05.03.62

Page 1

Hotel To Become Home for Aged

PROPOSED NEW HOME FOR AGED IN NORTH ATTLEBORO TO SERVE FAITHFUL IN NORTHERN SECTION OF DIOCESE His Excellency, Most Rever~nd :lames L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, is interested in a petition to the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of No., Attleborough' for. necessary iIluthority to .establish a Resi.., dential and Nursing Home for. the Al!ed on the premises of the present Hotel HIxon. If the MceSSary authority is granted 0

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to the, Diocese of Fall River, 'Bis- Chapel will accommodate aphop Connolly plans' to refurbish proximately 150 and the nursing the present Hotel, facilities and , area will include 80 beds, with construct a million dollar addi- four-bed wards, double and tion to serve approximately 125 single rooms. ' Included in the plans are Aged. The planned facility will in- dining rooms, a new main. kitclude a Chapel to be built in chen, social and T.V. rooms, front of the present structure occupational and. physical therand a new Nursing Wing which apy areas, a beauty parlor, be added to the rear. The nurses lounges, treatment ro~ms

will

and a recreation center. The institute will be staffed Modern hospital equipment by the Grey Nuns of Ottawa, and specialized installation for Canada, who will serve in the safety and care of the Aged supervisory capacities. They will will dominate the. new structure. , be assisted by a comp.1ete staff The former hotel rooms will of lay personnel in the engibe 'revitalized for residential neering, malhtenance and kitguests and, will have accommo- chen departments. In the house dations of private rooms and and nursing areas lay people as baths for approximately forty maids, aids" licensed practical individuals and couples; , ,Turn to Page Twelve

"

Explain Church on Basis of True Values, Keynoter Tells 1,000 Diocesan Educators

The ANCHOR FQ:d~

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Non-Catholic 'Observers To Attend Council

ROME (NC) - Non-Catholic observers at the forthcoming Second Vatican Council will not be limited to formal fJessions but will be able to attend the plenary sessions. Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., head of the Vatican Secretariat for Promoting Chris- emphasis than that of non-Cathtian Unity, told more than olic Christians, he said. 60 representatives of the, The non-Catholic observers at world press that' the Holy the council "will have broad See will invite- to the council @lose non-Catholic observers -'who want to be invited." Cardinal Bea made it clear Giat non-Catholic representatives at the council which opens next Oct. 11 will be observers m fact, and will take no active part in the work of the council. He said also, that the observers cannot simply be interested ehurchmen without any official ~atus, but must be representing Christian bodies of significant iltanding., ' , Asked if non-Christian observe era might also attend the counen, the 80-year-Old Germanborn Jesuit said that the matter lhad been discussed by his secretariat lind was still under study. tlhe interest of non-Christians MJowd certainly be different in.

poss~bilities of studying and following the work of 'the counCil," according to Cardinal Bea. "These 'possibilities evidentlY will not be limited to, assisting at the solemn sessions 'in· the presence of the Pope, in which there is no further discussion,' but in which those theses which have already been discussed and approved in preliminary sessions are simply read out and formally voted on." ~n addition, he continued, ob· servers "will even be able to participale in the, plenary se(lsions, the so-called general congregations of the council fathers -the cardinals and bishops, that i&-i,n wWch the theses which have already been examined by the various commissions' of the Turn to Page Eighteen

Delivering the keynote address at the Seventh Annual D i 0 c e san Teachers' Convention, meeting today and' tomorrow at Bishop Feehan High SchOOl in Attleboro, Rev.

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N~xt Su~d1ay for 5)eamerrtl Catholics are asked to observe May 6 as Apostleship of the Sea Sunday, offering special prayers for the welfare of seamen here and throughout the nation at the request of Most Rev. Leo R. Smith, S.T.D., director of the National Catholic Apostleship of the' Sea Conference. In this Diocese, Rev. John F. Hogan, director of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, is also port chaplain in partiCUlar charge' of the ,spiritual welfare of seamen. The sea apostolate is difficult, notes Bishop Smith, because men at sea have no contact with priests and must go for long periods without attending Sunday Mass. "The ordinary means of grace which \ the Church provides in abundance to landsmen are lacking to them. Still, perhaps because of our Lord's special love for them, immense numbers of them are deeply Catholic men." Bishop Smith 'said that Pope ' John has called attention to the fact that "seamen must be very dear to our blessed Lord, for He chose them to found his Church."

MAY 20-30

John P. Driscoll, Assistant General Manager of The Anchor, called upon Catholic teachers, .both religious and lay, to further the cause of Christian unity by an understanding and communicating of the truths' of the Faith in the prayerful atmosphere of charity. . Father .Driscoll charged, before the almost 1000 teachers present, that "too manyCatholics, even teachers, look upon their. F.aith as a sort of spiritual , grab-bag, in which the doctrine of the Incarnation, the green scapular, the Holy Trinity, and devotion to St. Jude all seem to be on the same level of value, all holding equal importance, all equally necessary for salvation. This, confuses the non-Catholic

mind and causes our separated brother in Christ to draw strange conclusions about the validity of Catholicism to be the bearer of the Christ-announced good news of salvation." "Some Catholics, in speaking of the Faith to those outside the Church, slight essential doctrines while making much of what are, at best, subjective reactions to, and devotions following upon, these doctrines. We all know of the Catholics who have made more of the Fatima letter than the' necessity of feasting upon' the Body and Blood of Christ at the Sacrificial Banquet of the Mass," Father Driscoll commented. The teachers of the 12 high Turn to Page Twelve

"IN CHARGE:: Supe~isirig DiOcese's thousands of elementary :andhigh 'school.g.tu~ents are Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, 'superintendent,. Sister Miriam, R.S.M. and Sister M. Felicita, R.S.M., Diocesan supervisors of elementary schools.


,

Rebukes Laymen 'For Ctriticism Of Prel~tes

Hai~s Bib~e- ~m~h~~m~

In Religious

Tra~ning

WASIDNGTON (NC) .:- ~he content and methods'of 'religious education-' have undergone "revolutionary" changes since the 1930's, according to a specialist in the, field. Father Joseph B. Collins, S.S., director of the National Biblical Met~o~ Center of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, out"From the authority of God's lined the new developments Word derive motivation for in an address yesterday to loving and loyal acceptance of some 90 CCD diocesan direc- His message of salvation. The ,tors attending their" 26th an- method is inductive and bibliDual m~eting here. , cal, no longer deductive and Father Collins summed up ,analytical,'" he said. . the changes under" the heading Father Collins' declared that "Kerygmatlc Renewal." -<Keryg- this is a "far, cry" from ,the ma is a Greek word for herald, "atrocious but unhappily perand "kerygmatic" was the term slstent" system of having chil-, applied in primitive Christian dren simply meplorize chunks times to the central core, of of the catechism text. Christian truths.) Such a procedure, he said, New Approach "c~_.n~~· be called, teaching reliA fundamental change in re- gion; and 'the catechism cannot ~nt years has been that the be blamed for such cavalier deductive approach to religious treatment." education, starting with formal Catechism Last propositions and theses, has ,Today, Father' Collins comgiven way to an "inductive mented, "the catechism is placed process," Father Collins said. 'last in the catechetical triad: Under this new approach, he Bible, liturgy and catechism .. . continued, "the Bible story of It should never be placed in the God's goodness 'and love toman- hands of the pupil. Rather its kind, 'and the liturgy, which is material is properly placed only the living worship of God en- in guides or manuals for teachshrined in prayer and in the ers in graded and illustrated myriad details of the ecclesiasti- pU~il texts, and in book1ets for 081 years,~ are today made the parents," evidences and proo~s of the Another important aspect of truths and precepts that are to the new approach to religious be taught and explained." education is the emphasis on Referring to this as a "bibli- teaching methods, the priest cal-historical method," he said continued: ' '''Modern catechetics must be a typical religion lesso~ begins with 'he scriptural source of its jllst as concerned with method theme. \ ;,. . as with content,'" he ,said. "Skill in method . . . is· a mark of a well-trained catechist to0

leIay."

TRENTON (NC) - Bishop George W. Ahr of Trenton haa rebuked "certain laymen" for' "ignorant, insolent and arrogant crittci!!m of the Bishops of the ~untry." '~Tbere has been IB recent months a vast volume of iUconsidered, badly advised and poorly defined talk about the \ place of the laity in the Church. which has resulted attitude. and understandings that are un.theological and uncanonical,· Bishop Ahr said. Sow Seeds of Schism "This talk has already resulted in igno"rant, insolent and arrogant criticism of the Bishops of the country by certain laymen: Such talk can only build false hopes of unattainable power_and, 'prominence in the minds of proud and ambitious men. Such talk sows the seeds of anti-clericalism and' schism." Bishop Ahr, speaking to a banGRADUATION IN JAPAN: A Japanese student bows q~et of the Anicient Order of formally as she receives her degree from Father Francis Hibernians ana their auxiliary, X. bizumi, S.J., president of Sophia University, Tokyo, at said the Church was "founded the school's' recentgrl;tduation exercises. The Jesuit in- by Jesus Christ, as a monarhierarchical society in' stitution 'gradu~ted 669 students out of a student body of, chical, which all right to rule and the more 'than 4,400.' NC Photo.' divine right to teach were restricted to the Apostles under ;Peter and to their suceessors, the Bishops of the Catholic Church, with and under the Pope. "And no amount of talk by compromising theologians or ambitious laymen will change , DETROIT (NC) -A lay editor told Catholic educators that fact," he added. here that 'he rates 'His Holiness Pope John XXIII's Mater Quotes Holy' Father The Bishop praised the "haret Magistra as ",a \last •chance encyclical" 'because, if the social practices urged in it and its predecessors are not put, vest of sancity" in Irish tradition, attributing it to aevotion into effect shortly it will be 'for the ,Spiritual ,-Life Institute to prayer, love and' loyalty' to too late. Donald Thorman, of America, a cultural project , the Church, and reverence fO'l' former managing' editor of of theD i s cal c e d Carmelite the priesthood. He contrasted these virtueB Ave M~ria magazine, tolg a Fathers, noted that Pope John session of the 59th annual conrepeated an app:al ma~e 25 with the attitudes of those ,vention of the. National ~athplic years before by p~us. XI m his whom he criticized, saying: "Far Educational Association that the encyclical on AtheistIc Commu- better was the love of the Church's social teachings have nisin. It is that the' Church's Church and the respect for the been scorned by being ignored. so~ial teach~ngs sho~ld ~ ''re- priesthood so marked in the . • ' ][g' d' qUlred currIculum" In Catholic lives of your fathers." ' ' i ' 11 ., He recalled that Pope J ohB , nore .. .t " sc h 00 s, espeCla y semmarles. "Let's be reahstIc about 1, S t 1 'I' hi last year told a group of Cathoi'Nt' tth 1 f ,oca eac ngs he .said. 0 ,Jus e ru ers 0 yet' he said few Catholics lic' Action pilgrims that the nations have s cor ned the, ' ,,' , h I state responded. How many people apostolate. ,of the Church is "Ill · f th Ch t eac h mgs 0 e urc. 1 . 1 R l' 1 't . 1 f t· Shave - c erica, e IgOUS or a y - mission, the execution of an or1 as.a simp e ac. 0 do' you know who really under- der," which Catholics must carry Cathohc educat.ors and members stand what th'e Church's social on under the' direction of their of the C~thohc press and. -:- teachings are all a'bout?" he bishops. well, you can make up your hst. k d We; have Church's asEed uca · ti.ona1 Ins . t·tut· 1 t scorned h' ' the b ., 1 Ions, he socl,a eac mgs y Ignormg .d st beg' t turn out MAY 9 the " sal , .mu In . 0 T~~rman, who was recently , pe~ple knowledgeable in the Rev. J. E. Theodule Giguere, named ; director of 'development SOCial encyclicals. ' 1940, Pastor, St. Anne, New Bed"I do not think it melodrama- ford. tic to suggest tha~ this might be Rev. John P. Clarke, 1941, your last chance to answer the Pastor, St: Mary, Hebronvilie. recurring plea of the Church for our educational' structures to PI~1n make' the social doctrine of'the ,llUi:h a home, looks ahead \to Church an integral part. of such a job, is hardly a suitable Catholic education. At least, If Funeral recipient for truth. Where the you decide to ignore this last 571 Second St. treasure is, not ,only the heart, chance, be prepared to live with but the mind _is-and the treas- the inevitable fruits of your Fall River, Mass. ure today is in earth-bound se- neglect," he" said. OS 9·6072 curity, self-centered. advanceMICHAEL J.' McMAHON ment and man-made decisions." Lice~sed Funeral -Director Newman teachers, he said, Registered Embalmer must expose for collegians "the possibilities of the Mystical Body F~tt\l!t"al Dome of Our Lord as a plan of life."

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FRIDAY -St. -Monica, Widow. : As for the basic, orientation III Class. White. Mass Proper; of, the new religious education, Gloria; no Creed; Preface of he' said, "the former stress on' Easter. Two Votive Masses in knowledge alone has been' .rehonor of the Sacred Heart of placed by emphasis on love. Jesus permitted. Tomorrow is : "The message of Christ, the the First Saturday of the teaching of His Church are Month. looked uponas the express inviSATURDAY-St. Pius V, Pope, tation to men to love God in and Confessor. III Class. White. return for His love." Father Collins said the new Mass Proper; Gloria; no.Creed;' Preface of Easter. approach also underlines the SUNDAY _ II Sunday after Christian apostolate. "Religion Easter. II Class. White. Mass is not taught as' a personalized, Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface endowment of the individual, of Easter. but as a mode of the apostolate MONDAY-St. Stanislaus, Bish- and mission which Christians op and Martyr. III Class. Red. share with Christ and His sucMass 'Proper; Gloria; no Creed; cessors. the bishops, in the salPreface of Easter. vation of all men," he explained. TUESDAY - Mass of previous \ Sunday. IV Class. White, Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Preface of Easter. Mw~g.;rtllft WEDNESDAY-St. Gregory.Nazianzen, Bishop, Confessorimd I DETROIT (NC)-A new deep' Doctor of the Church. III Class. South" archbishop told Newman 'White. Mass Proper; Gloria; ~oundation teachers here' that no Creed; Preface of Easter. the students they face today are THURSDAY - St. Antoninus, ~ictims of depersonalization, Bishop and Confessor. III many'raised in homes which are Class. White. Mass Proper; no more than big ,telephone Glori~; Second Collect SS. booths., Gordian and Epimachus: MarArchbishop Paul J. Hallinan of 'tyrs; no Creed; Preface of Atlanta, Ga., said that "uprooted_ Easter.' ness is a phenomenon of ,the big apartment building, the stylized suburbs, the faceless factories 1l.<e@D@I!'t' ~~~~IJ'il~}f and the mechanized office buildFORT¥ HOUtltS "ings.. The following films' are to be "These are the places from added to the lists in their re-' lD>/EVOTfiOIM which students are coming; they spective classific,ations: are the places where they will Unobjectionable for' general May 6 - Our Lady of the eventually work.'" patronage: Runaway. 'Immaculate Conception, , The prelate called upon the Unobjectionable for adults and North Easton. chaplains in their educational adolescents: Lisa.' ", St. Vincent's Home, Fall programs on non-Catholic camCondemned:. Jules and 'Jim River. puses to show students a higher (utterly immoral)., St. Mary, Hebronville. ground than the valley of con-' C han g e of Classification: formity and complacency. . "Wild Harvest" is changed from May 13 - St. Patrick, FalPersonal E:il;perience 'Condemned Classification to mouth. "Far too many homes," he told Morally Objectionable in Part St. Joseph's "Orphanage, a dinner meeting, "have become for All. Revisions have improved Fall River. large telephonr booths where we tfie film somewhat but it is still make arrangement to go out; too suggestive in costuming and May 20-St. Casimir, New ~any jobs are only occupations situations. / Bedford. devoid of craft, pride and prinVilla Fatima, Taunton. ciples. " Holy Ghost, Attleboro. "The student who lives in Al!J~~~'i8!N~ May ~7-St. Mathieu, Fall River. ' , ' St.'Kilian, New Bedford. . May 6--2:00 P.M., Holy Family, Heleft Aubertine '8raul/lh East ,Taunton; St. Francis Owner aJld Director TBB &.NCBOB Xavier, Hyannis. Spacious Parking Area Second CIa... Poataa. I'aid at r.D at..... 4:00 P.M., Sacred Heart, TaunKaaa. Pobl'-1McI ."17 l'h1lftdQ at 61e BhrblaDd A......_ h11 RI..... ......., 'ton; ~t. Patrick, 'Falmouth. WY 2-2957 ~ 1:i~~~1e8Q~I::' ':30 P.M., St. Peter, Dighton; lit Allea lit. New..,.... _tpl4 ~ ~. '.,~ Ii. .Joseph, Woods HO~J' ':. ,

Necero!ogy

Prelate Urges Teacherrs Stress BOdy as of Life

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River-Thurs., Mav 3. 1962

3

Number of U.S. C~tholics ' Now Totals

Clo~~ to

43 Million Persons-

NEW YORK .(NC)-The exact total of U.S. Catholics is now 42,876,665, according to the Official CathOlic Direc~ory for 1962 published here by P. J. Kenedy and Sons. The number includes those in the 50 states, all families of the defense forces at home and creased by 461, to a present total abroad, and the diplomatic of 25,633, while 22,895 children and other services abroad. are cared fur (in foster homes. The new total is an increase The total of 48,528 dependent· of 771,765 over last year's figure children reflects an increase of of 42,104,900, and a 10-year in- 1,678 within the past year. crea.se of 12,451,650 (or 40.9 per Homes for invalids and the cent) over 1952's figure of 30,- aged were increaded by 16 and 425,015, now number 355, with additional There are now 27 archdioceses facilities. of 2,367, for 33,738 In the United States and 120 residents. dioceses. 125,000 Converts Chicago Leads For the ninth straight year, The 27 ar~hdioceses reported tht! number of converts entering a growth of 35,306 and the 120 the Catholic Church exceeded dioceses 736,459. The eight 125,000. During 1961 128430 archdioceses with Catholic pop- became. Catholics, bri~ging' th~ ulations in excess of one million total conversions during the past are Chicago, 2,163,380; Boston, decade to 1,354,968. 1,698,138; New York, 1,651,400; The number of infant baptisms Newark, N.J.,. 1,495,298; Los during 1961 - 1,352,371 - is an Angeles, 1,421,478; Detroit, 1,- increase of 3,131 for the year. 396,346; Philadelphia 1251 934 Marriages recorded increased by and San Francisco, 1;121,595. ' 36&. to 319,847. Dur-ing the same Brooklyn continues· as the period, 356,878 Catholics died in largest diocese, with a Catholic the U.S.. 8,349 more deaths than' population of 1,493,164. Others in the previous year. with more than then 500,000 are: PiLLsburgh, 903,688; Buffalo, N.Y., 873,089; Cleveland, 818,rge~ ~40: Rockville Centre, ·N.Y., '"', 694,497; Providence, R.I., 521,Out~ook, 358; Trenton, ~.J., 518,307, and Corpus Christi, Tex., 504,250. Re~i~ions Clergy Increase An increase of 899 in' the VANCOUVER . (NC) number of the clergy brings the A priest-convert from ag~tal of ordained priests to 55,nosticism said here that . 581, the largest ever recorded. Ca·tholics should "cultivate There are now 33,774 (633 more) diocesan or secular clergy, and a positive outlook to the tem:U,807 religious order priests, an poral world, Protestants _ and . increase of 266. Newly ordained Jews," Father Gregory BaUlll, O.S.A. priests listed for the first time said in a talk at the University number 1,679. One cardinal, five bishops and of British Columbia that modern 780 priests are listed in the anti-Semitism has taken on necrology. Professed Religia'us "fantastic dimensions." The Augustinian priest, who personnel inciude 11,502 Brothers and 173,351 Sisters, repre.:. was born of Jewish parents in senting respective increases of Berlin, Germany, and reared as an agnostic, delivered the fifth 574 Brothers and 2,913 Sisters. Two new general and four Newman Christian Culture lecless special institutions bring ture at the university. He said that "Catholics should the number of Catholic hospitals to 947~ Bed capacities have cultivate charity in attitude and been increased by 1,660 to pre- practice towards other Christians, Jews and people of goo.d sent facilities for 152,912. ' . The number of g'eneral hos- will." Lauds Dialogues pitals is 816, with 141,331 beds, and the 131 special hospit!lls acHe stressed that such an atticomndate 11,581. Patients treated tude does not entail a comproin 1961 increased by !>81,208 to mise in essential beliefs but a a record high of 14,442,188 in working together in a spirit of the 947 Catholic hospitals. brotherhood. Dependent Children Fath~r Baum, the only CanaCurrent, enrollments of 35,700 dian consultant on fhe Secrestudents in the' 344 Catholic tatiat for Christian Unity pretraining schools for nurses rep- paring for the Second Vatical1' resent a decrease of 194 in the Council, lauded current "dialonumber 'of student nurses. gues" between Catholic and ProChildren in the 272 orphan- testant theologians as a means ages and infant asylums in- of reducing bigotry.

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-Pa [(@c1roia ~$dm@@~ G[f@d~$ ~$~®rri)lfi~~ DETROIT (NC)-The new president general of. the National Catholic Education Association said - Catholic' education:is so essential today , that not a single grade should be considered expendable. Coadjutor, Archbishop John P. Cody of New Orleans made the statement in an inaugural message to delegates at the NCEA's 59th annual convention. "Indeed," he said, "our. pastoral concern must be so keen our support must be so generous: that no grade in a parochial school and no level in a diocesan system - from kindergarten to graduate school-should be considered expendable.

175 u806 O~ TeO~~IDLrn~ S)lfcQJ~§S

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Kenedy and Sons. The new total comprises

11,586 priests, 818 scholastics, 5,016 Brothers, 100,871 Sisters and 57,515 lay teachers. These figures represent increases in the past yea'r of 26 priests, 248 scholastics 209 Brothers 2015 Sisters and 4,631 lay teach~r~. A high of 14;015 separate educational institutions _ 54 newly established during 1961 _ ineludes 98 diocesan seminaries; 447 religious order seminaries .

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N~W Y~:>R~ (~C)-The fulltime teaching staffs of ed~catIonal mstItut~ons under Catholic auspices in "'the Umted States ~ave mcreased by 7,129 to a record total of 175,806, accordmg to the Official Catholic Directo f 1962, published here by P. J. .. ry or

Positive Toward

SERRA DISTRICT MEETING: Principals in the trict 40 meeting of the Serra Clubs of Providence, River, New Bedford and Attleboro area were Bishop rard; Bishop McVinney; Bishop Connolly and Very ., Kevin Harrison, O.F.M. Cap., guest speaker.

ISing

DISCUSS CAMPAIGN: Discussing plans for annual Catholic Charities' appeal are Bishop Connolly and J. Harry Condon, Attleboro, this year's lay chairmaP

Catholic Educators Survey Decisions o.n Curriculum DETROIT (NC) Catholic high school educators launched here a nationwide analysis of how their. schools are reacting to movements which have brought many traditional courses of study under fire. How many schools, for example, woul€l support a new movement to have pro- P?rtment and educational su~er. . . VIsor for the Northern Province fesslOnal people outSIde the of the Xaverian Brothers. ,schools correct student com"Our curriculum is being' positions in English courses? handed us from far too many This is one aspect of the proj- sources today," the Brother said ect which began at the 59th an- in an interview. "Many courses nual' convention of the National of study co~ing this way are Catholic Educational Association. good. But the question is, should Other aspects are weightier. we merely accept them? Should For E'xample, the study will seek not we analyze them? Find out to find how schools relate their the philosophy behind them and curriculum deCisions to, the relate it t9 our philosophy? These Catholic philosophy of education. are the questions we will study." It also will ask how curriculums The six' advisory comrriittees a~e related to accrediting agenwill gather information on presCles. ent practices in curriculum' deSix Subjects velopment in Catholic high Advisory committees, made up schools. From this information of Catholic teachers and admin- they will sketch a 'picture of the istrators, have been formed to new trends. study six subject areas: English, The committees then will surscience, foreign languages, reli- vey the new movements and try gion, mathematics and history. to determine which may be the If they are successful, school most acceptable. administration, educational tele"We actually have two major vision and other areas may be goals." explained Father Koob. added to the study. "The first is to encourage local The project is being coordi- schools to take a long hard look' nated by Brother Bartholomew, at how they got their. present C.F.X., of· Newton Highlands, course of studies, and the second Mass., retiring president of the is to assist them to choose from NCEA's Secondary School De- among the' new movements...·

or nOVItIates and scholasticates; 278 colleges and universities' 1,566 diocesan and parish high schools; 8~9 private high schools; 10,177 pansh e.lement1!ry schools, . and 453 pnvate elementary sch~ols. ,!he~e are also 127 protectIve Ins~Itutions, with 12,832 youths In attendance. Candidates for Priesthood . New educati?nal institutions Inc~u.de two dIOcesan and six r;hgIOUS o~der seminaries estabhshed dur~ng !961. The 98 diocesan semInanes report enroll~ent of 23,662 ~eminarians, an Increase of 2,342, while the 447 novitiates and scholasticates of . the religious orders have 22,592 students or 2,041 more, indi_ cating a total of '46,254 candidates for the priesthood. In 1945, the directory listed 311 seminaries and novitiates with an enrollment of 21,523. In 1962 there are 545 'such institutions with 46,254 shiClents. Catholic colleges and universities in 1945 totaled 210 with 92,426 stUdents. There are now 278 such institutions with 336604 students. ' Enrollment Doubles High schools in 1945 numbered 2,3~1 and had 447,699 students, whIle today there are 2,435 such schools with 945,785 students. Elementary schools increased from 8,030 enrolling· 2 029 012 pupils in' 1945 to 10630 'enrolling 4,451,893 in 1962.. Overall, the number of U.S. Catholic educational institutions h~srisen by 2,976 (27.3 per cent) Since 1945, while their enrollment has grown by 3189676 (123.1 per cent). " The upward trend in Catho_ lic college and university enrollments for the ninth year is reflected by an increase of 14605 college students during 196i. The record postwar decrease of 31,699 occurred in 1951-52. Current enrollments now total 336,. 604, or 64 per cent more college students than 10 years ago - an in~rease of 131,667 over the 204,937 in 1952. High School Increase The number of fulltime pupils in Catholic elementary and high schools reflects an increase of 121,604 during the past year. The 1,566 Parish and diocesan high schools' rep 0 r t 588 968 pupils, an increase of 42;709 above 1961; the 869 private high schools with 356,817 show an increase of 16,781 in one year. Pupils in 10,177 parish elementary schools now number 4,367,076, or 66,845 more, while students in the 453 private elementary schools now total 84. 817. In addition, 12,832 students are accommodated in the 127 protective institutions. Released Time Instruction The further progess of religious instruction to children un. der released time, in religious vacation schools and other classes, is evidenced in the 1962 reports of 3,749,522 public school children receiving religious instruction, indicating a year's in. crease of 277,346 pupils, or 7.98 per c e n t . ' The directory reported 992,691 high school pupils and 2,756,831 in elementary grades receiving such instruction. There is a total (including orphans) of 9,542,. 890 American youths in aU grades under Catholic instruction - 'an increase of 418,698, or' 4.58 per cent over comparable figures for 1961. .


/

4

THE ANCHOR-~jocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3,,1962

P@rent@~

CareJincd Cushing Sees Plf@paganda

tEx@mpl~fCff®~ts

~n Image, Worry

Chi~d' ~h~rr~cter fCrmoi'Bon By Father John L~ Thomas, S. J..

Asst. Sociology, Prof.-St. Louis University

BOSTON (NC)-Richard. Cardinal Cushing says he is weary of hearing the word "image" used in reference to the U. S., Massachusetts aAd Boston. "The continuous reference to the 'image' of the United States, of Massachusetts and of Boston wearies me and, many others," the Archbishop of Boston declared at a Knights of Columbus dinner honoring U. S. H 0 use Speaker ,John W. McCormack of Massachusetts.

'- .

"How can parents' be sure that, their children' are really learning the right values? My wife and I often' diseuss this problem because we h~ve seen young people from apparently good homes who give 'little evidence that they know right from wrong in eral prmcIple' . . ' such as truthful, . many .resp~cts. Our chIldren ness, honesty, or brotherhood, are stIll qUite young, but we and then applying it 'tospecific also know that character situations as they occur in his formation begins early. Judging expanding' experience. from present trends, our, chil. Rather, his understanding of dren are going a ge.oeral principle 'is always in to 'live in a terms of a specific situation. For Lauds lHIonse Spe~ker badly confused this reason, parental example is Mceormack received the sixth world. How can of supreme importance. annual Lantern Award of the we p re par e Thus parents may teach truth_ K. of C. Council for his "extrathem to meet fulness as an important value, ordinary patriotic service" to the this' challenge but if they send the child to the state and nation. as Christians?" door to tell an unwelcome visitor The l' e are that they're, not at home, the The Cardinal lauded Congressmany serious child :voks upon such deception man 'McCormack and his wife, Harriet, "for exemplifying in parents who as truthful. are ask i n g Parents teach the general pui?lic life an ideal union b&themselves the principle of universal brothertween husband and. wife." He same question" hood under God. but if they treat also said that McCormack is "a Lester. others as unequals or make dis- ' public' servant who needs no They learn from .daily experi- ,paraging remarks about memartificial image to present him in ence that people in our society bel's, of another race, class! or a favorable light locally ~ no longer agree on basic moral nationality, the child learns to nationally." principles, with the result that ~e.concile the general principle ong CUBANS AT MASS: Liberated prisoners from"'. t "ForI 8 1 Ih . tbime and. very conflicting_or contradictory pat- ~Ith such forms of discrimina- H' FREED 'P'" P . s rong y ave een convillced terns of conduct receive equal tion. , av~na ~ n~cIpe rlS?n c~pt~;ed after the ill-fated Bay that all this worry-about our Based on Love public approval. of PIgS InVaSIOn kneel In MIamI s Gesu Church during Re- 'image' is a lot of misplaced em: Moreover, althou';;h the child Traditional distinctions bequiem Ma,ss. offered for the 94 freedom fighters killed' in phasis, if not propaganda on the tween right and wrong have now may obey. a parental order be- the invasion attempt. NC Photo. ,par.t of on' of the two' major become matter of personal pref- cause he wishes to avoid disap" political parties in our country or proval or gain approval' in a erence, while· what were forboth," the Hub prelate said. ~p~cific instance, this is not an merly regarded as moral absoDeclaring that those who use lutes have evolved into conven- adequate basis for solid characthe "image" phrases "must have ient ideals, to be aimed at only tel' formation .. a limited, vocabulary," the CarThe child must so identify if the personal cost is not too dinal continued: "Tpey believe, with both parents that he wants high. . t'o conform; that is good behavior LOUISVILLE (Nt) - Latin where in some instances only 10 whether right or wrong, that the Developmental Pro'cess reputation of the country, our is valued because it sustains and Am~ica, a "rebelliously poor" per cent of the worker families Christian parents have' good Bay State, our capital city is strengthens a relationship that region and "one of the world's are now self-sufficient:' reason to be concerned, for they' he desires. Both religious and lay volunbadly tarnished. We have been major areas of destitution," needs cannot hope to segregate their 'smeared,' 'betrayed' and 'black. This means that parental au- more than economic aid from teers (effective workers - not children from all outside influjust those who can be "spared") mailed,' they proclaim. We must ences; and besides, they recog- thority can fulfill its real pur- America. ,poses only if parents are loved "It needs us to send people, as should .offer to work in Latin improve our 'image.' Get Madinize that such a type of "hot, which is another way of sayirJJi well as dollars, to work for jus- America in areas where they are son Avenue publicity agents'" ,. • house" training 'would be no needed. spend a millon or more on adver-, preparation for life particularly that parental· authority must be ,tice, to understand and to share . Americans shouid work activetising our virtues." based 0:1 love, since it exists for' th e people's,. poverty-stricken in our morally pluralist society. ly,with groups ,in our own counthe well-being of the children. lives," according to Father John , Far More impOrtant Hence their aim must be to , Parents are Models J. Considine; M.M., director of try: such as the Peace Corps, . teach principles and to guide the which are attempting to funnel He urged that less attention be , Adequate exercise 'of parental the Latin America Bureau of the character formation of their chilaid into the country. paid to "images" and more to dren in \ such fashion that they authority raises serious problems National Catholic Welfare ConAmericans must, keep informed the fact that the U. S.is a natioa wiV be. capable of maintaining fo~ the modern middle-class ference, Washington, D:C. and concerned about the Latin "under God." father, who tends to spend much Father'Considine told 600 peotheir moral integrity even American struggle for Ii better T~ th~ nations of the world though their ideals receive little of his time and energy away pIe at Ursuline College here that and more just life. and to all 50 states of this coun-' from the home and consequently the people of Latin America are' support from "':1e socictv within try, "the dictum of Thomas A. which they must live and work confides the rearing of his chil- convinced to~ay that "they are Lawman Genu,flects, Kempis appl~es just as effectivedren almost entirely to his wife. unjustly poor, and they 'are out their salvation.' ly as it, applies to individualS: Yet it is not the time spent at detenniJ:led to have 8 chance." How can par,ents promote the Then ,Nabs Es~apee ~It is not what men say about Ufl Reds Active learning of ,values? In the first home but the image' of tne parSOUTH' SAN FRANCISCO that matters; it is what God The communists, he said, have place they must keep in mind ~nt imprinted in the mind of the (N~) Deputy Sheriff Ray knows about ~.' " ' hundreds' of agents located in that the learning of values, like child that is significant. Garibaldi, a Catholic, ran into . Couples who have learned, to the "misery villages" outside aU' other learned experiences" is :All Souls' Church here, genua'developmental process-a mat:' work together and to share au- big industrial centers to enlist flected before the altar, then MEN 17.25 tel' of gradual growth. The child thority appear equally loving to the discontent of the people. on raI! behind it and captured aJl JOIN THE NEW is not born with right attitudes their children, though one must the side of communism. , be absent much of the' time. '''I challenge you," Father es~aped prisoner. and values. Society o.f Brothers of The prisoner had appeared in ~ Fathers who avoid all exercise Considine said, "to find a group Learns Responsibility municipl(Il court on a bad ,check cif authority.or are harsh and im- " tl)at goes to the lengths they do Our Lady of Providence He first encounters them as IJUlsive in giving orders cause ... Their aim is to destroy every charge. He ~s bein'g handFor information write to: they are reflected in the gestures, ,children either to identify aU vestige' of JJ:l,oral or spiritual cuffed for the return trip to . tones of voice, 3l1d words of his authority with the mother or to' prindple remaining with the jail when he, broke loose. FATHER MASTER parents, and 'because he wants obey unly. out of fear. .' Garibaldi raced after him into St. Joseph the Worker Latin American people." to be loved and 'accepted, he Novitiate In brief, Lester, you will te;ch The 'Cath'olic Church in Latin ".the church, brought him out' at tends ~o adopt them very quickly" by what you are. Since growing America is in "deep trouble," he gunpoint from behind the altar Warwick Neck, R. I. Thus he learns that some ac- children look upon their parents said,pointing out that there is and marched him back to court:' tions carry parental appro~al, as models, you and your wife only vne parish priest for every while others lead to. rejection or have your work 'clearly ,cut out"'- 6,000 persons there. a negative response. for you. . ' . Practical Steps As imitation, learning, and the He suggested several practical continued testing of' parental AS A HOLY. CROSS FATHER steps to help "widen the base of rules continue, the moral bound- Guidance Counselors Priest-Teacher Home Minioner self-sufficiency" among a people aries of the child's world emerge

Father ConsBd;ne Asks Personal Assistolrnce foil' Latin America

·~~·"····"·fOUR··iiYS~TOSERVE

.more or less clearly. If he is fortunate enough to' have sensible parents, these boundaries are consistently defined. , He knows where he stands and what h~ must do to win the approval of the important others , in his small world. This does not mean that he will never test, th,ese bmmdaries or even violate them by an open act of disobedience, but if he does, he knows what kind of parental response will inevitably follow and thus learns responsibjlity for his actions. Specific Situations Unlike an adult, the child it DOt capable of learning' a ,gen-

Hit Suppression . ,

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VAN NUYS (NC),--The Van Nuys-Sherman Oaks Ministerial Association here in' California has passed a strongly worded r~oJuti9n prot~sting attempts to delete' all reference to God and Jleligion from public life. .

Elect Fr. Moreau

: CHICAGO (N'd) Father qeorge H. Moreau, O.M.I., guid_ ance director at Bishop Fallon ~igh School, Buffalo, N. Y., was e~ected president of the National' , Gatholic Guidance Conference at ' its eighth annual convention here. -, ' . Brother Mari~ Belka, S.M., of St. Mary's Uniyersity, San Anto~io, Tex.; conducted by ,the Marianists, ,was chosen president-elect. 0ther officers elected included: J!'ather Edmund W. Olley, St. Joseph~s High School, Kenosha, Wi,;., executive director; Carl Fisher; University of Santa Clara, Calif., treasurer, and Sister Marie de Chantei Im_ macu~ata High School, Deiroit. All are 'guidance directors at the respective institutions. More than 1,000 guidance counselors· representing 750 universities, coll~ges and . high schools throughout the' country attended the two-dayconventiOD..

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THE ANCHORThurs., May 3, 1962

CINCINNATI (NC) - A priest liturgist suggested here that specific changes in the structure of churches are needed to draw the priest and· congregation together in wor$hiping God. F.ather Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B., said that the day of expensive of time it has come to· be almost "cathedral - like par ish a wall of separation between churches . is rapidly pJ;'iest and congregation." "Since this is thEl place where drawing to a close," and

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DETROIT (NC) - An alarmist response to the communist threat will do more harm than good, a Federal

"simpler, less expensive, yet .Communion is distributed, and law enforcement official has told artistically superior structures since this is the sacrament that a nuns' conference here. unites, we should try to have a • .. would seem called for." "We must not indiscriminately The Benedictine priest, who is Communion rail that doesn't label as communists those whose editor of Worship, monfhly connote separation," he stated. opinon on a particular question / Father Diekmann pointed out liturgical review, gave 'a lec.may, on occasion, parallel the ture at McAuley High School. that the altar "must be the focal official Communist party posicenter of the church," and that It was under the auspices of the tion," said Arbor W. Gray. a "it should be. free of all but the Liturgical Arts Group. supervisor for ,the Federal essential elements." Procession Bureau of Investigation. Symbol of Christ Prior to Father Diekmann's "The altar," he 'added, _"is Minclls of Men talk, Archbishop 'Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati offered a dialogue consecrated as the symbol of Gray noted that communism Mass in the school gymnasium: Christ, and it is a far better has achieved success largely be.symbol of Christ than even the At the Offertory procession cause of its ruthlessness and toartists and architects brought to most realistic crucifix," talitarian power, and the key He s.tated that. the sacrament the altar samples of their work. question facing Americans -is Father Diekmann said that of penance is a "second bapthis: "Can we meet the challenge tism," restoring the penitent to church builders must draw their of communism without imitating plans with the role of the con- the worshioing community, and its methods?" gregation in mind as well as therefore the confessional "ide... "Any response to the challenge ally, would be located near the that of the clergy. of communism which is based on Since the laity have an active entrance, or at the rear of the church." , BLESSES CENTER: Bishop Connolly blesses crucihysteria, alarmism, extremism role in the Eucharistic' sacrifice, or vigilante action," he said, He also said he favors less hung in new parish center of St. Elizabeth. fixes to be he said, there should be "8 sense emphasis on visual "secrecy." Church, Fall River. Aiding him is Rev. Manuel P; Ferreira, "will do more harm than good." of physical 'togetherness,' and "The priest should at least be Gray asserted that a construcvisual and auditory contact with curate. Center includes sports area, portable stage and tive, effective opposition to comthe altar." Systems for am-- able to tell whether the penitent screen, reading room and TV lounge. It is air-conditioned. munism must be continued, "but plifying the priest's voice should is an adult or .a child," he said. we must also *. * '" deepen our be installed at the altar as well "And the penitent should be able to see the priest extend his own heritage of freedom - our as in the pulpit, he added. hand. Let's preserve anonymity, mightiest weapon in the struggle Sense of Headship COLUMBUS (NC)-The pre- peeved because Pope John made for the minds and loyalties of but let~s not make the sacrament More room is needed also for completely impersonal." dominant note in Pope, John's only one direct reference to men everywhere." processions, he stated. "There encyclical 'Mater et Magistra is communism in the encyclical, are. certain occasions when the optimism, a priest expert in the Sulpician priest stated, "But people of God are on the march. social action said here. . if you were to ask the Pope: ~@{1'g.tf~ 8\1' ~f ~op® We are. pilgrims~ and, we march Father John F. Cronin, S.S., 'Why did you overlook com!3lU~ in procession to remind us that assistant director of the Social munism as a social problem of ~(9:lC';\I1'il~ ~@C<!n~att:@ we are on our way to heaven." Action Department, National our day?' I think that the Holy But the church building must ROME (NC) - A mosaic of . Catholic Welfare Conference, Father would smile and say, 'Oh, be the image of the entire body Pope John XXIII has been added told 200 priests at a clergy con- but I didn't overlook 'commuof the living Church, and not to the long series of popes' por- ference of the Columbus dioc~se nism.' " only the laity, Father Diekmann traits which line the nave of the' 'that the Pope "is essentially Father Cronin added, "You 273 CENT~Al AVE. continued. Therefore the struc- Basilica of St, Paul's Outside the optimistic." \ . will find under every aspect of Under J!:very Aspect the encyclical-population probture must also possess "a sense ·Walls. WY 2-6216 "He seems to be of the firrri lems, farming problems, prob- of headship," reflected chiefly in The serie", of oval portraits beopinion that men of good will lems of developing nations-the the arrangement of the altar and gins with St. Peter and represents the line of popes to the can solve man-made problems," Pope's uggestions for meeting 'sanctuary. • NEW BEDFORD the threat ,of communism under He said that placing of the present day. With the newest Father Cronin added. Noting that some critics were each of its -aspects." altar in the v~ry center of the addition, there are now pQrtraits building isn't a satisfactory ar- of two Poryes John XXIII. rangement. "To whom would the On of these is the portrait of priest address' 'Dominus vobis- the ant;~n'~e Baldas~?r~ Cossa. . cum'? To whom would he reaa 'who took /tne name of John the Epistle and Gospel?" he XXIII in the 15th century but asked. who later renounced the title. Wall of Separation Before installing the portrait Father Diekmann did not spell of the present Pope John XXII~, Q'\lt any ideal arrangement, but it was debated whether the portrait of the antipope should be insisted that "the sanctuary should be elevated, and the 'altar removed. It was decided to leave it in the basilica because of the must be separated from the nave historic value of the series.' by an adequate space." The 330.-polInd mosaic was deReferring to the Communion rail, he si:lid that "in the course signed by Italian artist Fausto Conti and was executed by the Vatican mosaic laboratories. It L~H1D@$ . ~ccll(!M;:@~~!f~O measures about five feet in diameter. OPIEN IfR!lOJA.V 9 A.M.. to 8 P.M.

. Cites' Optimfism in- EncycUca~

RUB3S0N

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LAUNDRY

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DETROIT (NC) - Pres~dent Kennedy has praised Catholic teachers for counseling youth to combine krrowledge with a genuine love of their fellowmen and nation under God. The Chief Executive made this statement in a message to the .:>pening general session of the 59th annual convention of the National Catholic Educational Association. In his message to Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit, president general of the NCEA, President Kennedy said:, 'Eloquent Tribute' "The an~ual convention of the National Catholic Educational Association serves as an eloquent tribute to the teachers who have devoted their lives to educating · the young. Truly it ca,n be said · that they foster in youth' that love of knowledge which is a wellspring of truth and a source , of national stren~th. . "Equally important is the guidance they give the student to temper the use of knowledge, under God, with a genuine love for his fellowman and an abiding concern for the needs of the mation. "Please extend to the delegates to the convention my congratulations for the achievements of the past and my best wishes for greater accomplishments in the flAt,ure."

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6

THE At-1 r l-l()P-Diocese ,of: Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1962 I

51. Martin de Porres

Worldwide Vision I

Parochialism - the willingness to live solely within the en~my one's 'own boundaries of life OF occupation- is. .. I. of Catholicism. . Catholics must have an interest first of all in <:}od. And then in God they must 'see all other Jhings - their fellow men and all the arts and sciences that pertah't to humanity's progress here on earth and 'its journeYil1 to God. ' . Such an occasion as th~ Seventh Dioc.esan Catholic Teachers' Convention now going on at Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro helps break· away from 1the parochialism of one classroom or one school or one l;lrea . of the Diocese. .: '[ . Teachers - religious and :lay - from the 12 highan~ 59 elementary schools of the D~ocese are gathering to review the aims of Catholic education, to keep u'p to date on Ithe newest methods and texts, and curriculum studies, to draw from one another a g~ater degree of enthusi~sm ,. 'in their vocation and a 'higher degree of purpose in their . dedication. " :'" ' . "j These, m~tings surely breftk down the parochial sp~rit, the narrowness of vision and .interest, the limited horizon which are the contradiction of true Catholic educatIon!I . I At the National Catholic Educational Association meeting recently concluded in Detroit, Father John J. <bon'sidine, a native of New Bedford, urged this worldwide butlook on the teachers present. rhe Maryknoller pointed Iout that the Catholic's interest must be in the human race, destined by God to serve Him :through His Church. This is the spirit in which the diocesan: teachers are meeting.

Coming' Vatica,u .Coun.cil By

~ev. Wm. ~. ~n, C.S.C.

~,Si'onehill.

Professor

--<'0

The Council of Cbalcedon An interval (}f but at. ·years separated the thiN .and fourth ecumenical coun.cils 'of the Church, for' all

abbot at Constantinople, by the name of Eutyches, began teaching that Christ had but one nature as the result of the Incarnation. He . maintained that the human nature was absorbed into the divine. This was a denial of the Incarnation because he claimed that Jesus did not have a human nature like ours. It is, possible that this error arose from a misundepstanding of St. Cyril's terminology in the Nestorian 'controversy inasmuch as he spoke of Christ By, REV. ROBERT ,W. lHIOVDA, Catholic 'Ullliversnty having but one nature in the sense of one person. TODAY-Mass as on Sunday. MONDAY-St. Stanislas, Bisln"1I.'ome of Leo' ' , Baptism is a commission to teach op, Martyr. Despite the fact of Flavian, the patriar~h of ConAt the conclusion of the annual Catholic Library As- aswell as a commission to wor- Jesus' claim on us and 'our acship. The East'er-made Christian ceptance of it, our gratitude for stantinople, summoned the monk sociation meeting, Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh is a prophet as' well as a priest. it, our trust in it ... Despite the Eutyches before a synod of some called .for the "rehabilitation lof words." His request ihag Our 'central experience of wor- fact that His claim is one so in- 32 bishops and 23 abbots. When great validity. . " I '. ship at Sunday Mass is designed, timate as to !nvolve our sharing the latter refused to retract his to nourish us ~ith grace an,d His life, as the branches share here~ical views, he was deposed, 'As the Bishop pointed Ol).t, the present-day world is. with the Word of God, with His the life of the vine and live only degraded ana excommunicated. much concerned with actions., The age is one where IHe and with His truth. So that as long as they have a real or'Eutyches appealed against the formancepays off. It is one' i;mpatient "'for deeds. oui:' tea hi g will not be the gailic union with the vine (Gos- sentence to the patriarch of c n Alexandria, Dioscurus. At the l . .And, men would forget only at their ultimate perillthe teaching of men,but the teaching pel) ... Nevertheless our assent instigation of Dioscurus, Theoof the Spirit of God is weak. 'and our capacity ........ importance of words, for language is. the vehiCle of ideas ., . .."'" dosius II summoned a council fM faithfulness feeble. Our environand ideas shape, the lives of'men and the course of ci--(rjliTOMORROW - ~t: Monica, ment, social habits and customs March 30, 449 at EDhesus ·f') rebWidow. Jesus' raising from the influence our life and thought consider' the sentence made zation. of the mother's only "son and action far more than the against Eutyches. Flavian meanSO many obstacles in the world today - obstacles in dead is theo Gospel meSsage today. It Word which comes to us at Sun- ,while wrote to Pope St. Leo the the areas of politics, peace aclong nations, efforts towiard tells us of the' mysterious inter- day Mass. So we ask the prayers Great. the reunion of all calling themselves Christians - so inhny relation of human -beings, of a bishop who preferred de1lth St. -Leo sent three legates to this -.:ouncil to read the of these obstacles rise from the inability of men to chIn- 'through the Son of Man, which to .i!1fidelity in tOd.ay's Mass. T' . . famous . enables our prayers for one anome of Leo in wll.ich the Pope municate in lang~age acceptable to all. . other to be effective. Our Lord TUESDAY-Mass as on SUD- expressed his official, decisioB Sometimes it IS a matter, simply of translation. One, is teaching us that Monica's day. The Epistle reading, too,' concerning' the points at issue. wag came up recently with ~he horrible thought: "Sup- prayers for her son Augustine, in takes the Gospel theme of our In this letter Pope St. Leo clearly pose Khrushchev really loves, us and it's his interpreter God's providence, contributed Lord as shepherd and the Chris- taught that 'Christ is one Perso& toward his conversion and' his tian people' as His numbered . with two natures, divine and who hates us!" ; .'. fruitful apostolate as a bishop in flock, as the sheep to whom He . human, which are not inte... Sometimes it is a matter of many men 1,1sing he Christ's Church. Mass, especially individually attends. The modern' mixed. same words with far different meanings.· . at the mementos for living and Christian has perhaps a special 'Robber Synod' Upon their arrival at Ephe. Sometimes it is the difficulty ~of finding a vocabul~ dead, always leads us to pray for need to meditate on this symbol, .one another. if his prayer and worship are to sus, the papal legates found' the' acceptable to all parties. . : ' , '. SATURDAY-St. Pius V, Pope. attain the depth and. warmth· council in session under the pres. Yes, words do count. And when men grow impatient Confessor. Not all popes have '"possible. Too many of our expe- idency of Dioscorus. The bishopS of words they ,run the risk or: clouding up their own ~on­ been saints' nor have all been riences, even of ~ur relation- who had taken part in the synod cepts and the' spread of their own ideas: And they tisk great te~ch~rs of the good news, ships, are more or less imper- .which condemned Eutyches were ignoring the' contributions thait others can make to their of the Gospel. Holiness in the sonal. We dare not let this hap- excluded and this council at Church is not a matter of office, pen to our relationship to God: Ephesus under pressure apknowledge as well. . but of personal commitment. proved Eutyches' teaching, conTeaching in the Church' is not WEDNESDAY - st. Gregory demning the doctrine of the' tW(l) · d to th ose w h ose 0f f conf me lce"1t Nazianzen, Bishop, Confessor, natures in Christ. . t 0 JU . d ge w h I IS at 'IS and w h at'.IS Doctor: This Mass, celebrating a Flav~an was severely beaten . t' f ' t y 'W1'th th' orm1 e great teacher and father of the and died shortly afterwards: the, An English' Catholic has said that the Jtu," no h ·10 con t eac 109 0f th e A postl es. Th"IS Church, draws our attention to papal legates had to flee for their dents ,themselves hold thekeyi; to many»roblems in their f unc t 10n .' th e 'b'IS h ops ' t eac h one of the perennial lessons of lives. Emperor Theodosius n, · gIves . . t ' t the liturgy. Christ draws us to however, approved ·the decrees. own hands. Students should: be encouraged to gre~ier mg a· umque au th or1"ty. B U.1 does not relieve the rest of us of the Father in worship not only History books have called this heights of initiative especially, in matters religious. h an d for our sakes but also 10r "the council "the robber. synod- of th e d uty . of t eac h'mg were . can,.. an d th'eref ore 0f others,'" for those who belong in Ephesus." One. President of a secular- college hailed a student- w h en we . . f or zea1. His sheepfold no less than we sponsored reb'eat with the words: "It is a joy to find ithe Iearnmg an d 0'f pray109 Pope Leo condemned this mis'but who for one reason or anCatholics doing something' fo~ the colle'ge at last; u~ to SECOND SUNDAY' AlF'lI.'ElIt other have not yet recognized it carriage of justice and truth in now they have taken, everything and given nothing." I EASTER. The good' shepherd nor found the gate. It is our pub- a council at Rome and sent tWill claims' the sheep as his own; lic worship, above all, that letters of protest to the emperor, There always be Catholics attending non-CatWolic never .disclaims them (Gospel). should instruct, inspire and requesting a new council. Ten schools on every level. Those i in the higher grades eSpe- Our. salvation lies precisely in strengthen us for the witnessing months later (July 450 A.D.) Theodosius died without heir cially should be encouraged to be leaders in school ~nd this fact: Jesus Christ claims us and teaching mission which is and the rule of the empire passed community efforts and to shot their interest· and support as His own, He claims us in bap- ours. tism and in our annual Easter to his sister and her husband as Catholics o~ all t~at is worthy. . j Marcion. baptismal celebration. And, since re>n· Il"'hIL I every Sunday h'as, for the Chris_ IrU (D]IJ'ilIl'DBIJ'il\':lj to UllllSi&R'V~ , General Council tian, the significance of a "little ffl:ll,fro;m.a" Afl'ill1loveli'.Sfl:llIr\\9 A local council at ConstantiEaster,"Christ renews this claim y nople condemned Eutyches and • , at every Sunday's Mass. The FATIMA (NC) - Francesco accepted Pope Leo's Tome. Map. altar is Christ, so it is the most Cardinai Roberti, Prefect of the cion' convoked a general CO unvenerated symbol hi the church -Supreme Tribunal of the Apos- cil to meet at Nicaea but before i., 'f, ' : J I,,;. . (";. :'" .. building.. And around' the altar, tolic Signature iR Rome, will it opened, its site was transferred . }~; ~: ~.' _. • . ,;-i " at least on Sunday, the disciples preside at rites here on Satur- to Chalcedon on the Bosphorous. I gather to be claimed and to ac- day, May 12 and Sunday, May. IS Historians tell us that thh:J .OIFFiCUAll. NEWSPAPER Of THE DIOCESE. OF FALL RIVER cept .His claim,approaching it making the 45th anniversary of council opened on Oct: 8, 451 in , . . I , ,vith the'baptismal sacramental. the first ap.parition of the Virgin the presence of the emperor anell Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River water, on their heads. Mary to the three shepherd empress as the Fourth Ecumen410 Highland ~venue children of Fatima. . ical Council ~th some, 500 to . :Fall River, Mass. I OSborne 5-7151 'Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio' 600 bishops in attendance. With . ~@Ii' . <Q)li'g~ili'ilcoi'~iifr~ of Leiria, who announced the the exception of the pap'al legPUBLlS.HER 'PITTSBURGH (NC)-A tav- Cardinal's coming, said the in- ates and two African bishops, the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. ern on Pittsburgh's North Side tentions of. the mid-May pilgrim- members of the council were GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER rated an '0' for originality for age. to the Marian sanctuary will orientalS. • Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. I Rev. John P. Driscoll The papal legates (two bishops this Lenten advice iJriparted via' be peace in the world, and espe~ MANAGING EDITOR \ a window display card: "If You cially for Portugal anl;l her and a ::>riest) presided, while tho overseas prQvinces. , Turn to Page Seven MUST, Drink, Drink Hereo" Hugh t Golden

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THE ANCHORThurs., May 3, .1962

Continued from Page Six management of conciliar' busilL®~Jo~~@U'@[f ~@)f~ ness was in the hands of imperial By Patricia McGowall1l ~ommissariesappointed for tha~ $~!}u@@~ ~[f@)f®[f purpose. In a few weeks; some 18,904 Diocesan elementary school students will 'be groaning . 'lP'eooIl'llJias Spoken'. over annual examinations - but their toil will be as nothing compared to the work of B~n RcdJac~~@M~ In the first session Dioscorus, preparation going on right now in the Diocesan School Office. There Sister M. Felicita _ WASHINGTON (NC) the leader of the robber council and Sister Miriam of the Sisters of Mercy, the Diocesan supervisors, are hard at work Congressman Don L. Short · of Ephesus, was confronted with his accusers 8J!.d in the third at their twin facing desks. with fractions. The Supervisor A high point of the busy year of North Dakota has critisession a sentence-of deposition They're sifting hundreds of sat down with her for half an comes today and tomorrow cized a challenge to a prayer · was pronounoed against him; his 'questions in every subject hour, patiently helping her with when the Sisters will be a focal recited in New York publie followers, however, were treated taught in the eleIllentary trouble spots; Reward came a point of the teachers' conven- schools as "ridiculous and el&with tar less severity. grades, submitted to them by month later when the little girl tion at Bishop Feehan High plosive." In the second session the Tome teachers throughout the Diocese. jubilantly ,sent a package of School. . A case c hall eng i n g the of Leo addressed to Flavian was They'll standardize them, dou- math papers to the Sisters, "We'll be a hospitalitY com- . prayer's constitutionality is now read in accordance with Pope ble-check for ambiguities, run clearly showing her progr~ss mittee and information center," before the U.S. Supreme Court. Leo's r:ommands and the Nicene. off thousands of copies of each since the tutoring session. modestly rem ark e d Sister The Mid-West legislator in Creed. The Tome 'was received completed test - and get them When the Sisters are pre- Felicita. a statement placed in the Conwith great joy aild shouts: "Peter into the hands of their reluctant p?~ing to visit a school, says Outstanding Recoll'd gressional Record, said that has spoken through Leo." . takers - all before the end of F,ather O'Neill, they'll check One achievement of the past while public schools should not In ;he sixth session, at which the school year. previous work of. students and year that will be discussed today teach or advocate religion, Marcion and Pulcheria assisted, But this is only a part of the make a point of commending · a prOfession of faifr. in accord- Sisters' work. For 21 years particularly noteworthy accom- and tomorrow is the high rating "neither do I feel they should achieved by eighth graders of be a forum for advocating atheance 'Nith Leo's Tome was pro- they've been good shepherds of plishment. ism." mulgated and signed by all the the elementary school system, "You get much further with the Diocese in a· test covering , He also placed in the Record bishops; this concluded the doc- visiting' every. school .periodic- praise than with scolding," says 10 areas of learning that was taken in all schools last Decem- a Washington (D.C.) Evening trinal part of the council. ally, keeping records of teachers, gentle, Sister Miriam. ber. . Star editorial in favor of the To Share lR,esoull'ces· helping decide. on textbooks, .. ,DiscipInnall.'Y Canons. In general, Diocesan students school prayer. "I prefer to think of the Marcion was anxious to have ac" -j as'couriers spreading new tested about a year over grade some jisciplinary matters settled ideas and techniques from school Sisters as consultants rather level and 23 per cent of the than supervisors," says Father to. school. and the council was prolonged to [QlUli1lli1l@1i' ~[9>@@lk~1i' O'Neill. "They visit, schools to youngsters well.' e considered Twin Call'eell's 'Nov. 1. Some 28 disciplinary "ol4tstandingly talented" by the LA CROSSE (NC) - Gov. bring classroom teachers the More than their desks are canons were formulated concern- . Boston College testing service Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin resources at the disposal of the twins, as far as the Sisters are ing the clergy, their conduct, office administering the exami- will speak here on Tuesday, May ordination and rights, monks, concerned. Both were public Diocesan office." nation. 15 at a civic dinner commemoThe Sisters agree, noting that nuns, episcopal authority a~d school teachers before entering "A rather impressive pool of rating the dedication of the in many cases supervisors from the Sisters of Mercy, 'both were jurisdiction. human talent" was the comment Cathedral of St. Joseph the The last of these canons was teachers and principals in vari- individual communities of nuns of Dr. John Walsh of the testing Workman. ,The cathedral will be take care of personal' growth of vigorously opposed by the papal ous schools of the Diocese and service, apropos of the Fall dedicated on Monday, May 14 teachers, suggesting courses to both hold Master's degrees in legates; for it stated that River record. by Francis Cardinal Spellman, be purs1,led and so forth, whereas the see of Constantinople, the education. Another source of pride for Archbishop 'of New York. the Diocesan Supervisors are They have held their school , new Rome, should have the same elementary schools of the Dioprerogatives as that of Rome and office positions since 1941 and more interested in curriculum cese is the consistently good reand new methods of should rank second after Rome. note that Fall River was' the ~ application . cord of students in penmanship. teaching. . Pope Leo protested against this second Diocese in the country Palmer method tests are admineanon which attacked the very to institute such a, supervisory' · istered yearly and a careful reOffice Houl16 primacy of the papacy. When he . system. cord of results is sent from New "Sisters who have taught ill 9 :00.-0:&3 confirmed the decrees of the York headquarters of the penCouncil of Chalcedon, he re- . Fall River, then have been manship teaching institute. except WoCl. stricted his confirmation to the transferred to other· areas, are Two years ago,' Fall River DISPENSING always glad to return," said doctrmal decrees. children did so well that a disOPTICIAN Sister Felicita. She explained It is .said that Nestorius, who play of their writing was a Preacripiolt!) died about the time of this coun- that the clearly defined Fall feature of a national educators' For Eyegl= cil, welcomed Pope Leo's Tome; River' curriculum and educa· conference. Ville<! he claimed that it expressed the tional . goals are appreciated by High Schools 7 No. Main St.• Fal RiV<l1' OS 8-04111 teachings he had propounded. teachers. "They know where While the Sisters are kept . However, it seems that either they're going." more than busy with 59 elemimGreat credit for the well-orNestorius had changed his hertary schools, Father O'Neill also etical ideas or he misunderstood ganizedschool set-up of the keeps track of 12 high schools Diocese was given by the Sisters . Pope Leo's teachings.' NO JOB TOO BIIt'B in the Diocese. Regular princi'to Rev. Edward J. Gorman, unMonophysitiSllll1 ·pals' meetings are scheduled for til this year: Superintendent. NONE TOO SMAlt!. them and curriculum and textThis Council of Chalc,ed.on is From 1932 to 1941 Father Gorbook standards are maintained, mmportant because, in addition .man ran the office alone, setting. as with the primary .schools. ··to a clear definition about the up ail admirable system of recIncarnation, it protested against . ords and curriculum· guides. . imperial claims to decide. doc-' .Still in use is an imaginatively'~ PRINTERS trinal questions in the Church. ! named "shadow card," which \ It could not, however, suppress follows a child from school to . Main Office and Plant the aeresy of monophysitism: school, giving his scholastic reHom~ mado WIN S FELLOWSHIP: (there is only one nature in cord in a nutshell.' A "child acLOWELL, MASS. CAN'DIES Christ) started by EutYdhes. This counting' system" keeps tra~ of Catherine Goulet, daughter Telephone loweD beresy took on a national. char,:" transfers, new students, etc., and of Mr. and Mrs. Julian GouCHOC::OLATES acter in Egypt and the adjacent ~ is correlated with pri'ncipals' GL 8-6333 and Gl1·7500 150 Varietifi territories; bloody riots occurred, . record cards 'and census cards let of St. M~thieu's parish, in Alexandria because of it and kept on permanent file in each Fall River, has b~en awarded Auxiliary Pian~ ROUTE 6 n!!lor . for more than 'a' century the school. a mathematics fellowship BOSTON emperors made desperate efforts Happy Job . to Fordham University. She Fairhavon Auto Theatre OCEANPOR'Ii', N. .II. to subdue the Monophysites. "The warm hospitality we re- is a graduate of Jesus-Mary FAIR~AVEN, MASS. Most of the heretics, though, ceive at the schools we visit PAWTUCKEt, R. flo were not reat' heretics in the makes our 'work very re:' Academy,Fall River and is sense of having false beliefs; warding," said Sister Miriam. presently a senior at Bradthey simply objected 1hat the She noted that hostess Sisters ford Durfee College of Techterminology of their Ale9andrian make a big occasion of the -nology, also Fall River. predecessor, ·St. Cyrll, had been Supervisors' visits, with special rejected and that the distant menus the order of the day and eities of 'Rome and Constanti- a ge!1eral air of festivity in conL!EM~~QJJ~ nople had Jmposed formulas vents, although business as usual T~XACO FU~[L C§[L$ l?i..IlJIMlaaNG lk IHlEAll'~NG. ~N\C. which to them sounded' unor- in carried on in the schools. 'for Do~estic thodox. But pleasant relations are a . . . ·o~< -& Industrial DOMEST~Cg HEAVY Dlrnr Oga. BU~N~~$ '''' §:::: Sales and Next week: The Seventh Ecu- two-way street and Rev. Patrick· J. O'Neill, newly appointed Oil Burnells Service S@O@~ = $@Ilwi~@ - ifTi}$iC@OO@l'(Co@lJiJ menical Council. Superintendent of School$, has . WY 5-1631 many anecdotes to relate of the MABN OffiC!: - 10 DURFEIl:: ST., FAll R~V~~ 2283 AtCIUSIHi\BIEY AVIS. Sisters' personalized interest in !P@lIi'~o@rnru®lI1lt A~WJIi'@'\Y®s) students. NlEW B~IDlFORllll Michael Wojcik, he said, now M@'l,7D@ ~@ml$@Ii'!i)IkJO[,iD , a top student at Durfee High ROME (NC)-Italy's Ch..iauber School, Fall River, while a of Deputies has passed ~ bill to parochial school pupil benefited G~ORG~ ~g NM)~ilE set up censorship commissions from special projects planned for movies and plays judged by the Sisters to challenge his fI!LlJmlbDI7ilSJ - Hs@~nlTil~ "detrimental to public morals." capabilities. A similar bill was passed last Over 35 Years On another occasion a child in "October by the Italian Senate. a fifth grade. was having trouble of Satisfied Service Because of differences, the bill passed by the Lower house of 806 NO. MAIIi>.!I !s'jj'~IEIE'ii' Parliament must be returned for Itali ~iV!ar OS 5a74197 Senate approval by Monday, April 30, when the present cen';' ~ (!J] [lli [g [% sorship law expires. According to the Chamber of Deputies bill, censorship com<C©M'A~'Ii' missions will be made up of govJ IUSfr Across f~e ernment officials, judges and (C@IJ'\l'i!p>~iS~® IDJI7il® CogSieshC8~i, $fr. ISri«:lliPJs representatives of the movies ~QJJD~~DiJ'll(gJ AA©J~®ll'n©~~ FBl1i1e$~ ~(OJll'niS~W @~ and stage. The commissions will review movies and certain types , SlEfQ\IfO«)~ of stage productions and issue t.l SIP~aN(ll $'!i'., !rAIDt~.A vm~ Served Anywhere - AUse a certificate of approval if they WYman 3-2611 are considered to contain nothing STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN harmful to public morals.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3;'1912 •

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Enumerates Tricks of' TradEf For Hopeful W~~~d-IB~ Writer:

By Mary Tulley Daly , , Dear Mrs. Daly: , , For a long time I have wan~ed to write, .professionally that is. Trouble is, I just don't know how to get starte~. This past year, I have writte~ several "Letters to tqe Editor" of our, local paper and' two of them were used.

Subject of these was a tra~- you 'submit your manuscl'i;is, fic light. (By the way, we an' editor'who knows his reade~got the light!) Perhaps if I ship. \ . , , , ; tell you more about myself - Seems to me, Mrs. H., that you you cap help me. We have five have your subject' matter right,. children. The three eldest are in 'your own backyard - litei'married -a n d ally. With a garden which is living, within "the 'envy of the' neighbors\" . there must be gardeners galore 100 miles of our town. We who would love to' get firsthand "how to" information froin have a: boy in eollege and a someone like you. i h . And there must be still other ~~loo:.n hi g wO,uld-be gardeners, like myself, My husband who would enjoy reading and kas a good job fol}owing your adv-ice. Obv~from which he ously, you not only know how wUl retire in to 'make a garden grow, ,but another seven have the enthusiasm that woul~ carry readers through the bugsyears,' so 0 we \' li"eally don't need the money, and-weeds stage -' : thoughI'd like to make a little This summer, as you go abo~t by writing. We have a cpmfort- ,the ,tasks in your garden, you NEW BEDFORD AREA WOMEN: Mrs. John J. able home and a nice garden will be doing what all good which is my pride and joy, and writers find of inestimable Maloney, left, Wareham, chairman. of the Spiritual ibe envy of neighbors. value - piling up a backlog ~f , Development Committee, and Miss Lillian Ross, New BedAs you can see, my' duties research. The s~ills, tricks ¥ ford, president of the New Bedfqrd District DCCW; study have 'lightened considerably. the you will, that ,have becom~ last few years and I suppose second nature to you are exactly schedule of evening's conference progra~ at Stang High. that is why I find time hanging the sort of thing your readers I on my 'hands, especially in the will want to learn and translate Not~e winter. I get so bored playing .int~ their own experience neXt bridge, having luncheons with year., '"the girls" and just generallY . ReSearch Notes I watching the world go by ss I Write down those tricks Il6 NOTRE DAME (NC) ...: Notre C.S.C.., university president, ansit on the sidelines. yo~ go, Mrs. H., and don't tak~ ' Dame University has received nounced the gift. . I have a good education (two 'it for granted that "anybody a million dollar gift from the He said the new hall, by proyears of college) 'and write III would know that." Keep an ac~ Frank J. Lewis Foundation, vidiDl~ a year-round residence, good; clear hand as you caR curate log, also an expense aCi ,Chicago, for construction of a would enable' teaching nuns to see by this letter. count. When you transplant, residence hall for nuns studying earn their ,master's degrees in No Bobby divide plants, rotate and all tM 15 months, rather than through rest, write down how, when and for advanced degrees. Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, five Summers' work as'is now Now that spring is here' and why. These will become yom the case. during the summer, I'll have my research notes from which to garden, sure cure for boredom work during th.e non-gardening,. Grants for New' Colieg'e , The gift from the Lewis FoUndation will be augmented by a In my' case. But I do dread to d f t see another winter come when a~~ °th:e:~dw~~e;~mmer, yaJ"" CLEVELAND (NC)-Urs~lirie $500,000 .grant from the Ford the days are long and I have should have data for many an College for Women here receIved Foundation under the terms of DO real indoor hobby. Many. t'> I I two, grants of $100,000 each an arrangement whereby it is women must feel the same way, ar e. st t 'ght which will hasten construction to give Notre Dame one dollar Mrs. Daly. You could give us s ~ ar er, you ml ap- of new college buildings on a for every two the school reell a boost. if you would lay p~oach.your l~~al newspaper 112-acre site in nearby Pepper ceives in gifts from other . WIth the proposItIon of ~ garde~ Pike' sources up to J:une 30, 1963. down a few "ground' rules" column to start early in the . about the writing business. spring. Or you might try' one of Sincerely, the :gardening magazines which' Mrs. C.F.H. .yoU~ undoubtedly read. i "Dear Mrs. H.: , . Before submitting a manu'; Your let t e r to me, 'as script to a national magazine; your letters to the editor, indi- however, it is wise to study that cate that you have the ability magazine carefully. over a six to express yourself clearly and to ~ight month period. Note th~ cOncisely. You can "paint a, worli length, ·the style, and picture" in words, a first re- tackle a subject- that, has not quisite of a ~riter .. " " bee*. used for a long time, oz1 You do write a legible hand, add your own 'variation and ne~ but for professional writing you findings to a familiar subject. ~, must use a typewriter or hire Gpod luck to you, Mrs: C.F.H.I'I someone to type your material M.T.D." - double spaced and ,with ample margins. This is a minor but important "ground rule." Catholic Daughters Most important, of course, m : that you have something to say Appoint Secretary which will' be of interest to WASHINGTON (NC) - Annel readers. That something will be R. Dillingham of the administra~'I . judged by the editor to whom tive staff of the Youth Depart-I ment, National Catholic Welfare Conference, has been appointed Father Peyton Credits executive secretary of the Junior, Catholic Daughters of America.! Generosity of Women . Her appointment' was an-; SOMERSET (NC-Father Pat- nounced l1ere, by 'Ma,rgaret" J.I rick Peyton, C.S.C., has credited Buckley, supreme r~gent of ·the: the generosity of Catholic wom- Catnolic Daughters of America,; ,en with making possible his and Father Frederick J. Steven:-f Family Rosary Crusade radio son, 'director of the Youth De-I programs and films. partment._ ., 'Father Peyton, in an interview Miss Dillingham, attended I in News _and Views, official Ti'inityCollege, Washington, and I publication of the Catholic has been on' the Youth Depart-, Daughters of America, said "here ment staff for three years. She: in Ohio, it was a $30,000 grant has also worked in ,the office I from the CDA in 1951 that made here. of the National Newman t it possible to launch the radio ,Club: Feder'ation.. program project. ' \ I ! The radio programs in turn .'J Aid:I inspired the 15 Rosary films, WOmen'S, Council Amigos •• ; Hood Coffee Brazil Ice Cream is which are now being shown in made from rich, full-bodied" fresh roasted coffee Latin Ainerica and underdevel- impoverisJ)ed Mothers I WASHINGTON (NC) - The: (that means 'true coffee-flavored ice' cream) oped ',areas of the world, Fatner National Council of Catholic i Peyton stated. with big bits.. of crunchy Brazil nuts mixed Women has announced a Mother's· Ahrough. Don'i let Hood Coffee Brazil Ice Day remembrance' in the form 'I~ Elect Mother General of a donatiqn to assist impoverCream stay at your store, when it would taste . SCRANTON (NC)-Sister M. ished mothers of the world. , so' good.at your ~use todab Mrs. Arthur' L .. Zepf, NCCW : Beata Wertz has been elected Mother General of the Sisters, 'presipent, said the remembrance I Servants' of the Immaculate is called the Madonna Corsage, . Heart of Mary here. ,The Bed- and the donation is part of the I ford, Pa" native succeeds Mother council's Madonna Plan to aid i M. Kathleen who died recently. hungry and anguished mothers. .til

Dame Receives $1 Million For Sisters' Residence Hall

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SAP P 0 R 0' (NC) 'me . prayer and persistence of a five_ year-old Japanese kindergarten pupil' has led her entire family into the Church. Little 'Kimiko Watanabe p;ttt into action the lesson she' learned from the Sister in the Maryknoller kindergarten here: "If you don't pray, Q()d wontt like you." "Each ,even.fng Kimik-o hsisted that her parents and older brothers and sisters kneel and pray with her." Father Bertrand A. qramelspacher, M.M.. of Jasper, Ind., said. "Since bel' ,family knew nothing of God, much 'less prayer, they came to our mjssion to learn how to pray, like Kimiko." This contact sparked further interest in the Church which was climaxed 'when the ent'ire , Watanabe family was baptized.

'Conference to Studly Service Opportunities WASHINGTON (NC) - The second annual Conference on Op.. , portunities at Hofne and Abroad 'for Catholic M~m and Women will be held at th.. Catholic University of America here Sunday. . Specialists will survey OppOl'tunities for service in both Catholic and secular organization. during the day-Ion'g conference. Attending the conference will! be representatives of such groupe ,as the Association for InternaQ tional Development, the Grail 'Institute for Overseas Service.' the International Catholic Auxiliaries, the Women. Volunteers , Association, the Young Christian ,Workers, the Papal Volunteers ,for Latin America, the Peace Corps, the United Nations and , other organizations. '

Grant' for Books DETROIT (NC) - Marygrove College here received ,a $10,000 grant from the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., to purchase books,' Sister Mary Emil, president, has announced. Grants were given to' 12 private liberal arts colleges in.Michigan.

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lBy AUlI411i'ey lP'aDIl1J'il JRilkleJi' The tousle-haired, husky four year old pads softly to the kitchen where his parents sit talking over a late cup cf coffee. Solemnly from the depths of his sleeper he oxtracts an empty nursing hottle. He thrusts it toward his mother. "Fill 'er up," he ' commands. A cautious vet-The greater the preparation, thl2 less the emotional upset. eran of many bottle-battles, Forceful, abrupt weaning is almother sighs 'and complies. most always disturbing to a

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CLAYTON (NC) - Sixteen girls from Fontbonne College have volunteered for mission as_ signments on three fronts. One will be an Extension Volunteer for a year's service in a U.S. home mission field. Eleven will work as lay cate'~ists in the rural areas of southeastern Missouri, where tl' percentage of Catholics is less than it is in China. Four will remain in St. Louis, as "missionaries" to an all Negro parish on the city's north side. The volunteers were recruited by Sister Agnes Patrice Sheehan, who is instructor of theology at the wome'n's college here in Missouri.

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Later she worries, "I'm afraid !be'll take that bottle to kindergarten with biro." Most, parents are not faced with the embarZ'assing prob!em of packing II bottle in the school lunch box, but many do feel ashamed rz their youngmer's attacha rnent lasts more ~o years. In our speeded-up oociety it is considered an accomplishment for the parents £1 a baby w weaned early and completely. But every babr is different. One may cheerfully and finally switch himself to a cup long before his first birthday. Anoeher may insist on a night bott~e well into his third year. , How b Wean No matter when it happens, though, weaning is a big adjustment. Not only must your baby abaridon the loving' closeness tilat goes wIth feeding, but he must learn to chew and drink end master the intricate skills' of handling ti cup .and spoon. There are no ironclad rules, but, these suggestions sho8kl make weaning easier. -Preparation starts early in f:nfancy.If you dislike the idea of nirht bottles, hold your baby ior his last feeding and never put him to bed with his formula. Once he associates sleep with o bottle. it is difficult to change his mind.

child. While your infant still is fully breast or bottle fed, 'you can offer him sips of water, juice, or milk from a small glass or cup. Held upright, even young babies are surprisingly adept at sipping., -Look for cues and encourage growing independence. When your child shows interest in the cup, let him' handle it even if it means spilled milk. l§uftt2.bUe P,eli"Rooo

'-SOme periods in childhood are better than others for weaning. Research indicates that unless a baby is weaned very early - before the end of his first year - he learns 'to enjoy sucking so much that he may fight to retain it. The upset is greatest between 13 and 18 months. But after a year and half the reluctance decreases and by age two most youngsters find life so full and interesting that they are more willing to switch. o

-Qne task at a time. If toilet training is in progess, or if your toddler is working hard to master walking, take it easy on weaning. Once you. definitely ,,start" however,proceed gradu-. ~lly and keep at it. Substitute the cup for one feeding at a time' and wait at least a week before the next switch. Be generous with lapses and regressions,' but try to finish within three or four months. Too much indecisive. wavering is only confusing for mother and child. l

Educator Stresses ~ mportance Of Good Music for Children ,/ BUFFALO (NC)-The president of the National Catholic Music Educators Assocfation has called for a greater effort to make good music available to lrOung people. Msgr. Sylvester J. Holbel .tated that the kind of music to which chlldren are exposed "will greatly determine the place music will occupy in their adult Jives." "One need not be an educated Ilotener to appreciate and enjoy the 'music of great composers," be said in an article in Musart, the publication of the National Catholic Music Educators Assodation. The Monsignor added 0

that members of the association "have a special opportunity to bring music to children and youth." He said that good music "has the unique power to purge the .mind and heart of the grossness of the outer 'world.... and make th~ receptive of the finer things ' of life, even of 'the spiritual."

Catholic Daughters To Convene Mqy 13

MIAMI BEACH (NC)-Catholie Daughters of America from three dioceses will participate in sessions of the CDA state threeday convention scheduled to start here Sunday, May 13. . Overcrowded Schools Mrs. Mary Ket'Inedy of PensaTo Drop First ~rade cola, state regent, will preside at KANSAS CITY (NC) - The the m~eting in the Hotel,Seville Catholic scqool bot.rd here has where Bishop Coleman F. Car-' Instructed parish schools to drop' roll of Miami will be the princi,their first grade if enrollment is pal speaker ,at the closing ban110 hi ~h that other grades are quet May 15. "Spiritu~l Growth and Maturity for the Laity," is GWercrowded. The eight-member board <also the convention theme. Members ordered the dropping of kinder- from the Mobile-Birmingham, gartens which are cotnbined'wl.th St. Augustine and Miami dioother grades and do not 'have ceses will attend. 8Ufficient room or a .separate teacher. In its directive, approved by Asserts Parents Face Archbishop Edward J. Hunkeler of Kansas City in Kansas, the Terrmc C;:hallenge SCRANTON (NC) - Parents board saill: "It will probabU,. not be possible to m~t future edu- faee "a terrific challenge" in ational demands in every 'par- protecting their children from evtt influe~ce of trashy material lib." in the mass media, according to sociologist Michael P. Penetar of Nuns Inherit $100,000 ST. LOUIS (NC)-Fifty years Canisius College in Buffalo. He says there is neeq for "concerted ~o Orner Everaert, then 19, eame as an Immigrant from Bel- public opinion" in working to gium and began working as a remove objectionable material janitor for the Sisters of St. from the media. Soseph of Carondelet at their ''Whether a child is physically Nazareth Convent in nearby strong, emotionally sta'ble, intelKirkwood. He served the nuns lectually capable is determined for 50 years until his death April greatly by' parents," Penetar de20. His will filed for probate dis- clared. "The molding of a child elosed that he left an .estimated is the art of arts and one that $100,000 to the community of requires hard work and,patience mm.s. and love." 0

Plans Nursing Schoo~

CECILIAN SOlLOJISTS: Preparing for annual concert of. the Cecilian Glee Club of Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall RIver, are, from left, Jeannine :St. Laurent Jeannette Robidoux, Vivianne Ouellette. All will be sol~ists at the Wednesday, May 9 event.

inheritance ,Gd~s to Sisterhood After Death of Five Pet Cots SPRINGFIELD (NC)-A cat may have nirie lives, as they say, but just like humans it can be sure of at, least two thingsdeath and taxes. For the five cats that were pets of Mrs. Margaret Montgomery, who died in 1960, death has been long delayed by good care and an ample legacy to insure they continue to live the life to which they have been accustomed. . Forty per cent of Mrs. Montgomery's estate will go to the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament of Corn'wel1s Heights, Pa., upon the death of the last of the cats. Inh~ltance Tax Meanwhile, taxes have caught up with the cats. Illinois Atty.

Diocesan Nurses Plan Biennial Conference The Fall River Council at. Catholic Nurses will hold its Biennial Conference beginning at 5 Saturday afternoon, May 5 at St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River. Principal speaker, Sister Maureen, R.S.M., of Nazareth Hall, Fall River; will be presented at 5:45. Benediction and a banquet at' which Bishop Connolly will be guest' of honor and featured speaker will follow.

DETROIT (NC) - Madonna College .in nearby Livonia has received approval from the Michigan State Board of Nursing to initiate a newly organized program of professional nursing education this Fall. The college, conducted by Felician Sisters, is setting up a four-year currIculum leading to a bachelor of science degree with a major in nursing.

DONAT 30CSVERT INSURANCE AGENCY

Gen. William G, Clark approved an inheritance tax assessment against the cats. Flat Nose, who is only 9 years old ,and has !l longer life expectancy than his four playmates, paid an inheritance tax of $181.83. But Big Boy, Brother Cat, Blue Eyes, and Mommy Kitty, all 12 years old, paid less because of their age. ,They were assessed $15.10 each. Mrs. Montgomery left her estate, which has £I net value at. $13,086, in trust for her cats. William J. Fields, now 72, was left 60 per cent of the estate upon the death of the last at. the cats, provided he takes good care of them meanwhile. He and the cats live rent free in an apartment building that Mrs. Montgomery owned. The other 4() per cent at. the estate then goes to the Sisters at. the Blessed Sacrament.

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, OAKLAND (NC) - The first' spiritual head of' the new Oakland diocese beside California's 'Golden Gate has

38th animal meeting to work fur racial justice lind to share in the ecumenical. movement. Father Francis X. Canfield o:f 'Sacred Heart Seminary, Detroit, 'noted that "the desegregation of our schools is moving along at 'a measured pace." But "how about our libraries?" he asked. He remarked, that "surely the social implications of library service and of the Faith thai unites us oblige us to voice the principles of racial justice where they relate to the use of libraries." ' " Noting that the' Second-Va ti~ can Council's "first emphasis" is on clarifying and advancing the Faith, Fat h e'r Canfield added: "In his own sphere acquiring and distributing books, periodicals and pamphlets - the Catholic librarian can help manifest what is the first meaning of the ecumenical spirit: the Vatican council as a symbol 'and embOdiment of truth, unity and charity." "The truth remains our overall concern," Father Canfield stated, "and where else but in the written records of man and in the inspired texts of Scripture - the materials that we select and catalog and classify, that we promote and circulate _ where else will:' we find the truth expressed and preserved?"

called upon his people to practice I the golden rule. Most Rev. Floyd L. Begin said the" practice of "fraternal char- i ityj, is the "spiritual barometer of our love of God" at his enthronement ceremonies in the new Cathedral of St. Francis de Sales here'. Magic Formula 'During his 35 years as priest and Auxiliary Bishop in the Cleveland diocese, Bishop Begin became widelY known for his work among the poor and the Negroes. He told his people here that God has given "each of us the chance to dispense each , other and others from the necessity of suffering by an act of charity or service we perform." TAKE VEHL: Fou~ postulants don habit of Sisters of Our Lady of La Salette at La "All 'of Our Lord'; miracles . Salette Shrine, Attlebolio. Left' to. right, Sister Madeline of the Cross (Jeanne Marchand, and services to mankind were Attleboro); Sister Mary James '(Eloise Remillard, Douglas) ; Sister Mary John (Lucille truly dispensation.s from the Triilque, East Blackstone); ,Sister Raymond Marie (Juliette Turcotte~ Woonsocket). The necessity of suffering," Bishop Begin noted. "Our Lord was not Attleboro foundation is! the first for the community in -the United States. .. content to relieve only the vicI tims of His own 'day. He found a way to lift the cross of suffering . from the members of' his Mystical'BodY until the end of time. The magic formula is fraternal ,DETROIT (NC) - The editor The words ·are being' "pinned Describing himself'as a "cardcharity." ' carrying member of the extreme of America magazine said :here on individuals and on groups in Bishop Begin urged his people that Catholic colleges must beinprecise and misleading ways," center," the Jesuit editor urged to inaugurate the history of the faithful to the "full Catholic her- he said. that Catholic colleges "stand new Diocese of Oakland by M. ~. SlJ»fJakerr faithfully by our full Catholic iitage of reason," which ~omtiines The term liberal, for example, dwelling for a few moments on CAMBRIDGE (NC) - Father heritage of 'reason~a very pre'both' liberal and' conservative has become "a kind of nasty charity~"the Queen of Virtues." :principles. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., ' l word to denominate anyone from cise amalgam of ideas and prin- presidento of the University of Help Fellow Man ciples that are both conservative _ Father Thurston N. Da~is, JIS .J ., an Americans for Democratic He pointed out that· Christ 'told a college educators' session Action sympathizer to ,some and liberal in the best tradition Notre Dame, will be the 'com'mencemeht speaker at the Masspent His public life removing at the :i9th annual convention 'of freshman caught reading Father' of those words" sachusetts Institute of Techno-' from others the cross of pain and the National Catholic Educatlon- J 0 h n Cronin's 'Communism: Father Davis also called for a logy here on Friday, June 8. suffering; that when He healed al Associations that 'Cathblics stop to talk about the alleged inthe man born blind He also spend too much time tal~ing Threat to Freedom" or Pope feriority of U. S. Catholic colchanged his v~cation so that he pointlessly about "liberals" 'and John's Mater, et Magi~tra'" he leges. . might now save his soul withq,ut I"conservatives." 0 1 said. Alluding to discussions about the affliction. ~ , how -well Catholic colleges con"In giving us the new comtribute to the nation's and the [j'®®~ [F'l}uD~@~@!pl}u®[j'$ !?'@ml©l®rr mandment to love one another Church's intellectual strength, he as He 10,ves us, He also gare us said: "The question has now' been !Pr@lh~em~ @fS©(bg@~ ,J\!.!l~q.B~e His authority, by our charity, to . I ' , booted around so badly that it' change the vocations of. our fel- LOUISVILLE (NC)-Philoso- be heard ,outside our own Cath- no longer has any meaning." lowmen,'" Bishop Begin said. .phers should put their mind,S to olic circles, it can be. only by an "~ objective appraisal of the "Every good deed we do in work on social justice probfems appeal to ethics, and It must be a relative merits of all 2,011 U. S. ,In your own thought, word, act, or omission, I and not leave thf' field of morals natural ethic, not, an ethic sub- colleges made on purely objecprompted by true charity, is ac- entirely up, 'to theologians, a ordinated to moral theology." tivegrounds would put the vast "Throw Away" tually a dispensation from suf- priest-philosopher asserted ~ere. . Father.. Grindel ,mad; clear , bulk of 'our Catholic colleges in· Container, fering," he continued. "Our "We have too often been' con- that he IS not advocatmg any 'anabove~average position with , Blessed 'Lord; the~ef9re, has ac-', 'tent to leave general discussions system of life based upon a "nat- :ft!spect to, all other American tually given us a formula for of social economic and political ural ethic," an'd stated that it is col;le~es," he declared. practically removing the cross question~ to the:social and 'p6lit- ,not possible i'to live solely by an' from th,~ backs of men." ical scientists and their inhral ethic' subordiiiated :'to moral Quc:iHty v"Chek~ aspects to the theologia:ns," theolo~;":, . .,' " Father Carl W. Grindel C.M. of . Callmg upon philosophers to . TAUNTON Receiv~ St. John's University, Brooklyn, do their share in thE: field of . VA .4-6984 said at the 'meeting of the An\.er- morals, he added: "Phl1osophers ican Catholic Philosophical As- cannot abdicate the field of BUSINESS AND' AnLEBORO sodation. '1 morals to the theologians. If they DUPLICATiNG MACHINES ROME (NC) - An audience CA 2-0292 "I submit that this is a sad ~nd do, we w~ll cOI;ltinue to talk only Second and Morgan Sts. with Pope John and participation .danger9us omission," ded~red to ours.e~ves an~ our impact ,~n, in Stations of the Cross in the the Vincentian priest, wh~ is the pohhcal, SOCial a.nd economic FALL RIVER Colosseum will climax a pilgrim- president of the association) thought of the nahon and the WY 2-0682 OS 9-6712 age of 12,000 migrants and refu': Appeal to Ethics ",:orld will c.ontinue to be negliE. J. McGINN, Prop. gees here on Sunday, Aug. 5. "If ' . h t ff t th' ,glble. , ----;-.. we WIS ? a ec e po"Scarcely a day goes by," The pHgrimage will commemorate the '10th anniversary of the hhcal, econom.lC. and sO~lal Father Grindel continued; "that , issuing of Exsul Familia, Pope thou~ht and achvlt~,of our t~e some headline in the newspapers Pius XII's apostolic constitution and ~~ our country, he con~I.n- does not suggest problems that regulating religious assistance ued,. we cannot, delegat~ the <:!IS- the philosopher cO,uld stlidy with for the world's refugees. ' cusslon of mo.ral matters so~ely profit. and offer"to aid the ~o the theologIans. If we hOPlf to solution." The pilgrimage will include AND lLOAN ASSOCJIA']['JION OF A']["]['lLEBORO ,refugees from Poland, Lithuania, Germany, the Ukraine and Spain. ~@IJ'lfil[p>@fr® DIm Au<dIul1'il®, It is bein? promoted by .the A~li'u«:(OJl1'il ~frM<dI(Sl)l1'ilfr$ '4% on all Savings Acc9unts Sacred Consistorial CongregaWASHINGTON (NC) - Gertion, the administrative office of (CAN SAVie YOU UP. YO the Holy See which has jurisd!c- many, 'England, Russia ~nd Extra on Systematic Bonus Savings 25%' tion over the. religious care of France are all in 'competition / refugees. A, special committee with the, U.S. in offering schoON YOUR FUIELBIUS has' been established and is larships to talented African stuBrokston Chem. Co. headed by Carlo Cardinal Con- dents, according to an Ameri~an I falonieri, Secretary of the con- educator. Brockton 19, MaslS. This was the report of Father gregation. -' Joseph M. Moffitt, S.J., director Five airplanes will fly groups of admissions at Georgeto\vn of pilgrims from the United University ,here, who receritly Famous Reading HARD COAL States and Canad,a for the occa- returned from a visit to Nigetia. NEW ENGLAND COKE sion. He and officials fr.om Harvard DADSON OIL B'URNERS and Yale Universities and B~r­ 24-Hour Oil Burner Service nard College went there as: a WHERE MOTHER LOVES NC!lme' ChCllRrmaru committee representing the AfriCharcoal Briquet, TO SHOP 'Edward J. Coogan, North At- can Scholarship Program i of tleboro, is Bristol and Barnstable American Universities to screen Bag, Coal - Chcircoal targestDisplay of Religious Counties Chairm"an of the Par- 4,'000 students for 207' U.S. Articles. in the- Diocese ents' Division for the 100th An- schools which will give 300 niversary development of Boston scholarships, with African gdv15 W~BR STREET College. A past president of ·the ernments paying transportation· , I Serra Club, he is the father of costs and the U.S. government TAUNTON ,eight children, one a senior at paying for the' students' r06m , 640 Pleasant Street New Bedford Tol. WY 6-8271 the Jesuit institution. and board. ! II

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PITTSBURGH (NC) Catholic librarians were told here by Bishop William G. Connare of Greensburg, Pa.,

m:OCESAN WOMEN: At meeting of Diocesan Coun~ Mrs. Helen Donahue, district three president; Rev. Thomas eil of Catholic Women, districts three and four, are, from F. Walsh, Diocesan moderator; Mrs. Gilbert Noonan left, Mrs. George' Bauza, toastmistress and chairman; Mrs. Diocesan president: More than 500 women attended th; Edward Galligan, district four president; Bishop Connolly; . affair at Feehan High.

WASHINGTON (NC)-Critics of· U. S. Catholic higher educa~ tion overlook the achievement of Catholic colleges and universities "through the regular massproduction of solid, decent welleducated graduates," according to Father William F. Kelley, S.J., presiden of Marquette University in Milwaukee. Father Kelley said here he is "angered by the disservice to Catholic higher education of many in our own ranks" who have made unfair criticism of Catholic schools.

"The disservice lies in this: that their focus is so fixed on one facet of higher education, namely what they call the 'production of 'intellectuals,' that there is never sufficient emphasis put on the heroic, gigantic strides taken by Catholic higher education, particularly in the last 30 years," he said. !Expanding Influence Addressing the John Carroll Society, an organization of Catholic business and professional men in the Washington archdiocese, the Jesuit educator cited

the physical growth of Catholic higher educ;:ttion as "sympto~ matic" of its expanding influence. He noted that there are cur'rently 267 U. S. Catholic institutions of higher education enroll-

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WASHINGTON (NC) - For the sixth time in its 1961-'62 term, the U. S. Supreme Court. has dismissed an appeal from an obscenity conviction. . M@~~ Crf(t7)~$ M·g~~o@rro®[1' G[(@U'~~llJl~ The latest such action came as the court refused to review the conviction of Harold S. [[\)~r §<e '~o~[]1{i)Q®~ ~@[l Kahm of Orlando, Fla., who had CLEVELAND (NC) - They "It was a pigmy elephant been. found guilty of sending obshuddered 'when Father John P. trap," the missioner continued. scene material and advertiseKeefe, C.S.C., announced in his "If I had fallen into it no one ments through the mail. Uganda, Africa, mission he was would have found me in a hunThe court did not comment on off to visit the pigmies. Friendly dred years." its action' in dismissing the apnatives warned: "NobodY comes 'So Few of Us' peal from Kahm, whom a U. S: out of the pigmy forest alive." . When the Holy Cross missioner Father Keefe has made several District Court in Florida senrelates ;the story he breaks. into trips into pigmyland. He plans tenced to five years in jail on an ear-to-ear grin and com- to make more when he returns to each of nine counts of mailing ments: '''I'm still alive." his mission-this time with a' obscenity, the - sentences to run concurrently. . Father Keefe, a Cleveland tape recorder to record the pig'Violated Right' native,came home from his mis- my speech. He said he's going to :Kahm had argued that the sion post for treatment of a mys- try to learn their still unwritten ' .lower court .rulings against him rerious: kidney ailment, which :lan~age. now seems to have disappeared. "But I'd love more to' be tak- violated his rights to free speech, . He has been a missioner' in ing back a lay missionary or two and; due process of law. . . Uganda for the last two years....:.. with me," Father Keefe said. While dismissing six appeals he was ordaineq. less than three "That's our main trouble. There from obscenity convictions since years ago--and has been given are so many Africans waiting to last October,the' court has tile "green light" to return to his embrace the God of love in place agreed to rule on one such case, post. ~. of their superstition and fear of involving the mailing of alleged,Elephant Trap pagan gods, but there are so few ly obscene! material. The court at present has that case u~der The pigmy forest, Father of us," advisement, and is expected to Keefe related, is across the Conhand down a ruling shortly. go border from his Bwana mission post. Despite the dire warnings, he set out on his first visit The First Friday Club of to pigmyland and soon found he Greater New Bedford will meet was followed from a distance by tomorrow at M-K restaurant. two of the little men. Speaker will be Carlin Lynch, Father Keefe related he kept director of athletics at Bishop going until hE' approached a Stang High School. Members squared clearing. Then the pig- may bring guests and business mies rushed up and grabbed him will include appointment of a by both arms. They led him off nominating committee to pre-' ~ ~AII ~1iiiJ~ the trail. One pigmy lifted some pare a slate of officers. ~~ fbwfJi ~-4>£l~ twigs and' turf, revealing a huge excavation with pointed stakes CHARlES F. VARGAS ~~~~~~t ~~ ~r@re~ at the bottom. 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE PITTSBURGH (NC) - More NEW BEDFORD, MASS. MClIryknoliers Going than 21,000 Catholics filled Civic ·auditorium here to pray for their To Four CQntinents persecuted brethren around the MARYKNOLL (NC) - FQrtyworld. Called the "Pageant of seven missioners wil take part Prayer," the demonstration feain Maryknoll's 45th annual de~ tured 20 floats which moved parture ceremony Sunday, June across the' auditorium floor de10. The priests and Brothers picting 20 national Madonnas of have been assigned to remote communist-enslaved countries. stations on four continents. Thirty-eight seminarians will be ordained Saturday, June 9 as pries~s of the Catholic Foreign ,IDI ONE STOP Mission Society of America SHOPPING CENTER (Maryknoll) by Bishop John W. Comber, M.M., Superior General • Television • Furniture of Maryknoll. • Appliances • Grocery Bishop Alphonse J. Schlad~ 104 Allen St., New Bedford weiler Qf New Ulm, Minn., will WYman 7-9354 deliver the departure ceremony address. .

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ing some 315,000 students. Taking exception with crItics of Catholic higher education, he commented: "With due respect to the great penitents of the ascetical orders, I always believed there is something unhealthy about self-flagellation for its own sake." 'Capsule Descriptions' He also said it is "difficult to accept calmly the snap generalizations or capsule descriptions of journalists attempting to describe neatly any of our colleges," Father Kelley said that traditionally a university has three major functions: to be a "reservoir" of knowledge; to "enrich . and expand" knowledge; to "transmit" knowledge from generation to generation. "To my mind, in view of this, it is perfectly respectable and professionally 'honorable to concentrate on what seems to be the pl'imary mandates of the university, namely to protect the tremendous holdings of the past and worthily to transmit these to generations still unborn," he said.

'that theirs was "a sacred trust" and one to be exercised with the "greatest of caution and care." Preaching at the Divine Liturf,y (Mass) offered at the Catholic Library Association convention by Bishop Nicholas T. Elko of the Pittsburgl. Byzantine Rite diocese, Bishop Connare urged librarians to use their powers to direct reading habits so as to result "in progress intellectually, '1nd before all else spiritually." "In these days, when the cli.nate everywhere is hyper-sensitive to censorship, this presents a clear challenge to all who deal with books, not only those who wrIte them, but those who, like librarians, dispense them to others," he declared. lForm Clear §tandar~9 "This demands on the part of people like librarians vigilance in the formation of very clear standards," Bishop Connare continued. "It means a careful schooling in the art of criticism, which recognizes in every book the equal importance of its content and its style. This results in an appraisal of every book in the light of its total possible effect upon the reader." However, "the resulting appraisal may not always be acceptable in modern circles, which so often confuse liberty with license, and freedom with the right to any experience irrespective of its results to body or soul," the Bishop warned.

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Tears are generally more Oftelll shellll fOl? ~e flBlg'DilllliJ. GQ ~~e soul than for the pains of the body. The hoUese team OOlllll0 lIlloe when 3 bone is broken, but when the heart is broken. S1llclln ~ll'!il the tears of a young motheR' who has lost ~ child, eb0 beioveall wife who has ios~ h0R' husbancll ell Y0all'S; ~ moth011' who seeo bel' sou live' and die outside the Cbmch, the penitellle whe ~ 6 nmied life saved by the abfwUvinghand olf ~ Priest.

!By lRt. Rev. Msgr. John S. lKelllllledy. The election of Pope John XXIII was follow~d closely by two epochal developments. The first was the ~ssurance that, for·the first time ip almost a century, an efumenical council would be convoked, and soon. The secon~ was an astounding "change of! at-· and in others asserted; them with mosphere both inside and a one-sided stress which was outside the Church." The not only' polemical but actually last phras.e is quoted frOtn a heretical."

Many a' man who has never seen God In the sunlight 02 prosperity has seen Him through the dewdrop of lit tear. In tb0 light of a warm fire, Peter denied that he knew Our Blessed Lord; in his tears he rediscovered Him. But there is also a correspondence between tears and joy, for the Psalmist tells US that those who cow in tears shall reap in joy. The last mention of tears in the Scriptures is this: "He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death, or mourning, or cries of distress, no -more sorrow; those old things have passed' away."

remarkable book by Father Two DevelopJrients Hans Kueng, a German theThe challenge of the Reforologian. The mation led to two developments Council, ' Rein the Church, as the author sees form and Reit. One was along th.e lines of union (Sheed' authentic renewal, as! evidenced and War d . in the Council of Trent, a "uni. versal expression of th~ Church's $3.95) . . The' e ban g e t0 reform of herself from within, which Father .rooted in the central core of C~JUN GLlE MISSIONER: Kueng refers. tholicism.",. (Apac. 21:4 has to do with The other had as its chief note Father Raoul J. Pronovost, longing, striv"reaction, in the serse of a M.S., who ser.ves a leper lIt is said that one's chanc~r Is delng, and prayrestoration aimed' at maintaining termined by' what makes him weep. Our colony at Akyab, Burma, is lng for a rewhat was established and reLord wept three times: once because of the death 01' a friend, union of a 11 storing according to the pattern touring th~ U.S. to raise once because of' tbe impending disaster of a city that knew Him Christians. In these, he says, ofa superior past, with the con- money for a GO-patient not, once because of the sins of the world. But for what Ib.ave there is presently "a totallr new stant danger of stur\.ting and leper hospital' in the Bur-' your tearS beeR shed?' Scripture tells us that God gathers all power and intensity." A mo- fossilizing the fullness lof Catho:" mese jungles. NC Photo. of our tears, as· it were, in a bottle, and they will in some way ment's reflection establishes the licism.". ; be reckoned ilIl OWl' judgment. Will y,oul'l'l be used fOl? or against truth of the asSertion. The centuries between Trent you'? The council, scheduled to o~en and the pontificate' of I Leo XIII in 0 c t 0 b e r, is indisSOlubly 'are seen to have been lsad tim.es. Are you ever sad for' those who leave the Church? Do' Y9U Continued from Page One 'linked with the idea and pr~s- indeed. But with Leo~s advent, pects of reunion: One m.ay ea~l1.y "fresh' air blew thr~>ugh the schools and 59 elementary ever grieve because there are, not enough churches or missionaries expect too much from It in thIS Church, and men breathed. more , schools of the Diocese were to care for the peopies of Africa, Asia ap.d Latin America? Does regard. A realistic assessment' of freely... Leo XIII h~d a fUt,I- "told tc center their efforts . it sadden' you to know that last year's per capita contribution of what it can in fact ,do, is mpst damentally positive re~ationshlp to further the reu.nion· af 'United States Catholics to the Holy Father's Missions was only important. But such an assess- to (the) modern world." Since, Christendom around an accurate 27 cents? More important; do you not .oniy weep but· act? Then ment as Father Kueng shows, his time the ecumenidal' moye- knowledge of what the Church send the Pqntiff's own Society for the' Propagation of the Faith whil~ it discounts oversanguine ment has progressed, arid in that holds; the recognition 'o'f' the. es- the alms with which to dry' the tear-stained faces of 2 billion expectatior{s, still leaves ground of John XXIII we ate seeing sential and non.;.es.sential ele- pagan poor. If we· weep not for them, we shall' truly weep for .for hope of substantial acco~:- some of its fruits, although not ments of the Faith, and the will- ourselves and ou~ children! plishmeht. . ' '. 'its final fruits. i. ingness to explain the 'truths of The direct task of the council, What Can Be Done GOD LOVE YOtk:to R,j.B. for~nO "Thank yon for reminding religion, to' lion-Catholics' with ~ccording to Father Kueng,';is.. Hence what was, hot long charity and using a vocabulary me how fortunate :rr am In having a wonderful wife and eigM a renewal within the Chu:ch, since, deemed out of the ques,.' acceptable to the non-Catholic happy, healthy children." . . • to' M..J.O'B. for $30 "Please use which would be the best pOSSIble ,tion, is now consider~d to be mentality. this as you see fit." ••• to'Mrs. J.M. for $500 "This represento ' . prelude to reunion. The very attainable, but by ~ means part of' an estate we inherited. We want to share it with the "As Cardinal Bea, the head af ootion may offend some, who right away. Father Kueng lists the Vatican Secretariat for Pro~ poor of. the world." •.• to D.F.G. for $1 "Enclosed is a sliver suppose that the -Church, as. it the things which, in his judg- moting Christian Unity,. has obdollar which should shine even more brightly in the hands oil ia at the moment, is beyond ment, can be done to build The Society for the Propagation of the Faith." served, our s~parated' brothers change and improvemerit. But, toward that intensely desirable simply, do.' not understand our / the author reminds .us, the end. Some apply to p~otestants terminology. They have be,en MISSIQN .combines the best features of all other magazines: Church, is in St. Augustine's . to whom he speaks I frankly; away 'from it for centuries, and stories, pictures, statistics and details, human interest. Take an ,words, the faithful P e 0 pIe most apply to Catholics. they have. been thinking of God interest in the suffering humanity of the mission world and send spread over all the earth.. - . Father Kueng lays !down a and religion' against philosoph- your sacrifices along with a request' to be put on the mailing &t This is not to say that, In h~r practical program for the Cath- ical systems and mentalities that of this bi-monthly publication. innermost being, th~ Church olic who wants to knoW, "What are,quite different from the tracan be imperfect, sinful, and can I do?" He demonstrktes how ditional Catholic vocabularies Cut out this collimn, pin your sacrjfice to It and mall it to the either in need of reforming o~ one can suffer, pray,; criticize and expressions and philoso- Most Rev -Fulton 'J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for reformable. For her innermost constructively and out of love, phies. It is not sacrificing or ~e Pr-opagation of the Fa!th, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., being is "Jesus Christ· himself, and act. . 1 ' compromising Catholic doctrine or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE His Spirit, and His grace . •. . In our action, he insists, we at all tc explain it in the lan- 368 North MaIn Street, Fall RIver, Mass. her head, her life-principle, and must "give priority tol charity gUage thlJ,t: these 'present-day hence her Gospel and her sacr,,- and pastoral considerations," nori-Gatholics understand and - YOURS TO lOVE AND TO GIVEI . take pains to "remain part of will accept," Father Driscoll said. ments, are holy." . . Ibe life of 0 DAUGHTER OF ST. PAULLo". God But the Church is in the the whole community," !both be, Five Points ,more, and give to souls knowtedge GIld low of world is in the tumultuous patient and avoid delays; and reGod by serving Him In a Mission which uses the After S11mmarizin'g current· main' coUrse of history, and turn to the sources of things Press, Radio. MotiOll Pictures and TV. 90 bring comprises weak. and fallible and to tradition. Nor does he trends in the present 'efforts to H"n Word to soufs everywhere. ZeoIOUll VOUBB . creatures. slight the obligation of obedi- reunite Christendom, Father girls, '4-23 yoors Interested Ie litis unique Driscoll proposed a five-step Apostolato IACIY write to: Historical Review ence and its concrete fune'. program which Catholic teachers In an impressive historical re- tioning. ! REVEREND MOTHO SUPERIOR could follow: . , view, Father Kuerigtraces the This Stimulating, stretching· DAUGHTERS Of; n. PAUL First, Catholics must unite process of renewal within the book had· an. imprimi I potest, SO Sf. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30, MASS. insbicere prayer that the Spirit Church all down the ages. It which evidently was granted the will touch their own efforts and may validly be said to have be~ Germ.an original. The I r~ader gun with the very first council, puts question marks h~re and the minds and hearts of those that of Jerusalem in Apostolic there in the margins: at :a point, outside the' Church. Second, Catholics must knowtimes, and 'it has never' ceased. for example, where a word There have been' periods of might have ~een l!aid bf' Pius what the'Church teaches and'dislamentable decline, each fol- XII's timely censure' of I "situa- tinguish the· essential from the lowed by a~ aw.akening, a tiOR ethics" or. at another point non"-essential elements. Third, Catholics ·must strive to stirring to' action, a vigorous, ""here the subject of apostolic cleansing. The crisis which' led succession. ~ight, for' p~ecision,. understarid what their non-Cath_ •. olie brothers believe and, withto, the sixteenth century schism have been more fully gone into. out compromise; ~e in 'how many called the Reformation had, been ! areas there agreement. building up for a long time: Thurth, the teachings of the There were those within ,the Age~ C~urch must be· explained in Church who cl~arly saw til!!! Continued from Page lOne WY urgency of reform and heroical- and registered nurses will be language that the' present-day Don-Catholic understands; Many ly sought to effect it. It never: employed.. It is' anticipatea that went far enough. : the lay personnel payroll will problems'in religion are probFather Kueng discusses ob- approxima~ two h ti n d r e-d lems of semantics. Fifth, 'the'abnosphere of reliBe Thrifty - Be Wi.. jectively and candidly the Re- thousand dollars a y~.! . '. gious discussion must alway-s be Alk, your Meatman. for, a formation which Luther initiThe present Diocesan I polley DAVIDSON'S ated; and. points out why, al- for sueh Homes would prevail~ that of charity. Gone Ul the use (MacGregor Brand) though it was occasioned by' The minimum age for. adMiSsion of attack and counter-attack and real and grievous abuses, it would be' 65 yeara, mate and . gone must be acrimony -in any e'SWE£TNlce was, and had to be; rejected by; female, reiardless of race, color ,discusSion aiming at greater love and service of God. The most Bake ·in the8Cllg-No Baiting the C::hurch. and' creed. Present .or orte time -Mac" laylLuther, he says, "took cer- residence within the area 'of eloquent proponent of unity is tain perfectly Catholic principles' the Fall River Diocese w6uld be not only the word but the living , "WINNING FAVOR and in some cases formulated a. re qui rem en t. The rates of the Word of God in the lives Real Scotch Ham flavorll .of Catholics; 'individually and as them so as to give the maxi- charged would be such that reWITH ITS fLAVOR" mum risk of misunderstanding, cipients of Old Age Assistance members ofa religious and civic .community. disunity and sheer contradiction, and Medical Aid to the I Aged would receive the same accom'C1!.!Iban Reh!l9]lees modations as persons entering , Seminary Opelrnin91 MIAMI (NC)-Resettlement of with their own financiat reDALLAS (NC) -A diocesan 35,000 Cuban refugees now quar- ' sources. I junior seminary to train canditered here in other parts of the This project would be fi- dates for the priesthood will be United States is the 1962,goal of. nanced by the Catholic C~arities . opened here next September, JUST at All Leading the Nat\onal Catholic Resettie-' Appeal and would increase the Bishop Thomas K. Gorman·· of ASK FOR Food Stores ment Council, according to· total of Diocesan beds fOr the Dallas-Forth Worth has anSWEETNICS in Massachusetts Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom. Dounc;ed. , Aged to' 808.. 1 #

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Diocesan 'Schools Students Face Catholic University Examina~ion Challenge in Tw~ Weeks

THE ANCHORThurs., May 3, 1962

Politoc«J1 FiguS'e Sues N~ws~~p®r

By Clement Jf. Dowling .. In just 11 days every Catholic student in the Diocese wiU be intent on conquering the Catholic University exams. Demanding in their challenge and indicative of the scholastic standards of the times, the C.U. exams will be held in every school on May 14, Fine Arts, the Fogg Museum at 15, and 16. Needed will be Harvard, the French Center, and extensive k now 1 e d g e of the Gardner Museum. The enAmerican and world history, joyable day brought a greater 0

algebra I, geometry, freshman science, junior chemistry and senior physics. Students with two years of Spanish, French or Latin will be tested. Seniors will be expected to measure up in comprehensive exams covering four years of religion and English. Hardly is Easter vacation over when Diocesan scholars find it im"'£'rative to concentrate on pi'eparation for these exhaustive measurements of their knowledge and fitness. Serious stuo dents find the annual experience a true test of their adaptability to school work. Teachers work wHh and pray constantly for the success of their proteges. Loving parents anxiously await the remJIt for the marks are usually o beacon light indicating the capabilities of their children. C.U. Affiliates . Additionally the C.U. exams determine the level of accomplishment in the various diocesan high schools. Each school is i'ated according to the results. The experience aids in determining if certain subjects have been fully covered. Every worthwhile high school is affiliated with some college. High schools in the Fall River Diocese are affiliated with the highly esteemed Catholic University in Washington. Mfili:::.1ion brings prestige and direction. A student passing the C.U. exams for four years receives an honorary diploma from the University. The award is within the reach of many of this year's seniors. lEaster TrAps L'Ji Ann Motta, first p1'lize winner in the New Bedford Regional Science Fair and pride ex Bishop Stang High, is enjoying her prize. She is now at the Seattle World's Fair for a weck with her mother and two of her teachers, - Sister Superior Anne Denise, S.N.D., principal, and Sister Bernadette Louise, S.N.D., her science teach_ er. Lili Ann set up her science exhibit in the Display Hall of the Fair yesterday to compete against other U.S. area' winners. Winners will be announced tomorrow. Easter vacation week saw oome 40 French-studying students of Mt. St. Mary's, Fan River, traveling to Boston to visit the Boston Museum of

appreciation of French culture to the Fall Riverites. Tripping to Boston also were three students of Msgr. Prevost High to attend the M.I.T. Day of Science. Their moderator, Brother Augustus, was a judge in the physics contest. Tomorrow the Vocation Club at Msgr. Prevost is sponsoriQg a weekend trip to Alfred, Me. to observe life and activities of se!J1inarians. A junior first is claimed by the class of 1963 at Fall River's Sacred Hearts Academy in being the first class at SHA privileged to sponsor its own junior prom. Held Easter Monday, chaperones included Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Connors, Mr. and Mrs. Monsour Ferris and Mrs. Estelle Maclean. Time Ilor Study

As the scholastic drive to the C.U. and June exams intensifies, extra-curricular aetivities are at a minimum. The Coyle band is practicing for its annual concert; a junior prom will brighten the New Bedford Hotel tomorrow night when Holy P:amily's juniors gather for a gala affair chairmaned by Richard Perras and Peter Sulliv~n; and Bishop Stang. will send III delegation of Sodalists next weekend to a two day Sodality Institute at Roxbury's Notre Dame ·Academy, directed by Rev. Frank Holland, S.J. of Cincinnati's Xavier University. In Fall Riv~r, Jesus - Mary Academy's glee club gives its yearly songfest this Saturday for religious of the diocese and repeats the performance for friends and relatives n ext Wednesday night. May is traditionally the month of Our Lady. As usual, students of Holy Family observed the first day of May with appropriate ceremonies. Susan' ~ock had the honor of crowning Mary's statue with girl" class officers as her court of honor. . Bishop James J. Gerrard offered the opening Mass at which the student body received Holy Communion. Oratok"loll,ll Award The Bishop James J. Gerrard Oratorical . Award given annually to a member of the Monsignor McKeon Debating Society for the highest degree of oratorical and foren!iic proficiency has been won for the second consecutive year b¥ Susan Aguiar. The Sister M. Ignatius O.P. Memorial trophy was presented last night to the Holy Family' High School Debating team, winner of the Narragansett League championship.

13

STUDENT COUNCllL: Student counefi officers at Mt. St. Mary .Academy, Fall River, are, from left, Claire Ouellette, Carolyn. Murphy, Sharon Murphy, Geraldine Matthews. Ready to entertain the, Catho_ will be guests Saturday, May 12 lic Teachers' Convention today . at the Diocesan Council of Cathat the Attleboros' Bishop Feehan olic Women's annual convention, High, the Feehan Glee Club will slated to be 'held on the Attledisplay a variety of vocal talent boro campus. and musical numbers. Other Wednesday, May 9 is the date students will serve as ushers, for the annual concert Jesuscafeteria workers and guides for MarY Academy's Cecilian Glee the science fair. The newest high Club. The varied program inschool in the Diocese has eludes' religious, folk and musiworked diligently and long to cal comedy airs. Jeannine St. make its share in the Conven- Laurent, Jeannette Robidoux tion an outstanding success. and Vivianne Ouellette will be Science Winners soloists. Among winners in the 13th ann u a I Massachusetts State Science Fair are Paul Moreau, junior at Prevost High School, Fall River and Judith Bourgalt, Paul A. Duchaine, general junior at St. Mary's Taunton. Paul, a first award .winner, manager, has announced that My showed an exhibit in the field Bread Baking Company of New of biology and Judith's third Bedford will award 0 $500 scholplace project was "Population arship to a prospective semiExplosion in the Microscopic narian graduating this June from a Greater New Bedford World."· May is a musit:al month fur high school. The award, to be made at the Slrea schools. The Feehan Chorw discretion of the Chancellor of the Diocese, will be granted' on 3)w@Il1$@~ D(Wrrnl!:@~ the basis of scholastic, intellec- . Bishop Cassidy Council, Swan- tual and moral qualities. sea Knights of Columbus, has Applicants should contact their reslumed .its series of Friday pastors, who will have full . night dances for teen-agers in information. the Council Home. Theodore To be called the Joseph P. Andrade, chairman of the youth Duchaine Scholarship in memactivities program of the coun- ory of the late owner of the cil, is in charge of the weekly baking company, the grant is the sessions. second given by My Bread.

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NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A political figure has filed a million-dollar suit foor damages here against two news orgaftizations, charging that they had prepared n news release saying he had been threatened with excommunication by the Catholic Church. The suit was filed in civfi court by Ross Buckley, Republican candidate for mayor in the recent city election, against the Times-Pi~ayune PUblishing Co. ~nd the Associated Press Bureau. Buckley is said to have attended a segregationists' meeting the time he was a candidate for mayor. The petition filed in Buckley'o behalf stated that the "defendants, through their agents anell employees, did, acting in concert, prepare a news release to the effect that the plaintiff had been threatened with excomfhunication by authorities of the Roman Cathoiic .Church." Buckley claimed that as a result of the news release he had sUffer~d damage to his reputation in the amount of $500.000, and had suffered mental anguish in the amount of $500,000.

Short Story WinllIer Falls Church Junior CHICAGO (NC)-Jane KrauS'(! of Falls Church, Va., has been

named winner of a nationSlI short story contest for Catholie college students. Her story, "The Marriage Feast," was judged the best cf 200 entries submitted to thla Thomas More Association SlIIlO! the McGeary Foundation. Miss Krause, a junioi' at fue College of Notre Dame of Mal:'yo land in Baltimore, will also l'e-ceiv*, 'the McGeary Foundation Gold Medal. The awards will be presented at the association'o 23rd annual celebration on Mall (I in Chicago.

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.. VFW AWARID: Joan Reilly, magna cum laude senior at St. Mary's High School, Taunton, is the recipient of the MsgI'. James Dolan scholarship awarded by the Veterans of Foreign Wars. She will attend Stonehill College, majoring im. medical technologyo

Minneapolis. MAnnesota fll;W detailed ini'oll'ma~tolll Wi'ite to .

M@Ii'~1h 11'@ M@!.%~ LISBON (NC)-Five hundred young people from Ajuda parish here walked over five miles with their parish priests to the massive monument to Christ the King. There they had a vigil service which terminated with midnight Mass at which all reooived Ho~~ Communion.

CHARLES A. MQJlltPIHfY

I!tegistered lltepresenta.~dVIil Hl5 Pond Stree~ 'Winchester, lWl!.Gs. PA 9-2696

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BOSTON (NC)-:Richard, Cardinal Cushing, critici~ed by a Louisiana segregationist for his membership in the

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NAACP, has urged prayers for segregationists "that' they may correct their sorry wayI' The Archbishop of Boston also praised the "courageous stand", of Archbishop Joseph F, Rummel of New Orleans, who has ordered the integration' o~ N~w Orleans Catholic schools. ,

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'''If denunciation by r~cists is the price to be paid for being' identifIed with Archbishop Rummel I am happy to snare his burdens in whatever way I may," Cardinal Cus1).ing assertefl· He referred to ,criticism di-: . rected against h$m at a ~egrega- . ' tionist rally by Leander' H. Perez Sr., 71-year-old south Louisiana political boss and an. ardent segregationist. Perez one of three Catholics excom~unicated by A;rchbishop Rummel for efforts to block New Orleans school integration, displayed a picture which he said showed Cardinal Cushing pre:senting a check for $500, to the NAACP' (National Assqciation for Ad'vancement of Colored People) at the time that he ac«:epted life membership in the , organization. " It was announced last Decem'ber that,the Cardinal had jQined the NAACP. '

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'The Newman Club at Bradjord Durfee College of Technology, , . Fall River, will hold its, third annual Communion Breakfast on Sunday, May 6 at St: Ma~hieu's Church, Fall River, with Rev. Robert L. Stanton, assistant at i imm'aculate Conception as: guest speaker. ' I The group will attend the 9:00 , o'clock Mass, after which·breakfast will be served in the basement of the church. " Fa"ther Stanton's topic will -be, : .. "Failure of the Young American ' to' Accept Individmil Respo~si-' , bility for His Actions." Father Stanton attended' Bos:ton College, St. Bernard!s ,Sem- inary, Rochester, and St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. In 1950, he ,i entered the Chaplain Corps of I the Navy and was Staff Chaplain \ of a Destroyer Squadron in the Far East.' In 1954, Father Stanton was released from activ.e duty and place( on inactive duty with the' rank of Lieutenant Commander. I He is instructor at St. Anne's ' Hospital Scho!>l of Nursing al).d at the Novitiate of the Sisters of Charity ,of the' Presen.tation of Mary in Dighton.

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THE ANCHOR-

The' Parish Parade ST. MARY'S, SOUTH DARTMOUTH The Women's Guild will hold its annual dance Saturday, May 12 at Stevenson's restaurant. Mrs. Frank S. Gracie and Mrs. Jerald J. Normandin are cochairmen.

ST. JOHN'S, POCASSET /" The Ladies' Guild will serve a breakfast to first communicants of the parish Sunday, May 13. Next regular meeting is set for Tuesday, May 22. A travelogue will be, shown. ST. MARY'S, FAIRHAVEN Mrs. Edmund Carreiro and Mrs. Preston Bouchard are in charge of a cake sale planned for June by the Couples Club. A Summer outing has also been scheduled. Mr. and Mrs. John Rezendes are in charge of the social committee for this month. ST. ROCH, FALL RIVER A 6:30 supper will precede the meeting of the Council of Catholic Women Monday night, May 7. Mrs. Jos~ph Dechiara is chairman. A cake sale will also be held at the meeting. ST. JOHN BAP'.ll'J[ST, NEW BEDFORD To benefit the CYO, members will produce a' variety show at 8 Saturday and Sunday nights, May 5 and 6, in St, John's Hall, Wing Street. Mrs. E. Cardoza is director. Tickets will be available <it the door. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT The Women's Guild will sponsor a whist party Saturday night, May 5 in the school hall. Mrs. Rene Labonte is chairman. Mrs. Louis Rego heads a nominating committee to submit a slate of new officers and Mrs. Ralph P. Souza is chairman for & June banquet. llIOLY FAMILY, 'lrAUNTON The Women's Guild plans a Maybasketwhist at 8 Saturday night, May 5 in Caswell School auditorium, Middleboro Avenue, East Taunton. It will include a clock contest sponsored 'by the parish Holy Name Society. ST. MATIDEU, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women plans its annual Maybasket whist for 8 Saturday night, May 5 in the church hall. Miss Anna Forcier and Mrs. Ernest Parent are co-chairmen.

ST. MARY'S, NORTON - Judson Stafford is chairman of a large committee of parishioners planning the annual parish variety show, to bE' presented at 2 and 8 Sunday afternoon and evening, May 6, in the new parish center. A chorus of 57 plus eight featured players and many specialty acts will be directed by Manuel J. Viera. Proceeds will benefit the center and tickets will be available at the door. ST. ANNE, NEW BEDFORD Girl Scouts and Brownies of the parish will have their third annual parent and daughter Communion breakfast following 8:30 Mass Sunday morning, May 6. Mrs. Robert Lambalo will preside and Mrs Alphonse Spirlet will be guest speaker. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild plans a penny sale at 8 tonight in the school hall. HOLY NAME, NEW BEDlFORD The Women's Guild plans a dance Saturday night, May 12 at the parish hall. The regular May meeting of the unit will feature a penny sale. Mrs. Gerald Francis is chairman of a nominating committee which. will present a slate of officers for , action by members. ' ST. JlOlHlN'S, AT'1l'LlEBORO . A Spring whist to be held at 7:30 Saturday night, May 5 in the school hall on Hodges Street, Attleboro, will be sponsored by the Mothers' Club for -the benefits of its Bishop Feehan High School scholarship fund. OUR LADY OF ANGJELS,

FALL RIVER Parishioners planning for the Feast of Our Lady of Angels will meet at the church hall at 7:30 Sunday night, - May 6. John Souza, president, will name committee chairmen. A planning meeting for Confraternity of Christian Doctrine June acth~i­ ties will be held Tuesday, !VJay 8. Members of the Holy Rosary Sodality will hold a breakfast and meeting following 7 o'clock Mass this Sunday morning and Children of Mary will mark Mother's Day with a breakfast following 9 o'clock "Mass. At 3 the same afternoon May crowning ceremonies will be held. The Council of Catholic Women will observe Mother's Day at ., o'clock Mass the same morning. The CYO will hold a Spring hop from 7 to 11 tomorrow night in the parish hall.

ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER New officers of the, Women's Guild are Mrs. John Malgieri, . ST. PATRIICK, president; Mrs. Donald Hinch- FAlL'lL !!tRVEE cliffe, vice-president; Mrs. ThomThe Women's Guild will hold as Booth Jr., secretary; Mrs. its annual Communion breakfast Raymond Gagnon, treasurer. following 9 o'clock Mass Sunday Annual Communion breakfast morning, May 6. Members are is set for Sunday, June 10 and requested to meet in the lower the next regular meeting will be church at 8:45. Rev. John Delaney Wednesday, June 9. Films show- will be breakfast speaker. Coing dedication ceremonies for chairmen are Mrs. Edwin Jackthe new church w~ll be shown. son and Mrs. Edmund Perreault. The Monday, May 7 meeting ST. ANTlHlONY OJF IDESJERT, of the unit will feature a penny FALL R!VER A visit to Fall River by Paul sale under direction of Mrs. Peter Meouchi, Maronite Patri- Frederick Hopkins and Mrs. arch of Antioch, has been post- Jerry Aubrey. A rummage sale poned for about a month, due to is planned for Saturday, May 5 the Patriarch's illness, it has in the school with Mrs. -Louis been announced by Chor-Bishop LePage as chairman. Donations Joseph Eid. A welcoming pro- may be left at the school tomorgram sponsored by the parish row. will be held at that time. SACRED HEART, FALL RJ[VEIlt ST. ANNE, State Senator Mary L. FonFALL RIVER A youth dance will be held seca will be commentator for a from 7:30 to 10:30 tomorrow fashion show to be sponsored at 8 Monday night. May 7 at Venus ,night in the school. de Milo restaurant by the ST. MllCiiAEIL, Women's Guild. Mrs. Robert FALL RJIVER ' Nedderman and Mrs. Nestor Silva, chairmen, request that all The first Dominga of the Holy 'Ghost will open Sunday at the ticket returns be made. by Sunhome of Alfred Andrews of 107 day, May 6. They will be accepted following the 8:30 and all Wellington Street. One of the parish clergy will lead in the subsequent Masses. Members wishing transportarecitation of the Rosary on Tuestion to the even,: may leave their day, Thursday and Saturday names with committee members, nights at 8 o'clock and all parishioners are invited to assist. also on Sunday. The Men's Club will 'hold its The last kl a series ci Cana Conferences will be held at first annual corporate Commun7:30, Sund8¥ evening, m tbe ion and breakfast Sunday mornmg, June 3. schoOl haP

Thurs.. May 3, 1962

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER ,Mrs. Rene Lariviere heads a nominating committee to present a slate of new officers for the Women's Guild. The guild plans a mystery ride Monday night, May 7. Cars will leave from the schoolyard at 6:15. A bus trip to Canada is set for July and will be open to guild members and their friends. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER Junior CYO members will at..;' tend a roller skating party Saturday afternoon, May 5. A bus will leave the schoolyard at I, returning at 4. The Women's Guild plans its annual installation banquet for June. Mrs. Henry Bernardo is' in charge of tickets. The unit plans a rummage sale from 9 to 2 tomorrow in the parish hall, which will be open until 9 tonight for donations. Also planned for June is a parish penny sale. A Boy ~cout troop is in process of organizatiop in the parish. ST. IDOMllNIC, SWA\.NSJEA The Women's Guild has chosen Knights of Columbus Hall, Milford Road, Swansea, as the locale for a Spring dance to be held from 8 to 12 Saturday night, May 5., Tickets will be available at the door, according to Mrs. Thomas Hazel, chairman, who is aided by, Mrs. Frank Ormond as co-chairman. SS. JPETlER A\.NJI) PAUlL, FALL RIlVER The Women's Club will meet at 8 Monday night, May 7. Mrs. John Markland and Mrs. James Quinn are chairmen for the social hour and Mrs. Raymond E. Dooley, program chairman, announces that a floral display by John Bonner will be featured. It is announced that reservatons for the unit's installation banquet Tuesday. May 15 will close Friday, May 11. ST. HYACINTH, NEW BEDFORD A Maybasket whist to benefit the church will be held in the parish hall, Rivet and County Streets, at 8 Saturday night, May 5. Door and table prizes win be food baskets. Mrs. Lucille Brassard is chaa,man. Sponsoring organization is the parish unit of the Ladies of St. Anne in addition to a committee of other parishioners. ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER A chicken supper is set for 6 Saturday night, May 5 it! the parish haD ST. MARlI. SOUTH ~ARTMOllJTll:l[ The Women's Guild will 'hold its annual Spring dance, Saturday night, May 12, with Mrs. Frank Gracie in charge of arrangements. The unit's annual Communion breakfast, scheduled to follow 9 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, May 20, will have as speaker Miss Eileen Lardner, reporter for the New Bedford Standard-Times. ST. PATIltICJK, WAlItlElHlA\.M . The Holy Name Society will sponsor the: film, "The Triumphant Hour" at an open monthly meeting Monday night" Parishioners may purchase tickets from any Society member. ' A clamboil will be served in June instead of the annual cookout. The Rosary and Altar Society will hold its annual dinner-at the next meeting. Mrs. Timothy Walsh, chairman, with the aid of Mrs. William LeFavor, has announced that St. Patrick's Circle will conduct a rummage sale tomorrow and Saturday for the Scholarship Fund.

15

$M~~Cn't$ Fedelrol l@@1Gl$ U'O SC~(Q)O~~ F©lrf C@n'jl$~D'Ucto<t)n

WASHINGTON (NC) The administration's top campaigner for Federal aid says he personally favors Federal 'oans for certain types of construction by parochial and other private schools. Abraham Ribicoff, Secretary of :1ealth, Education and Welfare, disclosed his opinion while testifying before the Senate education subcommittee. He gave his support to a bill which would amend the 1958 National Defense~ Edl,1cation Act, including a three-year, $375 million program of construction loans to non public grade and high schools. -

S p' E A K E R : Joseph A. Mullaney, Providence College basketball coach, will be guest speaker at the annual Communion breakfast at Attleboro PartIcular Council of the St. Vincent de Paul Society to be held Sunday at St. Mary's Parish Center, Norton.

The loans, approved last year by the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee but never taken up on the floor, would bo given for construction of classrooms for science, mathematicll or modern foreign language instruction, for physical fitneslJ programs or for teaching English to students whose principal language is not English.

ExpC!nsicll1 P~@~iJ'd!Jm CLEVELAND (NC)-A TIultimillion dollar development program to increase enrollment by 1,000 at John Carroll University which now has 4,028 students. is planned. Construction of a $1.9 million dormitory for 400 will begin next Fall. It will be followed by a new science building.

Loans would have to be repaid within 40 years at an interest rate sufficienT. to cover the government's cost. Use of the loann for any religIOUS purposes or for general education would be forbidden.

SACRED HEART, NO. ATTLEBORO Mrs. Leo Piette has announced that a reception for new members of St. Anne's Sodality and a May party will be held Tuesday night in the parish hall. Prayers at 7:45 in the church will precede the meeting.

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PITTSBURGH (NC)-A priest who risked his life in helping subdue a former mental patient armed with an automatic rifle, was among 26 persons who received medals from the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. Father Gerard Griffiths, C.P., of St. Michael's Passionist, Monastery in Union City, N. J., wac credited with preventing possible tragedy on April 13, 1961, when a former mental patient went berserk in the city, The Passionist priest was called by neighbors when the man climbed to a rooftop and thieatened to shoot With his automatic rifle anyone who approached him. Father Griffiths and a policeman ascended to the roof and tried to talk the gunman into surrendering, but he leaped three feet to an adjoining roof. When Fa~her Griffiths and the policeman' followed, the crazed man struck the priest with his rifle and then fired six bullets, all' of which missed the mark. A bullet from the policeman's revolver hit the gunman In the thigh and he was then disarmed.

~@QDOlJ@] Amru~~g~@ITU: ~@~M~O@[(i)' By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. Q. Bishop of, Reno

Mr. Graham Green:e, 'avowed speciaIjst in the"psYchological thriller, has his hosts of addicts and detractors. Which is reasonable enough, considering that His, purpose' is to entertain rather than to edify, and that entertainment " is always the most thankless which we should jump in with of callings. But whatever force. . judgment be passed upon It is possible that we might, him as novelist or moralist, get away with, this without pre-

it cannot be gainsaid that he pos- cipitating World W~r III. It is· sesses an uncanny faculty, for to be assumed that certain risks realizi!lgagiven must be taken in the game of situation for power politics, and from many seeing through points of view this is plausible. it, in the oldOnly it' must be recognized for f ash' 0 ned what it is, a cosmic r'isk involvphrase, by a sor~ ing the very real threat of a cosof intuition. mic war, orie in which we should , So it was, conhave no assurance of' help from ,spicuously, in any source. I 'h i s Caribbean If we made a fearl'ul 'blunder potboiler of a in helping Castro to ipower we NEW BEDFORD CYO: David Loveridge of Holy few years ago, would be wei! advi~ed not to Family and Ann Fortin -of St. Joseph, Fairhaven, display Our Man in Hacompound our blunder by mak- the first place' trophies won by their schools in annual vana. The story , ing his ouster a worseltragedy, Bas~etball Tourney. ' was thin the framework sardonRevert to ColoniliIism? /' , ically rid~culous, and the ':ast' 0f( , BuLlet us suppose,I that the' characters a projection of :lay ,thing '..ould work. W:hat then? 'all't;dpants Praise , figures against the familiar What is our plan for Cuba? Shall Pre-C""'"1l1 te.fl:tMll'eS tropical background, steamy :,tnd, we, place in power ohe of the oppressive, feverish and sinful. multitudinous politic~l groups" Aim~ YOUNGSTOWN (NC) A Nevertheless, as a rehearsal of which are now' proliferating o~ total of 884 couples attended the DETROIT (NC) - The true "Besides the love of wisdom what actually took place in Cl,lba American soil in the !beatitude purpose of Christian education there is ..Iso the wisdom of love. 10 hours of Pre-Cana lectures in within months after its publica- of safe exile, and which range .is to offset as far as possible It is not just that in the classthe You'ngstown diocese last tion it suddenly assumed ,~he from clerical through '¢onserva- the effects of original sin, Msgr. room we sometimes talk about year. Almost all were unanimous stature of one of the Major tive to liberal and socialist? William J. McDonald, rector of God, but that we must be con- in their praise of the pre-marital instructions. Prophets. . There are literally ~ozens of the Catholic University of Amer- stantly affirming, even though Msgr. Benedict Franzetta, diFor reading it you we're cTr- these groups, filling the air with ica,' said here: not always explicitly, the pri,rector, distributed a ,questiontain 'that something dire ar d their own contentions. IHave' we "Our teachmg must be shot macy of the spiritual. naire to each couple, asked them drastic must happen, and happen sorted them out and yp,ade our through with a spiritual quality "W'th t dr . to fill it out anonymously, and soon, in a country and a society choice, or are we to let events that pervades, permeates and 1 ?u. ~wmg ~ny moral tell him frankly what they liked so fundamental,ly corrupt. What take their course, staftding by penetrates a,ll that we do," he !esso~s l~ IS stI~1 pOS§Ible, ~ven happened, of course, was Fidel with an air of benevolrnce? Or said in the closing address to I n . t e Impartmg of. subJects or didn't like about the lectures. The critics weren't at all critical. Castro. are we to revert to a I form of the annual meeting of the Jes- WhICh do not cal~ ~or dIrect ref,A non-Catholic participant erence to. the J?Ivme, to stamp Total Political Vacuum colonialism in, C';lba, after we uit Educational Association. wrote: "It'E too bad more have denounced It everywhere The meeting, held; in ci:>nj unc-. our teach.m g" WI th the hallmark e else in the world in Africa and Now history, so far as churches, don't require these imtion with the 59th annual con-' of our faIth. lmow it, did not go quite so far in the Far East?' i, ' vention of the National Catholic Msgr. McDonald ,said that portant preparations. It was eduas the building of a let~al plant How should we explain this to Educational Association, brought wherever feasible there should cational along with being fun." in the central Cuban ~Ighlands the Belgians and the Portuguese, together some 275 Jesuit edube even closer ,cooperation be.... Among the other remarks: "Marafter the pattern of a gIant vacamong others? : . cators representing secondary tween Jesuit and other Catholic ,riage has become more sacred." uum cleaner., .', McKinley's 'Gospel' "The rea~m, they gave for the schools"colleges and universities, institutions and organizations. ~ut it did. i~volve fantas\es It is just over 60 ye~rs since wife not to work were sound and "This will be more and more ,qUIte as terrIfymg: a band of we "redeemed" Cuba from the and ,seminaries. are being considered fully." "It Msgr. 'McDonald spo~e on "The needed in certain areas as we thugs drafted into power be~ause nefarious depotismof Spain-acgives the young couple a good of a ~Qtal political vacuum;. good cording to the gospel 'of Wil-' Jesuit Impact on American become increasingly conscious of feet-on-the-ground this-is-whatHigher Education as Seen by a the enormoUs task, with which men reduced to an exhaustIon. of liam McKinley, But it Idid not Catholic Co-Work~r." 'we're-getting-into approach to moral stamina, down to the POI~t take us long to discover \that we ,"CathoFc edu'cation differs our whole Catholic system of ed- marriage." where they no longer cared who, did not know' quite what to do even on its intellectual side be": ucation is faced in the future," or wh!lt took over th~ country; with all these little bro~n peo- cause we have a command to he said. ' R. A. WILCOX CO. even me~ of superlatIv.e moral pIe, any more than the Spanish ~ove God with our whole mind. Stature., lIke the ArchbIshop of before us. ' I This power of intellectual affecOFFICE FURNITURE Sal'\tiago, led irito judgments so' , So it was that taking good care tion is frequently forgotten," he ' In Stoclr for Immediate Dellvol'l1 wildly erroneous as ',to' make us to protect our sugar invebtments said. Paul A. Ruggerio of St. Dom• DESKS • CHAI~~ gasp.' we left them to shift for themInic's parish, Swansea, a student .Now: wit? a!l the garnere~ 'selves, in t~e' fond hope t~at they FILING CABINETS at Rochester Institute of'TechnolWIsdom of hmdslght, we are pre-: would become model citizens of ,Wedding} Bells Peal ogy. has been named Historian t FIRE fiLES • SAFfE5 pared to give the Cubans lectures a model republic. No sm~ll part Wnt~ C@!PlIJ)@r Ril1lg$ " of the Empire State Province of FOLDING TABles on the, virtue of prudenc:" or of Castro's popularity haS stem, LIMA (NC)-The church here Newman Clubs. The appointAND CHAIRS would If we w,ere ,not so uncom.., med fr:om his ability to Icarica- in Peru was decorated, the priest ment came at a provincial confortably conSCIOUS that our own ture this monumental folly, ready. but the bridal couple had vention held in Rochester. RugAmerican .State Department and, Real Question Remains , lost _ their rings. Confl.\sion gerio last year was named 22 BEDFORD 51'. our AmerIcan press ~oth swal-, , We have a monkey 'by the tan reigned, until ,the young 'Amer- Member of the Year of his local FALl\. RIVER 5·7830 lowed ,C.~stro as readIly ~s the in CUba, a monkey which now ican -mIssioner swung into ac- ~ewman Club. ,mostilliltera~e peon from the looks very much like an infuri- tion. sugar 'plantatIons. So we were ated ape. It is' more thah pos:.. Not one to stand [n the way all gl;llled by the Great Imper- sible that we may have Ito act of true love, Father James J. sonatIon. again in the: case, in "~erl hemi_ Madden, M.M., rushed to the mission's tool shed and with a 'Castro Must Go' spheric self-protection. I pair of p~iers fashioned two Today, especially after the, But' theOreal questio~' r~mains INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC fiasco of th~ Bay of Pigs, we 'are' have we a plan of actIon ,ready, rings from some heavy, copper wires. With profuse thanks to screaming for revenge. We want' not only for the operationi itself, OD Castro out at any cost by any but for the day after, when the, the ingenious' Maryknoller, the bride and ,groom met at the altar means, No~e so resentful as he: guns are silent? I who has been gulled, and we in- . It i~ time for our State Depart- 'on time. ' deed have been the cosmic, ment to advance beyond the . ltOllYld!$ !f>1i'@;~{i'@ chumps the suckers more con- thinking of a Baptist seminkry in temptlbie than .those who mer-' Topeka, Kansas. ~ SACRAMENTO I (NC) - The ited the raucous scorn of the late ' . I State AS$emblv has adopted a St. New Bedfo<d : Miss Texas Guinan. U (to ,.. /!,lL n· e'.Jl resolution commending Bishop ... <> All of which is fine. We are .~. '!l..<\t!IulfllO~U:::S ~er(gJ Charles. F. Buddy of San Diego agreed, one and all, that C_~tro G!l'(lJOIl'\1 h» ,KGJi'econs i , in connection with his 25th anniversary as' a bishop.. The resomust go-if he has not already, SEOUL (NC) _ Almostl four gone in substance if not in "million .,pounds of relief grk.in is lution said Bishop ,Buddy has shadOW. At best he is an insane , , . 1 on its- way from U. S. Catholics "performed' se.rvice of an outposturer, at worst a diabohca to 80,000 needy 'Korean f~rrlilies , standing character both for his Church and 'his community genportent. to relieve the "Spring huhger" INCORPORATED 1937 erally." Cosmic Risk ' that is a yearly problem irl. this SQ, with that facility in offer- \ country. : · ~<><><><><X><><>~<><>"\) ing advice which is our endearCatholic Relief Services-Na, A fAMllV YRIEA'Il' ing American characteristic, tional Catholic Welfare Cohferthere are those of us who would 'ence sent the grain to Catholic · . lBA~-la-©) (C:~~«:c{IE~S suggest to President. Kennedy parishes around the country for that he give Cuba one more , distributiofl ' to, the poor and ~O)~rn:lL~W~ month to .oust Castro, failin'g needy in the next three months. .DAMICS ColI. COIl.8.INS, !C.IE., Pr$5. · 0' -1?fg\~M~, Local priests, acting with the Registered CivU and Structural Engineer A"'k ~iI!l>""IRII!i1lT\lDli'B@li'il welfare officialll of local go~,ern- '~l45 Washington St., FairhavenO Member National Society Professional Engineero .. \G''''''''''~ , ments, will supervise the distri- v ", Just off ~oute 6 . SAN JUAN (NC)-The Cathbution. The list of needy petson's IrRAIi\lCaS 11.., COUDN$, Jilt, fl1'ElClS. WY;7-9336 olic-backed Christian Action .is prepared by the local weifare 'li'I-lIOMAS ct C:OWNS, $QltV. Watch for Signs 'party has, asked, the Puerto ,officials, so the distribution IWill Rican Supreme Court to accord ,be-as always with CRS-NCWC While out f~r a, Drive ~(;ADlEAA'\t' ~'~llm.~DN@ ;:l~lLl!. R6V~~, M~~~. it full legal reco<1nttion as a'·, s,upv.lies-::-on the basis of "ileed ~ Stop at this Delightful SpotO major political pany: not creed;" ," 1" b<><><><><><>'<><><><><><><>q'll

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(HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1Q6217

Enduring Society Needs Perennial Sound Philosophy

Int@IT'fai~~

to AJd drawing up lists of homes will- . zation, the Voluntary Hostels ing to take in some of the 12,000 Conference, whose launching shelterless who wander through was largely the responsibility of the city strets. The organization the Catholic Herald. The St. is also making plans to help Vincent de Paul Society, the Legion of Mary and the Cathyoungsters in trouble. olic Discharged Prisoners' Aid An Anglican, Capt. Noel Lys- Society are among Catholic orter-Binns, has been amed first ganizations cooperating in thfl . fUll-time director of the organi- 'project

LONDON (NC)...:-Catholics are cooperating in a new interfaith organization to help London's homeless.

SOUTH ORANCE (NC)Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh says any civilization that seeks to endure

With Anglicans and other Protestants they are cooperating il' plans to open hostels, psychiatric clinics and training centers for the unemployable. They are

must be anchored on a perenilial philosophy and a transcendental faith. The Bishop told the 19th annual symposium of the Catholie Renascence Society that a thousand . years hence our science will be as dated and discredited as is now the science of a thou-. sand years ago. Transcendental Faith

But the values that devout faith and sound art, including literature, find valid today will be as valid a thousand years from now as they were two thousand years ago, he stated. SPEAKER: U.S. Secre"Hence th~ importance of art tary of Health, Education and letters in a civilization sometimes exclusively enamored of and Welfare, Abraham Ribithe changing sciences," he con- coff, will deliver the annual tinued. "Civilization needs a' convocation add res Ii at perennial philosophy as well as a Chicago's De Paul Univertranscendental faith to provide substance in the midst of the sity and receive an honorary shifting emphases of technology. doctorate of laws Wednes"Such a philosophy: and such a day, June 6. NC Photo. faith were valid when our machinery was limited to the wheel; they will still be valid when scientific warfare has reduced us once again to the primitive simplification of the wheel." VILLANOVA (NC) - Father Presumptive Humanity Albert J. Nevins,·M.M., editor of "They are valid now," the Maryknoll magazine and presiBishop concluded, "and any dent of the Catholic Press Associvilization that seeks to endure ciation, received the St. Augusmust integrate its science with tin Award of Villanova University. . the postulates of these testimonies to reason and faith.''' The award is given annually Msgr. John M. Oesterreicher ·to 'a person who has achieved "distinction in the field of comof Seton Hall University told the Society when science fails to munications journalism." The take into consideration the presentation was made at a "wonder" of humanity it be- dinner here before some 250 stUdents; faculty members and comes too presumptive. "What starts out as a humble former award winners. The award was established in quest often ends as the presump1956 by thE' university to honor tion that nothing is barred from man's knowledge, that he can an outstanding person in the control and .dominate nature's field of communications arts and secrets," he stated. "The wonder to encourage young people to of knowing remains a wonder follow careers in this field. Former Reporter only as long as it keeps clo~ to Father Nevins, a native of the wonder of being." . Yonkers, N. Y., was a reporter Manipulator of Man on the Yonkers Herald StatesMsgr. Oesterreicher warned man, before' he attended Maryso-called "bioengineers" w b 0 knoll Seminary. He was ordained dream of juggling an embryo's to the priesthood in 1942, was sex or size, of transplanting a assigned to the staff of Maryknoll fertilized egg from one uterus to magazine and 10 years later another or developing ail embryo was named editor. in culture in a laboratory jar. . He is alse director of Ma·ry"When man becomes the knoll publications and writermanipulator of man," he de- producer of more than 20 ·docuclared, "this is no 'longer a threat mentary films. He was elected to the poetic imagination. Here president of the Catholic Press man's very humanity is 'at stake." Association in May, 1960.

(Split. or Cut-up Ib 3 I c) WHOLE

Villanova HOlJ1ors Father Nevirrns

of

Priest Says Anti-Red Undermine Bases of ST. LOUIS (NC) - Self-appointed anti-communists, who attack schools, churches and sources of public information, are actually wrecking the structures of American society, Father Edward Duff, S.J., said here. Acknowledging the existence of a real communist 'conspiracy, he said it is finding, its "strongest support" from the very people who are working in an extrem.ist way to fight it. Father Duff said "self-appointed anti-communists" are "the agents of anarchism, determined to create a vacuum that can only be filled by history's tamer of chaos - tyranny." Outmoded PhllOf!Ophy Father Duff, of the St. Louis University Institute of Social

Wants Used Books

B rot h e'r Theod~re, C.S.C., Brothers of Holy Cross, Columba Hall Mission Society, Notre Dame, Ind. has issued an appeal to Catholics for used missals, prayer books, catechisms and religious books of all kinds for use in mission lands. They can be sent to him at the book rate of rime cents for the· first pound and five cents per pound thereafter. clearly marked "Book-.It

~xtremists

U.S.

S9cn~ty

Order, ~s editor of the monthly magazine, Social Order. In an article in the magazine, he said the anti-communist extremists are working actively to institute an outmoded soci~l philosophy. "More· probably consciously than innocently, they are exploiting the fears of communism to cover their attack on social policy democratically arrived .at over the last three decades,'~ he said. . "They are beguiling their listeners that their target is communism while they strive to annul .one of the purposes and functions of our national government as declared in the Preamble of the Constitution-'in order to ... provide for the common welfare.' " Divide, Demoralize He predicted the anti-communist extremists will continue their attacks against U. S. schools, newspa{lers, and churches. . "The result is to' divide and demoralize .us," he said. ~"They will; predictably, call for drastic reduction of taxes needed to pay for our defenses, they will advocate economic policies .calculated to destroy our alliimces, deprive ua of access to raw materials, and leave us isolated, enfeebled and vulnerable.It

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THE ANCHOR-Dioc~e of Fall River-Thurs.,. May , 3, 1962

Glorify Memory Of Mexican Hero

,

Amero(@tJ1 Farmers Ne:®d ,

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Sixty students· from St. Mary's University, San Alltonio College and L. W. Fox Tech high school here will cooperate with the Republic of Mexico by participating in a marathon in honor of the general who commanded the Mexican forces which defeated the French at Puebla on May 5, 1862. He was Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza, a native of. Goliad, Tex., then a l'art of Mexico. The students will run with an urn of dirt from Goliad to the international boundary at Laredo next Saturday and Sunday. There the urn will be turned over to students from Mexico to run it to Puebla in time for a Cinco de Mayo centennial celebration. U. S. Cooperates The distance from Goliad to the border is 165 miles. Thp marathon is expected to require 22 hours. Two runners will cover each segment of the route, one with 'the container of dirt from Zaragoza's birthplace and the other with a lighted torch. Also cooperating in the marathon are the U. S. Department of State and the U. S. Air Force.

S~P~@[fU' @~ G@Ve[frrnmerufr .

By James L. Vizzard,

s. J.

I

Msgr. George G. Higgins is in Europe in conne(\tion with work for the' forthcoming Vatican Council. In his abs~nce, this 'column has' been written by JFather Vizzard, Director of the Washington Office of the' National Catholic Rural JL.ife Conference. .

Even if it does not ],'ivaI our defense expenditures, six billion dollars is a lot of money. That is approximately the size of the current budget of the U.S. Department of Agricll1ture. Not a few non-farmers wonder whYi farmers 'des~rve or need that kill(~ of for emergency gifts of food for support from gove.rnment. famine relief and surplus food To' city taxpayers It looks bartered for strategic defense like' their pockets are being materials. .• : .

~.

Thes.e pr~grams, 1:>e~ond b.em,g " d to fill the jeans of their plcke . They divide the an expressiOn of our nation s country COUSInS. . . f h Id' six billion by the less than four practIcal concern or tt.: e wort ~ '11' f s in the country hungry, are an essen ta l par 0 .ml IOn . ~rmthe average farm.er our foreign policy and' should be' an d enV1SlOn . . t A ' 'It b t tUn a $1 500 check each year char¥ed no to gnc~ ure u ;:rou:h th~ generosity of the to elther ,the State Of De~ense BLESSES AIR AMBULANCE: An amphibian aircraft, USDA. And they don't like it. Department budget. : donated by Catholics in the U.S. to the Oblates of Mary They like it even less since Less Than Ha~f they know the Government has Subtract, the cost of i a~l these Immaculate for their work.in the Sulu Archipelago, Philipahout ,nine billion dollars of programs from the A~nC?Iture pines, was blessed in 'Manila by Father (Lt. Col.) Cipriano their tax dollars tied up in s.t~ck Departme.nt budget ary.d It beS. Arcilla, Chief Chaplain of the Philippine Air Force. piles of unused food and flber. comes eVldent that a great deal Even if they have not actually less than one-half of that budget F&ther James A. Holland, O.M.L, (behind chaplain) is the seen them, they have heard of represents a subsidy to. farmers.· pilot. NC Photo. the countless barns, bins, caves But why should they get any end warehouses, as well as sur- subsidies at all? . One farmer plus ships, that are bulging with answered that queStion colorwheat corn cheese, butter and fully, even if somewhat super7 dried 'milk.' Just handling and , ficially: "It's no fun to be sober," storing these sur p 1 use s is he said, "when everyorie else is TORONTO (NC)-"Church at.In the midst of suffering, Is located In Southern India. Here, costing something like' a billion drunk". " tendance is excellent, yet the IIOme -few years ago, Monsignor Paul Chittilapilly founded the dollars a year. What he meant, of course, was crime and vice situation has Damien Institute for the care, of Calm Analysis that in one way or ianother . worsened i~ the past two years" Lepers. Because of the difficulty of The city taxpayers' unhappi- ,every other major segmento~ in Ontario. a' Protestant minister finding the qualified personnel necness is climaxed by the eviden?e our economy, is subsi?ized or told ~he Royal Commission 'on essary for the success of such an that despite years of effort aqd assisted by the Govern~eiJ.t and Crime. Apostolate he was inspired in 1955 alm'lst .countless billions of dol- why should farmers alone be "We have continued to deliver to aitempt the foundation of a new . lars the farm problem seems no denied such aid. the message, but· I suppose we Religious Community whose members closer to solution today than it Enormous Productiyity can be accused of having failed would devoie their lives to the care was five, 10, Qr 20 years ag\>o , On a more profound' level it to get it across" said the Rev. of ·the Lepers of India. In 1960 the They are just abo'-!t fed up w~tp. can be pointed out th~t when James R. Mutchmor, secretary Holy See approved of his plans and the mess and close to the poul-t farmers have done a spectacuof the United Church of Canaon January 25, 1961, the 'feast of St. of revolt. , larly successful job of providing da's Board of Evangelism and Paul's conversion, there came into A few pertinent facts and a food and fiber for the A'merican Tht Holy Palhtr's Mission being the SAMARITAN SISTERS. In Social Service. The United little calm analysis may reveal consumer and, indeed, Ifor the Church is the largest religious , for Iht Orimtal OJurrb preparation for' the establishment or a different picture. and i~dic~t~ hungry and needy of th~ whole denomination in Ontario. this Community the' first three young Indian girls who. were that much of the dlstress IS mlS- world why should they, n9t be Rev. Mutchmor also said that , to be the pioneers began the study of nursing in England. Havplaced and ~isinformed. A protedted by their Government "honesty and sobriety don·t seem ing obtained their nursing degrees they entered the novitiate breakdown, for mstance, of the from a threatening disaster not to mean what'they used to." of an established Religious Order. Last month these three girls USDA's-.pudget makes ~t cl:ar of their own making? , The Royal Commission on made their first vows as the charter members of the new Comthat farmers are ~ot gettIng rlch It is precisely the e'10rmous Crime was set up by the Ontario munity of SAMARITAN SISTERS. Of seventeen aspirants to out of the pubhc treasury. A . efficiency and productiYity of government on the insistence of this new Community two are now studying nursing in Ireland large part of the budget never the American farmer that is the legislative members who feel and. four are studying medicine in England. The government of ends up ~n farmers' pockets. major contributor 'to "th~" .farm that crime in Ontario is a matter India ~nd several European Congregations of Religious are It . should be obvious o~ :e.:. problem. ,"No individual :farmer, of immediate concern. helping to pay for their studies. By 1964 Monsignor Chittilapilly flectIon that most .of the bI1hon no matter how big can have any hopes to launch his major program of Leprosy control with his doll~r co.st for handling and significant effect' on th~ total own doctors, nurses and technicians - all of .whom will be ©!b$<e'1'V@U'~ . stormg surpluses goes not to volume of production or' on the SAMARITAN SISTERS. JFor the stability, growth, and goocll Conu'nued from Page One the. farmers but ~o tru~king and price received for his c~oPs. administration of this infant Congregation a Novitiate House of council are still under discusgram s~orage~ flrms, msurance One hold-out, or ~;ven a its _own is needed. Can you help build this house and thereby sion." compames and brokerage houses. thousand of them, woulcj. make be instrumental in building a new Community of Religious? On Cardinal Bea said of the nonItems in Budget a wholly imperceptible dent in the day Monsignor Chittilapilly's appeal for help arrived the The hundreds of millions of the - supply and in the l price. Catholic observers, however, that same mail' brought a check for $1,500 from a generous bene"normally except in exceptional dollars which are spent for 'Without Government prpgrams factor whose accompanying letter gave permission to use it school lunch arid milk distribu-, of price support, surplus r¢moval" (cases they' will not assist at where we thought it was most needed. This money was immemeetings of the commissions tion programs are primarily' a and production controls farmers diately sent to Monsignor Chittllapilly to begin wot'k on the subsidy not to farmers but to the would go broke almost! over'" . themselves,· but will be kept in::loviatiate now so essential for the SAMARITAN SISTERS. formed on these matters via the children and their parents. The, night. I Much more money, of course, will be needed to provide a suitsecretariat for unity ..." thousands of meat and food in-:1 Million Jobs I able building. Many little gifts make a big gift like the $1,500. 16 Pass Ideas Could you send a little gift? Or maybe a big one? spectors carried. on the US~A Such a development wduld be Observers will be able to pass payroll are for the protection.. t 1 f" thl f f disastrous no on y or e ar- their ideas and suggestions to his O' consumer.s. . h' elf but Iso for the "None of MY business" secretariat, which in turn can ConservatiOn payments are m~r. Ims . a I ' How often have we 'heard people use the above phrase? l'erlong-term investments, often ~rulhons whose l~vestmentlsand send them on io the appropriate haps we' have used it or have been tempted to use It ourselves, . h ' d"d 1 Jobs depend on hnt!. Four out of commission. Thus they can posuneconomlC for t e m IVl ua 10 US' b 16 million of either in actual words or by our actions. The child In the poster sibly take part' in the council farmer but necessary fox: the every : . JO s'.. , .. asking for a foster home, the stranger who needs a blood transdeliberations; even if only an protection of the nation's future. them,. are mvolved. m proYldmg fusion, the elderly with no place to go, the poor of other lands . indirect part, 'he sa~d. In the' USDA -annual budget matena~s and se;vlce~ ,for; farm 'who need food and clothing: these things, Indeed, are "none of Questioned whether there was Is found over a half billion dol- pro~uctlOn. a~d l~ stormg" proOUR business" unless following the command of Christ we any news concerning a possible lars for 'rural electrification cessmg, dlstnbutmg and I merwish to become neighbor to" everyone in need. For only ONE ~eeting between Pope John and rural telepnone and Farmer'~ chan~ising farm products:. DeDOLLAR A MONTH-by joining one of our Mission ClubsOrthodox Patriarch' Athenagoras' Home Administration interest-: press~on ~n. the fa.rm mea~s de. you can make .the aged, the sick, the orphan "YOUR business" bearing loans on which the re- preSSIOn m t~e Clt,Y too. I • . of Constantinople, Cardin-al Bea and become neighbor to people truly in need. Will you join one payment record has been close For somethmg hke on~~f1fth said relations between the Patriof these Clubs and send us a dollar today? to 100 per cent. of ta~e-home pay, the. a~era.ge arch and the secretariat are ex" Other items, such as the sugar ' Ame:lCan ~onsumer b.uyS f dlet cellent. But any meeting between PALACE OF GOLD CLUB the two spiritual leaders depends and. wool support programs, are that IS so nch an~ :raned t?a~ he (Care' of the Aged) self _ financing, though their has to s~end addltIonal ml~hons on their own negotiations rather than oil thesecretatiat, he said. .0 DAMIEN LEPER CLUB listing in the budget swells the for. welght-reducer.ll an~1 anCardinal Bea also was asked total by several 'hundred mil- taclds to countera~t overmdulORPHAN'S BREAD CLUB lion . gence. Food today IS by far the whether there are any plans for .. Food for Peace gJ,'eatest bargain on the m~rket. considering clarification o.f reMOTHER'S DAY GIFTS lations between Catholicism and Even the. cost. of feeding' Boon to Consumer I Three suggestions: Judaism. He replied that his secstarving pheasants and other The very productivity of the retariat has already draw·n. up wild life, presumably for hu-. ,farmer, which threatens' him 1. Mass for her special intentions If she Is living; rot' the toea proposal on this matter for dismane reasons and for the benefit with disaster, has been a boon pose of her soul If she Is deceased. cU!jsion at. the next meeting of of the nation's avid sportsmen, to the consumer. The few billion the' council's Central Preparatory 2. Perpetual ($20) or Annual ($1) Me.nbershlp In the Catholle is charged to the farm program. •dollars that are charged to the Commlssio'r.. Such matters are Near East Welfare Association. (It might surprise and shock consumer as taxpayer to keep i under the seal of secrecy, and some people that more money is the farmer from going under is 3. A years enrollment . , ($12) in one of our Miss~on Clubs. he did not elaborate. spent each year for pfeeding a small price to pay. I migrant birds and animals than This is not, of course; an ~ rFUli'sl!' VCh8ll'ilil"eer for feeding mig r a'n t farm endorsement of limitless :sub- ... workers and their children). sidies to farmers, nor of farm BEIRA (NC) .,.- Dr. 'Lucil\no FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preside,,' Informed observer- "ave -long :programs that simply willi not San Sebastian 'Artesga, 35-yearMl9r, JOI.'" T.R;"· 'Nai'l Sec', recommended that another very work. But if social justice means old pediatrician, has arrived lar item in the USDA budget anything' it demands that a - here to work as a medical misSetl4 011 ClOlllmIlOIJotI_ tol should be transferred to. other nation in one way or andther sionary. He is the first doctor to CATHOLIC NI!AR EAST WeLFARB ASSO¢IATION departments; that is, the two provi<ie adequate compens~tion .volunteer for such work in 480 lexington Ave.. at 46th St~ New York 17;~. Y.' billion dollars artd more spent to those who serve the nation Mozambique. Portuguese' east fO,r the ~ood for Peace program, welJ ' African territory•

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Weekend Baseball Proves' Popular for School Teams , By Jaek Kineavy Anymore of that kind of unusually fine Spring weather of last week will be making softies of those who participate and supervise Spring sports programs: A veteran baseball coach, Howie' Ferguson of Newton High, for years contended that the Parochials took a 4-1 record into first two weeks of Apnl play this week. 'Coach Jack Noprovided bet t e r playing brega's club put a four game weather than did the latter win streak on the .line against

part of the month. And he had Apjxmequet on Tuesday. Judging 'by their run producstatistics to prove his point. This tion last week, Holy Family apyear proved an pears to be in high gear. The exception. Blue ran themselves into the A good size . ground in a 23-7 triumph over turnout was on Dim~ on Tuesday, then came hand at Alumni back with 18 more two days Fi~ld, Fall later against Apponequet. River last Sat·· urday for the First baseman Richie Frechette Durfee _ New and pitcher-outfielder Tom MerBedford gam e edith have been giving the Blue which the the long ball consistently' and hemesters took each of the starters had at least by a 4-1 margin. one hit in the Apporiequet game. mgh school The loss of Leo Paradis who baseball might well profit from pitched Holy Family to the increased weekend scheduling finals of Class B last Spring was which would give ~terested indeed severe but apparently far adults an opportunity otherwise from crippling. Paradis now atdenied them to see various clubs tends Stonehill College where he in action. From a player's point is playing centerfield and leado~ view, a crowd lends atmosing off. phere and 11ft to a ball game. Case-Holy Family Coach Don MonUe's undeThe Case game could be a feated HiUtoppers have another hummer, especially in the event home date this Saturday when of a Santos - Meredith dueI. they are scheduled to meet Whether Coach McCarthy holds Rogers' High of Newport in mn his ace for the Parochials reexhibition tilt. The Rhode Islandmains to be seen. Prevost, the ers have a solid ball club bujlt pre-season choice, cannot be around veterans Caswell and Swistak, both of whom' have lightly i'egarded. Santos, incibeen named to tlie All R.I. . dentally, currently leads the loop Schoolboy unit that may make a ' in strikeouts with 44. His only loss was-an opening day 7-2 setpost season tour of Panama. On back at the hands of Somerset; the mound for the Newport club is Charley Kaull who last year Frank Sullivan, Cardinal shortwas named to the All-America stop in his third year of varsity basketball squad. 'competition, is getting the good Belting Berube wood on the ball. Sully has I:apped out 7 extra base blows, The shift to first base duty has including three home runs, and certainly agreed with Woody at this writing is third in batting Beru·be who has blossomed into in Narry with a .477 average. a long distance clouter this Frechette and Meredith lead the Spring. Always a good hitter, parade with marks of .534 and Woody is off to a great start in .529, respectively. the extra-base department. His fifth inning triple against New Biber stOry Bedford was his fourth of the A humorous incident which still young season. In his pre- might have proved disastrous vious trip to the plate, Woody occurred in the Somerset-Diman belted a Davenport serve down- game last Thursday. Veteran artown, the ball rolling to the dis- biter Ray Biber gave the play tant clubhouse in left centerfield. ball signal, stepped in behind the Getting back to thIs Saturday Raider catcher and· called two ball bit, we applaud the efforts pitches before it was noticed of Coaches MonUe and Charley that he had forgotten to don his Luchettl of New Bedford to pro_ mask. Commented the startled mote high school ball. Both have BIber, "I thought I was seeing long been exponents of weekend the ball better than ever." Coach play. We realize, of course, that Jim Sullivan hastily 'fetched an there are certain limitations in- extra mask and the game was volved whIch make it virtually resumed. Impossible for some schools to The quip was typical of the play Saturday ball but for many quick Irish wit for which Ray it's simply a question of going is noted. This is his seventh year along on a traditional five day behind the plate for the Raiders week. and during this time he lias This week proposes to be a earned the respect of all with telling one in Narry League whom he has been associated. He competition. Coach Jack McCar- has a new partner on the bases thy's league leading Cardinals this year in Ray Billington who have the toughest ,row to hoe. needs no intrOduction on the On Tuesday they were at home local sports scene. Hanging up 00 fourth place Prevost. today the serge after long and merlthey have a date with Holy torious umpiring careers are Family in New Bedford.. The Waltei' White and Tom Burns.

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WASHINGTON (NC) - A st. Louis girl and a New York youth were named winners· in the eighth annual oratorical contest sponsored by the National Catholic Youth Organization Fedei'ation. ' Betty J. Deckert of St. Louis was named winner in the contest's teenage section, while Rob-· ert J. O'Connell of New York took first place in the you,ng adult division. Runnerup in the teenage ~ tion was Michael Norelli of New YOi'k. The second place in the young adult section went to Robert Bach--of Buffalo, N. Y. Miss Deckert represented tbe teenage section of the st. Louis .ArcluUocesan Councl1 of Catholic Youth. O'Connell and Norelli :reprelleDted the CathoUe Youth OrganbattoD of a.e Jfew York

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the Catholic Young Adult Club of the Buffalo diocese. The winners competed here against other finalists from dioceses throughout the country. Miss Deckert received a' $400 college scholarship donated by the Catholic War Veterans and a personal trophy. Norelli also i'eceived a personal trophy. O'Connell received a $25 government bond, and both 'he and Bach were given personal trophies. The awards were presented at a luncheon by Catholic War Veterans national commander Albert J. Schwind. Each contestant in the ~ompe­ tition was required to give a formal address OD the 1961 U. S. Bishops' statement "Unchanging Duty in a Changing World," followed by an extempoi'an~us talk on a designated section of Dis Holiness Pope John's' enqdkaJ, Mater et Magistra. <G".

19

THE ANCHOR-I);ocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 3, 1962

/Bruce V:ItJ)!anfe Takes Year 011

Ree~ters N. B. Tech Next January Accoun~ing Major Star Performer in Two Sports By Frank' Trond

. An athlete who plays two of, the leading collegiate sports and excels at both, Bruce Violante of New· Bed-

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ford compiled an impressive .340 batting average last Spring over the course of his first baseball . . . . . '~ .... r season at New Bedford Institute . ~1~ of Technology and he finished "',_,-~the .recent basketball campaign '. . . . ,~ w.t"'J \'.....'~\i",. with an average of 20 points a game for the Whalers. ,~~~ Bruce, who is presently taking 1 -'I ! a year off from college, will be . ... returning to NB Tech next January: But the fine all-around athlete, who also played soccer for' the Whalers, will definitely be playing the diamond sport during the Summer months. Active in Summer His last Summer vacatIon Bruce' starred as a third sacker for the Smiths batting .390 as he spent a good part of the time in the cleanup slot, for the team which clinched the New Bedford Twilight Baseball League championship. When not in the lineup for Smiths, Bruce played for the Perfections in the CYO Subui'PASTORAL ENLIGHTENMENT: Rev. John J. Hayes, ban Uagu~ last Summer. His pastot/of Holy Name Church, New Bedford, explains the average for the Oilers was also well up in the .300s and his posi- value of a college education to Bruce Violante. tion was again the hot corner. squad last Fall. Being the recipient of a Circle Crimson Stall' A communicant of Holy Name K Club scholarehip at New BedThe son of Mr.' and Mrs. , Church, Bruce has played base- fOi'd Tech is but one of many Manuel N. Violante of 14 Ban- ball since he was a Little honors and awards that have nister Street, Bruce is presently Leaguer. He played Pony League come Bruce's way. . employed as a tree surgeon. He ball, he played for New Bedford Bruce has tentative plans' to hopes to keep the job, which he Post 1, American Legion, and play in the Twilight Baseball finds interesting, until he i'e- also CYO baseball. League again this Summer - a " turns to Tech after anothei' Accounting Major loop loaded with more than its semester. An a CYO hoopman, Bruce share of former professional A 1960 graduate of New Bed- was named most valuable player players - and he will more ford High School, Bruce starred of the annual Easter Tourna- than likely be playing in ld during his three years on the ment in 1960. At New Bedford least one other league. hardwood and as a baseballer Hig·h, the same year, he was While Bruce will be active foi' the Crimson. He played two voted most underrated player Qn in outside leagues, his return to years of varsity basketball and the Crimson basketball squad, college will not be soon enough put in a season as a jayvee hoop- when much of his vital play- to suit the Whalers of New Bedman,. while he recorded three making went unnoticed. ford Tech. successful years of baseball at Await Return NB High. , Majoring in accounting at As a schoolboy the 20-year- Tech, Bruce would like to beold Whaling City athlete saw ,come a teacher-coach following mostly leftfield action and his· his college days. His subjects last batting average ranged around semester were accounting, histhe .320 mark. Bruce, who stands tory, marketing, economics, 5-11 and goes a solid 180 pounds, communications and French. left little to be desired as a hoopman at NBH, where he aJso played soccer during his senior Contractors year. Shifts to Infield The Whalers of New Bedford Tech will miss Bruce over the first half of the next hoop camfr.. delivery-Cal! paign. The loss of any player who can average 20 points a game over the course of two seasons and his first two years of college, at that - is not 373 New Boston Road 944 County St. to. be taken lightly. New Bedford In baseball at Tech, Bruce Fall River OS 8-5677 started in the left field position last season, .but was 'then switched to the infield at the FOUR CONVENIENT OFFICES 10 SERVE YOU shortstop slot. He was a halfback on the Whalers' soccer l

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20

THE ,...~ ..,..." ,",!"ce~p. ('If Fa" River-Thurs., May 3,1962

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T~fee: Leading, Scholars in Each Graduating Class

In·· 10 High:· Schools· of·Fali. . River Diocese


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