!'
Chicago Law Prof Sees No Problem In Federal Aid
The ANCHOR An Anohor of 'he Soul,
Legal Experts Feel Parochial School ,Gr,ants Within U. S. Constitution
Bur. Gnd rlJrm--ST. PAUl.
FoU Rover, Mass.,' Thursday, April 6 8 1961 ©
--
H~61 The Anchor
PRICE lOe $4.00 pOl' Yoar
Socond Clauu Mail Prlvllegoo Authorized crt Fall llivor. Mass.
A~~~~mies An[O@~tmC~ S~~~larship R~lu~ts High schools of the Diocese have announced full and partial scholarship winners as a result of entrance examinations held last month. Six eighth graders have won full fOur year tuition scholarships at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River and five have mott is the daughter of Mrs. earned two year awards. The Mary McDermott of .13 Fay oix four year winners are Street, both of Taunton. Suan Mary Kelly and Mary Mc- Reid is the daughter .of Mr. and . Mrs. Herbert B. ReId of 1102 lI>ermott, Sacred H.eart School, Robeson Street. Paula M. Powers 'll'aunton; Susan ReId, Academy is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. of the Sacred Hearts Elementary John Powers of 1536 Gardner's School; Paula Powers, Nancy Neck Road, Swansea; Nancy lRe.gan and Mary Souza, Sacred Regan is the daughter of Mr. and mr~rt parochial school, Fall, Mrs. Francis W. Regan of 300 )RIver, Linden Street. Mary Souza is Two year winners are Anna the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Parin, Sacred Hearts Elementary Antone Souza of 42 Summerfield School; Margaret Moniz, Kath. Street neen Silvia and Mary Pires, S t . ' . Michael's parochial school; Ellen Anna Faria is the daughter of Demetrius, Sacred Heart par- Mrs. Maria Faria of 470 Bark ochial school all Fall River. Street, Swansea; Margaret Moniz Mary Kell~ is' the daughter of is the daughter of Mrs. Americo mI'. and Mrs. John Kelly, 26 Moniz of 177 Lindsey Street; l1'il.'st Street and. Mary MeDer· Turn to Page Fourteen
BISHOP ELKO
Serrans
to
Hear
Byzantine' Bishop Speak Monday The Serra~ Clubs of Nmy Bedford, Fall River, Providence, and the Attleboro
CHICAGO (NC). - Inclusion of parochial and other private schools in the administration's education aid bill will not violate the Constitution, a former law school dean has advised U.S. Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon. Wilber Griffith Katz, former dean which protects the freedom o;f of the University of Chicago choice of students and parents as law school and now pro~essor to the school in which Federal of law there, has sent a let- benefits may be enjoyed. This ter in reply to Senator Morse's principle is supported by the req\lest for hi~ opinion on the decision in Everson vs. the Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1, with controversial bill. Senator Morse is sponsor in which your (Senate education) the Senate of a bill which would subcommittee is familiar." provide $2,3 billion in grants for Mr. Katz pointed out thR-t public school construction or "Congress has previously shown teachers' salaries, but rules out concern for freedom i!l th0 such aid to private schools as choice of schools." well as long-term, low-interest ''This principle," he declared, loans to them. "was embodied in the GI Bill Mr. Katz told the Senator his for veterans' educational bene· interest in the problem "is re- fits and, at the pre-college level, lated primarily to the First in the laws governing education. Amendment prohibition of laws al cost for congressional and 'respecting an establishment of Supreme Court pages. religion or prohibiting the free "The following provision is in exercise thereof.''' section 88A of Title 20 of the "In my opinion," he stated, U. S. code: '(C) Said page or "inclusion of parochial schools pages may elect to attend a pri. with other priv.ate schools in the vate or parochial school of their measure you proPose would not own choice; provided, however, violate this provision. . that such private or parochial "I believe that the Constitution school shall be reimbursed btleaves Congress free to pattern - the Senate and the House of Turn to Page EIghse0n its aid. to education· in a way
Federal Tax Funds Aid More Than 40 Programs
district'will hold their joint meeting on Monday evening at the New Bedford Hotel. WASHINGTON (NC)-The Federal government now Featured speaker for the af- spends tax funds for more than 40 programs which include fair will be Most Rev. Nicholaa church-related institutions or individuals from such instiT. Elko, Bishop of the Byzantine Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh. tutions. This revealed by Abraham Ribicoff, Secretary Ii..I. Bishop Elkoisthespiritual lead- of Health, Education' and Loan Program, the National De. " er'of nearly a quarter of a mil.,.. Welfare, in a document sent fense Education Act, the Hilllion faithful, spread over 14 t C t th t ,J. States of the United States. He 0 ongress a . e reques vi Burton Act to aid hospital con· pursued his theological studies Sen. Wayne Morse of Ore- struction, the National Schoo! Lunch Act and related programs PALM BEACH (NC)-Father John J. Considine, M.M., at the Byzantine Catholic Sem- gon, chairman of the Senate and the Surplus Property Dis-off New Bedford, director of the Latin America Bureau, inary of Uzhorod, Czechoslo- education subcommittee. The list of Church-State c0- posal Program. vakia, and with his qualified Most of the others involve National Catholie Welfare Conference, was named to the 'background in Oriental Studies operative projects was sought by No.tional Advisory Council for the Peace Corps. The list of acquired 'froin exten'sive travel the Senator in view of the Na- Federal grants to persons or to iJ3 prominent citizens who and research' in the Middle East, tional Catholic Welfare Confer· institutions in the form of schol. 'n t h ' '1 Taking part in .the National. he served as professor. of Sacred' ence's request' for 'inclusion ,of arsh,ips or res~arch funds. WI serve. on e counCI was Conference on Youth Service Scriptures" and 'Rector' of . the '. private and, parochial schools in , However, the smaller programs Jn~d~ public from tM tem-, , ,Abroad was a delegation repre-' Byzantine Ca~holic Seminaiyal. proposals fOr Federai aid to'edu·· do inClude some direct grants to institutions. These include the ~rary White House here senting the National Council 01.. '" T~i1l toPl\fI'e F~IU', '. clition." . where President Kennedy was ,Catholic, Y.outh.· The delegation' '. .' ...., . The' NCWC suggested ~ Con- Atomic Energy Comniission'. ~ending the Easter holidays. . was made up of representativetl' B.I·shop· ',' .·Ger·ra· r'd gtessional educational subcom. grants·to enable Colleges to pur· chase nuclear lab equipment and Vice President Lyndon B. of th~ National Federation of . mitteel that a loan; program: be loilllSon will be chairman' of Catholic College Students, the'S· " started to aid' construction of . the Public' Health Service'. grants to health research facilithe gl'OUP which will assist the Na.tional Newman Club Federa'In equlem' private, nonprofit schools; Peace CO/P8 director, R. SllrgeDt tlon and. the national Catholle For Pa stor '.') The majority of the programs ties to meet· up to 50 per cent Sh:'-iver of Chicago. Youth Organization federation. listed in the Ribicoff report ili- of . the cost: of. construction' or . Meanwhile, in Washington, Most Rev. James J.'Qep.. volves· participation . by both· remodeling. D. C. representatives of national At. the close of the meeting raid, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary public and .prIvate institutions. . 'fheCollege Housing Loaft Catholic youth organizations conference delegates .endorsed Bishop of the 'Diocese, eele- Few are exclusively for nonpub-' Pr~gram, passed by Congress ia were among delegates to a three- the Peace Corps idea, opposed brated' a', 'p'on~I'fl'''QI RequI'em lie institutions and none are only 1950, gives low-interest loans for day meeting on the Peace Corps,' loyalty oaths for members, and for church-related agencies. . up' to 40 years to help finance which will send young Amer- urged eventual United Nations Mass in Our Lady of Perpetual Five of the programs are c9ilstruction of revenue-produoleans abroad to work in under'. 'control of aR'international peaee Help Church, New Bedford, yes- major.ones: the College Housing Turn to, Pag~ Two developed nations. corps. terdaY morning for· the late pastor, Rev. Adolph Banach, O.F.M.Conv., who died in !l River Maryknoller Brings Boston hospital Sunday morning after a short illness. Stew to Mayan Indians Father Banach had served lW Forty-seven Mayan Indian farmers of Solomo, Guate- pastor of the parish since last . WASHINGTON (NC) - An Orthodox rabbi appealed mala took a long walk into the 20th century recently by September and his death brought f-or Federal assistance to Jewish and other parochial schools sadness to his people whom be em'oIling in a scientific farming course sponsored by the had worked among for such a at the House's concluding public hearing on Federal aid to local Maryknoll Mission and the Guatemala Ministry of education. However, a spokesman for the American Jewish . Turn to Page FoUl' Congress charged at the Agriculture. The pastor of ence, the ministry would send "It is our view that to deny these same session that U.S. aid to tax-paying American citizens ()f the mission, Rev. John M. a team of experts to teach the church-related schools would Orthodox Jewish faith the bEme. ]Breen, M.M., of Fall River, courses. decided to do something Father Breen managed to en· mark the beginning of the fit of their taxes • . . is a discrimination not in accord witb obout primitive agricultural roll 47 farmers in the first phase end of U.S. religious liberty. basic American ideals." methods which deny people an ofa'program which includes cuJ... The chainnan of' the subcomHe objected to statements by adequate diet and perpetuate tivation of new crops, insect conmittee which heard the two superstitions' inherited from aJloo trol, soil conservation, irrigation Jews appealed to supporters of "certain secularist Jewish leadand food preparation. aid to private and parochial ers and reform' clergy" opposed eient Mayan religious belief. The self-help program requirea "The Indians were resigned to schools to drop their request for to Federal aid to private schools. farmers to purchase their own inclusion of such aid in the gen- He said their statements led to their fate," says Father Breel1. seed, fertilizers and insecticides, eral education aid bill and to misconceptions about the Jewis!::l '"For them, crop failure was while the government supervisea accept separate treatment by otand. 'punishment from the gods', planting and cultivating, deter. The rabbi's viewpoint woo CongreSs. . r.ather than the result of iHF mines crops that will flourish in opposed by Leo Pfeffer, general Rabbi Morels Shere'l' of New fl)roper farm methods." certain. regions, and encourages York, executive v-ice president counsel oi. the American Jewi9~ The Fan River Maryknolle!." Congress, and a well-knowB called in an official of ,the Agri. profitable mal'keting .In t~ ~ the 5O,000-mem.ber Agucfath Israel group, told the subco'a- proponent of "absolute separa(Julture Ministry for aid and nearest cities.' mJottee: "We strongly iiavor FeQl.> tion of Church and State." advice. The agent promised that Proof o:f the success of the Mr. Pfeffer sa-id any U.S. S3'o eral aid to parochial schools.'" if the padre could guarantee a program waa realiZed last week Orthodox Jews are suppor.tln:g £l!Btarn:e to churllb-related eleo @roup of farmer-s who would wAth the first "scientific" harv~ ~ !9 Pa£l'() JF@!!1:Y ~J. schoo!s m 26 ~ he s::M. [Willinely studu ~deuUural Iclr> ~ to ~() BftxfJool3
was
ames Father Cons.-d.-ne T. 0 Peace C. orps Cou nc.-,
9$
R . .. .,..
'-'Q
Fall
Lamb
Orthodox Rabbi Requests Federal' Aid ,for Schools
,::6r 0 u p'Asking
THE ANCHOR-"'-Dioce'se of Fall Riyer-~hur~" April, 6, '1961
Do Something'
Does It
Diocese .of' Fall River'
OFFICIAL
the area radio and TV field. The group has launched ~ "thumbs up" and "thumbs {Iowa» postcard campaign to let ra~ and TV stations know how members feel about certain programa. If the. members approve a pro-. gram they send a "thumbs uP" card reading: "Happy to send y~ a message of praise." If they ~ approve they send a "thumbl down" card stating: "Sorry fIJI send you a message of disap.. .proval." On the reverse side of .ax. cards are ratings and' reasoN\,
Clergy 'Jl'ransfell' Rev. Rudolph Frick Glaser, assistant at Espirito Sa,n~ Church, Fall River, to assistant, St. Anthony Church; Taunton.
.~~~ Bishop of Fall River .
' . '. .
-
. "
.
\.
StonehiliHolds President's'D.··inne,'· At the First Annual President's Dinner of Storiehill College,:held last evening in North Easton, Richard Cardinal Cushing, AFchbishop of Boston, and' the' Most Reverend Bishop were 'honored guests. This social event, sponsored by the Century Club of the College, , 1Il; group of honorary alumni" paid tribute to Very Rev. RIchard H. Sullivan, President of Stonehill.
.
NEW ORLEANS (N~ The 'Do Something Aboui It' moral safety committee is living up to its name fill
'r.to' be· checked by the
sendell,
SCHOLARSHIP FUND: Charter:, members:o. group~' 'd~ta~ling how the pr~gra~l"WaE Richard J. Potvin olBrocktori, ; organizing Father John J. Sullivan Scholarship Fund discuss received. The se~der signs .l1is·. gener~l chairman of. th~ event, . '• , . . ." ·her name and address. . ... , ,ex;pressed his jupilation 'at the plans. Left to nght, .Leo .Dl Corpo; OrlandoConfortl,·treas-: Mrs. Harold Ainsworth,"h~ response that greeted the anurer; Alphonse Saulmo, secretary. of the "Do Something Abolllt'Ir
nouncement of this 'event which . group, said the cards havebeea will be held every year. . . distributed to units which com. Chairman 9f the formal dinner-' pose the Council of CathoBi da!1ce wasFr~nk: E. Mone of '. 0 5 . School Cooperative Clubs. '!be North Easton. Rev. John J. Sullivan, former tions for one year or by one-time .. . pastor of Holy Rosary Church, special gifts; Fall River, who died in FebruIt' h ed that th ch 1 h' FRIDAY-Easter Friday. I Cla-. ary, will be honored by a Dioc. IS op e s ~ ars.lp White. Mass Proper; Gloru. I~ U S ch Will become affalr,open Sequence; Creed;. PrefaCE!, et-.. esan H'gh I 00I S Ch 0 1ars hi' p . . a . yearly ' .. able Thirty-two students from four to be founded in his memory by tobOY~ or girls .and ul1 at of Easter. Votive Mass in honor Diocesan school!! will com~te a' group of his friends and former aay Di o~san higtih . schotoo.l beat of the Sacred Heart of Je_ this Stinday for participation in parishioners.' . prese~t 10 ~pera on or" not permitted. BOSTON (NC)-The National' the National Catholic Forensic Edwiu'd Casper is president of established In the future. SATURDAY-Easter Saturd8Jl.1 Biennial Institute for :Business League tournament, to be held. the: fundraising· group, ,Orlando Contributions may be sent tel " _. Class. White. Mass Prop. . Educators will be held June 14 to .in Baltimore Thursday through Conforti is' treasurer and Al- Father John J. Sullivan Schol- . Gloria; Sequence; Creed; PrE60 22 at Boston' College. Richard Saturday, May 11 tlll-ough 13.' phonse Silulino is secretary, They arship Fund, ~5 ,PurchaSe Street, " , ace, etc. of Easter. . .\ , Cardinal Cushing; Archbishop of Try-outs will be held at Mt. will se~k contributions by a Fall River.' Checks should' be '.' SUNDAY-Low Sunday and,OeBoston, will offer a . Pontifical St. Mary's Academy, Fall River; pledge system of weekly dona- made payable to the fund~' : . tave Day of Easter. I' Clasa. Mass for delegates 00', June 18.. with students from Sacred Hearts . t· " White.. Mass Proper;Glodal Tl:!e institute is sponsored by the and Mt: St. Mary's Academies, ,.Creed; Preface of Easter;··::northeast unit of the Catholic Fall River, Holy' Family, ;New . 'MONDAY-Mass ··of . prevw. Business Edu<:.ation Association. Bedford; a~d ·Msgr. Coyle, Taun- . . Continued from Page One The Federal government: also '. ~'., .Sunday. IV Class. White, 'Ma8Ii ton, particillating. ing 'facilities, such. as dormitories distributes some of its surplus Proper; Gloria; no Creed; ~ Entries will include two two- and social centers. foods, such as butter, flour .and . ace of Easter. 'man debate teams and two conThe program has. made 767 some meat products, .to .pu~lic ,'rUESDAY-St. Leo I, Po~ testants. in four other speech ,loans to private colleges, totaling and private schools, for use ~Ill Confessor .and Doctor of tIul categories, Debaters must uphold $595 million. There is no break- lunch programs. , Church. III Class..White.. MaSlrl both the affirmative and nega- down on how many went. to It also helps pay the cost Oif Proper; Gloria;· no Creecll tive sides of the pmposition: church-affiliated institutions, 474 rec;:ess-time milk . programs.. In Preface of Easter. "Resolved: That· the United of.which are Protestant and 265 the last fiscal year, $70,9 million WEDNESDAY-Mass of pre.io. Nations should hi- significantly of which are Catholic. in tax funds was spent to purous Sunday. IV Class. WhitA\. strengthened." About· $618· million. has been chase 2.4 billion pints of milk lor Mass Proper; Glori~; no CreecJs . lent in465.loans: to public .insti- . children', ' Preface of Easter. ,tutions.' . The Surplus' Property' 'ACt, ..THP'RSDAY - St. Hermeneg~ , ' ..:Hospital Grants.". . adopted. in 1949 by CongreSs, . ,. Martyr. III· Class.' Red. ·,M...... . bleto educational, ,.. ... NEW yoRK: (NC)...:.-eatholic ..,.. ~he Hill_Burton Act,·. adopted rna k es avalla Proper,' Gloria," .no· ·Cr....... Yciuth"OrganizatiorimeIribership .'" h Ith d""d .... \ .... --.,. "in the New York 'archdiocese ., in 19.46 and adminisu;red by,the. ea an Civil efense orgl111i-. .Preface of Easter." " ' ! r,.;', . . Public Health Service makes zations land," buildings" ',' and ., " .., . ballooned from 25;000 chil<Jren ' .' .. , . equipment· which' the :govern· ano'younlir!>eoptEdn'1936; wlien,"'a~y:\?ublic or .prlvate.,hospltal ment no 'longer requires. '.:' SUMMER . :. it· was founded to '250;000 'in 1"001, " e,bgl1He lefor a Federal construc, , ' .,. ." ., . .,. a~ . ' , '~;lthel" PhilipJ: MurphY; youth, hon .~r~nt. It has passed, ~ut No Line Drawn '. . ~IREME"'T ;HOMES. ,I' ' t. activities 'division' diI~eCtor- of .. ' ~1.4.bl.llion, 22 percent .of. which No line- is' 'drawn' between ,,' New York Catholic Cha'rities~JJS':.esti~ated to ,have. gone .. to eligible public and privai,t('ili'C~pe' ,. reports. ' ':.Cat~hc;·,Protestant.and::Jewlsh stitutions. About $423 million ,hospitals. "" . " . in propertY. wa,i.il.i~pose'd·9(t,his I'*,~ . ' ·r.The':,Na'tionar School. Lunch . way in the las't fiscal y~ar.About ~. 1 ••• Program, adopted by Congress in _ 77 percent v.:erit ti3 schoolS; : . West Yarmouth "..:: . 1946, permits private ~nd paro.. THE ANCHOR liStS the 8D-· ,Rte. 28 SP 5-31'00 n~versary, dates of priests who . . chili! school pupils .to . benefit serve'd the Fall River Diocese equally ... with public' school' since its formation ill 1904' pupils in a program of cash' and with the intention that lUle food to maintain a satisfaCtory • faithful will give them a nutritional' standard. . TRANSFERRED: . R ev . prayerful .remembrance. The ca.sh-about $93.6 million Rudolph Frick Glaser, assistthis year"':" is provided" to states ICE CREAM. APRIL' 9 ant at Espirito Santo Church~ or directly to private schools to · Fall River, has been trans- · Rev. Cornelius McSwiney, .1919, help provide' fr~~ or. reducedILEO R. ~ER1JBE. Mgr.,· " · Pastor. Immaculate Conception, c0!lt 'lu,riches for needy' y~ung';ferred by the Most,· 951 Slade 8t. . 'I·el. Of) 5-7886 Fall River. .,. , , .,,'j". st~·rs.. " : , . " Bishop to become assistant APRIL 10 . In 28 states whose constituat ·St. Anthony's Church" You·~i John P. Doyle, ·1944, 'Pas- tions are interpreted as forbidTaunton. Fr. Frick Glazer tor,Rev. ding the state to channel Federal .1 .:' 81. William, Fall River: . · has been assistant at the ·funds ..to private .schools, the . TlCKUtMf APRIL 11 N. S. Agriculture' Department Fall River parish for the 'Rev. Johri F. Downey, 1914, deals directly with private , past two years. Pastor, Corpus Christi, Sandwich. sc~ools, oft~l!- represent~d by a . fret deflYtry-catl t', f c09perative organization.' , ' Commercial • Industriaf' Dec'~ncy'" IDEA~ FORTY HOURS Institutional .. The. following films. are to be Pai.nting and Decorating added to the lists in' their· FeNew Bedford Catholic Wom.... DEVOTION ,- Fall River' OS8-56Tl~~ spectiveclaSsifications:' . en's Club ways and means com.135 Franklin Str'eet' : .. 373 NeWBostOh Ro~', Apr.. 9-St. Francis Xavier, UnQl?iectionable fot. ge~~ril1 mittt~e wiii sponsor an' auction ,.. , . Acushnet.. 'patronage:' Five Guns to' Tomb- . sale open to the public at 7 I=all River OSborne .2- i 911 St. Joseph, New Bedford. stone; Misty (recommended, 'as . Wednesday night, April 12 at : .. ..... . St. James, Taunton. . superior, wholesome entertatn- Sinith .Mills: Grange Hall. Doors Apr'l6--St Paul T a u n t o n ' , .. . will open at 6, and refreshments ., ·s· t J h' th B' t· 't F"ll . ment):-, .... ' will'" be :available. Mrs. Luke ,:'., . 0 n e a p 18, a .UnobJ·ectl·onable for a'dults'and Charon . · . is chairman .and Francis . R Iver., adolescents: The Fierce·,st. .:H",~"'rt·, \ Cql1!n~ ,will be au. . ioneer., . . .: ':'''1t>6., "at-The"N~rrcw~ 'in: North Welt~' "'!, ,A.pr. ~3-0ur Lady of :tb~: ' 'Operation Bottleneck; The':Secret " . . ,.. .' .' -: . ••• I ~ .... : .1.;.\ ' • • • -.' , .:, • . .. , : .'.Holy Rosary, New·Be~Ways. <;,:;'--\: . . ,ford. , '.' ,... ":. " Unobjectionable fC)l< "'adUlts: Holy Ghost, Attleboro."~·· .. ;"',Tlle Big Bank Roll. .: •. ·,f..\:.. . IN NEW 'BEDFORD ; ~ " to \':". :' ,:,!, Apr.30:,.-St. Michael,. Ocea~ '.' Objectionable in part' fc)t'~~aU: :~~, .. Where The ' . . DIAL '3-1431 .Grove. Two Loves (justifies.: dlv,iirce, . 'EnUre: FainD.v:· 1 OtirLady of the ImIriacu- . 'remarriage and free·,l<ive.; Note: llill...... aim Dine>'···· late .Conception. Fall :, advertised ,for .a:dUlts/ :Oilly~":~ EconouUca}q J:tiver. .' r . • ; producer); .. : '.:' ~ . ~ . '_.' ::') . ,:: , . Change .of .Classification: 0,At- .. bibJlliIlIIIIlII ,. THE; ~CHOa'; ':':,', -, . ; lailtis,the' LOst'Conti~nt:(~J.:in-.: ~" . '.' IN f.AI,.L, RIVER Sccond-cl~ mail.privilegeS authoiiaed .' erly classified' as:objectibnable . \ '. \;'. ',. ' . ' •• ,Fall "R",~er•. ·.Mass: . ·Publlshed: 'everl/ t·· . -f' ." " ...' " .'. ' .J.,.... . DUAL 2-1322 5-7620 . "·FOr Reservations " Thursda; at no Highland' Avenue 'Fall: ·lD. part. or'. all; ,Jiow';classifiedl as , . :' Rive..... Mass:.ti, ,the catJioI~ fr~~~fthe' j.unobj~cti.ona~le;.for.:"adUi~'/md .. . .. ~.' ..~~.~ ... · DIoc~ee,?f. ,Fall .RI"er,...Sul;1scrlptlOD. plica . ' 0:. .. ...:,. 't· \"" ' ..:..' ';·<.f." ~;. ... .... '.0-.:: ..... .',~ ..~ . .. • . · ,br I!lllil•. postpald-·$40.00 .pel' year;"",_. ". ,•.' <, ,·.....y.oescen S"." ..... §: i-" ,." ''':'..... , • '.,
Found Diocesan Scholarship Fund T H Pastor' M ' onorL ate emory
.
Mass Ordo
D.iocesClln Youth Enter . For ll..laAoiona·1 T'ourne'y
Business .Educators
Tax Funds .Aid Prog''ram.
5.:. , .
...evo ,iExplosion.'. n'
u-
'.;
& 'ls'land:, ,:, Real Estate .
'Necrology
I
t
•
•
•
..,
•
.
. '"
~~.,':/ifI~
ReV:
!
,:
DONNELLY PAINTING '.' . SERVICE.
Legion. of
New B.edford Auc:tion
LAUNDRY
..
'
~wH I' TEl S,~Fa;";;" Re$taur~ri';',~:;
ct.
or
..
. Phone 'os .5-7'·S5
Thurs.. April 6. 1961
Principal Lis t s Commandments For Teens
OKLAHOMA CITY (NC)-'-Wiihin 50 years the Cathdie Church in the United'States will see wider centralization at administration in the diocese while the parish will conCentrate on the formation of apostolic Christians'. This is one of the conclusions drawn spanned illl the Courier's foreby seven Catholic experts in cast. -Father Andrew M. Greeley special articles written for the Oklahoma Courier, dioc- on the parish: The parish will ocesan newspaper of Oklahoma City and Tulsa. Some other contlusions are that the layman's IlOle will greatly expand, both . . participation in worship which will be mostly in the teople's languages-and in administrative functions; and unity with other church bodies will be Dearer reality, if not a fact, by that time. Best Known Authors ~e experts included 'soine of the best known Church authors' til the nation. They were told to project recent and present Utends to foretell what. the Church would be like in 50 . rears. Each writer was assigned bois own specia: field, the liturgy _d worship, the parish, the layman, structure of the Church, education, mission activity, anCi .umenism. The articles were published as a special insert in the regular Raster issue of the paper. ,Among some of the conclu-, lions drawn by the authors Were: Liturgy -Father H. A. Reinhold on liturgy: there is a definite and determinable direction in past changes in the worship of the Church; this reform is not yet !balf completed; Latin is the last barrier between the worship and the people. Among the reforms cited by Father Reinhold and othel's were the relaxing of 'the Bw:harisUc fast, the changed hurs for Mass. -Father Gregory Baum on eeumenism: Catholicism and Pirotestantism are moving closer .. many ways, and as specific examples, the unity expert cited the development of Church arIhitecture and the reform of· 1VOrship ideas in Germany, where a dialogue has been in aperation; a simplified and direct liturgy are assets to this moveDlent; the Church must learn', elore from "Bi?le sects," although u~ity wl~h .these ~cts , IeeIlls unhkely w~thlO the time
Blame Cat Chase' eASTRO MARIM (NC-Fire which destroyed, the late 18thIieotury church of Our Lady of -,e Martyrs here was attributed .. the droppiI)g of' a lighted .-ndle by two boys who were dlasing a cat behind .the high ~.
become less important, while strangely enough it is becoming more important; tqe diocese will be the centralized administrative unit and will operate school boards-which will include lay people; meanwhile, the parish will become less "social" but will concentrate more on training effective lay Christian apostles. -Father Frederick A. McGuire on missions: Mission activity is changing, with colonialtype mission work dying with colonialism, and with the use and aid of behavior scienclts to effectively carry out mission work; the use of lay missionaries spells a great change in activity and techniques, including the recognition that "our new mission is the human race." Education -Professor Justus George Lawler on education: the big question facing schools is money, and a way to solve this problem will be a prime concern. -Mr. James L. Cockrell' on laymen: the layman is assuming a "more 'priestly' tole"; greater participation in worship, concern with social and family matters, will be his targets in the next half century; the "apostolate" will be more and' more understood. -Father Joseph Connolly on structure: the other writers in the symposium are merely using scholal'ly techniqu,es to predict changes and the changes themselves will not alter the Church Christ founded, but its methods and ideas will change vastly for the better.
District One Sets Dialogue Mass Forthcoming activities of the Diocesan' Council of Catholie Women include a 'dialogue Mass for District One' at 7:30 Wednes,day night, April 26, Feast of Our Lady of Good Counsel, patroness of the organization, at St. Mathieu's church, Fall River. Rev. Thomas F. Walsh, district moderator, will celebrate the Mass and Rev. Gerard A.' Boisvert, Notre Dame Council of Catholic Women moderator, will preach. Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, assistant pastor at St. Mathieu's, will lead the congregation in dialogue responses. New District One officers will be installed at the Mass and Holy Communion will be distributed. A short business meeting will tollow and nine guilds will join in providing hostesses for a cOfJlee hour. The meeting will also be a tribute to Father Walsh on the occasion of his transfer to St. John the Evangelist parish, At-· tleboro, according to Miss Helen Chace, district president. She reminds members to m'ake reservations by Thursday, April 20 with herself or Mrs. Raymond Poiss~lIl, District Spir.itual Development chairman. ' The annual Diocesan Convention of all affiliates will be held Saturday, !\!Iay 6. Further announcement of plans will be made at forthcoming planning meetings.
Somerset D· of I, st. Patrick's Circle, Somerset
Daught~rs
of Isabella, wili meet at 7:45 Wednesday night,' April 12 at Old Town Hall. A business meeting 'will be - followed by a calendar party: .
,
'
PHI BETA KAPPA: Sister Rochelle Mar y " RS.,M.;· cJaughter of Mr. and Mrs. ~o Posbiglione, F a II River, has been elected to ~ Beta KapR,&, national bonor society. A senior at Catholic Univ-er-siily (Jf Am•
, s'~ is. a m\l'Sic major•. :
TRI-¢ljTY ,OFFICE 'EQU·I·P. BUSINESS AND • DtWLlCATING MACHINES
Second ~nd Morgan ,Sts.
FALL RIVER· W¥ 2-0682 OS 9-6712 . .E. J. McGINN. Prop.
3
THE ANCHOR-
Catholic Experts Look Fifty Year$ Ahead
FALLS CHURCH (NC)The head of a Washington, D.C., high school listed the "Teen Commandments" for
MEMORIALIZES NUNS: Nuns Hl'llping the Wounded of the American Civil War (1861-65) is the subject of this stained glass window in the new Church of St. Brigid, Lexington, Mass. The centennial of the Oivil War recalls the many tributes of praise heaped upon these Angels of Mercy-. NC Photo.
Catholic Sisters-Nurses Among First To Volunteer for Civil War Service Thousands of volumes conWASHINGTON (NC) - Just 100 years ago, April 14, Presi- cerning the Civil War history dent Abraham Lincoln issued his and personalities have been ihitial call for 75,000 volunteers published during the past 100 for Civil War service. Catholic years. However, "It is almost Sister-nurses of 12 Sisterhoods unbelievable," Professor O'Confrom 20 Religious Communities nor observes, "that there is no were among the first to respond. work yet which deals with Eventually 600 nuns served on Abraham Lincoln and the Cathboth sides during the war (1861- olic Church in the United States." . 65). They attended the sick and wounded of both the Union and The war':time president's im-' Confederate forces, in hastily promptu visits to the nuns· in erected hospitals" emergency the military hospitals in the . field stations, floating hospitals Washington area, and his friend- . and military prisons, serving . Uness and admiration for their without pay. . nursiI.lg services is often menMany have 'been the tributes tioned in the Catholic press. of pmise for their unselfish de- Quotations are sometimes given votion. Their story has been from a so-called "Abraham Linnarrated, at -least in part, by , ooln's Tribute to the Civil War George Barton in his "Angels of Nuns." . the Battlefield" (1897), and 'in Ellen Ryan Jolly's volume, '\Nuns of the Battlefield" (1927)• Gallant Work However, in the opinion of one histOI'y professor, Dr. . Thomas H. O'Connor, of Boston College, writing ill the Boston Pilot recently, "there is much more which could be done to bring the story of the gallant work of the religious orders up to date. A much needed study, too, is an overall account of the Catholic chaplains and their participation in the Civil War."
Buck Ossieks
RED· ANGUS RESTAURANT Famous for our Prime ,Aged Charcoal Broiled Steaks' - also Roast Beef - Sea Food Dancing Every Saturday Nite to the Music of Eddi'e Davis and his Orchestra ·Pla....ing A Wedding. Shower. Banquet or Meeting-CaU our B_quet :Departm8ftt for' details•. AI Parties 'giYen our EXpert Attention-Caa MAYFAIR 4-9888-4-9979
91 Cranda,i Rd. Tiverton, R.I.
youth guidance during a talk to the St. James School Association here. Brother Dominic Luke, F.S.C., of St. John's College High School, conducted by the Christian Brothers in Washington, developed his talk around ten rules for teenagers' conduct. He said the "Teen Commandments" are these: 1. Don't let your parents down -;-they brought you up. 2. Be humble enough to obey -you'll be giving orders. yourself someday. . 3. Stop and think before you drink. .4, At the first moment tur,n away from unclean thinking. 5. Don't show off when driving-if you want· to race go to Indianapolis. 6. Choose a date who would make a good mate. 7. Go to church faithfully. The Creator gives you a weekgive Him back one hour. 8. Avoid following the crowd ~be an engine not a caboose: 9. Choose your companions carefully-you will become what theyare. 10. Keep the Ten Commandments. : 'I'he motto of the Washington school is 'iBuilding boys is better than mending men."
REAL ESTATE
POWERS Insurance Agency 43 PURCHASE ST.
FALL RIVER
Flo'wers by
Henry Teixei.ra Johnny ,Lemos Florist Hyannis"
Sp. 5,-2336
4
T;:~'
Name NBC Officio' for Vif1anOYG Awcnd
____T..;..h..:;u..;..rs:;...:.-, April. 6, 19.61
VILLANOVA (NC) - William, R. McAndrew," executive vicepresident for news of the National Broadcasting Company, has been named the winner of Villanova University's St. Augustine A ward for distinction in the field of communications' journalism by Father John A. Klekotka, O.S,A., Villanova's president. Named for St. Augustine, one of history's most brilliant writers,
Two 'frrfi~sfi'$ Caire ,MOtTO I D~Hrilgerrs
Of
Goi~g
Steady
CINCINNATI (NC)-Two Jesuit priests dispensed some advice to parents here about the moral hazards in modern dating practices among youth. The priestS advised parents to "slow down the process" of involving teenagers in social life and to "omit the dancing classes for youngsters in grade schools." The counsel' was -given to a joint meeting of fathers' and mothers' clubs of St. Xavier's high school students by Fathers Edward L. Wieber, S,J.,· and Herbert J. Raterman, S.J., members of the high school faculty. Father Raterman said "going steady isn't necessarily a mortal sin" for teenagers, but added there are grave moral, social and "educational risks in the practice. . He, said it amounts to "exclusive, frequent company-keeping" JESUS·MARY WINNERS': Full scholarship winner at which is the "equivalent of being Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, is, ,front center, Denise engaged without the possibility Boule of St. Anne's Parish, Fall Rjver. Winners of partial of getting married." He added that "going steady" scholarships are, rear row Janice Cousineau of Notre Dame prevents' a boy or girl from Parish, Fall Riv'er, Christine Demers of Immaculate Concep"shopping around" and finding out there are many, different tion Parish, Fall River, and, Denise Dion of Notre' Dame types of other boys and girls. The Parish, Fall River. result of "going steady," he said, usually is a "half-baked person", ality." ·Continued from Page One sell T.' McVinney of Providence,' "A boy who is thinking about a girl won't listen, to a Jesuit," Saints Cyril and Methodius in with their Auxiliary Bishops, he said, referring to the "educa- Pittsburgh. He was consecrated Bishop James J. Gerrard and tional handicap" of "going Bishop on March 6, 1955 at the . Bishop Thomas F. Maloneyj Rev. Altar of the Chair in ,Saint ;John J. Hayes, Director of Vocasteady." , Peter's Basilica in Rome. tions of the Fall River Diocese, ' Asks Reasonable Approach District Governor John E. , Father Raterman listed these Bishop Elko has been active 'reasons for "going steady": sel- in the work of rehabilitation of , Queenan representing Serra Infishness ("I want her all to my- Iron' Curtain peoples. With a ternational and his deputy, self"); shy-neS!! ("Others might staff 6i priests, he prepares Robert V. MC,G~wan, K.S.G. turn me down for a date"); in- Catholic programs for w:eekly @nt ~j«i1 surance, (a policy usually fol- broadcasts behind the Iron 'Curlowed by girls to avoid embar- tain through Radio Free Europe, Continued fr.om Page One rassment in Monday morning Inc. During the Hungarian Re- mentary and" secondary schools cafeteria conversations); and the volt in 1956, he himself was near "most certainly would mark the "far more serious reason," lack the border of Hungary establish- beginning of the end of the ing stations and helping the American principle of religious of love at home. . "Forbidding them to go steady refugees. . liberty and Church-State separadoesn't solve the problem," He has founded a new com- tion as we have known it in thie Father Raterman said, "Talk munity of women religious country." things over rationally and point known as the Byzantine Catholic The call to supporters of aid . out the dangers first. Use a rea- Sisters of Christ the Teacher, to parochial schools to accept sonable approach." separate legislation was made who dress in modern garb. , Father Wieber urged parents by Rep. Frank Thompson of Among invited guests for-the New Jersey, chairman of the to "intensify your own family life by doing things together"ro meeting are Bishops James L. subcommittee and House spon,keep boys ,and girls close to the Connolly of Fall River an~ Rus- sor of the administration's bill to 'family. He said that dating aid public schools. should begin "certainly not in , Msgr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, Catholic Edifices Get -the first year of high school" but 'director of the Education De"maybe toward the end of the Sculpture AWards partment of the National Cathsecond year it would be" all NEW YORK (NC). -'Two . olic Welfare Conference, earlier right." He added that even in Catholic edifices were honored ·told the committee he thought a the junior and senior years dathere Monday for distinguished ~(":parate bill ,stood little chance ing ought to be moderate. : use of l s~ulpture .In the ecclesi- . of Cong,ressional action and that it implied private schools were astical category. .not a part of the over-all AmeriHenry Hering Memorial Medal l'afl educational structure. Continued from Page One . short time. Before coming to the awards of the National Sculpture New Bedford parish, Father Society went to the National Banach had served as pastor of Shrine of the Immaculate ConIiIO JOB TOO BIG St. John Cantius Church, Clifton, ception, Washington, D. C., and the Cathedral of Mary Out' N.J. NONE TOO SMAIl Born Dec. 21, 1908 in Mil Queen, Baltimore. The cerewaukee, the son of John P. and mony took place at the Nationllll Marie (Brzek) 'Banach, he was Arts Club. graduated from Messmer High School and entered the Order of PRINTERS Friars Minors after graduatloll. Electrical IIatD 0Hlee IIIDd ...... , He made his religious profession in Corpus Christi Church, lOWELl, MAss. " Contractors . Buffalo after attending St. Fran'IleIepboae Lowell cis Novitiate, AthOi Springs, N. Y. GI. 8-6988 aa4 QL 'I-fIOO He studied at the Franciscan Seraphic College in Rome and ~PbBtI. the Franciscan Seminary, Assisi, Italy, where he was ordained on BOSTON July 24, 1927. ' 944 County St. ' OCEANPORT, N. J. He served in parishes in IlliNew Bedford PAWTUCKEI', II. L nois, Pennsylvania and New Jersey before being assigned to the· New Bedford parish in September 1960. The transfer of the body will take place Tuesday afternoon at 7 4 o'clock, followed by Office of , IINO. the Dead. Father Banach is survived by , four brothers, including Father Edwin Banach, O.F.M. Conv.,'of California, and two sisters.
,the awerd Is conferred upoc • who has achieved pao:::tb ular distinction in the coll'l§Jt'tuiication arts. Presentation d bB made on Saturday, April 8. The 46-year-old 'Mr. ~ drew Is a graduate of the Ca(D.. olle University of Ame~ Washington, D. C. He worked£lllr a Washington paper and h1tIlI' served as head of United ~ theJ!e.
"pel'llOD
-------~------------------
SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY HEAVY, CORN-FED STEER BEEF
Chuck
Serrans to Hear Bishop Elko
Roast ,
"
lONE IN ..
R©[brwo
LB SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY HEAVY, CORN-FED STEER BEEF
Rib 'Ro 051
7-INCH
CUT
3rd TO 6th RIB NO 7th OR SHORT RIBS ARE INa.UDED
Fr. Banach
.SULLIVAN BROS.
'.t'
·\:J· :I·~:
':'.~
,,' . ;,','7; :~-."".::::"
•. '~". : ~'. :"
. ~., .J..:. . "";."..A.:
'~,'. :.~.
I
~"A
,
~
1f.r
D & D Sales and Service
FRIGIDAmE
lt~ll'~ey 5)1J)~(Ql~~U'
SAN'ANTONIO (NC)-James : A .. F,arley, former U. S. Postmaster General and chairman of the Democratic National Committee, will be the speaker and receive an honorary degree at the commencement ceremonies of St. Mary's University here May 28.
RlEFRDG[ERAT~ON
363 SECOND ST.
ARTIHIU~
Marvel Owen C~,eaner
~~39a
H@j~~~e ~:R At~~HilltD~ M@[p} ~~ad$
IlAGH
C~@set Haru~~!?, ~
120Z PKG
A«:e Mop
!A
25 Cl 39° 4geJ ~
'!HE GREAT ATlANTIC 8. PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC.
Afj2lPl~ANC~$ Ag~ CONDIT~()NO~G IrRANCIS J. DWUNE
Ammonia B~~~::LC~ 2 B~8,35c Bright'Saii Bleach flPflClAL ':: 29« LARGe .35Cl Marvel SpCWgCS5 sIze
.!l. OOUCIW
\FALL RIVER, MASS.
"'Ieos sbow1l ,. thIs ad guarant"" Ulr. 9lsl., Aprn It
a1lll'ect1w ot AU A&P SUpeI Morkets III lMI commcmltr a '1c1oUr
Church Expresses full Confidence hi Area
THE ANCHORThurs., April 6, 1961
Court Invalidates Zone Ordinance Barring Church
STEUBENVILLE (NC)Bishop John King MU6sio of Steubenville described the new Diocesan Community Arena as a symbol of Catholic eonfidence in the community. 9:'.:1 this building we manifest Qm' unquestioned loyalty to the thi.ngs for which this community etands," Bishop Mussion told e1ergy, Religious and seminarians crt a religious dedication (March 11:) the day before the· civic QPening of the arena. Various Functions The arena, which has a capaeity of 8,000, was built by the Steubenville diocese at a cost of more than $1.5 million. It is intended for cultural, educational lIlDd athletic functions. Judge Carl A. Weinman, SPeaking at the civic ceremony, expressed the thanks of the community to Bishop Mussio for the ar.ena; He described it as an expression of the Bishop's "confidence in the future of the upper Ohio VaHey." Civic leaders and non-Catholic churchmen were nmong those speaking at the ceremony. Third Institution The Diocesan Community Arena is the third major community institution built by Bishop Mussio since he came here in 1945 as first Bishop of Steubenville. The other two are fhc College of Steubenville and . . John's Hospital, both of which serve more non-Catholics t:ban Catholics. Bishop Mussio noted in his dedication sermon that "at a time wAen Church unity and brotherbood are consistently discussed _ the higher levels," construct10n of the Diocesan Community Arena "takes on some special dgnificance." Mutual Understanding He said Catholics "can ne.ver make strides in the direction of IIWtual understanding" as long ., they appear to be "isolating OttNelves from the mainstream of community progress."
Stonehill Plans Press Institute Newspapermen, authOl'8 and educators from three states will toke part in a unique high school newspaper institute at Bennington, Vermont, on Saturday, April 15. The Stonehill College Scholastie Press Institute will be conducted at Bennington Catholic High School, Bennington, Vermont, according to an announcement today by Very Rev. Richard B. Sullivan, C.S.C., president of Stonehill. The Institute, which was sucoeBsfuHy inaugurated 011 the Stonehill Campus last Fall, will teaturc seminar discussions, lecwres and meetings directed to school editors and staff members. tIlom schools throughout Vermont, Western Massachusetts, IIew York and New Hampshire. Representatives from newspapers and press associations in New York City, Quincy, North Adams and Brockton, Massachuaetts, as well as several Vermont cities, are expected to speak at the day-long conference. Faculty personnel from StonehiD College will join representatives of the Bennington Catholic High School faculty in the cooperative administration of the JlDstitute. The program will be open t6 public and private school editors and their staffs, and reservations may be made by writing to the Institute Reservations Chairman at the school.
Camp Directory Publication of the 1961 Directory of Catholic Camps has been announced by Msgr. Joseph E. Sahieder, director of the National Catholic Camping Assooiation. The 420 Catholic camps avail8ble to American youth are 11sted, with all important details tIbout each. Copies are available ~ the association at the National Catholic Welfare Conflerence Building, Washington. D:a.
S
MADISON (NC) - The Wisconsin State Supreme Court has invalidated a village zoning ordinance in-
COMMUNION BREAKFAST: Rev. Mortimer Gavin, 8,J. (far right), labor-management expert, addresses Thomas P. McDonough Council, North Attleboro Knights of Columbus, at 40th annual communion breakfast. Left to right, Past Grand Knight Albert Morawski; Rev. Edmund Dickinson; Grand Knight Leonard J. Quinn; Past Grand Knight Edgar C. McGowan; Father Gavin. •
Bishops To Join
RENSSELAER, (NC) - Four bishops have announced plans to take part in the third national Catholic communications seminar her'e July 26 to 29 Participating in the four-day meeting will be Most Rev. Thomas K. Gorman of DallasFort Worth, Tex.; M~st Rev. Andrew Grutka of Gary, Ind.; Most Rev. Martin McNamara of Joliet, Ill.; and Most Rev. John Cal'berry of Lafayette, Ind., the host diocese.
In
Public Relations Seminar
They will be among an expected 150 priests, Religious and laymen who will discuss their work with experts from the fields of public relations, advertising, journalism, radio. and television.. Direct Bureaus The participants are directors of diocesan bureaus of information and public relations officers from religious communities, institutions, schools' and lay organizations. The seminar will .be held at
Tyranny of Labels Confuses Issue On Federal Aid to Private Schools PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A "tyranny of labels" is preventing an "intelligent dialogue about non-public schools," a priest-law school dean told a regional convention of school administrators here. Father Robert F. Drinan, S.J., dean of Boston College law school said the "term 'public school: is ii prestige-laden title which, in Madison Avenue parlance, has a built-in appeal to the mind and heart of every American." On the other hand, the term non-public schools has a negative connotation and implies such a school does not fulfill a public function, while the term private school suggests exclusiveness based on snobbery or wealth, Father Drinan said. Unfortunate Term He classified the term paro-
Prelates Support Antibicis Bill JEFFERSON CITY (NC)-:-A cardinal and two bishops have given their support to proposed Missouri legislation that would ban discrimination in public accommodations. House Bill 421 was endorsed by Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. Louis; Bishop Charles H. Helmsing of Springield-Cape Girardeau; and Bishop Joseph M. ~arling, C.PP.S., of Jefferson City. Their messages were read at a hearing held there on the bill by the House Municipal Corporations Committee. The bill would bar discrimination in public accommodations, including hotels. The legislation was approved unanimously by the 20 members of the House c'ommittee conducting the hearing.
chial school as "even more unfortunate," and asserted that the terms Catholic school, church-related school or sectarian school "imply that their p'rincipal function is to serve as an extension of Sunday school." Father Drinan told the regional convention of the American Association of School Administrators that it is unfair for ·a democratic state to aid only public schools for three reasons. He enumerated: Three Reasons "1. It is unfair to coerce students to attend a 'secular' school by placing an economic boycott on the 'secular-sectarian' school. "2. Parents and children have a constitutional right not to be coerced into attending a secular school or to be penalized for attending a sectarian school since such' attendance is an integral part of the 'free exercise' C1f. their religion which Congress and the states by the First Amendment may not prohibit or restrict. "3. A truly democratic pluralistic society would, without fear of national disunity, allow parents and all responsible groups to operate tax-supported schools where the 'secular' would be. fused with the 'sectarian' or where militant agnosticism would be ~aught."
st. Joseph's College here. The previous two' seminars were in New York. The meeting will be sponsored by the Bureau of Information, National Catholic Welfare Conference. Msgr. John E. Kelly, director .of the NCWC bureau, said in commenting on the seminar that public relations in the Church should be "somebody's specific assignment." Need Specialists , Catholic groups need specialists in the public relations field, Msgr. Kelly said, adding: "There is now available a body of knowledge and techniques in the field, and this meeting is\ organized to make them known to Catholic organizations."
tended to prohibit constructiolll of a church. The ordinance was declared invalid because the Bayside Village Board acted in an "arbitrary and capricious" manner in refusing to permit the construction of the Lake Drive Baptist church. Tohe Board originally indicated that the church construction would be permitted. Church members donated eight lots and started to collect $125,000 to build the church. Then the land was zoned to forbid church buildings and the board overruled a petition to grant an exemption. Promote General Welfare The village ordinance was intended to keep churches out of residential areas. Supreme Court Justice E. Harold Hallows wrote a concurring decision strongly objecting to this theory. "The church in our society has long been identified with family and residential life," he wrote. "Churches traditionally have been and should be located in that part of the community .where people live." Noting that zoning ordinances are intended to promote the' general welfare, Justice Hallow. asked: "How can the exclusion of churches from a resid"ntial area promote public morals 01' the general welfare'?"
Crewmen at Shrine
FATIMA (NC)-Forty crewmen of' the Portuguese liner Santa Maria which was captured Information on the seminar' on the high seas by antigovernmay be obtained from the NCWC ment adventurers have come to Information Bureau, 1312 Mas- this shrine of the Blessed Virgin sachusetts Avenue, N.W., Wash- with their families in thanksington 5; D. C., he sa·id. giving for their safe return.
First Ca~holic School r-:--t--d--;----l In Bolivian City I In 0 ay S I
V.I~CHA
I smartest h 110me s . . .
.II I I
(NC)-This city in·1 BolIVIa has been 100 per cent Catholic for the past 400 years but it took a missionary good neighbor policy to give the city 1:::--its first Catholic school. L · _ T h r e e U. S. missionaries . teamed up with four nuns from ---,--..----.--111 Colombia to open the school in Viacha, a city of 30,000 that is _ _ located 12,635 feet hi'gh in the Andes mountains.
i
-+----r
NEW ENGLAND
'C LAM
BAKE
Every Sunday -: .$2.95 including -
A Live lobster
THE
CASA BLANCA Coggshall Bridge, Fairhaven
-Am.rlca'.' most
envied kitchen.·
E.W.GOODHUE. Lumber Co. Inc. l
A. D. McMULLEN Inc. MOVERS SERVING
Fall River, New Bedford Cape Cod Area Agent:
AERO MAYFLOWER TRANSIT CO. INC. Nation-wide Moven WYman 3-0904 :104 Kempton St. New Bedford
Middleboro Road. Route '8
) co. ) ) Heatinq Oils ~ [l ) and .Burners ~ o ~ 365 NORTH FRONT STREE.T' ' N E W BEDFORD __ WYman 2-5534 ~
EAST FREETOWN Please send literature Have salesman call at no obligation.
Name
.
Address ..................................•• City
~
14YOUR BANK"
GERALD E.
McNALLY GENERAL CONTRACTOR 2666 NORTH MAIN ST.
DEBROSSE OIL~
FALL RIVER
TELEPHONE OS 5-7992
SLADE'S FERRY TRUST CO. SOMERSET, MASS. - Next to Stop' & Shop • •. invites your participation in the growth of a new Banking Institution
• •
COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SERVICE MORTGAGES - AUTO and APPLIANCE LOANS Accounts Insured Up To $10,000 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Co. Harold J. Renan., Pre~lden4
6
TH:::·....:.:.::..: :":-Diocese ofFal! Riv~r.-T~vrs., April 6, ·1961
".
.,
",.
..,
' ,
'_
, , _ , . , '. ~ . '.
..
.~
·'e ,.
., .•• -;'
.,
.
'.
,"
," f
Reality.:'.!'
\
On Race Justice'
With each year, th~ .Restor~d Liturgy of Holy Week finds more persons followilJ.g carefully in booklets the 'sw'eep of the services and entering more fully into their meaning. At first curious and then seeking, those. who have taken the trouble to investigate have been rewarded with a deeper spelling out of the plan of God for man's salvation. Indeed, it is a common experience how men are caught up by ritual--':'" how 'they delight in signs and symbols, in ceremonies and services.' Thousands wilf flock this week to Radio City Music Hall in' New York to witness the Easter _ pageant with its pseudo ritual and dignified play-acting. , So when the signs 'and symbols are removed from the realm of ·acting to the realm of grace, when they actually eause what they signify, then the interest is rewarded with, a' deepening of faith. and a~ quickening of the ~pirit,. . . . This is what Holy Week accomplishes,aIld this is w~at it held out to those wno 'entered into it fully. Those who participated 'in the Easter Vig:il, for exa~ple, ca'.l nevel' again think of Christ aP.art from the~ideaoflight,:~an n~yer. think of their baptism withollt seeing it as-a sharing in the light, :a8.----'- iJi the ide~s(jf ;the Lessons.'-: anew\ ·~re·ati~~· a deliverance from bondage, a life of growth in the Lord; a life of faithfulness to the new covenant with Him.- ' The :Liturgy expresses reality and teaches it: And wha( rich reality has it placed before Catholics in Holy Week---. a reality to be contemplated and examined and prayed over throughout the whole Easter season.
Man's Conqlllest
WASHINGTON, (NC).:Natiori&l 'Counci1~ Of Catholic Men 'has prep,aRci a parish program on racw justice for Catholic parislfel throughout the United Staies. , The program will be launc~ as a pilot project in parish,~ of the Diocese of Pittsburgh, wlieie it will be conducted in prep. tion for the NCCM's nationali biennia~ convention May 4, to~'" The'race justice progni'rn .. developed "around the theme "Christian Unity and Ra-dat Prejudice." Theme of the NCCD! convention will be "The Ap~ toli,c Layman,-,-New Resporisi~ itie's' in Christian Unity.". ~ race question will be one of: tile , issues discussed at the conv. ~on.· , ~ , The pilot project will be 'c~ . ducted at the request of FathGlr . Paul Lackner, Pittsburgh. dioo. esan director of the Holy Name Union. The program is intendeCl to implement the 1958 statemeot opposing segregation issued'~ the U. S. Bishops. , Stresses Participation An NCCM brochure outlining the program suggests three :t~ mats for parish meetings. It reI> ommends that whenever possibltl the meeting include a parish' ~ ganization with Negro membem. It also stresses that audience paljlloo ticipation should 'be encourage4. The brochure says the program should center on these basm questions concerning racial j~ tice: 1) What is the mind of _ Church? ' : 2) What is the role of the :tap.. man in carrying out the Churclal teachings? .. . 3) What is the actual situaUolll in the area of the speCific pa.isb I concerned? ' .,
The
, 6: , 800,000' . ND£NT-6C)\OOL
l"OE~UPI\...S
......
.
"
II \I~N.
41
~
,
""Council'Prep~~~ ~arish Progra~::
.
.
.-
C"'(hnou9h thE. cUltdt ~ith thE. ChWtc~
In this jet age, when man is happily contemplating how his technical genius has measured the globe in hours rather , By REV. ROBERT W. HOADA, Catholic University than in weeks, when he is flinging objects millions of miles out into space and himself at speeds of thousands of miles an hour around the earth, it is sobering and humbling to TODAy - Easter Thursday- common prayer, offering the sacBoth Mary and the Ethiopian' rifice in which our grace and realize that nature still has something of an edge - that, «(}()spel an'd Epistle)}.:>elieved in freedom is grounded, and 'sharfor example, light travels through air' at a speed of Jesus through hearing, through ing in the Bread which makes WI 669,600,000 miles per hour, that meteors' fall at a speed C1f the word. And because the Lit- one. 93,600 miles an hour, that the earth rotates at its equator urgy-Mass, sacraments, blessMONDAY-With M38S as OIl . ings-is the common prayer of at 1;034 miles an hour. the Church, the Holy Spirit lives\ Sunday - Faith is the lesson Man's conquest of "!'tis physical.environment is still far in its words and acts. , of both Epistle and Gospel. In from complete. There. are still more' Everests rising' up in . This is why the Church is so the Catholic view; faith and the the world Of science waiting to feel the conquering foot Of a '. concerned that in these times sacramental system are so intiHillary and .a. Sherpa guide. . , Christians return to the ancient 'mately linked, that neither is in, practice of saying together and 4ependent' l,)f the other, neither And so creation's Lord must look- if this can be said singing together and "listening~ can stand in isolation. Our'faith reverently....,.... with humor upon -the boasts that men make ' to" together the words of these is in 'the (}()d who has come in an in this generation about how close they. are to mastering services. It- ,is in· these words, , . our flesh, who renews us and. their world. There is'still so'much more world for manto spoken according to,their proper makes' us acceptable to Him by . ,. . ,...' ' . . roles by celebrant, lector, choir means of homely signs, And the WASHINGTON· (NC) -:-''Ii. c~nque~ ~ a!1? t~~'~ ,'the, .universe -~nd .then, ~ '~lways,' and .congregation,' that Je!!us .. sacramental signs are signs of Preachers Institute, designed"" . hImself. , . .' ,.' '.. ' . _.' " sJieaksto us' of the' Father and filith, are both expression of &nd ,give priests specialized' antf iDthrough,us to. the .Father. nourishment 'for faith. . tensive training iJi'preachin&~• TUESDAY _ st. Leo, Pope. shifting the scen~ of its opelN,P Friday Co~essor, Doetor'7"To the faith- tions to, the Adirondack mo~ The London reviewer ,of .Graham Greene's new Iwvei -Both lessons speak of Baptism, ful, what appears'to so ,many 88 ta~ns afte~' 28 ~e~s on the Ca~ - , ended 'his notice in. the ,Daily Herald in this way: '~A8 even theJirstoHhesacraments of ini.,. 'the scandal of papal and hierar-' olic UmverSIty" of . Am~ God Himself is said to give sinners a more than evencbreak ,.' tiation...For it is by means ,of. that chical 'auth~rity, 'is part of the ' campu~.' " ' ~ :', . ,.:' . The m~tItute,wiUbe he!d·~ it .Is :soinehow unseemly' .and. downright p'reSumptious 'that ~ holy sign that ~en become sons manifestation 'of God's love and:' .. . . , ',. " , , ,.. . " .. ,', .,: ,.: .of· God and put on the perfect dire for his people. What ap:.' %'I to July .. :,~7'· at. the, ,w.~ Mr.' Greene, should be 80 fast apd ,deadly Oft the ~v.engmg , manhood of Jesu's Christ. Man pears to others as a human 'clai~" Fathers ,.~~maJ:t': 'Oll~, "~ trigger;~t.. ' ~,', does not '. attain, resurrection- 'and pretension. is seen by the" ~~shaquam O~c~o~,,1'f.X.... " 'Wliich is:'another way of saying that' God,'s 'iri~rey'and .. gl~ry-+:-.he',is given it.. Catholic as an' act' of God. alone' .~iJes' north,' Qf .Sar~nac·,Lak~.: .:.,: ~uest IJectur~rs, ... '. even 'His' justice are"oo be preferred to Mr. 'Greene's', :Pardon .and grace through no . assurin'g him 'that human sin'and" The Preachers InstItute_ l@' ~ "ud em~nt. ',~: . '.,' " " ' merit of o.ne's own is the joyoUfl ignorance. will not, destroy. the J g ..' . . . ' , ;. ,.,~ ....~. : ' , '. ' •. ' .. '.. .. .and· ,assurmg' message' of Easter. Church.' The Epistle announces .rected ~y ·Fath~rJohnIL... 'II~ "'And ,what ,lsfrue,·m the pages of 'hterature]s true. m' So every Mass is a celebration, the pattern 'for the' exercise of - d~n, 'as~lsta~t <~r9fessor at p~ fa~t., How intolerant are men in their assessments of their ': . because in, ~very MaSs these this authority. Authoritarianism 0I!c Umversl~y, s: school. of ~ . . _. , fellow mortals, how quick t9 point out and to condemn 'out:· marvelous de~dsof God in Christ and commercialism are alike' th.eology., of hand,\vith little or no oonsidera£ion ofwna.t' may' 'be said il~e made, prese!l~. under sign, condemned. Obedience .is an act . ~ Guest.lec~urer,s.wIlI.be my~ . ' .:. . .. . "', ,. . " ". .. Deeds through WhICh the gr:ace of love and of freedom for the mshtute s semInars..~ . seminar, July 10 to 14"will 1lI!I on behalf of the defense. . . of justification is offered to all WEDNESDAY ~ MaBfi all _ conducted by Father Tho!ll36 For all too oft,en do men see only in terms· of black and· mankind.' Sunday-The (}()spel teaches of Liske, president"of the Homll~_ white, in terms 'of right and wrong, or - more accurately EASTER SATURDAY - The faith not merely in the abstract Society and author of. "E£f~ ~ in 'terms of what agrees or disagrees with their:,own' : Resurrection (Gospel) is the cen- but in terms of an individual, Preaching.'" .' i:. standards or preferences. As a special feature this y~ tral, the pivotal' act of the Son Thomas. Faith is eminently perAnd so the judgements of people are severe ones. of Man. First-born from the sonal. So all Christians worship .the institute will conduct foul Without watering down the force of St. Paul's warning, dead, Victor over the sin which arid s!1cramental life is personal, separate seminars: for P&risIa "God is not mocked," it would seem to be an easier thing to leads to death, His priestly sacri- must involve the person. The priests, missionaries, hom~letJ.ee objective performance of a cer- professors and speech teacbewa be judged by the C]:eator - Who alone can read the inmo~ fice on the Cross finds here its tain rite or ritual action is only The Preachers Institute, w~ acceptance and the confirmation recesses of' the soul and Who alone understands t~ of the fact that from it a 'new part Qf the picture. The other was founded in 1932 at Cat:hali!; University, has more than 1;001 tensions and ,pressures and conflicts within the human priestly people is born (Epistle) part is one, too often forgotten. alumni. . heart. Indeed, in this light, the justice of God - no less -the Church. Those marked This is one of the 'great conwith the "character" of Christ in cerns of the Church in our time: than His mercy - need hold out no dread. Baptism and Confirmation are personal participation in the sac- Colleg"icans Respond It is indeed fortunate that unlike 'Mr. Greene the indeed priests, sharers of His, and in all· public worship, To Prelate's Appe~ Almighty deals with His children with patience aDd priesthood, empowered to offer rament personal involvement and enWASHINGTON (NC)-E~ tolerance. Would that the same qualities marked their to ,the Father the perfect worship gagement which only can make returns indicate Catholic CGQ.. dealings with one another - in life and 'not just in of the Son. them true community, actions, , lege students responding gea.. participation with body and rously to an appeal from ~ literature. THE SUN~AY IN WHITE- voke as well as with mind and a'rd Cardinal Cushing for :fuiacII for the Catholic University at The first Sunday after Easter heart. Formosa, it was reported heIe takes its name from the baptismal garments worn at one time Hospital Association 'by Msgr. Joseph E. SchiedEtat national director of the Nati~ by the new members of the Christian community throughout Convention in Detro~t Federation of Catholic Stu~ Easter week at the Church's pub- . ST. LOUIS (NC) - The 46th Early returns have been ..... lic services. annual convention of the Catb- ceived, said the Monsignor, :bci4a oFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER , Every SU'nday is an echo of oUc Hospial Association of the Mount st. Mary's College" Ba-. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Iiall River Easter and should mean for ·U. S. and Canada will be held ia. mitsburg, Md.; too Collei!:e Cit Christians a rediscovery of the Detroit from June 12 to ]5. Mount St. Vincent, New Y'Cd 410 Highland Avenue experience we shared in the "Attitud~s, Action, Achieve-' City; St. Martin's College, 0Jp. - Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 Easter celebration of the Lord's ment" will be the theme of the mpia, Wash., and Mary~ Death and Resurrection. This is convention, the association an- College, Salina, Kan. Totals ... PUBLISHER why the Church has always nounced at its headquarters her-e. nated will be announced 1aUlI Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. The fund-raising efforts"nm placed so much emphasis on the GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Sunday ga'thering and its utiliza- ' The keynote address will. .be' been going on' for five '~ I tiqn' ~yaIt members of the par- ' given by Father James H. Fitz- Msgr. Schieder 'said. "It kg'~ Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo, M.A. ,Rev. John. P. Driscoll is!} as a cqmmunity-listening to patrick, associate director of the '. hope of Cardinal Cushing ~ MANAGING EDITOR the readings from God's Word, Brooklyn diocese's division· ~ . each college,student will ~ Hugh J~ Golden' " , ' $i." said. ', responding to them in song 'and' heaitnand 'b'ospitals.,
PI
Institute In Adirondacks -
AvengiJ:lg "Trigg~r. ,
",
":: .; ...
,-
'"
J
'
...
TOMORROW-Ea8~.
...,
'
',",
, , '
:
j .....
'.
®The ANCHOR
lie
NEW NOVITIATE BUILDING: Religious of Jesus-Mary, who have I staffed Jesus-Mary Academy and Notre Dame Grammar School, Fall River, since their arrival in the country in 1877, have announced plans for a new novitiate building costing over $1 million dollars to be constructed at the
MotherhouS; in Hyattsville, Md. The project will be partially financed from proceeds of the record album made by the religious called "Patterns in Song," and from fund raising drives to be held in the areas served by the Sisters. ' I
Commends Moral legal' OffQcial Gives .Approval Vig@ras NQJtion 8 !) T@ SisU'\er~ ,in Public Schools
'OBdahomo g Tex.cs Se<es to Share in New Lay M~~sa@~®~ 'U'@gram
~e$~ We~pon
OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) mission volunteers for the DENVER, (NC) - Atty. Gen. The Archdiocese of San Antonio, 'American home missions. Its reDuke Dunbar of' Colorado has 'J:~x., and the Dioceses pf crititing is carried on jointly. WASHINGT9N (N'c) held that there can be no chalAmarillo, Tex., and Oklahoma 'with the Papal 'e>lunteers for Christ's death on Calvary lenge of, teaching by nuns in City, and Tulsa will' share the Latin America, which also has was a' triumph of love' and public'schools. first group of 80-100 Extension headql)arters in Chicago. - Y:oh,lnteers. ,.. '. Four Categories teaches the lesson that moral The opinion was contained in .. ",The laymen-members of the Between now;imd June 15 the . strength is a people's most po~nt a letter ,to the Conejos. County new mission program for the ,new. field headquarters ad- armam~nt, Ric~ard 'Cardfnal Ilchool board saying that' the· . U.S. home missions will come to ministered by the local ~ cate- custihlg saiq. in a 'Good Friday 'board could arrange any conthe three dioceses next Summer. c:hetical oommittee, will eom- messa'ge at the Pentagon., _ ' ' venient schedule for buses to the The Oklahoma City and Tulsa plete arrangements for the in"What the Lord was demon- public school in Antonito which diocese has been chosen national flu", 'of the missions. ,strating' on Calvary 'were those is taught by nuns. field headquarters fur the new During the'first year, the ExBut,.he said, "I do not believe heroic virtues .which'. ,restrain program. tension Volunteers will work power and put it to· its most any religious instruction should The Extension Volunteers here in four 'major categories of .effective' use," . said the Arch- 'be the reason for a change in bus program, organized at ~~, be- ,mission activity: bi9hop, of Boston at a ·Catholic schedules." This referred to aa ginning of this year, ~ec~uits lay 1) Teaching ill 'parochial service, in. the inner, court of, the . arrangement in Antonite for schools: Pentagon, located in nearby public school buses to take pupils 2) Cateehetical work, such as Arlington, Va. ',' to catechism classes outside the parish visitation, census work. public schools. He declared that Christ meekly inStructions, 'working with CathPoses QuestiO'llS 'and 'humbly' '''suffered . the 'abuse olics ' in, parish" projects; and , of HiS enemies until He .might ." "The:' ~'tto~n~y g~nera~ incited ' • ,:work: with lax' ·Catholics.' I ,,' rise' 'gloriously ,and' con:fiute tlieiK ['that ule Antonito pu6lic 'school \ '" 3) "Organizing 'Newman' Club , 'bad .employed for' years lit num'-'·\idivity .at 'secular univer-sities blindness and',them I. infamy.":" I I ,', .,. .. • I~ I ,, and" colleges. ,', ( 't" ':. ber of teachers" who, 'are, ,mem" :.., Le~n, ~or",~ll~,,,'" " '!':, 4),"Gi'ving .n,urSing c'are' ia ,.bers, .ot, ap, ecc;lesiastical ,or.~er. ". ,"Does" not· :.this bavel' a, lesson .'anil ',,'/ , ... ......: ",mission Qre9S:, .' wear. their garb while teach,for ,us in-a w.orld':fuU',pf ar.maing. Then he posed these two ments, a lesson for ··those', who , questions:, " " , " pla~ "all .. their ,c,9nWlence 'in " '-, " ~ • ,t} • •• , 'Jl. : '!Does" the'< wearing o£' the . ,', , Jlower~" Cardinal Cl,lsh~ng 1\.sked. '~" ecclesiastical garb by a teacher ~:'ln"'Cathol'ics .: "In every 'contest Ui:e"stronger "I ';,,' "~~OlViE '('NC> ,: ~: Ther~ ~ere overcomes the weaker;" he con- ,w\1ile performing te?ch~ng duties ,within the. public schools consti110,O\)0 Catholics among the 22 tinued. "But in conflicts 'betwe'en ,'inisSion Peopie .of Thailand. in nations we measure ·not merely tute the teaching of sectarian '''$o\ttheast Asia ,on June 30, :1959, values "of quantity but of quality doctrines or tenets by Section 8, , "it was reported· here by, Fides, as well. Often the wise' overcome Article IX, Colorado Constitution? mission news agency. the strong, the" clever win out 2. "Does the wearing of visible 1).n ;fdditional. 2,500 persons over the mighty, ideas' are more ,are taking instruction prior to powerful than bullets ... And so , baptism, the agency said. . ,t\1ere are forces greater, than the " ''J;'l1e great majority of the mere, physical forc,e, of arms and people of Thailand, a, country these can bring to destruction , the !lize of Spain. bordering on those, who. rely on naked, power strlfe-torn Laoll, , are Buddhists. alone.'! 'There are also about half a mil"Moral fortitooe, the basic lion Moslems and between 15,000 So. Dartmouth strength of a people, must reside ,and 20,000 Protestants. in its citizens," he added. , Of the nation's 231 priests, 92 and Hyannis are Thais. There are also tWQ Thai bishops. So. Dartmouth WY 7.Y384 "
,.
, t
ecclesiatical 'insignia by • teacher. while performing teaching duties within the public schools constitute the teaching of sectarian doctrines or tenets 118 prohibited by Section 8, Article IX, Colorado Constitution? "Conclusion: In view of the weight of authority, both que&tions are answered in the negative."
Trinitarian Fathers BOYS WANTED for the Priesthood and Brotherhood. Lack of funds NO Impediment• Write to:
, P O.
•
~"
""T'ho'iJa nd'!':Gro;s' ',"
"
~x
,J.a~timore
5742 .8, Md.
".,' A:Delicious Treat
'J,B
LUMBER CO.
First
F~idQlY
Hyannis 2921
, Rev. John P. Driscoll, assistant manager of T'he AnChor and curate at SS. Peter 'and Paul Church, Fan River, will addr~ 'the F'all River' First Friday, C.lub tomorrow night at 'a supper fol'lowi'ng 6 'o'cloCk Mass' at Sacred Heart Church. The suppa- will be held at K of, C Home, 200 , Franklin Street. '
, FULL: Winners of fun acho)arships at' Domiriican :Academy, .tall River, are,' bottom, Suzanne Y. Ratte of St. Anne's Parish, Fan River; center Janice M. Costa of St. Louis Parish, Fall River, and, top, Irene R. Lamontagne of Blessed Sacrament Parish, Fan River.
It4CORflOftATED 1931
" ,'.What 'YOU Have
Furniture Store
1IL MY" 9-8231 54 PLEASANT STREET NORTH AnLEBORO
forr ThElm Yodav
f. L COLLINS & SONS BOWEN'S
Insurance Agency
As~
..
, .'Protect
McGOWAN
M(11]dfJ Rite Chips
GENERAL· (ONTRAOORS and ENGINEERS,
JOSEPH M. P. DONAGHY own.r/mgr. 142 Campbell St. New Bedford, Mass.
WYman 9-6792 HEADQUARTERS FOR COLONIAL AND . ftADmONAL FURNITUII!
JAM1S H. COLUNS, C.E., Pres.
RertStered Civil and Structural Engineer Member National Socl~ Professional Engineen • _,
v
..
~
FRANCIS L COWNS, .It.. T..... THOMAS K. COWNS, Sec'y.
ACADEMY BUILDING
FAIL RIVER, MASS.
/'
THE ANCHOR-DioCese of Fall River-,",~.,'Apf!1~,1;H1
8
Pontiff Blesses
NCCW Group
Fabrics Play. Important-Rol~, In De~oration of Home
WASHINGTON (~) ~Pope bestowed ~ apostolic blessing on the officers and members of the National Councll '01. Catholic Women in a letter of 'appreciation :fur boxes of cloth: ing sent by the NCCW for distribution through the papal stOlleroom. The letter stated the giftl brought him "much consolation and comfort." The clothing was collected by NCCW members throughout the country as pari of a project sponsored by the council's committee on foreign relief. . JohR
,
,
.
By Alice Bough Cahill To be knowledgeable about fabrics is very valuable, for what you do with fabric' is as important as what m~teria18 you choose. The fabrics, colors, and patterns are for' your home, you have to live with them and even though a salesman calls them "high material under natural Ligbt, and style,"' don't be tempted un- then artificial light. For draperies, push two widths less they suit you. Yon should select the fabric that together to see how 'the pattern accords with your color scheme, decorative purpose and style 01. furniture. Texture is import- . ant in fabrics and interesting • results may be prOduced, through end'less variations oJ. f~bers, twists, weaves and finishes. As a re-,:, sult, texture assumes additional importance in your decorative scheme. In fact, variations in texture are often used as the sole means of introducing pattern into rooms. Coarse textures usually wear better than smooth textures and tight w:eaves are m<>re durable than loose weaves. The vogue for slip covers has increased tremendously in the' past few years. They are practj-~l; they are decorative. Instea'd of upholstering a sofa or chair in a chintz to match window curtains, a slip cover is made, for it can be ta·ken off, cleaned, and replaced Inore eas, lly 'than regular upholstery can be cleaned. Take Your Time Of materials suitable :fur slap
centers. This also helps in determining yardage required. The fabric you select may be patterned, plain, or both. Since Booklet CommemorateS too much pattern produces a confusing effect, you may want Missionary Anniversary to combine patterned "Hrycovers FRAMINGHAM CENTRE (N~. with solid colored ones, or use -The Missionary Sisters ot the RETURNS TO MISSION HOME: Fifteen years after only so1id colored material and Society of Mary have issued a , rely upon contrast in color or she and 46 other Maryknoll Sisters were rescued from booklet commemorating the s&i~ texture for interest. Los Banos prison by American paratroopers during World ing of their first three pioneer Patterns should be in keepiftg missionaries for Oceania in 185'J. with your decorative scheme War II, Moth~r' Mary Colman, Mother-General of the The booklet also commemoand in scale to your room and Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic, returns to the Philippines, rates the 39th anniversary.. of the furniture. To make decorating her first mission. Here in Dulawan, on Mindanao, she talks community's fir s t American easier, so m e manufaoturers with Filipina Muslims, whose children attend the Maryknoll , foun~ation, which was located in provide matching wallpaPer' and school-here. NC Photo. ' Boston. Their community's re.' . fabric. Ther-e also fabric gional center is now in Framingcombinations 01. large and small ~~~f;~~t~~~t.has a novitiate iIn matched prints or a print with a companion fabrie 01. harmonThe congregation, which JIll izing stripes. I IOUS I devoted to foreign mission work, As you hunt for fabrics, yow BOSTON (NC)-Women's maFor this reason women "are. now has 123 houses throughout ' will find many designs that re- ternal instincts may make them naturally better instruments for the world. Its members do med-! flect a hobby or interest that more suited to religious life manifesting the sanctity of the 'ical, catechetical, educattonal and, may have a particular appeal to than men, a priest said here. Church in religious life than 'social service work. The congre-your family' or one member. their male counterparts," Father ".gatiC{,n's mother house is in Rome. For a young e.Questrian, you Father Reginald Masterson, AI PI will find a horse design that will O.P., noted that women naturally Masterson, director of the graduate theology program at St., umnae ans. . delight anyone that· likes horses . have "maternal instincts for love, Xavier College, Chicago de-' Alumnae of Sacred Heam and this design can be effective.' faith and obedience" and said clared. ..' '.. Acade~y, Fall River; will hold ly "used for drapes and ,slip- these are "at the heart of rell. "a famIly day at 3 Sunday after>- " covering a large 'piece of furni- ,gious life." He spoke at the .. national' : noon, April 16 in the school hall, '.! ture, like a sofa. If .you are, a. meeting of the Society of Cath-' : Prospect, Street, and a fashion ....: zealous, gardener' your choice Fairhaven Science, Fair olic College Teachers of Sacred.' show Thursday, April 27 M • may be one of the beautiful B'·'...',· ' ", Venus de Milo restaurant. " floral prints arbara PIres, DOI;ena Ferro, ,Doctrine. . , ,( Rita Thivierge and Joan Raphael In the spiritual training' Of' a : , . . . - - - - - - - - - - -.... Add Indlvidaallty are prize winners for the second woman Religious the maternal IDONAT BOISVERT Wander into the dress goods I annual science fair held, at instincts must never be neglected, department, where you'll find Sacred Hearts Academy, Fair- Father Masterson stated. INSURANCE AGENCY denims and other materials that haven. Miss Pires' exhibit AN Kinds ,Of Insurance "She must be taught to undercan be used for drapes and showed the grafting of African spreads. Then add a bit of' in-· violets, while Miss Ferroexhib- stand that her bridehood with 96 WILLIAM STREET dividuality by using some of the ited a display of photomicrog- Christ is the fulfillment of her NEW BEDFORD. MAS& new bardware, like the tdcky raphy. "How to build a Tele- desire to love and how her DIAL WY 8·5153 brass clips for cafe curtains, and scope" was Miss Thivierge's maternal instinct to bear new life the thick brass poles. Don't over':' theme and Miss Raphael ex- is accomplished through' her PersonaJ Service look the new fringes and braids plained the struCture of. rockets. ,apostolic labors," he said;. with which you can trim. One doesn't always have to buy yardage and have drapes made; you can find a wide selection in ready-mades. Often', you'll find complete sets. If you're shopping for a boy's room you might use a ready-made spread of a bold plaid - , one (, that is easy to launder and re-", sistS wrinkles: Then'buy aond "spread and make drapes of.
ar-e
Asserts ,Maternal Instincts Make L' f e Women Suited to Re I·· 9
~.
covers, there is a bewildering variety, but in making a choice the paramount purpose must be kept in mind. Take your time when you are selecting sUp cover fabrics. Spread the fabric fla't on a chair. Ask to see the
see- "
it. In a girl's room Pd also rePeat the pattel'n in spread and drapes. If you use a patterned spread, have a plain dust ruffle; or a plain spread with a patterned ruffle. JJf YOI1 are l->1.1ying readymades, you may find matching by-the-yard fabrics which storeI 'eart'7 ,to IOlve. the special prob-
, lem.,~ ~es~.
Finance' Your
New' e"ar
with a Fall lliy'erTr'ust :','"
W«te'ster ,Women':Seek TOP::/CQtholic Girl ,
.
!(
"
. ,WORCESTER (NC)-An-awanl
.fOr ~ "outstandinc Catholic . ',girl"~ graduating ela,~ 01. . each Oi the 14 coeducational and " girl'•. Catholtehigh schools' baa ' .' been' announced. ' Spo~sored by the ,Worcester ,Diocesan League 01. Catholie Women, the award will be named . ~ Bishop Bernard ~. Flanaga~ , of Worc~ster. The first recipieotll will .be named on May 6. . Winners will be selected by the . ,school princiPal and senior teacherS of each school on the. 'basis of '~excellence of conduct and: character ,exemplifying the ideal Ca'~~lic~irL" ,
/
PARTIAL: Partial seholarship winners' at Domini~~ Academy, Fall River, are, bottom, Marie Paiva of' St. Michael's Parish, 0 e e a n Grove; center, Frances ~ Drake of St. Michael's PMish, Ocean Grov-e; and, tOp, Diane' M. Paquette CY1. BlesBed Sacrament Parish, Fan' lUvu.
' ... '. .. c ~" ~,
f. 0,
';1
"
.
,
t. ':
l:oa may,also place your insuranee "
,:
"
A Fatll River Trust ,A1Ito Loan ttl
'
'\
."
,,'
.
\,~
.,
•• '~.J
the practical and economical way :with your favorite broker 'and
to finance the purchaSe 'of yoUr, hava..the premium, included in your ,
new
caL
"
.
~'"
You P8¥ Low Bank F"mance Stop in:for~ complete details at our Charges and have the payments . Main Bank or at: any of our ,contailored to fit your income. -'. venient, Neighborhood Branches•
OPEN FRIDAY -9 ,A.M. to 8
~.M.
, Totai' ~ Over $~O,ooo,ooo.OO
'., i
! \
Flint Branch
'.""-=
WU 9 PleasGnt Ii. illll!!:i:!lllll:lill!
"'apl. WoocUreMia . ""M 1 Stafford lei.
,
.
" THE,.ANCHO~Thurs., April 6, 1961
Cra:ndc'hJldren,' Dogs Make Ha rd~to- Beat Com hination , .
""\.~..
Planning Project To Assist Aged
-.'
By Mary Tinley Daly
.Babies and dogs, aside from being photographers' Mghts, are a wonderful combination. The breed of dog, .. course, HI important. Some take naturally to young tlHtdren, others become nervou, eVeR snappy. Goodness tIIows, a snappy dog may be to join the crowd. With a dog langerous. Over the years, Qf Magoo's height, eight inches, • eUE house we have had and length, 23 inc1lelf, everybody ...e dogs, corresponding to CaD pet her at the same time. . . number 01. our children. IJIaey have beeR bulldogs, cock. . . terriers tile .dogs, tha·t ... .at the chil-
......
And now for past four f'lMl'S we have IMld Magoo, a "ch~~lUnd, the MIne in Genn_ properly proaounced "dox~
5:t~~):~i II;. . . . dog," not "hound." Self-appointed "'baby" ()f the household and its smallest member'-"two dogs long and half-aclog high," Magoo has establ18hed her own place. True to her breed, she is indp~' . -nt _ unobtrusive. clean, easily ~iplined and a lovinl;! pet, "'ugh for all of us she is es-.nthlly M~-'-'e's dog. Mark' e, awey at nurses' tram. . . school. misses Magoo M ..m as Magoo miases her -.ore, as a matter of fact. At ,...tion time . • the minute Mal"~_ ltarts up the front steps, .goo sets up a terrific storm tit joy. leaping into the air, runmng around Xl circles 'aDd lickAIle Nf- .. -,'- feet.. "'en, when :Marltie start. 110 pack her bags for return to collitle, Ma~oo goes into re~r.: ..uong in a corner. crying piteously. Sad· brown eyes look up IBProachfuUy, shop pointed _ _ is flat OIl the floor between . . front pa'IIN. "P',,--- can you d< this to me-?" She seem. to lie moaning. ~ ~ minute Maride bas gone, ~ ,,- _. -L~";lS the psyehol~ say, belonginC to all the . . . of \1S for the duration. Once ..... I become the object at .... -"p~~tion. since I'm the ORe ...., feedll her in Markie's ab~.
Diocesan Council of Catbolie Women wIll hold its final meeting Monday, April 10 at St. Stephen's Church, Dodgeville. Officers will be elected and Rev. Thomas Walsh, new district moderator, will be welcomed. Mrs. Albert JackSOll. Mansfield. district chairman ()f organization and development, wiH be ia charge of the meeting. with Mrs. Florence Piette, South Attleboro, heading the nominating eommit-
co~' ·--~tiOD..
tee.
....
Poetry Anthology
PRESIDENT: Miss Leslie ,-vo is new president of
...
leered
:a.~ Ac~~ _mnae AMOC~; F.a1l
~~"-"'-"
TAUNTON BALL: Taunton Queen's Daughters enjoy annual Charity Ball whose proceeds will benefit new Taunton High School for Girls and the Bishop's charity fund. Left to right, seated, Mrs. Jame.s Downing, Mrs. Patrick Lyons, Mrs. Thomas Wynn; standing, Mrs. Harold Galligan, Mrs. John J. Kelly.
Name69-year-old Grandmother Maryland Mother of the Year BALTIMORE (NC) Mrs. Sadie Baker Ayd, 69-year-old grandmother of 28 chi~dren,~ been named Maryland s Ma er of the Year for 1961. Mrs. Ayd, whose huae.nd is Baltimore physician Dr. Frank .
DCCWDistrict
FOUf" Attleboro District Four of the
Cathol ic Women's -Union Defends Rights Before UN Commission
During her years at our house, lI$goo also has had to adj WJt . . .mall people-~andchildreft --with whom no dog could pollGENEVA (NC) - The World I8>ly compete. Union of Catholic Women's OrRealizing this, Magoo does her ganizations has defended religion best to find her own metier. against the charge that it f<>sWhen the kont door bursts tered a rigid interpretation of the epen to a stampede of visiting slogan that "A woman's place is ..-ndchildren, MaglOO dashes in m the home." Dr. Marie Therese GraberCake Sale Our Lady of Good CQunsel Dubernay of France, representative of the World Union before -.xtality of Holy Family High the United Nations CQmmission 8ehool, New Bedford will hold. on the Status of Women, testified • cake sale this Saturday at the that Christian efforts to achieve .... Store. Proceeds will benefit rights for women "are based • ':lund to send stude'nts to a hmmer school of Catholic on the very principles of religion, for which all human beings ~iQn in New York, according are equaL" . . :Miss CathIjn Brower, ehairDellies Kestricti_ . She was commenting on ... study under consideration by the commission. The study, prepared bY the 'International Labor Or.:. ganization, Sllid religion contributet:i to the creation of an atmosphere unfavorable to the participation of women in economic life. While denying that religion tries to restrict women to their home duties, Dr. Graber pointed out that the nature and special gifts. of women must be considered. "Women are made to give life, and no one should ignore the demands of this vocation," she said. Fir8t Teachers "They are the first teachers of their children in moral, spiritual,
.
TOLEDO (NC)-Four parishes have been selected by the Toledo Diocesan Council of Catholic Women to pilot the new "Friendly Visitor" project. Mrs. Charles Bayer, chairman. said the proj ect plan calls for visits to elderly shut-ins at the start, but will be expanded to include the blind, other age groups and those in institutions. Object of the project is to bring cheer and assistance to the aged and afflicted . Mrs. Bayer said volunteers will be trained to carry out the program on a parish level. "In ollr parishes. tbere are elderly persons Who are shut in and perhaps have. outlived friends or are lonely and want a friend," she said. "The Friendly VQlunteers serve in that capacity. They'll be there to listen, do errands and try to bring a new perspective from the community. the parish."
This she loves, stretching her length to accommodate all the little hands reaching fur her back. Magoo's Favorite It is with the babies, though -Alice, Kate, Tony-that Magoo shows her real nature. Try-out period comes first, when Magoo has to wriggle around on her back, flap' short paws in a "patty-cake" routIne and perform all her tricks in an effort to attract aLL--L'l>n-almost like ill an initiation ceremony. Convinced that she "belongs," Magoo is content. Chief playmate is Baby Alice, for there seems a special camaraderie between these t'vo. Alice will crawl across the floor. MagQO scampering along he~'de her. Blue eyes of tbe baby meet brown eyes of the dog. Alice grins and Magoo stretches her mouth wide m a -~n;ne imitation of a smile-all this prelude to a roughouse tUBSle, with Alice's arms tight around MagOO'S neck. These two even share toys. No, share is not the right wOl'd. 'lIhimgh Magoo stares longmgly at Alice··s "squish" toys, she neVler touches them. On the other hand, when Alice crawls after a toy belonging to Magoo, 1lbe little doxie just stands there and 'waits, tail thumping the floor in gentle re1:>rimand. Accepting her a~ bou... hQld pet supplal"L~d by babiesAlice and the others - Magoo also assumes the role of. protec'()r. When Alice t o _ • h~lf finished bottle out of the pby pen, Magoo berks until somebody retrieves it. When a crawlet" or a to<kller start. up the st-airs, Magoo plants herself at the foot of the flight and puts up 'an ear-apUtting bowl for help. Babies and doIa. the right kind of dallAl, are a wonderful
role
_ ....•.
'-
Twelve students from St. Mary's High School, Taunton, will be represented in the forthcoming Annual AnthC!logy of High School Poetry. Irene Me·gan, a junior, receiyed the further distinction ot Special Mentionfor her poem, "Happiness." She will also represent her class lila •. contest .sPonsored '1S¥ the National ColiOOil Gf TeacherS Gi .
.:Ioilitla..
9-
economic and civic matters, and this is why they are often given responsible tasks in the various movements for the promotion of peace." Dr. Graber said that as a medical doctor she must warn against any inclination to put women in work inconsistent with their physical and psychological nature. She called this "the war. type of discrimination."
J. Ayd, has long been
acti~ i. Catholic affairs here. For 20 years he has worked to de\re1op a scholarship fund for needy boys who wish to attend Loyola High School.
She is the mother offi~e.chil-,. dren: Dr. Frank J. Ayd, Jr., a psychiatrist and father of 11-; Father Joseph D. Ayd, S.J., principal of St. Joseph's Prepartory School, Phi ladelphia; Robert E. Ayd of Baltimore, father ()f 9; Mra. Jane Elizabeth Morales, mother of 4; and Mrs. Mary RegiAa Brockmeyer, mother of
s..
• • . Ayd will receive a citatioa as Maryland Mother of the Year from Gov. J. Millard Tawes today. She will also attend the American Mothers' convention in New York May 9 to 12.
New Bedford Nurses The Catholic Nurses Guild of New Bedford will hQld its annual card party at Kennedy Center at 8 Monday night, April 10. Mrs. Stanley Koczera is chairman.
Mexican Bishops Laud Family Movement MEXICO CITY (NC) -The Mexican Bishops have praised the growth in Mexico of the Christian Family Movement, singling it out for its contribution to Catholic Action. The Hierarchy also praised the "Little Courses on Christianity" -Spanish-born teaching system which is rapidly growing in Mexico. The commendations Were made public along with the text of new rules issued' by the Bishops' Committee for the ApostQlate of the Laity to guide' Catholic Action.
Queen/s Daughters Fall River Queen's Daught~s will hold a dessert bridge at 1 :30 this Saturday afternoon at the Hotel Mellen. Proceeds will benelit the White Sisters. Also to benefit the community is a dinner and auction to be held Tueeday, June 6 at Bishop Stang Day Nursery, 217 Third Street.
CORREIA & SONS ON'STOP SHOPPING Cl:,.,TR
i.i.. .
I"urDiture • Appliances • Grocery
• Tel....
1M Allen St•• New Bedford WYmaD 7~935.
The Friendly Store That Saves You More!
Dad learns 10th' Baby ls IOn the Housel CHICA,G.o<NC) Martia Shanah/in,' Northlake, Ill., elec.tric company vice-president, stepped up to the cashier's window at St. Ann's Hospital here ~~.a,§kedf6r the: bill for hi. .wife and newly born son, Matthew. He was told to forget it-that the bill was "on the house." It was explained to the bewildered Mr. Shanahan that whenever the tenth child in a family is· oorn in St. Ann's Hospital, it's an unwritten rule that the institution picks up the tab.
Catholic Nurses Fall River Catholic Nurses' Guildwlll hold a rummage sale from 10 to 4 tomorrow at 308 East Main Street, Fall River. Mrs. Thomas Doyle is chairman.
BONNER flOWERS SpeCtal18ts
Nt
Spectal Floral Arrangemeftta
e;Funerols
..
eCorsages We~ing. - Hospital ~q8~ Robeson
Fo~ Riy.~,
St.
~ 5-7804
,
\
,
.. '
Tel. OS 7-9663 99 R~man St~t Near Sec~nd St. FaUJRiver at Cathedral Square.
•
19
THE AtKHOR-Diocese of Fall
Catholic Lawyer
Rivef"-Thurs., April 6, 1961t
First Premier
Federal Smut Plan Wins
Of Uganda
New Backing in Congress
ENTEBBE (NC) - The first Prime Minister of. ~ selfgoverning Uganda w~ll be a Catholic lawyer who hall'
WASHINGTON (NC)-The move to set up a Federal eommission on the obscenity problem received new backing in Congress. Rep. Dominick V. Daniels of New Jersey joined the growing number of Congressmen who have sponsored bills to establish such a with Judge Anselm Sod-aro, in a group. Rep. Daniels' bill case involving six news dealers (H.R. 5822) was referred to arrested on charges of selling the House Committee ()Jl obscene magazines. Education and Labor. Like other obscenity commission bills, his would establish a 17-member unit to investigate the problem of obscenity and report back its findings and recommendations to Congress and the President. The group, to be known as the "Commission on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials," would have until January 31, 1963, to make its report. Elsewhere, there were these developments relating to obscenity: 1) In Washington, the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld the power of the Post Office Department to ban from the mails material intended for deviates. The court approved the Pest Office's ban on publications of a Washington. man already convicted twice of criminal oharges arising from the mailing of ille..i matter. ' . The man had challenged the postal ban em his publications en the grounds that they did not eome under the definition of obscenity established by the U.S. Supreme Court. The high eourt has held obscene material to be that which makes its appeal to a normal person's prurient interests. The appeals court ruled, however, that the Supreme Court's test requires that material be judged by the average member of the class of personfl for which it is intended. 2) In Arlington, Va., County Court imposed suspended sentences on a 42-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man who pleaded guilty to charges of pOll:' Bessing and selling illegal material. 3) Ion Baltimore, Assistant States Attorney James W. Murphy said any attempt to justify obscenity on artistic grounds is "an affront to the intelligence of any normal, rational humaJil. being." Mr. Murphy's comment was made in an ll-page brief filed
Noting that the Supreme Court has made "contemporary community standards" a test of obscenity, Mr. Murphy commented: "Certainly, contemporary community standards do not :meaa the lowest common denominator of human conduct tolerated by the community as a whole." The existence and toleration 0( immorality in a community, he said, does not indicate that the majority of citizens in. the community approves of it.
Students Draft Social Code PITTSBURGH (NC)-Students at parochial and public schools in suburban Mount Lebanon. have drafted a social code c()veri~g dates, use of automobiles, drinking and other topics. According to the code: (1) g0.ing steady is a practice of d()ubtful value; (2) young people should refuse-to ride with a reckless driver; (8) no on~ has the "moral right" to serve any alcohol to other people's children; and (4) smoking is a hazard to health, especially when. the habit ill established at . . early age. The code is printed in a booklet entitled "We agree." According to the booklet, "young pe0ple have excellent standardlS, but they are often subjected to group pressures that are difficult te handle without the support and understanding of their parents."
Urge Beatification KOENIGSTEIN (NC) - The annual convention of the German section of· Pax Christl, international Catholic peace movement, has urged theJ:i,eatificatioa of Father Maximilian Kolbe,' Polish priest who vQluntarily went to his death in the Nazi concentration camp at Oswiecim (Auschwitz) iB. place of the father of a family. The priest's beatification cause has beet!. introduced in Rome.
PARTIAL SCHOLARSHIPS: Winners of partial scholarshiPs at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River,are, front, Anna Faria of St. John of God Parish, Somerset, and Margaret Moniz of St. Michael's Parish, Fall River; and, rear, Mary Margaret Pires of St. Michael's Parish, Fall River, Ellen Demetrius of Sacred Heart Parish, Fall River, and Kathleen Silvia of St. Michael's Parish, Fall River.
Catholic High School 'Samariteens' Give Aid to Menta lIy Reta rded CINCINNATI (NC) - Who if! my neighbor? The Samariteens of McNicholas High School know the answer. It's the teenage (or older) mentally retarded boy Ol' girl who gets few invitations to a movie, a bowling alley, a snack bar or a basketball game. , Nearly 90 students at McNicholaS'-most of them girls-have been taking part in the past year in a pilot project sponsored by the Catholic Federation for Retarded Children. The "buddy system" is a chief feature of the program. Once a month, in groups of two or three, the Samariteens take retarded
II
teenagers out for a Saturday afternoon of recreation. Thus far 10 retarded teenagers have enjoyed the company of the Samariteens. Mary Linz, president of the Samariteens, said the buddy system is just one of the Samariteens' activities. Others include: -Teaching religion to young retarded children on. Saturday mornings to prepare them for First Communion. -Making rosaries for retarded children in institutions. -Providing secretarial help for officials of the retarded children's federation. -Praying for the retarded and their families.
.• .•. .•. .•
.-.. C
;:
-.,
U
III
C
•
o
III
III
U
]
=:u Ii;~
--" .. i ... ... Z
..~
-" Z
til
::II
AIa
o
played a major role in the march' of this east African pation towardindependence. He is Benedicto K. M. Kiwan-, 11ka, 38-year-old leader of the' Catholic - oriented Democratic party, which won control of the' new legislative council in the first nationwide elections ever' held here. The elections were the firlJt step toward selfgovernment, which will be proclaimed along with a new constitution in the near future. Full independence will follow soon afterwards. Uganda is a high, hilly country the size of Oregon with a pleasant climate despite the fact that it lies across the Equator. Although missionaries did not reach Uganda until the late 1800s, 46· per cent of its 6,517,000 people are now Christians, two-third.l of whom are Cahtolics. Most Chiefs Protestants In the past the less numerqui Protestants have been politically' dominant in Uganda, which be-. came a British protectorate in. the late .19th centuq. While· a majority of Uganda's Christians are Catholics, the Kabaka (King) 01. Buganda, its most advanced province, and most chiefs in the other provinces are Protestants. In the Mareh 24 elections, however, the Democratic party WOIl 48 of the legislative council's 82 seats. The party was established in 1956 by a group of Catholici headed by Matthew Mugwanya, grandson of one of the first chiefs converted to the Faith, t. end the practical exclusion of. Catholics from local government. At present it does not claim to be a strictly Catholic party and has many non-Catholic members. Its platform calls fur full independence as soon as possible, development 01. national ~ sources and more education.
Coyle Honors Twenty-eight Coyle Hi g]a School students .have' merited, high honors· for the current marking period. Highest ranking' senior is Horace Travassos, followed by Robert Casey. Geoffrey Kane is the only junior on the. list and Joseph Costa and Neil Bowen head the sophomore tally. Leo Curry and Michael Reilly lead the freshman class.
u u u u u 0000"
fit
'"
'
a
•. "-•Z.
o C
III
o Z
... .. =
.... " .. It
Slate Courses for Workers
THE ANCHORThurs., April 6, 1961
Among Puerto' Ricans
Adults Disagree On Students' Working
WASHINGTON (NC) - The fifth -annual Summer institute primarily designed t<> prepare priests, nuns, Brothers and the laity to work among Puerto Ricans in this eountry will be held from June 5 to August 5 at the Catholie . University of Puerto Rico in ment for those who can remain Ponce, P.R. "There is no in Puerto Rico after the formal better place to learn the course has ended. language, the customs and Retreat
traditions of the Puerto Rican people than in Puerto Rico, itself," said Father Theodore E. McCarriack, director of the 1961 Institute for Inter-Cultural Communication. Father McCarrick stressed the importance of learning the language and customs of the Puerto Ricans as an aid to integrating newcomers to this country from the island into the mainland American way of life. Nationwide He said the problem of und~r standing the Puerto Ricans is a nationwide one. When large scale migration of Puerto Ricans to the mainland began several years ago, Father McCarrick said, the problem principally was centered in the New York City area, where they settled. In recent years, he explained, the newcomers have been fanning out to all sections of the nation. Father McCarrick said that last year there were 180 enrolied for the institute courses. S,()m~ of the courses, he· said, include ,supervised field assignments, during whic4 the student ma~ gain. a first-hand knowledge of the customs, history, traditions and manner of living. of the .Puerto Ricans. First Course Tile first course-Program Aruns from June 5 to Ju,ly 29. Father McCarrick explained: "This is tailored to meet the needs of Religious already stationed in Puerto Rico who will devote eight weeks of their school vacation to obtaining greater fluency in Spanish. This program includes besides the intensive language course and social seminars, a special series of seminars on the historical, econottlic and ecclesiastical structul'4 Puerto Rico." . Field Assigomen.... , A,second course-Program Bextends from June 12 to August 5. Father McCarrick said this is the usual eight-week courSe recommended for beginners. It includes the social and cultural seminars, foRowed by a fiveweek supervised field assigft-
.a
Programs C-l and C-2 run from July 3 to Augus t 5. The director said: "C-1 is the beginners' program offered especially for the benefit of statesiders who cannot come to Ponce before July. It is similar to Program B but includes a shorter field assignment after the forma: course and also makes available an eight-day retreat for Sisters at the end of Summer." Father McCarrick said that Program C-2 is for more advanced students who already have made progress in Spanish and who follow a program which emphasizes writing and public speaking. Missioners The director said there also is a Program D, which is a fourmonth program of language, social and cultural seminars and area studies, offered for those contemplating missionary work in Latin America. Information concerning any of the courses, travel and tuition costs and other data may be obtained by writing to Father McCarrick in caJ;'e of the Institute for Inter-Cultural Communication, Catholic University ol. Puerto Rico, Ponce, P. R.
Pities Officia Is On Admissions ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-Pity the college or prep school admissions officer, says Father Thomas J. Costello, Syracuse, N.Y. diocesan school superintendent. He told this story to illustl'aie their problems: Admissions officers at one school were given the application of a boy described as "delicate," "no scholar," "good ift English, but poor in L8:tin arid mathematics," "sometimes rebellious," and ranking 12th in a class of 14. The officers unanimously turned the application down. They were told the information was taken from Winston Churchill'. school record at Harrow.
11
CINCINNATI (NC) High school students and. their parents were at odds with high school teachers Oil a question of whether part-time jobs are "beneficial" for the students, according to a poll conducted here. The survey showed that most of the students and their parenti favored the part-time jobs, but the teachers were unsure of theilr benefits. Seton Poll Senior and junior students. their parents and teachers were quizzed in a poll conducted br the Setonian, publication at Seton High School for girls conducted by the Sisters of Charity here. The poll showed that 79 per cent of the students and 80 pel' cent of the parents favored the jobs, but only 33 per cent of the teachers sided with them. FiftIV per cent of the teachers epressed negative opinions about after school work and 17 per cell& said it depended upon circumstances and the particular stu-· Gent's abilities:
.FULL SCHOLARSHIPS: Full scholarship winners at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are, front row, Nancy Regan of Sacred Heart Parish, Fall River, and Paula Powers of Our Lady of Fatim:_ Parish, Swansea; middle row, Susan Reid of Holy Name Parish, Fall River, and Mary Kelly o.f Sacred Heart Parish, Taunton; back row, Mary McDermott of Sacred Heart Parish, Taunton, and Mary Souza of St. Michael's Parish, Fall Rivet:.
Appeals Court Upholds New York Law Banning Sales of Obscenity ALBANY (NC) - 'fhe New York Court of Appeals has upheld the constitutionality of the state law banning· sales of. obscenity. But .the court, in a 5-2 decision, ordered new trials for five New ,York City booksellers who bad been convicted under the' law. . The men. had challenged the law on the grounds that it was similar to a California statute held to be unconstitutional by the U. S. Supreme Court because it did not make knowledge of
the contents of illegal material a condition for conviction. COIKains Provision Associate Judge Adrian P. Burke, who wrote the appeals court's majority opinion, held that the New York law contained the provision by implication. "A reading of the statute as a whole clearly indicates that only those who are in some manner aware of the character of the material they attempt to distribute should be punished," he said.
Part-Time They lined up this way in __ swer to the question "Do PartTime Jobs Help or Hinder School Work?"~ per cent el the stUdents, 81 per cent of the parents and 83 per cent' of the teachers said the jobs do hindel' school work. Advocates of part-time joblt said they teach the value fIi money, give the job-holder a feeling of independence, provide the student with valuable experience, and develop poise a~ confidence. Critics of after-school emplO3'"" ment said it takes too much time. leading to neglect of homewodl and of family life.
Mone,. Spent 'Where does the money gelt Among the answers to this question were clothes, rec;reatioD, education, donations, and 5lMIlings. 'The Setonian staff conclud" that a student wlw intends te' work while attending school needs "a great deal of determination, a dash of initiative, and a splash of ambition."
•2
THE......ANG ;O~ :.<'"
~
'An 'Only C~,ild"En9rossing Story of 07Connor' sYouth
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. D.D. When God acted upon nothingness, as He did in creation. Ue met no opposition, no obstacles. When Be acts upon us or uses us for some apostolic work, Be often encounters resistanee either ill Olll' wui OJ' in oW' passioll$.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Frank O'Connor, one of the most brilliant of contemJI1OI"8.ry fashioners of short stories, has now given us an MCount of the first 20 years of his life, under the title 'An Only Child' (Knopf. $4.50). He does not review these two 4lecades in chronological se- this he did not fit at all. Others 4Uence, but rather skips back of his age were adept at the tasks _d forth until he comes to set, an dperformed them well _ I with the Irish revolu- and insouciantly. He was a bungtIIoIt and civil war, when the 88lTative takes a fairly straight ~. It is char-.eterratherthaR wdered events which interests IIim and a num.... of persons nd clearly . . d unforgettllbly forth from tIaese pages, not Joe a s t the boy .-d' youth that O'Connor was. lie was born . . Cork in 1903 and named Michael O'Donovan; "Frank ~nnor" is a na.Ille he assumed )Mer. His mother who dominates .., book, was Minnie O'Connoe, _ orphan brought up by the Cood Shepherd Sisters. She was a small woman, but • person of integrity and spirit, pllant and unbowed despite a ]Me which was hard from tae beginning. Whell it came time to aake her own living, she went iIlto domestic service, and except ... . eight yean ill the emplO'J' ef the considerate and friend.. Barrys, she had a difficult, sometimes a nightmarish, time of it. Mystifies FaSIaer 'l"be man she married, Michael O"Donovan, . . . tall, hand.ome, iIIIlprovident, and a demon in the II'iP of drink. With him she was M¥er free of the Nek and sURg ef poverty;. He had speDt Tears in the ~tish army aDd proudly played. tile big drum in parades. His son, who had none of his bigness or bluster, mystified him. O'Donovan chose to live near .... mother in a slum aection of eork. Frank O'Connor vividly t1IIecribes this vast, sloppy wom_ and the members of her fam..., so unlike his own mother. • was bad enough living neal" tIIem, but then the grandmothet" .-oved in wHit them, her dishevelled bulk a terrible incubus oa -.e household. Four womeR 01. the neighborhood are portrayed by Mr. O'Connor: Mrs. McCarthy, "the "ing image of Kathleen MavouJeen"; Gerti Twomey, the chattering Cockney; Ellen Farrell, a bitter and ingenious crone; and Kinnie Connolly, whom in retroll)ect he considers a saint. There are thumbnail sketches .t others, especially eX one or twO priests who at'e far fronl leritly handled. '.l;he author had little formal edUcation. "It seemed to be extremely haNi to get an education, "li!ven-at the level on whim we'" lived-to diecoYel' what it wail.." Be had a few years of schooliIIg which amounted to virtual~ ROtbing; these 8l'e piercingiy eonveyed. He knew only one lIeIDarkable schoolmaster, Daniel CIorkery, later f.amous as a writer of fiction and a figure i-. the nation's fight for freedom. Quits School at 1% His real education came from !'eading, which he began early Mid continued avidly, althouga without plan. He bad a passiOli tor books and a passion fOl' ausic, but it is plain that he !'egrets the lack of direction and depth in his untutored search foe tile best in both. He was about • when he quit school. J:.ater came Gaelic classes and. • spell in night school. He had verious jobs; the one to which lie gives most attention here ia tlla\t of a railway messenger. Int.
.a
ConfirmatiOil at Base
_d
BITBURGo (NC)-One hunand seventy-five childrea Ml4 adults here in Germa"y with tbe'U. S. armed forces were contil'fued by Bishop Matthias Wehr fII. Trier in the chapel of the U. S. • :~ jl.t .l\e~bM Span_gdah.1~... ___ ' .. _:. ,.' .'~::..
_~/~
",-,--:.,~~.~.c,..-,::;.....,'.-
!_,
If a pencil were endowed with consciousness aud turlled ii8e1f upsi&! down as we began to write, neither ear minds nor OUl' hands could do anything with it. We often wonder why we are not closer to God. It is because we have not become supple instruments in Bis Hands as the pencil in the hand of the writer.
ler.
Double Life The reason was that he was completely taken up with literature. "It was a strange double life, and small wonder if it comes back to me only as an hallucination. CAROL DUARTE "Each morning, as I made my way across the track from the passenger station in the early light, I said good-bye to my real self, and at seven that evening when I returned across the dark This year's Diocesan CYO the new books and papers in the President certainly knows the well-lit passenger station to see responsibility of being an officer. the nesw books and papers in the Carol Duarte, daughter of Mr. railway bookstall, he rejoined and Mrs. Arthur Duarte, 480 me, a boy exactly like myself Somerset Avenue, Taunton, has except that no experience had held numerous CYO as well as dinged or dented him, and as we school offices. In 1959 she was went up Mahoney's Avenue in vice-president of her parish CYO, the darkness, we ohattered in Sacred Heart in Taunton. The Irish, diversified by quotations following year she was elected ill German, French, or Spanish, president of her parish unit, and talked knowledgeably of president of the Taunton CYO. Italy and the Rhineland." and vice-president of the DiocSolder in Combat esan CYO. In the civil war which' broke She was re-elected vice presout after the signing of the Free ident and is now assuming the State treaty with England, Mr. duties of president in the vacanO'Connor was on the Republican cy left by the resignation of the side and had a taste of soldiering president. Carol was a represenand of combat. He tells about it tative from the Fall River Dioill a serio-comic way, making us cese in 1959 t<l the New England feel something of the pathos of CYO Convention held in Manit, but more strongly accentuchester, N. H. and to the same ating its absurd aspects. Convention held in New Bedford It was at this time that his dislast year. illusionment in Irish romantiMiss Duarte is the oldest fill iam was complete. Taken prisoner, he spent al- five children, Peter, a junior at aost a year ill jail or prison Coyle; Arthur, Arnold, and. eamp, and it was in the latter Francis, students at Sacred Heart Grammar School. She is a 1He that he undertook and enjoyed teaching. Released, he headed graduate of Saint Ma~'. Higa School in Taunton and is pI'fthome, and ais widowed mother, enUy majoring in English at looking intently at him, declared, Bridgewater State College. "It made a maa of you." An essay which he had entered 1ft a national contest took the prize. He never collected the promised money, but his literary A Catholic priest, arrested recareer was launched. cently by the Cuban government Seethes With Lite as an anti-Castro rebel in the This is all engrossing book, Escambray mountains, is reclosely and meticulously written, ported to have been executed. jewelled with exquisite detail The report of the execution of (the cast of a face, the sound of Father Francisco Lopez Blasquez a voice, a landscape), seething comes from a Honduras radio with life, and bursting with feeling. A certain tranquility plays on the basis of unconfirmed Havana reports. over it because it constitutes reGovernment controlled newsmembrance of things lo~g past. papers charged Father Lopez Yet wryness and even bitternelJll -Blasquez-a 45-year-old native run through it. eX Granada, Spain-with being The author was reared as a a "direct accomplice" of the Catholic, but by the time he reached his early twenties, he rebel leader Evelio Duque. The was evidently through with the Catholic hierarchy has maintained official silence, but CathChurch. olic spokesmen described the He detests the introverted religion with which his early years newspaper charges against the were surrounded, took calmly priest aa "GUtrageousq ridiOll:lous." - ' ' the exco~unicationvisited upOR practitioners eX Republican violence, and once out of prison cam.p. went no mQre to Mus. 'Henri longer ,believes in the immortality of every soul. "But f knew that there were souls that were immortal ... and perhaps it was the thought of these that turned me finally from poetry to story-telling, to the celebration of thOse who for me represented all I should ever know of God. My mother was merely one among them."
Diocesan Leader Used to Offices
Report ExecutiOll Of Priest in Cuba
~n&.ig~,.
,.',
, " ' ,. " .:,':
~
,;,'.'
We receive letters asking why the Church does not do more for Latin America or for Africa. But we have never known a single person who asked that question to contribute as much as a dime. It is always the irres- . i:. ponsible in the Church who hold the Church.~~· responsible, These so-called Liberal Catho-t(·. lics are liber<il with their blame and not,·'.l liberal with their money. t·,,\:, On the other hand, those who do make sacrifices never blame the Church but only the meagerness of their own giving. They are Catholic, and the word Catholic has no modifier before it, no limitation, no condition. A Catholic is like Our Lord in the Garden of Gethsamene when He said: "If I am the man you are looking for, let these others go free." As Our Lord took upon Himself the sins of the world, the Catholic takes upon himself the burden of The Society for the Propagation Gf the Faith in mission lands. Satan asked Our Lord to be Liberal-to forget sin and coneentrate on turning stones into loaves of bread. We do not ask you to be Liberal; we do ask you. to be liberators-to free souls from the bondage of sin. *'- free miIIds for ChrisVs Truth iA Asia, to free yourself from egoti8lll through ltACI'ifiee .. the TrInity may dwell in your 8Oul. As liberal Catholics increase. liberality to the poor decreases. Let us keep our Faith stroD&" and soulder the burdens ef the world. Send J'our sacrifices to the Holy Father through hill 8odet,- for the Propagation 01 the Faith. ' .
GOD LOVE YOU to F.S. foe $2 "'My landlady bas just lower.e<l my rent and I am sending you the money I will be saving each month." . . . ~ M.H. and her Seventh Graders for $20 "Each yeu' we hold an auction for the benefit of the missions. All of tfte articles are contributed by members of the class. Here are the eM'Dings from this year's sale." . . . to ML.A. fQl." $10 ''1 recently aw a JnOvie depicting the sufferings endured by lepers hundre4k of years ago. I am sending my birthday money to help today'. lepers." •.. ~ Mrs. J.W. f()r $10 "F()r the past monUl I had beell worrying about our ability to meet all of our debts. Mter reading about the missions, I find we have wealth and riches I had ftever considered!' Would y_ like to lwow more about the aetivities M tile miMionary Church, to find out w,hat the Holy Father's emissaries ~ doing around the globe? Why nGt sub8cribe to WORLDMISSION, a .clloIarly quarterly review edited by Most Rev. Fulton ~. Sheen. A year'. subscription i. $5. The address: WORLDMISSION, Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York.
3"
Cut out tIlis column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Moat Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National DirectOl' of the Society ·for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, NY .. 01' your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE. 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.
DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl
"m.
yo_...... (14-231 Ie .. Chri.,.. va.t viIleyarel as ... Apa.... .. .... Editions, PreIS. Radio. Movie. .ReI T ... "i.ioo, With "'_ modern mea".. th_ ~itsionary Si.t.,. brine Chri..•• Doctrine te .It. r. .ardle.. .. race. coJoto .. u_. FOI' information write to: R£V MOTHER SUf'HIOR It It. PAUl'S A~ BOSTON 10. MAli. "
AVAIlABlE IN FAIRHAVEN AT: DUMAS' MAItKET FAlRHAV&N PIONEEIt STOltE FOOOTOWH UTTLEBAV MARKET
NVE'S STORE
Maclean's Clam Chowder
t
ATTENTION.
DmUSTRIAI.c~~~~fSERVICE
Pontiff Names Texas Priests Monsignori DALLAS (NC)-An official of the national center ot the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and the bU!liness manager of the Texas Catholic have been giveR papal honors" Bishop Thomas K. Gorman of Dallas-Fort Worth announced that Father William J. McCoey, who has been with the National CCD center in Washington, D. C., since 1957, and Father Thomas W. Weinzapie;L,business manager Of the diocesan newspaper, have been named papal chamberlains with the title of Right Reverend
I
Wily Buy - We Supply COMPLETe
RENTAt. WORK. UNIFORMS
SHOP TOWELS Abe Redatm Industriaf Gloves
MEDALIST: Mrs. George Vergara, associate p.rofessor of speech and English at the College of New Rochelle, N.Y.,has, been selected .. receive the 1961 Magnificat Medal C1f Mundeleia CoIletJe.
::;:tJC.J:l~::.: ". " , :.:. '.
COYNE
IlDUSTRIAl LAUNDRY
luaa••••r .. .......... Overall & Supply Co. M Bowanl ........ !lew Bedford
..... . WT 1-"''' or WI 7-0788
I
"
•
;
'.
The Polio Season is on-the-way. ••
/
SUNDAY APRIL 9From 9am 10 12 NOON al Ihe·· TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL ,
( :.
SpOnso,:eJ",
'r"'
:
'
I
"
,
'I
. ... .:....
"
~.,
,
•.••. ;••
"y ,;'" '.. ,'
.. ~
'
i ,! ,
FA~~~":IUVlR 'MID.leAL SOCIETY' ,FALL: RIVER-BQA'RD"' OF"' 'HEA'LTH DIST'RICT~URSING' ASSOCIATION
~..
,"
'
,,'
,
,
"
:.
-
•••
,.#•.,••, ••••,
~,
,
.
,..-;
.
,
co.
,
"
'"
, •••••••••, ....
'
This Timely Messag. :'~ Sponsored lfJy Tbe Following Public Spirited OIId Business Conc.rns Located ;,. Greatel Fall River Duro Fi'nishing Corp. Enterprise ~re~ing Co. The ExterminatOr Fall River Electric Light Co. Fan River Trust Co. Globe, Manufacturing co.
...
Kaplan Furniture Co. Kormon Water Co. MacKenzie ,& Winslow, Inc. Mason Furniture Showrooms Mooney & Co. Inc. Newport Finishing Co.
Individ~als.
Plymouth Printing Co., ~ Sherry Corp. Sobiloff Brothen Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Worken UnioR qI America, AFL-CIO
,
\
'.;,t·
-
THE A~C.HO,R-:-~i~es~ of.;fcill ,Riy~,:~rhu~., April ,"
": -
.,'.
..
~ , ': -
6. ,1961
. ".'. • • ",' _
'
. i
~-~eca;I:~~ Iii nt~~p~el;~iI'sible/'::"
::Easter DCa1te'Co·ntrov.ersy By Most Rev.' Robert
J~'.
Dwyer; ·U.D•. ,
Bishop of Re~o
.
.
'.
too
". '\ . In these northerly climes Easter.is nearly always early ,'..... to vouchsafe more than a hint of Spring. In Rome the azaleas '-,. . ' .eascade down the Spanish Steps and the Borghese echoes .with the shouts of children; even in Paris the leaves are unfurled and the nursemaids sedulous care. Against it; too, tha linger 'to chat under' the we'ighty obstinacy ofbusiIiesa flowering chestnuts;B u t and finance, unwilling to· make · here we live in peril of un- the proper adjustments. la- the
eertainty. It· may snow on ledger system. Yet it must be acknOwledged "Easter, a' wet,sloppy snow,with that the Church, under the direc· nothing Of its tion of the more recent Pontiffs, December has been by no means adverse magic. The wind to reasonable modifications in may howl, a the liturgical practice.' . ,'eold and venge:. And perhaps-a faint perhaps 'fulwind eager to "\ ' . . -the Easterners might fall in ·tnflict the' last· ..MOTHERS GROUP; Chairmen for the' Coyle 'High Whist .and Bridge being held line if they saw. that the WeSt [penance' of Lent,· were ready to waive a 'point. this evening at the school auditorium at 7:45 are, left to right, .Mrs. Dorothea Poyant 'and we' may Sometimes the least signi~icant of New Bedford, Mrs. Walter Burns Jr. of Fall River, Mrs. Dorothy Sullivan of No. Easton, , battle our way of gestures brings the richest' ':w'Mass gasping Mrs. Chester Kawa of New Bedford, Mrs. Louis Dubowiczof. . No. Attleboro , and Mrs. results. . and sputtering. John' Meunier of Taunton. ' -At, best the day .Tidy and SaMstadoti' "may bea wash Gf silver and pale blue. Easter were set for .~ theSuppose second Sunda.y of April. It ' .' '. The Church universa I opera...... (In' a Mediterranean calendar. might not sui~ us boreals perfect-· Continued from Page One . Fall River; Nancy Curran ,of 4[ . John.J. Morgan, Jr., a pupil at 'She is iridifferent to other hem- 1,-, but it. would save us the an- Kathleen Silvia is the daughter Richmond Street, daughter of 5t. Patrick School, ~all River; ispheres and temperature belts. nual scramble to find when Lent of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Silvia Mr. and Mrs. Leo Curran, a Kathleen A. Bolger of 21A Maple .Easter down under is an Autum- begins and endS. Not that it of 53 Norfolk Street; Mary Pires pupil at Susan Wixon School, Gardens, daughter of Mr. and nal festival and Christmas a would help the Southern Hemi- is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. also Fall River; and Anne Mrs. Jeremiah Bolger, a pupil at 'Summer holiday. We have' re- sphere out of its difficulty, but Antone M. Pires of 168 St. Mary Brownell of West Main Road, Henr'y Lord Jr. High School, Fall ·eeived Christmas cards' from there the only practic;u solution Street. Ellen Demetrius is the Little Compton, daughter of Mr. River; and Rita A. Kulpa, 7Z 'Rio, where Winter never comes, 'lies in a double' calendar, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred~ and Mrs.. Herb~rtBrownel1, a Rockland 'Street, daughter of Mr., decked in holly wreathes' and lIkelihood of which is ,too remote . erick J. DemetriuS,' '71 Linden pupil atJosephine Wilbur School. and .Mrs. Stanley Kulpa, pupil at 'snowy English landscapes, 'and for speculation. Street. Partial Scholarships' :St. Stanislaus School, Fall Rive&:. "Easter greetings from the ·Ca.pe How tidy it would all be, and Honon Group Honorary part'a! s holarshi how satisfying. to ~he. urgings of . " I' C. ps Merit Certificates with improbable lilies and croBesides,. the winners ofschol- have been awarded .to Elaine 'Cuses, '.\' order and consistency. ,Your arships 14 students ,,'Vho ranked Medeiros, daughter of Mr. and The following are recipients .; IOften have we reflected on the Easter outfit could then . be in the. top ten per . cent of the' Mis. Manuel Medeiros of 2678 of Commendation of Merit CerIstr'ain this 'must place upon the plamled with corifi<ience; and 'candidate's have been .awarded East' Main .Road, .Portsmouth"tifi~ates·for ~ is tin g it ish e.c1 liturgical consistency o:ftiines your preachers would be spared honorable mention. They ... are R. I., a pupil at Fort Butts School' ,a,chlevement m the scholarship t~d seasons. . their yearly task of revising their S h ar 0 n . Boulanger; Barbara Janice D'Amico, daughter of .ex-amination: An? _Witengier. _:': How is' a"preacher in Durban m .. : ~nO~fs~:~t:e~ In~~.tp!!Xl!-gar7 '. 'Furize, 'Rowena Silvia,'lMary .LOu· 'l\1r. :and, M~s.· ·Louis ~'Amico of Joyce Jordan, Pat~lcia Ann MU!'les _..' , to, expound the rebirth of life .. . ' " Sullivan, Susan Nunes;' Anne 75 <;::ampion Road, Tiverton.·.a 'phy, Gayle Carreiro. ..and the resurgence of hope when . '" . Second' ThoUghts ," .' Marie Amaral, Mary ,Jane Camp- ,_, pupil at Pocasse~ School; imd AI;me Louise Richar~ Mll1'a · all about him proclaims 'the belt; Rosemary Gal1agher,Patr~ 'Mary Kt:istenLimaof Foglandgaret Potvin, Nancy C. Jacksou. :.dealh of nature? How shall 'a ','Yet 'even as we·.poise:thuson "'cia A."McBreen, :ioan' ·Wiison. Road,Tiverton, daUghter·of Mr. ,Carol Si~via, Karen Jones. Tasmanian, 'fanning himsel! on the verge of endorsement, we are EOlle:<;::acEjUJ., Jaoq~el,i!'1e. Gl~- and Mrs. Henry Lima, a pupiiat Also, Dolores Salvo.. JoApn his verandah, savor the tioadi- haunted" by,' secondthought8. ,ent, Jacqueline Jette, Kathlel;lB 'Pocal;Se~ Sphopl. '. . . • F~-enette, Mary M. Brosnihau. ,tional joys of Twelfth Night? 'g<)W much of life, thus far; has S 'th . Monetary scholarships am ... Thib 'b'ee'n" gO've"rn"e'd by" thOe' erraCtic and . ml,,' , ''''. , , , ' . . ' •. ' . .. . " ou~ t - P au 1e tte '... ault, Linda , .' Ct~ te Schism Candidates who -have' satUified 1ng to half tUItion for. four years ';Gomes. . - ' , . inexplicable sequence of 'equiiloxerit%-imce req'uir.· nave be.·e.n .have been awarded' itO: J"o.,Ann . Paula Gauthier.. Jan'!'ce Be JL 'Not that 'it' greatly matters. and'mo·on.' ::', " notified'tO repOlt··.. at ~sae:t:ed Murphy;, Peckham Road; Li'ttle narz and. 5a~dra Cabral. .... We read the story of the ancient .' How valuable' an'adjunCt of -'Hearts .Acait'em7 for"',offiClal .Compton,' ,daughter. of Mr. aDd ,;-i£aster 'Controversy with stolid conversation woU:ld'be':sUbtracted:r~gistration','MQl;laay ·t:tJOU.gh -.l\/I;~'lk C;,Geor.ge,Murphy, 's,pupil j1:Lncomprehen~io~. How..., coul!! from our social intercourse. Frid~y,;'Aprn"'10'to"iiif.rODt'·1 at" ~oseph~ ;iW;i~ut '~hwl; IfJ!¢nsible '~en,'we ask; :'York , "When does' ;-Eaifef-,'faU next to 5 and 6:30 to 8:30' and Satur- 'lYIal'le 'r;.. ·,Mor.gan,·;,50, ,Walter q:themselves into such a fearful year?" is a' gambit,sure'tcn'evive day, ApH(15'fro~·9·t6·11:30and 'Street;daugh,ter"of·Mr.anci Mrs. ·f ~.
-'
Academ.-es Announce- Scho'lars''hl'-
p , '
W'-Inners
ements
!;i,1
~ptr~~·,~~ef~~~i;:ih s~~z;:y.,a~~~; 'st'~ael' rnoross::v'ed:'°iJfei~~'~~r~,J'~d"
I~i~~n:t~~~~~~~'
"'..
:,::
,2; 'U)"5~,', .... :-~~. ','; ":', , .il\.:;",,-:, ~.r/' 'Mt;tSt;·MarY'AwaidS'· ','
··..'.·).;.o:····b·'.· IiD.'~..·,O',·..·S'· p'f.e",'C·'f'l,s' .~.'B··,(.-r'l·g··'h.'t· 11":..,.
,
AUBERTIHE· ': <"Fun'era'I" Home
'.'
'~'.:.
'".1
: . ' ., "',
~
:,
,-
I'
•
, ;··;··H6Jen·Aubertintt Braugla'
~oIlO~;~ng tl~. ~t~~~ng.~r~~~~~~.',f~i;:~~t~)t~e·:T\vei~Et~igh~i( f~~€'gitlih'~Y~ Fer Xavier Seni~rs;'~ ... ;)". Owner and Director' H: . We find nq ,anSWer, yet,the faCt . "\MoreoveJ':': as :,~~,'a~tid6tefor 'irieril;ed,. ~cholai-~ill~~to 1·'Mt:··'St. 'tCINCINNA'Tf '(NC) ·-:.-"X'avier ".' >:'$pUci9~". 'p.arkir:-9 Ar.ecI', 1
~;rem~fiis: tha f.' 'popes .arid :sain ts 'b6'redoiri;' hO'" -two,( 'Eastets' :. a're '"M~rr, 'A",Ca·~.~~Y, '~i~~f:t~11: Ri'*~i:, :,Un i ver'sity "seniors ', have "b'Cight : "~I' :~ .:,." WY::,2-2957 .. ;~ ;have- lost ·their tempers';over i~ ever'the same; Decefiiber"25: 'de- .Q\it pf:~':w~partic~pa~i,ni" in,;the;i96t~' J'Ob""'and::"'salilty "'prosp'ects, 129 Allen SL· ' . :New DeMore! . \,e~c.ommunicating one another 'lermines' cliri'stniiis, a~'fb(eci,t\nd Marth'e,*'arllination:' ;!' ",i .'" 1>'';'', '·tM"Uii'iVersitypladHrient"office 0'-' "'. ",. '. '. : I,-with fierce intolerance. The delightful date, but a:Ias;' how :::"i~E;~H)ients 'of'Honof S'ch'o!W:_'~,repOI1ledh:erel';""" ',:".,>,:." Eelelt,~.c ,!3Qlfrch . came .. ,much, hard it -is'with.advancing.age to 'ship1"ilrlhetwoiiigh~!st'rariitlWg '·'·;M6r'e';<'iirn\S Qndi"government ~/ ieloser to schism-with Rome.-(>ve!'. distinguish one' Christmas' from st(id.e'nW)~ho 'U;ok' tb'~~·~t'·;~ 'agencies:than 'ever 'b'efore"'lliiVe . !:/'" J'JEfFREY"E .• -\".
~
'"
.
1 .:.
I' .
". ':
' ,I"
'
I
I', .~is issU.l;llth,a11, it'ever did dur.hl.·g worst. ;phases of th!! ~rom-
'.'
'" "'' ' SULLI'VAN-
-,:, Joy"~e'tlizab~thjGr~ti~~
asked permission to'cbndiict ·'campus" interviews;' 'the offiCe ':. welliansettlement.' ".' ',', :-. .: .~~.~ ;Var,ie~ ,," .rence 'Green'wood ,of 83' BJ'a~ett 'said;'and'starting salaries offered ,Funeral Dome 1 . And eyen now, come tQ 'think ,'All our ChristmaSeS' are-pal- ",Ayenue, Tiverton; 'lindNan~y "range' from $90· a ,week to; $6 000 . 550, Locus' St. ::.,of it, .not the least of the differ- impsests.- ·Not so"with Easter. )Ferris,·d#ug~~r,c)O~r.and ,.l\,:rs. .'Ii: year..:.-.an increase over' iast fa,it River.MaS& l'. ences' sundering Eastern Ortho- ,"That was the'year when Easter .Yincenl.J. Ferril!,~~ 153 Bear<,ls- "'year'sf~r~s. OS 2.,2391 ~> doxy from· the ecumenical unity came with the last snowfall!' . \Ylp.Jth Road,.T;yertqn·. . _...;.;.0 .....',;;, .. _ _;..;,..;.._ Rose E. Sullivan Lof th,e F~lith'~s thissa~e.quarrel .',~:rhat·was ,the ,}\:,aster . of the . Miss -,Gr,eenwoC)~ ,attends. p,o-,O'RC)URK~.. · , " Jeffrey E. ~ullivan 1: eve'r the date 6f Easter." , apple,..blossoms/' So ,,,,~;recall the 'cass~t School~Tiverton and Misll ;l . Should we titer\. fix this crotch- f~~st,with r~t~ a1l1ple.. va~)e;ty.: "F~rH~'~tt~nds sCPktrTc;itSih'g?J.. ii·ety_qate,·once for all and have· So" for our part, we shall not Fall River. .'. , 571 Second St.·, ), done' with it? ~t ~isa recurring .J;~;Vive .' the E8;~ter,,·,Col1tr.oversy. ,-', .' '. ~ .. , 'f',:, " < ., i~. piqposal, 'eminently attractive to L~t, Pope SL,YiCtol',resi .quiet.;·,¥uI" Mo~etarY SCltoland,J.~·, ., Fall River, 'Mass. J.. ,'calendar makers, florists, "mili- in his tomb. But' we. cannot re- " Monetary scholarships, are .1'.. ',' 05"'9-6072' , I. !I iner:,!, and con~ectioners of Easter press a sigh of -satisfacUOlllthat awarded the next .three' highest.. " . MICHA~). 'McMAHON Ii, eggs. There. are, we understan'" we do riot 'live in Tia~£... del . winners;"'· ,.', ." Licensed Funer'c:tL D'irector \-'0 !: a number of solemn organiz~- Fuego. Easter in Autwwa ill Thr'ee girls have won full; fOUr '.• Re9istered,Embal~er ._ , tions dedicated to the promotion dreadful thought. year'tuition scholarships: They of this cause, and their literature, are Claudette . Auger, daughter if tedious, "has argumentative C~tholic H,igh Senior of·Mr. and Mrs. Emile Auger.of merit. W' G .'Id' Ii. .... 310 King Philip Street, a -pupil at 'Ble'sSed' Sacrament· School, . Against it· has been arrayed the' . an$. WI . AwarU FAIRFIELD (NC)-A 17-yeaJl'o , . . . . . ' , . I conservative tradition ot' the .FUNERAL HOME Church, reluctant to chang" what old Fairfield gIrl has won a four986 Plymouth Aven~ ' ,has been handed down with,such. year Metropolitan Opera Guild i , scholarship., , Fall River. Mass. : ' ...'" '. She 'is ··Ge'I'tri.J.iie "ADD' (Trudy) .' Tol. os 3-2271 .... HYANNIS HOME, 5,O@@,O~O OIbSfJD'V@ Thaler, a senior at. the Academy . . a. Marcol Roy -0.. Lorruloe ~ " DANia. (,'HARRINGTON ~ HARWICHPORT . Ibet_ Funeral ·Director .. BoSa LaP'ra~"" l~ ~.ol!.Bth Adoratio~ D~W. of Our Lady atMercy in Milford, .; SOUTH YARMOUTH Ii WASHINGTON (NC)-An e~-' Conn. A lyric soprano, Tru~ GOO .RG9I.teicd.~_·, .• ',,,-, . "FUNERAl.: DIRECTORS'" ,'.. .\. ti~ated five million U. S. Cath- won the ~cholarsh!p by her singIl.-......._-_--~~", .;. '., . ~,,*.v~(,;~~ . .C,ir~';, ,~. " olic youngsters will kneel· hpf~"n ing of "Donde, Liete" from 'La !; the Blessed Sacrament on Youth Boheme and -- ''tAl Cantone di" ." '" "W'( ··7.-7~30 ,I. '-," r', I,ll Adoration Day, May 21,. acco....Doretta" from La Rondine. \. ,,;~~w, BJEDFQRD ' 1 , I" J. .,r·· i.' I' ing to Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder, .. Botl;1 the finals and-semi-finals :"" ;,.' .\ director of.' the Youth Depart- 'w~re' held in New York's Car' " i: me nt, National Catholic Welfare . negie Hall. . '.' ' I I. Cc:mferenc~. . ; -: ~ 1 . . . .• I ' : : ' . - ~ ' . ). . Travellers' Mission I Goal of the observance, he sai~ MUNICH (NC)-A joint Cath.DOMESTIC H~VY'DUTY OIL BURNERS '. is to have each teenager medii' tate 30 minutes before the olic-Lutheran mission at Mun469 LOCUST STREET ich's ce'ntral railway station has I, Blessed Sacrament. 'Youths are Service FALL RIVER, MASS. given help to more than two :j asked to meditate on their perOS -2-3.381 MAIN OFr:-a - 10 DURFEE' ST., FALL RIVER ;! 80nal needs .and to consider cer- million. travelers since World 'war II, it was i-eported at the 'i tain intentions, among them' the Wilfred Co James E. lIUccessof the forthcoming ecu- -inauguration ot. DeW rooms .ffW . Driscon Sullivan, Jr. ~ coUllciL the mi.ssioa. )
f ,'the
another,
:·d~ughte~.~fMr':,j{~d.'~S:"~
c
,v
,
•_ _. . . .
"Funeral·'H()me'",
a'"
i
Co PD' HARRINGtON'
i·
:
BROOKLAWN
to
,rrUNEMIl
INC•.
':
",:'",,,·,WEBB ,01['<'(0'.
r
<.D~'D·.··SULLIVAN' &:, SONS
.'::-':'., ,;, '-:··TEXACO FUEL.:' OILS
fUNERAl' HOME ..
-
&
Sales -
,I
'nstallation
Phone OS 5-7484
Protest'D;oppbtg Hungary Issue From Agenda
"-~~~-"""'''''''''''~;-w~'t-".:1~.~~~~",~~~~~
THE ANCHOR.Thurs., April 6, 1961
,}~2'
"l~t<
1.' •
Legion of Mary Has Phenomenal Growth in Chile'
NEW YORK (NC) Hungarians are. "deeply shocked" by reports that the eurrent session of the United
.SANTIAGO (NC) - The Legion of Mary in Chile hai recruiterl more than 3,000 active members and 30,000
~ations General Assembly may not discuss Soviet aggression against Hungary. This is the message sent by auxiliary members in the fo_ the Hungarian National Comyears since its foundation. mittee, an organization of exiled This is reported by the cen~ Hungarian leaders, to leading office of the Legion here. UN delegations and officials. Since each active membet' New Arrests pledges to devote at least twe hours weekly to the legion~ The committee, whose president is Msgr. Bela Varga, prowork, the legion gives at least tested against treating the Hun6,000 man-hours of work for t~ garian question in the UN as "8 Church every week. cold war issue or bargaining inSo rapid is the growth and Be strument just at a time :when a widespread the apostolate it ill new persecution drive is starting impossible to get complete cW!>o in captive Hungary." rent statistiq. ,In Santiago,'_ Msgr. Varga said in a separate example, where the legion ill statement that security police in already established in 56 ~ Hungary have arrested some 200 ishes, 10 more parishes now aM clergymen for interrogation. At 'forming praesidia (individua'! the same time collectivization of units). land is being stepped up, he said. In the Vicariate of the A&&The Hungarian committee's cania under the direction of the UN message stated that "any Capuchin Fathers the first curio softness and tolerant attitude (group of praesidia) was estab-toward Soviet aggressions against lished just a year ago. Now the~ the liberty and independence are three curiae and 40 praesidiQ ,-. of small nations weakens the in the Vicariate. In the whole free world's position in such country there are 320 praesidia and 18. curiae. cases at the Congo, Laos and Cuba." The statistics for just 100 011 See Warning SOCIAL WORKER AT HOME: Relaxing at a family reading session are Mr. and these praesidia during SiR The message said it is in the Mrs. Arthur Cassidy with their children, Kathryn Ann (left), Mary Christine and months of 1960 show that thq were responsible for 175 converinterests of the free world to Arthur Jr. sions, the return of 427 perSOll!J promote UN authority. It warned to the sacraments, the righting that continued Soviet "defiance" of 332 marriages, and preparaof UN resolutions on Hungary tion of 1,086 children and l-'1l' "may represent a stern warning adults for first Communio.n, for the nations of Allia, Africa Sixteen members of the legioi:! and Latin America of what they entered the religious life. may expect from the UN in case r By Patricia McG()walll of a communist aggression.• ," All this represents the worll A specialist in an uncrowded f~eld is Arthur F. Cassidy, psychiatric social worker c: l~ss than one third of tbe The Hungarian committee's message went to Frederick H. for the Greater Fall River area Mental Health Clinic. Excluding a concentration at l~gionnaries in Chile during Cl Boland, president of. the UN Brockton VA Hospital, there are only· five other such workers in the immediate area. sIx-month period. The statistteD General Assembly;. Sir Leslie are almost endless since ea~ Munro of New Zealand, special As a result, Mr. Cassidy,' a member of St.Pa-trick's parish, Somerset is kept busy praesidium does the work moQ his working' . . . . . the . UN representative on Hungary; every minute of. ' espec~Uoy In CMlfl .,....mentally handicapped people needed in its parish. and the delegations of the United day b y t h e varIed demands dren. Visits to the sick, the teach~ may be provided with 'a means of catechism, census taking aD(l States, United Kingdom, France, . of his job.· He channels an An interesting :fact 18 that of of livelihood. An Awards Dinner distribution. of Catholic liteF&Italy, Tunisia, Uruguay, Austraeases that come into ~ children referre~. to the clinic, for people,who have contributed ture are common to all the pr~ lia and New Zealand. Fall River clinic;handiing ~ny 85 Pet' ~nt are 00y6 and 15 per significanUy to the men ta I sidia. . '.' . himself and rouUng' otheN to cent gIrls. Adults reverse the heal~, program. is planned foao .... one 01. two PlSychia·trist6· avtril- . figures, being 90 per cent late this m9nth.. able, to the clinic, a clinical P!IiV- women and 10 per. cent moo. AeUve. Family chologist Ol' Q graduate student .. . Arthur Cassidy ~ marr~ FRESNO' (NC) - CelebratioN; in'tJhe . psychiatric: soCial' work . Medleal C~pSIn" marking the golden jubilee in '. field. The' Mental Health elink' Mr. Cassidy himseJ:f became in- and, hastilree childrefl, Arthur ,Plvm.~i"9..·...;. Heating. the p.riesthood of Bishop'Aloysius is a United Fund Agency 01. Fail t~ested in the psychiatric field Jr., 6,. Mary Christine, 5·· and Kathryn ~nn, 4•. ~or .tW().yeM6 _ J. Willinger, C.SS.R., .of Mon~ River. during his Army . service. As s Over 35 Vears terey-Fresno, and the elevation Cases may Nnffe :fpoyn JlMill1tid medical corpsman, he says, be . 'tile 'family entertained foreign .' of Satisfied Service of Carmel Mission to.·s minor -....J.o.I· to' ;.,"'Ut ...... · I8W man'" problems ··....ich m' ~...,.:. - students ·.",nder,. the National ·be.held heft ],I'''''' emsper90I..... y ..-" WI> CUI _NO.·MAIN STREET basl'll'ca sta'tus ordeN' of aU types. A88i6tanee' .. e8J. knowledge a.J.one eould ft'Ot Catholic. ,·Welf~re: Conference' River . OS 5·7491 April 26 and 2'1. . . gi ......._- .... --1 .t·..." ., iolve:· soldiers Buffed· -ttle .program..Their ,guests. included· ven a.._..c..... 1ft ua giris' from. France a'nd La-tm James Francis Cardina'l. Me- prospective adopthoe parent&:letigue, (or instance. He determAmerica~' . . Intyre, Archbishop of Los An..: and children. to be placed, .and .inedto learn more about the Rita .Casstdy rdiares .her hus- geles, Archbishop Egidio Vag- to veterans not'eISgt~ ffw VJ\. 1'ela.tioneIUp of mind. and body. band's interest, sociai' work.. ' nozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the services.' After military semce be United States, some 20 archA recent caBe betped ~ the graduated from BostoiI. College A zra1,,~~~ of An~';'lrst Colbishops and bishops and a nurn- clinic was that of a family JMo 1hen en.teroed. itS graduate school . lege', Putnam, Conn" &he worked ber of state and civie officials which a defective child wee of social work, also taking iM>me for tile Boston Department ofhave accepted invitations .to bol'll. Assistance' gWen' ~ 1be eourse8 at, Harvard: He did field Public Welfare befQre marriage, . attend both events. . psychiatric workel'lll over • work .in Pawtucket and Bo8t.on and is as active as family duties Bishop Willinger was ordained period of time he}ped the paY_ agencies, coming to Fan River will permit in the Mental'Heaith to the priesthood on July 12, ents adjust to the shOck and almost nine ye8l'8 ago, wnel'1 Association. CHARlES F. VARGAS The family lives in Somerset, 1911, but observance of the an.:- continue to provide proper ca·re mental health serVices hi the 254 ROCKDAlE AVENUI niversary was advanced to AprJl for the normal etlndrern iD. the .81'etl woetoe only in· a forma-tive in a rambling white house they NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 26 to tie in with the basilica 1.. _ _ : stage.' estimate is over 100 years old. dedication. Il'\HI.... Mr. Cassidy, a,n ~~-'-"f do-itA campaign is underway b1 Mat!l7 Childr. Ja. F\all River since tba>t time, ... be· OOS seen the local clinic grow yourselfer, has made many imUte diocese to mark the Bishop.. Chndren account :Ilocr about ·.to its present staff of 4 full time provements to it in his somejubilee by raising $150,000 to 'balf the number cI. patients ric what scarce f;ree time. eo.mplete the diocesan minor. . __ wo e1'S and many more pa·Jll1; seen at the clime:, SlllY\ll . - 'U m e and volunteer aides. seminary wing now being bunt. cassidy. This is a ·treIJld eneouJl- Closely associated wJth i<t is the aged by the W()rkeN, who waot Greater Fall River Association Oklahoma City ''to get at problems 88 eaNy 88 :Ilor Mental Health, a1ll organizathey aA! recognized and to :UoIl of members of the communDiocesewide Census 1hem so adequately that ~ fi¥ keenly interested in promotOKLAHOMA CITY (T--Tr<' " mg the mental health of the diocesewide census ill wbieb. ment time need. DOt be lM#." Children's p r ~ ~ __ area, and there are similar visits will be made to eve.',) .w_,.": 273 CENTRAL AVE. I in Oklahoma wiU be eonductecl press t.hemse1Yes ill such be- clinics in New Bedlficmi, TaWllhev-ior as bed wetting, excessW:e ton and Attleboro. early in June. Much work is being done .m 1\ The Chancery ~ sUd It disobedience, tempe!' tantrums, NEW BEDfORD will be the first attempt to set and school :fiaf1ures. LiWe chilo- ':oeterNl basis with. both pubUe an accurate count of CathoDe dA!Il at'e ,troeated br meaftlI cd! and PQl'OChial school child're,l, WY 2-6216 Church statistics in the state plev thempv. BiY ~ them. .)1lil Mr. Cassidy, providing wIilh toy9, tmifted worlreftl e&Il another example of catching aince the H()peratioD Unde.atanding" pr'oject of MIi5. '!'be understand many 01. their emo-menClal health problems early. In census-takePS will be organized tiona! difficulties aDd beIp'" this connection, a conference of. terpl'et 1IMMl to ~ school. pr.lncipal\\! Js pklnned iIar OIl a deanet'Y level, will eheclIt Gl'Own-u.ps pI'eI!Ie'D¢ ~ ~ this Spring' to acquai·nt ~em every city and !'Ural dwelling flo count the numbers of. Cathonc.. h same problems os ~ ~ with c1li.nle fooilities. secord lapsed Catholies and other but becaU6e . . ~ .Another important aspect O!f data, including tbe number at haw had ,time ""to ~to ~ h locel pl'OgJ.'Qrn. is 'l'l "Inquil'mixed mauiages. ftOR m Qpt to lOe IIlOIl'e ~ ~ Paxen:t'" lIadio seri~ heard AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATTLEBORO Bishop vteflor J.. Rleed·-atl~ 'lQle cl~ of ~ p!'0m!se6 over both FaD. River stations. In boma City and 'nrlsa sai4 deaD- no m!racks, but lit eQn ancll does l:t 'behavior problems of childTen ft1! meetings win be bema !help eooperatliv:e ~ If;o ~ ~ lllustl'ated and explained. 3V2% on ~~ Savings Accounb throughout the~ cJ.ur,tog April deMtand 1!bem.6elves ~ h k Mental Health Associati021 memIto J.ine up ;the poojec1ro <Uooe~ dlfffeulties and modili)r ~ bel'S a!so participate in a volun€!bairmen cand ~a~ A ~ personam., ~ ~ ~ program. at Thunron State TI % IEx~a'Ql @m! Systema~ic Bonus Savings statewid:o meeti;ng will \lllo ~aJ Q.7 COQpeva>l.i~ t:J ~ Gl mll.~ &gpital, and ~ .. currently i:lll PJi.';q j:l:lst ~ i(;b ~ [;I m<reii ~ ~ ~ 110 gw~ working towards establishment ~.~~ ~ ~ ~ D. ~":'''b ~ ~eltered workshop" where
Member of ·St. Patrick's Parish, Somerset Psychiatric Social Worker in·Fall River
BI'shop WI·III·ng·-.
To Ma rk 'J u'bi lee .
G.EORGE M."'ONTLE
will
'""YO
I....
PcdI
.....
in
"SAVE .MONEY ON
,YOUROIL HEAn
. • c(J// ~;;'
PIOM
_at
BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY
..
101'Illicit tlellvl'Y ~
<!I!~
HEATU-lG OIL
First Federal Savings
--
/
Ha,i1 President's - Changes 'in Farm Labor Program
THE ANCHO::-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1961
Asserts' Extremist Groups Hinder Anti-Red' Cawse , I
WASHINGTON (NC) Catholic spokesmen h a v e hailed the administration's proposed changes in the
By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director, NCWC Social Action Department
In recent weeks at least a d9zen syndicated columnists and newspaper editors, in the Catholic as well as the secular lPre~s, have noted with alarm that the number of extremist groups which specialize in a very emotional, not to say hysterical, brand of anti- olic social teaching?' I think not. ~ommunism is markedly on And the fact that it emanates the increase. These writers, from an organization which, on m alerting the American its own authority and for its people to this phenomenon, have performed a -thankless but a necessary pub:Me service. -A "thankless" . service, for they will either be e a sua 11 y dismissed by the extremists as b abe s in the woods or recklessly smeared , as communist dupes. This much I can predict with almost absolute certainty on the basis of personal experience. A. "necessary" service, for if the extremists are permitted to go their reckless way without . -ever being called to time, they may well succeed, by their bullying tactics, in stifling free discussion of controversial public issues not only in the field of foreign policy but on the domestic front as well~ , In other words, they may eventually succeed in imposing upon this country what one commentator has described as the '''silence of fear." This, I think, would be disastrous to the cal.\se - of. freedom and would play 'right ilmack into.the hands of the Kremlin. Fight Fairly, Sensibl,. I do not mean to imply that we can afford' to be complacent about the communist menace. Quite the contrary. In the words of. a recent editorial in SIGN Magazine, "Let us fight vigorously, against the communist eonspiracy, both at home and abroad, for it is one. But let us do it in a fair and sensible manIller." Unfortunately, however, the extremist groups referred to above are not fighting the commuriist conspiracy in a fair and . sensible manner. Some of them, for example, are characterizing President Eisenhower and his brother Mflton and the late John Foster Dulles and his' brother Allen, head of the Central Intel- . ligence Agency, as communists.. The fact that these distin-,guisned' public servants and many other honorable Amerioans are being subjected to this kind of character assassination is enough to make a decent man. sick to his stomach. Questions Assertions If the extremist groups re, fen'ed to above are not fighting " the communist conspiracy in a. fair manner, neither are they , fighting it in a sensible manner. ' Is it sensible to say, for el(ample, as some of them are wont to do, that Social ,Security and minimum wage legislation ~re planned stages on the road to oommunism? Or, to quote from a document l'ecently sent to this writer by a local chapter of the Cardinal Mindszenty Foundation, is it sensible to characterize as a pernicious liberal anyone "who enthusiastically endorses all welfare legislation though it threatens to stifle iriai~idual incentive and paves the way to statism and lOCialism"? I take this' to mean, in contex'l. that all welfarp. legislation is being condemned as a deliberate effort to ~dvance the cause of eommunism in the United States. J)oeS this make any sense at all from the ,point of view of Cath-
Plan Student Center
SOUTH ORANGE (NC) Seton Hall University has announced )t will construct a lhreestory student center on its campus here. Con.struction of the building, which will have dining facilities for 1'00 is expected to start this Spring.' . '
own purposes, has appropriated the v~nerable name of Cardinal Mindszenty makes it all the more regrettable. The good Cardinal deserves much better,than this. One would like to see his name associated with the kind of constructive anti-communism outlined by the late Pope Pius XI in his encycli.:..cal of 1935, Divini Redemptoris. This encyclical calls for a number of far-reaching social reforms which are either being soft-pedaled or, too often for comfort, are being ridiculed by many of the current crop of extremist anti-communist organizations,
Dublin Review
Changes Title LONDON (NC) - The Dublin Review, founded in 1836 and possibly the oldest Catholic, journal in the English-speaking world, announced here it has changed its title to the Wiseman Review. It did so to overcome the mistaken impression that it deals largely with Irish affairs and also in tribJte to its editor and contributor for many, years, Nicholas Cardinal Wiseman, first Archbishop of Westminster after the restoration of the English Hierachy in 1850. The Dublin Review is a misnomer. The magazine, now a quarterly, was nEwer published anywhere but, in England. The title was intended at a time of 'bitter religious feeling to indicate its Catholic and pro-Irish sympathies and to contrast it with its staunchly, Protestant rival, the Edinburgh Review. The original title was also meant as a compliment to Daniel O'Connell, the Irish e!llancipator, who helped with its foundation. Honors Prelate The review wasaddresssd to readers in England right from its foundation and its 'switch of title is intended both to draw attention to this fact and to honor the prelate whose arms it still carries on its title page, . Owned by William Cardinal, Godfrey, Archbishop of Westminster, it is edited by Michael Derrick, assistant editor of the Tablet, the British Catholic weekly, which ,publishes the Review, The Wi'sema~ Review is now nonpolitical and nontheological. ,It deals with philoSophical, literary, historical and other academic matters and, is intended to appeal especially to Catholics at universities.
Cleveland Merchants' Observe Good Friday CLEVELAND (NC)-The Holy' Nam,e Society here reported' more than' 12,000 stores, offices' llfld industrial firms in this area closed for at least part of the day' on Good Friday, The 95,000-memoer society has been conducting a Good Fri- . day closing campaign for the last ~ six years. Merchantl' are asked to close all day or part of the time 'from noon to 3 P.M. Now 65 industrial firms close all day.
U.S. NUNS CLOISTERED IN P AKISTAN; Archbishop Joseph Cordeiro of Karachi, Pakistan, on the eve of his departure ,for the United States, formally cloisters 10 U.S. . Dominican nuns in their new convent in the overwhelmingly Moslem city of two million. Kneeling for the blessing is convent prioress Mother Mary Gabriel Collins of LOUisville. The nuns arrived in Karachi 14 months ago from a Los Angeles Monastery. NC Photo.
College to Honor Leading Kansans
ATCHISON (NC)-st. Bene- and will go to the following: dict's College will confer honorB' h' M k K ary degrees 'on four outstanding . is. op ar . Carroll of , . WIchita; U. S. Sen. Frank CarlKansans to mark the celebration son路 Dr W Cl k W 'tat h d t ,.. ar e escoe, of K ansas s e 00 cen enary. chancellor of K ansas U'mVerSl . 'ty; Father Brendan Downey, and J. P., O'Sullivan Jr., a O.S.B., president, said the ,de- Hutchinson,Kan., industrialist. grees will be awarded at the St. Benedict's College is' a school's l03rd commencement ,Catholic school for meR conducted by the Benedictine Fath. era.
Fr. Breen'
Mexican farm labor program. They expressed "gratification" at the administration's stand in a telegram' to President Kennedy and added: "We pledge, every effort in support of the administration's bill and ask you to call on us for any help we can give." The administration' proposals were saluted in a telegram signed by Msgr. George G. Higgins, director of the Social Action- Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference; Father James L. Vizzard, S,J.,路 director of the Washington office; National Catholic Rural Life Conference; Msgr. William Quinn of Chicago. executive secretary of the Bishops Committee for Migrant Workers; and Father John Wagner of San Antonio, Tex., executive secretary of the Bishops Committee for the Spanish Speaking. Limits Number The Administration measure would amend the program under w h i c h Mexican nationalsknown as braceros-are brought into the U. S. to work on farms. About 400,000 such workers are imported annually. It would empower 'the Secretary' of Labor to limit the number of l;>raceros employed by an)' farmer. It would also cut off braceros from farmers who failed to make' "reasonable efforts" to hire domestic workers or who employed braceros on a year-round basis or in skilled jobs unnnecessarily.
<f$~ OIL BURNERS
&11Io comple\e Boller-Burner 01' Furnace Vnita. Efficient low cost beating. ,Burner and fuel 011 sales and eernae.
Stanley Oil Co.,
Inc~
f80 Mt. Pleasant Street Mew Bedfpr:d ,WY 1路288'7
Continued from Page One -a bumper crop of cartots, beets, . cabbage, onions, turnips and potatoes. ' Final demonstration was the , preparation 'of a huge kettle of lamb stew by Mayan women, under direction of a dietitian. The stolid Indians Sat solemnly around the ,fire in a circle until one of the wives tasted the stew on a tortilla, smiled enthusiastically, and called out: "Come: and get it!" "The contented- look oa. the faces 01. their husbands," says Father Breen,. "was proof positive that lamb stew has been permanently added to the menta 01. my Indian parishioners."'
Tlte, KEYSTONE Warehouse Salesroom" New and Used
,
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
We show a large assortment of usOd and new' desks, cham, filing eabinets; tables, etc;, in wood and steel Also metal storage- eabiaelll; 88f~ shelving lockers. ete. '
"NEW ,OR
'':rJU= NewBedfOlil'
USED
_ QJ ,
'.
. WY3.27~
,
BISAILLON'S .GARAGE' 24路Hour Wrecker' Service 653 Washington _Street, Fairhayen WYman 4-5058
~iiiiiiii
Whether. it's a NEW Of' USED CA'~ you can Get an AUTO LOAN AI RATES THAT, WIU SAVE YOU MONEY .
Coatpa.........
00.. Altangf
.~ in and get the fig~....
FIRST SAFE DEPOSIT NATIONAL BAN:K Of NEW BEDFORD ~ OfflCI-UniOA, cmd flteasant Streets , HORfH, EHD-l200 Acushnet Avenue
THE ANCHORThurs., April 6, 1961
IThe Parish Parade North Atdebofo Whish
Do -It Ifourself ts W ait«:~wcrd f . For KO[f@Qns "<m
HOLY CROSS. ST. GEORGE. FALL RIVER WESTPORT The PTA will hobl a rummage The Women's Guild will hold sale from 9 to 3 Saturday, April a Communion breakfast this 15 at the parish hall, Manchester Sunday at Stevenson's RestauStreet. Mrs. Mal"y Gosciminski rant, North Dartmouth. Speaker is chairman. will be Rev. Ferris A. Kleem, C.S.C. Members are requested ST. MATHIEU, to assemble in the parish hall FALL RIVER . April plans for the Women's -at 8 in order to attend 8:15 Guild include a fashion show at :! Mass in a body. Mrs. Donald F. Sunday afternoon, April 23 and Cleveland is chairman of the a rummage sale Friday, April event, with Mrs. Oliver Fitzger:" aId co-chairman. 14 at' 314 East Main Street. A Communion breakfast will SACRED HEART, follow 7:30 Mass Sunday morn- NORTH ATTLEBORO The Ladies of Ste. Anne will ing, May 21, with Miss Grace hold a court, whist at 8 Tuesday Parenteau in charge. night, April 11 and a Spring ST. JOHN BAPTIlST, whist at the same hour WednesNEW BEDFORD The Ladies' Guild will hold l.l day night, April 19. Both events rummage sale from 9 to 4 in the will take place in the church church hall Friday and Saturday, hall. Refreshments will be served April 7 and 8. Mrs. Robert Clark and attendance prizes awarded. is chairman and Mrs. Guy Caucci ST. JOJH[N BAIPTllST, CENTRAlL VIJLlLAGE is co-chairman. The Ladies' Guild will sponThe Couples Club plans a corporate Communion and banquet sor a whist party at 8 Saturday Sunday, May 7. Mr. and Mrs. night, April 8 in the parish hall. George Alexander are chairman Mrs. Joseph Perry is chairman. The regular guild meeting will couple. A potluck supper is set for Sunday, April 23. It will be be held at 8 Thursday night, prepared and served by women April 13, also in the hall, preof the group, with Mrs. Joseph ceded at 7:30 by a spaghetti supMotta and Mrs. J.' Andrew per. Officers for the coming year will be nominated. Deschenes as co-chairmen. ST. JOHN'S. ST. AUGUSTINE, ATTLEBORO VINEYARD HAVEN A parish dance postponed The Women's Guild will view from February will be held Sat- films on Japan and Korea at its HOLY FATHER'S CANDJ-,E: One of three candles sent urday night, April 15 in St. . meeting Thursday, April 27. Mrs. by Pope John to Washington to symbolize his desire for John's School from 9 to 12. Re- Alfred Ferro will be in charge turns on all tickets should be of the social hour. Mrs. Bolislaw peace, religious vocations and the success of the coming made in the school following Nickowal and Mrs. Frederick J. ecumenical council, is presented to Mother Mary Margaret any Mass this Sunday. New ad- Thifault will care for the altar Sheerin of Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School by mission tickets have been issued for April. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the to replace those issued for Feb- SANTO CHRISTO U,S. NC Photo. " ruary and they will be exchanged FALL RiVER at this time. In order to plan for The annual observance of the (Cafrl}a@lnc Art Gil'CUp T'tI» Me~t 0111 refreshments, all reservations parish's patronal feast will be must be made by this Sunday. held Friday through Sunday, MIAMI (NC) - The Salve mentary and secondary schools, May 5 to 7. It will include two NOTRE DAME. processions, auctions, and a sol- Regina Art Association will hold the conference also will meet in FALL RIVEIlt emn high Mass at 11 Sunday its national meeting here April conjunction with the convention 13 and 14 at 'Barry College. of the National Art Education April events for the Councn morning, May 7. of Catholic Women will include Dedicated to improving lU"t Association scheduled here Apr!! education in U. S. Catholic ele- 11 to 15. a dessert bridge whist Saturday. ~iWKl~~~ORD April 8 in the church hall, with The Catholic group will study Miss Blanche Lambert and Mrs. The Tuesday night meeting OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL existing art education programs Albert Lachance as co-chairmen. .of the Women's Guild will fea~EJLP, NEW BEDFORD ture a lecture and slides on The Women's Guild will hold in Catholic school systems A food sale is planned for Sun- the various courses offered to a post-Lenten dance this Satur- through an exhibition of works day, April 16, with Mrs. Leon Brisson and Mrs. Manuel Grillo women' at the New Bedford day night at Pulaski Hall. An entered from all sections of t~ Vocational Evening School. The ,ij:aster banquet is planned for country. Included will be stude'nt in charge of arrangements. . meeting is open to the public. 'the 'church hall Sunday, April work at elementary and 'high Members will participate In a Mrs. Gerald Bariteau will serve school levels and demonstrations district-wide dialogue Mass to be as chairman of the committee 16 and new officers for the sea- in two and three dunentional son will be nominated at the celebrated at 7:30 Wednesday that will sponsor a whist party media at high'school and pronight, April 26 at St. Mathieu Saturday evening, April 15, at next regular meeting Sunday, fessional levels. April 23. Church. 8 o'clock in the school hall. The A roller skating party for par- proceeds will benefit the con- SS. PETER AND PAUL. ish teenagers is planned for Fri- vent. ,FALL RIVER day, April 14, with Mrs.' Jeanne April plans for the Women's Fontaine, youth chairman, in Mrs. Stella Balut, chairman, has announced that a rummage Club include a whist at 8 MonSupply, charge of planning. I . day night, April 10, with Mrs. Council members will sponsor sa e will be held in the rectory 'Milton Kozak and Mrs. Robert "Everything for the Office" a breakfast for first communi. besement on Saturday, April 29. Paul as co-chairmen, and II Guild members will pick up the TYPEWRITERS, FURNITURE cants of the parish during May. articles when informed by the Communion breakfast Snnday, ADDING MACHINES' April 16, in the church hall folST. JOSEPH, donor through telephoning. lowing 9 o'clock Mass. Mrs. Weir St. Taunton, Mos6. 19 FALL RIVER , ST. PIUS X. The Men's Club wil:l sponsor a . SO. YARMOUTH . Francis C. Taylor and Mrs. Tel. VA 4·4076 ham and bean supper from 5:30 Mrs. Jerome Canning reported Thomas Callahan, co-chairmen, to 7:30 Saturday night, April 8 the completion of the apron announce that Rev. John P. in the parish hall. Tiekets al'e project for the sisters of the Driscoll, assistant at SS. Peter available from any member. Rose Hawthorne Lathrop 'Home. and Paul, will speak. ST. JAMES, Hospital gowns were also made , , A rummage sale is planned for Inc. 'Friday; April 21 in the church NEW BEDFORD for the patients. . Magr. Noon Circle will hold A Chinese auction will be held "hall with Mrs. Raymond Dooley Fabricators of Men's Night in the lower church Monday evening' at 3 o'clock and' 'Mrs. James Wholey in 'charge, and club members will hall at 7:45 Wednesday night, in the Church Hall on Station Structural Steel April 12. A lecture by Chester Ave. under the chairmanship of be hostesses for the Catholic and Howland with slides and colored Mrs. Walter Wright and a large Guild for the Blind at 2 Sunday afternoon, April 23 at' Sacred movies OR whaling days will be committee. featured. Plans were discussed for the Heart School auditorium. The hospitality committee wm annual past presidents' dinner 753 Davol St., River be headed by Mrs. Luke Smith, to be held on Wednesday evenOS 5·7471 chairman and Mrs. George D. ing April 26, at the Riverway PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. Sheehan, co-chairman. Lobster House. :for Domestic The circle also plans a rumIt was voted to donate $5 to mage sale Thursday and FrIday, the fund for Radio Free Europe. " Industrfai Sales and I April 13 and 14 at 1028 S. Water Miss Lillian Land, cosmetoloOil Burners Service Street. Mrs. Walter'McCormack gist, will speak on "Looking is chairman, and may be conGlass Jitters" at the regular WY 5-1631 tacted to have contributions monthly meeting Tuesday night. 2283 ACUSHNET AVE. picked up. Mrs. William Moorhouse will NEW BEDFORD ST. ROCH, head the refreshment committee. FALL RIVER A Spring whist will be held COME fiN'~ SEE - eJnd DRIVE Wednesday, April 12 to benefit the convent fund. Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Pierre Gagnon or her committee, and World's Most B@CU9tif~Dly fPlll'oportionec!l prizes may be left a~ the parish , CIIt hall. Mrs. Henry Bert:lbe and Mrs. ASHl~Y Gerard Fortin are co-chairmen of a forthcoming rummage sale formell'ly Mo~ SaBes ~ompany Gnd ask donations from members of the Council <rl Catholie fORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS Women. Donations of books are also requested for the school 1344Q86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Masi. library.
F!oroda
SULLIVAN/IS Office Inc.
<f
SEOUL (NC) - Korea!! Catholics ~ "do-it-y~ self" Catholies, according • Minnesota-born Bishop H-. old Henry, S.S.C. , He said that instead of havifll foreign missionaries bring tlw> Faith to them, Koreans went to China and brought CatholiciSID back with them. Bishop Henry, Vicar ApostoIllB Gf Kwangju, told the story of the, Catholic Church in Korea ova? the armed forces television nGt-o work here. The program walB part of a series begun by tOO U. S. Eighth Army chaplaincy In January and covering all rel:J:,., gions in Korea. lFirst Catholic
Outlining the developmentJ of the Catholic Church, BishOEi> Henry recalled that the first , Korean Catholic was Ri Syung . hun, who was baptized in Peking and as Peter Ri brougW the Faith back with him in 17M. Ten years later, when a Chinese priest came to Korea, he fouDCI 4,000 Christians awaiting 11m., The Church was persecuted co&. stantly for the next 100 year.s, Despite one period of 35 yean without a priest and despite tcna ture and martyrdom, the Jay people kept spreading the Fai' the Bishop said. The Columban missioner concluded his talk by emphasizing the progress the Catholic Church has made since the end of' tke Korean war in 1953. He used ~ a backdrop for his talk a displCG' of tor~ure instruments usecfi against Korean Catholics in t;bj) 19th century.
············ r A FAMILY lREAT
_ BAR-B-Q CHICKENS
ROSELAWN
to
FARMS.
• +145 Washington St., Fairhaven Just off Route 6
i
WY 7-9336 , Watch for Signs : ' While out for :l Drive , : ~ Stop ::It this Delightful Spot
,
0
............ HATHAWAY
OIL CO. INC. NEW BEDFORD
HEATING OILS
JOHN E. COX CO.
LEMIEUX
THE 861 _',fORDS
SAllES
....
INDUsTRfAl OILS
TtMKEN OIl BURNERS
Sales & Ser~;ce
Miscellaneous Iron Fan
501 COUNTY ST.
NEW BEDFORD WY 3-01751 "Mac" saysBe Thrifty - Be Wise Ask your Meatman for DAVIDSON'S (MacGregor Brand)
~
Cil
S;WIEETN!C e
Bake in the Bag-No Basting Real Scotch Ham Flavor" "WINNING FAVOR WITH ITS FLAVOR"
-
)8
THE ANCHC ::-Diqce.se:ofFalf River-Thurs., April 6, 1961
Parochc(QJ~
£ethool
Jesuits ·to Opefl New University In Nicaragua
PIr@dM~tl'~
Loya~ AM®(f~Can Cit~Lb@m)~
MANAGUA (NC). - The new Central-American University will be opened by the Jesuits here in June with
By Father John L. Thomas, S.J. Ass't Sociology lProf.-St. Louis Uiliversity
"To what degree can it be said that parochial schools aPe divisive? There is growing insistence that because we &Send our children to' private schools (either Catholic or ~n-Catholic), we are segregating our American youngsters tr.om those who attend public How realistic is this assumplIChools. The fact that chH- tion? Surely the facts dealt with 4ren .themselves realize they by the school must be expressed ave separated from their' wit h ins OD_e interpretative Qge'-group is being used to inake us parents feel it is unAmerican have them tit'tend parochial t n s tit' u • Clons. What's the .,lswer? ~ As. you prob.Iy· recognize, • orge, this ac·.sation of di9;.siveness has be e Ii a de .ather steadily Ciince the par~hial s c h 0 0 1 .. '.. ; . IIWstem was ini. '. tiated in this country. There can be no question that a separate . • $e h 0 0 1 s Y s tern "separates." Whether it is divisive in the deIOgatory sense implied is quite IiIIlcither issue. ." ..' - One easy answer t6this charge .. that since' private schools 'offer same basic courses and strive' io" promote similiu' civic .virtues end goals 'as others, it is }neanIpgless to accuse 'them of being divisive. . ' . . Although parochial schOOlS. riiJiW provide religiou~'ihstructio':!: cidid' training, 'this addition' en:'; .aances rather than weakens the lJtUdent's preparation for Iiie . . an adult American citizen. . . Indeed; parochial schools' caR ~ considered divisive only to the extent that diversity ofreligi0!J~ tieliefs can be called divisive, pet Americans' have' alwars , 'de d th emselv'es on their "1'1 . reli . lrous toleranee. '
eo
m
scheme or conceptual framework; . Seek Interpretation deny th~m moral signlficance is itSelf a moral judgment. The very choice' concerningthe facts to be taught is governed' by some set of ultimate values.' And .stitdents, like all men, 'seek the meaning o~ things and. an interpretation of life.. If the school refuses to deal with values, it implicitly states that there are none worth teach., ing, with the result that it can .produce only ethical eunuchs:. .Confuses Principle A further assumption is that religion should be confined to the home and the churches. A unique ,school system is required to leach youth cooperation, loyalty; and American ideals: Why private schools cannot accomplish. this is never. explained, nor' are we told who will define the unifying values to be taught. A related assumption ·is that private schools are undemocratic, AU Americans should be sllbjectedto the same educational experience, /so that distinctions based on social class, or religion may cease to exist. This view confuses· the 'truly American principle of equality of opportunity with the totalitariaR ideal of mass conformity. . Charge S.eparation Finally, a small but highly active non-religious group violently opposes any fOrID..ofreligious education .because it marks them as different. Although only:'
students of law, engineering, business administration, humanities llDd psychological studies. .The 24th Catholic university in Latin America, its autonomy, by. taws and degrees have already been granted recognition by the the Nicara~uan parliament..
To
EXPLAINING THE ROSARY: .Father Ainbrose. Wind. bacher, O.P., a Dominican missionary priest, stops to explain . the significance of, the' Rosary _t9 a Muslim outside the Church of St. Dominic in Lagos; ~igeria. NC Photo.. T D n ,. t· f D· t B
urn
loeese, 0 uy
own lfueques 0
C·ltv- O' .JI L Wl1Ieu an d f or H·19.h 'S Ch00 I
The university expects an in. iUal enrollment of between 150 and 200 students-l00 of them on scholarship grants. The faculties will include not only Jesuits but lay professors and members of oUier religio,us orqers. '11he aim of the School.of Bus~ iness· Administration is to train competent executives with a' . view toward the progressive economic integration of Central Airieri~a.
. P.L~INFIELD. (NC) - The 'Catholic high school wo~ld reNicaragua's ruling Somoza~ Plal.nfield Plannmg Board has sult in a direct saving of $176,400 Debayle family donated 10 demed a r~quest from ~he New- to· Plainfield taxpayers through blocks of land near the capital ark archdlOcese that .It be al- educating students who would for the erection of the university lowed to purc~ase clty-owned otherwise be in public schools. buildings. land for a new high school. . The high school would 'be coinstitutional and would have facilities for 1,500 students. It is .one of eight new schools planned by the archdiocese. . , Ili tll<S leUerfl'oiU l~.., V·"".i;.ui,jJ 1..... ~.i1.,;R JOS~PHINE, Mother Msgr. Charles B. Murphy, pasGeneral of the SISTERS OF THE 'IiOLY FA'MILY in INDIA. 'tor of St. Bernard's Church here, 'She wriWSl' "Five years ago six' of my made the request on behalf of . Sisters went to the remote vlllage of the archdiocese. He, said the WADAKKUCHERRY. The area was request'now will be taken to ,the . the center of much Communist activcity's Common Council. Howity, and the Bishop wanted Sisters ever, in view of the plaiming thllre io' teach the children. Since then, board action, .it will take an .8-3 day in day out, the Sisters have proved vote by the council to approve by their lives' and work that Catholicithe request. . ism-not Communism-is the answer In turning down the land pur-, io our ·problems. The Sisters' live in chase offer, the planning board heroio poverty. For five years the six said it wants. to stand by the .DtlIoly FaIhtr's Mission AiJ Sisters have lived in two small rooms. city's master .plan, which allots . &w tht r>-:-o-I Ch _L Their chapel is the empty space under the land in question for "public 1"' vnmHII 'IInQ the roof~nd it has io serve both the schools and/or parks." Sisters aitd the faithful. Iii jean io come, If we continue to The "tract of land consists of bold our own with the Communists, we'd like io build a school . 34 'acres, most of which are, unand orphanage, a convent and adequate chapel We have aldeveloped,. About 29 acres would ready purchased the land-but that purchase took evelT rupie Implicit Assumptions a small minority, they actively be r:equired for, the scQool. . we had. The need here. is desperate-we ,pray evelT day that anyves-'. . 'rhl'S answer l'~.. correct, but it fight for the removal of . Opiniops about possible use, IIOmeone somewhere will give us help." .' :.&....- s not touch the. heart of .the tige of religion in the educational . UU" . by .the. arcl).dio.cese tIad. been ~.o- . .' The enUre program, of course, wUl east much mo.re than &hili. ';"'atter because, it ign.ores the system on the grounds that it . ." . but we'd like' io help REVEREND' MOTHER JOSEPmNE wet f ~p'll'Ci't ass·umptions. upon which separates their children' from lipited by. t.he planning board . uu fro.m. the Board. of Educatio~, ·the program started. We'd like to send her a check for $2.500. .....- accusation is based, There others and consequently discrimd ""... . . . t . t th , the Recreatiol!, CO~,mission an All enormous amount? Not enormous If you and 2~9 others like "'n be no meaniJlgful discuss~on ma es· agam~ . e m . . . the Uniop . Co:unty . Par:k Comof the charge 'unlil'sS these.. as"" . . When Y0';1 answer. t~e char~es missiQn. ~ow~y.e,r.' the p,lanning' _ ,ou 'will send US '$10 now. U not $10 send us what you ce~ ••. blit soon, please. Even one dollar wUl go a long, lOng wa, ill eUmptions are made. explicit ari<i' made .agamst·" the '. paro~hlal 'board said insufficient' iriformaWADAKKUCHERRY. . hced squarely. Otherwise the· school~GC?rge,. keep· these. as- . tion was received 'from" these discussants will· be talking past sumptlOns m m1Od, To. be effec- ., age!iciesa'nd the board Itself did NO STRINGSATIACHED iJather than to each other: . tive your reply must· deal with 'not feet'it sh'ould set abou't gath-' . What are some of these im- the implicitassumptions,'llnd;"as . 'erin'g the information' and: ·it EVERY SO OFTEN, in opening the ulail, we fl.od a clieck or pttcit. assumptions? Perhaps the •. I have in~icated, these.'~an'~ be voted to· stand by themas!er money order with these three litUewords: "No strings attached," basic one is that religiously based . defended 10 terms of, American·. . .... .~ .. / .. OUl' benefactor il saying in effect, "Use this donation wherever ~o.ral instruction and ,ttain.ing . ideals.... . plan:,.,. - ' .. ' . . ' . ' . it's needed most, wherever it will ,do the most good;" We thank B f he h i · In presenting the reqUefJt to God that_people are so generous. Usually these stringless gifts not relevant to formal ~,u, ut 1 t . paroc la, "sch.ool,· the Cominon. Council, .~sgr: .tion at' least in a pluralist makes your chl1dren feel separ- .Murphy' noted tha't' the' mastar' oome just in time to do. something special for which we have. DO funds. They're constant reminders it's good now and then ~ciet; like our o;"'n that reveals a~ed~' from others, isn't i~ 4iv~- plan makes provision for "chang·io count up the "stringless gifts" we have received from Godlittle consensus on moral values: SlV~ .. Not ~very. separahon .IS fog conditions/' ,He also pointed good health, a happy family; and so on. If you're ready to do Hence formal education must be divisiy~. Chil~ren.~re se~arat~d. that the .construction of a eompletely secular, that "is, it by ~amlly, nahonabty, reSidence, """ ., ". something for God,' in return for His "stringless gifts,~ ellp this column; mark your donatioD "No strings attached," lend Ib.ust have nothing to do with SOCial background, and'so on. Pari'shes" Protest' ,..- values meanings or interpretaThe parochial school wpuld be it t~ UI; and we'll_ put it to work for God somewhere in tbe Clons based on r~ligious beliefs. divisive only if i~ failed· to pre- Actions"in Poland Near East. .. Pushed' to its logical' conclu- pare children for full participaHAMTRAMCK (NC)-A reso(lion, this view implies that eVeR tion in Amer~can lif~. The record lution protesting communist per"PRACTICING mE MASS' the' broad "cultural' values based .shows that Its products are as . secution of the Church in Poland THEY'LL BE COMING BACK 'TO THEIR HOME PARISHES on. our Judaeo-Christian. tradi-· cooperative, loyal, .and law-abid- has been signed in.lO Polish par..; during the' next few weeks to oiler Solemn Mass for the flnl& tion must rtotbe promoted by the ing as· those from other schools. ishes here ·in· Michigan and will time-thousands of clean-cut, zealons, newSchools. Formal edu·cation m u s t · . . '.. . be sEmt to the American embassy ly-ordained priests. EvelT' day now, waiting deal only with morally sterile Deplores' Trecihnent in Warsaw. io be ordained, they're "practicing the Mass" facts and techniq·ues. Like "sciM ."• grant WO'rkers The resolution repeated recent -learning how io oiler the Mass. In AL'$nce," it must rema'in 'ethically: charges made by Stefan Cardinal WAY.E, INDIA, at St. Joseph's Seminary, neutral. . CINCINNATI (NC)-Many mi- Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, two young men who want to be priests need grant farm workers in .this that the Polish government is Jour help. They are GEORGEKAMMA· 'Sch I pR IF • 'country experience conditions . .. ,00' Dans CD'eogn "far worse' than those of political violating a 1956 agreement guarTHURUTHEL and. THOMAS THERUVAN· KUNNEL. To educate a seminarian in pagan India costs $601 Reporting Instoi'u1l'e slaves in Siberian salt ~ines," al,lteeing free exercise of religion. liItogether, 01' SlOO a year. That's less than $2.00 a week, scarcely MILWAUKEE (NC)-A for- a priest who has surveyed the more than the price of a paok of oigareties ,a day. It eosts so eign correspondence institute situation said here. . nUti. io educate "another .Chrlst"! Write to u and we'll tell will be a highlight of the MarFather Carl Reikowsky,C.r~.S., Cpntinued from Page One· 170U how yoU can help edncate priests. You need not pay &he ~ette University college 0,1.· 'stationed in Dayton, Ohio, .was Representatives only in the same enUre amount all at ·once. ,. We'll soIIedule the payments to soU ;ournalism's 50th a!,miversary o.n one of three speakers 'who dis":'· amount as .would be paid if the "our eonvenleDCle.. April 14 and 15. oussed .the. migrant . workers' page or pages were attending a . Four alumni of the collegewiU ,problem at a me.eting in the Fen_ public school ~der the... pr9vi-· . BEFORE MASS CAN BE OFFERED: ;ive papers on the field of for- wick Club sponsored by.the Cin-' sions' of subseCtion .(Af'and:(BJ IN THE NEAR EAST, AS BVERYWHERE, the priest must :eign reporting April 14.' They cinitati chapter 'of Kappa Gamma' of this section.''' . ' bve .Maal kit. The kit Includea ChaUce, missal, altar carda,. 'are Fred Zusy, '37; 'president' Of Pi, . national Catholic honor' ~'. Discretionary Area . linens; vestments,candlet. FOI' $100 JOu, can provide a ,Mall kit· .·the Continental Press, Washing": . ciety~ He called the system Refel'ririgaglilig..:to· th~. educa. '~ a pX:lest who needs on.e '. .. in ~ ~nc1 wheN the Mass was, 600, D.C.; Paul McMahon;' '33, hideous injustice.."" " U o n ' a'id··b~lI;.Mr, Katz said:: ' ; 'IINt offered. What better WAf. to l'eJllel!lb~ permanently a l~~~ ltravel editor of the Milwaukee' , ' Father 'Reikowsky;·former.-d'; " "'In my opiniQn; the faet'.th'at ,iourpal; Jack Casserly; '51,-Rome ,rector, of the':Aposiolate for this 'bill contains·.'nO.p'rovisio'n·· ,. __ .- one-mother, fathe~" Son,daught8r, Or p~ Simply ~w ·"MUI kit," attach It to your gift ~~!I8n4 It to us. We'll . . *! bureau chief, Hearst Headline . Spanish-speaking iIi the Lansing, 'for private. or piu:ochial .sch.oola ~ .It that ~e kit.getl to .th._ .priest.~ needs It DlOIt. .' :Service; arid Wallace Carroll, :Mich., diocese, said, life in . the .does not render it unconstitu-' ,'28, W'ashingtofl news editor, migrant. stream is "a vicious cit:' tionaI as' a law 'restraining, the . Mew York Times. cle." He asserted:' "It's a .life .of free ·exercise' of religion. . , Other anniversary highlights no cash,. no school, 'no medi~al ~ ·"In legislation· indirectly . ~ . wul include Solemn Pontifical . ca~, no adequate food,-no recre~ 'fecting' the.freedom ·.of. educa-, .. MANCIS CARDINAL SHUMAN, "....... Mus to be offered by Arch- ation, no insurance, no protectioD tional: choice,. eongress ..has j, ............. t. . , ........ .-, . ~ishop William E. Cousins of from swindlers and discriniina- . wide area of discretion iii which· Milwaukee, at Gesll ·church. oa. tion"and no money to take back its action would. be neither all . GATHOUC NIAR IArt WILIAR' ASSOCIAttOM . the campus followed by an ae&- bo the .hot and' dusty South. 'establishment 'of religion'. on the 4eoleJC~neton Aw. at 46th... N.- Y_ 1''''. ~ C1emic convocation and an alwna1. That's ,the whole miserable p{e;, one hand; or a 'restraint of this IlIioner on April. lQ.. '" . 'fioee eitereiSe' on' the othel'.· -
.I;l
ON OUR DESK RIGHT NOW
so
are
out"
Red
Of
Ch·' P f Icago". ro
"a
.- . for,
. . . '~~r5stOlissioliS'~"
...................
tuN...·
I
.,'
Bas.,ball ,Season in Debut;
Tttf ANCHOR-'
Easter Tourney Resumes
Plan Naf1'~@nW'ide: High Sclffiool Hoop TO!!lrntSY
1.,
rhurs., April 6, 1961 ::':':'::~..:.::.I:-::":':"'~':":'::":"---i
By Jack llGneavy The long hiatus is over; major league baseball moves into Fenway Park next Tuesday when the Boston Red Sox are scheduled to play host to the Kansas City Athletics. The school boys have already launched their. season. Last Monday Newton High, a Green will take a .500 batting traditional early April start.; average (18-9) on the homeer, played Revere. Earliest bound barnstorming tour. contest in this area will be Unfortunately, Green's arm
:
WASHINGTON (NC) =<> it.. blueprint for a nation~
competition which annually would produce a Catholkl
the Somerset-Fairhaven tilt neltt isn't considered up ~o major Monday The Sox are apt to find league standa,rds. Thus It appears New England that he will once agajn be cast weather a bit in a utility role, second base hostile aft e r having been nailed down securetheir six week ly by rookie Chuck Shilling, a stay in the .New York product via Manhatbalmy climes of tan College. Schilling, whose Scottsd8!le. It fielding exploits are said to be has been clear reminiscent of Bobby Doerr; hit' enoug'h, for the a solid .314 in the Association most part, but last year. the temperature Teammate Yastrezemsld is hardly conAll eyes will be on his more ducive to play;heralded Minneapolis teammate, ing baseball. Football squads out Carl Yastrezemski. The young-' for Spring practice have found ster is coming up with a lot of conditions ideal. The only ~- pressure on him as he seeks to sible thing to' do is sWJtch fill the shoes left by the great Beasons. Ted Williams. The Sox, howThe basketball season contin- ever are confident that Carl will ues to roll on. The Celtics and beco~e as great a nemesis to Hawks have p~ayed two .games opposing pitchers as hi- ~urname of their cha~Plonship serIes for has to the harried typesetters. He the NBA dIadem, though only attends Notre Dame in the off in charity c~uld we call the season. MOST VALUABLE: Father Edward J. DuncaP; Sunday affaIr a contest. ,TV The legendary Stan Musial director of the Newman Foundation of the University of. commitments ma~e it manda~ who at the age of 40 figures tory thet the ser,les get under- prominently in the Cardinals' Illinois, congratulates Newman Club member and varsity way in Boston on Sunday com- scheme for the current season, football player Joseph C. Rutgens upon being selected by pelUng the Hawks, who had just made a few interesting observa- his teammates as most valuable player of the 1960 se~~,., finished a grueling seven game tiong the other day on the insetto with the Lakers. on Satur- creasing scarcity of consistent NC Photo. day, to make tracks for the .300 hitters. "The slider," he said, home of the bean and the cod. "has come into its own and is 'JIh~y ~hecked in Sunday part of the working repertoire of mornmg CIrca ~:30 A.M" show,ed, just about every starting pitcher. up for the matme~ performance, Add the fast ball, the curve and CARACAS (NC)-Father !lat- television and,at publicralltes. did a creditable JOb for a half, the change of pace, and the hit- rick Peyton, C.S,C., has begun a The Irish-born Holy 'Cro~s then proceeded to get bombed ter has a 25 per cent problem 'four-month crusade for the Fam.;. priest is assisted by two other by the we~l-rested Celts, 12~-95. choice up there." ily Rosary in this Venezuelan Holy Cross priests, seven dioc'JIhe phYSlcally weary viSItors . capital. ' esan missionaries from. Spain just CQuldn't keep pace. Of H~ also mell;tioned the effect The crusade started March 25, and two young women from Irecourse the money from the TV of mght ball WIth a day game to rights is' lucrative enough to follow but he suggested that the the feast of the Annunciation, land. Father Peyton reports that his mute the. wails of the van,. 'pitching startegy no~ in vogue 'alld will end July 25. Jose Humberto Cardinal Quin- appeal for rosaries for the' poor quished, 'but, the sport is being ~as had much to do ~I'lth ~aking shortchanged; they are in the It t~~~her ,for the hlt~;r. !ears tero, Archbishop of Caracas, 'of Chile brought in about n st~nds, too. ago" S~n recalled, a llltcher pledged to give Father Peyton quarter-mAilion rosaries from Catholics in the United States, CYO Tourney paced hImself to go the route." his full support. , Father Peyton is continuillg Canada and Ireland. He has ap.. The CYO Easter Tourney re'" Accordingly, he eased up when sumed tbis week •&£ter being . possible~ Now .he goes. out there the same techniques he used dur~ pealed for still more rO,":'i:i'es' for dormant 'through )}~e ~iter part 'under i~sttuchon to thro~ bard HIg his '15~month crusaqe"'ih the poor of Caracas, which"has of Holy Wf;lek. The' Junio,r~' ha:ve as long. as he can, if ne.ce~~ry WI :Chile'; His Rosary'ral1ieg"in'23 a population"of; about 1,300,000: ' ': been pared .dQw~ ,to ,~~e ~eml:" ' ,be ,f0J?-0we~ ~r. a rehev~r, who Chilean cities' from" Augu~t t9'59 to November,1960, drew Poet Colum Receives final stage but the weightier does hkeWlse. 1;300,000 people: ; , ,-c, ll·b,rg'r",y','s ,'A,w''g'rd ',\\' , Senior division 16 just completToleoo Basketeers " Uses Color ,Movies' " ing the sec?nd :ound, .of" Pla~ " Tbose of you who viewed the "Teams ofmo"ie projectionists ST.LOUIS" (NC)-The Cath'... ChampionshIp f,~nals In bo. Toledo Basketeer:s ,in act,ion be- and' cafechists wiiltour the slums olic Library Association has' pre!. divisi?ps are sb~edul~d for' 'one,'," 'tween ih~ haives ,oft~e:~a,wks of 'Caracas with color movies'on sented its' Regin'aMedal to'l'riSh week ,from ,tomght;, Thurs,day, Lakers game last Saturday, were thE! 'mysteries of the ; RosarY. Poet Padraie Columin recoglij;.. April l~th.' At the concluSion ~.' treated to an .amazing' han- Tllirty projectors with scre~lls tion of his contribution tochil':" play, trophy awards tlw.i~l~~ " dling' p~rforll,1ance"by,yolJngsters imd public a'ddress systems have dren's literature. ',' mad~ arid t~e respec, ve, of junior hig~ age,:,Thf;l,.b,ehind beeri brought' here 'from the The award was' made at: the Star teams announced. . , the back di-ibbling reminded us United State's~' The 'crusade' has association's 37th annual conBasketball of all sports seems ,that it \yas twe,lve year/! ago imported' eight tons of' equip- vention here. The 79-year-old to die the hardest. Perhaps ~hls against Loyola 'in the Boston ment, 'including three jeeps. poet-who has lived in New is d~e partly. to geographIcal Garden that Holy Cross" fabulous , When the J series ot15 half- York since 1914 - has written condltions .WhIch preclud.e out- Bob Cousy first used the lievice hour movies on the Rosary haE several books,. of verse, three door play before the arrival of to bring the Crusaders fr~m the been shown throughout Caracas, plays and a number of volumes milder mid-April' weather. At brink of defeat. Gerry Nagel . " . ' F'ather 'Peyton's workers will of stories. 8ll y rate we find tournament close covermg Loyola guard, dlS- begin a house-to-hou~ canvass U p on tournament. one concludes, afterward of,. the city., They will ,seek other begins ,The personnel 'consolately observed . an . that the "Cooz" Just all of a sud- pledges fr,om Catholics to recite remains ,fairly constant" only the den seemed to disappear. the Rosary in, the family circle. setting changes. It's a long sea,. ;.. . Appeals for Rosaries $6 M·II· son but devotees of the sport PI d " Father Peyton will also carry .,,~ don't mind. They carry it over e ge I Ion 'out the crusade by radio, and into Summer, the Fall and it's For Building Fund New England's Playground time to get ready for another NEWARK (NC) _ Archbishop go-round. - Thomas A. Boland of Newark Plan Your Dance Party Reports from Scottsdale indi- has reported that more than $6, cate that the Sox are going to million has' been subscribed in Fashion Shows and ' open the season hurting at short- the firJrt phase of the archdlocBanquets stop. This is the Achilles heel of esan development campaign to a ball club. Don Buddin has raise $25 million. at Lincoln Park's COMPANY failed to impress and his No.1 The campaign is directed at MILLION-DOLLAR challenger, Bill Harrell, while some' 1,500,000: CatholicS' in a capable afield, is woefully weak ' 'four-countY area.. 'Its aim is to . Complete line BALLROOM at the plate."Pumpsie Green,-on 'raise funds to help in the 'buildCall' ROLAND' GAMACHE' Building Materials the other hand, has had a fine ing of eight new high" sehools, WYman 9-6984 ' Spring. Used more sparingly four homes for the aged and a 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN ,than any other 'infielder during seminary addition. Total cost 'WYma'n 3..26.11 the ,~rain~ng period, "the, Mile" of· the ,"construction, is, expected , ", " ", " , " ',.' •. to' be"more than $33 minion. ;;~"~"~L..:.,,:-', ....,.;;.::~.~',,;,,;:,;;.."...,;""";,!,.;,,,_'_ _...............~ ...,
Father, Peyton Starts Four-Month:,,': Crusade for Family Rosary , , ,', ,'
ban,
-
FAIRHAVEN LUMBER
'
high school champion basketbaU team is on the drafting board. The project must get the greoo light of the Supreme Board of Directors ,of the Knights d Columbus before it is put into operation. Tentative plans fur the competition already have -been· discussed informally with members of the board, who have 'been reported sympathetic to the project. Outstanclling , . Tbe national championship 'competition would be built alo~ the lines of the annual K. of ~. Georgetown University tournament staged in this city. The, local tournament attracts team. from all sections of the nation and is rated by some Catho). high school coaches as the om-' standing high school basketball competition in the nation. A. J. (Gus) Coupe, director of oA the local tournament, explaineej that the contemplated national championship tournament would climax eight regional tournaments staged throughout the· C9~ntry.
"It would work this way," MIl., Coupe said. "We would divica the country into eight regional· districts. In each district the Knights, with co-sponsors if de's~d, would stage a tournameM the particular area to det~ mine a regional champion. _ \ , , i'The regional champions tha would be sent to a selected to compete in a tourname,Dt' :which would produce the undisputed Catholic high school national championship team." Different Sites Mr. Coupe, who is athleOt director at Georgetown Prep School in suburban Garrett Park. Md., said that the si~ for the contemplated national championship tournament could be movect frhm one city to another through.' 6utthe country. ' ", "One year," he said, "we coulft h'old it in Washington, the nmlt' LOs Angeles, the next Chica~ 'and so on." .', Thomas J. Trodden, pubDi relations chairman for this yeaTi K. of C. tournament here, sata' each regional district would:be required to pay the expenses '0«' 'the' regional championship teaa: 'to'the site of the national tourno-' Mento " ,
in
d.
<:>
" BARBERO'S
PIZZA· PATIO , _
RoUTE 6, HUnLESON AVI. Near Fairhaven Drive-In
Italian Dinners Our Specialty
,
Service On Patio
R. A. WILCOX CO. OFFICE FURNITURE fa 8__ for Immediate DellY...,
• DESKS • CHAIRS FILING CABINm ' • FIRE FILES • SAFES' FOLDING TABLES AND CHAIRS
R. A. WILCOX CO• ,,
22 BEDFORD 51. fALL RIVER 5-7838
Bel'g'ian f'King, (Queen,: "p . ", J"'hnt; T 0·,'V·,·, ,.Slt q~, ,0,\. ",' ,"
, ">,,,d, ' ' SERVE YOU ' " ,',: :/', ,i=Q!Jfl ~~V~N"~NT OF~!CES ..TO'" ",' , ,,:'. VATIC A V "CIT ,,',(NC)-;-KJmr ,' ~ , ". ~\ I:B 1I'-inn' aDd l1is'~''.' . .. -; . ," ' " ON.'E-'·S'·,TOP 'SA' , . NK,IN~", u
~~~~:Ju:. ~t~'~n:'~/, ~ope
June 8, 'a' month .after ,he' reHoliness John ,XXIII <tn. ceives 'the Queen of England. Vatican officials also 'revealed that Guatemalan Minister <Ii Foreign, Affairs Jesus, Unda Murillo Is, seeing the Pope; 'on: ' April,4. Queen Elizabe~h I1c:f England .is to ,pay a/i1l!-te ,visitJ~ the Pope on May $..- .
'" " FI'RS"hMACHINIST$:-,
'N'ATIO"',NA."L ,'BA.N'K'
. O~ TAUNT~~: . North DiS.h,to.n, N,orth~, stOR ,;' 'Norton , Jauntol'! M . S Spr,ing StreEtt Ma,in Street W. Main Street . am treet, .. ' Member Federal' ,DepCllitlnin;f.an\=8 'C~rp~ratiorr,," ".' . • #.
•
•••
_..
••
.".
-
-
• -'-
':'.'
'-'
'".,'
Tet. wy, 6:.8271
-'
~\.,'
New Bedford ~.
.
\
..
l "
.'
20
Delinquency Rise
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., April 6, 1961
In France Seen
S~tHfW®r@[f~ ~[fil$ffQl~~
TV
Ch[f'n~{[D@lJ'il ~fi'@t~®1T .
Affi'
B~Qm@
MONTREAL (NC) -Juvenile ," delinquency is increasing in France and violence on ,television is to
~U'e~n~®lrnt·
, WASHINGTON (NC) Brother B. Austin Barry, 'F.S.C., associate professor 0i civil ell2'ineering at 'Man-
blame for it, a French psycho;malyst said here. ,.' "Not since 'World War II haa the' French youngster been expo'sed to sO much violence as he can see on television today," said Dr. Philippe Parrot, an authority on the mental health problems of juveniles. He said that "recent studies have shown that juvenile crimes have increased noticeably in all areas of France where television has become available." The problem is all the more acute ,because French' youth rely on television for nearly all of their .entertainment, he stated. Lower With Girls Dr. Parr~t did say, however, that the delinquency percentage among French girls is much lower than it is among North 'American girls. One reason for this, he stated, is that "our girls are taught to behave like ladiea at a very young age." "It is not considered smart for them to run around in blue jeans and hang around street corners looking for mischief," he said. "French mothers are much more strict than working mothers' in North America."
hattan College, New' York has been installed as president of the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. : He took office during the 21st annual meeting 'of the organization of 6,500 members throughout the country who are engaged in map making, high order measurement and property surveys. , A registered professional engineer in New Jersey, Brother Austin was national vice-presi~nt of the organization during the past year. He succeeds Rear .Admiral H. Arnold Karo, director of the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. For the past five years he has headed a task committee on the status of surveying and mapping NEW COLLECTION FOR OLD LIBRARY: Cardinal TIsserant, center, Vatican in the United States under a Librari~n, and Abbot Anselmo Albareda, righ t, Prefect, examine collection of manuscripts project sponsored by the Amerof Lorenzo Perosi, famous sacred music composer. Although'Library spends only $10,000 ican Society of Civil Engineers. a year on new material, many collections, su ch as this, are donated. NC Photo. Predicts Growth .... , A native of Newburgh, N. Y., Brother Austin has been a member of the Brothers of the Chris,tian Schools since 1933 and a faculty member at Manhattan College since 1943. , At his installation as president VATICAN CITY (NC)-The V~tican ,Library, the world's oldest collection of learning, $f the Congress on Surveying se,rves scholars of every race and creed. Ever since Pope Leo XIII opened its shelves to Plan to, Memorialize and Mapping, Brother Austin the scholar's of all nations in the ·1880's the Vatican Library has been a major source of' Pioneer Missionary predic,ted that "the decade ofth,e WASHINGTON (NC)-A res.scientific learnirig and research.' Orginally s tartedas a private collection of works useful ~Os will be a time' of vital olution to have Father Eusebio growth in the status" of this to the'Church and the popes, . admittance cards were issued to ' Kino, pioneer missionary of the ;work. . the library has. become a This coileetion amounted to more than 2,000 volumes. But approximately, 1,500 scholars Southwest, memorialized in the He said technical advances, infrom 40 nations. Among them statuary collection in the U. S. cluding the development o(geo: . public service that serves'to' .with the transfer of the Pope to cieticearth satellites, ,will help swell the general . body ~. ,Avignon parts of the collection 'were 804, Italians, 138 Ameri- Capital has been received by the . cans, 136 Germans and a hand~ Senate.' knowledge of mankind. were lost. ' . the surveying-mapping field 'ful from Iron Curtain nation~ ~ather Kino, a', Jesuit, waa make contributions to increased , Although it has incalculable Real, Founder . such as Poland, Hungary and born in 1645 and is noted for his, knowledge about the earth. and riohes on its shelves the LibThe real founder of the presCzechoslovakia. explorations and missionary . the universe. . rary can. spend only about ent Vatican Library was ·Pope 'Use of the manuscripts room work in what is now northern I $10,000 a year to acquire new' Nicholas V who died in 1455. 5 . U ~c material. Fortunately it acquired .Some of the succeeding popes was higher. A total of 9,307 Mexico and southern Arizona. its treasures in the past and thou;::ht in terms of 'a private ,persons requested 15,236 manu- He establish~d some 25 missions scripts for consultation. The in Mexico and Arizona. today need on~y buy the fundacollection but the general trend On March 9 Gov. Paul Fannin general library attendance was WINDSOR (NC)-Education is mental modern literary and his- was to preserve .'- ··'~ent docu14,287 with 16,181 requests for of Arizona approved a resolution the most effective tool of torical works related to its col- ments related to the government of the Arizona legislature to churches in building an indus- lections. of the Church and to the papal d'books. have Father Kino as the state's Helps Scholars kial civilization that is Christian, Not all Religious sta' , In addition to a number 01. second representative. in the naaccording to a lay leader honored Contrary to. popular thought, " With the reborn interest ia tional statuary collection. The here by Assumption University. the Vatican Library is not pri- ancient learning of Greece and specialized catalogues and in- resolution was transmitted to tho The University presented its marily a collection of religious Rome of the Renaissance, the 'dices to help scholars find what U. S. Slilnate by Arizona Secre;' 1961 Christian Culture Award works. The bulk of its material library' gr,e"Y. rapidly. At' the they ,are looking for, the Vati- tary of State, Westley Bolin. It 'gold ,medal to Peter Drucker,' .. time of the death of Nicholas V can Library 'also h;as a full copy' , 15 manuscripts and, books cont'he V'a·tl'ca'n":Ll'brar'y had 1,209 of the Prince'ton Index of Chris- was referred to the Senate Com:. professor. .of. managem~nt at. ~he nect'e d Wl'th'p'h'l 1 h' t 1 0 ogy, ' lS ory cod'ices or manuscrl'pts and 30' , mittee on Rules and AdmihiStr~. graduate 'school of New York ~n d l't t Theo1oglca . 1, p h'1- 'y'ears'later' ";"wd boast of 3,50.0 'Uan- Art, t~gift of' Francis, :t~~n.. ' . -1 era ure. Ca,rpinal;Spelhrian: of New York;' University, :as an' "outstanding l6sophical and legal tomes form ..~ . ,This;:in,dex.,ls,'a ,pictorial' gui(Ie lay exponent of Christian ideaJs." a secondary"'.part of the import" manuscriptS... ' · . Be received the' medal ,from ant .collection of 'approximately. " .. Nap?leon ~l~nde~d the Yll:U- : :to .,th~ ~orl~~s :Christia~ .art ,up' Father E. G. 'LeBei, C.S.R, pres- one 'million worKs::, " ,can Llbraryto enrIch the lib- to, ;1.309 ,.anti,; was., begun. by·. . . ' .. ~~ ~~joio HELPfUl, ident of Assumption, conducted . :,~re~son" fot': this, 18" ttwlt..: ,raries of'Frarice, but des~,ite ~is .Princeton: University ,Professor ' ~". " INSTEAD Of' HEl.P\.lt" . < ': TME;,WMt,I.~A5 8UOA1 . ht Basilian'Fli.thers~ ' d u r i n g , ,the ,library's .periOd ,of ~~"agp'~.,.. the present ~. e.ct~on eharleS.·~. Morey. . " W&,1l!W't1D 11'15 . Teaching 'Major Wa,.; greatest expansion ...:.:;' tne"i5th', mcludes1Jl4)rethana mIllion; , ,,~~, library's staff: includes ~bQUt. 50",: p~rS9ns ,~eaded ,b¥ .' ~tiEEl. 'ctWft noM ' "'Mi'. Drucker "declared' in his -l6th 'and" i7th"centliries' ~ th~ ,works. ;. ecc'eptartce' speech' that "in the Popes' whO 'enriched" it were' By, far. ,the most important Euge,ne .C;:ardiq~ .Tisserant, Lib,. past 30 years "the churches have 'great humanisUi who shared .the , items are the 50,000 manuscripts r!lriaJ.l, an.!;I .t\rchiy~~t of the Holy discovered industrial sOCiety and passion" for "secular" learning, in. iGre'ek, Latin .and various ROn:tan,Chur~h;.'and Abbot. An,. are busy at work to make'it',a:" ,which' marKed. 'tlie Italian Ren- eastern lal1guages. The V~tican selmoAlbarooa; it 'Spanish_Be~ -' /iood society." , .. ' a:issance. ' ' ''. '! ,," .:' •.~,' ~anuscripts al'e of rema'rkahle .~d,i~t{ne .. ~9ilk . who'. hilS .beeri. "Teaching has, from the begit~- . ':', . ' .. . ..': '' :value both because they aoo an-' P,refe.~t,' of' the V!1t~can Library Ding; been one major way in ,'. ,~e begl~~ngS ~,,th~ lio/ll:ry cient and'rareand becaw~ many 'for. ~i!~ past 25 years '., .' The staff includes a dozen exwhich, in' the Churcti of Christy are found, ln, the ,fl~st. centu~les are illuminated and are works of ~r~ : and scholars engaged itt one could serve the Lord," Mr. of the, Church. Evef!. ,m ,th~ pr~m-. art in themselves. ". '. . .' 'itive Christian times' Rome.'s . ,. .. .. , . · D rucker Contmued. "His Apos-' 'ohurohes . collected':' d'oc'uments' " ,Ainong ,th.e. 'rare man,uscr.lpts. .private, research and who will also assist visi.t1ng. sch.olars.. In' ties were sent' out to teach 'in 'aU and rel-igious' writings. In the in th e.Va t l(:~n C?11ec t ~on IS a addition th~re are librarian as-' ~~A:~i:l:~ucation has therefore year 303 all these' were: de- Greek. transcrlption 'of the Bible sistants, guards, photographers. stroyed by 'order 'ofthe Roman ,o~ the fourth centu~, four~ and to facilitate requests for photobeen the most effective way' in ... . flfth-I'entury coples of the which the churches have become E~peror Dloclehan. works of Virgil: of Cicero's essay stats and "reproductions' of vathe leaders in buiding an' indusPersecution "De Republica," and of the rious documents and to micro~ film documents for other libtrial civilization that is a ChrisWhen under Constantine the Latin poet Terence. . raries around the world. A few tian civilization, and an indUS::' Church came out of persecution, In addltion . . . to manuscripts the staff· members are employed to trial society that is. a Christian among its first institutions were Vatican Library has 100,000 en- restore books of the library 202 ROCK STREET society ... It is through educa- libraries in Rome. St. Jerome, gravings, maps and other docuwhile others' ,are engaged in tion that in one industrial 'com- who made the first Latin trans- ments, 7,000 incunabula clerical. duties. . 'IFALL RIVER, MASS. munity after the other churches lation of the Bible, speaks of books printed before 1500have again become the leaders, working in the Roman lihraries and 770,000 other books, most of the centers of the community, the of the Church. . which are connected with the pace-setter and the target-setter." The sign 01 Qualify • •• In the fourth centu,ry the ltb..: resear c h and . sch 0 1arsh'1p 0 f the IFlI'oncDsc«:!In Brotheli' lIary and archives were kept at library. Priv"l,te Gifts n'""v~e""''''s .lab.... r~S""'ve'"' the Lateran, the residenl'e of the II.. •• « popes. Other' documentS were TPere are also private gifts to CAMPBELLTOWN (NC) -A kept at the Vatican basilica and the library. The manuscripts of Brother novice at the Franciscan in the library of the Roman the Italian ,composer, the late novitiate here in Australia has,' ·Emperor's palace' on the Pala- Lorenzo Perosi, former director rigged up a labor-saving device tine Hill. , of the Sistine Choir, have been. for making the white Francisc8'a _ Agal.D. most of these coliec-.· recently donated. So have' fragoord, using odds and ends. , tlons were lost during the up- ments of a cop~ of the Koran in The cord that girdles the Fran- . neavals, invasions ,d sacks of the ancient "{"'lIic alpha'be~ eiscan habit takes many hours Rome' during the Middle Ages. The largest consignment to to make by hand. The·.new device:In .tpe 13th cent~ry, during come to the Library in recent does it in minutes. the reign of Pope Innocent III, years ,waS the 15,OOO-volume , :It was fashioned from part of the administrative offices of the collection 'of ·the 'Sacred AposNorton No. Easton E. Bricfgewater "-. . a disused butter churn, part of Church shifted from the Lat- tolic Penitentiary which is coma sewing'machine, strips of sheet eran to the Vatican. With the prised of books of the 16th and Randolph Plainville metal, casters from old beds, beer shift there began the "Vaticlm 17th centurieS: ' and the new Brockton East Shopping Plaza bottle caps and a tin can. These registers," systemized collection Because of itS highly scientifie A~SO "USBii' OUR NEW STORE IN NEW IllEDFORD Ihave been harnessed to a recoJr of papal doownenta and manta- nature, the, library is ,open only ditioned electr-kl motom. 6£l'.il9ts. ' ~ scholars. During 1960 SJ)eCial
Famed Vatican Library Op®rns ·Treasures To Scholars of Every' Race,' and Creed
" h es ' Lau d Ch ·on Use of Educat.
.T·O.UHEY'S _ PHAR.MACY'
v....
*.
A
* *
* *
"