05.17.62

Page 1

The ANCHOR .

F~~U ~OVefl',

V

JC.

N

\

"

M@§s., Tlhlull'sdayu Mf;Y i10 f'll1 ©

=,~@ _IT_ o _g...:.6_ _ 0_._&

.Catholic Charities Begins ~29 Hearts in One' Appeal In Paris1ws on· Sunday

c

"Twenty-nine hearts in oneH - the annual Catholic Charities Appeal that touches every heart enters its second phase next Sunday when 12,000 men and women will visit. every . Ca~hol~c ho~e in the diocese to receive contributions to help to operate truly ___charItable mstItutIOns. The demand upon the Most Reverend Bishop will increase even more next year when he undertakes the establishment of the fifth diocesan home 1~~2 for the Aged and the In.

firm," M. Harry Condon, lay 1962 Th A h PRICE lOc chairman, emphasized "today. e__n_c_o_r__~$:::4.~OO~P~er:...y~e~a.. "As a father and as a businessman, I fully realize that t!I costs are continually climbing.

T S ", N T· 'aJunton atlve 0 erve As Holw Cross Father ~

Ordinary Shifts Curates, Places Newly Ordained'. ~

~~~ ~~~~~e~:eBii~~~~\:sc~~~

.... cerned. The demands made daily upon him are greater every day," the Attleboro lay leader stressed. "The success of our Catholic · Rev. Mr. Henry B6urgeois, C.S.C., son of Mr. Vital Charities Appeal rests in the Bourgeois and the late Mr~. Eva M. Bourgeois, of 20 Smith 108 parishes of the diocese. The Street, Taunton, will be ordained for the Holy Cross Fathers· manner in which the parishes organize and the enthusiasm ~t 10 A.M. on Ascension Thursday, May 31 in St. Joseph'§ with which they make their Chapel, Holy Cross Fathers contacts has always been the S~minary, North Easton, by r '-~T---:;;;;;~""'S;;;;3r:r;::Tf!;!i, deciding factor in our success" Most Rev. James L. Connol-' Mr. Condon said, adding "this Iy, D.D., Bishop of Fall year it will be the same." River. . Turn to Page Fourteen Rev. Mr. Bourgeois will offer 1Irls· first Solemn Mass in St. J~cques Church, Taunton at 11 .I A.M. on Sunday, June 3. Rev. .John P. Lucey, C.S.C. will be archpriest; Rev. E. Peter Royal, e.s.c., deacon, and Rev. Daniel REV. BERNARD R. KELLY REV WILLIAM F. MORRIS Gamache, sub-deacon. The sermon' will be pr~ached by Rev. Transfer of two curates and the assignment of four Roger P. QUilty, C.S.C., rector newly ordained priests are announced today by the Most of Holy Cross .F·athers Seminary. By Russell Collinge Rev.' James L. Connolly, Bishop of the Diocese of Fan · A graduate of Coyle High School, Rev. Mr. Bourgeois As Christians it is re- River. Rev. William F. Morris, assistant at St. Mary's served in the U.S. Air Force for . quired of us that Charity be Church, Taunton, has been five years and attended Bryant Christi mouth, Provmce of Nova Scotia. a part of our daily lhres . . • transferred to Corpus ,Canada. College before entering the The Chancery Office has also So we're Christians and we Church, Sand~ich, and Rev. Seminary. He received his A.B. know abOut Charity and we're Bernard R. Kelly, assistant announced the first assignmento d~gree from Stonehill College. all for it ... we got to be kind, at Holy Name Church, Fall of the four priests newlyAfter completing his philosophy and - er - well, charitable. And, River, has been transferred to ordained last Friday evening by courses he was sent to the Holy REV. MR. BOURGEOIS Bishop Connolly. All will serve sure, it's not easy to have the St. Mary's Church, Taunton. Cross Fathers House of StudiesRev. Thomas J. Leblanc, as- as assistants. kind of Charity that the Saints lin Le Mans, France, the Mother Rev. Philip A. Davignon g<>el had - but, all in all, .we do the sistant at Sandwich, is returning ~ouse of the Congregation ~f , the new priest from 3 to 5:30 P.M. on Sunday, June" 3 in the best we can where we can. Look, to his home Diocese of YarTum to p.age Two ~ly Cross. now that family that lost A reception will be held for Cotillion in Taunton. , everything in that fire. We joined with the other neighbors and raised money for them and donated clothing and furniture . . . so you can see we do practice charity. So far, so good. But just sup· Mission appointments to Honduras ann<>unced by the VATICAN CITY (NC} - There will be free discussion. pose find some child wan«:::umberland, R.I. provincial house of the Sisters of Mercy deringwealong the road - both during the coming ecumenical council and the public will include Sister Mary Johnella Dailey, R.S.M., .transferred parents are dead and the kid be "suitably informed" about its work by an enlarged from SS. Peter and Paul School, Fall River, to St. Ignatius is sort of lost and bewildered press office, His Holiness Pope John XXIII said here. Tho School, Belize; and Sister ferred to Mazapan School, La and crying and sure does need Pope stressed these two Mary Mer cit a Oannon, Ceiba, first staffed by the Sisters help. We know we ought to take points in his address to the session of the Central Pre.. the kid right home and swamp B.S.M., fro~ St. Louis of Mercy in 1960. . closing meeting. of the sixth paratory' Commission for. the Turn to Page Twelve council. School, Fall River, to St. Turn to Page Fifteen. , Pope John told the commiseatherine Element~ry School, sion that while those taking also Belize. part in the council will be 'Sisters of Mercy have been helped by the three years of working in Belize since 1883, preparatory work preceding it, when Mother Austin Carroll led' there will be "free discussion • group of five Sisters from • . . for the good of the froo New Orleans to establish St. assembly." . By Avis C. Roberts eatherine's Convent in the "He added that "We have atSaturday marks the first Pontifical Mass of His' Excellency, the Most Rev. Joseph tended lIonduran capital; to a greater development The Sisters first opened a W. Regan, M.M., D.D., first prelate ordinary of Tagum, Philippines. Bishop Regan is of the press office so that pUblic private convent school with an currently at his native home in Fairhaven. A former parishioner of St. Joseph Church opinion may be. suitably inenrollment of six pupils. The formed." IIChool now enrolls' 450. The in that town, he was the first priest ordained in his parish. Sharing in Saturday's celeThe work of the commissioa Sisters also taught 75 pupils in bration will be the Bishop's opened with propbsals by the a government school J;Upervised 90 - year. - old mother, Mrs~ Prepatatory Commission for by the Jesuit Fathe$. They now Mary M. Regan, who had Bishops and the Government of teach in three go v ern men t Dioceses. These. proposals de'alt not seen her son for four" sdlools with a· total enrollment with 'coadjutor and auxiliary years, and his sister, Sister Rita o:f 2,105 pupils. bishops, the mission of bishops ·The . community also staffs a Marie, a Maryknoll nun who has and the care of souls. minic, at which 2,234 patients been serving in Formosa. "And Then the commission turned our father is celebrating in were treated last year. Valuable to the study of proposals on the aid was rendered inhabitants of heaven," Sister Rita Marie said care of migratory groups, 01Il Belize by the Sisters during last simply. catechetics and on the instruc. The Pontifical Mass will be ¥~ar's disastrous hurricane. tion of adults. sung at 11 a.m. in St. Lawrence In addition to Belize, the SisProposals made for the agenda ters are in La Ceiba, Honduras. Church, New Bedford. At the in following days touched upon same hour Sunday Bishop Regan 'l'his mission was established in the prohibition of books and on 1959, at which time two Sisters will offer a low Mass at St. the questions of excommunicaJoseph's, where he sang his began work at D'Antoni Hospition, suspension and interdict. ilal. Sister Mary Jam e sin e first Solemn Mass in 1929. After a' recess the commission The new bishop was conseReddy, a graduate of Mt. St. resumed its work with an exacrated at Christ the King CatheMary ACl!demy, Fall River, is mination of a consititution presently director of nurses at dral in Tagum, Davao, April 25 (statement of teaching) on the by the Most Rev: Salvatore Sino, ~~ institution. Church. This constitution was Sister Mary Reginald Kinsella, titular archbIshop of Perge; the proposed by the preparatory • graduate of Holy Family High Most Rev. Clovis Thibault, MARYKNOLL FAMILY: Mrs. Mary Regan with son, Theological Commission. P.M.E., D.D., titular bishop of School, New Bedford, previously After this, proposals were preMost Rev. Joseph W. Regan, -Maryknoll Missioner, and assigned to St. Catherine Con- Canata and the Most Rev. QuenTurn to Page Eighteen daughter, Sister Rita Marie, also of Maryknoll. Turn to Page Eighteen :wnt." Belize, has been trans~

And Charl~Y 1$ G,eate~t Of Virt-ue~B

Sisters of Mercy . To Work Among Honduran Natives

.Free Discussion Will Mark Coming Vati.can Co~ncil

Missioner, First Priest in Fairhave,n Parish, Now First Prelate of Tagum, Philippines


2

I

.

I

'Catholic Agency' To Continue Formo!)Q Aid

THE ANCHOR-Oioce~e of F,.,II ~iver-Thurs., May, 17, ·1962

Diocese of FaII River

WASHINGTON (NC) Catholic Relief Services National Catholic Welfare, Conference will continue its

OFFICIAL Transfers. Rev. William F. Morris, assistant at St. Mary's C~urch, Taunton, to Corpus Christi Church, Sandwich, as assistant. urch , Rev. Bernard R. Kelly, ass~stant at Holy Name F·all River, to St. Mary's Church, Taunton, as assista,nt. Rev. Thomas J. Leblanc, assistant at Corpus 9hristi Church, Sandwich, returns 'to his home'Diocese of Yanpouth, Province of Nova Scotia, Canada. . I Transfers effective Wednesday, May 23, 1962.

Cr-

Appointments I Rev. Philip A. Davignon to St. Pius X Church, South Yarmouth, as assistant. I Rev. Arthur T. deMello to Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Taunton, as assistant. . Rev. James E. Murphy to st. Patrick's Church, Fall ;River, as assistant. ' Rev. Ronald A. Tosti to \ Our Lady of the Assumption Church, Osterville, as assistant. .Appointments effective Friday, May 18, 1962.

~~/e;;4Bishop of Fall River

i.

FOOD WORKSHOPS: Bishop Fulton Sheen discusses Food Service Workshops with Brother Herman .E. Zaccarelli, C.S.C. The Holy Cross Brother will conduct sessions for religious Brothers and Sisters engaged in culinary arts this Summer at Stonehill College. The courses will be the third such program for Brothers, the first for Sisters, an~ will il1clude consideration of problems involved in food service for religious. communiti~s.

i

\

Bishop Announc~s 'Assogn,mer ts

operations' in Formosa substaa. tially as they have existed in the past. The U. S. Catholic overseas relief agency will do so despi te tho decision of Church World Service to discontinue direct family feeding in .Formosa. Church World Service is in the relief arm of the National Council of Churches, the country's chief Protestant and Orthodox federation. The CRS--NCWC-policy waa outlined by Msgr. John F. MeCarthy, its asSistant executive s~retary. He was here for & joint press conference with officialS of Church World Service and United Hias,·the Jewish relief ag~ncy, urging support f~ pending refugee aid legislation. · Church World· Service, sa. nouncing its decision to halt dig.. tribution of surplus food to FOIl'mosan fainilies, cited favoritiSlll, in 'distributing ration cards needed to receive food ami alleged black market operatio. involving the food.

. Legicll1 @f Dec.eney

The following films are to be added to the lists in their" reContinued {from Page One . of the Assumption, Oster;ville, St. spective classifications: . to St. Pius X Church, South Yar- Louis', Fall River and st. Marfor genen4 Unobjectiona'ble mouth. Rev. Arthur T. deMello garet's Chur~h, Buzza1]ds Bay, patronage: Bon Voyage. Do~j1wlroD1le is . assigned to Our Lady of the new Cape curate. was ap-, ChIfD${ta~n Lourdes Church Taunton.. Rev. pointed in March, 194~ to St. Unobjectionable, 'for adultaz O$fi"lYHdJy tE~ lYI~at'i~81la; ®~evi$aon James E. Murphy is assigned to Mary's Parish, Taunton.1 Counterfeiters of Parish; Horrw Ghamber o! Dr. Faustus. . Father KellY. ; St. Patrick's Church, Fall River. WASHINGTON - (NC) - The director of the center, said the And Rev. Ronald A. Tosti is to Father Kelly, son oflBernard Confraternity of Christian Doc- institute will be the first sponObjectionable in part for ana serve as assistant at Our Lady of G. and the late Mrs. Kelly, was trine will investigate this Sum- sored by the CCD to consider Cabinet of Caligari (suggestive the, Assu"?-ption Church, Oster- born in Springfield irt March- mer how educational television educational television. costumes and situat.ions). ville. ., 1933. He attended the Uttiversity fits into its programs of religious The workshop' of which it will Separate classWcation: In- Father Morris , o f Massachusetts and Elm Bank education for Catholics outside, be' a part, he said, is concerned truder (superficial melodrama .Father Morris, son of the late Minor Seminary' in "N,ellesley, Church s~hools.' with adult religious education. on integration; requires cautioa William F. Morris and the. late completing. his studies: for. the .Commissioner Robert .E. L~ The CCD, whose major effort and maturity of jUdgment). .' Anne Cronin Reilly, was born priesthood at St. Mary's Semi- of the Federal Communications is religious education of Cath~· in Taunton on June 19, 1919. nary, Baltimore. I Commission will be one of sev- olic children unable to: atte'nd Educated at Providence College . Since his ordinatlon 'on May . eral experts who will lead ses- Catholic schools . conducts its and St. Mary's Seminary, Balti- 1, 1961, in St. -Mary's C'athedral sions at the 4lstitute at the Cath- programs for ad~lts through ~"e­ more, he was ordained on Nov. by. the Most Rev. JameslL. Con- oUc University of America. He Ugious discussion clubs; the' par-' . FUNERAl HOME; INC. : 2'7, 1943 in St. Mary's Cathedral, nolly, Father Kelly. has served will discuss "Possibilities for ent-educator programs wh'ich' a. MArcoJ Roy - C. LOrraine ROll Fall River, by the late Most as assistant at Holy Name ETV Today - Stations and Net- help parents to: instruct' preROller LaFraDCG' Rev. James E. Cassidy. Church, Fall River.l works.". \.. .' school children; and the ApostoFuNERAL DIRECTO~S Following assignments at St. The Na~ional Center of. the late of Good Will through which Peter's, Provincetown, Our Lady D@MofilDc(QJn Newm(lJ~ 11 iRVIlNGTON CT. CCD here said the televisioQ in- adult' volunteers contact fallenstitute ,will be hl:!ld during the away C.atholics and potenti81 WY 7~7830 RetlrleCB.t Lea.gue· ApostolGte Chaplain final three days of its third an- . converts. NEW BEDFORD WASHINGTON '(NC)~Father nual Summer workshop. The Our Lady of Sorrows unit qf Richard Butler, O.P., dItector of workshop is .one of six in· difSt. 'Gabriel Laymen Retreat the Aquinas Newman Center at ferent fields being held at CathLeague will hold Ii Communion the University of New; Mexico' olic University. P. J~ DUFFY breakfast following 8:45 Malis in Albuquerque, has. been ap"Father Joseph B. Collins, S.S., Funeral Home Sunday morning, May 20 at S~. pointed chaplain of the National Fgn~ral John BapUst Church,. New Bed- Newman Apostolate. ' Comfortably Air-.cOnditioned Helen Aubartine BrOugh Necrology ford. Rev. Francis Regis KwiatThe Dominican priest succeeds ATTLEBORO Owner and Director. kowski, SS.CC., director of CeD;- Msgr. Alexander O. Sigur, direcMAY 19 '0 Peck .St. CA 2·0193 tro Catolico Hispano in New tor of the Newman Center at the Spacious Parking Rev. Ambrose Lamarre, O.p.. Bedford, will speak. University of Southwestern Lou· PATRICK J. DUFF'Y 1940; Dominican, Priory, Fan WY 2-2957 . isiana in Lafayette; La. I ' . . Ti'unera.l Vir. -Embalmer 119 Allen st. New Bedford Confirmations' . Father Butler, who is alSo pas- River.. Rev. ,Thomas Trainor, 1941, May 2G-2:00 p.M.,'SacredHeart, tor of St. Thomas Aquinas Uni- Pastor, St. Louis, Fall. River. Oak "Bluffs; Cathedral, Fall ver!!itychurch ill Albuquerque, MAY 20 . . River (Adults). has been active in the :work of c.P~ " 'Rev.. Antonio L. 'da Silvia" 4:00 P.M., St. Augustine, Vine- the Newman Apostolate for the Pastor, Our Lady of Health, 1952; yard Haven'. past 10 years. i FUNERAL HOME ·Fall Riv.er. . FUNERAL HOME ,. May 21.,-7:30 P.M., Our Lady ~ , M""ss O'rdo 986 Plymouth Avenue' MAY 23 the Isle, Nantucket. " .. 469 LOCUST STREET Fall River, Mass. Rev. William F. Donahue, 1944, FALL RIVER, MASS. r--------~.. I . FRIDAY-St. Venantius,IMartyr. Assistant, St. Francis Xavier, Tel. OS 3·2211 III .Class. Red. Mass 'Proper;. Hyannis. OS· 2·3381 DANiEl HARRINGTON Gloria; no Creed; Preface of MAY Z4 James Eo Wilfred C. . Ucense.. "unoral Dlrecto•. Easter. . I .Rev. James' F. Clark, 1907, · Driscoll . I and Registered Embalmer Sullivan. Jr. SATURDAY-St. Peter ~ Celes- . Founder, St. James, New. Bedtine, Pope. and Confessor. III ford. _ trW $":. i!!£&¥ i fit e Class. White. Mass [Proper; , May 20-St. Casimir, New Gloria; Second Collect St. Bedford. (y~OURKE Pudentiana, Virgin; no Creed; " Villa Fatima, Taunton. Preface of Easter,. i fUffJefal H@mra Holy Ghost, Attleboro. SUNDAY - IV Sunday after 571 Secon'd St. .~~im.ming, Horseback Riding, Boating, Athletics, Arts· and I Easter. II Cla.ss. Whit¢. Mass May 27-St. Mathieu, Fall ;Crafts, PhY5i~al Fitness Program-- Seminarian-Counselors Fall River, Mass. , Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface River. $60.00 FOR TWO WEEKS '. of Easter. i St. Kilian. New Bedford. <OS ~-6072 MONDAY - Mass of previous MICHAEL J. McMAHON May 31 - Mount St. Mary's Sunday. IV Class. White. Mass licensed Funeral O'irador, Convent, Fall River. . Ajhletics, Waterfront Sports, Arts a'nd Crcifts~ Hikes: Proper; Gloria; nol Creed; Registered Embalmer Convent . of the .Holy P~ysical Fitness Program Preface of Easter. Union of the Sacred $25:00 fOR TWO, WfeEC<S TUESDAy - Mass of previous Hearts, Fall River. • Sunday, IV Class. White. Mass ~~-.-=D""'A"";Y-;· """"'C...... AAAP fOR.GD~lLS Proper;' Glori~;. no ; Ci'l*!d; June 3 - St. Teresa's ConJE~fft~i,~. OUR LAfOY OF TME LAKE ' Preface of .Easter.· : "r . vent, Fall River. . Athletics, Waterfront Sports, Arts and Crafts, Nature Study, Funeral HOme' WEDNESDAY-Mass of previous St. Joseph, Taunton . Square Dancing, Special Events Sunday. IV Class. White. Mass Holy Name, Fall River. 550 Locust 8" $25.00 FOR TWO WEEKS Proper; Gloria; no; Creed. Rlver.MaR. Preface of Easter. THE &NCBOa 13 mi. from New Bedford, 14 from Taunton, 17 "from Fall River . Second ClaM Poocap !'aid 'at "aU River. THURSDAY-Mass of previous Transportation provided-No extra charge. Campers bring CS 2-2391 llIu.. Publi8bed . 8VeJ'J l'bursc1a7 at ,no , Sunday. IV'Class, White. Mass Bill'bJan<l &v_u (Pall Rive. II.... bj own lunches. Milk is served Rose E. SUllivan tho Catbolle Prt!88 .1 lite Oloe_ 01 Proper; 'Gloria; 'no I Creed; SPONSORED BY THE DIOCESE OF' fAll RIVER Jeffrey E, Sullivan Pall River Sub""ri"itcllJ priM '" .mall. Preface of Eastel ' poa&paW ".00 Pv r...

COlrilfrratelrnity

T

-T

B~OO)(J(lAWN

AUBERTIN.E. Home

Area

HARRINGTON,

.

fORTY HOURS DEVOTION·

D. D. SUUDVan.&.Sons "

. ,

.:C·AT'HEDRAL

.··OVERNIGHT CAMp

..

I

,

SUlliVAN·

I

"

Fan


Senate Majority Lea'der Mansfield T@

Addrr®~~

5t@nehill Graduates

Commencement exercises at January 1961, is Chairman of the Stonehill College will be held Senate Committee on Rules and Sunday, June 3. Senator Mike Administration and is a member Mansfield of Montana, Senate of the Senate Committee on ForlMajority Leader, will address the eign Relations. Other highlights of .his polit132 students 'who will receive their degrees as the 10th gradu- ical career include service as a ating class in the history of the delegate to the United' Nations Sixth Session in Paris where he college. The baccalaureate services for debated Andrei Vishinsky, Soviet the class will be held Saturday, Foreign Minister, on several June 2, with ~he Most Rev. Rob- occasions; investigation trips to ert Francis Joyce, Bishop of Indo-China, Europe and Latin Burlington, Vt., as bqccalaureate America; and service as a delespeaker. . gate to the 13th General Assem_ During graduation exercises, bly of the United Nations.. honorary degrees will be conBishop Joyce ferred upon Bishop Joyce and Bishop Joyce has been Bishop Senator Mansfield; and upon Mr; of Burlington since 1957. A naPeter Grace of New York, pres- . tive of,Proctor, Vt., he graduated ident of the Grace Lines; Rev. cum laude from the University Patrick Peyton, C.S.C., director of Vermont with Phi Beta Kappa of the Family Rosary Crusade; honors, '.md subsequently reMr. Richard J. Potvin, president . ceived the degree of Licentiate and treasurer 01 the R. J.Potvin in Theology at the Grand SemShoe Company of Brockton; and inary in Montreal. Mr. Francis Mone, attorney, of He was ordained in 1923 and Taunton. has served in several parish apS.en. Mansfield pointments and as a Chaplain in Senator Mansfield, who was the U.S. Army during World elected to the U. S. Senate in War II. Bishop Joyce has served 19.- has a long record of publie six years as a trustee of the Uniser.vice as ar. educator and as a versity of Vermont and is now a member of Congress. He joined trustee of Champlain College. . the U. S. Navy at fourteen years He holds honorary degrees of age' during World War I. from the University of Vermont, Later, after work~ng as a mining St. Michael'S College, and Norengineer, he entered college, wich University. taking entrance examinations to establish his eligibility as he had Dever graduated from grammar school nor high school. Subsequently, he earried B.A. and M.A. degrees at Montana BOSTON (NC) -'- Public State University and his doctorate as a result of work both at aid to ,private schools and Montana State University and at elergy-laity relations are the U.C.L.A. He served for ten years two chief domestic issues as Professor of Latin American facing the U.S. 'Catholic press, and Far Eastern History at Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort Montana State University prior Wayne-South Bend, Ind., told to his election to Congress in the opening general session of HJ42. the 52nd annual Catholic Press He has been Majority Leader Association convention here of the United States Senate since yesterday. Look to Press On the issue of public funds for private schools, he noted tilat "sharp d iff ere nee s of Opinion" divide the nation and· Rev. Oliva H. Langlois of the "are not likely to be finally reSociety of St. Edmund will cele- solved to the. complete satisfacbrate his silver jubilee in the tion of either side." People "are looking to the priesthood Tuesday, May 22. Born in New Bedford in 1909, he Catholic press for information was ordained in 1937 and as- and guidance· that will enable signed to St. Edmund's parish, them to come to settled conclusions and· to take a defiriite Whitton, England. _ There be was a curate until stand," he said. "It would be folly to under1947, when he was appointed pastor. He attended Kings' Col- estimate the difficulty of meetlege, London University, in 1938 ing this need, but it would be and 1939, until his studies were cowardice and dereliction of duty to back away from it." cut short by World War·II. Urgent Task During the war, Father LangBishop Pursley said the work lois was section leader of a fire_ watchers' brigade and persop- of "clarifying and stabilizing" oIly extinguished many incen- clergy-laity relations is a' "very diary bombs. D uri n gone urgent task." While there is no dispute on bombing his church' was destroyed and his rectory badlY' basic doctrine on this issue, he damaged, but he was able to said, in "the wide open field of supervise reconstruction when practical collaboration" there does exist "a degree' of' discord" hostilities ceased. whieh is "formidable enough to In Vermont Returning to the United States Iiw all concern." in 1949, the New Bedford born priest was named pastor at Nativity of Our Lady parish, Swanton, Vt. Since 1956 he has been pastor of St. Anastase Church, G I' e en fie I d Park, Quebec. This year the Edmundites are marking 25 years of work in the southern missions of the United States.

School Aid, Laity, Press Issues

Marks Jubilee Next Tuesday

3

THE ANCHORThurs., May 17, 1962

Soc~a~ M~!)~O~8l) [¥rrOml~Om)(~~W@f?~ O~ ~[}uM[j'@;1}u HONG KONG (NC)Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, head of the American Catholic overseas charities

RIEV. DANIEL F. SHALLOO

agency, said here that "the social mission of the Church is the most important and most expressive of its work in these days." Bishop Swanstrom, Auxiliary to the Archbishop of New York and executive director 'of Catholic Reliet Service' - National Catholic Welfare Conference, REV. WIILlLIAM H. O'RElllLLY spoke at a reception given in his honor on his first visit to this British crown colony in five years.. He praised the development of the Catholic Welfare center in tion of Sister Stephen Helen, the Aberdeen section of Hong Kong and sa;d that "every coun_ S.U.S.C. try should have one." Both the Father O'Reilly, prior to his present assignment, served as center and the Hong Kong Cathassistant at Star 0 .. the Sea, Nan- olic charities agency which optucket; St. Patrick's, Falmouth; erates it -are "a tribute to Bishop St. William's, Fall River; Our Lawrence Bianchi (of Hong Lady of the Assumption, Oster- Kong) and all the priests and .ville; St. Paul's Taunton; St. Religious working under him" Peter's, Provincetown, and St. Bishop Swar.strom said. Bishop Bianchi, Hong Kong Joseph's, Taunton. Father Shalloo served as as- government officials and Amersistant at Immaculate Concep- ican consular officials were tion, Fall River until May 4, among the 200 persons at the 1942, when he was named assist- reception. Bishop Swanstrom ant at St. Joseph's, Fall River. told them~ he was impressed. by He was apooiQted ar:hnin'+'ator the welfare work of the governof St. Louis parish on April 5, ment. Visits 'Hospital 1961. "There are still squatters on the' hillsides," he said "but nothing compared to the'riumber I saw in 1951. thanks to the govNEW YORK (NC)-The 1962 ernment resettlement program." Bishop Swanstrom had arrived Father McKenna Award of the here earlier in the day from ForNational Headquarters of the Holy Name Society will be pre- mosa. But he was able to visit sented next Thursday to Msgr. OU~ Lady of Maryknoll Hospital, Joseph A. Aughney, society di- WhICh was opened last Decemrector for the Omaha, Neb., arch- . ber in one of the colony's largest refugee· resettlement areas. He diocese. Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan lauded the Maryknoll Sisters of Omaha has been invited to who ol)erate it, for their "c"?rity, preside at the presentation ban- initiative and spirited work." quet in Omaha. The principal address will be made by Father K of C Participate Matthew Scullion, O.P., associate Jail D~dication national director of the society. FORT PIERCE (NC)-DediFather Dennis B. McCarthy, O.P., national director, will read the cation rites for the new St. Lucie citation and Father John E. County Jail were conducted here Marr, O.P., provincial of the in Florida by Fourth Degree Dominicans' St. Albert Province, Knights of Columbus. Grand Knigh~ John Forget aswill make the presentation. Msgr. Aughney is being hon- sisted County Commission Chair_ \ ored for his long years of serv- man J. D. Nelson in the cornerices to the Holy Name ·Society. stone laying and Father Michael He is a native of Jersey City, Beerhalter, pastor of St. AnasN.J., and was ordained a priest tasia parish, gave the invocation. in 1919 at St. Bonaventure (N. Y.) Sem·inary. He began his work for the HNS in the Omaha "Wisdom is in the head archdiocese in 1929 and was and not in the beard." named director for the archdio-' cese in 1937. The" society's Father McKenna SAVE Award, reserved for priests, is at the named for the late Father Charles H. M~Kenna, O.P., known as "the American apostle of the Holy Name Society."

Two Diocesan Priests to Mark

25ti'h Anniversary of Ordination Two Diocesan priests will observe the Silver Anniversary of their ordination to the priesthood next Tt,J.esday. . Rev. William H. O'Reilly, administrator of St. Peter's Church, Dighton, and Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, administrator of St. Louis Church, Fall River, and . general manager of The Anchor, were ordained J.l..iay 22, 1937 in St. Mary's Cathedral by the late Most Rev. Bishop James E. Cassidy, D.D. The thiro member of the ordination class was the late Rev. William McDonald, S.S. Father O'Reilly will mark the observance by celebrating a Mass of Thanksgiving at 7 Tuesday morning in St. Peter's. Father Shalloo will celebrate Solemn High Mass of Thanksgiv_ ing at 11 Sunday morning, May 27 in his church. He will be assisted by Rev. James A Benson, S.J., deacon and Rev.' John P. Cronin, subdeacon. Both are natives of St. Louis parish. Rev. John P. Driscoll, .assistant general manager of The Anchor, will preach. The' Mass will be Sl1n~ by the Holy Union Choir under the direc-

Wins Holy Name

a Nationa I Honor

Ordinary Says Final Prayers A Solemn Requiem Mass. was. sung in St. John's Church,' At. tleboro, Monday morning for the soul of Mrs. William H. (Lillian Deneen) Bowen, mother of Rev. Ambrose E. Bowen, pastor of Corpus Christi Church, Sandwich. Celebrant of the Mass was Rev. Edw-l,n J. Loew with Rev. James F. McCarthy as Deacon and Rev. Edward A. Rausch as Subdeacon. . Final prayers were said by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, who was assisted by Rev. Edward L. O'Brien and Rev. William Dolan as his chaplains. Many priests of the. Diocese were in attendance: at the Mass.

R

In

BANK

that

, SPECIALIZES in

Thl~

W.- Pledges

lee~e;;ea

SAVINGS Save by mail, too, at The OLD

RED

BANK.

$1.00

'opens your accountl

"We will describe extras accurately and quote the exact price of each./#

New, Higher Annual Dividend

in a. Series

Gale. Ford. REV. OLIVA H. LANGLOIS

4. PI...nf ._..!- fill R1,er

Old Red Bank Fott River Savings Bank

141 NO. MAIN fAU. RIVER ~.


.

I

I

THE ANCHO"-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., M.ay1?, 1962

4

Asserts Kremlir. Wr~te Script

,

Mutu~~

Trusf(

~@~.*~ce~ 1rrWJelo~e

GJff3@

Foundation of

By Father Joh~ L. Thomas, S.~. '.

,

Asst. Sociolog! Prof.-St. Louis University

FQr Titov WASHINGTON (NC) :Some speculation has beeD set off by the visit to· the Uriited States of cosmonaut

i

'I

"How' can I help iny husband"? He is so jealous that he even suspects teenage. boys .".- young enough to~ lpy sons - of flirting ·with me. Most ·of our friendshav~ fa~len \mder his suspicion atone time ·oranother. I don1t think I have given him reason. grounds, you and your :husband He's a wonderful man ex- . may disagree concernigg what cept for this' failing. is proper and permissible conafraid it· is weakening my duct for a married! woman.

Gherman Titov, according to J. J. Gilbert, NC correspondent. At first it seems like one propaganda gimmick that reacted. against Soviet Russia. Upon re, flection, it is possible that Moscow was not too disappointed' by the results, Gilbert writes.

rm

love for him since I find that I'd rather have him away from home than to have to handle him with kid gloves all' the time." . As your last remark indicates, Nancy, j e a lou s y in marriage is so destructive of 10 v e because one #nally gets fed up with .; catering' to such childish nonsense. Young lovers, like young puppies, tend to display some jealousy at times, not because they are in love but because they are not sure' of how they stan;d with the' person loved and f.eel that their relationship is bemg. threatened. . Continued display of jealousy, however, always' destroys the very love relationship it pr.etends to protect, for contrary to a com m 0 Ii . misapprehension, J.ealousy does not spring f r0JP.. lov.e. Unfounded Fear Yet· the belief that jealousy stems from love is so widespread that it will be useful to analyze jealousy -in some detail. As I use the term here, jealousy is an un,founded suspicion, fear, or resentment, arising from mistrust of another,' more specifically, it is suspicion of the faithfulness of a husband, wife, or lover. ' Moreover, this - disposition to suspect rivalry in matters of affection indicates not only that the jealous pa'rtner ·feels.. insecure about this affection, but that he demands eX,elusive de, votion from the object of his af:fection.~

T his latter point merits serious consideration. It ofte~ happens that to the jealous person, his suspicions, fears, or resentments seem well grounded because of the way he defines the situation. . Because he has a negative or very low estimate of his own worth he does not believe that his p;rfner can really love him, . and this fear drives him to demand exclusive devotion 'and at.. tentio~ as a constant assurance that the partner is st!ll faithful:. Understand Problem Yet this exclusive devotion on the partner's 'part . is h~manl.l;' impossible, flO that the Jealous person always finds som~ grounds to confirm his suspicions. No matter how careful the partner. may be, the jealous spouse will always find some_ thing to critiCize, because the source of. the r trouble is within himself, not in his. partner's actions. ' How can you help your hus': band? You fir~t step, Nancy, is .to understand thoroughly the problem with which you must deal. If you feel that you have given him'no reasonable grounds for suspicfo'n and he still persists in criticizing whatever you do, two possible sources of ·the difficulty should be considered.. First, because of differences in training . and family .back-

Among some national I groups, husbands apparently n!'!ver trust their wives alone in mixed com-pany. However, even apart' from such ethnic customs, m~n raised.,> in families in which their mothers and sisters were shy, retiring, or not allowed, to converse freely with "m~nfolks," are likely t.o regard suer a pattern of separation between the sexes as proper, and v{ill consequently be suspicious pf wives or others who deviate from this pattern. '1 Husbands who s~e :jealousy stems from this source :are difDEDICATE NEW WING: Bishop Connolly presides at ficuIt to deal with because they dedication ceremonies for 'new chap¢l and library wing' of themselves are not capable of Holy Cross Fathers Seminary, North Easton. From l~ft~ enjoying normal social relationRev. Joseph 'Hanna, C.S.C., t~eBishop, Rev.. H~rold Riley, ships with' women, and !as a resuit their own social' inade- C.S.C. qua~ies and misconceptions cause them to see an ulterior sexual motive in all' such· relationship. ~unning. Source of 'Di~ficUI,tY A wife who wishes to lead a normal life with such a husband OLONGAPO (NC)-Water has Calif., commander. of the Dixie, ' , must not allow herself, . to be been"piped aboard" St. Joseph's said. "This is. the way these lads maneuvered into a defensive poschool here by about 50. U. S. chose to spend their liberty." sition by being too cdncerned Navy .men: More than' 2,000 The l:J. S. Navy base here rewith his harping criticisfu. Filipino children and their -leased two old' surplus tanks for Rather than trying constantly teachers have tankfuls to be the project: The men brought the to justify her actions, she should thankful' for. tanks aboard the ship, cleaned point out the real sourc~ of his Crew members of the USS and painted them and' mounted' di.i::iculty and indicate that the ·Dixie, destroyer tender, came them on frames. Meanwhile, a remedy lies in correcting his asking what they' could do to team of dungaree-clad fitters own inadequacies and 'miscon- help while their ship was in was hard at, work in the school. . ceptions.' port. Father Thomas Vaughan, "They worked from Thursday . , Columban .from St. Paul, Minn., afternoon until one in' the morn_ Second, a not her <possible . source of your husbanq.'s' jeal-. had' been praying to, hear· a . ing," Mother M. James cif the Missionary Sisters of St. Columousy may be his own raq.ical~­ question like that. "You could install running ban, who run thf school, -said. security as a person. H~ is n.ot sure of YOur love because he is water for our schOOl children," :'On Friday' they started at 4:30 l~ the aft.erno~n and worked all not sure that he himself- is he answered hopefully. The men, expert fitters, got ~llg~,t untIl 8 0 clock next mornlovable. This basic insequrity. is mg. frequently the result of early . approval, equipment and mighty . family treatment.' I . husy. . \ Most Non-Catholics ' Spend Liberty Leader of the group was Ship's Jealousy Destroy~ "About half the ship came up Fitter 1st Class William E. Mc. A child learns taat it l is lovwhen we put out· the call," Capt. Mahon from Philadelphia, now 'able because it is loved) and if Thomas H. Smith of Coronado, a resident of San Diego, Calif: this love is denied or the child According to the. chapl,!in, feels rejected, it tends! to re- (J Father (Lt. Cmdr.) Thomas A. main insecure in all !liter in- PlI'iest on Baltimore Kenny of Newark, N. u., most of timate relationships.' ! the volunteer workers were nonThis insecurity is mahifested . Antibias Com~ittee Catholics. . by' the need for ,frequerh reasBALTIMORE (NC)-A priest . A few days earlier the pastor, surances of love and 'by the ,leader in. interracial justice Father Hugh O'Reilly, Columba'n demand for exelusive devotion work is a member of a commit- from Dublin,. had watched a or attention from the beloved. tee organtzed here to spur legis- youngster running from the basAll outsiders' are regatded as lation against discrimination in ketball court to the drinking - possible rivals. '. ,public places in Baltimore. . fountain and finding no water. Father. Joseph 'M. Connolly,· "Now," Father O'~eilly says If this is the' source bf your husband's problem, -Nanty, .you moderator of the Catholic Inter- happily, as he sees' th~ bright water spouting, "we. have 4,236 must be firm in dealing with 'racial Council of Baltimore and gallons "in those tanks." him. Point out that his j:ealousy assistant a~ St. Gregory's parish; is one of eight members'of the does not stem from his rove for you, as he pretends, but from his Clergy!Jlen's Interfaith Committee for Human Rights. low estimate of his own, worth. The committee represents Why else does he doubt his abilsome 200 clergymen --;; priests,' ity to. hold YOUr affection?· RESIDENCE FOR YOUNG Protestant ministers and rabbis ! WOMEN . True love can be bu~t only -of the 'Greater Baltimore area,' 196 Whipple St., Fall River on mutual trust and respect. Re- inclUding about 60 priests. It was Conduded by Franciscan mind him that since jealously. organized March 14, five days , undermines both these qualities, Missionaries of Mary after the state General Assembly' inevitably it destroys the very killed a public accommodations Comfortable Furnished Rooms foundation of love. .I bill. With Meals Inquire OS 3-2892

Uo So Sailors Pipe Water Into Catholic School in Philippines

I

.

Sf. -Francis Guild

By the time he had made his way across the country and visited the Pacific Coast, he had reflected disparagingly upon a number of things American, asserted little interest or pleasure in most things he had seen, and . had got in some not too sly suggestions that' the U. S. should disarm. There is no doubt here that Titov came to· the U. S. to play a role written for him in the Kremlin. Whether he overplayed the part, or it was badly written in the first place, he left this country with some poor "re,;iews." WorJdwid~ E~ort

In' addition to saying a lot of little things that would make one a poor guest, Titov insisted on repeatedly swinging a heavy propaganda bludgeon. He kept referring ,to Soviet- ·Russia's "peaceful" exploration of space, as if our exploration w'ere not.· peaceful. He spoke of "military" rockets, that put U. S. satellites into orbit. Presumably he hoped to obscure the' fact that all space exploration is peaceful' at present, but could in the future have military implications at any· time, anywhere in the world. All of this is seen as a part of the worldwide effort Moscow is making to get the Free .World to disarm on Soviet -Russia's terms. Those terms, the Free World knows, would spell, its

doom.

5 1/2%

INTEREST ON YOUR·,

SAVINGS INVESTED IN CATHOLIC CHURCH AND HOSPITAL BONDS In 'Unih of $500 or More

KEENAN'& CLAREY, Inc. Minne'apolis, Minnesota for detailed information write to CHARLES A. MuRPHY Registered Represen.ative . 145 Pond Stree. . Winchester, Mass. PA 9-2696 . AN

Name Address _._...._

...

_

City

I

Wareham Parish· Plall1s Activities !

The children of the parish will receive their First Hol;y Communion Sunday,' mornirtg· and will be guests of the pastor,· Father Chippendale, at ~ Communion breakfast following the Mass. ': Mrs. Harold. Cleveland; chairman, has announced that the Circle will sponsor a fashioh ,show Petition Castro_' Friday evening, June I, at 8. MADRID (NC) The In- o'clock, in the parish haIllfor the ternational Union of Catholic benefit of the scholarship; fund.. Women, with ~6 million mem.., St. Rita's.Altar Guild will meet bers, has protestel. to Cuban tonight at the home of GerI' Premier Fidel Castro against the ard Cusick of Marion. trial of 'more that a thousand· The annual banquet the Cubans- who took part in .last Rosar.y and Altar Society'lwill be year's unsuccessful invasion. ot. held on WednesdQ7 night attbe the island state. '2', BouneMill.

i

Mrs.

:0£, r-

I,

Titov had hardly landed on our eastern seaboard before it became evident that his was more of a propaganda mission than a visit of friendship.

i

. i

GRACIA BROS. ~Y"''''.''''''.~'''T~ .~. CAMp· SACRED HEART .... 'Excavating

".. •

Contractors

....

9 CROSS ST.,. FAIRHAVEN WYman 2-4862

".

::I==============-

~

",

CORREIA' & SONS

.

a...

SHARON, MASSACHUSmS

"1IIIIIIII

SPACIOUS' FIREPROOf SLEEPING QUARTERS For Boys 7 to 14 Years Old

~

,.--

Six week season: July 1to August 12 Register for 2, or 4, or 6 weeks Free Tutoring if Desired THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

".. /'

~ ~ ~

~

~

. ONE STOP SHOPPING CENTER

a....

~

SACRED' HEART SCHOOL SHARON, MASSACHUsmS

...

• Television • 'Furniture . • Appliances • , Grocer7 1M AileD at.. New BecIfoN WYmall.7-93M

".

A RESIDENT SCHOOl FOR BOYS

"lIIIIIII

'.

\

.'

0 ~

~

~

.

GrommarGrade. 4-5-6-7-8 . . 1R01HERS Of-THE SM:IID HEARl

~.........

,

~

... '

~

....


ANCHORFee'ls 'Alcoholics New IJiography of lames Cardinal ,Gibbons ,.THE 5 Thurs., May 17, 1962 Need Continuing, Of Special Interest to Anchor Reporter' Over Four Million Planned Therapy By Patricia ·McGowan 'Reply To Ads RICHMOND (NC)-Alco-, The publication to~orrow (}f "Prince of Democracy: Jameg ,Cardinal Gibbons" is holism is a disease and "cannot be cured by spiritual of particular interest to this reporter, since the prelate described as "one of America's OfKofC

remedies," according to the eo-founder of a New York State alcoholism clinic. "If you are not convinced in your mind and heart that alcoholism is a disease, leave the problem drinker alone," Father Vincent P. Collins of Hornell (NY) told the fourth annual Pastoral Institute on Alcohol Problems sponsored by the Na-' tional Clergy Conference on Alcoholism. No Permanent Cure / He advised counselors who are . not convinced that alcoholism is Q disease should refer the alcoholic to someone else. "Tell him that you cannot help him; that you would do him much more harm than good. This is the truth," he said. The priest likened alcoholism to d'iabetes or tuberculosis, saying: "Once it is contracted, it lean be arrested, but never cured." Moreover, he stressed, "it can_ not be cured by spiritual remedies." Father Collins said an alcoholic's pledge not to drink merely "conveniently llllows him to dodge the real issue-permanent reco\lery-for six months or a year." A man who can stop drinking after takin'g a pledge does not need to take the pledge to stop drinking, he emphasized. "We must keep our eye on the long-range goal of permanent sobriety and not be tricked into settling for a temporary paaliasettin~ for a temporary palliative," he commented. Father John Ford, S.J.,-professor of moral theology at the Catholic University of America, also asserted alcoholism is a dis-

ease.

0

Contlnabtg Theraplr He urged that more be taught about alcoholism in medical schools and seminaries and said all faiths should back alcohol education on the high school freshman level. Dr. Ebbe Curtis Hoff, medical director of the Division of Alcohol Studies and Rehabilitation, Virginia State 'Depar:tment of Health, told the conference that "the therapy of the alcoholic, to be successful, must be planned and continuing." "As long as help for the alcoholic is limited to periodic management of his acute alcoholism, whether in ~e hospital, in the office or through home visits, with no on-going rehabilitation program, it is unlikely that much progl'ess will be made," Dr. Hoff stressed.

Re«Etcllv5n~ So~~!ish; F~1l' ~@~~

@f

Hefi'@l!l

OMAHA (NC) - Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan of Omaha has told a group of'110 ne' Creighton University sodalists here that they a're "being readied not for mediocrity or the middle ground, but for the role of heroes." "From the added graces you will receive from your association with the sodality, you will be able to give valuable service to mankind-which without your help will certainly perish," Archbishop Bergan asserted. The Archbishop said U. S. Catholics must strive to exert a greater influence on the nation. "Our influence here in AmerIca, even in a moral sense, I'm afraid, is not what it should be," be declared. "We have not reached near the height Almighty God would have expected of us. ' . Our influence is very, very shallow, very weak."

New Bedf~ll'd Guild The last meeting of the New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind will take place at 8 tonight in the K of C Hall. The annual food sale held by the guild will be tomorrow at the Star Store.

most influential and beloved Cardinals" is a great-uncle and childhood memories include many stories of "Brother Jim" passed ddwn from grandmother to mother. This book is a treasure trove of additional stories of the man whose "career spanned the period of the Chuz:ch's greatest expansion in America, when it grew from a small, struggling immigrant minority - considered alien and undesirable by some Americans. - to a vital force, American in spirit and mind." Umversal Popularrity Born in Baltimore in 1834, James Gibbons' family returned to Ireland when he was three. In 1853, however, his father having died, his mother decided to come back to the United States. The young man took employment in a grocery. store, but soon decided to en,ter the seminary. He was accepted 'by St. Charles College, Baltimore, and thus began his life of service to the Church. His early years as a priest were spent in the midst of the turmoil of the ·Civil War. Not yet 30, "he showed unmistakably the grace of personality, the 'sweetness' which would win him,love and admiration always. . . . Soon he would enjoy that universal pop u I a r i t y which would be his delight and his temptation." In 1865, the first step toward advancement came when Archbishop Spalding of Baltimore named Father Gibbons episcopal, secretary. He proved himself invaluable ahd in 1868 was himself raised to the episcopacy. His s~ was in North Carolina, where he was vicar apostolic. In addition he was titular bishop of Adramyttwn. He .was the youngest bishop in the world but his assignment was no.t enviable, "a poverty-torn, largely illiterate diocese without an episcopal throne." ' In 1869 'Bishop Gibbons attended the Vatican Council in Rome. "An Ecumenical Council is probably the greatest sight on earth!" he exclaimed, and it was tris pride that he was the. last survivor of those who attended the assemblage. Further Advancement Further advancement was not slow in coming to the North Carolina Bishop. In 1872 he was made Bishop of Richmond, Virginia, still with jurisdiction over North Carolina. In 1876 came the writing of "The F'aith of Our Fathers," which has been/called the Car- ' dinal's most lasting achievement. It is a work of apologetics which still enj oys a lively sale and has been responsible for many conversions. In 1877, after only nine years as a bishop, the young churchman was named Archbishop of Baltimore, oldest see' in the country: Ten years later, he was Cardinal Gibbons and for years to come was'to be the only Prince of the Church' in the United States. The years of his cardinalcy w~re eventful. "He was beloved by both Catholics and non-Catholics for his liberal ,and temperate views on education, labor relations, and social justice:" Troublesome problems, however, included the "phantom heresy" of Americanism, difficulties attendant upon churchstate separation and the issue of public ;versus parochial schools. A project dear to the Cardinal's heart was the development of "the child of my age," the Catholic U n i v e r sit y of America, now grown to greatness. Most of all, in the midst of surging concerns, the Cardinal remained "our Cardinal" and tales of his approachability are legion. Each New'Year's day he held a public reception to which everyone in Baltimore was inVited, and his love for children was legendary. One woman recalls that "as a brid~ .of 22 she lived across the

NEW HAVEN (NC) The Knights of Columbus program inviting inquiries about Cat hoi i cis m has

brought in well over four million inquiries in the past 14 years and resulted in enrollment of nearly half a million inquirers in a course of religious instruction by mail. This was disclosed here by the Catholic Advertising Committee of the K. of C. The committee's report states that as a result of advertisements in' periodicals, the K. of C. Religious Information Bureau I1as received 4,375,040 inquiries, and 461,440 persons have asked to take a mail course in Catholicism. The advertising program was started in 1948. The religious instruction by mail is free of ch3'l'ge. The committee's report states that 408,930 persons in the U.S. asked to be enrolled in the religious, instruction cours~. 25,968 in Canada; and 26,l:;42.in 61 other countries or territories of the world. There were 14,940 requests for enrollment from the Philipines, 3,238 from Africa, 1,145 from New Zealand and 1,032 from Ceylon.

Honors Eds~ar

. FAMOUS ANCESTOR: Sheila Jo, Christine and Mary Pat McGowan, St. Joseph's parish, Fall River, admire new biography of their great-granduncle, James 'Cardinal Gibbons.· , street from the episcopal residence. 'I stood shyly watching the cardinal as he turned rope for a little 'duster of children, white' and .colored, . who. were jumping rope in front of his house. I had heard so much about him but I did not belong to his church and I had never met him. Suddenly he called out gaily, "Come over for a ,visit, my dear," as he continued· to turn rope. Soon we became fast friends.' " "Beneath his sympathy for women, however, the cardinal had a wholly masculine ignorance of their artifices. At a reception he watched in wordless fascination as an, elegantly groomed young woman, who sported a Lastrionable beauty spot artfully applied to her chin, conversed animatedly with him. , "Finally the cardinal broke his- silence to offer the helpful remark, 'My dear madam, did you know that you have a crushed fly on your chin?' " Daily Schedule A regular schedule was the secret of the amount of. work the Cardinal accomplished and also of his excellent health. He ate frugally and his activies included two daily walks. He spent about four hours a day in prayer, at the same time meeting innumerable visitors and keeping up an immense correspondence. Legend tells of an Indian prince who exclaimed, "AmerMIt..·,·· &i

i

am .•,!

-;

" ,. . ,,.",,,,

DONNELl.Y. PAINTBNG

135 ,Franklin Street OSborne 2-1911

TRI-CITY OFFICE ,EQUIP. BUSINESS AND DUPliCATING MACHINES Second and Morgan Sts.

FALL RIVER . OS 9-6712 E. J. McGINN. Prop.

WY

2~0682

••• Cleanse'S • ••

Inc. 94 TREMONT STREET TAUNTON, MASS. Tel. VAndyke 2-0621

Plumbing - Heating Over 35 Yeors of Satisfied Service

806 NO. MAIN STREET Fall River OS 5-7497

MONTHlY CHURCH BUDGET ENVELOPES PRINTED AND MAIlED OSborne 2-132~ WYmon 3-1431

as

CATHOLIC BOYS .DAY CAMP WlESYlPon1l', MASS.

SOATING - SWIMMDNG - HiKIES - A1J'~LIE1DC§ ADUS 0,

C~fF'Il'S

I?~DVA il'1E

fIllEACIXI

7.50 ~Il' w!t.

AGE 7 -12

Call OS 6-8943

Commercial 0 Industrial Institutional Painting and [)ecorating

it8

Casey-Sexton,

GEORGE M. MONTlE

Bring Own lunch - Milk, ~ookies Providecll

SERV~CE

Fall River

ica! That's where they have the Rocky Mountains, George Washington and Cardinal Gibbons!". This new book, while of course not so complete as the two volume biography of the Cardinal by Msgr. John Tracy Ellis, nevertheless gives a vivid and interesting picture of his crowded life. By Arline Boucher and John Tehan, husband and wife writing team of West Hartford, Conn., it is published by Hanover House.

'CAMDEN (NC)-Fathers Salvatore J. Adamo, executive editor of the Catholic Star Herald, Camden diocesan newspaper, and Thomas H. Sharkey, Chancellor, were among 10 priests of the diocese honored by Pope John.

k)


I

6

THE'AI'~rf-!I"'~·,)iocese of Fall

River-Thurs., May!17. 19·62

.\

Comi":g Vatican Council

I

. !

Hands Held Out .

I

Life is always a series of strJ'ln~e contrasts. I So. many persons ask for so much - material;' things, . I. attention, influence, prestige. .- This is true of the young as well as of those ;older. And there are the others who a~k for - and expectI an~l very often receive, so very little. . : The old person who asks only a decent place i.n which to spend final days and to die. . I . '. The' infirm person who looks for a little atten~ion and the cOQ'lforting assurance that she is not a burden. The 'YOUngster who is baffled by the knowledge .that he is not wanted when he sees normal families all, around :. ' . him. The young couple seeking instruction on the vocation of marriage to which they are committing themse~ves and their future happiness and their salvation. '. "The YOUligo adults who' feel ~he need of ass9ciati~g with one another and look for a wholesome program III which this may be done. , Each one of these reaches out - silently and p~tiently . and, at times, despairingly - for .assistan~e. I Sometimes family and relatives and frIends are unable or unwilling to give that help. ! . , . Sometimes a public welfare agency does what it canbut the human element is so often, of. necessity, l~cking. . What other place to turn but to the Church, ~he continuation of Jesus Christ in the world, His e~tension . through time and space, the union of Christ with His brothers and sisters, the baptized. . ~ The Church is an agency, a visible society, a structure: But it is so much more. It is not a super-b~siness, going about its activities with dispassionate effici:ency. . It is Christ. Its motives are prompted by love; of God and His children.· Its activities are ever and alw~ys informed with the spirit of Christ,' of seeing and serving Christ in the needy, the aged, the infirm, the ttoy.bled, the fearful, the helpleSs. I ' . , I. . . True, at times some ¢ its, servants grow impatient of their dedication, make mistakes, slip from' the ways of charity into the ways' of business. . , But, on' the .whole, there is charity; there is d~votion, . there is goodness of motive and' action that is so overwhelming that it once prompted a business man to tell a. nursing Sister that he would not do her work for. a Imillion dollars -.:.. a remark she countered by assuring him that she would not do it for that either. ', A contribution to the Catholic Charities Appeal places in the hands of the servahts of God the matetlal: means· to carryon the Church's mission of. charity." , Dedication is more important. So is prayer; so. is love' of,God and neighbor; so is the spirit of religion. , But material contrib.utions are needed. They are • . I needed by the Church to dQ her work. They are even more ".... needed by the faithful- as opportunities to do, as members of the Church, as brothers and sisters of Christ, the work of charity demanded of all who love God and His ~ili~ I

By Rev. Wm. F. Hogan, C.S.C.

-=

Stonehil! Professor ~

Seventh Ecumenical Council At the end of the seventh and beginning of the eighth century Christianity faced a new threat, this time from

the invasion of, the Moslems. They conquered northern Africa, c r 0 s;s e d into Spa i nand Southern I France. The y were repelled from Constant-· inople in 717 by the military prowess of Emperor Leo III, the Isaurian, and the Eastern E mp ire was saved for about seven centuries. This emperOO' and his son effected many legi9lative and economic reforms to erhn.O~Clh th~ strengten the realm internally as well. And yet the Moslem inBy REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University fluence seems to 'have pervad~ the Eastern Empire because a' movement began among the TODAY-St. Paschal BayloD, of truth. It is this truth which clergy to forbid the veneratiOG Confessor. But the Church, our frees us trom the prison of our ,of images just as the Moslems' human· limitations and our outlawed, images. Thus 'here worship to<iray instructs us, canbegan the heresy of iconoclasm, not reach all nations. unless she human' circumstances. image.;.breaking. . is continually reforming and renewing' herself.. Christ is here Use of ·Images :M:ONDAY-Massas on suDworking, but with earthen .ves- day. In New Orleans or in ChiThe 'early Church had alwaya sels, with human stuff. And the cago~ ,'.the liturgy brings this permitted the y.se of, image~ human ,stuff must be purged ,pictures and symbols from the· ·~th to. US. W,e may not ,al,wa" again arid " .again, must be appreciate it. It may sting'lind Scriptures in' their cemeteriel .cleansed and purified, must have rep,-:ove and it may' exhort to and .places of. worship, as reits loins "girt about" and its minders of tne .great truths Oil a~tionS which do not appeal to lamps "burning," else the Christ- us, but it saves-that is the point. religion. Even. ,the Jews usecl fact, the 'fact of God's love and It saves in bringing a permarieJi~ religious paintings in their redemption, will not De seen, sure, enduring answer to the synagogues. The clergy and Emperor Leo TOMORROW - St. Venantius. human frailty so evident in our. the Isaurian, who prohibited the selves. And· it saves in lifting US Martyr. The Church's martyrs use of images, apPealed to the are the',great symbols of this pu- above ourselves so that we can Old Testament in defense of see' at lel,lst momentarily ,with a rification, this testing with fire, their 'position: "Thou shalt not whi<;h the Church needs steadily vision ,that is truer and 'mO!'e make to thyself a graven image.'I " far-reaching. if she would not degenerate into They further pointed out that a self-conscious arid self-protectit is impossible to have images ing power structure. The "fruit" TUESDAY-Mass as on SUD- of Christ because the divine of the Gospel is precisely the day. So we come to Sunday Mass, nature cannot be expressed ill "madness" in the world's eyes, · or indeed to Mass at a!1ytime, on images and it would be heretical the honorless-ness, of which the any day, glad and eager for a to portray only the human first reading speaks. Conformity chance to· open ourselves and nature of Christ. (These arguis not the test. Nor is attachment surrender ourselves to the truth- ments are not valid, of, course, to our ways and our traditions. giving Spirit, to the Spirit who because one can still portray the The "constancy" which the Old teaches without our commit- human nature with the unTestament reading teaches us is ments and limitations and· inter. derstanding that Christ is divine, a constancy related to God's ested motives. This is the free-:. as is often symbolized by halos.) Word' rather than'human morals. dom to'which our worship inI The imperial edict for,bidding , I cites us and which makes it the veneration of images brought SATURDAY-St. Peter Celes- possible. "If I were asked to put my, finger on TV's toughest about the unreasonable destrue,.. problem I'd P].lt all four fingers, and my thumb, down I on one tine, Pope, ConfesSor. One reason tion of many beautiful works of the papal chair. in Christenspot - television for children and young people. In A;'merica for 'WEDNESDAY - Mass as on art and the depositiOn and pel'dom may be the fact that today children under 12. spend 70,000,000 hourS: a day ,national bishops and even patri- Sunday. So Ch'rist's Church is secution of the rn:embers of the clergy who advocated the use of ' i watching television." , archs are in a position less free not a blindfold we put on be- images. . cause we do not like to look at So .speaks the chairman of the Federal Co~tilUnica- of political and sometimes selfish Pope Gregory III assembled a pressures. But this is a human the world and its cold realities, council of 93 members in Rome tions Commission, Newton N. Minow., !' The Rock'is sufficiently nor is it a wolf snapping at our and excommunicated all those And Sir William Alexander, Secretary of the British apology. indicated in the evangelical heels as we hasten to perform who destroyed or profaned Association of Education Committees, has remindbd the teaching of the Gospel. Pray in our duties according to instruc- images instead of venerating world: "We teach children that violence is, unde~irable. today's Mass for that papal au- 'tions. Rather is it Christ's teach- images as was the tradition of Do the newspapers support you? Do television programs thority which, even in its free- ing voice, saving us from human the Church. Emperor Leo took uncertainty· regarding the most support you? ... Those of us in education are pose<I with dom, can feel the pr~ssures of fundamental truths, elevating us revenge by sending a naval force interested powers. the problem of making young people fit to live in ~ociety on the solid ground of truth it- to capture the papal territories in Sicily and southern Italy; he when the fact is that this is not the problem. The ptoblem FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER self, so that our decisions, our then installed Byzantine bishops judgments, our exercise of freeEASTER. Those high truths we is to make society'fit for young people to live in." : . . on these territories. So that is, indeed, the frightening implication lof the call dogmas, those doctrines of will will be in accord with the The heretical, clergy of thQ and morals which are our nature ~f things." East held a meeting, 338 strong, 70,000,000' hours a day spent watching television by c~ildren faith Spirit-guided spelling out of at Hieria on the Bosphorus and under 12: not only is this television-watching making what God has revealed, are a approved iconoclasm at the inchildren fit to live in society but, more especiall~, is· it guarantee of freedom. And the Sll'. lOll.lfis University sistence of Leo's son, Constanportraying a society fit' for the children watching to enter liturgy, the' Church's public AIl'\)(i'DCUlIllu::es Awards tine' V. Copronymus, the new worship, teaches them to us not into? ' " - :, emperor. Severe penalties were only in its Bib~e' readings but ST. LOUIS (NC) - St. Louis stated by the council against ' also in its prayers and psalms University has\announced it will ' anyone who would publicly or and actions. Our Lord tells us in award scholarships to 111 high privately make, display or venthe .Gospel. that it is better for · school seniors, nearly double' erate images. us that He departs, referring to .the number it awarded last year. Neverth'eless" the value of in:His ascension. "If I go, I will ,Included are 24 four-year, full voking the intercession of Our send him to you"-the Spirit, the tuition grllnts; one four-year truth-giving Spirit. He it is who honor scholarship; 29 four-year, Lady and the saints was stressed by the council, against the guarantees ,G<>d's'truth for men. half - tuition scholarships; 52 wishes of Constantine. EvenOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE ,DIOCESE OF FALL jRIVER And He guarantees it in and one-year scholarships; and five tually .the eml?eror publicly dethrough the Church, the mother special scholarships. Last year 'clared the veneration of the ·Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fa.1I River the university awarded 56 scho- saints, themselveS and their 410. High,land' Avenue . larships. relics unlawful. University Grant Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 Father Jerome J. Marchetti, Suffer Persecution JAMAICA' (NC) - The U. S. S.J., executive Vice-president of PUBLISHER I Constantine V was even mO«l Department of Health, Education' the university, said the increase violent than his father in the Most Revl James L. Connolly, 0.0.. PhD., I and Welfare has awarded a in the number of scholarshipS detruction of images. Although GEMERAL MANAGER, i ASST. GENERAL MANAGER $10,102 grant to St. John's Uni- was made possible by the con- he at first did nothing about Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M".A. I Rev. John P. Drisc611 versity here in New York for tinued increase in the univer- them, he eventually unleased all MANAGING EDITOR i' undergraduate training in psy- · sity's 150th annivel\Sary develop- attack of savage' proportions Hugh' J. Goldeca chiatric nursing. ment program. Turn to Page Seven

The Problem

,

@rheANCHOR

• I

i

I

CWult 'With thE ChWtck


Vatican Council ,Holy Continued from' Page Six who

7 Trinity Parish, West 'Harwich, Plans Thurs..ANCHORMay 17. 1962 TQOpen Grade School in 1964 Suggests Greater THE

egainst ima~s and those upheld their veneration; for he Insisted on the right of :,the emperor to legislate fOr the By RUSSELL COLLINGE Church. Many martyrs, e'specialOn October 20, 1865, through the generosity of Patrick Drum, ground was broken for 1y among the monks, died in this peiosecution. the third Catholic church on Cape Cod. Land had been bought from Chester Snow: and Favor Images ST. CLOUD (NC) - The now the buiJder, George T. Swift,' began construction of Holy Trinity Church in HarA council was held in Jerupresident of a Catholic colwich Center. June 1, 1866, the new church was dedicated and the first Mass was said in salem in 761; the clergy from 'lege said here that many July by Father Peter Ber' Antioch, Jerusalem and AlexCatholics have developed a andria attended and 'emphati- toldi. In 1869 Holy Trinity fine degree of personal piety but cally declared in favor of images was established as the secneglected their role in the social and their veneration. Similarly ond parish on, Cape Cod'with apostolate of the Church. Pope Stephen m held a council Father C. O'Connor as pastor. "Many Catholics have grown at the Lateran which reached The new parish took in all the up with a very narrow, insulated the same decision. lower Cape from Yarmouth to view of what if means to be a Persecution stopped during QProvincetown. ' Catholic," said Msgr. James P. the reign of Emperor Leo IV. At Father Thomas Sheehan estabShannon, president of the Colhis death, his widow Iiene belege of St. Thomas in St. Paul, came regent for her son, Con- lished the first priest's residence Minn. ' stantine VI; she was determined in Harwich but this' was transPersonal Piety to restore the orthodox faith to ferred by Father McSweeney to Woods Hole and then to Hyannis. He told the convention of the the East. St. Cloud Diocesan Council of The first thing she did was In 1004 Father Ge9rge McGuire Catholic Men that "this inappoint as patriarch, Tarasius, re-established residence in Harsulated kind of personal piety" who upheld the veneration of wich. He built,the Church of the is "one of the great problems" images. She then called a coun- Immaculate Conception in East the Church faces among her cil at Constantinople to meet Brewster in 1907. members. In 1905, Bishop Stang, first on August 17, 786. However, , "This type of Catholic," he the gathering of bishops was Bishop of Fall River, asked the stated," is very faithful in per. broken up as soon as it started Congregation of 'the Sacred forming his personal acts of defor assistance and ,by a force of image-breaking Hearts votion, but he gives no considFathers Bern!lrd Pierson, SS.CC., troops. eration to the responsibility of Meet at Nlcaea Stanislaus Bernard, SS.CC., and giving himself to the rest of Irene was not to be stopped Hilarion Eikerling, SS.CC., were mandkind." in her attempts to' crush out sent' from Liverpool to New Msgr. Shannon said a good Iconoclasm; she suppressed the Bedford in response to, the Catholic should ask himself the revolt and eUected a purge in, Bishop's' invi~tion. following question: "What is my the army. They helped with the local responsibility to the society, in The council met a year biter, parishes and made the jurney to which I live to improve it, to in September, 787, at Nicaea, Cape Cod on weekends to assist preserve it, to perfect it and to 'with about 300 members in at- 'the few resident priestS. ' passit on to the next generation tendance; ~d this counCil. is' " ,,' First Me~ber " better than I have received' it?" known as the second ecumeOlcal ' " Council of Nicaea, the seventh The ;first' ~ember',of'the conof the Church. ' gregahon assigned to Cape' Cod Pope' Hadrian' I sent' two,' on aperma~ntbasis was Father' hard resistance) to make a Catholic school in West Harwich a legates with orders only to exa- "Ro~ert Ja~en. He established , reality and 'not a far-oU dream. mine whether an ecumenical ,:resldence m Wellfleet April 17, , cou'ricil was "ecessary. When ,19.10~ took ?v~r ,Harwich on .a We recommend a trip to West 'they saw the necessity, they ,~Ionbasls,from Father McHarwich and an inspection of "actual1ytook part in the coun- Gu~e, and transferred, the ree, the school premises-particulardl of Nicaea as representatives tory to Wellfleet. ly by residents of nearby parHOLY TRINITY WEST HARWICH ., Father ~arion Eikerling suc" . of the P o p e . ' ,ishes with school age' children. Formal Statement ceeded .Father Jans~n.and was Take a good long look-and if Many of the bishops who had ,responsible. for bUlldmg" Holy been granted for a mission makeshift teaching of catechism you feel the work should be enchurch in ,Dennisport. , in the church on Sundays. favored iconoclasm werere- ,Rec;leem~ 10 Chatham, ~d for couraged and supported, why the The first Mass was offered in Then on 'Aug. 21, 1953, Our rectory is right handy. (If you admitted to the Church 'after remodeling, and enlarg~the Dennisport July 5, 1953 and July Lady of Victory Missionary Sisretracting their former error. ,E~s1 Brew~ter Church. feel that this is in the nature of Letters' of the Pope ~Irene In fact, nearly every Catholic 16, 1953, Bishop Connolly con- ters arived. Hardly waiting to a strong nudge-it is!) ducted the' dedication'of the new get settled in the' convent, they Tarasius were read, followed by ,c?urch o~, the lowe~ Cape was . . ._ ....._ _. . 'texts froin Scripture and "the either bullt or repaired by the church, to be known 'as Our Lady "established a catechetical proAre YOl,l Wearing A of the f\nnunciation. ,'. gram for Harwich and Chatham, Fathers of the Church which dir~tion or through the aid of Pretty Hat? In 1955 Chatham became a and, in cooperation with the paswere favorable to use of images Father Eikerling. . .' in the Church. In 1926 Holy Trmlty was en- 'parish in its own right and tor, they' saw to the installation ~ It's The decrees of the heretical larged and the work was, fin- Fat her Theodore Brennan, of the Confraternity of Christian lZOuncil at Hieria were con- ished in December of 1927. 'rhat SS,CC., was appointed Pastor Doctrine in the parish. 'demned along with the leaders' same month' fire completelY de- May 1, 1955. Our Lady of-the Thus Holy Trinity had the first ~uthern Now 'England', Annunciation in Dennisport is complete, full-working CCD of iconoclasm. In the seventh stroyed the church. Largest Millinery Fashion Store open only in the Summer and chapter on the Cape. In West, session a formal statement was In 1928 Holy Trinity was re134' SOUTH MAIN STREET dra'wn up to the effect that built by Father Dennis Spykers, is under the supervision and Harwich, classes for religious FALL RIVER images not only of the Cross SS.CC., on Route" 28 in West direction of, Father' Boniface instruction are held twice a but also of Our Lord the Blessed Harwich and was dedicated by Jones, SS.CC., present assistant week - after school for' the to Father FiQbarr. ' grades, and in the evening for Virgin, the angels' and saints' Bishop Cassidy. Dennisport has been enlarged high school students. should be made and receive In 1931 Holy Trinity wasesA'most generous action on the veneration - not adoration, ta~ished as a separate /parish , but still suffers, as do Holy Trinwhich is due to God al~. With Father Spykers as pastor. ity and all other Cape Churches, part of Mr. John Taylor allows Just Across The It was decreed th;lt images It wa~ no longer dependent on from the, terrific jump in attend_ the Sisters to use the' units of Coggeshall St. Bridge two m~tels a~ classrooms~ should be venerated with lights Wellneet and h~d. Chath:un to ance in the Summer. and incense because "honor paid care for on a mlSSlon basis. Finest Variety of Both churches depend extenThe need for further Catholic sively on visiting pries~ to cope education is vital, and' constructo an image is paid to the person Plans Convent . SEAFOOD it . represents." Some 22 d.is,ciFather Octave Igodt, SS.CC., with the heavy Mass schedule tion of a school has always been Served Anywhere - Also plmary decrees, many of which followed Father Spykers, and'in: on Sundays-but. this section of in the plans of Holy Trinity adSTEAKS-CHaPS-CHICKEN touch upol). monastic life, were 1940 Father Thaddeus Bouhuys-:. the Cape is so favored as a vaca- ministration. This is a matter also formulated. sen, SS.CC., left his post as Su- tion spot that usually there is , close to,the heart of Bishop Con. Final Session perior of the Sacred Hearts little trouble in, finding enough nolly, and in 1961 he granted permission to build a school and The fmal session of the coun- Seminary in Washin'gton and be- celebrants. ,approved' the plans of the archi_ Much Work en wa~ held in the Empress' came Pastor,of Holy Trinity., palace 10 Constantinople at her He remained for 12 years, In the last 10 years a vast tect, William Riley. The necesrequest. She presided and to- until 1952, and dux:ing that time amount of work has been done sary contracts were let, and on gether ,with her son signed the obtained proper,ty with an eye with' regard to the parish prop- July 28, 1961, construction of the profe~~non of faith made by the to use as a future convent and erties. Th~ conv~nt and rectory school was started. counc~l, after lJI)eaking to, the entered into negotiations with have been renovated and the Parish Hall coun~ll m~mbers. the Mother House of Our Lady grounds landscaped. The first buildings will take ThiS 'p0lllt is not often men- of Victory Missionary Sisters in Outdoor statues of the Blessed care of grades one through eight tioned m history books because Indiana. Virgin ,and of the Sacred Heart and will oUer a much needed Empress Irene was an 'unFat her Columba Moran, have been erected-Holy Trinity scr~pulous .woman known for SS.CC., took over but only stayed : has been wired for sound for the community hall to the parish. As CHARiESF. VARGAS havlm g mUbl~ted her brothers- about eight months. He was fol- convenience of the parishioners , construction continues, four more classrooms will be added, plus 254 ROCKDALE A VENUI in- a~ and bl~nded per o~n son. lowed by the present pastor, Rev. and as an aid to the dialogue an auditorium and assembly hall. NEW BEDFOB. MASS. ThlS counell .was not Imme- Finbarr McAloon, SS.CC. Mass. This hall will be used as an For some time it had been obd i ate~y recogmzed by Pope Parking lots have ,been im~adf1an, althoug,h he did accept vious that something must. be proved and enlarged, the church "overflow" church in the Sum1~ decrees, because the Byzandone to relieve the crowded basement redone with a perma- , mer. It is also hoped that a new tme unsurpa.tions of papaI lands condition of Holy Trinity during nent sanctuary and both convent convent will be built. , After the usual trouble of geta~d authority were not adthe Summer and permission had and church have had new roofs. nutted. Our Lady of the Annunciation ting teaching Sisters-the Sisters Full Acknowledgment in Dennisport has been enlarged would come if the school was Only more than 100 years, and financial aid given to Chat- ready and the school could not In addition, the new Caro- ham for enlarging Holy Re- be ready until the Sisters were later was this council added by the- Holy See to the list of the lingian emperors of the West deemer and for work in the definitely coming-the Sisters of Mercy, of Cumberland, R:I. councils which it considered 'as and Protectors of the Church rectory and parking lot. promised Sisters in 1964-65, at ecumenical, evel\ though its de- were opposed to the veneration First CCII) Chapter which time the full school cree's had long been accepted by of images. Only when the emIII Rome. " pire founded by Charlemagne All of this cost a great deal of schedule will go into effect. AdAnother factor in the dehiy had disintegrated, did the money and would seem to be ditional Sisters are promised was that iconoclasm did not fully Church give full, acknowledg-, enough to keep any parish busy. each year l!ntil the school is ' die out after this 2nd council of ment to this 7th ecumenical But the need for religious edu- fully staffed. Certainly this school is needed Nicaea; 'the emperors of the ~uncil in order to avoid open cation has always been a matter East after the time of Irene per- conflicts. , of serious. concern to those in -and thanks should go to all sisted in destroying images and Next week - The Eight Gen- charge of Holy Trinity and they those who have labored (with persecuting their defenders. were never satisfied with the little, thanks and often against eral Council.

Effort in Social Work of Church

and

Q.-u_O_O~

~4

CASA BLANCA

S,AVE MONEY, ON

路YOUROIL HEATI . . cflD

ns-:

'Illicit tI~!i"G!y fII

~~

HEATING OIL


..

.

.

~

F'rehJte" , Pralses 1'

#Sha red: Ti mel ,J .

.

. OPEN HOUSE: Student nurses at St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, hold annual open house. Over'150 southeastern Massachusetts high schooler,s were present. From 'left, Sandra Simmers, North Dighton; Theresa Carvalho, ,Fall River; Student Nurse Carol.Bowes" Osterville; Margaret Ledwell, New Bedford.

International\ Congress' Marks ~e'r1tenary of' Pau.ljne, Jaricot _,

,

.

SAGINAW ('NC)':-The Bishop of Saginaw; in whose diocese three 'high schools have heeD closed and many elementary grades dropped, has praised "shared time" prollosais. "The best solution I have seen so far," said Bishop Stephen S. Woznicki of Saginaw. "It is acceptable to the Church and f:t 'would save our high schools." The prelate explained to 'tOO annual convention of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Wom~ that under "shared time," pupils would attend church schools for subjects deemed of religious ~ port and' go to public schooll for secular stuiiies. ' , Bishop Woznicki' noted that "shared time" is' being widely discussed among educators and the 'unresolved problems aN many. He mentioned college aCcreditation and which school Is entitled t9 give the graduaUOD diploma. , 'If We Baa Sisters' Bishop Woznicki called Ca~ oUc schools "the biggest iSSUEl facing the Church in the United States;" He said the principal problem is the lack of vocation. to sisterhoods and urged that the November convention of too National Council of Catholic Women address itself to thbI,' , problem. Noting three high schools helle ,have been closed and numerous 'el~mentary schools in the diocese were dropping all, or some of the ,first three grades, Bishop Woznicki told the ~omen: "We have 12 to 14 places we ,could start schools tomorrow if we just had Ui'e Sisters."

LYONS (NC)-Pauline Jari- 'Cardinal Agagilinian, Prefect of cot, humble spiritual dynamo the Sacred Congregation for the who began it all, was' honored on' Propagation of, the Faith, and the centenary of, her death by ,Pierre. Cardinal Gerlier, Archthe convergence here of national bishop Of Lyons. Card~naIAga­ directors of the Society for the . gianian, head of the Church's . ' Propagation of the Faith from 20 ,worldwide mission endeavOl; Novitiate Friends Slate countries" in five continents. represented Pope John. It was in Lyons that Pauli'ne Representatives of missionlll')' Rummage Tomorrow : began the society by ,organizing orders Of men and women and of Friends of the PresentatioJl oC friends' to try' to . collect a . lay people representing major ,Mary Novitiate will hold, a cent 'a week for the missions Catliolic Action movements gave r"4mmage sale from 6:30 008:30 from everybody, they could. So the congress aspect of a little Friday night, May 18 and from it was to Lyons that mission ex- ecUmenical council. The thou- 9 ,to 4 Saturday, May 19 at 30G . perts came from all over the 'sands of .participants got right East Main Street, Fall River• . world for a five-day mission 'down to business, splitting up: to The group will have a rega. GOngr~. ' , a t t e n d ' dozens of study group lar meeting at 7:30 Monday The meeting opened in St. sessions concentrating on all night, May 21 in the conference John's cathedral under thepresi- majo:r aspects ot missionaryac- room of St. Anne's Hospital, also dency of Gregorio Pietro XV tivit)t. , . Fall River.

her'

an

10 TREAT ASSORTMENT AT ASPECIAL PRICE! WINNER: Muriel Bus-' Fund Raisers 'I siere daugher of Mr. and St. ~atherine's. ~ndRatsin5 '. . . CommIttee, auxIliary to the Mrs. O~m BussI~re, Tlver- ~ Dominican Sisters of Park Street; ton, thIrd rankmg gradu- Fall River, will hold a dinner ating student at Sacred meeting Tuesday, June 12 at Hearts Academy Fall River ,Sunderland's restaurant.: The has been design~ted a win: "unit plans.a Dominirola in, SeV'" . ' ' , tember, 'wIth Mrs. Rene Garant ner In the Rhode Island J alid Miss Noella Bileau 'as"ChawState Scholarship Program. men. . ;

You get 10 good eating 'Hood 1ce Cream treats - Hoodsie Cups, Hood Sundae pups, Hoo~ H-Bars, Ice Cream SandWiches, and famous Hood ,Rocl:tets ._~_.:All tOp~quality treatsl

'''PLUS·4 FREE ','SilLY, :STI'CKERS"

IN, EVERY BAG'

Children love. them, they stick OD, . 'jackets, bikes - ' anything at all Coiorful, bright - full of sillysa~gs."

.BRING .i1()ME A HOOD"~;GOODIE GRAB BAG H fadA Y: •.~ Get I 'THE BE.SI. IN !~E CREAM', IREA'[S~~TA ~'98AlJfJAa" ._. _._-- §AYlNG / .

~.

-_.~

..


Norma'l Youngsters' Have Own Timetable for Development

\I

Thurs., May 17, 1962

firm announcement may' do the trick' and success. fully launch a' hesitant. fledg-

ling. A good part of successful parenthood is .~aking deci~ons, knowing when 'to hold a child back and when to push him forward. . . But sometinies, out of exhaustion, pressures from relatives or after· observing a friend's child (same age as yours) walk while yours' still crawls, you may begin to wonder if. your youngster isn't lagging where he' should be leading. individual Timetables

The growth charts that tell you when'a baby sits 'up, crawls or. walks are only rough guides. They describe everybody'S child and yet nobody's. child. Each i n d I v i d u a 1, normal youngster has his own pmer timetable of growth and maturation. And there is llttle you can do to alter it. Years ago Dr: Arnold Gesell clramatically illustrated' that simply growing older and bigger enables cblldren to do things they couldn'·t possibly dO at an earlier age.

Polish Priest, Sister Meet After 40 Years CLIFTON. '(NC) - A visiting . Polish priest was reunited here In New Jersey with a sister he had not seen for 40 years. F a th e r Paschalis Grygus, O.F .M., of Bronowice, Poland, was only 10 months old when his older sister, now Mrs. Florian Soltis, left Poland in 1922 for the U.S. Father Grygus is on a visit' to the United States. His next reunion will be with his brother John in Chicago.

Senator Keating Lauds Catholic Women's Aid WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen. Kenneth B. Keating of New York has praised the National Council of Catholic 'Women for "one of the most outstanding" programs conducted by a private group contributing to the U. S. foreign aid effort. He made the remark as 'he placed in the Congressional Record an address on international assistance programs given by Auxiliary Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom of New York, executive director of Catholic Relief Services ...,- National Catholic Welfare Conference' at an NCCW institute in New York. ~.

t

Protestant to . Speak. At Catholic Graduation

GaHlots to Withdraw. From Catholic School NEW ORLEANS (NC) -Excommunicated Mrs. B. J. Gaillot, Jr.. will withdraw her. two .sons from a Catholic high school and enroll them. in a public school. Mrs. Gaillot said' she would rather that her sons--Kenneth, 16, and Donald, 14--u had less education than to see them disobey God through such a grievous sin ·as integration." The boys now attend Redemptorist High SchOOl here. . Mrs. Gaillot is one of three New Orleans Catholics excommunicated for trying to block Catholic school integration. New. Orleans Catholic schools are to be integrated in the Fall.

.

CONVENTION BOUND: From left, Cynthia Hodson, Joanne Perry, Claire Audet, delegates from St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River. to National Student Nurses AssoCiation convention, Detroit. Sessions extend from today through Monday.

-Manhattanville, Hono~s Daughter Of Former Japanese. Premier PURCHASE (NC) - Mrs. Takakichi Aso, daughter of former Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida, has received an honorary doctorate' of humane letters from Manhattanville College of the Sacred· Heart here in New York. Mrs. Aso was honored Tuesday for outstanding pu?lic service and for her leadershIp in bene~olent and cultural endeavors 10 Japan. " . She 18 vI~e-president, of th.e Japan-American Women s SOel-

F ELL 0 W S HIP: Miss Roseanne Thomas, graduate of Holy Family High School, New Bedford, now a student at Regis College, has been offered fellowships to Amerlean College, Beirut and the University of Pennsylvania. She will accept the PennFaU River Women sylvania award and study New officers of Fall River towards a doctoral degree in Catholic Woman's Club are Mrs. chemistry. She is the daugh- Joseph M. McManus, presideIlt; Anthony Geary, vice-presiter of Mr. and Mrs. George ·Mrs. dent; Miss Margaret M. Lahey, Thomas, 442 Rivet Street, secretary; Mrs. Linton Wiles, New BedfOld. ~

ety, president of· the JapanBritish Women's Society, vicepresident of the International Ladies Benevolent Society, and vice-president of the JapanIsrael Society. Educated at the Go Gakko dlvision of Seishtn Gakuin conducted by the Society ~ the /Sacred Heart, Mrs. Aso has long been a leader In Catholic women's organizations in Japan. She ~ presently directress of Ake no Hoshi (the Association of Catholic Women).

MI LK

and DELICIOUS

man.

COME IN

AND SEE! THE

NONE TOO SMAll

SULLIVAN BROS~

BUICK ELECTRA

511'

Main OHice and Plant

FARM FRESH

Sucordium Club of Sacred Hearts Academy, 'Fall River will hold its annual father-daughter Communion breakfast in the school hall Sunday, May 20, following 9 o'clock Mass in the chapel. Mrs. Matthew Sullivan and Mrs. Charles Leonard IU'0 chairmen. The club's annual installation banquet is set for 6:30 Monday night, May 21, also in the school hall. Mrs Elmer V. Stafford Jr., past president, is general chair-

NO JOn! TOO BIG

PRINTERS ENJOY

~\~"4

Sucordium Club Plans ~~. Father-Daughter Meal

New Buick

Junior D of i : Junior Circle 71, New Bedford Daughters of Isabella, will hold a mothers tea Sunday, June 10' ~d a dance ::'riday, June 15. For the latter event Jean Ann Muldoon'is ticket chairman.

10 Caesareans CAMBRIDGE (NC) The steubenville Register's Mother of the Year, Mrs. L. Paul Nugent of St. Benedict's parish in this Ohio community, has had all of her 10 children delivered by Caesarean section. Mrs. Nugent, a convert to Catholicism, has . been married 25 years. She was honored with a statue of the ·Blessed Moth&' and a' plaque by the diocesan newspaper. Her husband, Paul, is a mail carriei'.

..............

HAZELTON (NC)-The .laity of the world by "seeing" and understanding that communism amounts to an anti-God movement can aid in the struggle against the ath'eistic ideology, Father Louis Dion, A.A., former chaplain to the American colony in Moscow, said here. He told some 700 delegates at the 1962 Scranton Diocesan Council of Catholic Women cona vention the people of the free world must pray for the conversion of Russia. He said there can be no real peace until Russia Is converted. Father Dion, now registrar at Assumption College, Worcester, said that by its anti-God educational system, ma~J media propao ganda methods, stringent regulations against churches and seminaries, and by jeopardizing jobs of people who attend church services, Russia is eliminating organized religion in Russia today.

before he is mature enough to coordinate leads to fatIure and frustration. Don't Push Tots No one expects a newborn to recite the alphabet, but many parents do anticipate skills by many weeks or months. All of thi.s does not mean, of course, that you must sit tight and wait ~til your bright eight year old asks for an encyclopedia before introducing him to the public library. From the moment of birth children are 'learning all the time- at every age your youngster has specific interests closely keyed to his abilities and level of development. There is an optimum time for encouraging self-feeding, toilet training, reading, writing. Such' timing is not particularly difficult for parents to gauge. Did you ever try to keep a toddler from walking once he· has learned how? Interest, and· perfection of related skills offer good cues as to when your child is-ready to· tackle a particular feat. U you misj udge, start. too .Soon, and' !'t'l:k:J(:'J;"'<¥.""&:,.,,,,meet failure and frustration, try again later.

INDIANAPOLIS (NC) - J. Irwin" Miller, president of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., will deliver the commencement addresS at Marian College, conducted by the Sisters of St. Francis, here SundaY,June3. . . Miller, a Columbus, Ind., industrialist, was. described by - Msgr. Francis J. Reine, college president, as one of the foremost Protestant laymen in the mitton. The Monsignor added: ''In this day of growing interest by Catholics and non-Catholics alike in union, in closer relationships, it is fitting that we Invite to our forum a man who is eminent In' the ecumenical movement."

9

End Communism, Fr. Dion Urges

By Audrey: Palm Riker . ''It's about time Patsy learned to tie her own shoelaces!" How often have you heard an exasperated parent declare it is 'itime" Alice learned to eat with a fork instead of her fingers, that Rob learned to ride his new two .wheeler, or that Andy learnIf you have been a parent for ed to pick up his toys and any length of time, you know elothes? Actually, parents that trying to "teach" your do know their own children child to skate or hit a baseball best. They often posseo>J an instinctive and accurate notion of when the time is ripe to encourage independent, grown-up behavior. During such perIods a

nt£ . .ANCHOR- .

LOWELL, MASS.

Telephone Lowell GL 8-6333 a~d GL 7-7500

Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKO, R. L

1

,

FOR QUALITY, SJYLE AND COMFORT

POIRIER ·BUICK·

594 PLEASANT STREET , FALL RIVER

Ice ere'am

DEVI NE'S Quality v Chekd TAUNTON VA 4-6984

BISAILLON'S GARAGE 24·Hour· Wrecker Service 653 Washington Street, Fairhaven WYman 4-5058

~miiimiii~


10

D'ecency Legion

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., May 17. 1962

SC«)ll"es

Onec$~ded.

Starts C~ange InNEWP@~B<f:Y YOllK (NC)-The

V8~W @~ JM~li'a~e In W @IT'~d Oli'dJer

National Legion of Decency' has initiated a new policy designed to "emphasize the

LOUISVILLE (NC)-Loss of its own fundamental convictions is the "greatest d.ang'er" facing the West,

positive" in evaluating motion pictures, according to its execu-' tive-secretary, The legion, which since 1958 has given special recommenda:' tions, to outstanding films in .the (morally unobjectionable A-1 for all) category, is "now

~ccording

to- former .United' Nations General Assembly pres-: ident Charles Malik, now a pro-; fes'sor the American sity in at Washington, . Univer.

He has. warned the western: nations against forgetting "the grounds of their own strength. and certainty." . "Already many western think-: ers are interpreting themselves' in African and Asian terms," he told the American Catholic Phil':', ~ophical Association,

'considering all morally unobjectionable films for possible ~ n d 0 r s erne n t," said Msgr. Thomas F.Little. Msgr. Little said this means that both A-2 and A-3 films of special merit will be eligible for endorsement henceforth, (An A-2 movie is one rated by the legion as morally unobjec~ .. tionable for adults and adolesParticipating in the s~ond amiual Scholastic cents, while an A-3 film is conSchool were left to right: Joseph E. Joyce, Jr. sidered unobjectionable for B. Kiernan, State Commissioner of Education: adults,) '·Su.fficientlY Educated'

State of War ''Must the strong themselves I I 'become weak in trying to help FEEHAN HIGH' HOST SCHOOL: the weak?'" he asked, "Must the Achievement Dinner' Qf Attleboro High eertain lose 'their grip on the principal of Attleboroi High; Dr. Owen grounds of their own certainty; in trying to aid the unsure?" .. , Sister Mary Urban, prmcipal of Feehan High, host school; and Mayor Cyril K. Brennan T,h e Lebanese statesman, of Attleboro. . . The go-ahead on the new "Peaking on "Justice in. the Inpolicy was given by the U.S. ternational Order," declared that! .I ~is?ops at their annp.al meeting the world today is in "a state of' in Washington, D.C., last· W'liIr _. Ii strange 'kind of 'w!lr~, N()vember, Msgr. Little said, but a most decisive war noneHe sa i d recommendations theless." . ... '" .,.! VATICAN CITY (NC)!:- HiB', ment was immediate and exul- . and . which was given .to the have been restr.icted toA,;,l fi\ms , In this war those who believe Holiness' Pope John -XXIII', first tant." .Pope Joh~ added' that he Church 'by, the new POPe,t!l,at up till now' because it wafJ' In.right order(in natural justice decided to call the coming' ecu';' considered the Cardinal's ~eac- y.re could not find suitable words' feared that endorsement of A:.:i an'd in the freedom of man are menical council, during Ii c()n- .. ti()n as' "the 'first definite sign to expres!i our 'unlimited' joya~d. ' or"A-3 movies might be misintig~ting for·their )ives," he em-: versation about· world: peace of the ,will of t~ Lord." obedie.nce. We are ready 'for terpre~~d 'as implying a l;>roadel'~ phasized... " . with D<>menico cardinal; Tar",; .Threefold work." , approval than the -legion actuallj' ~ !'Justice today cannot be' cCin- . dini, the late Papal'Secretlary 0( .. . . Conclud~ng his comments, ,the inten~ed,.. .' , . .. Pope recalled: "And there' im.....d,ered l',n the. a'bstract" not. eve'n·. State, .' I ' _ It was d\1ring the ,same period,· N()w, h,~wev~~, t,he MonsignOlr. . '. JI;T ~.·.. philosophers,' 'forth·e.. p·r~--."' P~o'pe John spoke of hl'S deci::" the p,ope stated."t.hat "the idea. ~ediatel.Y;· ' . ".,.... . . ,.all partS·:, . . 88'i;l' b l'!:e.v~, d"th t" Cat!lo~", . c8,in~ #om ,,,.~l't".~~••·e ,-.~.,. q~tion is precisely, among . sion: during an audience granted of. ,t~e Roman synod and of, .. of the world the first'llnnotince:,:" '.,l~f~ ,~~:: sU.~IClen~y educated", ¢~er things, the survival of the here to a' group of visitors from . brmgmg the code of canon law . ment of' otli,e;r'" ·s'u,j>po.H,. TQ.·ere..',".~· hi tlie p~r~se!l.·. a~d _~~cti~ning_ ~ry P?ssibility of abstract cO '- : . Venice"led by Gioyanrll' ~ardihai'" up to· date bec"arne concr~te, We was 'not 'one dIscordant note or .~f , the. .IeglO~, .~ iri~ret rell I Urbani, t~e ,;Pontiff's s~dcessor w~re therefo~e able to gIve the. at le~st, noiIidica~io~s' o('ln..;' ~op?-mens!~t!o~~:il1_ !~'::~pir,it 1~, ~derat1on,.xm<!rv~l at .~estern teh.'ought. still sportmg. wIth the . as Patriarch of Venice.'. threefold announcement to ~~e surmountable obstacles: There whIch they ar~ g,ive]1' an~ '110) aJ)stract • •.• when existence' 'The Pope. said he w~s re~ , Sacred "(;:()Uege on the ~ornmg was a real ChOrus of stirring ap- who.m. ~hey are.' dir~." around itllnd in it is all crum-', vealing it as a "confirmation of of January 25, 1959, 1ft the:, plause to which :was soon added' bl~ng," he said. ' his affection' for the faithful of' Monastery of St. PauL" the good wishes even of brothers i 'Looking .Ahe~d· h6 beloved Venice,'" . I Pope John also revealed that ~o: do"not participate' per". . ~How did it happen? HJw did the, reaction of ..the- cardinals fectly iIi'. tlie' \lnity desired and )lalik stressed that justice in t the idea develop?" the i PoPe present 'On.that OCcasion surt orh' . ~ '. ,Home' maCle' ib,e international order resides I asked thoSe" at' the' audience. prised him. He' said: "It wa's es a IS:~,~ by ,the .L.<>rd.'!. : .. " .' :. ,CANDIES' . primarily -in the relations b'e- "The idea' came 90 suddenly that" ibuman to believe. that after . .. CHOCOLATES cultures and civilizations,' to . tell about it seems unreal," hearing the speech; the cardi-' Praises Volunta" ~tl:1er than. nations. . " he went on. Paraphrasing: what . naIs would surround Us to ex:' . A 8" .•. .. ,150 Varie~ . ,"The nation is 'not an abso- he said to Cardinal Tardiniat . press their approval and ·their· gencies. Efforts .'" ' ~te;" he asserted, noting that. the tfine' of their convetsation; good wishes. But there was in-' WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi-, : . 'ROUTE 6 'near te)day there are more than'ioo' P "d"-' t d -. . d' d t dent. Kennedy said here that the n.,i1tions and .in a century ."there . the ()pe sal : ".' 'I' ." ,s. ea .·an .ImpresSIve. an .evou . Wh" ~ T \ Do' ,:'" SIlence." ""', . participation of voluntary agen-' .Fairhaven"Aulo Theatre eouId half .IS claImed ' . a. that 0 I . " ". .." . . . "On1be only t th' as many." d ' " - '"It· the .people " - .Sl1ence Cles In' U. S. overseas relief ef- .. F~IRH~V~N, MASS, : y wo mgs en ure..,.., t. d" t b t.· ,.-,". . forts. "r.epresents • . . the best man and civilization,. but nodiie wan. peace a~ agree~e~ .' u" : The Pope. saId. thIS ~l1ence was aspiratlons of oyrcoun,try.." nation," he declared. "Whatever It hap- . later explamed to ,hIm by the h~ppens to the nation in the ~ens that ultimately. dls~gree,:,I' 'Icardinals, who told him:""Oui' The President said participa;" ,. r " m'eimtime, a hundred years from mentJ; beco,?e' more acu~, a~d.. ~motion was so intense ~nd ~ur_ tion by "the various religious . The. EYSTONE new; .we .would _still have the threats are mcreased. Wh~t wl~l JOY', 90 profound at·· thIS gIft, and charitable organizations'" half-a-dozen fundamental civil- " the Church ~()? M~st ~he¥ysb- whIch WaS all the morepreci" makes' the U. S. relief program .Offic~ '~quipment . izations o{the world." ": . cal B~rqueof.c;~lst..re~rma~ ousbecause .it was unexpected; "infinitely, m()re effective· in..;: . ' . , _,' the. mer<;y. of. the waVeS and go: . ',' ._ finitely more personaL'" , , ".::.; , ~al.es,roo~,·:·' . Just Principle adrift? Is,there not rath~ eX....-:~ 'ilCick,Tax' .Relief. President.Ke~nedY·sa~d.people-' ..... 'NEW·AND USED Malik. deplored :the fa~t that p~ed fr6t;n the Chur~li. n()l~ 'only . t()-people aid efforts are an inwoOd and, Su;.,l D8ks aDd ~hairs'" the principle of "freedom and an admOnishment, but a~ the. . : BRATTLEBORO '(NC) - Th~' . valuable supplement to govern. steel filing" cabinet,s• .lOckers, .helvindependence" has' in recent light of .great example? .1 Wh~t , Brattleboro j)aily·Reformer" has' ment efforts. He told,. the' repre-' ::~:::~~'e:e~ra~ Ct!b~net;s. sar.... years, been applied only "one-. could this light. be?" ~. - I. ' . backed ,proposals to grant 'par- .sentatives of voluritary agenCies sidedly" . on the international Pope John Tar-. tax 'exemptions for' tttat U"8. aSsistance programs,' 108 James . scene, as an .argument for the' dini listened to this with. re- expenses incurred by their chil- ·especiallY ,those involving food.. · '. '. . :,' breaking up of the colonial em-' spect. Then, the Pope\cont~nued, dren in .obtaining a higher edu- distribution;·'would riot be as efpires'of European nations. "The "Our soul was ,suddenl~ en- cation. An editorial in the news- 'fective 'wIthout the cooperation '. NewBedrord new communist empires have not ~ lightened by a great ide~ that paper end()rsed arguments for. of. their groups. , . WY 3-2783 been touched by it," he noted., to Us at that such tax relief advanced by, .iSureiy every people who whIch We welc?Med Wlt~. ~e Fat~er Gerald E. Dupont, S.S.E., . IIYOU . want and .can be independent . greatest 10. the. !?Ivme' president of St. Michael's Col.... .' R GROWING BANK'" are entitled to that free choice," . ~ast.er, and one solemn; -~nd leg,;, Winoqski Park, Vt. . he added. "This a sOund uni-, bmdmg. word came to .Our, lIps. " versal principle It'. rt" f Our vOIce ,formulated It for the SOMERSET, MASS. , ' ,IS pa 0 f' t t' '1'" , justice. But it is unjust to be Irs Ime - a,counCI . i' able to apply it only one-sidedly. SUdde~ Ann?unce~e~t - .. $200.000 to $2,000,000 in 2 Years .iIf the effect of the rine-sided The Po~t~ff saId he ImmediTreat Yourself T4» Convenient Banking application of this just principie ately. realIzed· and feared, that in is in the end only to weaken ' the Id~,a of a, cou.ncil 'fould Somerset Shopping Area at the Bridge . tho~ who hold it, must they not c~use perp~exlty, if not real., So. Dartmouth then either modify its application dIsmay ... If for· no other reaMemb~r Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and' Hyannis or seek more vigorously to see ,son than because. the sudden. , All Deposits Insured Up To $10,000 it carried through to the ends of ' announcement led .one to Ithi.nk the earth?" of. the, ~atural and prolpnged So. Dartmo,uth preparatIon that such an inWY 7·9384 tention entailed." i !nstead ~f protests, the' Pope, Hyannis 2921 Hpng Kong Catholic .saId, Cardmal Tardini's "agree-

Pope'Till • 0 f 'C' -I'C"a' '11 e $ 0 f Genesis oLincl"

V&

~een

unfort~nately ~mebm.e~

sa~d Cardma~

occ~red

~s.

tru~t

~======::=====! K'

entsinco~e

'Q" . ~ea~tr;:ion

A

~dment,

rr-';"~~~.i"':'_----_""~::========:::==:::

SLADE/5 FERRY TRUST C'OMPANY

JIB

LUMBER,CO.

Popaalation J82,000

HONG KONG (NC) - The baptism of 2,100 converts during Holy Week raised the number of Catholics in Hong Kong to more' than 182,000. . .With arou'nd .13.000 c::lfet>hllmens preparing for Baptism imd a growing numo~c of iIiquiries by Chinese pagans about the Cat~olic' religion, it is' estimated that the . Catholic population· of Hong Kong will reach 200,000 by the' end of 1962. This· would 'Dean a five-fold inc:iea~e,during the pas~ 10f~1l~~ .

Lobst'e'r Spats a ~e Co",ing

. pringing in . ~ing Size 1_ Lobsters MacLean~s Sea 'Foods' UNION -l.WHAR~, FAIRHAVEN

.

'

W'HIT:E SPA. _ ~C A T:ERERS . ..

'

..

.

• .BANQUEtS .. ~ WEDDINGS • PARTIES " ,. COMMUNiON BREAKFASTS ~ . P~EASAM. S f . .

OSborn. 3-:7780., \ ....

.. '

FAll. RIVER


Charges Attempt To Inject Sex In TV S<e~G~S

THE ANCHORThurs., May 17, 1962

11

Rel;®D@M~ ~®~t®r

Ap~@O[Ill\f~ ~@bbi

WASHINGTON '(NC) Sen. Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut charged here that Columbia Broadcasting

COlnl~M ~\f@ [Ill\? MONROE (NC) -

Rabbi

System television officials made Marc Tanenbaum of New 'a "clear attempt" to inject York has accepted a position "prurient sex" into a network as consultant to the Religious series. Education Center at St. Mary's Dodd, presiding at hearings of his Senate juvenile delinquency Convent in this Michigan community. subcommittee, said material subpoenaed from CBS-TV files was The center was established by a "shocking revelation." two Sisters, Servants of the ImHe referred especially to an maculate Heart of Maryinteroffice me m 0 ran dum in Sister Mary Johnice and Sister which CBS-TV president James M. Elizabeth - to serve as an T. Aubrey, Jr., was quoted as educational resource center for urging more sex in the hourall faiths. long series "Route 66." Rabbi Tanenbaum will serve Dodd said that in the 1960-'61 as a consultant on reference a'ld season the series was watched background materials concernweekly by an estimated six miling the Jewish religion. lion children and teenagers, in-' New Frontier eluding four million under the The' Rabbi, on a visit, called age of 13. the center "a kind of a new 'Exist In Life~ frontier in the world of reliIn testimony before the subgious education. committee Aubrey insisted that The Rabbi is director of the "no one in CBS asked for more Department of Inter-Religious sex in this program." Affairs of the American Jewish He commented that "sex and Committee, Institute of Human violence do exist in life and in drama which portrays life." He NEWLY. QRDAINED: Shown following the Ordination' ceremony held Friday eve- Relations. said "Route 66" is "well pro.,. , duced and written." ning at the Cathderal are ,the Most Reverend 'Bishop with, left to right, Rev. Philip A. Aubrey said the original pilot, Davignon, Rev. Arthur T. "deMello, Rev. Ronald A. Tosti~ Rev. James E. Murphy, all of film for the series,: shown to 'whom will serve in the Diocese, and Rev. Francis A. Hatton, a: 'New Bedford native orprospective sPonsors, contained ,daine,<l for the Archdiocese' of Santa Fe, New Mexico: scenes which Wel"e oQjectionable and were eliminated before th~ IOUTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE. film was shown to the public. Near Fairhaven Drive-In Dodd cha~ged that "you go as Italian Dinners Our SpeCialty :tar as you dare, ~nd then are ,WASHINGTON (NC) - Th~ ,Churches, the nation's biggest 'textbook unconstitutional, every Service On Patio forced to clean it up." National Catholic WeIfareCQn-- federation of' Protestant :a'nd "school distric't in the nation has , Aubrey, ~,enied that this was ference's top' legal authority has. ,'Eastern Orthodox denominations: long, been violating' the Consti~ 80. ',He also, stated that the perrejected a claim' that ~church:' .. 4 Noue told' .the' N.C.W'C. fution/" " " centage o,f violence in CBS pr()- , related schools, Should' be d'eiiied 'NeWs Service. at the councll's, ' , ,Secular :Humanism grains, diopped in the last two , Federal 'aid because' they, inte.. headquarters 10 New York that· , .... . years.' . . ' grate religion with subjects such he had surveyed 90 . Catholic ,Ev~n if rehglO ll .were tota~ly as science, , s c h o o l textbooks. ke~tout of educah0!1, he said, Ask ,Tax Exemption William R. Consedine,'direc'tor He said that at least 75 of the· thl,S would not ~lve the probof the' NCWC's -Legal Depart- Catholic textbooks conta.ned lem ,be~use education would For. Education Cost ment, said a' suggestion -that "religious indoctrination", in then falll!1 to another ~ategory'TRAVERSE CITY '(NC) _" "textbooks be the criterion for, subjects such' as 'mathematics, called secular humamsm. The Michigan Citizens for Edu- determining, the :cohstifutional-. science and foreign: languages.,· "And the Supreme Court said caiional Freedom org~nization ity of government aid to .church The NCWC's Consedine said in last year ... that 'secular humanhas urged support for a measure related schools betrays a lack a statement that "it is no secret: ism is a· religion within the .Famous for our Prime First Amend- ' to 'grant Federal income tax ex- both of education and of con- that Catholic schools integrate, meaning of' the . Aged Ch~rcoal Broiled emptions for educational ex-',: stitutional la.w:". ' religion with other subject mat- merit," he said: pepses inc.u~ed in, pu,blic or:, He also s~ld ,~at ~f text?~oks ter.'~ . Consedine declared that "the Steaks - also Roast private schools. ' .: : must be Wlt~oU~ an.y rehglOus , "We do not den.y this. We take.. problem of the propel" relation- , MichiganCEF president Stu- ,: content to make theIr purchase, ,pr.ide in it. Otherwise, our Ca~h_ ',ships between parents, governBeef .. Sea Food art .D. Hllbbell of Tra'verse City "with pU~lic funds cons.titU:tio~,:, olic schools would lose a Vital ment" religious groups and edusaid in a stl\tement that the pro- aI, then. every schO?1 dlstr~ct In, reaso~ fo'r existence," he said. cation is one of the gravest con_ Dancing Every Saturday Not Se~ular stitutional problems confronting posal, sponsored by Rep. Gerald the nation 'ha~ lo?g ~een vlolatNite to the Music of Ford of Michigan, "should re- ing the ConstitutIOn. La ,Noue charged that the our nation." Eddie Davis and his eeive the unqualifed support of Answ~rs, Claim loans extended in the 1958 Na-, Only. ',Solution Orchestra all who believe in educational He was responding to a c~aim tional ~efense Education Act, ~ "We !>elieve that the only lNedom." in a 100-page report by a Yale parochial schools for the. acqul- solution consistent with our conThe Ford bill (H.R. 9726) :, graduate student, George R. La tion, of minor equipment for. stitutional,~ heritage' is one Planning, A Wedding. Shower. 80... ~uld allo\V deductions for edu- Noue.. The report· :was made for science, mathematics and foreign' which will leave the government quet or Meeting-Can our Banquet eation expenses up to $300 an-. the Department of Religious Lib-' languages instru'c.tion are uncon-: free 'to provide the same assist-' Oepal1ment for detail.. All Partiea DlI&lI¥ for each dep~dent. erl¥ of the National Council of stitutional because these subjects &nce to_edu'cation in both public given our Expert A"enilon-CaU are not "secular", in ~tholic., and private, nonprofit schools schools. " and which will also respect the MAYFAIR 4.9888-4-9979 Consedine said integJ;'ation of academic freedom of both sys91 Crandall Rd. Tiverton. R.I. religion do.es not make .the tems of education," he mainNDEA assistance unconstitu- tained. ' tiona!. "As a matter of fact," he said, "the NDEA bears out our con';' tention that the government can' aid private nonprofit schools because these schools render a public service to the community. '·'In these schools, the students learn mathematics and' science, . which is what Congress obvious_ ly desires through Qlis legislation. A PROUD ~VENT IN "That a religious purpose is also achieved does not nullify A Y.OW~·G MAN'S LIFE the public service rendered." Consedine said the argument An occasion you will always that aU' reference to religion remember, and every detail must be eliminated from educashould be correct. Make the tion getting public support leads to '''absurd consequences." day perfect; dress him in CI . Shakespeare suit of purest white, with the look of linen ".Chips'n', Twigs" . "Taxpayers' must' surely see to -it, under this' argument, that' white suit of washable rayon no more copies .of' Shakespeare and, cotton. are purchased with their funds, 12.95 6-12 since there are few more powerful teachers of'religion," he said. White shirts 2.25 and 2.95 ,"I~ could, certainly be proved tha't every school that uses Dante, Hose .45 White ties .50 Ch~lUcel" or Shakespeare inevitably educates children in. a religious interpretation of life,' OI?EN DAIL'f some aspects of religious dogma; PROUD PASTOR: Rev. Arthur T. deM~llo, left, is and· the moral and -life values, until 5:30 shown following hi~ ordination Friday with the Bishop and tbat Christianity, maintains in a Fri. until 9 P.M. his pastor, Rt. Rev. Antonio P; Vieira; of Mt. Carmel culture. "If the simple presence of reli_' Fan River Free Parking Pleasant Cor Troy Church, New Bedford; Active at 96 years of age. Monsignor gious content in. a textbook ' Ipakes public purchase of the Vieira has. been.a priest ~or, 73. years.

,

BARBERO'S PIZZA-PATIO

Lawyer Rejects School Te~ts Charges

.Duek Ossieks

RED ,ARGUS USTAUIlANT

FIRST COMMUNIONI

THE HUB, YOUTH CENTER

S. GOURSE & SONS

-.


TMEANCHOR-Dioce~of F.aJl:River.-lhur.s."May:P" \962, . .' -.' .-....... '.....

,\~.,

.

'.'

I .•

....

~."

aLi,·'· Ylngi

-,P~ejud'gce ,SfumbliingJB;I~c;k To Atth~,g!n,ment olf UJo1ii';y By Most Rev;

God; lOlve: Y0'1·' B;y Most: Rev•. }i1ulton J.' SheeJ;\~ D. D~ , &rel tlimee, leve& m the. house. of the soul:.

, .

,

Robert JI. Dwyen;, D~D'~

BiShop of Reno,

'

TJiere: the 1Irsi· flOor' is. filled: with:. demeS: for 'self; the second. floor is full of' iiIterest's for' other' persons;' the fftmt floor' is' concemed only witliL the: gfoQj of: GOtt. the: perCormance' 011 HiS' Willi and the' spreallt of' the, KiiIgdolD! of: God on. imlttm. Everyone prays: on tho' Ievell of, JiiS' ow,u'. hati'nesm. 'JlJie more: spiritual we: az:e, me: less personall are our prayers.;; Ole: less: hob" we, lne>. the more· ego,:" tiil.tic: are> our.' novenas: and' petitions.

.

She; was, the ve:ry moqel of: SomeaodWs: G:ra:n~otili.er., There she sat in the w~ndo.w seat; of the: prane" a;. v;iSion of:' dai1llitiness i.n lavendel!' and; old fa:ce" 8no.w-wmte: ~', piJedl higJa' under her frHled. bonp.et, mn<!lG:e~ce a:~d sweetness: iIn hel'" faded blue ~yes'. A mul'Inured greeting and we sank badt with a sigh of reJ:ie:f;, Utis, wouId. be' a tl7i'p without, eith e~ conversatfon OI: conko-· versy,. So we • fisbed. tlie brevi'ary out of the bag, and adcfr~sed' ourseTf tD the: Office of tli.-e .Flay; "That lI' Profestant or· Ii: €atl'rolic:~" The' 'VOiee was; harsh. 81, DJ d rasping'. The blue eyes, held a steady; '. . g1inili.. The. answer, ctlpsu1e~' sed;' :lOTh O£:. the Div:ine· Q:fi.£i:ce\" ~v,eTh with. hopeful. finality,;" vis>.· ibly upset her. Propinquity; to> a\. Cath()lic Bible, or compilation ~ereof; was' bad' enougll, 1)u1: i1i Suggested! something. m u c l'JI worsC',. tl'tat' the' .possessor' might eve,n be' al priest. She' summoneqI - her stl'engtb.~ "You: a priest?'!' ¢ompanianshipl with at lepel1C would' have been infinitely prefera'Me, but the Old' Girl' wa;SI

and! an! exp1!essfo1ll llfiingliIDg: . "You canlit mean! tha1iiwith, all.

your.' ed.iicafi'on\ ~u~ still. ¥ev;e

in. CliriStiani~?:'"

!is. for: herself'" ~lie, went: on" she liad\ long; since: ~v;ered.', the: superior. meritsJ of: Tb.~sophy.; • It: was; perfect'L'yr obvious,tliat it offered' ll: faJ!' more: rational ae:,. count. o£ life, than:. tlie': naroo.w superstitions; of: G:furiStian dog:. malliinm. .. , . . She felt: pleasii:IgJJf confident : that she neJ!SeIf;, ,im net- ~. seventies" was; welli. advanced: arong; her' personalt serieS: of re,. incarnations,;, and! ouglit:' snoJrtI.¥ tal qualifY' fOr. a, full\-tiine: 10b in tne: Astral'. World'" I, .

I .

Penal~' fom' MiSdee~ ~0tIrii1g~ iDl this" adinittedly" was; fu; the, l'east unusual.1or' par_ ticliliml-y- interesfiii:Ig,. per_,

BE~ €:SJ:IfNA. SEE:: Ms:g,r:-.. William F~. Kupfer" l\tML" an:. American mlssioner to, (;::l'l'ma'r, has: neeD! named Bishop' of:' the, neW! FOJrm08& diocese'. of:' 'Faliehun:g; NrC:

.Ask: anw' Qe1'SOIJ:. what he. most· often prays for; and you have, the measure, of liis: moral conditiom. A young woman· is calledl a' ''gold! digg~" if: she: uses, a young man mereJ'3f to get: somethii.1g~ for. herself; another young·; woman' may: be: more, interested; in a mutual'. larcliang~, of: favors;, and- a third! maY' not: want any,' favors: at:all,. but merely: the oppar.tunify;' for: loye: andodevotiom In: fact" tlie mote~ one: lOv;eBl,' the· l'ess one- wanfg gj.fts;, and' the: more one: seeks. to make self' the gift., I) lDO, ~ais: ever.' pm:¥' fOr UiepeEsecu&ed! ~' ill,. CIiiiJ.3, or Northem.

PIlata-. '

Vietnam!'

'Appe,cd

Z} Have, ;YOUI ev;er casted! from a son cbink: oi a, d~ssert or' a· cigareUe that the' meritS: of; your' self~demaI' migJit be' applied, tOl the; conv;ersron', 01' a soul', In. In db, or: Nigeria'!!' 3)' Eil.ve: y;om, ev,er.' taken upon; YOUrseli1 the burdens: of : omen: b:v; redilcfug, y;our bodilY satisfaction, even' in, a tiny waJ" ~dl by sendfug: the: mo~ saveei' to the Holy Father for the Propagation, ofi the Fa.!eh: iiI missiOlll. lands?' 'i

Continued: £r.om'. Page, One, . it' with TLC' - tender" roving e:are; Howe:v:er; Pin: afraid! a' tot.

of.

us; particufurIy including' me" w()uld' start: to' ratiomrlize; We unless ~t a smaIl'. house' and can't, haps as a.casual.stud~in!the de- honestly afford the extra excline and faU or,New ~ngrand' penSE!''- ·and· then maY'be this kid PilritaniSm, oroadening i ' dawn is; not: quite,'bright; or', is sick: or from dissent: to dissent,. £r,om. even' crippled. ...... and' m~be. Puritanism. 00, T.ranscendental- we>re alIergj.c.'to. unpretty liandi.; ism, finally winding- up i in the caps. S'o, in no time at all' we~ve camp 'of the late Mrs. Annie convinced' ourselve-s that: it is Besant. I . ·~uch better _for the child, But. what intrigued; was the. mind YOU1 - if, we go away and l:lpplicatiom of' tlia idea. df reim-: let someone witli a'big houSe carnation t·o· justify l'aciSm and. and lots of money come afong g,ame... 'MissiODal')l ZealI' Ili'got'ry. ri'gh'1t here- amI" now: ·andi. look out for the- kidi. Or, maYDe; we ,:run' into·, an' , The long ensu~g silence meas;.... <1:fearfY'; those' whu' are c:Stholics: orecF her i'llward' struggfe {Iie'-' andl l'Tegroes in, this' life- 'are' P8Y- old maIl'~ and' an' ofdl woma'll on 'eweerD keeping heY soul! intaCt: ing the penalty ,fOrthefr. mts;.; the same. road _. unfbrtlIna1:ely and saving a brand from the: deeds i.Ill one: or. more: previous' they_ have. no homE!" and', more unf'ortunateIy, theY' ha'V'e. M' . bwming;, On par:li, -we re-. IIves.. 1 The only. possible. ~y in, friends; ·or' relatiVes and!, most: minded' OUl'Self' of tlie Eeumen-;' which the~ can impro:v;e; their.' unfortunately, tney nav~ no, 'leal ·Spirit. . I: Her' miSsionaIY zeall prev-ai!ed.: status. in. the. next rouncLl is, for:. moneY'. And; lees· face' It; they ... renun,.., ' are; not 'a: lov~bre! couple -,theile, jrhe:~ voice came with· a "t; t '"ue. C'a tholl'cs,; t:.. ",y;. promQO;: !:auld tell ~ou, Something, that, ciaU9n. of their ettors" ap.d fb1' is: nQ. twinkfe' in' tbe; eye; no,lii~ woul(f shock Yiou!" Would!· this;: the Negroes, bY'the patient bear- den.· lieart. of gpld1" no undel''-' be more of Mr. Emmett Mc-.' fng of: tlieir' lot: Let us' heal"' no standiD:g tliat': younger' people Loughlin's 1 ate s.,t. guaranteed!. murmuring·; Aliove' aU,' 'tel!' us: nave' theil' own, liv:es- to- live; no happY" acceptance; of: their lOt iiadl:'-rni'se.r~ "CriIp.eland! Immml-' nave no' Negroes moving. ilitO' " ' . .. .. and no' miIHon' 01" tWo' i'ility in the: Catholic: G::hurch?:" : the neighbomood'.. salted aw:ay.r SoJ.tlieY' can j,ust, be· . ,IN''o, it was' instead' a detail'edl Millions Like Hee i eccentric. This couple is miser..· amL thorough- rehearsal of the, fotal' d'epravity of the House of' Our' Little, Old Ea~. ~ no> able;, disconten~ed' and demanKennedy,.. She knew because she: fool. She, realized, that: if' she: ding,. o.ver-eritical and; alW'llYSl bad just been in Washington at'" wanted. to iustify her.- prejhdicfS wanting attentioIIl ani! nev;ez:' a conventi'on of Kfudred Spi'rits,.' she' must: do SOl' on some. otl1ei:' Satisfied, with, anw attempt: at and!. everyDody there was·taIKing~ ~und\ than Ch11istiani1iy;;.andJ fa, help. They give. ~' evidence . of. being; contfuuous nuisances He..' Chief.' Irritation ' that extent It was impossifJ!e ~ and' are, probabT'"7 fixing: to' 'be" "Andi he: is: trying; to ~: Ni~, , deny a cedain· honest, searching siCk gers into' e:v:ery. "o£fice he can'.~ . I Agafu.. what to: do?' same small' Reference to what. was, clearly to, her Theosophy. Tlie thouglit occw:red;, some.-, hoUse" same; financial, conditiolll the chief irritation of her life where during. the. avalancJie af: ~.. d~:t·i __.... 8e'1"Ved' too deflect' hel"' wratIT frOm ' words" tha.t, there: were lik~t.,.' an_ m a \U ·on,. we are. ~ ~. patient people. we don't see: RonmniSll1'. Indeed' she allnost: to, haw' we coula put up~ WIth. the tha.-wedl t'owalldl us: as: she w;a:rm-ed. '. millions. of. Qeople, ~ i to her par:tic.iI1ar' theme: of d:i!-' sliar:e: her. prej,udi.oes. and . he::' ra;., .. constant: iiTitation: . ., .. so, once. tionaliZing: of. them: - ! again, we decide- that'· the Kindest. nunciation. At the: ena" oddIy:' enough. she' and very best thing we can dO' The ciluntl'Yi was: being; given, had the' grace 00' adimt thAt: slie is let· tliaf same rieli" and' ~:-' over: to the Blacks" lock,. stock, and' l)arrer. The medals piimed to ; might. be, wrong; she' had omy' thical, benefactor fiild'them. Of' course there will al'wa;p the. lapel- of. her. iacket. gUttered been trying to think the thing' through. Niggers,~'she said" made, be an unde~currentof regret in the. sun" proo{'of her. ancestry" her cd'escent from the purest of ner' sick: Saviilg' our accepted a' nagging- reminaer that, DO matter how we' try to', bury Ol" New England's limpidity of , presence, so would Catholi9s. So we parted at the ramp", she ignore' our sneaky" feeling al· hlood. . Brewster and Bradford glared to go. her way rejoicing at: her guilt, we failed. in' our Chari." . • out at the world through their : victory; over a Romish Priest; we table' duty. . BET' ,. . we' can' avoi'd' aU the: great-granddaughter's eyes, dis- ; to contemplate tlie: ·llIl:ftactuosi-' ties of Ecumeniscism. Ws allong; unhappy;'· consequences, of: our pleased with all they" sa.w.. , rowl to hoe. 'hyp<>theticaI: r:·e'a.c:t;i o:n''s to Merits of' ''])heosophS!' our h'ypotbetical enc.qunters. We· What form of insanity is it need: not p~sonally.· provide~ for which leads one on to encourage,. the child and the. old couple: even srightLy,' oy a look or at i. S'fttSi[Qem®l!\lU' ." I they' will' be, eared f()l",lov;ed, gesture, such a monolog? To our JeWiS~l C@mmitRiee. patiently . endured ~d lbve~, mumniIredl refofuder' tliat. tliJis" NEW YORK ~NC~ Tlie 'waited: on, understood,. and; after all,. was hardly Christian, l!l:ardly, something. which, Ances.;.· ,American. Jewish, Cbmmittee has: Ioved~, Andi all we have tol cio is; help; _ for J',onattiall' EClwards' c011'la av- :hailed: reported~ remarltsi of fop pro:\T'e;, lI.er rej'oinder' waS' d'efii;P--' :ecumenical' council figure: tflat exerciSe 'Olm Charity> in tfte, w.q;, :the. October' assemblY. in Rame andi an e~ Wa,> it is;.' wUh: ftive:. wiIT diScuss' Christhm relatiOns which we: are· mosti. f!J!Diliar. 't oward'\ J'e w s . · ,i . ) Easy as the: ~. is: • ," Tlie~ committee, al human rela-· family G'roup. must take. it: small I15l the effort tions: agency, referl'ed,'fu' a state-, Jnll7 be ~ . .. we must; make. i1::-. OJ Meet inl. June' 'ment to> remarks attriDuted to help, we. musf.. , . SO now. ~ou,. know where. alI!, WASHINGTON (NC)' - The :Augustin' CardinaL ~ p*esi,. challenges, of marriage and fam- .dent of the Secretariat: for Pro-· thiS. is. headed: - tlie. C8.tIiolic., / mo.ting ChIjstian UtIity,:-,. duting~ Charities: AppeaI _ whicll.g,i~j fily lue today will' be treated at ];{J g~nera1l. sessions; L2' seminarill . a\ press intel-view, at. the: Foreign. - us our chance to help in. Charuy i · far, beyond our indIv.ii.iualabili,., and 8 workshops at the National Press' Club of Rome~ . Louis. Caplan of: Pift'sburg~, fy ,. and: wlii'ch, allows. us' to. ac... ¢a1ifuJlic, Family' Eife conv;ention, . comm'ittee president'.. ·said Ithe1 cept'" with. gratitude;. I: hope"tbe: tb be held. in St: Louis from June Cardinal's remarli:' that study;' easfug. of aur personal' ,reBQOn'" Z5 to 28. : A tentatL.v:e. conventiOIh pr~ will. be: given to, the' relationShip. siblliq and: stiU: leaves,. us free, gJ'aIIll w.as: announced! liere by.:' <>f 'religious teachings. to per- tiD. say" in. effect. ~ dIei' not pass. ll.lather 'John. C. Knott, director of, secution of Jews "represents'lIJ by;~ so tIlls'year give to the Chari,., the F~-:rr.ffe Bureau\,Nli1illmaii . Ql"ofoundly courageous. move!"' ~thoIre Welfare-. ,ConfeFenee; whiCh, will heIp' reduce ''Darrien tlea. Appeal as. if the. child: and"hias1" between. Jewsl 1and! tile. weI: couple were. standblg;. . , whiclJ> is; snonsoring the conYenmm. . CbriBtiaos. ! JIlMK" cfuor..

=

hiss:'

"!'.

."

'Ph.ei Gilory, of ~_..Ii'. _' .~

£:-.-

rvti'~ Ii

I

We. pray and sacrifice according" to" our spiritual state. May tliose' of you' who .read tll.is column be found on'. tlie thirdl floor of livfug' for' tfte gIOrY' of God; and' the.'gpread' Of the Ch1ll'ch throughow; the. world!l Will.ate:v:er you sendl to> Tlie Society for the Pro-" pagatiOI1' 0.£.. the: Faith,' will be: forwamied' directly. to' the Holy' Father, and he sends it to the, pooj of.. tIie~ w.orld.

._'--

GOD L&\Y,E YOU.e;;., Anonymous. for $5 !'May God' bleSs yOU.,

through Jesus, Mary' and' 'Joseph," .... to Mrs. C.E~B. f~r $30. "Iil. tbauksgiviiIg: fbm' a, favCi- received' tlirough the intercession ,oil:. Our.' Lad$ anil\ the: Iilfant d Prague. May; .ft. help some 'of' the pOOl:,' of ,me:' MissionS' to, know, love and' sellve. God~" '. • • to Mrsl., ·R.Mom, fon $G. "I promised we w:ould, make an. offering in , honor' ol thel Saclled, Hem if' we fOund'. ·our. lost puPP~. Taff:r : was:. returned. the: da!1 fallowing t1iis promise...' • • • to ·A..JL., , fbr' $5.' ''TbiB w, fOr'fiLvol'S Ii. have not received, although 1 have' been asking for two J:ear& I; know that I. will receive them...,

.WORllJ)MISSIIDN;" a quarterly magazine of missionary activities; edited! by MOst'Rev. Fulton s:. Sheel1\ is the ideal gift. for: priests;, nuns, semfnarians: or laymen, Send' $5' .for' a one:}fear. subscription:. to. WORLDMiISSIONi, .366, Eifth· Avenue. NewYork. 1:, NeWT York.. ' . Cut. out' thiS colUmn,. put "our saerifice to- it and' mall 'it to the Most Rev Fultwr J'. Sneen" National! Dli':ectot of' the' Society for the· Pl"l'pagatibn' of'the Faith,. 366 Fifth Avenue, New Yorlt I, N. Y;' O!' your' Dfocesan Director"RT: REV. RAYMOND T; CONSIDINE' 3681 !Worth Main Street" Fall Rinr, Mass. , , I

'

,- YOURS, TO· lOVE AND, TO, GIVEI: the .lif. of a' DAUGHTER: OF.' 51;, PAUli., Lova' God! 1II0r., and; siR> tOl lOuis, knowledge and 10.'"' of! . GOd. by, serviilg; If".m: in. a Mission, 1Irillch UIU. th.. I. P.rau: . Radfo, MotiOa: PiCtUrell: cand: Tv., fa' bring' : HiS, Wordl fa> saulS' e¥9I'YWliere, Zeafoua YOUDS. l gIiho, f4ioUl Y9GI'S' iittiinsfedl .... IIiis tIIIiq1l1J' ! Apa&fiIftIfiI may' ...... tai '

"

'REVriR&ND;

MOTHER' SUP.ERIOR DAUGHTERSi OIl' sf! PAIR! SO' ST.. PAUL'S. AVE. :, BOSTON 30. MASS~ ,

.

1ITl,s;'., S:UEll l

lI;p,

"

;

. . •' .

I'I}

rfUIUUmi

,

~~~ "'U~

D~DSON OIL BURNERS'~R. \."

2:4'-H~ur Oil

. Bee, COc:rl-· Chareoali

1

I

~~D ~~

famaus' Rila.ding HAR.I)I COAt NfiW' IENGIlAND' COKE' Burnell' 5er:vlce Charcoal Briq,uem

0'.'1I. 5

U' ....., n.H,lIIng:

• .

;~~

i.:-::

'.!!i.. S~~~ .·.. ~'fJ~.:(!) 'Y;S'" ~tt • '§:' ~"'.......~.

" .......~,.

!j)le©1S~$, -! a

640) 'I"asant: Street' 88, Thr.i.f.ty.; -' Be, Wise Ask; your Meatman far al DAVIDSON'S: . (MacGreg~ Brandl

i

.we

Life

l'

.:$WEnN11:C: e; Bake, In' the" Bag;.-No -M«,' ~-

-

of'

I '1

Basting

"WINNT~G" FAVOR: Roafi SCoti:fl: Haml FlavorU; WIolF.li ITS; FI:AVOIr."· ,

.

OAVIOSON'·S ,Mac: Gregor-

«

" BPArJD ')

-:P«is-

JUST at· All' Leading ASK: fOR' fOod Stores SWElTNTCS I~ Ma.sachusettS,

,, .


Fan River Acadehly S':"dents

· M .A'NCH01t~ 'Fhuri:, May 11, 1961

.r·

Continue Three Year Battle . Against Atheistic Reds

Relief. Agencies

· Urge Passage

By Clement J. Dowling Answering a question posed by a non-Catholic coneerning the supposed blind ·faith of Catholics, Fathers Rumble and Carty wrote in "Radio Replies," "Considering that Catholic Faith is faith in the very knowledge and veracit1 of God Himself, the Some 15 miles away at TaunCatholic is certainly obliged to m a i n t a i n that the ton's Monsignor Coyle High is a smaller group accentuating the teachings to be believed by positive. Meeting bi-weekly to

Catholic Faith are right. And he knows with abso~ute certainty that any doctrine or position op_ posed to the Catholic Faith it! wrong. Meantime since the Catholic Faith is a most precious gift from God, one who possesses it is also obliged not to endanger it, but to safeguard it in every possible way." Convinced that the greatest organized threat to the Faith is Communism, the students of Fall River's Dominican Academy have in their own way been actively fighting the atheistic philosophy for over three years. Conducting a weekly radio program each Sunday night at 7 over WSAR, the D.A.'s read and study various aspects of Communism. Preparing for the weekly radio stint titled "Communism and Christianity," Dominican stu-· dents have found the project demanding and /yet rewarding. Listeners attest to the extent of preparation and the excellence of presentation. "The Race Question" by Yves Congar supplied the basis for Sunday's 152nd consecutive program by the students. . study Material Some 90 Dominican students are participating under the ban_ ner of the Bishop Walsh anticommunism club. Divided into four units the scholars discuss the essence of atheistic communism and its many facets with the view of attacking it, especially. from a· positive approach. The board of directors consists· of three seniors who control activities. The junior and senior groups actively guide the frosh and sophs. "Evil Tree" by Agnes Murphy and material from the Cardinal Mindzenty Foundation typify reading used to arm themselves in the battle, against dialectical materialism. But one D.A.'er adds "With alI this accent OR anti-communism we still realize that the best attack is an intensHied Christian ilie. We find our greatest help more frequent reception of the Sacraments." Taunton YCS Bishop Walsh, a Maryknoller, and . still a prisoner of the Chinese communists, continues to be remembered in the prayers of these teen-agers whose project has attracted letters of inquiry from high-schoolers as far away as Cleveland. .

·"3·

Of Aid Law WASHINGTON (NC) Leaders of Catholic, Proteso · tant and Jewish relief agen~ · cie~ have urged President. Kennedy to use his influence tc> win passage of refugee aid legis~ lation now stalled in the Senate. The leaders of religious agen~ cies warned that Senate failure to act on the bill would leave the country without any legal provisions specifically covering tho admission of refugees. They said this would be bad from the "humanitarian" point of view and would damage the international reputation of tOO U.S. The voluntary agency repr~ sentatives made public at a press conference here the text of II telegram they had sent to Presf.. dent Kennedy the day before. The signers of the telegram, .who also took part in the press conference, were Msgr. John F. McCarthy, assistant executive director of Catholic Relief Serva ices-National Catholic Welfare Conference; James McCracken, director of ·immigration ·servicell 01. Church World Service; and James P. Rice, executive director of the United Hias Service. James Norris, assistant to the executive director of CRSNCWC, also particiupateci in' tM press conference. .

discuss and plan school activities, the Young Christian Students' aim is to better themselves, their school, and the world. Moderator Brother James Derrig helps the students to develop STUDENT COUNCIL: Student Councn~ members at leadership and realize their reDominican Academy, Fall River, are, from left, Michelle sponsibility as lay apostles. Sponsoring schOOl retreats, First Gariepy, Elizabeth Doimelly, Madeleine Brodeur, Pauline Friday Masses, and social activi- Phenix. All are from St. Anne's parish· with exception of ties, the Coyle students find a Elizabeth, from St. Patrick's, Fall River.. solid basis to· project their part in the Mystical Body of Christ. of the annual concert featuring contest for creation of a new Being the only YCS unit in the Coyle Band and Glee Club. the Fall River diocese, their ac- Spectators will hear musical seal. The seal is to be used in connection with the celebration tivity has brought questions as to masterpieces ranging from the to be held in 1964 and will be the content of their meetings. popular to the classical. Always on· decals, decorations and liter_ President John Digits reports that meetings open with prayer, a favoJ:ite of Tauntonians, the . ature.. Ancther Bishop Stang stuSpring Gala promises another dent, freshman Ronald Cormier folIowed by a reading of a gospel outstanding milestone in the his-- of New Bedford won second with open discussion to deter- tory of the alI-boy school. prize of $25.00. mine the gospel application to The Diocese's other all-boy The new library at Bishop daily life. Each meeting closes school, Msgr. Prevost of Fall Feehan is getting gifts. The Atwith prayer. . River, will honor Our Lady · tleboro Serra Club provides The Young Christian Students Sunday in Notre Dame church. pamphlet rack and library at Coyle are part of a world wide movement with U. S. headquar;. A Marian Hour will take place materials,. while· the Particular ters in Chicago. Using the famed at which Rev. Gerard Boisvert Council of St. Vincent. de Paul cell technique, members learn to and Rev. Adrien Bernier will · purchased 75 volumes of the 20th work together as a group J;or the speak on "Mary and the Sodal- · Century Encyclopedia ·of Catholgreater glory of God. Many YCS ity." After each talk a five min- icism. Additionally area Knights go on after high school to take ute period will be provided for of Columbus of Mansfield, Seean active part in the Young mentaf prayer, a spiritual activ- konk, and the Attleboros have ity which all Sodalists are pre- organized a committee to raise Christian Worker movement, a ·pared ~ Contradors for. .. .money.for needed books. . welI known activity in European Benediction and renewal of and American big cities. Banquet Tonight .Eledrical consecration to the Blessed Aids Community Members of the varsity volleyMother will close the hour. ball team at Sacred Hearts, Fan It didn't take the Attleboroa' Yearbook Planning new Feehan High long to develop Yearbooks .and their prepara- River, .will attend an· awards a spirit of community coopera- tion are works of art. One pub- banquet . tonight spOnsored ~ tion. Offering the use of their lishing company just had a con- Bristol . County Girls' Athletic . new ·and beautiful auditorium vention in Attleboro to explain League. " Senior art appreciation class to Attleboro High for a Student the . workings and techniques Awards Night brought many necessary to produce an out- members will visit Boston mu944 County St. complimentary worc1fl from the standing book. Attending were seums Tuesday, May 22 in toe New Bedford people of Attleboro. many of next year's yearbook second· field trip of the year. Susan Fagan is .SHA's repreIn a gestur~ of gratitude Attle- staffs. Mary De Ceccio and ·boro High officials invited Sister Theresa Viveiros are the '62-'63 sentative to the National Council Mary Urban, Feehan principal, editors of the Mercycrest, year- .of Teachers of English coqtest. A to be a guest of honor at the book of Fall River's Mount St. resident at Holy Union Prep J head table. Sister Urban's unique Mary Academy. Attending the School, Susan is a day stUdent presence created a warm re- convention from St. Mary's in· at the Academy. ..,.....-------t).1 Studen·ts at Bishop Feehan sponse as did her address which Taunton were Louise Bury, was broadca·st over the local Maureen Tamache and Janne High School proudly welcomed '" R MAKES MIl'TM\M" newly ordained Father Philip radio station. os: lME HIGH QUAU'TY Gallagher. Davignon on campus yesterday. Honors have also come to PRESCRIPTION SER'I\CE Louise, incidentally, has just Holy Family in New. Bedford returned from a month's tour of Father Davignon honored· 190 fro m Providence College's Europe with her parents and school by saying one of his first Lacordaire Debating Society. . finds her classmates' fulI of Masses in the chapel. Richard Perras, Susan Aguiar questions about her trip. She and Thomas Azar have received visited her sister who is studydebating awards magna cum ing music at Pius XII Institute laude for their outstanding work and her brother .who is an offi/ in the recent P.C. tourney. Kath- cer in the U. S. Army in Gererine Maguire of H.F. has added many. lustre to the school's reputation Over in Fairhaven Jeanne Le_ by winning the New Bedford febvre is the '63 yearbook editor Municipal scholarship, a four with Paula Couto as her assistNEW BEDFORD year fui! tuition scholarship to ant. The Sacred Hearts Academy New Bedford Institute of Tech- girls aim to make the Aymerian nology. INDUSTRIAL OILS the finest yearbook in the DioJanne Gallagher of St. Mary's cese. Today they and their felHEATING OILS in Taunton, school Anchor rep- low students are in Boston visitresentative, wilI also represent ing the Science Museum and St. Mary's in a contest sponsored Planetarium. TIMKEN by the National Council of Literary Trip' OIL &URNERS English. Nationwide there will Tuesday the effervescent junbe 426 winners determined by iors of Jesus-Mary Academy J,iterature awareness, grammar, a travelled from Fall River to & Service theme written in one hour on a Boston on a literary trip which previously unknown topic, a pre- included the House of Seven 501 COUNTY ST. viously prepared autobiography Gables, the Museum of Science, and creative writing such as a Harvard University, Longfellow NEW BEDFORD . IRENE R.SI-4EA;P~O·P. poem or short story. House, James RusselI Lowell House, and the Public Gardens. Miniature Campaigns WY 3-1751 '20'2 ROCK ST.. FALL RIVER,~S~, Political campaign in minia- The J.M.A.'s recent Sodality 1"te.OSB.·~RNE '5-1929' ture form are taking place at· election chose Denise Gelinas as Bishop Stang High in North prefect, Claire Amiot as viceDartmouth. Prospective candi.. prefect, Madeleine Valcourt as dates for stuqent council offices secretary, and Louise, Demers of honor are beating the drums treaslirer. For the National "for student backing. Imaginative Honor Society Barbara Boudria INC. will be the new president with campaigning fills the Stang cor:' Claire Amiot as vice-president. ridors as contestants and their Long Island University has political teams attempt to convince classmates of their quali- granted a.$675 renewable scholfications. Students previously arship to Janet Robillard, a senior at St. Anthony High. The submitted the list of qualifications they expected in their '63 New Bedfordite will major in leaders. The campaign will cul- . mathematics-her favorite subminate in a ralIy at which oppos- ject alI through· high school Seal Contest ing candidates will have the op- . The Dartmouth Tercentenary portunity to address the assemfRANlCIS J. DIWDNE Committee recently announced bled student body. Up at Coyle's. auditorium next that ,Bish9P Stang sophomore Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Nancy Ryan of New Bedford 363 SECON D ST. won first prize of ~50.00 in the ~e rafters will rin'g to the music

~

. Ct~ ,. ?).ftt

~

~~ = _.

TOUHEY'S. PHARMACY

HATHAWAY,

OIL CO.

Sales

INC~

·tT~

PHARMACY··

D &. D SALES AND SERVICE,

HEADS HOPE: Dr. WilJiam B. Walsh, "skipper" of the U.S.S. Hope, has sailed with his privately supported 15,000 ton hospital ship for Peru where he will direct the training of Peruvian doctors. The 42-year-old Georgetown University Medical School graduate averages 50 talks and travels thousands of miles· annually in behalf of the project. NC· Photo. . .

..--<:l

~

FRIGIDAmE REFRIGERATION APPLIANCES

AIR CONDITIOtl\UNG

to.:

....


. .

,

. ',f

..

II

...

~

THE ANCHOR-Dibc~s'e of. Fall River-Thurs., May 17, 1962. ,

14

_ , '

.,

J

.

Charities Appeal- Special G~fts'

Continued from 'Page One ''The parish comml~teeman is The faithful is urge~ to coop- a key figure, in reaching the erate with th~ parish collecw.rs goals we have set," I Chairman by staying at home during .the Condon said today. '\Your. past hours of the sOlicitation. The - spirit ~f ready cooperation has · hours will vary slightly i.D. ,each' indicated your ,williilgness parish, but hav~ been assi,gned 'sell' Catholic Charities," the Atby ·each pastor In an effort to. tleb~ro . business lea~er com. cooperate with the greatest num-· mented. "I ask each one of you, . ber. ' w i t h your' personal. contacts, to .' This year the first report must put a little more eff!>rt and a be given to headquarters on little more. salesmanship into , 'Sunday night and so -the need your approaCh. The icause for, · of following the 'directions as which we are.working[is a noble · regards the collection period is and dignified cause ~d I ask · blost essential. Go4 ~ bless your. efforts."

)

to

b .

Fall River

Special Gifts' National Accounts $500 Stop & Shop Foundation - $4.00 P. A. Tracey Co. '$300 Our ;Lady's' Chapel I. L. Marshall & Sons, Inc.' . ,$200" LaSalette Shrine Milton Bradley Company $125 Stonehill College $100 Sullivan Brothers Printers R .. J. Toomey, Co.

,~,

.

'. T

First National's tender, succulent pork - Lu~cious ,from end to end

PORK··.LOINS

,Combination . Chine 'End' . . 'F'r'e':s"h -<F'o"·wl,ReadYtoCooIc~4·tO,S.LBAV9

,

:r\

.

:"

,

,

.'

: '.

LB

, I'

- . Leap, Meaty Por'kRoast

Will &. Baumer' Candle Co. : C. L. Packhem Co., Inc.':' Thomas' W. 'Reed Co. , M.· H. Gerritt & Co. ' -United ·Cork Co. Gothic. Craft, Inc: ."', . $15 .", Kirkpatrick Co. $10 Western Weatherproofing

me.

I'

39c LI 49c ",r M-UP WHOLE 29c 33c LI. .,...

'Rib End Roast and' , Pork. Chops

Rumford Steel ~Producta .

',.,.

29(

LB

i

$50. $25

7 Rib Cut

\

. . ,le~n,,,. Tender,. Meaty . LB~

"

. Same Low SeH·ServfCll Prices In ;6.11 Stores in This Vicinity -: lWe·Reserve tlieRightto Umit Quilntiti8tJ ..

t

.eo..i

·1-

I.,

I

.

BEST SPRINIG

Taunton

PRODUC~

- SPECIALLY PRICED!

t

'.'

, .,

, t

,-

Fresh from Califo'mia ~. Luscio~s, ~uby Red, S';'eet, Juicy Strawberries

'STRAWBERRIE'S . . .'

Watermelons'

Fiery Red and flJlI of Juice ~ . , A Luscious Treat:

PASCAL ..: Crisp and Cru~chy ~

'~Celery flNAST -' ~

'

and Dettcious

Peanu.·· B....er

$13

,'. LI.

BUNCH·29c

LOw in Calories ..

I

~LB

. JAR

AD T~.sty Fruit F.lavors

'$30

c59c 'I~ Ie

THIS WEEK'S GROCERY SRIC_ALS! I • "

f'

Devine's Milk Lab. League of Sacred Heart--st.· .Jacques Parish $25 W. F. Crowley & SOM Poole Silver Co. . United Brotherhood of ear": penters LO.ciu 1035 Taunt( n Building Trade Hanson & Company $20 Church Fuel Co., Inc. Taunton Mason Supply Co. DonIe's· • . Dr. Edgar L. Latimer I $15 Dolan Memorial Funeral Home' Richmond Granite & Marble Works

I"~

,Jell.O··

F~.'. Gelat"'"

. Chocolate Crea,n-Fi~ed C~kies

SUn$hine CHEF BOY-AR-DEE _.

Spaghe••i

12 ~~s

SI~OO

,-. 43c

_

Hycl~ox AND · i MEAT IALLS

63c

2

j I

(EIJ.O

I

15~oz49c

I

. CANS

l

.

~eparture Cell'enit1ony

FOli' ·n"ii"h ree Pruests I

'.

PATERSON (NC)~A depar-\. ture ceremony will be held at St. John the Baptist cathedral here Friday; June' 8 'for three priests of the Paterson-diocese who have v;:olunteered to take over mission parish at Caranavi, Bolivia. Bishop James A. McNulty will Reilly, St; Germaine & Son, Wil-, offer the Mass, and present 'mis-' .. frid V. Saint, M,anny's News. sion crosses· to the three after the Burke's Canteen, Mr. & Mrs.: Gospel. Tlle preacher win be Howard .Carroll, Arthur J. ~e- ~ Auxiliary,BIshop Fulton J. ~een CqC!mplam, Edgar DeChamplam, , 'of New York national· director.'· M, J: Flanagan Sons.: _." of the Society for the. Pr6paga. Lamoreaux Oil Co., Milot TV, tlon of the·Faith. i Taunton Letter Carriers,Ward's .:. The'three are Fathers J6hn F Garage, Young's Motor Tryc~ Heusser,' who will be superior of Serv~ce, Inc." Raynham . Selfthe mission, Armand Conte, and SerVIce. Charles C. Cassidy. . .••L . Mehegan's Gas Station $10 ' I George F. Riley, Dagen Fu-' neral Home, W. H. Riley & Son i Inc., Riendeau. Funeral Home, Gorham Press. ... L. G. Beers Co., Frederick

Big Bonus for you';: on an arlJ'Gy

.

;

a

.

I

I I

0'

lonus Stamps Specials in every department. All items clearly displayed and identified. ' Fill your stamp book faster -get your 'free gifts sooner. "lOCOUPONS NEEDED - BUY Au. YOU WANT! ~iljiiijiiiijiiiiii';;Ei:iiijjiiiijiiij~~-'J ,-,~~ (

:

*,"o=:wac

fA


MacmUlan Replies to Schoolgirls' Protest of Indecent Movie Ads LONDON (NC)-Prime Minister Harold Macmillan has replied at length to girls of a Catholic convent school who protested to him against indecent advertisements for movies. The gist of his 600-word reply was that the government cannot set standards that .are stricter than those accepted by the comunity as a whole. . He said that if the girls of Notre Dame Convent School were able to change public opin. ion on movie advertisements, government censors would then have groun~to stand on. The school is at Blackburn in Lancashire. Macmillan said he took so long to repiy because he wanted a careful investigation into the facts. His reply came after a national campaign whicl} the girls started against indecent ad_ vertising had gathered momentum and attracted wide attention in Britain's national press. The Prime )\'tinister's letter said: "Public opinion can be formed only as a result of the tensio ll between different points of view expressed by different people or groups of people. It is therefore all to the good that there should be groups of people like you and your friends who ~re urging the maintenance of high standards. .If this should lead to a general change in public opinion it is likely that those responsible for the control (.of

advertising) arrangements would respond to it. '.'The Government for its part will find it difficult to impose standards which are a great deal stricter than the majority of people would be willing to accept. The Prime Minister 'does not think the result of the inquiry which he has made V\l;ould justify the Government taJting at the present time any additional steps to impose further statutory control over that which already exists. . Claim Wide Support. "I understand that there has been verY,little complaint about the standard of fiim advertising and this would tend to suggest that those responsible for these arrangements are setting a standard which is partly accept_ able to the majority of public opinion." The girls of Blackburn' are campaigning to let the Prime Minister know that indecent film posters are not acceptable to the majority. They have already written to about 60 other girls' schools and they are trying by other means also to stir up public opinion. They claim to have the support of many thousands of people. Their efforts are being publicized regularly in the Catholic press. Bishop Andrew Beck, A.A., of Salford, the British Hierarchy's adviser on schools,' has publicly praised their action.

Two Sisters of Mercy to Receive r Degrees in Special Training Sister Maureen, RS.M., prin- in Fall River. She received a cipal of Nazareth Hall, Fall B.Ed. degree' from Catholic: River, and Sister Anne Bernarde, Teachers' College, Providence R.S.M., a teacher at Mercymount and has taught in schools in New Country Day School, Cumber- . Bedford, No. Attleboro, and Fall land, R I., will receive Master River. of Arts degrees in Special EduSister Anne Bernarde,' RS.M., cation and Special Reading, re- a native of Fall River, is the spectively, Sunday, May 20, from daughter of Mr. and Mrs. BerCardinal Stritch College in Mil- nard F. (Margaret Lawlor) waukee, Wis. . Sullivan. A graduate of Mt. St. Sister Maureen, the' daughter. Mary's Academy, Sister received a B.Ed. degree from Catholie of the late Daniel Hanley and the bte Sara Melia Hanley was .born. Teachers' College. Prior 'to her present position as teacher at Merycmount; she also taught at St. Matthew's School, Providence. Rev. Bernard F. Sullivan, as-' sistant at St. Mary's Parish, NaPton, is a brother.

Names New Nuncios Tq' Ireland, Spain VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has appointed Archbishop Giuseppe Sensi as Apostolic' Nuncio to Ireland. Archbishop Sensi,' who· has been Apostolic D'e1egate to Jeru_ salem and Palestine, replaces Archbishop Antonio Riberi, who has been named Apostolic Nuncio to Spain. , Archbishop Sensi, born in . Cosenza, Italy, in 1907, was ordained in 1929 and consecrated titular Archbishop of Sardi in 1955. In the same year he was appointed Apostolk Nuncio to , . ._ :.. __..••.. _., _... •..J Costa Rica, a post he held Wltil . he was named to the Apostolie SISTER A. BERNARDE, R.SM. Delegation in Jerusalem.

L EM"E U X PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. for Domestle ~ & Industrial ~ Salesand \ Oil Burners Service WY5·1631 2283 ACUSHNET Ava NEW BEDFORD

A. D. McMULLEN' Inc.

MOVERS SERVING

FaD River, New BecIfoed Cape Cod Area

~'\J

I

k

AA'eDt:

AERO MAYFLOWER TRANSIT CO. INC.

I\ ' " 'v

LJ.

\

....

_

...J

SISTER MAUREEN. R.SA

'

Nation-wide Moy.... WYman 3-0904 3M K.emptoll St. New Bedfol'd

15

'. 'THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., May 17, 1962

'Boston l@ymen

To

In

T~rk<e Syn~d

Part

BOSTON. (NC) - The aftermath of the ecumenical council will find laymen participating in a local synod, Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, said here. "I propose to have laymen participate in the Archdiocesan Synod that I will summon shortly after the completion of the Vatican council in OctOber," Cardinal Cushing said. "They will have a voice in the prepara_ tion of the Synod and establishing regulations for the archdiocese." The Cardinal spoke at the Diocesan Congress of the League of Catholic Women.

PI~I71lBilOIJlJ~ §~q?$(f;:I?(tO~~~ Cc~~~@e i~ ~~U'a~r.dl~

MISSIONARIES: Preparing for new assignments in the Sisters of Mercy missions in British Honduras are, left, Sister Mary Johnella, R.S.M., and,. right, Sister Mary Mercita, R.S.M.

Sisters of Mercy Missioners Continued from Page One . Sister Mary Johnella is the daughter of Mrs. Louise Dailey and the late John F. Dailey of Providence.. A graduate of St.

.Mass Marks Parish . 300th Anniversary' ~'

'

CHAPEL POINT (NC) - A special Mass was offered at' St. Ignatius church here marking the 300th anniversary of its establishment' as a permanent parish. The. Maryland parish was actually founded in 1641 by Father Andrew White, S.J.,· an English Jesuit who accompanied the first settlers of Maryland in 1634 aboard the Ark and the Dove. It has had a resident pastor since 1662 and is believed to be the oldest continuou.sly actiVe parish in the nation. , The anniversary Mass was 0ffered by Father, Michael J. Fal'reB, pastor of St. Mary's Star of the Sea church. in Ind'ian' Head, Md., .and moderator of the Charles COUJ:l,ty deanery of the Washington Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women, which sponsored the' observance.

HENRY'S' BICYCLE 'SHOP

Patrick's High School, Providence; she received a B.Ed. from Catholic Teachers' Colege, Providence. The new missionary sister has also studied Spanish at Salve Regina College, Newport. Professed March 12, 1952, Sister Johrella has taught in St. James' School, New Bedford, and St. Joseph's and ss. Peter and Paul Schools in Fall River. Sister Mary 'Mercita is the daughter of Mr. ~and' Mrs. Mark . Cannon, Manville, RI. Sister graduated from St. Xavier High 'School, Providence and received a B.Ed. degree from Catholic reachers' College, Providence. She also studied art at Salve Regina College. Professe<' on March 12, 1955, the new mission sister to Honduras is now te'aching iJll St. . Louis' School, Fan River.

" DONAT BOISVERT

WY 2-6216

NEW BEDFORD

lid New Car Dea.... . . . Service Stations Everywhere

............

. A FAMILY TREAT

ROSELAWN L4& Washington St., Fairh~ven

All Kinds Of Insurance

JUln off Route 6

96 WILLIAM' STREET' NEW BEDFORD. MASS. DIAL WY 8-5153

WY 7-9336 Watch for Signs While out for a Drive Stop at this Delightful Spot

................

Personaf Service

---~~-------"""I

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

CA~L WY 2-5112 REPAIRS AND FREE PiCK UP DELIVERY

213 CENTRAl AVE.

MAKES YOUR CM RUN BEnER

FARMS

INSURANCE 'AGENCY

New Bedford, Mass.

.LAUNDRY

BARDAHL

BARftB-Q CHICKENS

870 BROCK AVENUE

BLUE RIBBON

MONTREAL (NC)-The College Ste. Marie, which is 114 years old, will be demolished and 'r a 22-story skyscraper will' be built to house the future College Ste. Marie, its rector has announced. Father Real Lebel, S.J., the rector, said the plan has the ap,\ 'proval of Quebec and Vatican authorities of the Society oa Jesus. The college, conducted by French-language Jesuits, is hop-' ing to· obtain university statoo when the Quebec Royal Commission on Education makes ito report at the end of this year 00' early next year. The college nou has 943 day students· and 2,200 evening students.

COM"'ANV Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Independent Chain

10 BIG STORES 'We Give Gold Bond Stamps'

C@mp!eit~ Line Building Materials

8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAveN WYman 3-2611

ATT~NT~ON

INDUS'RIALcI~~~~sSERVI(E Why Buy - WI! S)MpplV COMPLETE RENTAL WORK UNIFORMS

SHOP TOWELS Also Reclaim Indulltrial Glove.

COYNE °

'INDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY Successor t'@ New Engla"d OVl!Jrall I Supply Co. 10 Boward Ave., New Bedford Phone W"" ··n78' or WY 7·0788

...


./

16

I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May:17, 1962 o

..

A. MI NllMUM GIFT of TEN DOLLARS from EVERy'ADULT

I

_~

29~

.

HEART·S

./

.

,

.

.

. .

.

The GOAL of This Year!1s Appeal I

• In

one Appeal . I

~

.

CATHOLIC YOU,TH ORGANIZATION Taunton

CATHEDRAl CAMP Lakeviile

HOME NURSING, WHITE SISTERS New Bedford ../

ST. -VINCENT'S HOME Fall River

CATHOUC YOUnl. ORGANIZATloH Fall River .

ST. FRANCIS GUILD

ST. MARY'S HOME . New Bedfor:d

ST.- VINCENT

WELFARE BUREAU Fall River

I

I

HEALTH

WELFARE BUREAU New Bedford Si. ANNE'S HOSPITAl -Fall River ST. JOSEPH'S HOME , ./ Fall River CATHOLIC MEMORIAL HOME Fall River

.,>:.'

"

ROSE HAWTHORNE LAlHROP CANCER HOME

OUR LADY'S HAVEN Fairhaven

F.AMIlY liFE BUREAU SAC'RED HEART HOME New Bedford

I

I, I

~

Fall !liver NAZARETH HALL - Fall Rivet"

PAUL.

c,AMP

HOME NURSING, WHIT! SISTERS Fall River~ .

DIOCESAN GUILDS for tf\a BliND and the DEAF

CATHOLIC YOUnt ORGANlZA11OM New Bedord' .

OUR LADY of the LAKE. GIRLS CAMP

NAZARETH

OR

the CAPE

! I

ST. JOHN'S DAY NURSERY Fall River .'

I i-

BISHOP STANG DAY NURSERY Fall River' - .

REGINA PACIS - New Bedford

'

CATHOLIC COMMUNITY CENTER FaU RivM

MARIAN MANOR Taunton

\

CATHOLIC BOYS DAY' CAMP

......

[

I

rnB\@~~M~® \

I I ~""~"~".~~""~""""""~~

.

I

.

~.~~,~""~,

I

.

..

~

~,

.. ..

"., ,."

, , , ,_"

~

.

,"'",

This Message II ;s Sponsored By TIte Following Inaw6duals . and BusullDess Concerns ia Great. faU River: I

I

Building

Ma~ell'iCills,

Il1'llc. Duro Finishing Corp.: Enterprise Brewi~g Co., The Exterminator Co~ Fan River Electric light Co. FCliU River Trusft Co.

I

.

'

.

. iG~olbl! ManiDfCld~rilllg' C@. :Kormoll'il Watfi Co.. I MacKenzie It WOnslowv ' hw!., \Mason Fur~i&ur~ Sh9Wrooml I MooB'ley & Co. Rneo ! Newport Finishing .~

.

Plymo~riu PII'DlI1fung

Co"17 Ioee

Sherry Corp. , SobiioH Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile WorLtenUnioa of America, AFL-CIO

I i I

.

\

" ~~ . .·. ..O+C~~~...O+C~...M4~~~ ...t0+4~...M4~~MCliOOl_ . .IMiIM4_Mtl""...M14. . . . .M4~...M4...t0+4~....H4~


THE ANCHOR.;...Dioces~ of Fall River-Thurs., May 17, 1962

The Parish Parade . ST. MARY'S. MANSFIELD New officers for the Catholic Women's Club are Miss Rose Vasanelli, president; Mrs. Jrene LaPlante, vice-president; Miss Joanne Collela, treasurer; Mrs. Rosemary Uva and Mrs. Hilda Jackson, secretaries; Mrs. Anna Palanza, program chairman. Rev. Edward O'Brien is chaplain for the club.

-

SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER A graduation whist will take place at 8 Monday night, May 21 in the church' hall. Mrs. Francis C. Taylor is chairman, aided by Mrs. Raymond Polak. Graduating class members are requested to turn in whist prizes by tomorrow. New Women's Club officers are Mrs. Roger R. Dube, president; Mrs. William F. O'Neil, vice-president; Mrs. William J. Sunderland, treasurer; Mrs. Everett C. Cowell and Mrs. James Quinn, secretaries, ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL. FALL RIVER The Women's Guild has as new officers Miss Virginia Martin, president; Mrs. Charles Richard, vice-president; Mrs. Rene Lariviere and Mrs. Wilfred Callaghan, secretaries; Miss Helen Goff, treasurer. OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP, NEW BEDFORD New officers of the Women's Guild wih be installed Sunday, June 10. Mrs. Paul Cembalisty is in charge of arrangements. The unit's next regular meeting is Sunday, May 20.

ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER Members of the Women's Guild will receive corporate Communion at 8:15 Mass Sunday morning, June 10. Breakfast will follow. The'unit will install new officers Wednesday, June 27 at a banquet to be held at Stone Bridge Inn. ST. MARY'"" FAIRHAVEN Ladies of the Sacred Hearts will have as officers for the coming year Mrs. Leo Grenon, president; Mrs. Antonio Silva and Mrs. Joseph Andrews, vicepresidents; Mrs. John Caton, secretary; Mrg. John Wojcik, treasurer. They will be installed Sunday, June 24 in church ceremonies, followed by a dinner at Shamrock Restaurant, Newport. A cake sale is set for Sunday, May 20 and members. will entertain First Communicants at a breakfast Sunday, May 27. ST. THERESA'S. SOUTH ATTLEBORO Fourteen new members have been admitted to the parish unit -of the Confraternity of Christian Mothers. New officers are Mrs. Doris Robichaud, president; Mrs. Irene Pitas, vice-president; Mrs. Thelma Goff and Mrs. Pauline St. Pierre, secretarie!;; Mrs. Irene Gosselin, treasurer.

SANTO CHRISTO• FALL RIVlER

The Couo-cil of Catholic Women will participate in'the parish observance of its patronal feast Friday though Sunday, May 25 through 27. Members will march in a procession at 2 Sunday afterpoon, wearing..robes. 'The unWs next regular meeting is set for 7:30 Tuesday night, June 5 at the church hall.

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-New Orleans' Archbishop Joseph F. RlImmel made a public appeal to his faithful to pray for the success of the Second Vatican Council which will begin in October. The prelate made the request when he spoke at a Mass in

Ursuline Academy Chapel here at the conclusion of the 13th annual pilgrimage iIi honor of Our Lady of Prompt Succor. The Archbishop urged his people "to make this the beginning of your period of prayer for the success of the ecumenical

council. Dedicate your prayers and devotions, especially at'Communion time, until the end of the council.' I hope all will join in the special Our Father and Hail Mary at the ~nd of each Mass that is dedicated to the council'. efforts."

OUR LADY OF MT. C'ARMEL, . SEEKONK

New officers of the Women's Guild include Mrs. Frederick Blythe, president; Mrs. Lawrence Weyker, vice-president; Mrs. Albert Jobe, secretary; Mrs. Manuel Piquette, treasurer. They will be installed at a Communion breakfast, date and place to be announced. Mrs. Wilfrid Demers is in charge of arrangements. ST. JOSEll"mI,

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY, HEAVY, STEER BEEF

IFALL RIlVlER

CYO seniors will hold their final general meeting for the current school year at 8 tonight in the school hall. Juniors and seniors will rec~ve corporate Communion at 8:15 and 9:30 Masses respectively, Sun day morning, May 20. The Men's Club will hold a Communion breakfast Sunday morning, May' 27. Tickets are availablE' from Bernie Tomlinson and Bob Gagnon. First Communicants will receive at 8:15 Mass Sunday morn_ ing, May 20 and will be guests of the pa~tor at a_ following breakfast. At 3:30 the same afternoon May procession and crowning ceremonies will be held.' ,

Deless

.Chuck

The Women's Guild plans a Communion breakfast following 9 o'clock Mass this Sunday morning. Miss Eileen Lardner of the New Bedford Standard-Times will speak. Reservations close today. A cake sale is planned in June and a potluck supper will precede the meeting set for Tuellday, June 12. • ' Annual Communion breakfast for the Women's Guild is set for S\lnday, Ma~ 20. New officers are Mrs. Arthur B. Souza Jr., president; Mrs. Joseph E, Lentz, vice-president; Miss Mary McGrath, and Mrs. Manuel J. Bettencourt Jr., secretaries; Mrs. Gerald -J Normandin, treasurer. ST. ELIZABETH. FALL ~1v'ElIt •

,C

POT ROAST

LB

SHOULDER ROAST CALIFORNIA ROAST CHUCK STEAK BR'AISING BEEF GROUND CHUCK BONELESS STEWING BEEF

ST. MARY'S, SOUTH DARTMOUTH

The Women's Guild plans a meat pie supper Saturday night, June 9. 'Miss Rose Machado and Mrs. Alice Souza, co-chairmen, announce that returns on tickets may be made following Masses _Sunday morning, May 20. Annual guild supper will be held Sunday. June 17 at Bruno's ST. PATRICK. restaurant. A family outing is FALMOUTH scheduled for Saturday. July' 21 Holy Name Society members and a fashion' show Saturday, will hold a Father-Son Com- Aug. 11. . munion breakfast Sunday, June 10 at Coonamessett Inn. TwentyST. PATRICK. four new members have been FALL RIVER, installed. Benediction at 6 Sunday night, A, ~ontinuing project of the group is Vie promotion of a drive June 3 will begin observance of the Women's Guild's 25th annifor decent literature on Falversary. It will be followed' at mouth magazine and book stands. 6:30 by an installation banquet ST. PATRICK. at which: Mrs. Nicholas Tyrell SOMERSET will be installed as president. To The annual lawn party is set be seated with her are Mrs. John for Thursday through Saturday, A. Sullivan, vice-president; Miss June 28 through 30. A May proHelen Buckley, treasurer; Mrs. cession will be held at 2 Sunday Robert Mello and Mrs. Albert afternoon, May 27. Girls of the Cote, s.ecretaries; Mrs.' Robert parish will recei~ eorporate Reagan, registrar. Communion Sunday morning, Miss Helen Buckley, in charge May 20. ' of banquet arrangements, anSACRED HEART, nounces that all former parishNORTH ATrLEBORO ioners and friends are invited The Holy Name Society will to attend. Past presidents will be ~91d a father-son Communion honored and Miss Sheila Higgins' breakfast and installation of offi- will read a history of the 'guild. eers Sunday morning, June 10. Flowers on the church altar St. Anne's Sodality will spOn- will honor deceased officers and lOr a potluck supper and dance members. To be featured will be OD saturday evening in the l,)8I'- - announcement of a scholarship ish hall. Gerard DesileU award to • girl of the parish. chairlady,' has announced taM Reservations JDU8t be made ~ l'e8e1'Vatioml D~4 Suod~, May rI:

Mr.. are

17

LB LB LB

8Se S9C S3C C

LB LB LB

79 6S C 6S C

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY, HEAVY STEER !3EEF, CLOSE TRIM (STRAIGHT CUT Ib 89c)

POT ROAST SHOULDERS ,

.

.

Fresh Bri,skef FRONT CUT

LB 59c

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY, 4 TO 6 POUNDS, SHORT SHANK

FRIED SCALLOPS

'LB

69c

:o~~~~e,

Flounder Fillets

Rhubarb NATIVE Yellow Squash Iceberg lettuce CALII'.

LARGE29C 'UNCH RED CUTTING

C

10 C 'SO~~ 98 LB

Fig Bar. Turkey. Orange Juice Green Beans lLB28

FROCASSEE LYMDEN "SC

JUST REDUCEDI - SILVERBROOK

,BUTTER

p~IL~T67c

~flF"

43

C

LB

lOC

C L& 19 LGE29C HEAD

2LB39c

SILVEITOWH

Nucoa Margarin~ 1J4', PKG C lLB43c Mazola Margarine 1f4', PKG OF THE SEA 7oz39 C Tuna FI·sh CHICKEN CAN SOLID WHITE c Cary's Map~e Syrup I:gTZ 83 Dole's Sliced Pineapple o~ ~A~ 39c •• 'palneh FROZEN 2'CANS 60Z 39 C REO ~ Hawcman Chow Meln c~~~z~~G 1 L~:GOZ 59C Chicken For Throe 1 LB 14 oz 9B C D•Bnner· Chun King Frozen PKG Sweet Peas &~:gi~~E 5 ~~~: 97c

LB

Doz49c

Calif. Oranges Pascal Celery' Watermelon Michigan Peat

FRESH

PKG

3 OZ$1 6 $1 5 OZ $1 141ft

CANS

BIRDSEYE FROZEN

BIRDSEYE FRENCH STYLE

60Z (ANS

,

9 PKGS

120Z29C Ritter's Relish JAR Niagara Spray Starch ~~z 69 Bev. 12 12 oz 99C Sg per COG Ia Carbonated 3.12 oz cans-25c . • CANS u • 8 OZ 1ftC Inst an t macaroni BRAVO PKG U Peanut BUWer SULTANA ;i: 65C c (haU'(o~1 Briquettes ~~~ 69 Suhcoma Jellies APPLE-STRAWBERRY 2 1 LB 4 79C APPLE·RASPBERRY JARS C

OZ

25 EXTRA PLAID STAMPS WITH 4 9 01 PKGS

A&P FROZEN CUT GREEN BEANS 25 EXTRA PLAID STAMPS WITH 4 9 01 PKG5

FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS

MP fROZEa

25 EXTRA PLAID STAMPS WITH 12 01

SARA LEE FROZEN POUND CAKE


18

:rHE ANCH0:-Diocese ~f Fall River-Thurs., May_l~, 1962

.Cites Imp.orta"ce 0* Catech!sts

FaJ8trtm@W<ertil t?traest Now BS$frn@[W' Continued from Page One The Catholics in the Philiptin Olwell, C.P., D.D., titular! pines are devout and loving. bishop' of Tabraca. They w'ork hard but they are . At Saturday's Mass Richard' hampered by poor ,roads, unCardinal Cushing, archbishop of steady, bridges and dry, river Boston, will preside and I?reach. beds which turn into raging torBishop Regan does not know rents in Winter: Terrible! floods !how long he will remain, in, hit the Davao area this ye'ar and Fairhaven. But 'he 'will return' ' whole towns were inundated by to his prelacy in the Philippines' the Agusan River. Catholic Rebefore going on to the Ecuineni- : lief sped food and assist~nce to cal Council Oct. 11, in Rome. 'thosein need. . While in this' country the bisFilipinos colonizing the area <hop plans to gather funds for hi's' are from the islands of 'Leyte, work in the new prelacy. He Bohal and' Cebu. Fortunately said somewhat wryly, "I need 'they speak 'the same dialect money to start the new diocese. Visayan - as the residents of I have no house' and no trans.,.' Davao. Maryknollers study the portation. I need a. jeep. We dialect for nine, months' at a .ihave 40 boys studying to become 'language school before starting diocesan priests. It costs $250, a their missionary work in. the year each to maintain them. area. In all 87 dialects art;! That's $10,000." sp'oken in the, Philippines.1 Pope John has asked the ' First Bishop bishop tc start a P.' inor seminary' Bishop Regan is 'the firh bis"at once" for education of native hop of the' newly-esbiblished Filip'inos.. "The next BishO? o,~ prelaey of Tagum. H~ has 'J;'~gum,might wel~ be "a native, worked 30 years in the·,n:tission Bishop Regan sa~d. O?ce we fields in the Orient, mostly, in have enough native prIests to" China. The' bishop, 57, w~s im- ' C3;rry on we go, out. and get o,n prisoned by the Chinese i Com~ wIth the next. t?,m g . That s, munists in' 1!)51 and then was what Maryknoll IS. expelled. Prior to his new asIn the last ~our. yea~s Ma~y" signment he. had been s~rving knollers have bUilt nll~,e high as regional superior' of MarySC)1ools, three ,colleges and two knoll missioners in the Philipgrade sc~ools. ~our communities, ' pines. ! of nuns, H' . SPirI "t ua I' 1ea'd er 0 f 29 . mcludmg Maryknollers, "B e IS teach m the Davao ar~a. ut Maryknoll missioners and 380000' we need many more pnests and ., ' ' , .t "th bisho \.. ,Catholics m the area of Tagum ~~dny more SiS ers, e p in the Province of Davao, on \Sai . Mindanao Island. ' His own sister will leave for Th ., st 't d . Maryknoll, N.Y. next week ,e. miSSiOn was ar e m h h '11 . u t'l 1958 m Tagum, where, the new ~ ere s e Wi remam n i bishop led a dozen MaryAugust. She expects, . ·t a t·Ion ; 0f . thentto ' re- k no11'erS, 't a th elnVi 'turn to her ~s.signmen m a the Quebec Foreign Mission For.m?san nOVitiate wh~re an fathers. The Quebec fathers dientirely new . commumty '. . ' b' t ' dof VI'de d the D avao area, givmg Ch mese nuns is emg rame. two-thirds of it over to the Simple Schools : Maryknollers. : Bishop Regan, spe~king about' A graduate of FairhaveriiHigh the Maryknoll. schools in the', School and Boston College, Philippines, said; "The schools Bishop Regan, entered Mary: don't cost as much to build as knoll Seminary in 1927. ~fter hi the United States." He said ordination he 'erved a mission the cost ,~ about $1,000· a room. in' Wuchow, South China,: and Tne schools are simple and open-" later opened a new missi6n in sided because of the climate and the Kweilin section of So'uth are mainly "ceiling and floor" China. He continued his mission affairs.' ' work in China during World The bishop needs funds to pay War II and. was expelled Ifrom for 200 catechists teaching reli- ,the country after three months' gion in the public schools. He imprisonment ~n April 1951. In needs a con:vent to house the December, 195~, Bishop Regan native nllns he hopes to, have was assigned to the Phillippines. soon. ' In lieu of desperately n e e d e d . . I money the bishop made a plea for children's ,and teen-age H" G' h: fiction for the youngsters in his care. He suggested to Fall River LOUISVILLE (NC) - iGen. !fiocesan residents that they Alfred M. Gruenther. (USA, ret.); ser.,i such books to The Anchor. . president of the Americani NaCatholic Relief ships books free : tional Red Cross, received the to the Philippines; Bellarmine Medal at a special Eighty percent of the popula- : ceremony at B~llarmine Co~lege tion of the Philippines is Catho- here. ~resentation was made by #, lie, the country having been ,Arc~bl~hopJohn A.__ Floer~h of .... converted by SpanIsh and Mexi- ,Louisville, chancellor of I the ,can missionaries' in the' 16th college. ," century. ' . Upon receivmg the. ~edal 'Wild West' ,Gruenther was extended special ,congr:atulatory messages from Bishop Regan's, prelature has 'ex-Presidents Dwight D. Efsena population of '350,000 Catho":' hower, ;Harry S.· Truman and lies in 14 parishes administered Herbert Hoover and President 110' only 36 Marknoll priests, John F. Kennedy. two Maryknoll brothers and 29 ,,' The Be11;l r min e Medal is sisters. . awarded each year to a' person . The Tagum area \is known to ,"who, on the' national or hherthe Maryknollers a~ the "Wild "national seene, exemplifies 'in a West" of the Pacific. The gov- 'notable mariner the virtues of ernment is encouraging home- ;justice, charity, and tempetatesteading, assigning Filipinos ness in' dealing with difficult from other islands five or '10 and' controversial problems)' acres on. Davao. Eventually these colonists will own the land. The fertile land produces 'coconuts, hemp, corn, coffee 'and fruit. Th.e workers export copra I to Holland for making varnish, ,SAN JUAN (NC)-The govhemp to the United States, - ernment closing of a Catholic bananas to Japan and plywood :newspaper,' La Phalange I in and mahogany to Jap,an and the ,Haiti in January, 1961, was' conUnited States. demned' at a meeting here of the, Inter-American Press Associa,tion. . The association also termed communism a menace to the !free WASHINGTON' ( N C) -:- A $355,000 U. S. "loan bas been press and other liberties.1 It made to the tfniversity of San urged its member editors to~re­ Francisco, conducted by the sent their readers with "the Ireal Jesuits, it was announced here picture of national and individual .ry ,by Commissioner Sidney H. degradation under communism." Woolner of the Community Relations between Ch~rchland Facilitie's Adniinistration. The State in Haiti under the Regime money will be used to build an of President Francois Duvalier 'addition to a residence hall. The have deteriorated since August, 'university has an enrollment of 1959, when the regime expelled more than 4,000 students. tW() ,Fren~h prie~ts. I

,Bellarmlne College onors ruent err'

i

NEWARK (NC) - God has a ,special reward for the catechist, Archbishop Thomas A. Boland of Newark told archdiocesan 'officials' of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. "Christ lives in the catechist who makes Him known "to those who otherwise would not know Him," the Archbishop said. "The work of the catechist is a tremendous obligation and responsibility and God has a special reward for him." As long as the ideal of having every Catholic child in a Catholic school cannot be attained, the work of the catechist will be necessary, Archbishop Boland said. The catechist, he added, is the chief collaborator -with the bishops in bringing' Christian doctrine to those not in Catholic schools.

Honor for Dop~omat BISHOP PRESIDES: Carmelettes, girls' auxiliary of Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven, receive unusual' honor of having Bishop preside at capping ceremonies. Sister Mary ,Daniel adjusts caps as Most Rev. Joseph W. Regan, M.M. officiates. ' -'

Vatican Council Continued from Page One sented regarding the priesthood, the episcopate as the supreme degree of the Sacramerit of Holy Orders, and the office' and dignity of bishops. In its meeting of May 9 the' commission returned to the project on the constitution' dealing with the Church. This time it 'studied parts tr'eating the positiOn and function of, Religious and ,laity in the. life of the Church. There were to be further 'discussions on the role of the laity in future .meetings of. the ~entra~ Commission, for it had not yet heard the proposals' of the Preparatory Commission for the Apostolate of, the Laity., Vocations The 'Central Commission next turned its attention' to proposals of the Preparatory' Commission for Religious. Tqese were concerned particularly, with the problem of vocations ,and of the formation of candidates for the different states of perfection. On May 11 Central Commission examined five projects of decrees submitted by the Commission for Sacraments. These concerned the 'impediments 'of marriage, mixed marriages, the ... marriage contract, the celebration of marriage and the hearing of matri!Jlonial cases. At its last, meeting, on May 12, the Central Commission discussed four projects for decrees on the Oriental Churches. These 'treated of the power of bishops, catechetical instruction, a perpetual calendar and the dating of the Easter cycle, and the Divine 'OffiCe. The proposal on the, calendar could, if enacted, bring about changes in' the Gregorian Calendar, w)1ich .has been ih use since 1582. .

JANSON'S Pharmacy

iConden'lns Closin~ Of Catholic Paper

School Gets loan

Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM SUPPLIES 204 ASHLEY BOULEVARD· New Bedford WY 3-8405'

R. A. ·WIILCOX CO. OfFICE· FURNITURE

I

I

,I

MILWAUKEE (NC)-Ambassador Frederick H. Boland, Ireland's permanent representative to the United Nations, will receive an honorary doctorate of laws from Marquette University here Sunday, June 3.

/'

ill Stoek

for Immediate Deli..e",

• DESKS • CHAIRS FILING CABINETS • FIRE FilES • SAFES . FOLDING fABLES AND CHAIRS

R. A. WilCOX CO. 22 BEDFORD Sf: . FALL RIVER 5-7838

Convent,Nursery School,Dispensary These three institutions 'will be of untold value in the village of PALAYAM in INDIA. Tbe faith of the young will be safe-guarded by Catechetical 'Instructions begun in Nursery School and carried 'on through grammar school years; the faith of many of the elderly and others, it is hoped, will' be re-born through the service of the Dispe~sary. The buildings will not win souls. for Christ-this will be accomplished by the devoted Sisters who will live in the' Convent and staff both the School and Dis, Tht Holy Fathtrs Mission Aid pensary.' PALAYAM is ,situated iii a hilly for tIN Oriinla/ Churrh and remote region of INDIA. 'For many long years' it has ,been Isolated from well-developed' Catholic centers. FATHER SEBASTIAN ~OTTANANY, the newly .appointed pastor of SAINT MICHAEL'S, the parish church of PALAYAM, writes to tell us' that the' religious indifference ,of a great many of the people is alarming. Determined to do something about it he invited tlie POOR CLARE SISTERS to open a Nursery School and Dispensary. Part of his letter reads: "Hoping in Providence and draining aU our resources we have begun the work of construction in earnes~ A plot. of 'four acres of land was purchased and the foundations of the buildings are nearly completed. The estimated cost of the three buildings is $6,000. The practicing Catholics of the parish" aware of the loss of faith in so many of their neighbors, 'p'ooled their life's savings and gave me $1,500 to start the work. Means for the cement, iron, roofing and ~asonary are , wanting. $4,~00 is needed for these things and if'this sum can be obtained the bliildings can be completed." The depth of faith of the good people ~ho surrendered their 'life's savings in order to save the faith of others is edifying and inspir;ttional. We don't want to crush their hopes of reki~dling the faith in man~ of their neighbors and strengthen. ing the faith.in their children. Can you help as gather the nf-cessary money, to send them? A donation in any amount will be gratefully received. For those who might be able to send a large amount: $1.50~' will complete one· of the buildings.

SERVICE OF THE QUEEN

.

BY THE VOWS of poverty, chastity, and obedience, THE LIFE OF A NUN is one spent iii. the veri· special SERVICE OF MARY QUEEN OF THE UNIVERSE. In far away India, also part of Mary's realm, there are four girls whose love for Mary and her Son has led them to the Novitiate of the POOR CLARE SISTERS. They are: SISTER FULGENCIA, SISTER CARITAS, SISTER EMMANUEL, SISTER VICTIMA. It will cost $300 to train each of these Sisters. Could you pay for the training of one of them? The entire amount does not have to be paid all at .once-you could send $150 over a period of a year. If this would be beyond your means perhaps you could send one dollar a month to be deposited in MARY'S BANK--: a Mission Club established to help pay for the training of Novices.

OF SPECIAL CONCERN at all times are the PALESTINE R'EFUGEES-the unfortunate people who lost their homes and 'livelihood at the time of the ARAB-ISRAELI War in 1948 and are stiD living in exile In GAZA, JORDAN, LEBANON and SYRIA. During the month 01 May each year we appeal 'especially for funds to carry on our reliel program lor these poor people. Their dependence on us cannot be ignored and any donation that yoU can send enables us to continue this great humanitarian work-the CARE OF PALESTINE REFUGEES. For $10 we can buy enough food to feed a family for an. entire month or provide complete care for an orphan for a month. ' ~AVE

YOU ARRAN~EDITO HAVE MASS OFFERED FOR THE LOVED ONE YOU WILL BE REMEMBERING ON MEMORIAL DAY?

~'J2ear&stOlissioDS~ ~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, P,.siden' . MlIt'. Jos.pI! 'T. R,CIIl,' 'Nat" ~" Send all comlllDIlIca?foDG to:

ItA-THOUe N~AIl EASY WEP.fARE 'ASSOCIATION 480 u-xmgton Ave. at 46th St. New York 17;'N. Y.

o


Coyle N.E. Catholic BTitlists Dartmouth D Relay Champs By laekKinea'7 It was a banner weekend for. area track squads. On :Saturday CoachAl Porter's Dartmouth Indians 'successfullydefenuedtheir title -inCIsss .DoftbeBelmontRelay:s and the following day Coyle' 'WarriorsranoffwithClass B honors in the N~. Catho- wind and :foetocompilea io-4l lic Meet .at St.. Johri'sPrep, record gciingintothis week's Danvers. Coyle 's u:c c,ee ds three game :Slate. Two :ofthese Catholic Memorial of West viCtories llave come 'againsta

Roxbury which 'was advanced to d:rongRogers High club which' Class A competition in this currently is tied 'with :St. .Rapbael's tar.the .EasternDivlsion year~s meet. St. lead in the Rhodersland Inter- . J~hn's Prep scholastic competition. won nn unprecThe only tearilwitha probable edentedfourth shot at overhauling the Hilltopstraight title in pers isoDce-beatenF.airbaven.. Class A. The rest ~f the league is PlaYing Warriors' sub ;500 ball. Three clubs, :Coyle, Brdan McCarWorth . Attleboro and Taunton thy, co-winner are deadlocked for third with of the J.\IlVP identical 3-4 records. Attleboroo Award, wall .n (2-3) .and 'NewBedfordVocadouble winner, tional still :seeking its fust:Victhen nnchored tory in six league :starts round the relay team to victory I to lead the Taunton ·out the .county circuit. TheNarr,yLeaguepicture Pnrochials to the title. McCarthy cleared perceptibly last week as paced the broad jumpers with a 19-1 effort and turned .ina .54:5 a result of Somerset's brace of clocking in the .quarter-mile. victories .overpriniecontenders Round.i.D,g out the relay quartet Holy Family and Case.Coacl;!. were ,George Milot. 'Bruce ,Gif- .Jim Sullivan's,~oung crew' ford (4thm the 440) and Walt wbosepitching :anddefense were considered :better than 'average Baggerty (3rd in the shot). , Other point wInners for coach in the pre-;season .CO:QSeDSUS .hav.e come up with a potent plate atFred Bnrtek'ssquad included tack that hastIleated ,opposing John D'Ambrosio' (2nd in the hurlers 1larshJ,y. ,Coming :through 100 and 3rd in the .220) ;iBill in c1utch faShion have been ABack was runnerup in the -shot; Sbor:tstopP.atHunt and .first lMike McCartb.y plaoed third in :basemanRayRead,y. the mile and Lou Magoni came • Binders HittiDg up witb a fifth in .the mg1l.jump. Theran,gyHunt who ,gives Winners and point..,getters.:received individual awards .for promise -of :becoming one of the their performnnces. In :all,eleven finest shortstops tblslll'ea nllls produoed,[ed the league in two schools competed in ClassB. Dartmouth High retained its base hits (4) in' first hal:fplay. relay crown by whirling to 'vic- Ready, ;a left";hande.d. .swinging tory in the 440,8S0and two-mile first baseman, belted one ·out.:oo: events amassing a 15 point total the park .againstCase at the 1iiB-en.route to -edge runnerup .Fair- tant .350 mark. r;fmemo~y .serves haven by four. Coach Hal 'Corn- correct, Ray is thefust Narry forth's Blue .captured the mile !Leaguer to' negotiate the right and placed second in the half field barrier in Hanson Memorial Field int1le historyof:the ·Park. mile. New Bedford in ChI.ss A '~he Red .Raidersihadan ·ear~y mld .New .Bedford V:oke in Class C and Somerset and Old Roch- week engagement with Dig1ltonester RegionalinClassD were !Rehoboth,the ·only club to -deamong the Southeastern Mass. cision ithem thus far in league play. The FaIcons' took :an nth entries. Rick Barry, Richie Raymond inning·4-3 V!cto~y'on thatfooca J nnd John Medeiros .formedthree_ 'sian behind the effective .!relief quarters ·of the Green's winning' pitchingofiDickPeail. Fearl, the teams in the quarter and ha:I£- workhorse ,0fI-·any 'pitch~, mile events. Mario Leite rounded was the pitcher ·ofrecol'dm :all out the 440 quartet and Vernon eigbt games which :his.team Wright was the fourth man in played.in 'the .first'ha:If.Dick'ssix the half-mile. Making up the viCtories ·constitute .a schoolrecwinning two-mile combinatiOn I ordfor .an indiv'.idu~ :hutler. 'mchieFrecl1ette, Holy IF.amwere Gene Monteiro, Greg LaPointe, Mike Pike. :andPaul lly's outstBnding!fi.rstbaseman, Foster. Steve Toland, Mike 'Hen- was an odds ·on :favorite to anll'iques,Tom Hiller and :Skip nex fir.st half batting honors Race formed Fa'irbaven~s wm- until he went far the ,collar lDing mile relay unit. -against .John Davis of 'Case :and Durfee "Undefeated .somerset~s Henry ;Seaman..iFJront Inclement weather washed out running at iIlheplate arenpair ear!yweek schoolboy :athletic of Apponequet thUmpers, "Bob activity throughout1he area -Nelson '(.472) :and Edl Thibeault (.423).. In tbird place isiD";R~ giving rise to the ·coaChes' tra./ ditional lament, ''Isn't this the ubiquitous.iPearl cat ;421. Leadin,g worst Spring ever?" Be that as piteherinNany is ;Somerset's it may, ·coach Don MonUe'siDur- .stylish.sophomare. .Jim Goodfee Bigb club bas survived the win w1lo has .a 4-0 mark ;to date.

Paul Fairbanlcsol Taun.ton

Fro~h '~cience Major Excels atNo,rt~~astem Stellar 'Hoo,pster P:la;nsVOiq'ity ,B;id Next 'SeGson . By Lynn Kennedy .Ask Taunton High basketball and football coach Ham

'Laneabout Paul Fairbaiiks, .and you're .askin,g :tiora dissertation.The mere mention of his name causes the genial 'Lane to hreakinto :a moonsized grin. "'One ,of the best athletes 'we ever had. He was ayoun,gs't.er who worked himself into .abili1y;"Hamexplained. Thencam.e a stream of superlatives ±omatch the smile "dep~dable, :pu11)o:seftil, self-effacing,quick, witty;" He .might haV.f; 'gone on, ,but \We stopped him to .enlarge ,a wee bit on the forma;'Taunton High basketball and track lumlnR11T now at Northeastern University. '''All .yoU·· had to do was tell him what tt. do 'and :he'd do it. With Paul the baD club always came :first. He 'Worked at the game hard, but 'he never let defeat upsetbis perspective. He scored a 101 'of points, yet he was .also our bestdefens"iv.e player. When the .0PIllonent had a big man, Paul.got thea~gnment iif ·stoppingbim." Ho.s 'SeweD. .'Let~ Modest and unassuming Paul was quiCk: to bruSh off accomplishments. Still, he added to the Lane image, whether he r-ealized .it ,or not. ·'1 didn't ,do much:' he protested .at .thesame time he admitted he'd won seven letters at U'aunton High. His 'serner year, PaUl was awarded a trOPhY for being the school~ .outstan~gciti:zen, 'scholar and .athlete over his four years in .school.' . ·"Ho1.v about :your marks?" we queried. HI was graduated cum laude,'he -replied. We pl'eSsed home the ,question ·_"y.our av.er.age ::for ::four :years?" '~tw:as .only ;87 ;5;"came the reluctant answer:. Paul, now wincl.ing up his Erst year at NUs College of Liberal Arts, has :s1lown :no 'signs of letting down with the books.or on the basketball court. Physics, chemlstry,caleulus, German andiEngliSh lll'e enough to 'kee.p five minds busY, but the 19 year old Fairbanks l1as 'been ·equal to "1llechaJlenge, ~n'lng his way onto 1!he l[onorList. -creditS Rroth2r "Yes t did, .alon,g With :Bob laxing. ~'N~thing se:doUS;"" he A physicB-'mathmaj or. :P.atil, Farrar who .playedwith me:at reminded' us. Otherwise he'a one 01' ::foU'!' eb.ildren,is ithe son Taunton. He was :theteam''ll top worked at :a variety ,fJ1. jobs Sum. :of ~. :and lV'".rs. 'George .?Fair- scorer." mers- to .earn mODE1Y fur 'hie banks of 1:5 Ricllar.d '.Street. :and "How :about 'you?" .college 'education~l~ in n .a ·comnmnicant .at 'flhelInnlacu:"!I 'finished .-second behlndiBab. discount ceenter, gl'oundskeeping late ConceptiiQIl CbUl'ch. 'ByhiB 'The.team went wen, :finishing .at . ~opewel' Pnrkand =shing own admission, as 'wclj CIS his 1{)-4 after a slow :start." From ceilings in a pizz~. "They had __ 'proud parent~ Paul 'is :aiming that point :he \began .discussing me scrubbing ceIlings lbecnuse I itoWaM either !l'esearch or ·teachFar.rar :and the othermember.s .' ~ theon1Y one tall enough to ing as .a :career. ·~hJs .hll,he'll of the :HuSkiE pups, mea.nin.g llIelllm 1ihem," he said laughingly. be Was1ling;toIl~'bounato take a ifohnXieny Fred 'Greer aniiA:s a basketballer nt '!'mInton liobwitb. !the National Set:UrUy MikeAnd~on.'''You ~ouia see .iRi,g1l, Pauil. bad manY fine tnlghts, Agency ,under Noitheastern'" -that Kelly, 1P~ed 'for Somer- '1mt, as he says, his higgest tlu"m co-op JPl1ogram. ville .ana "IleehToum~ team. enme in downing Monsignor . When we 'SUggested that ihat He''SreS:l ;good;" Coyle High three times in the was a' w.onderful 'oppmtunity" High 3unwer same season. :Paul was quick to .credit bis . "Bow abont you?" we asked "The last game was real .close, brother George with an .assist. .Now the bead .of the math-.scl- again. "Going to play next year?" went into three overtimes lbefore tTm g{)1n,g ,ont, lbutyouk:n9w we finally won." ence ,deparlmentat DightonPaul worked himself :up from a BehobothBegional IDgh Sehool Noritheastern :had :agreat varsity. at 24, George F:airban'ksworked 'Th~ went to the Small 'College 9ayvee !l'eserve ilis first year to NCAA 'Tourney Clut at Southern 'a .starting sp01 by the end IOf his ,'at NSAlheadquarlers w'hlle u . soph year. Explaining tbt! rupid student at :Nor1lheastern. "'He Dlinciis;" Again we brought him back to advanoement. Lane 'confided. "I helped me get the 'job;"Paul .tile subject .of P.auIFairbanks. just liked what I saw. so I l)sked volunteer-ed. Now ~~3%, he's -considered a the Jayvee e~ch :to use him Iiltere.st b Spooe :fine front court.pr.ospect by those more. Paul did the r.est." Not to His speciail. interest, we -disclose to the .NUhooppicture. let the matter Test at thnt, Lane covered., is the U. S. space proNortheastern !loses four o()f its had ':lne more word--' :gram. When he l1eminded us that '~only wish more of ilis kind the Security Agency works with five startel's, but Paulalr.eady NASA, dt was easy to :ask .if .h2 .consignS '1limselfto .a reserve's were heading :tnY YJa.y." :role. In the meanwhile, he's been were interested in rockets and high jumping for the FroSh traCk OVE:r~:::I Y~!f5 iE!r:pai:S3)ce space travel. "Yes," came the . quick answer, "but that's a long team, his best !Leap 5-11 against $tfJ(B 81]}2~ If:,N Andover Academy. With a little way oH. First rye got :to get through . Northeastern;"A:bout more prodding, we learned he G~ «:©~. his interest in math and p1lysics.; . cleared :6-1 % ina :practice ses:BOmm AJ'iD t.\1IIlB< {ij~ he ·explained that be h:id a won- sion. "Notverygood;" he -Offered. G.A5 A:F.Pa.1A~~:S What 1le didn't tell us,but derfu11eaeher at Taunton .High 4 5hcw;tororns .~ l;E:rvtl 'Y.ou <did. was that Paul that motivatedbis interest in what 'fW<lnn'is :klmeuth holds the :a!l1-time TauntonHigb :science. :E. M:tin :St. 59!> 1E. Main St. Despite the dgorousmental :record .farthe mile: 4:43. iIn col'SP .U5S6 !O tl-1560 diet, Paul still had time for file lege, however, he's w~rking OtlecDS iTcniincstown strictiy ,on . the .highjump. 'N~ ·hoopgame. hute • HSComm..a.iI:5t. tcHowabout basketball? - UIl- running. .585 851 derstand you played on the Paul also enj£lY a dilettante HIIJW1dl - '~49(J Northeastem Frosh?.pme of tennis because it'sre-

.his

:Lane

HAPPy GROUP: Miss .Sylvia E. Koose, Regional Director of the New England Campfire Girls, enj-oYB .meeting, at Sacred Heart SehoolHall, Fall River, from left to right, Bluebirds Darlene Wilson and EileenLindsyfa:nd Cam,pfire Girls Jane O'Hearne and Jane Doyle.


I

I

i I

20

I.

THE Al'!CHOQ-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May: 17, 1962 .. . I •

Conve~es I.n

\

Attleboro


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.