated lecture on Ja­ pan by Miss Murielle Desmarais, former teacher at an American Dependents' School in that coun­ try, will feature the Monday, April 5 meeting of the Council of Catholic Women. Miss Irene Quintin is program chairman. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, FALL RIVER Rev. Robert L. Stanton, mod­ erator, will conduct a question and answer session for the Wom­ en's Guild at its meeting at 8 Monday night, April 5 in the church hall. Mrs. Margaret Wyles will be in charge of a following social hour. The unit will receive corpor­ ate Communion at 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, April 4 and a public Scholarola is set for 7:30 Tuesday night, April 6 in the hall. ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women will meet Monday, April 12 to elect officers. SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAmHAVEN To benefit the new furnace fund a chicken supper will be held in the parish hall from 6 to 7 Sunday evening, April 4. Tickets are available from the ticket chairman, Adrien Desro­ siers, or from the rectory.

NEW YORK (NC) -The an­ nouncement that Brother Basil Peter Dougherty, F.S.C., has been named first assistant pro­ vincial for the growing Christian Brothers' East African missions doesn't tell half the story. In preparation for his new as­ signment Brother Peter is taking lessons in how t6 fly a plane from George Routel, Brooklyn photographer. And Brother Peter also is studying the Amharic and the Swahili languages, which he'll need to get along in Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania in the bounds of his new province. Brother Peter, a native of MARY REED NEWLAND

Catholic Club Plans Events Mrs. Mary Reed Newland will give the last in a series of lec­ tures sponsored by the literature department of Fall River Catho­ lic Woman's Club at 3 Sunday afternoon, April 4 in the unit's clubhouse at 742 Rock Street. A noted author and illustrator of books for children and par­ ents on the Bible, the lives of saints and the liturgical life of the Church, Mrs. Newland's topic will be "The Bible." She last spoke in Fall River five years ago at a' Communion breakfast for the Catholic Woman's Club. The literature department is headed by Mn, Michael Mc­ Mahon. The club also announces a des­ sert card party for 7 :30 Wednes­ day night, April 21, at the club­ house. In charge of arrange­ ments are Mrs. Anthony J. Geary, president, and Mrs. Thomas F. Burke, vice-president.

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Newburgh, N. Y., was named 1:e his new post by the provincials of New York, Long Island and New England districts of the brotherhood. His spread-out province makes learning to fly a "must"-so he'll pilot a Piper Cub plane in his new job. The Brothers opened missions in East Africa in 1959 and now have 45 U. S. Brothers teaching in seven schools there. Emperor Haile Selassie donated a tract of land for a new school which the Brothers plan to open in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in Sep­ tember, 1965, to accommodate 800 students.

NEVI NUNS NEED PtOPlE

WHY DOES A NAVY NURSE GIVE $12.50 A MONTH TO HELP TRAIN SISTER JOACIllIM IN INDIA? Now In Rhode Island, the nurse remembers hun­ gry children overseas. "I cannot live in India myself," she says. -The least I can do is train a na­ tive Sister. Sister Joachim wiD do the good I cannot do." • . • Like members of one family, Sister .Joachim writes to the nurse (at Cbristmas and Easter, for Instance). md the nurse writes to her. They pray ror each other's Intentions The Holy Pathw's M;ss;otf AU every day.. New nuns need. th, Oriental Chtlr,b people. In India, where Sister .Joachim's father earns only pennies a day, young Sisters cannot pay their own expenses. During the next two years, accordingly, the Navy nurse will give $300 altogether ($12.50 a month, $150 a year) •• Like to do the same? Here In New York we have the names or 167 young Sisters who need help to complete their training. We'D send YOU tbe name of a Sister to "adopt," lUI 8OOn)ls we bear from you. She will write to you, and pray for you. As If she were a member of ,our family, you'll share forever iDthe Cood she does for others , •• Hungry children, the blind and aging, cancer victims-all Deed native Sisters. Native Sisters need you. Please write to as immediately. H convenient, of course, YOU mllJ' pay tfW Sister', training ($300) in one lamp sum right now.

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GOOD FOR YOU-ARE YOU AND YOUR FAMILY MEM­ BERS OF THIS ASSOCIATION? Membership Is good for you. You participate i.. the Masses (more than 15,000 each year) and lacrifices of all our missionary priests and Sisters. You benefit from Mass each morning In st. Peter's Basilica in Rome Why not, as a Lenten sacrifice, enroll your family right now? We'll send you a certificate In time for Easter. Your family membership offering ($100 for perpetual membershIp, $5 for annual membership) we'll use where It's needed most. GOOD FOR THEM-ARAB REFUGEES IN THE HOLY

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Venezuela Endorses Pope's Peace Pleas CARACAS (NC)~The activ­ ities of the Holy See on behalf of peace and the welfare of peo­ ples are "viewed with respectful attention," President Raul Leoni of Venezuela said in his message to Congress here. He added that Pope Paul VI's proposal made during his visit to Bombay to divert money al­ located for armaments to estab­ lish a world fund to aid under­ developed countries "met with the favor of everyone and if brought into action, it would also have the support of the Venezuelan government."

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18

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 1, 1965

Jersey Min'ister Notes Closer Church Ties

,Corres©ondents' ,Comments Revea~ ~nterest' in, Co,lumn l,

. '

'JERSEY,CITY (NC)-A Reformed Church minister By Rev. Joseph T. McGloin, S.l. beiiev'es Catholics and Pro-' It's so hard to sort the mail and come up with any.­ testants are' coming a: little thing logical' enoqgh for one column that I, won't fry. In­ closer on, issues which ·once di- ' vided thf!m sharply. . stead, we'll have, to try here to cover as much territory At an .ecumenical program

as' illogically as possible, and thereby, 'probably,' ,to" dis­ series, Rev. Howard G. Hageman

satisfy everyone. One kind ' of Newark cited the differences

Minnesota adult wrote to teen-agers have their faults even over trad.ition as "a part of Rev­

as I have and everyone else has. elation. '

say that we should not pre­ But their potentialities for Lord's Table terid that this c6iumn is only good are so great that it is to be for teen-agers, since as many hoped they will spend their lives "We have come around to an adults read it as the youngsters. actuating them, rather than for­ awareness that tradition' plays a I hope this is'

ever trying .to' rid themselves ot much larger place than we ever true, though I

faults without offering positive were'willing to admit," he said. have no way of

substitutes. ' , " "It encourageS, me that we are knowing, But,

As 'aP,hiladelphia teen-ager 'no longer at dead' center but 'we ',UNUSDAL APOSTOLATE': Pictures of St. Paul and' are in motion." . if true, it will

put' it, "* ,) * it is the faith of Pope Paul adorn printing, binding department at Boston Dr: Hageman was on a pro­ bear out'.a the­ other people that helps ,us teen­ ory of mine -=- '

agers to ,put faith in ourselves novitiatE' of Daughters 'of St. Paul, marking their golden gram with Father Francis J.' one writes for

'" '" '" The word 'right' {in 'W,hat's jubilee this year. A television 'documentary will relate Nead, theology department head teen-agers a's'

Right With Teen-Agers') really at Seton Hall University in their unusual apostolate at ,9:30 Monday morning, April 12 South' Orange, N. J., ,Father for adults, since,

caught my eye'" '" *" No com­ on Channel Ten. ' e.. understahdably,' ment needed here.. Nead said .Catholics and Prot­ estants have come to know each the y "W 0 u 1 d Maybe the' most satisfactory rather rea c h ' comments coming my way' of I I other around the mayor's table Pap~1 through' joint involvemenf'ill than stoop. ,And late have been those ,about a it is my ceaseless ambiti@n column I did on mY. friend, social action ,programs but. do here to hold, out 'something for B,rother Max Antzcak. Not that 0 ' not know each other "around. the Lord's table:" them to reach for., the article was much' ','but Printing presses adorned with "pin-ups" of the Popes­ "For a long . time," lie said. ' In one column' I mentioned' through it; at least, some people 1.tl.at a teen-ager who, smokes to began: to 'see the" brothers' ,life these are'the hallmark of the Daughters of St. Paul,.a reli­ "Catholics and Protestants,hated, show, maturit~·. is being pretty for what it i~ instead of the giot,ls 'community dedicated' to ,the' apostolate of modern one another;.. then ignored. eac~, stupid., An Ohio correspondent w,asted:life they' h~d i~agined it.' , media of communication;' The Daughters are in,arking their, other, ,then talked about one an­ . other, 'still later begaq to pray (non-teen-aged type)' Pointed One can, ,for' "instance, get ...', ' , f o r . each other, -and now, finally out that, until the clergy quits pretty' incensed by :stories 'liI~e gQlden jubilee year and in connection' with its observ- ' . Thls 'Jubllee y,ear ha~ ~nw.e are, beginning to pray wit~ smoking' and thereby sets ,the this: "This boy ,wanted to be: a : WJAR C' marked by sendmg36· Sisters example; teen-agers' will not ," brotlier, 'but his 'adviser' rid'i­ ance. -TV, hann~I~ into mission hinds and opening' one another. Who can predi~t new, convents in Uganda 'Nigeria. wliere this will end.?" '., quit e i t h e r . ' culed the idea so much, that he 'Ten, WIll show a documen­ 'Dr:' Hageman noted recent And' I'm' sorry. but I .don't, gave up ihe idea." T~'at adviser, tary film describing their work G~many, : Uruguay" ' B6rneo~ know how' to answer' that one', ,if he makes it to heaven, had best , at 9:30 Monday morning, April Formosa and ,Pakistan. Addi-' changes in attitude have made 12. . ' tional Sisters' have been sent to irrelevant.~hings which had since all I said was that smoking avoid Big Max. ~, ' " , The community was founded LeolXlldville and, Elizabt!tliville -sharply divided Christians in as a sign of maturity was sheer Maybe the nices~t'l~ttE~rS'c()me stupidity, and I doubt. if many from the littlest kids, il\l.Ch as,.the in -Itaiy by Very, 'Rev. .fames' in tJ:te Congo, where Sisters' al-' ea'rlier centuries "when -we were' . ' e mescaped b i l l m e d in 'the bellef you were , enone, who is still active in ready assigned narrowly of the clergy smoke for 'that Inoianapolis seventh 'gra'der,who Alb reason. It now appears that th~re' , its direction. The co-foundress, with their iives.a few years ago. wrong and we were right." ,is a definite health 'hazard' in ,so enjoyed the articl~ on Guada­ Mothet Thecla Merlo, died in '. . ' ," ' '. .' ,, Aside from tradition, he cited . lupe, and ·the N.ew,Orleans sev­ . ~ostremarkab~~ to v1S1tors to three other areas in which the amoking, but 't~e connection, 'is enth graaer who cut out one of 1964. A fO,undation 'was 'made in the United States in 1932 and t~e: Bo~'to~,n~vltIate~,sa:! ~h~., churcnes are moving closer to­ not yet '",ell enough established ' to make'the moral angle perfect­ the coJumns" "bec,lUse, Sister, as­ the Daughters now have a '~arge, Sls~rs, IS the Slg~t ,?f postula~ts ,gether:' 1) tQe liturgy";' which' ly,clear. Besides. although Imy-' signed it,/' and who comes up, novitiate in Boston, 'where,"a and profe.ssed ~ehglOus run.nmg finds both Protestants and Cath-' self quoit smoking about 14 ,years with the supreme .. words' of complete printing and bin4ing offse,t~resses,. bn~types, ~ol~ers, olics reexamiriing old concepts ago, 'it was not on aAy, morai. praise, "Thank you for assisting operation is carried on and 13 cutters and bmdmg, eqUipment. to find a more: active role for principles at all. So there. me in my weekly a~ignments." other convents and 8t Paul Material published is written the congregation; 2) the Eucha­ and illustrated by the SistE~rs. rist, once. considered "shrouded An'Illinois' letter requests that I've a new-found, friend in Catholic ~ook and Fil~ Centers in superstition by Protestants this column give' moral-sexual Neptilne Beach, Florida" to in various stat~s advice which 'Would be more whom the articles have to be The Sisters' distribute their but now looked to as a possible' read because, since World War literature 'through visits 'to Tax' Seminar source of greater grace"',and 3) 'fitting for the early-20, unmar-' II, he is blind. ,'He is, however, homes, 'factories, offices, jails,' Dr: Ja~es A. Papke, author­ the Bible, which is now "viewed tied set, rather tban for the OUnger' characters. It would, of endowed with more sight than poll'ce statI'ons, pI'ers and ot'he:r"·t '11 as a sourc-e of additinal divine' I y on s t a t e' f'Isca1 ma tt ers,wl, Y most reader~, and it' is people conduct a seminar on State Tax, light." 'course be nice to comply, and like him' who keep kindly old gathering places. Reform at 3 Wednesday after­ practical as well. But it would Father feeling about one-inch also change this column into a noon, April 7 atStonehill Col­ . Roman Curia Berth moral-sexual advice column, and tall. , lege. The meeting will De the there 'seems to be enough of that 'There are the "pJ:oblem" let­ first in a pUbllc service series For New Cardinal i~ print already. ters which T would attempt to designed to brip.g in-depth in­ VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope formation on area problems to Besides, the moral principles answer personally, but unfortu­ Paul na.Q1ed Lawrence Cardimll on sex, the specific request here', mitely they t~sually come anony­ citizens in the vicinity of "the Shehan of Baltimore a member are the same for any unmarried mously.Nor can they be an­ college. Civic, business and labor. of the Consistorial Congregation, person; no matter what his age. swered, adequately in a short leaders of southeastern Massa­ NEW BEDFORD

the Roman curia body which This particular writer asks, for space such as in this column. chusetts have received .invita­ - example, about the morality of There are 18 sides to' every provides for the erection of new tions to' attend. dioceses and the nomination of INDUSTRIAL OILS

petting for the under-20 unmar­ question, and so, serious prob­ tied, and the answer is the same lems usually require personal, Bishops. The Pope also confirmed him HEATING OILS

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From Our Own or kisses or embraces as my cor­ the give and take of conversa­ chairman of the U. S. Bishops' respondent mentions) is serious­ tion, and question an answer. Tested Herd", ly sinful in itself outside of mar­ B'ut While jldvice can best, be Commission for Ecumenical Af­ & Acushnet, Mass,. WY 3-4457 fairs. tiage, precisely because it is part given and taken in personal in­ • Special Milk and 'parcel, in' nature, of' the ,terviews, still there are some 501 COUNTY STREET

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But the important point here theinselves powerless tO,seek an­ • Tropicana Orange Juice is that principles do not change, swers directly. If I can be of any • Coffee and Choc. Milk WY 3-1751 and sin is no more permitted as help in any such, and if it is a MORTGAGES

• Eggs - Butter 'one grows older or gets engaged problem which cal" be handled than it was earlier. It is, of by mail, if you'll send me your Residential - Commercial course, true that certain' things 'address, I'll try. But don't e,xpect at (such as even modest kissing too much of either the mail or FIVE CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU and embracing) are much'mere 'me. Cape Cod's LARGEST Bank dangerous for the very young. ONE-STOP BANKING But where there IS question of something seriously sinful out­ WEAR side of marriage (such as pet­ Shoes That Fit ting), age has 'nothing to do with "THE, FAMILY SHOE STORE" the matter. It i& always cheering to re­ South Dartmouth, Hyannis' OF TAUNTON ceive letters from teens who realize that T am trying here to Dennisport Norton, W. Main St.-Raynham, Rte. 44-Taunton, Main St. work on their positive potential­ North Dighton, Spring St.-North Easton, Main St. ities rather than concentrate on Yarmouth Shopping Plaza 43 ~URTH STREET

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St. ,John's University Controversy Reaches Negotiations Stage JAMAICA (NC)-The controversy at St. John's University here on Long Island with faculty members and students aligned against the administration, now is in the negotiations stage. Following a meeting with a group representing the university chapter of the American Association ,of University Professors, Father John T. Tinnelly, C.M., former dean of the law , school who was named to arbitrate the dispute, promised another meeting before April 2, deadline for renewal of the teachers' contracts. The faculty_group headed by Andrew Robinson, philosophy teacher and president of the AAUP chapter, presented to Father Tinnelly a list of demands which called for a 25 per cent across-the-board raise in teachers' salaries; more liberal retirement polley, group health insurance and health insurance plans. , The wage demands by the AAUP chapter would make the pay scales $13,500 for a full pro-

THE ANCHOR"'Thurs., April 1, 1965

Porrut~~~ BI~$$~S

fessor; $11,500, associate profes­ sor; $9,000, assistant professor, and $6,800, instructor. Robinson said the present pay scale is into the "D" category according to AAUP standards. Retirement Benefits Robinson s aid professors scheduled to retire this year will receive only $100 per month in retirement benefits under the present arrangements. Also at issue in the university policy making field is a demand by the AAUP chapter for an elected faculty senate through which all matters of educational policies would be channeled. Robinson pointed out that un­ der present arrangements the university, largest Catholic in­ stitution of higher learning in the U. S., with an enrollment of 13,000 students, functions with an academic senate of 22 mem­ bers, 15 of whom are adminis­ tration appointees and seven, who are deans of the university's seven colleges, who are elected by the faculty.

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VATICAN CITY (NC)­ be sent to the Fatima shrine in Portugal was blessed by Pope Paul VI who said he hoped

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'Judge Upho!ds' State Assistance 'For C~MlTc~",Affiliated Colleges , ANNAPOLIS (NC)-A MarY- land judge' has ruled that it is constitutional for the state 'of Maryland to provide funds fOr the construction of buildings at 'church-affiliated colleges.' Circuit Court Jud'ge O. Bowie ,Duckett said it was "crystal clear that the Maryland legisla­ 'ture was in no way concerned with J;eligion" when it made the appropriations to four private 'Colleges in 1962 and 1963. , The suit opposing the ,state 'grant~, had 'been brought by the Horace Mann League, an organ­ ization of public school admin­ istrators, and 13 taxpayers. T,he attorn~y for the plaintiffs has 'indicated the suit will be carried

'all the way to the U. S. Supreme

Court if necessary.

Two of the schools involved. in the court test are Catholic. St. Joseph's College of Emmitsburg was given $750,000 in matching

grants for a science building, and the College of Notre Dame of Maryland in Baltimore was allocate $750,000 for the same purpose. The other colleges are Hood

College (United Church of

Christ) in Frederick, and West­

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w.

MEN 17·25

On the calendar for members

of Council 295, South End Knights of Columbus, Fall River, is a membership drive to start Sunday, April 4; a Catholic'Dis­ cussion Club meeting Wednes­ day, April 14; a social Saturday, April 24 at Stone Bridge Inn; 'and a past grand knights ban­ quet and a World's Fair trip, 'both scheduled for 1487.

JOIN THE. NEW Society of Brothers of Our Lady of Providence For information write to: FATHER MASTER St. Joseph the Worker Novitiate Warwick Neck. R. I.

Primary Purpose In ,qis 27-page opinion, Judge ,Duck,ett said the primary pur­ pose' of the grants was to con­ struct classroom. and science bUildings and other struct~res u!jed for secular purposes. The legal question to be decided, ,he said, was whether the primary effect of the grants was to ad­ "rance religion. , The court case was considered a major test of aid to church 'schools, with implications that went far beyond the $2.5 million so far appropriated under the program by the Maryland legis­ lature The mOJ;ley has been held 'up until the ruling.

eternal spring" for the Portu­ guese people and a "symbol of their attachment to the Holy Church." The gilded represenation of 8 rose is a mark of honor which popes have sent to persons, churches and shrines as a per­ sonal tribute. In a talk, the Pope noted that joy is a characteristic of Laetare Sunday for "in the midst of len­ ten penitence we already feel the joy of Easter which is draw­ ing near. "For this reason, even since«' the earliest times, the Church has reserved for this day ~ blessing of the Golden Rc;>se which in its mystical signifi­ cance represents' the joy of the twofold Jerusalem-the Church triumphant and the Church mil­ itant--and the Immaculate Vir­ gin, the' most beautiful flower of Jericho." , The rose will be delivered to the Fatima shrine on May 13, tIle

anniversary of the first appari­

tion of, OUi" Lady to three Portu­

guese children in 1917.

POlPeN~mesAM~:"~~1j for 'N@v~ S~oH~ See VATICAN CITY (NC)-PoPe Paul VI has named Father James Michael Hayes, chancellor of the Halifax archdiocese and rector' of the Halifax Cathedral, to be aliX­ iliary biShOP to, Archbishop Joseph Gerald Berry of Halifax. Bishop-elect Hayes was born in 'Halifax on May 27, 1924. 'He studied 'at the major" seminltl'y there and at the Pontifical Uni­ versity of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome. He was ordained ~ in 1947.

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BIG LEAGUER OFF THE FIELD TOO: Rico Carty, outfield batting star of the Milwaukee Braves, helps dis­ tribute clothing to needy school children in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, during the off-season. The clothing 'was donated by American Catholics through the 1964 Thanksgiving «lothing Collection of Catholic, Relief Ser­ In vices-NCWC. NC Photo., ,

, " ASSISI (NC)-This' hill town glan and an extreme leftist of northern Italy, which once­ politics, conceived the idea for 'witnessed the birth of the revo­ his movie,' "The Gospel Accord­ lutionary Franciscan' movement, ing to St. Matthew." , is' now the center of one, 'of Drawn to the center by a Italy's most dYnamic' and infIu­ study week on film production, 'ential programs of Catholic lay Pasolini one evening started action.'" ,. reading, 'the book of Gospels Assisi's PrO Civitate Christiana which lies on every night table , (For a Christian, Society) ,~ a 'in the modern guest house. umque association of about 100 Deeply moved by the J,larra­ "Catholic' unive!iity graduates 'who have dedicated their Uves tive of Christ's life as transmit­ , to 'bring Christ to th~ mod~in ted by St.- Matthew, he deter­ mined to produce a film which world.' , ' , The nine buildhig complex of would embody the austere sim­ , t h'e organization's "Christian 'pllcity of the Gospel text with a Citadel"-a: striking architectu­ . natural style of photography. ral combination of medieval The result is a 'fascinating"':"'al­ , grace and clean-lined modernity though mildly controversial­ -has becOme a spiritual oasis treatment of the life of Jesuil~ , for 40,000 visitors annually, who

'come for study weeks, conven­

"lBi$~~fPP@5nts Out tions, research and prayer.

The magnetic attraction, of 4s­ D~H~r

sisi's citadel is not merely tl;1e

TOLEDO (NC)-The Catholic charm and serenity of the town Church prohibits participation itself, but even more radiant and in the religious services of other 'Christlike hospitality and the denominations because each pro­ challenging programs offered by fesses different beliefs, Bishop the center. George J. Rehring of Toledo Government leaders, scientists, said. artists, university professors and Replying to a letter from Dr. students, working men - all drawn by programs of Christian Harry C. Gintzer, a local Meth­ odist pastor, which was pub­ study directed by Italy's biggest names in theology, the sciences lished in the Catholic 'Chronicle, diocesan newspaper, B ish 0 p and art. . Rehring said: Idea for Movie "By joining in the religious It was at the citadel that Ital­ services of another church, one ian film producer Pier Paolo either affirms a doctrine which Pasolini, a non-believer in reli­ he does not believe or subscribes to a rejection of a doctrine which he holds. This, of course, Coyle Breakfast involves violation of conscience. Capt. Walter McQueeney, per­ It can easily pave the way to sonnel director for the Provi­ indifference." dence police department, will be principal speaker at the third annual Communion, breakfast of the Coyle High School Fathers' Club, to be held Sunday morn­ :ing, April 4, following 8 o'clock 'Mass at St. Mary's Church, Est. 1897 Taunton. Breakfast will be served to fathers and sons in Builders Supplies the Coyle cafeteria. Greetings of 2343 Purchase Street the city will be extended by New, Bedford Mayor Benjamin A. Friedman and Rep. Charles Flannery will WY 6·5661

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20

THE ANCHORThurs., April 1, 1965

Prelate Lauds News Interest In Vatican II

Cardinal Shehan ApQroves Clergy •n Ri~hts I s~ue

SAGINAW (NC)-A bish. op said here the news inter­ est in the Second Vatican Council is a phenomenon of

NEW ORLEANS (NC)­ Lawrence Cardinal Shehan l)f Baltimm'e said here that the inclbation 0 f the G'~'ounger

generation of priests"

tc become more actively in­

-

volved in civic problems "is a great thing." "I don't feel that you can re­ strict the younger generation when they are doing what they believe in conscience they must do," he said in response to a question about the participation of members of the Catholic elergy in the Selma, Ala., civil rights demonstrations. Stating that the whole pattem ef marches stands out as a sym­ bol of the problem of providing voting rights and equality to all in this country, he declared that each person has to make up his own mind as to how "to meet each particu:ar situation." Therefore, he said in answ~r to a repor~~r's question at a press conference, "I respect Archbishop (Thomas J.) Toolen's position." Prelate's Statement MAN ON THE SPOT: If you have served with a little nervousness as a lector or com­ The question concerned a St. mentator in your parish, you will sympathize with this young man reading the Epistle ~s Patrick's day statement by the Bishop of lVIobile-Birmingham Pope Paul VI and his retinue ()f dignitaries listen. Scene occurred at St. Joseph's church In Ro.me. NO Photo. in which he said he resented members of the clergy from other parts of the country inter­ fering with problems in his dio- _ eese. INTROIT: Ps. 42, 1·2 When you consider Archbish- . -TRACT Ps. 128, 1·4 ep Toolen's statement, he con­ tinued, "you must realize ~hat Do me justice, 0 God, and fight my fight Much have they oppressed me from my the President of the Umted against a faithless people; from the deceitful youth. V. Let Israel say: Much have they op­ States had already interfered­ had spoken to Congress. Steps and impious man rescue me. For you are my ~od pressed me from my youth. V. Yet they have not­ had been taken to secure the and my strength. Ps. ibid., 3 Send forth your prevailed against me; upon my back, the plow· right to vote." Certainly Archbishop Toolen light and your fidelity; they shall lead me on ers plowed. V. Long did they make their furrows. had already borne witness to the and bring me to your holy mountain, to your But the just Lord has severed the cords of the fact that the problem is great, Cardinal Shehan said. dwelling-place. Do me justice, 0 God, and fight wicked.

Proper of Mass for First Sunday in Passiontide

Suggests Offices To Combat Smut WASHINGTON (N C) - A Catholic priest has suggested es­ tablishing full-time offices if!. New York, Chicago and Los An­ geles to arouse public opinion. against peddlers of pornographic klaterial. Father Morton A. Hill, S.J., llIecretary of Operation Yorkville, an anti-pornography association h! New York City, told a na­ .•- tional conference on obscenity

that such offices are "absolutely

essential" if a nationwide war

against obscene publications is

going to be made effective.

Father Hill saie he envisioned Gffices Where publicists and at­ torneys could cooperate in as­ sisting local agencies to battle smut peddlers in the courts and where they could arouse the public to the dangers of porno­ craphic material. He estimated it would eost about $1 million ttl set up the .ffices and suggested the money could be raised if interested IIhurch groups and private agen­ lues taxed each of their mem­ !'ers a few cents.

my fight against a faithless people; from the deceitful and impious man -rescue me. For you are my God and my strength,

OFFERTORY Ps. 110, 1 et 118, 17, 107 I praise you, 0 Lord, with an my heart;

be good to your servant, that I may live and keep your words. 0 Lord, give me life according to your word.

GRADUAL Ps. 142, 9 et 10 Rescue me from my enemies, 0 lord; teach me to do your will. V. Ps. 17, 48-49 0 lord, my deliverer from the angry nations, truly above my adversaries you exalt me and from the vio­ lent man you bave rescued me.

Governor Vetoes R-epeal Measure INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - Gov. Roger D. Branigan unexpectedly vetoed a capital punishment re­ peal measure passed by the 94th Indiana General Assembly. In a message- accompanying his action, which he called "one of the hardest decisions of my administration," the governor said that capital punishment should be decided by the people in a referendum.

COMMUNION 1 Cor. 11, 24 et 25 "This is my body, which shall be for you: this is the cup of the - new in my blood, H says the Lord; "do this as you receive it, in remembrance of

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Nun's Memorial MANCHESTER (NC)-A nur­ ping scholarship will be award­ l)(l to some young woman in Itartago, Colombia, as a memo­ lllial to Sister Mary Sebastian, Inember of the Manchester Mis­ Irion who worked as a missioner In Cartago. The nun, who died lIan. 31, established two clinics In nearby towns. She worked a rfCar in the mission and was be­ ''oved by the people.

modern times. Auxiliary Bishop Steven A. Leven of San Antonio, Tex., told an, audience which over­ flowed the auditorium of St. Paul's seminary here, "we have been told this will be the finr.l session (scheduled to open Sep~. 14) but we _have not been told when it will end." He speculate\i that he might eat Christmas dinner in Rome. Bishop Leven said the council is moving along in twofold rhythm-discussion and decision. He said after a subject is intro­ duced, there is a vote on whe~her further discussion is necessary. If the vote is favorable, the material is given to a commis­ sion for collating and brought back before the Council Fathers in form of propositions. Th2 commission evaluates voting on the propositions, prepares a final draft which is submitted for a final acceptance or rejectio3 vote. Updating Church He said the council brought together more bishops from more parts of the world than ever before in history. Alluding to the Church as the bride of Christ, Bishop Leven said the council's role is updating the Church. He remarked: "What bride would be content with wearing the same dress for 400 years? It's time she had a new dress." Bishop Leven said, "I should suppose there will be many more councils." He added there is no pattern for when or where a council is to be held, or how it will be conducted. He said a council simply is calling together the bishops of the world by the Pope to examine some particu­ iar problem.

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