',.,. ~
The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, May 28, 1964 VOl. 8, ·No.22 ©
$680,111. Total
Appeal Record
91
1964 The Anchor
PRICE lOc
Commenting on the record high amount of $680,111.91 given this year to the Catholie Charities Appeal, the Most Reverend Bishop expressed gratitude to both those who gave to the Appeal and those who staff the 29 agencies of charity that benefit from it. The Bishop also voiced his hope of opening a new school for the mentally retarded and an nounced that within a month bids will be accepted and con- hailing the success of the Appeal faithful friends are quick to follows: notice. And, more and more, the tracts signed for the conMay 26, 1964 level of support has mounted.' struction of a Home for the Dear Friends of Catholic Charity, Each year finds new contribu Aged and Chronically III in North Attleboro. Text of the letter written by the Bishop
$4.00 per Year
Leading Parishes
FATHER SOUZA
FATHER FORNI
Silver Jubilarians Parish Observances Silver Jubilee Masses of ThankRg-iving will be offered by Rev. Alfred R. Forni, administrator of St. Francis of AS!'lisi Church, New Bedford, and Rev. Maurice Souza, pastor of St. Anthony's Church, Taunton. Father Forni, son of the late Caesar Forni and Anna from 1943 untll 1946. He Consolini Forni, was born' lain then returned to Holy Rosary Feb. 9, 1911 in Sandwich. until September, 1948, when he He was graduated from St. was named pastor of St. Francis Charles College -and completed his studies for 'the priesthood at St. Mary's Seminary. Following ordination on June I, 1939 by the late Bishop Cas sidy he ~as assigned to Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs. He was ap pointed to Holy Rosary, Fall River in October, 1939 and AW service as an Army Chap-
of Assisi, New Bedford. At . 11 o'clock on Sunday morning, June 7, Father Forni will sing a Missa Cantata in hiS parish Church New Bedford. The parish choir under the di rection of ·Mrs. Anita Belliveau will sing the' Mass. Mrs. Lucy Grande will De the soloist. Turn to Page Twelve
Church Worship Asks Each Fulfill His Proper Role By Rev. John R. FoIster
. st. Anthony Church - New Bedford
The overwhelming effort to make the liturgy real and JlWre meaningful to our parochially-oriented lives has dis turbed many. It seems that a certain usurpation of rights is encouraged. The problem was recently touched upon at • meeting of the priests of the Diocese of Camden, N.J. and at the NCMEA (Na tional Catholic Music Edu The Most Reverend Bishop
Ordinations
cators Association) convention. What is actually intended by the Church is that everyone take his proper place in realistically eooperating with Christ in the .Hering of His Sacrifice and in the fruitful use of His sacra ments. Each person is ~ play the role eiven him-<>ne which only he eaa do well and no one else call
Turn to Page Ten
will confer the Sacrament of Holy Orders on the Rev. Mr. Thomas J. Harrington and the Rev. Mr. Donald J. Bowen, for service in the Diocese of Fall River. and the Rev. Mr. Ed ward J. Donaghy. for service in the Diocese of Sacramento. The eeremony will take place at St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, Saturday, May 30 at 10 A.M.
The fifteen leading parishes of the Diocese are: Holy Name, $22,037.25 Fall River St. Lawrence, :U,235.55 New Bedford St. Mary, North Attleboro 17,849.50 St. John the Evangelist, Attleboro 16,838.00 St. Francis Xavier, 15,293.00 Hyannis St. James 15,040.25 New Bedford St.. Joseph, 11,655.04 NeW Bedford Sacred Heart, 11,502.00 Fall River Mt. Carmel, 11,102.00 New Bedford st. Mary, Taunton 10,461.50 Immaculate Conception, North Easton 9,944.00 St. Mary's Cathedral, 9,913.00 Fall River St. Mary, 8,908.00 Mansfield St. Patrick, 8,749.00 Falmouth Holy Name, 8,703.00 New Bedford
Pontiff Insists On Necessity Of Ob~dience
Once again I have the happy privilege of saluting the success of the Charities Appeal. We have been mounting steadily, year by year, from success to success, al ways achieving new heights in the resources contributed. No doubt the reason for in creased support is that many more families and individuals have benefitted by the devoted services given in our many and varied institutions. Genuine charity speaks for itself. Where religious women and competent lay men and women give far be yond what duty demands, our
tors, and generous. ones. For all this we are grateful, and will continue mindful of g~ friends in prayers and masses. This re membrance can also be assured from all who benefit by and all who staff our 29 agencies of Charity. I still hope to open a new School for the Mentally Re tarded. Within a month, bids will be accepted and contracts let out for the construction of a Home for the Aged and Chronically III in North Attleboro. With the re sources put in our hands fui. Turn to Page Two
Bishop Approves Ch,anges Of Sacred Hearts Fathers The Most Reverend Bishop has approved the nominations made by the Very Rev. Daniel J. McCarthy, SS.CC., Provin cial of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, concerning three assignments of Sacred Hearts Fathers to parishes in the Diocese. Rev. John Godelaer, SS.CC., ad ministrator of Our Lady of the Assumption Parish, New Bedford, to administrator of St. Boniface Parish, New Bedford, replacing Rev. Charles P. Kel lagher, SS.CC. Rev. Raymond Mahoney, SS.CC., assistant at Our Lady of the Assumption, New Bed ford, to administrator of the same parish. Rev. Jude Morgan, SS.CC. is appointed parochial assistant at St. Mary's Parish, No. Fairhaven.
ROME (NC)-Pope Paul The appointments take effect VI has stressed to members Monday, June 1, 1964. Father Morgan was born of religious orders the impor tance he sees of having in F'all River, Nov. 25, 1923,
persons in today's world who are the son of George A. and Margaret Loretta Morgan, Father consecrated to the ideals of pov Jud~ attended Coyle ;High School erty,' chastity and obedience. . SpeaKing in Latin to several and Providence College. He en tered Sacred Hearts Novitiate, groups of. newly elected supe riors .of religious orders w.ho Fairhaven, September, 1943. have their generalates in Rome, Navy Chaplain and others, the Pontiff . stressed After his religious profession, that although conditions of life Father Jude studied philosophy in general have changed and re ligious life has changed with at the Sacred Hearts Seminary them, '''nevertheless that which in Wareham and theology at the emerges from the very nature of Seminary of the Sacred Hearts the· 'evangelical counsels' main in Washington, D. C. tains its full force and cannot be Following his ordination in in anyway diminished."
1950, he served as assistant pas Pope Paul insisted on the nec tor at Our Lady of Victory, essity of obedience. "Authority Rochester, N. Y., and Our Lady must maintain itself in its exer of L~urdes, Wellfleet. He was cise within the limits of charity appointed bursar and served in and in respect for the human the houses of the Congregation person," he commented. at Jaffrey, N. H. and Washing After describing chastity as a ton, D. C., until his entrance "precious gem," the Pope turned into the Navy in 1956. to the virtue of poverty and urged Religious to "love this vir Father Jude's NaVy c:luty intue" and to content themselves with things which are strictly necessary. The Pope, moreover, recom The Most Reverend Bishop mended poverty to religious will administer the Sacrament orders themselves as well as to of Confirmation to adults. re- . individual Religious. cent converts and others who On discipline, the Pontiff have not had the opportunity urged his listeners to abstain to be confirmed in their home from passing too many regula parishes, at St. Mary's Cathe tions. He urged them to keep dral. Fall River, on Sunday, only those absolutely necessary, June '7 at 2 P.M. Candidates lest the very number of rules on should contact their pastor the books make it difficult to observe them. immediatel,-.
Confirmation
REV.
JU~E
MORGAN
eluded tours in Guam, Camp Pendleton, Caiif.; the USS Mitehell,and Marin~ Air Group 14, Cherry Point, N. C.
Liturgy Display And Bible Vigil In No. Easton
Immaculate Coneeption Pari 41 Nort!h Easton, will conduct a Bible Vigil and Liturgicai Dis plays Sunday. The Bible Vigil, first in parish history, will be held at 8 p.m. in the church. The biblical topic will be ("...od's Plan. Lay readers participating are John Boyle, John Keohane and Joseph Len ny. With the renewed interest of the Christian Community in Holy Scriptures it is expected that many parishioners will par ticipate. A Liturgical Display showin§ how Liturgical Feasts can be: celebrated in the home is also planned. Visual displays with brief explanations are to be shown in the Parish Hall start ing after the 8 o'clock Mass. A panorama view of how seven feasts can be oelebrated will be giver',
2
THE ANrH""-l')iocese of Fall. River-Thurs. May 28, 19-64
Bishop's Letter
Continued from Page One year we move confidently for.. ward, imprQving our activities, and taking on new responsibil ities. The Charity of Christ urges us to set our hand and our hearts to reach out to every neighbor in need. It is good to be assured of sympathetic support. Cordial thanks are due our La,. Chairman of the 1964 campaign and his many thQusand lieuten ants who have spoken for our cause. May God be good to them all and reward generously their concern for charity so wonder fully expressed. Sincerely in Christ, lAMES L. CONNOLLY. Bishop of Fall River
Final p'arish Totals
FALL RIVER St. Mary's Cathedral $9,913.00 Blessed Sacrament 2,015.00 Espirito Santo 1,651.00 Holy Cross 1,030.00 Holy Name 22,037.25 Notre Dame 5,492.00 Our Lady of the Angels 6,003.50 Our Lady of Health 2,464.00 Holy Rosary 3,020.00 Immaculate Conception 6,354.20 Sacred Heart 11,502.00 St. Anne 4,339.00 St. Anthony 1,615.25 of the Desert 1,902.00 St. Anthony of Padua 1,003.00 St. Elizabeth 3,388.00 St. John the Baptist 5,550.50 St. Joseph 3,359.00 St. Louis 2,173.00 St. Matthew 5,096.85 St. Michael 8,015.55 St. Patrick 6,077.25 SS. Peter & Paul 2,557.50 St. Roch 1,940.50 St. Stanislaus 4,725.50 St. William 4,635.00 Santo Christo NEW BEDFORD Holy Name $8,703.00 1,385.00 Assumption 437.00 Holy' Rosary Immaculate Conception 4,793.15 11,102.00 Mt. Carmel Our Lady of 1,894.50 Perpetual Help 893.00 Our Lady of Purgatory 4,241.05 Sacred Heart 2,127.50 'St. Anne 4,860.00 St. Anthony of Padua 305.50 St. Boniface 1,000.25 St. Casimir 2,064.00 St. Francis of Assisi 754.25 St. Hedwig 1,517.50 St. Hyacinth 15,040.25 St. James 7,761.25 St. John the Baptist 11,655.04 St. Joseph 4,541.00 St. Kilian 21,235.55 St. Lawrence 5,877.25 St. Mary 5,143.00 St. Theresa NORTH ATTLEBORO Sacred Heart $5493.00 17,849.50 St. Mary TAUNTON $3,452.00 Holy Family 2,029.00 Holy Rosary Immaculate Conception 5,154.30 3,185.55 Our Lady of Lourdes 5,885.00 Sacred Heart 4,394.00 St. Anthony 3,392.00 St. James 6,033.50 St. Joseph 10,461.50 St. Mary 5,789.50 St. Paul ATTLEBORO $4,724.55 Holy Ghost 16,838.00 St. John 5,078.50 St. Joseph 6,245.00 St. Mary 3,883.32 St. Stephen . 6,528.59 St. Theresa
Confirmations May 31-4:00 P.M., Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton. 7:30 P.M., Holy Family, Taun ton; St. Mary, Mansfield.
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
May 31-St. Theresa's Con vent. Fall River. Corpus· Christi,· Sand wich. June 7-St. Joseph; Taun ton Holy Name, Fall River Sacred Heart, North At tleboro June 14-8S. Peter and Paul, Fall River LaSalette Shrine, Attle boro St. Mary, Mansfield Our Lady of Purgatory, New Bedford June 21 - St. Elizabeth, Fall River . Blessed Sacrament, Fall River St. Mary, Norton. THE ARCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall RIver Mass. by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription Drlce by mall. postpaid $4.00 Del
vear.
'rOWNS AcushnetSt. Franci~ Xavier $3,467.08 AssonetSt. Bernard 1,353.00 Buzzards Bay 5,204.00 St.' Margaret Centerville-· Our Lady of Victory 2,736.00 Central Village. St. John tl:.e Baptist 1,961.50 ChathamHoly Redeemer 4,105.00 Dighton1,538.50 St. Peter East BrewsterOur Lady of the Calle 1,510.00 East Falmouth6,732.00 St. Anthony Fairhaven6,099.45 St. Joseph St. Mary 1,831.05 676.00 Sacred Hea rts Falmouth 8,749.00 St. Patrick Hyannis15,293.00 St. Fr'ancis Xavier Mansfield8,908.00 St. Mary Mattapoisett-2,880.50 St. Anthony NantucketOur Lady of the Isle 2,850.00 North Dighton3,143.50 St. Joseph North Easton Immaculate Conception 9,944.00 North WestportOur Lady <')f Grace 2,467.50 Norton4;663.05 St. Mary Oak Bluffs2,788.50 Sacred HeErt Ocean Grove3,475.00 St. Michael Orleans2,186.00 St. Joan 01' Are Osterville 3,556.00 Assumption. Provincetown 3,122.00 St. Peter Raynham3,335.00 St. Ann Sandwich 'Corpus Christi 5,356.00 Seekonk5,560.00 Mt. Carmel Somerset--:3,297.50 St. John of God 4,910.50 St. Patrick 7,423.50 St. Thomas More South Dartmouth 7,279.00 St.Mary South Yarmouth 7,514.20 St. Pius X SwanseaOur Lady of Fatima 5,874.00 3,429.00 St. Dominic St. Louis oj' France '3,837~OO Vineyard Haven1,984.50 St. Augustine Wareham8,229.75 St. Patrick Wellf~eet-
Our Lady of Lourdes West HarwichHoly Trinity WestportSt. George Woods HoIe-· St. Joseph
2,055.00 3,491.00 6,818.50 2,754.00
Mass Ordo
REV. MR. HARDING
Slacr~~d
Hearts Ordination Slet for Friday, June 5 Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D.,V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese will ordain two members of the Con grElgation of the Sacred Hearts to the Priesthood at St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, at 9 Friday morning, June 5, thE! Feast of the Sacred Novitiate in 1959. A year later He.art. The ordinandi are the he started his theological studies Rey. Mr. Stephen Richard at Queen of Peace Mission Sem Harding of Fairhaven and inary. the Rev. Mr. Augustine Hiroshi Kobayashi, of Mito, Japan. This ordination will be notable because it will mark the first ordination i:1 St. Joseph's Church and the ordination of the first J'apanese priest in the Congre gation of the Sacred Hearts. The cere-mony will be open to the public. R<!lv. Mr. Harding SS.CC. is the son of Mr. a nd Mrs. Raymond C. Harding of Church Street, Fair haven, and the brother of Sister Mary Harding, Maryknoll Sister stationed i·n Cobija-Pando, Bo livi~l. He if a graduate of St. Jose·ph's paIOchial school and of Fairhaven High School. Father Stet:1hen entered S·acred Hearts Min<'lr Seminary in the Fall of 1955 and attended Catholic Uni versity, Washington, D.C. for two years before entering Sa cred Hearts Novitiate in 1957. AJ:ter his :profession of vows a year later 11 e entered Queen of Pea<:e Missic,n Seminary, J'affrey, N.H. to purliue his philosophical and theolog3cal studies. He will offeJ~ his First Solemn Mass in St. ~roseph's at noon on Sunday, JUDI! 7. A reception in St. Joseph Hall will foUow. Rev.
1~.
Kobayashi
RElV. Mr. Kobayashi, SS.ce., one of the Sacred Hearts Fathers' first converts in Japan, was bap tized in the l~ith in Mito in 1953. After graduating from Sophia University he came to the United Stat,~s and entered Sacred Hearts
Legion of Decency The following films are to be
added to the lists in their re
spective classilications:
Unobjectionable for General
Patronage-Hey There, It's Yogi
Bear.
Unobjectional for Adults and Adolescents-Gold for the' Cae- _ sars. Unobjectionable for Adults Marnie. Unobjectionable for Adults, With Reservations-The Organ-· izer. This film is a drama about the plight of the oppressed worker in late 19th century Italy and about hi~ first struggle for recognition as a human being. The realistic treatment which is used in the development "f this powerful drama is character ized by vulgarity in language and earthineso. ia:l situations.
REV. MR. KOBAYASm
(:. P. HARRINGTON FUNERAL HOME
The Sacred Hearts Fathers established their Japanese Mis sion in Mito in 1949. They now have the care of two perfectures, Ibarakl and Yamagata, with nine mission stations staffed by 18 priests and one brother.
Necrology MAY 30 Rev. JQrdan Harpin, O.P., 1929, Dominican Priory, Fall River. Rev. Edmond J. Potvin, 1937, Pastor, St. Jean Baptiste, Fall River. Rev. James M. Quinn, 1950, Pastor, St. John Evangelist, At tleboro. JUNE • Rev. Jose P. d'Amaral, 1949, Pastor, Santo ChristQ, Fall River. Rev. Louis J. Terrien, O.P. 1920, .Dominican Priory, Fall River.
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FRIDAY - St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi, Virgin. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. SATURDAY - Mass of the Blessed Virgin for Saturday. IV Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect St. Felix I, Pope and Martyr; no Creed; Preface of Blessed Virgin. SUNDAY-II Sunday After Pen tecost. II Class. Green. :V[amt Proper; Gloria; Second Collect Blessed Virgin Mary, Queen; Cteed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-St. Angela de :l'ie1'1d, Virgin. III Class. White Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY - Mass of previous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Second Collect SS. MarcellI nus, Peter, and Erasmus, Bish op, Martyrs; Common Preface. WEDNESDAY - Mass of previ ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria 01' Creed; Common Preface. THURSDAY-St. Francis Carac ciolo, Confessor. m Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. One Votive Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, the Eternal High Priest, permitted.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 28, 1964
Small Country of Lebanon Boasts of 20 Bishops
Panama Bishop Orders Rites Be Simple
BEIRUT (NC) - Picture a country the size of Con necticut, with 20 Catholic bishops - and you have the picturesque country of Lebanon, curving along the blue Mediterranean Sea. And these are all Ordinaries; each has a diocese to administer. Religious and clergy are One reason for this is the The well educated and well trained. variety of rites in the Brother Samaha says most of country: The Maronites are the mountains are dominated by the vast majority, and the sec-' ond largest are the Melkites. But there are also an Armenian Catholic Rite Hierarchy, Chal dean Catholic Rite, Latin Rite, Syrian Catholic Rite six Catholic rites in the country in
aU. Brother John Samaha, S.M., a native of San Francisco, points out that bhe dioceses all overlap geographically for the various rit-es. He also says that in past eenturies, every provincial ruler wanted his little section to be a diocese. He would request a bishop - and that is how many. of these dioceses were formed. In Beirut, for instance, there are three bishops - Latin, Maronite, and Melkite. Stronghold The stronghold of Catholicism In Lebanon is in the mountains, says Brother Samaha. Almost every village is completely one Catholic rite or another, or one particular belief: for example, a village may be completely Maronite or Melkite. Only the larger towns will have more than one Catholic church Brother Samaha says that Lebanon is a haven for many people in the Near East, both for political and religious rea sons. He feels that most of Le banon's succeSs as a nation and the height of its civilization and culture is due to Christian in fluence, to Catholic influence. In parts of the country where Catholics predominate, he be lieves, there is much more pro gress and adv~ncement and a higher standard of living than in other areas. More Outside He also pointed out that there are more Lebanese outside of Lebanon than inside it. The rea son is that professional and busi ness opportunities are limited because of the size of the coun try, and those with higher edu eation often emigrate for busi ness purposes. He also believes there is a new spirit in the Church in Lebanon, comparable to the new religious formation Brothers and Sisters are ~etting in the U.S..
m 0 n a s tel' i e s and convents. During persecutions many of the caves in the sides of the moun tains were used for monasteries and convents. Some of the old churches that still remain in the mountains, he says, have very low doors at the entrance. This was to prevent
the Moslem Turks from riding horseback into the churches the doors were built too low purposely. Different Rites The people know the different rites pretty well, he reports, as far as assisting at Mass and participating in the liturgy are concerned; and the vernacular is used in the Eastern Rite litur gies. The Epistle and the Gospel.are always said in Arabic, and al ways read facing the people. The Epistle is ready by a layman and the Gospel is read by the priest, both facing the people. Prayers like the Creed and the Our Father are recited by the entire congregation in Arabic. Brother Samaha notes that now more Arabic is replacing Syriac, which is the Aramaic which Our Lord spoke. He also says there is very little difficulty of political coups or revolutions in Lebanon, and that there is a real meeting of the cultures between East and West. He feels that there is a free and easy exchange of cul tural ideas and mentalities not ·found in other Arabic-speaking countries.
Veteran Missionary Heads Canada Area OTTAWA (NC)-Bishop-des ignate Jules Leguerrier,. O.M.L, 49, newly named spiritual head of some 2,300 Oatholics in the J'8mes Bay vicariate, is a hard ened veteran of 20 years in Can ada's northern missions. A native of Clarence Creek, Ont., the Bishop-designate comes . from a fumily of 17 children. He made his studies at the Ob late scholasticate in Ott'awa and at the UniversIty of Ottawa. He was ordained to the priesthood on June 18. 1943 and almost immediately was sent out to the tlOrllhern missions. He served at bhe Fort Albany mission on James Bay and since 1957 has been superior of the Oblate missions in the James Bay and Labrador vicariates.
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WINS SCHOLARSHIP : Diane Martineau, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mar tineau, 25 Hambly Street, Fall River and a senior at Mount St. Mary Academy, has been granted a $4,000 scholarship by the New En gland Conservatory of Music.
PANAMA CITY (NC) The new Archbishop of Pan ama has ordered simplifica tion of wedding and funeral
-~ ~h i1i''':,~v.~" k-iattn' ~~,>~~l~~ BISHOP VISITS SERRA CLUB: Principals participat ing in the Annual Bishop's Night of the New Bedford Serra (Club were, left to right, Mrs. William Muldoon, Bishop Connolly and Dr. William Muldoon, newly elected president.
Laud Summer Program Archbishop VagnozziCommends Work Of Catholic Educators WASHINGTON (NC)-Arch bishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apos tolic Delegate in the United States, has commended the work of the National Catholic High School Summer Reading Pro gram. "This year as in the previous two years your program will make available to the young people inexpensive paperback
Publish New Edition Of Vocation Manual WASHINGTON (NC) - The fourth edition of "The Guide post," a religious vO.cation man ual for young men, has been published here by the Catholic University of America Press. Compiled by the university's conference of clerics and Reli gious, the manual features an exp~anatory article on the dif ferent religious vocations, in cluding observations by Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston on the diocesan priesthood•
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ceremonies and the elimination of class distinctions surrounding them. Archbishop Thomas Clavel told a meeting of pastors and super iors of religious orders that class differences at funeral services are to be eliminated at once. The
new rules concerning weddings are to be voluntary until next Jan. 1, when they become obli g·atory. In the case of weddings, he called for the elimination of everything not concerned with the liturgy. Bridesmaids, ushers and pages are to be a thing of the past, along with special car peting and lights. Henceforth, First Holy Com munion is to precede Confirma tion and the latter llacrament is always to be administered dur ing Mass. At the same time, the Archbishop granted permission to all priests to wear suits, rather than cassocks, outside the church.
Chemistry Grants books for good Summer reading. You and the other members of .. The New England Associatioft the national committee are to of Chemistry Teachers announces be commended on this worth the availability of fellowships
while program. I wish you every to its Summer conference at success," the papal envoy said Colby College, Waterville, Me., in a letter to Msgr. Frederick to be held the week of Monday. G. Hbchwalt, executive-director Aug. 24 through Friday, Aug. 28. of the' program and executive Chemistry teachers not already secretary of the National Catho_ members of the association are lic' high schools in all states, encouraged to request applica Puerto Rico and the District of tion forms from Harry Stubbs, Columbia. Milton Academy, Milton, Mass. Objective Test The grants are made under aus . The schools with students pices of the National Science Foundation. enrolled now are receiving se lected paperback books for Sum mer reading from lists prepared by the committee and graded for BEfORE YOU each high school level. BUY -TRY Msgr. Hochwalt pointed out the program provides each stu dent with a reading guide of the 75 titles in the program. He said as a further check on the stu dent's reading performance an OLDSMOBILE objective test will be supplied Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault to the schools before classes are 67 Middle Street, Fairha_ resumed in September.
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THE ANrI-.jI')R-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs. May 28, 1964
Secular Campus Has Problems For Catholics
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Alliance Fabric Co.
~10
Dr. Nelson Portnoy, Thomas W Croacher, Estate Daily News Publishing Co., Debson Fabrics Inc., Harwayn Mills Inc. Building & Construction Trades Council, Souza's Pharmacy, E.C. Sherman & Co., Smith Mills Pharmacy, Sealtest Ice Cream Co Bristol Acceptance, Dr Frank lin Berry, Hawes Electrical Co., MCOF St. Eulalia Court No. 164, D. Fillet Co. Inc. Denmike Corp., N.B. Tire Ser vice, N.B. Ice Co., Tripp & Taber
TRI-CITY
OFFI(~ EQUIP.
BUSINESS AND
$500 Bernard J. Doyle Family $150 Robert V McGowan Ins Agency $125 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Wright $109 Oscal,' HUman & Sons Joe Curtis Real Estate Westcott Construction Co. $75
Beauchaine's Inc.
Catholic Women's Club
$55
North End Social Club
$50
Capadano Inc.
Donley Mfg. Co.
Pete's Barber Shop
C. Ray Randall Mfg. Co. Ine. $30 Atty. JOhtl Pollis $25 B & J Jewelry Co. Inc. No. Attle'Joro Plumbing Philip W. Lincoln The Rome Restaurant Dr. Henry R. Bedard Dr. Robert G. Bedard Lavery Irvine Co. Inc. Strut Inc. Frenchie's Service Station $20 Fetzer's Garage, John R.. Black inton $15 Frank M. Miller & Son Inc., No. Attlebo::o Gas Co., Robert A. Munroe $10 Earl C. F08ter & Son, Frank J. Halbrook Inc., Johnson B:!"ush Co, Lyons Advertising, No. Attleboro Floor Covering Co. Rattey's, Mucker's Delivery Service, Walter H. Murphy, Rez za Oil Service, Fred E. Shepard & Son Emblem Club NO:264, Dr. Isa dore Altman, Earl J. Comey Oil, Edward G. Lambert Ins., Snow Laundry Inc. Attys Paul Armstrong & John Pollis, Morrell Construction Co., Sandy's Stores, Sayles Dairy Farm.
TOPEKA (NC)-Cath~ lic students attending a non Catholic college too often develop "intellectual schizo phrenia" and "religious neu tralism," a Newman chaplaiJl said here. Fat her Brendan DowneJ'~ O.S.B., chaplain of the Newman Center at the University of Kan sas and former president of St. Benedict's College, Atchison, told a Knights of Columbus ban quet that, in contact with atheis tiro and agnostic students and teachers, the Catholic student "tends to become lost, to lose his bearings, and has no time for Catholic action." "Rather than face the hetero geneous thinking on the secular campus, the Catholic studem absorbs the religious neutralism of his teachers and classmates, develops an intellectual schizo phrenia, thereby locking 011t his Faith, and assumes a positivistic way of thinking." Father Dow ney said. He called this a "tragedy" not only for the individual but also "in the mission of the Church." Catholic students on l' secular camp"~. he said, are "the repre_ sentatives of Christ in the aca demic community, and Christ is depending upon them to s;;>read His word."
Bishop Stang KC NAZARETH CROWNING: Joan Sarno, a pupil at Naz areth Hall, Fall River, crowns the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the annual Nazareth crowning held in Holy Name Church, Fall River.
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Bishop Stang Assembly, Fan River Knights of Columbus, win close nominations for new offi cers Wednesday, June 10 and ejections will be held the fol Jowing Wednesday.
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All G're cordially invited to
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All veterans organizations are invited to have their American Flag and Bea,rer participate in the procession. All Fourth Degree Knights are asked to participate in full regalia. These groups are asked to be present by 2:30 P.M. Additional information may be obtained by contacting Ken McCarthy, Pilgrimage coordinator, 222-1512 Area Code 617
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 28, 1964
5
Parish Donations FALL RIVER ST. ANNE
FIRST DIOCESAN RETREAT FOR DEAF: Above photo, Rev. David Walsh, C.SS.R., communicates by the sign language with more than 120 retreatants at St. William's Church, Fall River. Left photo, Albert Medeiros of Fall River must feel the signs because he is also blind.
Set Mgr. McKeon Jubilee Fete Bishop Connolly will be among guests of hQnor and Msgr. James Dolan, pastor of St. Mary's Church, TauntQn, will be prin cipal speaker at a testimonial banquet Sunday, June 7 in honor of the golden jubilee of the ar dination of Msgr. Francis Mc Keon, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, also Taunton. Other participants in the event, scheduled for 7 Sunday night at Roseland Ballroom, Taunton, will be Msgr. Hugh Gallagher, toastmaster; Msgr. Raymond Considine, invocation; Msgr. William Dolan, benedic tion. John Egan, banquet chair man, will speak for membel"s of Sacred Heart parish. A preceding reception at the ballroom will also honor the jubilarian and a Mass of Thank~ giving will be celebrated at n that morning at Sacred. Heart Church in the presence of Bisho!, Gerrard.
Await Bronze Doors For St. Peter's ROME (NC) - Bronze doors which have been 13 years in the making were expected to arrive here several d·ays ago from the Milanese studio of Italy's famed sculptor Giacomo Manzu - but 80 far they haven't. Destined for the far left en~ trance tQ St. Peter's basilica, the so-called "Doorway of Death" because funeral processions tra ditionally leave the basilica this way, the 3D-foot high doors were expected to replace the present wooden ones in time for the feast of SS Peter and Paul Mon day. June 29. But no official word has come yet and no offic ial ceremonies are planned. Manzu won a competition in 1951 to cast the pair of doors. Originally he had thought to use the themes of the Ascension and Assumption, but later chan ged his mind and decided to center his theme on death. Va'r rous panels trea·t of the death of Christ, various saints and of Pope John XXIII, a native of Bergamo like Manzu, who en couraged him to complete his work and suggested the theme of death on. land, sea, air and in space.
Special Gifts
Attleboro
$125 Attleboro Trust Co. $100 First Federal Savings & Loan $50 Leaven's Mfg. Co. Inc. Alcazaba Circle Daughters of Isabella $35 Standard Plastics Co. $25 Ashley Drug Store A Friend Flynn's Hardware Atherton Furniture $20 Leedham Hardware $15 DeMayo Trucking Co. $Iet London's Inc., Ernest Roten
berg
Fall River $1,000 Venus de Milo Restaurant Firestone Rubber &; Latex Prod. Co. $5etO J &; J Corrugated Box COl"p. $303 Catholic Memorial Home Resi dents (additional donation) $250 Webb Oil Co. $200 Reise's Dairy A Friend $150 Fall River People's Co-opel'll tive Bank Radovsky & O'Donoghue $125 Ann Dale Products Inc. $100 Louis Hand Inc. Sullivans of F'all River and Hyannis H. P. Hood & Sons Inc.
Pacific Oil Co.
Dr. Morris Feresten
$50 Fall River Retail Liquor Deal ers Assn. Mrs. Katherine Cl"osson General Scrap Iron Inc. $30 Tri-City Office Equipment Corp. $25 Sheldon Metal Products Atty. James Seligman Atty. Lincoln D. Brayton Dr. Frank L. COllillB $20 Anonymous $15 Anonymous, Downtown Pal"k ing Lots, Joseph Lima, Joseph A. Cohen, Dr. Samuel Brown, Dr. Alexander E. Rostler $10 Gold Seal Tank Co., Atty. Rob el"t A.-Bogle, Atty Philip S Bray t-on, Atty. Nathan J. Sokoletsky, Ml"s. Anna Cashen Wm. P Tierney, Elimbeth Fer reira, Mrs. M. Daley, Josephine S. Louette, Fred Wilding Mell Jewelry Co., Tom Ouel lette Wholesale Beef & Provision, Mr. & Mrs. J. T. Cottrell, Dr. Alex Friedman, Mike's Rest>au rant Dr. Burton D. BrY'an, Mr. & Ml"s. Walter Smith, Atty. Lester Bakst, Flint Sportswear, Liberty Loan, Swan Cleansers
Catholic Babies BURLINGTON (NC) Slightly more than half of the babies born in Vermont in 1963 were baptized in the Catholic Fa.ith. A survey by the Vermont Catholic Tribune showed a total of 8,748 births, with 4,441 Cath olic infant Baptisms, or 50.7 per cent.
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Annual congress of the Legion of Mary will be held Sunday, June 21 at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth.
22 BEDFORD STREET FALL, RIVER - OS 5-7838
$100 Charles R. Galligan $75 Machinist National Bank $50 New Process Twist Drill $35 Dermody Cleaners $30 Eureka Mfg. Co. Ine. $25 Paragon Gear Works Weir Pharmacy $15 Plumbers & Pipefitters $10 Leddy's Va.riety, Dr. Malcolm G. Robbins, Italian Naturalizoa tion Club, Louis Courcy, Marie Anne Courcy . Roman Tile & Terrazzo Co.
Cardinal Diagnoses Vocations Decrease MONTREAL (NC)-Paul Emile Cardinal Leger pinpointed a de crease of the Christian spirit in homes as the chief reason for a falling off in vocations to the priesthood in the Montreal arch diocese. Speaking at a Mass marking the 50th anniversary of St. Pi erre ClaveI' parish and of Msgr. Charles August Labelle as its pastor, the Cardinal said voca tions are encouraged in true Chl"istian homes and commu nities.
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New Bedford Legion New Bedford members of the Legion of Mary will hold a day of recollection Sunday, June 7 at Holy Cross Novitiate, North Dartmouth. Friends are invited to attend. Next meeting of the New Bedford Curia is announced. fur 2 Sunday afternoon, June 14 at St. James parish halL
Taunton
$10 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Hamel
ST. PATRICK
$10
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Mayo
ST. WILLIAM
$25
Tyrell's Market
$10
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Perreira, Mrs. Malcolm Ratte, Mr. & Mrs. Patrick McElroy NEW BEDFORD
OUR LADY OF THE
ASSUMPTION
$50 Abramson, Titus & Levenson $25 Bernard Kestenbaum , $10 Lawrence M. Cabral, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel J. Cabral, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Anacleto, Mr & MT'S John Anac1eto, Mr. & Mrs. Jos eph F. Cabral Isidore Oliveira, Mr. &; Mrs. Gene Oliver ST. JAMES $20
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew O'Neil
TAUNTON
ST. MARY
$50 Rabbi Baruch Kodf In Honor of Msgr. Francis Me Keon $20 Mrs. Joseph Rowley ATTLEBORO ST. JOHN $100 MI". &; Mrs. Arthur Ciolfl NORTH ATTLEBORO
ST. MARY
$50
Mr. &; Mrs. Fred Wright $10' Ml"s. Helen Harris, MI". &; MN. Alfred Grimaldi, Mr. & Mnl. James Madden, Ml"S. ElizabeMa Roessler . BUZZARDS BAY ST.MARGARET $1&
Mol'. & Mrs. John Hickey
MI". & Mrs. C. P.aul Tucy
HYANNIS ST. FRANCIS XAVlEa $1,000 Mr. & Mrs. Larry G. Newmaa $10 Dr. Harry Sobel, Louis R. Riv. ard WAREHAM ST. PATRICK'S
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Letter of Conscience
EIIe.si.1
PAVU
Soviet officials have not shown any particular sensi tivity to criticism leveled against them, particularly that of religious leaders, so it is not likely that the "letter of con science" protesting anti-semitism in Russia and signed by Chri~tian clergymen and Jewish leadE~rs will make any ehange in the treatment of the Jews there. But the letter itself is a prime example of cooperation by leaders of various religious groups against an evil recog nized as such by all. The Catholic Church is no stranger to persecution and the sympathies of Catholics go out to thl~ir Jewish brothers who are undergoing the typical routine of harassment and pressure that is part of the communist system. In recent months there has been a stepping-up of anti-religious activ ity behind the Iron Curtain. It is almost as if the Red leaders were aware that their campaign for at:'leism has brought about indifference in many but not the violently militant anti-religious sentiment that they had hoped would be engendered. It is good to see that Jewish and Protestant and Catho lic religious leaders are uniting toproteHt anti-semitism in Russia. Their "letter of conscience" will at least touch the eonsciences of people here in this country even if it does little to ease the plight of those suffering for their race and religion under communist rule.
His Brother's Keeper
REV. JAMES A. CLARK
Assistant Director
Latin American Bureau, NCWC
Our Best Ambassadors
•
C"fhnou.qh thE. CWedt CUlith thE. Chu.nch
By RIJ:V. ROBERT W. HOVDA. Catholic University The amount raised throughout the Diocese in the Catho lic Charities Appeal is a testament to the awareness by TODAY-CORPUS CHRISTI. this· holy supper we are being Catholics and their non-Catholic friends that each man is This great central sacrament of formed into a community of love, his brother's keeper. Christian worship has been MONDAY-St. Angela Merici, St. James has written that religion is not only the made more effective as sign by Virgin. The life of the vows is keeping of oneself unspotted from this world but the in the recen"; reform in the com a symbol in and for the whole volvement of oneself also in the problems of others. munion rite. The priest's simple Church of the mysterious depth announcenent, "The Body of of this virtue of charity. When A gift to the Charities Appeal-be it small or large we speak of the Church as com fltands as a mark of the giver's 'love of' God and love of Christ," ~nd the "Amen" re from each person before munity of love, we are at a -level neighbor. It takes but little imagination to picture the good' .sponse re,eeiving ';he sacramental bread, different from that of a -. that will be done and the sorrow that will be forstalied shows that this Supper of the quite prudent altruism or -a natural: throughout the coming year because t~1e BIshOp of -the Lord is ~In expression of our generous bent. The love - we ' Diocese has found many hands and hearts willing to unite fa'.th and unity as well as a praise and strive to attain is in- . separable from faith and from . with his in doing the work of the Lord, ministering to Him nourishment of them. St. Augl:.stine once commented that relationship to God, the' in His needy and poor and troubled. . upon this very ancient way of Bridegroom, .which He Himself An outstanding effect of the Appeal is that it not only reeeiving the sacrament: "You has established in Jesus Christ. helps those in need but it helps the giver even more. For _ ar,e told,' 'The Body (if Christ,' TUESDAY-Mass as on 'Sun the gift is usually not only a sum of money but a spirit of and you reply 'Amen.' Be a day. We have been invited to of the Body of Christ, taste of His supper (Gospel) tlacrifice, a willingness to help others, an act of gratitude member Ilnd let your 'Amen' be true." and the rite of communion has to God. And every exercise of the virtue of charity does :FRIDA"J"-St. Mary Magdalen just recently been changed. The more for the giver than for the one receiving. of Pazzi, Yirgin. If the Church restoration to the Roman Mass is Christ'~ Body, in its unity of a simple dialogue betv:een with Him, it is also His Bride, celebrant and communicant be in its love for Him. Today's Mass fore the reception of the sacra teaches the espousal of the Peo ment reflects two emphases in Once again the prospect of Summer is viewed with hor ple of God to the Lord and com modern sacramental theology ror and dismay as every pleasant day ar..d sunny weekend mends to us the discipline, the and on the Council's constitution trust and the fidelity which a on sacred liturgy. is followed by a tragic newspaper litany of deaths. true espousal requires. The vir The public, social, ecclesial . It is all very well for those not immediately concerned gin we honor, like all those character of every sacramental to say- that accidents will happen. But there is a human under vows, witnesses in the celebration demands the partici Church to the total and ultimate pation of all in the community, element involved also. of each according to his role. . Every person driving an automobile must be especially devotion of this Bride. llfASo;; OF ST. . MARY ON The "Amen" which the people aware that an accident can happen to him at any moment. SA.TURDAY. Mary as the chosen now say in response to the cele With longer daylight hours children must be expected at bride of God is a symbol of the brant's "Corpus Christi" (the any time of day or evening to do the unexpected. All too wlJole Church. Whenever we Body of Christ) is the common many drivers are so used to taking chances and getting away celebrate her glory, we celebrate and deeply signWcant assent, with them that even the most skilled driver can become . ou:: own glory as God's people. appr<~val and sign of commit When we honor her faithfulness ment of the People of God in its • eareless. And it takes only one act of carelessness to bring to the Word of God we renew public worship. . about an irreversable tragedy. . OUI~ own dedication to both hear WEDNESDAY - Mass. as on . Water safety is another aspect of Summer that cannot anti keep it (Gospel). The First Sunday. The other emphasis . 'be neglected. No one wishes to be a kill-joy, but the aware Reading a::firms her identifica - served by this reform in our tion with the royal priesthood communion rite is the regaining ness that drowning can and does occur is not so much meant - anti consecrated nation, with the of a balance between. our stress . to cast a pall of gloom as it is to bring about a healthy respect family of God. on the sacraments as true in for what can be a source of pleasure and of danger as well. 8l::CONIJI SUNDAY AFTER struments of -grace and the ne PENTECOST.. The Gospel sup glected role or our dispositions per again links the fulfillment in receiving the sacraments. Our we call "heaven" with a- pro theology is again recognizing foundly social satisfaction of the active instrumentality of the people's faith and hope .and love man's appetites. The Fir!it Reading discourses in sacramental action. Long ago on the mo;t profound social, as St. Augustine wrote of this prac well as theological virtue. The "Would you understand the Christian community gathered Body of Christ? Hear the Apos around the altar for the Euchar tle saying to the faithful: 'You OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESI: OF FAll RIVER ist today, then, sees it both as are the Body and the m~mbers sign of future fulfillment and of Christ.' If, then, you are Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the [)iocese of Fall River sig:1l of present love. Future ful Christ's Body and His members, 410 Highland Avenue
fillment, in fact, is to be attained it is your own mystery which is through the present love which placed on the Lord's Table, it is Fall River, Mass. OSbornE~ 5-7151
the Mass signifies and expresses your own mystery which you PUBLISHER
receive. It' is to what you are and nourishes. Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.ID., PhD.
The Council, in its reform of that you reply 'Amen,' and by Ca-;holic public worship, has replying subscribe. For you are GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER spE'lled this out clearly. It has told, 'The Body of Christ,' and Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll you reply, 'Amen,' Be a member told Us th~t there is no under MANAGING EDITOR standin!;; of what we do at Mass of the Body of Christ, and let Hugh J. Golden unless we ,~rasp the fact that in your 'Amen' be true."
Summer Dangers_
@rheANCHOR
Enrique had a plot of land which he tilled to feed his family. Whatever could not be grown on that plot, the family could not eat. Before Papal Volunteer Pat Pyeatte came the plot gave birth to justenoughfood for the family survival. With Pat's new meth ods and agri cultural knowl edge the yield from the land increased seven times. Now the family always had enough to eat. They still didn't have much variety but they had quantity. Enrique and Pat were coming home from a basketball game when Enrique burst forth with an expression of gratitude to Pat for all his efforts. "1 never thought North Americans were like you Pat. Somehow I had a wrong idea of North Ameri cans". Pat agreed and questioned Enrique as to why many Latins disliked North Americans and where they got such wrong ideas about them. "You know, you yourselves are at fault for our apoarent dislike", Enrique continued "You send down food and ali over the container you splash the words: 'Gift &f the people of the United States'. This is true and we appreciate the gift but we don't like to be remi'nded that we cannot yet feed our own families every time we take a spoonful of lard. "Furthermore, Pat, ~rou send down movies which give us a real wrong view. Movie scenes that ,you don't allow in the State\ are added to the pictures by the time they reach here and we can only think that the im morality of the movies is a pic ture of American life. Until you described Stateside life I thought there were still mobsters with tommy-guns terrorizing Chicago streets. "And those tourists we see from the States!" Enrique con cluded. "They give us a real bad notion. I suppose the people who can afford to travel through here are the wealthy Americans who are used to every comfort. They come here and fail to try to speak even a word, even a "Buenos dias" in our language. They look down upon us and fail to see any of our qualities or ac complishments. They think their money is the gateway to all goals and never seem to realize that money doesn't mean that much to us. They are so patronizing, it just makes us sick." - There are other reasons for anti-Americanism that Enrique didn't mention. Our past poor relations with some Latin Amer ican nations; the superiority complex of our businessmen, the naivete of our politicians, and the condescending attitude of our writings about' Latin America. All in all if the aver age American were as ugly as these make him appear, I guess we would dislike him too. People like Pat and the other Papal Volunteers give a truer picture.
End of Semester ~ctivities, Occupy Thoughts of Diocesan 'Students. As .Summer. Approaches
THE ANCHORThurs., May 28, 1964
7
Thomas Walsh, Attleboro area dean, will preside. Following induction of senior members, provisional members will serve as hosts and hostesses at a silver tea honoring seniors and their parents. Hound of Heaven As their last long range proj ect, seniors at SHA Fall River are compiling sets of 30 pictures illustrating lines of "The Hound of Heaven." These pictures may be drawn, painted or cut from magazines. And back at Feehan the stu dent council has announced a project to raise funds for the Kennedy Library. Each student is asked to donate proceedS) of one day's work to this effort in memory of the late president. Some rooms are undertaking this project individually and others are joining in one activity. Samples: car washes ("and one bus was!" comments our re porter); an auction of a beagle puppy; cake sales; miscellaneous sales. At Prevost Henri Raymond, Henry Demers and George Cam peau represented their school and CYO at a drama fecstvai held in Manchester, N. H. Their entry, "Horrors, Inc." won them a prize. And Prevost debaters ended in fourth place in the R. I. College Debate Tournament and fifth place in the Narry League. Brother Dominic's debate coach. At Bishop Stang Patricia Ziemba has received a $200 scholarship from the Polish American War Vets of New Bed ford; and Room 403, a senior class, earned the coveted Spirit Cup for the month of May and the entire year. Mercyerest editors for '64-'65 at Mt. 51. Mary's are Jean Bro deur and Paulette Thibault. Cynthia Erdman will head the staff of Mercian, the school paper. And .the Diocesan Sodality Union will hold a meeting Monday, June 1 at the Mount. A last Mount note: Joanne Bailey, senior, has earned a grant to the U. of N. H. for a two-week period during the Summer. She'll attend a music camp session.
"Our Hearts Were Young and Gay" is true in more ways than one for students at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, who're readying their production of the well-known comedy for presentation Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Boys from area schools are help Marc. Chabot . and Edward ing the all-girl academy out Gagnon. with regard to 'male roles. Letters. Sweaters Too bad it's too hot for letters Elections are in the news
at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall and sweaters, say p~oud recip River, with Mary Kelly to be ients of the same at Bishop Fee han High in Attleboro. The cov school captain ror the next scho eted awards were presented at lastic year. St. Margaret's cap tain will be Norma Pereira; St. an athletics award banquet held Agnes' captain, Kathleen Silvia; Monday in the school cafeteria. Also varsity and jayvee cheer sodality prefect, Mary Souza. Others who will serve on leaders received athletic charm STUDENTS REHEARSE: From left, Jacqueline Le bracelets. Football, baseball, SHA's student council are Sha cady editor Mary Lou Sullivan; basketball and track were the tendre, Florence Lemaire, Rosemary CuIlen, Jane SuIlivan areas where awards were given. memory book editor Nancy Re rehearse for Mt.St. Mary Academy production of "Our Forty-four new sodalists have Hearts Were Young and Gay." The Fall River school will gan; Debrabant Debaters' presi been received at Mt. St. dent, Anna Faria; Natio'nal Hon present the play at 7 :30 Sunday and Monday nights, May or Society president Paula Mary's with Rev. Paul McCar 31 and June 1 for th~ publ~c and on Tuesday, J!lne 2 for Powers; St. Margaret's Squad rick, school chaplain, officiating. Leader, Kathleen Smith; St. Also at the Mount, May shrines religious. A double cast of 24 is listed. Agnes' Squad Leader,Ann Marie in each room are honoring Mary. In the main corridor a larger Club and is a frequent soloist at Dunn. reading an act of consecration Junipero Club members at shrine has been set up with a school coneerts and other func on behalf of faculty and stu Holy Family, New Bedford, held different class in charge of tions. dents. parents' night at the Kennedy flowers for it each week. At SHA Fall River Elizabeth In the St. Bonaventure con And at SHA Fall River antici Center and heard an address by pation is running high for Class Fredrickson has received a $150 test mentioned earlier girls from Bishop Gerrard on what Juni Day, set for Sunday, May 31. scholarship to Union Hospital Mt. St. Mary also won kurels, pero Clubs do to further reli gious vocations. The Holy Fam Songs to be offered include School of Nursing, renewable with Cynthia Erdman cited for ily Glee Club offered several Roses of the South and Lovely annually. And Paula Powers, a feature article and Madeleine junior, has received a $25 bond Thibault for her work as year selections and new officers were Lady Dressed in Blue. book editor. presented. They are Luke Sophomore biologists at Holy as a "Voice of Democracy" win ner. Three journalists have re Sweeney, president; Den n is Family went to the heart of the New Sodalists Kennedy, vice-president; Mi matter last week when they took ceived' recognition in the 51. Bonaventure Journalism Con New Sodalists were received chael Doherty, secretary; War a field trip to Sandwich where ren Sanford, treasurer. . they boarded, ships with scuba test, with Constance O'Brien, at Fall River's SHA on Tuesday, Tonight's the Night divers who obligingly brought up Mary Kelly and Nancy Regan with juniors renewing acts of Tonight's the big night at underwater specimens of marine being cited for a sports article, consecration for one year and Dominican Academy, Fall River, life for study. Sister Mary editorial and poem, respectively. seniors who so desired taking Kathleen Goldrick, daughter a lifetime pledge. when the glee clUb, directed by Dianne, R.S.M. was in charge The school's May procession of Mr. and Mrs. John Goldrick, Sister Mary Pius, O.P. will pre of the not-50-ancient mariners. 60 Berkley Street, Taunton, and was held Monday .with high Scholarship Winners sent its annual Spring concert. Officers Paulette· Gauthier, Still ,the awards come, with a student at the Sacred Heart. school, elementary and kinder School, Taunton, won the Altrusa garten - students participating. Valerie Stinton and· Suzanne Timothy O'Leary, Francine Fil Ratte are making final 'arrange ipek, Irene Griffith, Mary Gos- . Club spelling. competition finals Juniors led singing, freshmen ments' for the event, at which selin and Sheila Harrington of that induded the finalists. from formed a living rosary and first solos will be offered by Paul Holy Family High winning $50 . 13 public and parochial schools communica"nts from the elemen_ tary school were the white in that area. The prize WlUil a ette and Lucille Boilard. grants from the Catholic Wom dressed flower girls. Meanwhile girls at Sacred an's Club of New Bedford; and $100 Savings Bond. Student Council officers will Hearts Academy in Fairhaven Diane Martineau, Mt. st. Mary's Trying Their Luck be elected at Feehan High to are relaxing from presentation receiving two awards from Madeleine PhenIX and Jeanne morrow. Posters, phis, and all of their school play, which took music schools. One is for $4000 Pinsonneault are among contes forms of electioneering have place Monday night. Cast mem to the New England Conserva bers included Jacqueline Grant tory and the other is for $3750 ' tants in an Exchange Club been going on for the past two weeks and five students will be and Louise Sicard, supported by to the Eastman School of Music. sponsored scholarship compe many underclassmen. Diane's the daughter of Mr. and tition. The Dominican Academy chosen to office. Student coun Prevost High in Fall River an Mrs. Joseph Martineau and is students were selected for their cillors will be seniors only, in nounces that its five top-ranking president of the orchestra and proficiency in American history. the future, but members of the Girls at Sacred Hearts Fair present senior class, Feehan's students in National Merit ex the Senior Scienee Club at the OFFICIAL
8ms for juniors are Paul Nowak, Mount. She's also a member of haven will pay tribute to Mary first; have held the office for the WORLD'S FAIR
Gerard Goulet, Omer MarUneau. the Fall River .Junior Music tomorrow as the annual May past four years. It'll never hap pen again! procession and crowning .cere TRAVEL CENTER
mony take place, climaxed by Also at Feehan, the first in duction of members into the Benediction in the academy Mercy Chapter of the National chapel. Honor Society will take place Also at SHA Fairhaven stu dents will take part in an Monday, June 1. Sophomores One Church Green
Aymerian Field Day this Sun and juniors and their parents Taunton Tel. 824-7518
day. This competitive gym meet will be invited and Msgr. will be marked by games and demonstrations of physical fit ness, says Anchor Reporter Su zanne Chandler. And the Coyle High School Rt. 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford Band and Orchestra visited Fee han High on, Tuesday, presenting NEW. ENGLAND'S PLAYGROUND a concert for the stl,ldent 'body. Special Rates for School Outings and Group Parties
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THE ANCHOR-[)iocese of Fan River--Thurs. May 28, 1964
Maryknollers Aid Bolivian, Workers
Car Absolute Necessity in U.S., Strolling Is Suspect Occupation
Two cooperatives in Mary knoll parishes have made more loans than any other credit unions in this country, the Na tionalFederation of Credit Co operatiw's of Bolivia announced here. The managing director of the federation, Rev. Joseph W. Beausoleil, M.M. of East HaveD, Conn., disclosed that the Santa Ana parish cooperative, the old est in the country has made more than 950 loans totalling $95,000. Father Gerald P. Zie gengeist, M.M., of Plymouth, Mass., directs that cooperative. Another cooperative at Riber alta, on the tropical Beni river in the eastern lowlands, ha1l gl"anted over 700 loans amount ing to.a little more than $70,000.
By Mary Ti!'ley Daly At our house, it seems, we are not alone in Our "trans portation problem." Cars, as necessary for 1964 urban and suburban transportation in the U.S.A. as the ox cart is in other parts of the world, are u major headache. They are, at least, to the owners. To the youngsters automation and, to coin a word they are merely wheels - to f. it, autclmobilation. "Give her the gun!" is the take them places and let slogan of the times. "Get behind
them see things. What the old timers fear about these people, the young-uns, is this: they have become so dependent on wheels th ey may lose the use of their limbs. They use their legs mere ly to get them in and out of cars, to walk fro m curbing . to entrance ways of homes and places of en tertainment, to school and to church. It was Anita 1.oos, celebrated author of the novel and hit musical "Gentlemen Pre f er Blondes," who came forth with the observation that in Southern California "any citizen caught by the police using his feet for transportation is suspect." . Taking. Air . In an article published in the . current Harper's, Miss 1.008 ci' 'S the case of the late Aldous Huxley, noted British author, who one evening went out for a stroll in Beverly Hills. He -'-'1S stopped by two policemen. They wanted to know what this' strange character was up to, walking the streets, of all things. Mr. Huxley's reply that he was' merely taking the aii"dicl not' quite convince the officers. They ordered him to get off the side walk at once, get going and keep going, or they would call the paddywagon "nd hail him to the police station, under arrest. This prevails not only in Cali fornia, ~ - ~ .., ingly, but in many . oth"'" -rts of tHe country as well. Is this what we are coming to in "1 sections? Only a few men, and hardly any women, in cluding the younger set, do any walking at all. There never seems time for it, 'and certainly . not the inclination. It seen to be the influence of two forces:
a wheel, and let's go!" The formula has been trans lated ;T'\to: :1ever walk when you can drive a car; never drive a car when you can get in a plane and o::trike for the bright blue yonder. Never, if possible, get in a plane 'Jhat is not a jet. This is the age of mobPHy, automobility, mainly. The latest statistics are out now. _They show that America before 1964 is ended will have an additional 7-million brand new cars on the streets .and highways. This i. what make."! for a higher eCon omy. Or so they tell us. Matter of: fact, at our .house we had no ldea of being part of those elevatbig the economy via joining the 7-million. We were searching for a "bargain"' - beg your' pardon, a "deal." We were learning all about "a('·'1al miles," "real miles," . "honest mi:es," being recorded on the sP~edometers of the cars under consideration, so that we began to wonder * * * . And when Happy Hal could promise deal far ,better than his. competitor, when figures were thrown at us from all sides: so much for price, so much down, and "a mere whatever-it·' a month" we became, bedazzled and befuddled - more befuddled than bedazzled, and utterly son
MISSION SOCIETIES MEET: Gregoire Cardinal Aga gianian, Prefect of the Congregation for the Propagation o:f the l~aith, addresses leaders of the Pontifical Mission Societies in Rome. On the Cardinal's right are Bishop Ugo Poletti, National Director in Italy and Bishop Fulton J. S:neen, National Director of the Propagation of the Faith in the United States. NC Photo.
Nuns Change Methods Cardinal Suenens Suggests Simpler Garb
Exchange of Ideas With Superiors
.JERSEY CITY (NC) - Leo Buenens told a gatherin,g of 2,000 nuns from six Eastern states here that- they must cha"'~e their methods and mode of dress to assume a more active role in tht~ world. The Ar,~hbishop of MalinesBrussels, Belgium, told the Sis fused. . tel's that "modern women are everywhere, so religious women New Car! must be everywhere. You must Then it VIas that one of our see yoursdves as animators of own children suggested, "Why' modern w:>men, a leaven in the don't you just buy a new car?" world." Perhaps we had been running' :Listing ';he changes necessary around in cIrcles, making much to carry out this task, Cardinal of what is not exactly a lifetime Suenens said religious garb and irrevocable decision. should be changed "as soon as So the Head of the House and possible to something 1,000 spouse went into a car place and times simpler than what you are wE'aring." bought a '64. iCustomssuch as traveling in . "O.K., wh.!lt color?" asked the . pairs-dating from bygone days salesman. without efficient police systems "Green,· :r said.
"Red," said the Head of the -Bhould lie abolished, he said, and the hours which nuns rise House. "Thoug.ht· so," grinned1Jhe and retire should be modified salesman. "Never yet sold an to allow Sisters to meet with Irishman a green car, supposed adults who are free only in the eVtenings. to hring bad luck." ~rhe Cardinal said there should And that'll how a fii"e-engine be more fl'ee exchange of ideas red car came to our house. "Holy smoke!" said the "child" between fluns and, their supe who had suggested a new car, riers, and ';hat they should prac "Never thought you'd do 'it 90 tice "adult obedience" rather casually and red of an thun "pas!:ivity." 1Jnion With God Basle things!" ''The holiest is not the mom passive nu n," he said., He' drew
a
C~lrdinal
laughter when' he advised Sisters not to be satisfied with "telling, Reverend Mother what sh ~ de sii"es to hear" but to "have the courage to go and say what she does not desii"e to hear." The Cardinal's suggestions were similar to those he set forth in his book, "The Nun in the World," published in 1963.
Father Beausoleil also pointed out that the 10 biggest parish cooperatives have so far granted loans of close to $400,000. In thi. land where the per capita in yearly income is $114, these credit unions are bringing about changes in people's lives that eouid not otherwise occur.
Nurses Elect Fall River Catholic Nurses' Guild has installed Mrs. Anne V. Fleming as president, sup ported by Miss Claire Sullivan, vice-president; Mrs. Kathleen Sherry and Miss Emelia La rocque, secretaries; Mrs. Mae Fitzgerald, treasurer.
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THE ANCHOR-
Urges Teen-agers Choose
Model With Highest Ideals
Educator Lauds Newman Clubs
By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. Being human beings, we are somewhat prejudiced in f)ur own regard. We have an expression, for example, "Monkey see, monkey do," which, while based on some eolid fact, doesn't really go far enough. When it comes to do~ng imit~tions, hum a n superficially and externally re bemgs can rIval any monkey. ligious is unworthy of us. You see little kids imitating It's an insult to our intelli their father's walk and little gence (and to God) to imitate .irls dressing up like their mother, and even smearing on • c:oat or.two of "",·,,'t}l'!i1 pamt with a n ' t & expression that "'it .. funny to ... everyone except 1D0ther. Later on, the teenaged boy will walk and talk and try to bat like his favorIte ball-player. fI remember a bigh-school where most of the boys were walking as if they were carrymg invisible buckets of cement in each ·hand, an imitation en a basketball center with stiff lDuscles.) Adults, Too The teen-aged girl may well, fortunately or unfortunately, Irtart talking and walking and even acting like her favorite female-type heroine. Adults too, do their share of imitating. But the imitativeness goes a lot deeper than a slinky, or sup posedly virile walk, or an inti mate or manly voice. We·imitate actions and attitudes and tem peraments and ideals and ambi tions and the works. The important thing, since we are imitators, is that we make IrUre we choose the right models. Take a superficial thing like language, for example. Some earacters imitate the filthy lan suage of the loudnlouth, because they mistake noise for maturity, or because they've noticed that .'s the language of adults when tile kids are supposedly tucked .. for the night. Even Tempered, Soft-Spoken, Or consider temperament. Wha t a ridiculous thing to look lIP to someone because of his ancontrollable temper, mistak~ log tantrum for strength instead 01. recognizing them for puerility. When you're looking around for people to imitate have the .ood sense tAt model yourself on the unselfish, the even tempered, ibe soft-spoken, the generous, Instead of on the loud-mouthed bl'aggart who thinks he's supe rior because he's dreaming even when he looks in a mirror. Imitate those who know where they're going and are willing to eboose the right means, however difficult, to get there. Don't bother with the superficial kooks whose only ambition is either "All American" or ''Miss America." But we go still deeper in our Imitativeness. We imitate even CIte deepest ideals of others. To Imitate the guy who acts as if bis intellect was given him only lor perpetuating his childhood, III to share his foolishness. Genuine SplrltualitT , '1'0 imitate the spiritual out Ieok of someone who fa· only.
Celebrates Jubilee Sister St. Mary of the Sisters ., Charity of Quebee, stationed at St. Joseph' Home, Fall River, bas marked her 50th anniver .-rY in the religious life. To ,ettier with other jubilarians she was feted at the community's Jl\otherhouse in Quebec and this was followed by an obsel'V'ance lit the Fall River institUtiOD.
the character whose whole spiritual philosophy is "How far c:m I go without committing a sm?" Only those with genuine intel lectual, spiritual, moral, and social ideals are worthy of our imitation. Only the stupid look up to mediocrity. S<> when you pick out a model, pick one with the good sense and energy and faith to love God above all things, not just in word but in action. Follow the model who knows that a vocation Is not just ·a whim or a chore, but the best way to get to God. Look up to the one who un derstands the incredible privi lege of being able to get to Mass and receive Christ in Holy Com_ munion daily, or to visit Him in the Blessed Sacrament any tim.e he takes the short few min utes required to pop into a church and say "hello." Pick a man or woman for your model. Parents' ReSIJonslbflity You parents have quite some little responsibility in this mat ter of imitativeness, because you are your kids' first models. Good or bad, they'll imitate you. If your only "ideals" are material, don't expect the kids to do any better. . On the other hand, if your standards of spirituality and mo rality are based on eternal values, they'll follow you. If you understand and live a real family life instead of a self centered individual life, your children will become an integral part of that family now and base their own family life on these ideals later. Not that you give example for example's sake. Kids can spot this brand of phoniness a mile off. Live and serve God so that example will be a natural con comitant. You teens, take the good ex ample you see in your parents or in any other adults and use your youthful sense and energy to im itate it, letting any other exam ple, flashier and phonier, stop dead with its foolish perpetra tors. Thank God for the good ex ample there is. You can imitate the wrong people or you can imitate the right ones. You can go to hell or heaven. too.
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PARTIAL SCHOLARSHIP: Deborah Marchand, daugh ter of Mr. & Mrs. Normand Marchand, receives annual Im maculate Conception Women's Guild Scholarship in Fall River from Rev. Edward F. Dowling, Immaculate Concep tion pastor. The oldest of seven childrAn. she will attend Jesus-Mary Academy.
'Ideal Situation'
Judge Urges Compulsory Marriage Counseling
To Cut Divorce Rate
DETROIT (NC) - A judge said here some day "we will arrive at the ideal mtuation" when a divorce suit simply will state discord threatens a mar riap.e and the parties are in need of marrfage counseling. Circuit Court Judge Victor Baum, longtime advocate of compulsory marriage counseli.ng as a means of cutting down t'he rising divorce rate, told t'he annual banquet en Wayne Uni versity's Law Review staff pre sent divorce proceedings bring about family breakups unne cessarily. Under t'he present system, he said, one married partner files suit while the marriage is in an acute stage and there is no pro vision for counseling in an at tempt to save the marriage. "If this situation isn't calcu lated to kill a sick marriage, I don't know 'what is," Judge Baum said. Foresees ReconciliatioDs Under the "ideal situation," -the jurist detailed, the complaint
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COLUMBIA (NC)-The Uni versity of Missouri president characterized the Newman Club program as a type which fits into the structure of American higher education without raising legal or constitutional questions about the teaching of religion. President Elmer Ellis, speak ing at the dedication of the Newman Center at the univer sity here, advocated more such centers at other public universi ties and colleges. "The center which we dedi cate today is a most welcome addition to the facilities of this nature established by the Mis souri churches to assist the uni versity in one of the most vital aspects of its mission. We not only welcome these efforts, but we need the assistance they will render our educational pro gram," Ellis said. Before an overflow crowd Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arch bishop of St. Louis, dedicated the center, which is a joint project of the four Missouri sees. Bishop Joseph M. Marling, C.PP.S., of Jefferson· City, 'preached. The center will serve some 2,000 Catholic students attending the University of Missouri and close-by Stephens College and Christian College. The Missouri Knights of Columbus is contrib uting $100,000 to the project. Substantial contributions also have been made by the Missouri Daughters of Isabella and the late Luke E. Hart, who was Su~eme Knight of the K. of C.
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10
Tlif ANCHOR-
Jesuit Father In Civil Rights Legal Corps
Thurs., May 28, 1964
Church Groups Must Remain In Struggle
NEW YORK (NC) - The dean of Boston College law school and representativeR of seven major civil rights
ATLANTIC CITY (NC) Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, confident the Senate "soon" will pass the civil rights bill, advocated here that church groups stay mobil ized to lead the second phase in the equal rights struggle. Speaking before the American Baptist Convention, Humphrey said he hoped religious leaders leaders would take the initiative PARTIAL AWARDS: Partial, scholarships to Stonehill College have been merited by and lead their communities in these seniors at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River. From left, Cameron Shea, St. Thom "expanding the frontiers of op portunity for all Americans." as More parish, Somerset; Anne Wright, St. Michael's, Ocean Grove; Margaret Donn~ "We still need your help in elly and Marybeth Donovan, Holy Name, Fall River; Kathleen Raposa, St. Michael's, Fall taking tbat second step. Wher River;Mar~' Beth Furze, Holy Name, Fall River. ever you live there will be vital work to d9," the senator said. Moral Problem • In The work of developing sym pathetic community feelings for Continued from Page One All these should stir the laity's given him. The priest is to con-' equal rights in all areas-jobs, do as well no matter what his devotion. It must be remembered centrate on his own calling and housing, voting, education-will education, qualifications, eleva is to offer the sacrifice, inter-' that the early Church was active fall largely on religious groups tion or orders. Priests are to be and courageous in the face of cede for his people, preach and because the problem essentially priests; laymen, laymen. That opposition and persecution, yet preside over the Eucharistic is a moral one, he said. gathering. does not mean that some will its only "J; arish school" was a "If you and others like you always be active and others only menningful and inspiring liturgy. Servers are to immediately do your work well, then we shall passive. There are times when help the priest in his sacred move quickly toward that high The people must understand work but they are not to replace ,priests occupy the spotlight and ly desirable state of voluntary others are quiet and recipient; that 'the lhurgy is to be more the people or be a substitute for compliance with the principles at other times, it is the priest div.ersified. The council has the congregation. of civil rights." turned its back on "rigid con who must be attentive. "A well trained lay commen When religious, business and For there to be a realistic har formity of worship". Hence tator is a pastor's prize posses professional leaders decline to vest, of the hopes sown by the forth, n regional diversity will sion." The congregation will participate in movements of this bishops in council, a true edu involve traditions, cultures and readily identify itself with the kind, Humphrey said, groups of cation must precede the coming the languages of different peo layman who publicly fulfills his extremists, including commu liturgical changes. Not only the ples. own function. There will be "an nists, move in and take com laity but all--priests, religious, ThereforE!, the parish is to incredibly good spiritual effect" mand. He said the "guiding spir laity-must be educated. worship God as the "Church in both for the commentator or it from the churches, from the' , Bishop Damiano of Camden, mir..iature". Each person is to lector himself and for the con Catholic, Protestant and Jewish N. J. pointed out that that means respond in the role that God has gregation in general. faiths" has frustrated any appre_ 'that priests "will have to return ciable communist infiltration in to school" to develop a thorough the civil rights movement. knowledge of the, reforms. He Set Pattern said it is the duty of every priest Humphrey said the position to' promote an understanding taken by the Catholic Church of the 'liturgical changes among on school desegregation in the the laity. -' , South took_ 'spiritual courage Father Frederick McManus' which set a pattern. stressed that "it will be the task In the meantime, the Southern of the pastor to promote and at" Baptist convention, meeting si the same time restore the lit multaneously, but independently urgy. The pastor must prepare of the American Baptists, heard the people for reform and ,this Dr. G. Earl Guinn, president of instruction t-o the laity' is an Louisiana College, charge that 'immediate matter' because of Catholicism poses a threat to the changes Hoon to come." freedom in America. During the council debates on He told a pastors' conference that the "bloody historical rec the opportuness of lay-deacons, ord speaks for itself." He de a bishop, pointed out that what clared that "Contemporary per the Church needs today are secution of evangelicals in South priests and not necessarily dea cons. But true priests. The America and Spain is an unde niable fact. There is no solid ev priests of today fulfill more a idence that departure from tra role of deacons in the Church. ditional policy is contemplated." than that of the priesthood. The Southern Baptists, whose Priests must be freed from the 10.4 million members make it multiplication of labors that can the largest Protestant denomi be done ofter_ so much better by nation in the country, rejected at others. He must confine' himself their assembly an endorsement to prayer, and the exercise of of church integration and left his power of orders. In line with this, it was the issue up to local churches. pointed out at the NCMEA con vention that during the liturgy, the priest should appear exactly Holy See Gift Aids as he really hI-the one who pre Rwanda Refugees sides over- the various actions GENEVA (NC)-The Holy See '" '" '" not the one who is busy made a special contribution of with all. Laymen must understand $10,000 to aid refugees from the African nation of Rwanda, Msgr. three of the main problems in Costante Maltoni announced at liturgical-reform: (a) the com a meeting of the executive com munity nature of the liturgy; (b) the teaching role of the lit mittee of the program of the urgy; (3) the adaptability or U-"~d Nations High Commis flexibility of the liturgy. . sioner for Refugees. The liturg:r is the prayer of More than 100,000 refugees have fled from Rwanda, scene of Christ together with His chosen bitter intertribal fighting that people, His Mystical Body. It took thousands of lives last has been pointed out that the Chrismas and in J·anuary. There council commission on the lit are about a million Catholics and urgy is revising all rites so a9 catechumens in Rwanda's popu to endeav,or to make the Mass and Sacraments a "community" lation of ~.~ million. Msgr. Maltoni, counselor of effort. The "participation o~ the the apostolic nun'ciature in Swit people has long been neglected," zerland, also announced that the judged Father McManue. The revision of the liturgy Holy <;:;ee had made its annual eontributions of $1,000 each to will also stress the informative the high commissioner's program powerof the Church's worship. and to the United Nations Relief In other words, the liturgy in all and Works Agency for Palestine its parts is a te~her-inits l'ecitations, ,responses, songs. Refugee-
Each Fulfills RolEl
Church's Worship
groups have formed a "legal corps" to defend civil rights campaigners in the Deep South this Summer. Known as the Lawyers Consti tutional Defense Committee, the corps has already recruited more than 60 lawyers, most of whom practice in the North, but several from the South. They will seek to protect the legal rights of antisegregation demonstrators and Negroes seek ing the right to vote. Each volunteer has agreed to spend two weeks or more this Summer in Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Florida. Father Robert F. Drinan, S,J., dean of Boston College ,law school and a leading authority on constitutional law, joined with members of the seven civil rjghts organizations, to found the committee.
Girls Set Week W ASHIN GTON (NC) Members of the Junior Catho lic Daughters of America will hold their annual Junior W~k with rallies, field d;1YS, parent daughter parties and exhibits June 7":14. On the final day, Junior Sunday, members throughout the Vnited States will attend Mass and hold cere monies .in honor of the Sacred Heart, to whom they are dedi cated.
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THE ANCHORThurs., May 28, 1964
minois Councils Ask K of C Act A~ainst Bias
NAACP Leader Says Religions Are Insincere
CHICAGO (NC) - The Illinois Knights of Colum bus have adopted a resolu tion urging the national organization to change member ship rules which have been labeled discriminatory against Negroes. A similar resolution was adop ted by the Colorado K of Clast month. Both resolutions are slat ed to be submitted to the nation al K of C convenion in New Or leans in August. Under the so-called blackball rule now in force, five negative votes are sufficient for a local couneil to reject prospective members. The Colorado Knights supported a proposal whereby 25 per cent of those voting would be required for rejection. The Illinois Knights favored a 33 per cent negative vote. The nIinois Knights adopted the resolution at the 67th annual state convention here. Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of Belleville, Ill., state 'chaplain, asked for the change in his ser mO'Il at the JI"'~~s opening the convention. Albert Cardinai Meyer, Arohbishop of Chicago, offered the Mass. "While many of our brother knights have worked hard in the cause of integr·ation, we must admit that some few have shown a prejudice unworthy of·one who wears the proud insignia of our order," the Bishop said. "Now is the time to correct the bad 'image created by the minoritY. Words and declarations are no long'er sufficient." The convention action brought a fevorable comment from John J. Farrell of Chicago's Catholic
Interracial Council.
"We have been critical of the knig.hts in the past," said Farrell. "We are now happy, to salute the state officers and delegates. We believe their action is an im-· portant first step to win for the Knights of Columbus the respect and participation of the whole catholic community."
'White Moderate' Delays Equality CLEVELAND (NC) Air Force Capt. Edward J. Dwight Jr., America's only Negro astro naut, told the Greater Cleveland Catholic Interracial Council here that the greatest obstacle to Negro equality is the "white moderate." Dwight, a Catholic, declared that such groups as the white citizens councils and the Ku Klux Klan are comparatively minor difficulties. But he added: "Almerica has too many of those moderates who absolutely refuse to concern themselves or believe a problem exists. They sit back" in apathy and watch minorities suppressed by bigots. That sort of do-nothing will de stroy all America, not just Negro America. 'Worst Enemy' "These people," Dwight con tinued, "are America's worst enemy - the do-nothing citizen who prefers the slow legisla tive approach to equality:" . He said the legislative ap proach is inadequate because "in no culture has the privi leged class voluntarily given up its privileges to the minorities. So, by demonstrations, tension is purposely brought about to shock the white American out of his complacency; the moral question will arise in his mind, forcing him to think and come up with an answer." Dwight said that because the Negro is an integral part of American life, injustice to the Negro is a problem for all Americans
1
,
LAFAYETTE (NC) - A Negro leader charged. here in Indiana the religions of this country have failed to play an effective role in the racial crisis because they are in sincere about complete equality. The Rev. Carl A. Fuqua, exe cutive director of the Chicago branch, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, told the InterrcH"hus Conference on Religion and Race at Purdue University that, up until now, the churches and syn agogues of America have not met tneir res p 0 n sib i Ii tie s in preaching a message of personal involvement in the Negroes' fight for freedom. "The so-called race issue In the United' States," he said, "clearly illustrates the religious . failure of America." He said there is probably more hypocrisy in the United States than there is atheism in Russia.
PAPAL STOREHOUSE: Pope Paul VI visits a Vatican warehouse to inspect the Soft Pedal Message clothing sent for the poor by the U.S. National Council of Catholic Women. Last year The Negro leader lashed out clothing valued at more than $290,000 was distributed for the needy in Italy, Africa and other deserving countries~ Archbishop Angelo Dell'Acqua, left, of the staff of the Papal at the willingness of modern reli~ion to compromise and soft ~ecretariat of State, and Msgr. Andrew P. Landi of Brooklyn, NCWC-CRS director in, pedal the Ch.ristian message. Italy accompanied the Holy Father. NC Photo. "What good is it," he asked,
in construction of grade and high schools. He asserted that Church and State are partners in education of the young and objected to the· trend which would give the· state an education monopoly. Bishop Freking advocated g.etting away from the "wall philosophy" in the Church-State field. .
"ili be armed with religious principles if we don't use them?" He asked: "Was Christianity or Judaism born of compromise? Were the founders of these great religions. chronic middle-of-the roaders?" Rev. Mr. Fuqua called for a sincere, personal involvement from every religiously' com mitted person in the' country in working to solve the racial crisis. The "Negro problem'.' is not a Negro problem at all~ but an American problem aod will' require the efforts of all Ameri':' cans to solve it, he, declo1.rr.d:·
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'Wall of Separation' Unfortunate Phrase. Urge Effort to Reconcile Religious, Secular MANHATTAN (NC)-Frank lin Littell, University of Chicago professor, evaluated the "wall of separation between Church and ~tate" as one of the "most unfor.tunate phrases in history." Court rulings on problems which have an. education-reli gious bearing are "hazy" and '~no one can 'say what the. recent decisions (of the U. S. Supreme Court) really mean," R,obert Casad, University of Kansas law school professor, observed. They were among chief speak ers at a two-day institute on "Religion-The Church-Educa tion" sponsored by Kansas State University here. Other speakers included Bishop Frederick ·W. Frf;!king of Salina, Kan., and . Merlin D. Gustafson, Kansas State University professor. Littell said the claim that ed ucation of children is "the busi ' ness of the siate" is a straight totalitarian statement. He added: "Only a communist or a nazi could say that." Public schools have been shift ing from Protestant liturgy to nothing, Littell said. He remind ed there was a time when New York's first Archbishop John J. Wholesale Auto Supplies
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 28, 1964
Give to the Poor-
Novak Interprets Vatican Council1s Second! Session
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. Have Y'ou ever seen a person cross a muddy road by stepping on little rocks placed at convenient spots? Is this 1Jhe way our parishes are i-n cities, and our dioceses in the world? Are 1Jhey little ghettos and spiritual fortresses in whioh we take refuge to avoid getting involved in the muck and mud of the city's crime and the dirty puddle of the world's hunger and poverty? What concern is there for 1Jhe "sheep not of the fold," for the "sheep without a shepherd," for those non-parochial, non-diocesan areas which made Jesus weep as He looked over such a city and such a world?
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy "Still another book on the Council I" Such is likely to be one's feeling upon picking up Michael Novak's plump volume, The Open Church: Vatican ][I, Act II (Macmillan. $6.50). But this is true with a diffl~rence. Not only is it a practically day-by-day ac count of the session in the ness or merely theoretical acro batics .in place of thought; a autumn of 1963, but it is an liturgy in which the people are interpretation as well. "It not involved; an exclusively attempts to record, from one man's point of view, the events of that second session. It at tempts to pro vide some tools tor estImating where the Vati can Council is going, and what it means. The major tool it lI8eS in inter preting the Council is a philoso Phical one: an inquiry into the method· and the language by Which the Council continues to express itseU." Mr. Novak sees a chief story _d a secondary story' in the second session. The chief one is ibat "0£ the erosion of a school of theology, the theology of the 'prophets of doom.' It is the story of the growing ascendancy of other theologies, more con temporary and more ancient, over the immobile and abstract theology which since the Refor mation has predominated in the Church." Procedural Struggle The secondary stOry has to do with .a procedural struggle. "In that struggle, the representatives ()f the contemporary and ancient theologies, who were in the majority at the Council, tried to make the central organs of the Council, and of the Church, more responsive to their views." The reader will encounter again and again in this book the hitherto unfamiliar expression' "non-historical orthodoxy." This Is the position which Mr. Novak attributes to the so-called con servatives of the Curia and the Council. UNon-historical," he Cllllls it, because "it iavors speculation which is not called to the bar of historical fact, past or pre lIel1t." It is almost entirely abstract, without reference to the concrete. "Non - historical orthodoxy," Mr. Novak says at various points in his book, is unrealistic and irrelevant to the contemporary situation; ignores such things as file social encyclicals; rejects modern scholarship; admits no need of reform; sponsors a pri vete piety, a Sunday piety; would shut the Christian away fIrom the world, which it views with suspicion and fear 'as an irreconcilable enemy. Crippling COJlSe(luences It stresses four words "clarity, authority, jurisdiction, and . primacy." It has produced ill'tl)e Church such weaknesses as ";'n uncritical use of atistrac 1:IOn9; the loss of honesty and ..ndor; an undue admiration far aniformity, with a lack of esteem for diversity; and a bliridness to the spiritual wlues promoted in the secular world." It is Mr. Novak's judgment tINlt - the' prevalence of "non historical orthodoxy" has re lRllted in the isolation of the Chul'ch, ;ts being r end ere d largely ineffective, its being re rarded as a fossil without a living fuoc.tion in the present clay scene. Within the Church, too, there bave been crippling· conse lequences: intellectual sluggish
negative or passive role for the layman; preoccupation with law and power, to the neglect of the presence and working of the Holy Spirit. The sad state of the Church was, according to Mr. Novak, discerned by Pope John, who convened the Councll as the mea·ns t.o effect radical change. Hardly anyone recognized what was afcot, and, at the opening of the fi.rst session, the expecta tion wall that the bishops would simply :rubberstamp a series of perfunctory propositions pre sented by curial authorities who had the key positions in the Council commissions. However, something else en tirely took place. Many points of view began to be expressed on the Council floor. A wide spread lInd intensive desire for aggiornamento made itself felt. Genuine reform was deter minedly sought. The question of the bish':>ps as responsible, with the Pope, for the whole Church was raised and vigorously de bated. Ancient witness, in contradis tinction to the "non-historical orthodoxy" which is really of recent date, was sounded by the Eastern bishops. Almost all the proposals put before the Coun cil were severely criticized and substantially rejected as being scholastic,and unpastoral. A dif ferent image of the Church was projected and began to be fleshed out. Sees Hesitation This change was attributable not only to the bishops them selves, but also to the interven tions of Pope John. The repre sentatives of "non-historical or thodoxy," although proved by the voting to be a minority, did have control of the machinery of the Councll and were skillful in parliamentary procedure. The majority might well have been thwarted had not :Pope John stepped in at crucial points to see that ';his did not occur. His death, between the first and the .3econd session, left the continuation and the course of the Council in doubt. But Pope Paul at once announced his in tention to have the Council go on, and his opening address at the second session indicated that he had the same spirit and ob jectives as his predecessor. Mr. Novak is not sure that Pope Palll bas since continued resolutely on that path. He per ceives hestiations, even contra dictions. But such misgivings seem to have been cleared away by the end of the book. The author con cludes that much was accom plished in the second session, tbat it went just about as far· as it c;o~ld wis~lY' and prudently go, that desirable developments pro ceed irreversibly, that the day of "non-'historical orthodoxy" is definitely waning fast. He oft~rs ratings of others. For tun ate 1 Y', there are no beratings. He sees Cardinal Ot taviani as the chief champion of "non-histoncal orthodoxy," but does not picture him a·s a vil lain. Ratter, the cardipal is said to be personally admirable and an attractive personality, witty, urbane, ~entle, sensitive, and courageous,
A parish Is not Jurldlcall, responsible for a city; a diocese Is not canonically responsible for the world. But both are morally
responsible. Our Lord often SpOke about Ole world: "God so loved Ole world"; "I am Ole Light of the world"; "I have come to save the world." And He delegated the same reSpOnsibility to ros Apostles: ''I send you into the world." If the parish lives for itself, Ole city perishes; If Ole diocese lives for Itself, the Prince of the World takes possession of It!
VIBITATION: Very Rev. J ame:; A. Kielt, Superior General of the Columban FathE!rs. is coming from Ire land to visit the four semi narieB and 11 houses of the Society of St. Columban in America. The 46-year-old foreig'n mission society has a membership of 1,004 and is repregented in 11 countries NC Photo.
Jubilarians Continued from Page One At 6 o'clock the same evening, parishioners and friends will sponso;~ a testimonial banquet to the jubilarian at the New Bedfor::i Hotel. Dr. Joseph Finni will act as master of ceremonies and Father Forni's predecessor at the New ""edford Church, Rt. Rev. Joseph R. Pannoni, will be the main speaker. Father Souza Fath ar Souza, son of the late Manue:. R. Souza and Leopoldina Silva E,ouza, was born Sept. 24, 1912 in New Bedford. He studied at St. Charles College, Catons ville, Md., St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, and Grand Seminary, Montreal. Ordained June 3, 1939 by the late Mcst Rev. James E. Cassi\ly, D.D., third Bishop of the Diocese, he served as assistant at St. John Baptist, New Bedford; St. An thony, East Falmouth; St. An thony of Padua, Fall River, st. Anthony, Taunton; and as ad ministrator of Our Lady of Health Parish, Fall River. He was appointed pastor of St. An thony, Taunton, in September, 1962. Fathe·r Souza will celebrate a Solemn High Mass at 11 A.M. Sunday, June 14. He will be as sisted by Rev. Gilbert Simoes, st. Mic::lael's Parish, Fall River, as dea..;,)n, and Rev. Eve!"ett Ta vares, ~a. Anthony's Taunton, as subdeac,on. Preacher will be Rev. Jose M.B. Avila, pastor of Mount Carmel, New Bedford. Musk for the Mass wU1 be offered by St. Anthony's choir and the choir of the Sisters of St. Dorothy. A dinner for priests, relative. and fri.mds will follow in the parish IIChool auditorium.
May the Holy Spirit inspire us bishops, priests and laity to realize that the exit from the altar is .not the sacristy but the broken world, that the Communion rail is the pre lude to loving action in the world! The flesh the Lord took on was not easy-fitting; it groaned at deafness, sighEid at blindness, wept at death, bled at the sight of sin. You who are rich, give not only to those who are already rich, lest like Ephraim they become fat and unspiritual and identify the Kingdom of God with the addition of barn to barn! Give to the poor, wherever they are - i-n your slums ill the hovels of La,tin America, in the leper colonies of Mrica! the poor! Pray not only for YQur own needs, but make your lips one with the lonely hearts who cry out in their despair: "My God! Why hast Thou forsaken Me!"
Yes,
Begin rethinking your 'spiritual life! We aD belong to juri dical entities where boundaries are strict! But as members of the Mystical Body we are sent as a leaven to the masses In the slums and as salt of the earth. Look for Christ everywhere, In the w&rried faces of the spiritually homeless, In the Magdalenllo In those for whom the Vicar of Christ must trouble his !JOul. Rewrite your wills. Give principally to Olose who give to the pOor and make no Wall Street investments. Better still, give it to the Vicar of Christ through his Society for the Propagation of Ole Faith and allow the Hoi, Father to make Ole distribution. GOD LOVE YOU to Anonymous for $2,000 "For God's Poor."
••• to M.M.T. for $25 "Since last summer my Friday night 'dinner' has been one slice of dry bread, eaten in fellowship with Christ in His hungry poor, in reparation and expiation for my own and others' sins, and as a small sacrifice for the Missions." ••• to R.J.N. for $2 "In thanksgiving for a favor granted me through st. Jude." MISSION eombines the best features of all other magazines: stories, pictures, statistics and detailB, human interest. Take aD Interest in the suffering humanity of the mission world and send ,our sacrifice along with a request to be put on Ole mallfn. Ilst of tbls bl-monthlY magazine. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, H.Y., or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.
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THE ANCHORThurs., May 28, 1964
Ask Resumption Of Holy See, Czech Talks
Propose Senate Ethics Code
BONN (NC)-Czechoslo vak Bishop Necsey will go to the Vatican in June to ad vocate resumption of inter
rupted negotiations between the Holy See and Czechoslovakia's communist government on Church-State relations, accord ing to KNA, German Catholic news agency. Bishop Necsey, apostolic ad ministrator of the Nitra diocese and a member of the ecumenical council's lay apostolate commis sion, was in Rome earlier this year, He had returned to Czech oslovakia in March reportedly because of illness. KNA also reported that the Czechoslovak government has announced that religious com munities in that ,country. will now be allowed to receive finan cial aid from abroad, It added that the Hoiy See is' expected to send funds to, the Czechoslovak Bishops. KNA said that in April 1Jhe Cze~' oslovak government cre ated difficultieS in regard to the creation of new dioceses under the ·terms of a new Vatican Czechoslovak agreement. In February, KNA reported that a preliminary agreement had been reached between the two on Church-State ma'tters. The February report said that' it provided that Archbishop Joseph Beran of Prague--freed last October from 14 years of detention by the communist gov ernment-was to go to the Vat ican and that Auxiliary Bishop Kajetan Matousek of Prague was to be named apostolic ad ministrator of that See. The May 21 KNA report added that Vatican-Czechoslovak ne gotiations had been broken oft because of the attitude of Archbishop Beran. It said the prelate does not want to go to Rome and have an' -drriinistra tor appointed to his archdiocese.
Reds Bar Prelates From East Germany BERLIN (NC) -East German communist authorities refused 'to allow Bishop Adolf Bolte of Fulda to attend the funeral of his Auxiliary, Bishop Joseph Freusberg, who died at his resi_ dence in Erfurt in East Ger many. The Fulda 'diocese is split be tween East and West Germany. The late Bishop Freusberg handled the affairs of the part of the See in East Germany from Erfurt. Also refused an' entry permit to attend the funeral was Arch bishop Lorenz Jaeger of Pader born, who was a close friend of Bishop Freusberg. Msgr. Joseph Plettenberg, vicar general of the Fulda diocese, was allowed by the communists to cross thebor_ der to attend the funeral. . .
New' '·re-Cana Date
Due'to a heavy schedule of activities listed in Taunton for Sunday June 'I,the regularly planned Pre-Cana . Conference' has been· advanced to Monday night, June 8, at 8 o'clock in the .CYOBall, High Street, Taunton:
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.13
DR. MAXWELL DISCUSSES THE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS
Noted Educator Gives Bishop Cassidy Seniors Enrichment Course in English Literature Some 20 lucky seniors at Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton are beneficiaries of an enrichment course in English literature offered twice weekly after regular school hours by Dr. Clement Maxwell, past president of Bridgewa;ter State College. The special course started in February and will continue until next month said Sister John Elizabeth, S. U. S. C., Bishop Cassidy from Holy Cross College, uate study at Bridgewater prior . principal. Dr. Maxwell is . Worcester, and advanced degrees to his appointment as president concentrating on 19th cen from Fordham University, New in 1952. The Taunton educator's mem tury literature with special York City. emphasis on the work of Charles Dickens, his particular specialty. "We consider ourselves very fortunate in having Dr. Max well," said Sister John Elizabeth. "The girls are very enthusiastic about the course, as are several Sisters who are sitting in." Dr. Maxwell will lecture in English literature at Stonehill € o llege and at Bridgewater State this Summer. As c" airman of the building campaign for Bishop Cassidy High in 1960 he has a strong personal interest in the institution, as well as in the work of the Holy Union Sisters. He graduated from old St. Mary's High School, staffed by the community, noted Sister John Elizabeth. Outstanding Educator Dr. Maxwell, a Taunton na tive, received his A.B. degree
He began his teaching career as assistant professor at Holy Cross, then headed the English department at the Newman School, Lakewood, N. J. His next appointment was as a lecturer at Boston College and he was then in charge of grad-
WASHINGTON (NC) - Sena. tors and their' employes would be compelled to disclose their financial interests under a e<><le of ethics proposed by J;he staff of J;he Senate Rules Committee. In addition, the code would require that senators and em ployes be prohibited from as sociatiop. with persons and or g·anizations engaged in govern ment business. The Rules Committee con ducted the six-month-long in vestigation into the financial affairs of Robert G. Baker, former secretary to the Senate Democratic majority. Need for Protection "The disclosures made in th\s investigation justify, beyond any reasonable doubt, the necessity for protecting the good and faiJ;hful public servant agai.nst a minority who would take ad· vantage of every opportunity te engage in all manner of money· making influence. - peddling schemes," stated the group.' The suggested code of ethics faces action by the nine-member Rules Committee.
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14 .THE ANCHOR-Dioc~se
of Fall !River-Thu.rs. May 28, 1964
The Parish Parade ST. MATHIEU;
FALL ',lVER
To be installed Sunday, June "1 at White's restaurant are new Council of Catholic Women officers, including Mrs. Gerard Desmarais, re-elected president; Mrs. Raymond Antaya and Miss Alice Boulay, vice-presidents; Mrs. Maurice Desmarais and Miss Ja:queline Mathieu, secre taries; Mrs. Nelson Julius, treasurer. VISITATION GUILD. EASTHAM The Women's Guild plans an auction for Monday, July 13. Among items to be bid for is a 16 foot boat. All other contribu tions are requested to be made by the end of this> month, and will be picked up on request to . Mrs. John Connors or Mrs. Robert Clark. The unit plans II pot-luck supper Saturday night. May 30. Rev. James Clark. brother of Mrs. Evelyn Babbitt, guild president, will speak on Papal Volunteers in Latin America. The Guild will conduct II rum_ mage sale on Saturday, June 6, in the church hall from 10 in the morning until 3 in the afternoon. ST. MARY'S. FALL RIVER An organizational meeting to formulate plans for a testimonial honoring Rt. Rev. Arthur W. Tansey shall be held on Thurs day evening, May 28 at 7:30 o'clock in the Cathedral School. All parishioners, former pa
rishioners of the Cathedral and
friends of Msgr. Tansey are in
vited to attend.
NOTRE DAME,
FALL RIVER
A family Communion break
fast will be held Sunday morn
ing, .Tune 7, at White's following
the 8:15 Mass.
Sponsored by the Holy Name _Society and Msgr. Prevost Alumni Association, two schol arship winners from the gram mar school to Prevost High School will be announced. ST. WILLIAM,
FALL RIVER
Women's Guild. officers are
headed by Mrs. William McPart~
land, who will be assisted by
Mrs.. Paul Batchelder. vice-pres
ident; Mrs. William Reed. secre
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mer.
They will be installed Monday,
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HOLY REDEEMER,
CHATHAM
The Association of the Sacred
Hearts will hold its annual ban
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taurant, Hyannis. Rev. William
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reservations.
ESPIRITO SANTO,
FALL RIVER
The feast of the Holy Ghost will be observed Saturday and Sunday wi h two: processions. Parish organizations will par ticipate in the Sunday march. OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS. FALL RIVER . Promotion -day for all pupils attending catechism classes will be held on Saturday morning. Following the 8 o'clock Mass, all, including the Confirmation and First Communion classes, will attend a Communion break fast in the hall, and diplomas and sp,-cial awards will be dis tributed following the breakfast. SANTO CHRISTO,
FALL RIVER
A cake sale, chairmanned by Mrs. Mary Faria, will follow all Masses Sunday morning, June 14 in the parish hall. It will be sponsored by the Council of Catholic Women, which .also an nounces a session for 7:30 Tues day night, June 9, in the halL
ST••YEAN BAJ:'TISTE, F ALJL RIVER New Holy Name Society offi cers are George T. Casavant, president; Maurice Belanger vice-president; Raymond Melall~ son, treasurer; Paul Casavant and Roger Caron, secretaries. A reception ceremony for new members will be held at 8 o'clod!: Mass Sunday morning, .Tune 14, and will be followed by a Communion breakfast at White's restaurant. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA. FALL lUVEll Parish organizations will be represented in a procession Sa'; urdaJ', June 13, honoring St. Anthony. The Council of Catbolie Women will hold a meeting at 7:30 Mon day night, June 1, followed by a board meeting. A,n installation banquet is set for Sunday, June 21 and -reservations will close Monday, June 15. The-last reg:~ ular meeting of the unit will be held Tuesday, June 16, with Mr:s. Vangie Leite as chairman. SACE~ED HEART, NOR1rH ATTLEBORO CYO achievement awards have gone to Janet Fregault, Roger Achin, Maurice Guertin, Louise Choidere, Alice Desautel and Donald Ouellette. ThE~ unit plans an outing Bit West Island Sunday, July21i, and will visit Lincoln Park dur~ ing August.
NEW COADJUTOR: Fr. George T. Boileau, S.J., a nat ive of Lothrop, Mon~ ha~. been named titular Bish op of Ausuccura and Coad jut:>r with the right of succession to Bishop Francis D. Gleeson, 8.J., of Fair~ bar.ks, Alaska. NC photo. BLI~SSED SACRAMENT, FAJ,L ~IVER The Council of Catholic Women anrlJlunces a cake sale Sunday, June 7 to benefit the parochial sc.h(,ol graduating class. Cakes may' be brought to the ~hurch basement between 6:30 and 8 Saturday night, June 6.
ST. lVlARY, The unit will hold installation FAIRHAVEN ceremonies Wednesday, June 17 New president of the Ladies in the church. In charge are Mrs. of the Sacred Hearts Association . Marguerite Bacon and Mrs. is Mrs. Antone Pacheco. She will The:~eseGoulet. be supported bJ~' Mrs. .Allen. Parker and Mrs. Frank Morri:I, vice-presidents;· Mrs. Imq,ald Jr, Brazil, secretary; and Mrs. Ro land Bourgault, treasurer. The;r will be installp.d in a church cer , CO. emony Sunday, June 21, at which new members will alslJ be received. A banquet at Colo nial Coach restaurant, Mariotl, will follow. The unit plans presentation of 365 NORTH FRONT STREET a pail' of bronze candlesticks til) the new church. ) NEW BEDFORD
r~~
) Heating Oils ) and Burners
OUR .LADY OF VICTORY. CENTERVILLE The Women's Guild announces that the annual roast beef din ner Sl~rved by Mrs. John Con nollywill be held from 5 to 7:30 Sa1;urday evening, June 27 in th4~ church hall. Cor,)orate Communion f 0 :r Catholic graduates of Barnstable High School will take place at 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, May 31, and will be followed bJr a breakfast in the hall ST. MARY, SOUTH DARTMOUTH Men's Night for the Women';; Guild is scheduled for Tuesday, May !I, when a pot-luck suppeJ~ will be featured. A cake and food sale will be held Saturday, June 27 at Mello's Shoppe, Padanaram. SACRED HEART, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold its installation banquet at 7:30 Monday night, June 1 in the school hall. Miss Madeline Mc·· Dermott is in charge of arrange.. ments,
\
WYman 2-5534
t,,~~
Complete
BANKING
* Shop Early!
* Save Plenty!
4&P Stor•• C'o.ed MemorIal Day, Saturday, May 30th. Open FrIday Until 9 p.m.
.* '*
"* "* '* "*
'*
"* "*
HAMS
Super-Right Quality lIully Cooked (ut from render Corn-fed Porkers, No Water Added, More Protein Valuel
IHAII PORTIOI
33~
TURKEYS
S TO 14 LBS
READY-TO-eOOK
C
LB
37
TENDER, BROAD·BREASTED
FRESH TURKEYS • TO 14 La1, L'49C 16 TO 22 LIS LI 45'
RIB ROAST
7·INCH CUT
59
C
3rd to 6th Rib LB (SIRLOIN TIP 1st 2 Ribs Ib 7ge)
SERVICE
fe)r Bristol County
Elristol County
Trust Company
,rAuNTON, MASS. THE BANK ON
TAUNTON GREEN
Member of Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
:ommmmrnmmmrnm[OOl1lJ:JlEllI]mmu:mUllJ~
ON CAPE COD
JOHN HINCKI.EY ,& SON CO. BUILDING MA'rERIALS SPrin~1 5-0~roo
49 YARMC)UTH ROAD HY)~Nt-lUS AMPLE PARKING
:ommmmrnmmmrnm!IlXlIlJ:IlliXIImmlIlllJiuli
Special Sale! Big Savings
On the 3-lb
I!conomy
Size Bagsl
EIGHT O'CLOCK :.~:F~:C3 B~G 1.99 RED CIRCLE s~~;r::. 3 B;'~ 7.09 BOKAR COFFEE 1::'1 3 B~G 2.13 JAN!! PARKER
ANGEL FOOD LARGE 1 lB 1 OZ RING SAVI20.
39C
Prlc., shown In till. ad guaranteed thru Frl., Mq 2f,
& effectl•• at ALL A&P Super Market. In ibis communlll & vl.I.I~
Tob.... pr""ucls & Item. Pt1lhlbl\ed by la.. lllompt from PlaId Stamp .ftw.
.
tHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fatl River-Thurs. May 28, 196.4
15
JiM
==a- S
_,
Remember Your Dead
In Your Prayers
Memorial day is more than a ti me to pay tribute to our honored dead. It is ci time of rededication ••• to our country, our ideals, our hopes .for a future of assured' peace. The men who,died for ,our country uphel~ these 'ideals •••' it is us to us to draw full mean ing from their sacrifices, so that they will not have died in vain.'
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• This Message is Sponsored By The Following Individuals and Business Concern s in Greater Fall River:
-
Ann, Dale Products, Inc. Brady Electric Supply Co., Cascade Drug Co. Enterprise Brewing Co. Gold Medal Bread Globe Manufacturing Co. Hutchinson Oil Co.
International Ladies Gurment WO,rkers Union MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. 'Mason Furniture Showrooms Gerald E. McNally, Contractor George R. Montie, Plumber
R. A. McWhirr Company Plymouth Printing Co.~ Inc. Sobiloff Brothers 'Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO Yellow Cab Company
__
.
---------16
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nil:: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. May 28, 1«;'64
Chatham HOLY REDEEMER
Orleans ST. JOAN OF ARC
$25
Mr. & Mrs. John Mohyde $10 Mr. & Mrs. Everett King
Fairhaven ST. JOSEPH
$10 Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Rockwood Dr. & Mrs. Paul Sicard ST. MARY $10 Gilbert Morris
East Falmouth ST. ANTHONY
$100 Anonymous
$25
J,~remiah
& Mary E. Crowley
Anonymous
$20
Orner R. Chartrand, Flore 1C<!
Mil:er
$15
Mary Friese, Francis Fettig $10 'William Quinn, Theod)re Young, Warren Daniels, Dr. James H. Leach, Marcel Norgeot Lucien Ozon, Doris Goff, John Norgeot
Nickerson Funeral Home
Orleans
Provincetown S'lr. PETER THE
$20
Mrs. John A. Pena, Mr. & Mn. Oharles Botelho $10 Lester Dins, Mr. & Mrs. J()ihn M. Pimentel
Falmouth ST. PATRICK
$25 Mrs. Camille A. Beale
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Martin New Bedford Bargain Store Quick & Clean Inc. - St. Patrick's Holy Name So eiety
$15 Mrs. Charlea G. Trimble, John Riley $12 Mr. & Mrs. Henry Wasierskl., Mr. & Mrs. Ellsworth Nightin gale, Mrs. Louise Cook, Mrs. Jo anne Irving $10 Falmouth Electric Company, Falmouth Auto Sales,' Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Rich, Wareham Savings Bank, Frank W. Mc Cabe Raymond Dugan, Katherine Dugan, Alice Creemer, Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Souza, Stephea Fickle
APOSTL]~
$25 Mr. & Mrs. Gene Poyant
Sandwich CORPUS CHRISTI
$410 Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. CarpE,n gel' $10 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Cornick
Seekonk OUR. LADY OF MT. CARMi!:L
$25 Thomas J. Brady $10 Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Macedo, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Veader
ST. MARY
.:.
$50 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Flynn Knights of Columbus No. 4!() Mr. & Mrs. John DURn $10 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bolton, George Davis, Mr. & Mrs. David Falotico, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Kimball, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Lincks Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius McCar
thy, Mr. & Mrs. Farrand Mac j>hee, Mrs. Virginia Main, Mr. &: Mrs. Edward Moriarty, Mrs. Beatrice Mugford Mr. & Mrs. Guido ScarpeHini, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Tighe Mrs. Orphoo Pagnini, John' ltabella
North Easton IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
$15 Mr. & Mrs. John Wallent $10 Mr. & Mrs. Arnold W. GuS/bi son, Geraldine Lahey
Mattapoisett ST. ANTHAONY
$25 Damien Council K of C.
Oak Bluffs
FIRST: Carol Ann Guss, 23, of New Orleans is the fiJ'st Negro in the United States to enlist in PAVLA, Papal Volunteers for Latin America. An alumna of Xav ie)' University, New Orleans, she will soon leave for a
three-year assignment in
Brazil. NC Photo.
Mr. & Mrs. John Souza, Joh. Sollza Jr., Mrs. Francis Toolin
Swansea
Somerset
OUR LADY OF FATIMA
ST. JOHN OF GOD
$100 Dr. & Mrs. Americo Almeida $10 Mrs. Alice Arruda, Charles Campos, Joseph Coray, Geor,~e Coulombe, Thomas McKane Jo:hn G. Nobrega, Manuel Sanson, Antonio Torres, Manuel Velozo Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Cosl,a, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Fonseca ST. THOMAS MORE
$250
Mansfield
Ie
I
Rev. Joseph K. Welsh - $50 Roger Fortier Mr. &; Mrs. Albert E. Mobudt $25 Mrs. C. J. Crahan Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McCann
$20 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Heal,. $15 . Mr. & Mrs. Lopes, Mr. & Mrs. John A. Mitchell, Mr. &; Mrs. John O'Brien
$10 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Barra.r, Mr. & Mrs. John Burgess, Rwlh. Clarkson, Mrs. Henry F. O'Neil, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Curt Mr. & Mrs. Paul Darcy, Joseph H. Ducharme, Mr. & Mrs. Albert N. Duclos, Mr. & Mrs. John Far rissey, Bertha Felag Mr. & Mrs. John F. Fitzgerald,
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Flagg, Mr. &;
Mrs. Stanley J. Godek, Mr. &
Mrs. John Joyce, Mr. & Mrs.
Joseph Langfield Dr. & Mrs. Arthur LaSalle, Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert F. Leonard,
Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Lowney, Mr.
& Mrs. Reginald C. Marchand,
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Murr~lY
Mr. & Mrs. Herman Neher, Mr.
&; Mrs. William O'Connor, Mr. &;
Mrs. Stephen Rebello, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Rogers, Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Sieczkowski Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Louis Simeone, Mr. & Mrs. Vincent P. Smith,
$10 Mary E. Tracey, Mr. &; Mrs. Raymond G. Thurston, Mr. Be Mrs. Leo Jean Mr. & Mrs. John A. Sullivan
South Dartmouth ST. MARY
$25 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Niemiec Fruean Electrical Co. $10 Mr. & Mrs. Philip E. Tracey, Ch·~ster Smith
South Yarmouth ST. PIUS TENTH
EDGARTOWN ST. ELIZABETH
Seafood Shanty $10 Depot Corner StatiOl1
$10 l!:rwin's Pharmacy, Mrs. Hope H. Moulton 1IIrs. Barbara Porkka, H. L. Small Service Station
Wellfleet OUR LADY OF LOURDES
$25 Ist National Bank of Wellfleet $10 Nickerson Funeral Home Wellfleet
Wareham ST. PATRICK'S
$20 1\[r. & Mrs. John Nolan $15 :Mr. & Mrs. Leo St. John
~A·K Restaurant fe":lturing
liThe Gaslight Room"
Ideal for Communion Breakfasts
Organization Banquets
386 Acushnet Avenue
l'II.ew Bedford
Call WYman 2·1703
UNION WH.e.Rf, FAIRHAVEN ~
TURKEYS 37c u. S. Grade A -
16 to 22 LB Avg.
All Oven Ready - Plump, Meaty and Broad-Breasted
8 to 14 LB Avg
L8
LB
39c
-Watermelons
Red Ripe and Juicy - Warm Weather Tteat
Firm, Solid Heads - Well Trimmed
Lettuce
ICEBERG
2 29c HEADS
RED - Rich, Tropical Flavor
Hawaiian Punch All Popular Flavors
Za • Rex
3·
FRUIT flAVORED SYRUPS
IQTI40J:
CANS PT 80T
LUNCHEON MEAT - Delicious Served Hot or Cold
Spam
~;~
HORMEL'S
TWIN-PACK - "6c off" Sal.
Cain's '01010 Chips FINAST - Always Fresh Tasting Mayonnaise Solid White - Sandwich Favorite Chicken o~::- Tuna
IOVs OJ: lAG
OT
lOT
2
70z CANS
BROOKSIDE - All Flavors
Ice Cream Moist, Fresh, Flavorful Fig Bars GOLDEN Snack Favorite for All the family o& C '01010 Slicks 4
VsQAL CONT
_
Finast Ketchup
........
6
................
$1.00 29 c
53c 49c
69c 69c
2 L8 PKG
39c
l'A oz CANS
35c
Delicate Blend of Ripe Tomatoes & Spices
MacLean'Si Seta Foods ~,
Shank Portii.~
$100
OPEN FRIDAY until 6.30 p.m. CLOSED ALL DAY' MEMORIAL DAY
$25
Face Porti~
11k &; Mrs. Frederick E. King
SACRED HEART
$20 Darlings Pop Corn Store, Vincent's Fish Market $15 Munroe's Restaurant $10 DeBettencourt's Service Sta tion
HAMS 49C 39C
FULLY COOKED
14 OJ: 801$
Slime Low S.If·Servlce Price. in Aft Stor.. in Thlt Vicinity' 3 ewe 1 _ the Right to LInIIt Quentitl_)
North Attleboro SACRED HEART
Ji'all River Area CYO Sets First Band Concert Next Wednesday Night at Durfee Tech
17
THE ANCIiOR Thurs., May 28, 196.4
$50 Hyannis Rev. Roger D. Leduc ST. FRANCIS XAVIER $30 Affable, quiet-spoken Frank Wallace, supervisor of music for the Tiverton school .Joseph Bressette $50 $20 system, leads a double life. When he's not instructing Rhode Island's youngsters, he's Mr. & Mrs. John Hart Mr. & Mrs. Harvey Descoteau, shepherding a bouncing band organization for the Fall River area Catholic Youth Or Dr. Robert Watt Mr. & Mrs. Leo Froment, Mrs. Florence I. Lysaght ganization. The CYO band began softly in February 1962 with nine would-be musicians. Jeanette Gagne & Doris, A Walter M. Gaffney Associates It's grown to a membership Friend Inc. $15 of 55, representing 11 area $25 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Cloutier & parishes, and from a quiet Mr. & Mrs. Leo Healy Family, John Desilets little recital last year to a Cape Cod Furniture Store $10 Mary A. McGarry Mr. & Mrs Gerard Achin, Mrs. full-voiced concert this year. It'll be held Wednesday night, $20 Imelda Achin & Family, Mr. & June 3 at Durfee Tech Audito Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Lough Mrs. Leo Achin, Mrs. Berna rium in Fall River and it'll be lin, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred A. Junior, dette Allard & Alphonse, Mr. & worth listening to, from all ad Mr. & Mrs. Charles Harrington, Mrs. Edward Bedard vance indications. Mr. & Mrs. Earle L. Kempton, Albert Brais, Mr. & Mrs. Performers are all youngsters A Friend Adelard Canuel, Loretta A. in grades four to eight. None had Champagne, A Friend, Mr. & $15 any musical training when they Mrs. Roger Corriveau MHdred's Chowder House, Mr. joined the band, said Mr. Wal Mr. & Mrs. Adrien Courte & Mrs. Samuel Hull, Gerald V. lace. They were recruited ini manche, Mr. & Mrs. Richard tially through an instrument Sheerin, Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Deschenes, Mr. & Mrs. George Daly demonstration session held in all Desormeaux, Mr. & Mrs. Phili $12 Catholic schools. Children inter bett Destrampe, Mr. & Mrs. ested in playing any of the in Mr. & Mrs. Alfred W. Mc Orner Dion Kenna struments demonstrated were Mr. & Mrs. Paul Dion, Louise instructed to report to CYO $10 Dufault, Mr. & Mrs. Ovila Goy Mr. & Mrs. James Pelletier, headquarters on Franklin Street, ette, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Kane, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. A. Fontaine, Hasc Fall River, for a trial period of & Mrs. Bruno Lalancette keI's, Candlelight Motor ·Lodge, months. Mr. & Mrs. Arthur LeBeau, three Two Lessons Weekly Mr. & Mrs. Henry Leonard Mrs. Juliette LeBlanc, Mr & Mrs During that period, for a small Ross Dixon, Mr. & Mrs. Jo Emile Morin, Mr. & Mrs. Ovila fee, the youngsters rented in seph Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. Law Ouellette, Mr. & Mrs. Norman struments and had two lessons rence Vermette, Mrs. Kenneth Pinsoneault Toppin, Mr. & Mrs. Edward A Mr. & Mrs. Pierre Poirier, weekly, each at least an hour Costa :\lJ:rs. Virginie Poirier & Family, in length. One lesson concen Mr. & Mrs. Rico Sablone, JOhR Delina & Thelma Precourt, Mr. trated on instrument fundamen . tals, the other took the form of Mulkeen, Mrs. Grace J. Driscoll, & Mrs. Amedee Ringuette & a band rehearsal. CYO BAND: Preparing for first Fall River area CYO Family George Parmenter, M.C. ArrnyAfter three months, explained . band concert are, from left, Ronald Dupont, John O'Connor, Navy Surplus :VIr. & Mrs. Pierre Ringuette, Mr. Wallace, children may be :",Ir. & Mrs. Arthur Roy, Mr. & Jean Poisson, Darlene Wilson, Frank Wallace, director. Ray Sprinkle Co., Dr. Joseph come regular band members and :\!rs. Ronald Sarazin, Mr. & Mrs. arrange Robinson, Mr. & Mrs. Arthw to purchase their own JC.,eph H. Veilleux instrumentS. If music has been direction of Rev. Walter A. Sul more important than the musical Cloutier, Kathleen Lovlette R. B. Corcoran of Hyannis. a temporary enthusiasm, how livan, Diocesan CYO Director training they gain." . ST. MARY Girls' Program ever, they drop out at this time and Mr. Wallace is also aided $50 and parents' pocketbooks aren't by three Fall River music mak By no means is the band the Buzzards Bay Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Byrnes too badly dented. ers who assist in the weekly only CYO project going on, ST. MARGARET Mrs. Herbert Houghton lesson sessions. They are George Next Wednesday's concert will however. The girls' department $35 Tanous and Charles Como, of the Fall River area CYO has include band numbers, dance $25 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Hillman style arrangements and "some woodwind players and Edmond just closed its seasonal program, Gerard R. Cote $25 thing for everyone," promises Machado, brass. which included cooking, art $15 Mr. & Mrs. Francis Martin Mr. Wallace. The band will continue prac and sewing classes. Edward J. Marcellino, Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Edward McDon Proceeds will go towards uni tice through the Summer and Cooking came to a tasty con Mary L. Barrows agh forms for the young musicians Catholic school youngsters will clusion with a parents' supper, $10 Mrs. Alice .Barnhill and that'll be a big step forward once again have the l>pportunity and art and sewing sessions Buzzards Bay Theatre, Wal Mr. & Mrs. H. Sumner to their next goal. They want to to join in the Fall. ended with a display of the lace Auto Specialty, Roberti Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gilmore year's work. become a full-fledged marching "It teaches children social re Leona Kerr sponsibility, quite apart from At the latter program Miss Electric Inc., Red Top Bait, Tucy band, able to participate in pa Mr. & Mrs. James Cullen rades and similar civic evepts musical knowledge," points out Mary E. Cronin, CYO sup~rvisor, Brothers Mr. & Mrs. A. Clayson Tucy, $20 and also eligible to compete in Mr. Wallace. "This is possibly and art and sewing teachers ex Mezza Luna Restaurant, Bolles Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Boisvert, band contests. plained the content of their re Package Store, George Breen, Kenneth Hilllman, Marie Bolster spective areas of interest. ~e band ~ under the general & Mr. & Mrs. R. R. Czerwinski, Mrs. Michael O'Connor, aided Mr. & Mrs. Gildo Cubellis Mary Louise Gulski by Mrs. Francis Lewis, is in Mrs. Daniel Lavery, Mr. & Mrs. ST. .JOSEPH Mr. & Mrs. Edward Brown charge of CYO sewing classes Leo Monast, Mr. & Mrs. Edwin $25 $15 and Mrs. Leo Thibault instructs Zalesky, Lucy McNally Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lewb Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Rush, Mr. in art. Ernest Baier & Irene Baier, $20 & Mrs. Earle Myer, Mr. & Mrs. Awards for excellence in sew Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Rizzardini, Patrick Reilly Robert Kelley, Joan Wright, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. W. R. Veno, Eliza jng went to Mary Mendonca, Prescriptions called for
$15 & Mrs. Edmund Rice, Leo beth Boudreau, Mr. & Mrs. Anne Lewis, and Anne Hefko; in and Delivered
Mr. & Mrs. John Beckerle Stevens Jr. art to Carol DePippo, Anne Arthur Coggio $10 HEADQUARTERS FOR
$12 Marie Gamache, and Linda Mr. & Mrs. Norman Fontaine, Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Amaral, Mr. & Mrs. R. St. Martin, Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Edward Poirier, Saucier. DIETETIC SUPPLIES
Diana French & Mr. & Mrs. R. Louis Badara~co, Mr. & Mrs. Mrs. Benjamin Amaral, Mr. & Judges were Miss Cronin for 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439
Mrs. Arthur Faria, Lt. Col. & Lizotte Sr. sewing and Mrs. Robert Banville Fred Havey, Mrs. Alice Wether New Bedford
Mrs. D. Geddes, Mrs. Judith for art. bee $10 Johnston, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Mr. & Mrs. Lowell Merry, Mr. Mary Regan, Mr. & Mrs. John Maloney & Mrs. Raymond Sullivan, Mr. Krebs, Mr. & Mrs. John J. Col & Mrs. Patrick Grimaldi, Mrs. lins, Mr. & Mrs. Francis R. Per Charles Maxwell, Mr. & Mrs. L. ry Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Richard Ric Enjoy the Highest Rate on cio, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Galasso Carlen your Savings consistent Mr. & Mrs. William R. Dion, Mr. & Mrs. James LaFratta, with Safety ~ Mr. & Mrs. William Martin, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Barney, John Your ~avings Precopio, Mr. & Mrs. R. Tre & Mrs. Robert Seguin, Mrs. Al are Insured fred Love, Mr. & Mrs. Leo L. panier, Mr. & Mrs. R. McKitchen safe by an Mr. & Mrs. R. Maloney, Mr. Nolan agency of the . CURRENT Mr. & Mrs. E. C. McGowan, & Mrs. H. R. Boyle, Madeleine U. S. Gov't. RATE Mr. & Mrs. William Spadoni, Mr. Dargis, John Daly, Mrs. Rita A. Billingkof£ & Mrs. Ernest L. Buckley, Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Dargis, Mary Beaulieu, Mrs. Stephen P. . """","'; We're Famous For Collins Mr. & Mrs. M. F. Rego, Beverly J. Rego, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Mr. & Mrs. A. F. Reilly Sr., A • CHARCOAL STEAKS , FREE/KIT Send us this coupon for FREE save ~ Landry Friend, Susan A. Martin, Mr. & • SEAFOOD • CHICKEN Mrs. Anita Messier, Mrs. Eva Mrs. Anthony G. Nadeem, Mr. ~ by-mail forms and details on ~ • PRIME RIBS OF BEEF Kivlin, Mr. & Mrs. F. Gallipeau, & Mrs. John A .. Durkin ~ starting an account. ~ Mr. & Mrs. H. St. Pierre, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Hill, Flor DINNER DANCING ~ Signed ~ Mrs. Daniel Bradley ence Leary, Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Every Saturday Night Gaudette, Mr. & Mrs. Louis .1. featuring ~ St. & No. ~ Hebert, Mrs. Rose Healy Mr. & Mrs. Henry McCarthy, HENRY COTRELL Mrs. Helen Lovely, Mr. & Mrs. :.,'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"~ and his orchestra George Finn, Mr. & Mrs. Ray Resources over $27,000,000 ONE STOP
Reservations accepted for: mond Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas O'Donnell SHOPPING CENTER
• Weddings • Banquets
Mr. & Mrs. Z. Haduk, Mr. & • Stag and Showers
• TELEVISION • fURNITURE Mrs. William F. Moon, Mr. & • APPLIANCES • GROCERY 91 Crandall Rd., Tiverton
Mrs. Austin Butler, Mr. & Mrs. G. H. Morse Jr., Mrs. Elizabeth ROME OFFICE 1 North Main St., cor Bedford· Open Fri. Eve. 'till • off Rte. 177
104 Allen St., New Bedford Lovely SOMERSET OFFICE 149 U.R. Highway. Ruute 6 Tel. MA 4-9888 & 4-9979
'YVman 7-9354 Mr. & Mrs. John Nunes, Mr. &
Woods Hole
LARIVIERE'S
Pharmacy
4
BUCK'S
0
RED ANGUS
restaurant
a lounge
............
, ,
,,
, ,
CORREIA & SONS
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS OF FALL RIVER
18
THE ANCHOR-
.Urges Effort to Understand Beliefs of Non-Christians"
Thurs., May 28, 1964
New Bedord
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST $50 St. John the Holy Name So ciety Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Zipoli. $40 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Motta $25 Mrs. Maria Coelho Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dias Atty. Edmund Dinis Dr. & Mrs. Norbert Fraga Mr. & Mrs. Paul Rezendes $20 Mr. & Mrs. George Alexander, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Oliver $15 Mr. & Mrs. Albert S. Luiz, Mr. & Mrs. Gil Amaral, The Costa Family $10 Mr: & Mrs. Virginio Botelho, Mr. & Mrs. James M. Boyle, Priscilla Carreira, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Carreira, Dr. & Mrs. Antonio M. Castro A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Camillo Costa, Mr. & Mrs. John Fernan des, Mr. & Mrs. Carl Fontes, Mr. & Mrs. Laurent Guilette Mr. & Mrs. Frank Jason Jr.. Mr. & Mrs. Henry Levesque, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Marshall, Mr. & Mrs.' Louis McDonald, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Medeiros Mr. & Mrs. Frank Mello, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Mesquita, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Neves, Mr. & Mrs. David Oliver, Mr. & Mrs. Man uel F. Oliveira Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Perry, Mr.' & Mrs. Emanuel Perry, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rego,Mr. & Mrs. Anibal Rebeiro, Mr. & Mrs. Ar mand 'Silva ' ' Mrs. Mary C. Silva, Leopoldina Silva, J. Paul Thibault, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth B. Vaughan, St. John the Baptist C.Y.O.
Taunton HOLY FAMILY $25 Dr. & Mrs. Richard Heywood $10 James Pacheco,- Mr. & Mrs. James J. Lombardi Jr. John Mc_ Carthy, John T. Martin, Bruno Mozzone ' Dr. & Mrs. Gene C. Romano, John Sienko ST. ANTHONY $10 John Emond, Manuel Maciel, .loseph Soares,~ Joseph Thoma. ST. JOSEPH $50 Rev. John F. Moore $25 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Cutillo Dr. & Mrs. WilHam Donahue Patricia Frazier ~15
Mr. & Mrs. 'Leon St. Pierre $10 Lola Moore, Mrs. James Max well, Mr. & Mrs. George Cor deiro, Mr. & Mrs.· Lawrence Lacaillade, Italian Naturalization Club Mr. & Mrs. Robert Davidson, Mr. & Mrs. George Furze, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Zrebrics, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Reilly, Mrs. Vincent Wotherspoon OUR LADY OF LOURDES $50 Our Lady of Lourdes St. Vin eent de Paul Conference $20 Mr. & Mrs. Henry L. Silva $10 Dyonisia M. Mollo, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred E. Terra, Mr. & Mrs. Jo seph Faria, George R. Braga, Mrs. Mary Mattos Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Silva Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Gil A. Betten court, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perei ra Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Ter ra, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Nunes Mrs. & Mrs. George Silva SACRED HEART $10 Mrs. Peter Lucas, Mr. & Mrs. R. Peloquin
XAVIER (NC)-A lack of un derstanding and sympathy has prevented Christians from dis-' covering much that is good in Eastern religions, according to Reverend John A. Hardon, S.J., professor of religion at Western Michigan University. He told an audience at St. Mary college here in Kansas that Christians have a duty "to understand what non-Christians believe * * * in as much depth and detail as time and opportu nity admit." , The Jesuit educator noted Buddhism, for instance, con fronts the universal problem of pain, and its "praise of char ity sometimes reaches lyrical heights." Hinduism seeks union with the infinite through ascet icism and meditation. Confu cianism supports the intrinsic dignity of man; and Islam is a religion of uncompromising monotheism. '
UNUSUAL SETTING: Vines growing toward the ceil ing behind the sanctuary set off the altar in St. Rose of Lima Church, Lima, Peru, of which Eev. John Lawler, M.M. of New Bedford, is the pastor. ST. MARY $25 Catherine C. Winston $10 Mrs. Wilson Angell, Mrs. Da vid Arieta, David George, Mrs. Mary Lamont, John Landis Francis Lynch, Patrick H. Lyons, Mrs. Patrick H. Lyons, Robert Lyons, Mrs. J'ane Noon George Overton, Mrs. Ger trude Robinson, Jose Santos, Mrs. Joseph Sheehan, Ellen Smith George Wilbur Mr. & Mrs. William R. Silvia ST. JACQUES $15 Armand E. Desautels & Fam ily $10 Alvini Dufresne & Family, Alfred Marotte & Family, Oscar Lemieux
ST. JOHN $100 Mr.•It Mrs. Raymond F. Bren nan $'75 Rev. Edward Rausch $10 Margaret A. Boisclair, Maurice R. Cameron, Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Campbell, Mr. & Mrs. Fred Car penter Jr. Salvatore Caruso Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Codding, Elva Deavellar, Mr. & Mrs. John Donnelly, Mr. & Mrs. Hetman Gorman, Frank Hunt Helen C. Ivers, Mrs. Kenneth Johnson, Francis E. Moore, Ber nice Morrissey, Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Myles ' Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Pistolese, Mr. & Mrs. John Ricker, Ed wards Sheehan Jr., Anna Smith, Meriba h Stanton Mr. .!It Mrs. Frederick Woll
Dighton
ST. JOSEPH
ST. PETER'S $10 IVIrs. Joseph & Anne Fmnk: ~rald & Mrs. Fleming
, $15, St. Ann's Sodality, Mr. & Mrs. Roger Ritchotte, Yvette Smith
Attleboro
NO .IOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL
HOLY GHOST $5~
St. Vincent de Paul Confer ence-Holy Ghost Parish ' ' $30 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Casey $15 Mrs. William Richardsoll $10 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Beauregard, Mr. & Mrs. Alphonse Catudal, Mr. & Mrs. Harry Dowdall, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Fontaine, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Greve Mr. & Mrs. Edward Haberek, Anthony Martins, Mr. & Mrs. Leon O'Brien, Mr. & Mrs. Larry McNally, Mr. & Mrs. Ribert Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Robert Travers
SUllLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS MClin Office and Plant LOWELL, MASS. 01852 Telephone Lowell 451:·6333 and 457·7500 Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, R.'. PHILADELPHIA
ETHIOPIA= ,
"The things that God wants US most to recognize," said Father Hardon, "is that His Spirit af fects the soul of every man, and that His truth is found wherever He breathes. Our ill success in the East stems from the fact that we have not attempted to build upon the truths contained ill those religions which we insist on calling pagan."
Honor Architect BUFFALLO (NC) - Rosary Hill College wiH award an honorary doctor of letters degree to BrotherCajetan J.B. Bau mann, O.F.M., director of the of fice of Franciscan art and architecture, during commence ment exercises here Sunday. A distinguished architeCt, Brother Cajetan designed the academic buildings at the Catholic wom en's college.
MUP~HUT
U.S.A.: NATIVE SISTERS
Following a Communion Breakfast talk in Schnectady, N. Y., Rosary Society members spontaneously "passed the hat." The total: $176 .•. The money will pay the expenses for more tban a year of Sister Julie, an Arab girl in training to become I Rosary Sister in Jerusalem, Jordan. Sister Julie will write '00 the Rosary Society president to say thank you ... For as little as $3 a week ($150 per year, $300 for the entire two-year courseJ you can "adopt" a Sister of your own ••• Write us for inform.. tio••
SYRIA: JOAN OF ARC All America. priest who visited a Moslem village hi the , Raura.. <a desert area in Syria) witb Dr. Fanny Tornago reports sbe was "received like Joan of Arc" by tbe mothers who came running to show her their babies •.. With four other la)' apostles , from Europe, Dr. Tornago provides the only medical eare avail able in some 25 villages (population: 25,000) • • • Te provide eleetricit:r for her clinic In the village of Basseir (for lights, an x-ray machine, etc.) Dr. Tornago needs a .,enerator ~ Will you help Iret her one? •
n.ooo•••.
THE HOLY LAND: HUNGER
The typical American eats anll drinks too much, according te the National Academy of Sciences. We're told to restrict Ollt' selveB to 2,900 calories per day (for a man>, 2,100 calories (for a woman) . • . In the Holy Land, however, the UN diet for Palestine refugees provides oniy 1,500 calories' per day per person . • . The Holy Father helps to feed the hungry in the Holy Land-hungry children, in particular. Your $10 gift will feed a refugee family for a month. In thanks, we'll send yo. an Olive Wood Rosary from Jl'l'n"alPTYl, '
INDIA: OUR LEPERS
Leprosy victims are helping native Sisters to build a COIlvent hi Korea-proof that medicine can work miracles . . • Miraclell are happening month-by-month in India, &00, thanks to mem bers of our DAMIEN LEPER CLUB. The dues are only $1-. month, a prayer a day. The money and prayers are for the Sisters who eare lor lepers in tbe DAMIEN INSTITUTE, .. TRICHUR, and the GREEN GARDENS LEPER COLONY, .. SIIERTAT,LAY ••. Like .. help? l'e'ar MO!lsignor Ryaft: ~
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WHAT SERVES AS A CHURCH IN AMIA, ETmOPIA, ill _t • cl",,.,.,, at all. It's. tiny mud hut, with baked-mud walls and thatched roof... Disp'ace ful, isn't it, that we don't provide beUer for' the Blessed Sacrament! •• • The average man in AMIA earns, at best. $35 a year-less thaD lOco a' day! By themselves, our Catholics in AMIA can't build • better church! • • • The BishoP ia ETmOPIA informs 115 that the hut Is &00 small for Mass on Sunda)' morning. Besides, the old walls are TH Hoi, P",hw', !Kissiofl ANi threatening to collapse • • • What 1M ,I.. n ..."..,,,l CJ,,,,,.ch to do? P~rhaps the re~der8 of this column will help 115 bwld a deccnt ehurch. The $1 you might give is more than the laborer cets for a full week's work in AMIA .•• The church (with parish house attached) will cost altogether only $4,000. It would make a most fiUing memorial for soDieone's parents or loved ones •• Won't you do what you can to help us give God a decent hOlUlef
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FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preticlent
Megr. Jo T. I,•• Hat'l Sec",
SeIICI aU c lcatio.. to:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
330 Macll... Ay•• at 4211d St.
H_ T.... N. T. 10017
•
Fall River DOLY CROSS
$10 Mr. & Mrs. John Midura HOLY NAME
nr.
$150 & Mrs. Richard Donovan
$100 Dr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Higgins Dr. & Mrs. John Delaney $50 nr. Margaret S. Doherty $25 Atty. Frank D. O'Brien Dr. & Mrs. Eugene F. O'Rlor· dan
l\frs. John Welch
$20 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Foley Mr. & Mrs. Romeo McCallum $15 William Mannion $12.75 Little Friends of Catholic Charities Appeal $10 Mr. & Mrs. Russeli Pichette, :Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Stafford Sr., Grace M. Sherry, Mr. & Mrs. Fl'ancis Crosson, Patrick H. Shea Mr. & Mrs. Michael Hanley, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Leary, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Dion, Patricia Keating, Mr. & Mrs. Adrien Hochu Mr. & Mrs. WUliam Watson, Mr. & ·Mrs. Edward B. Downs, Helen G. Law & Mrs. Alice Har rington, Hilda Phillips, The Walch Family Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Donovan, Michael Lowney, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. C<>nlon, The Barrett Family, Mr. & Mrs. Adelino :nores, Mr. & Mrs. Roger Tache HOLY ROSARY
$10 Mr.. & Mrs. Gnbert Machado IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
$24 ~rean Sperduti $20 Mr. :. Mrs. Joseph Roderick Jr. $15 ;fohn G. Burgess, Dominick Sperduti, David Bixler $12 •Tohn R. Gettings
$10
John .Albernaz, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Ferraro, George Lafleur, Theresa Mahoney, Mr. & Mrs. John Medeiros Donald & Mary Thibault, Dlo linda Wilson, John V. Aguiar, Alberr Blais, Gilbert &'Gregor!o A. Calara John Kershura, The Harrlng tOI" Family, Mrs. Georgette Laberge, John Latulippe, James McManus Mr. & Mrs. George Santos, Mr. & Mrs. Romeo Sirois, Louis Ter ceira, Mr. & Mrs. Jametl Clement, Joseph Corriveau George Geary, Michele. Sper ling, Mr. & Mrs. John Thomas SACRED HEART
$100 St. Vincent de Paul Society 01 Sacred Heart . St. Vincent de Paul Salvage Bureau Atty. & Mrs. George T. Bolger $50 JOhn J. Coughlin $15 Edward G. Larrivee Letitia A. Lynch John J. Sullivan
$10 John J. Polak, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Cummings, Julia SUlliVan, Leonard Sullivan, Ervin Carroll Timothy Shea, Alice K. Bailey Mrs. Elmer T. Learned Leonard J. Harrington William J. Shea
ST. ANNJ!
ST. ELIZABETH
l
$25
Mr. & Mrs. David Amaral
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Banas
Kaszynski Family
$20 Jankowski Family, Mr. Mrs. Zygmunt Stankiewicz
ST. JOSEPH
$20
Mrs. Henry T. Munroe
$15
Helen McAvoy
$10 Mr. & Mrs. Francis Croke Mrs. Agnes Tavis . Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Leahey SANTO CHRISTO
ST. ANTHONY OF THE DESERT
$20 Ladies Guild st. Anthony of the Desert $12 Vincent Shea $10 Feyez Hassoun, Samuel Nagem Fouad Corey, John Hassoun, Norman Lavoie Fred Azar, Louis Lataif, John Monsour, BarbaI' Faris, Joseph R. Assad Alfred Massoud, Tofe Joseph ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL $15 t Mrs. Frank WheUy NOTRE DAME
$50 Dr. & Mrs. Adelard A. Demel'8 $30 Helen & Mildred SuUivan $25 Mr. & Mrs. Louis P. Moore , $15 Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Murray $10 ' Kenneth SUllivan, Mrs. Eliza beth Cabral, Joseph Oarroll, Mr. & Mrs. Forest Mills, Robert W. Healey Mr. & Mrs. Frank LabeckijMr. & Mrs. Ralph Fletcher, Mr.' & Mrs. Everett Benevides, :Mr. & Mrs. Frank Curry, William O'Brien , Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Gasior, Mr. & Mrs. William Gasior, Rita Thistlewaite, Caroline Wilcox Anie Wilcox. " , Mr. & Mrs. William Ensminger Mr. & Mrs. John Walsh, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs. Antone Moniz, Mr. & Mrs. Harry Cipollini , JI1r. & Mrs. James Fitzgerald, Mr. & Mrs. Loui!; Mirra, Mr. & Mrs. Victor Fillippi, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Morris, Mr. & Mrs. Dou glas' Poissant. Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perry, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Onorate, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Suart, Margaret Millerick Mr. & Mrs. Louis Finuoci Sr., tr. & Mrs. William Crane ST. WILLIAM $10 Mr. & Mrs. James Sulllvan, Mr. & Mrs. Franklin Raposa'
BRISTOL COUNTY GIRLS' LEAGUE: Among win ners of sports awards at annual Bristol County Girls' League banquet are from left, Elizabeth Paiva, representing Do minican Academy, Fall River; Lea Laflamme, Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River; Nancy Powers, Sacred Hearts, Fall River; Pam McMorrow, Bishop Cassidy, Taunton; Nancy Vogel, Bishop Stang, North Dartmouth.
New Bedford HOLY NAME
$10 Mr. & Mrs.Angelo Telesman ick, Mrs.1 Alice Marchi OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION $10 Mr. & Mrs. John Gonsalves, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rozario, Mr. & Mrs. George Barbozas IMMACULATE CONCEPTION $50 Dr. David Costa Jr. $25 Albertino J. Barros Joseph Furtado Mr. & Mrs. Jean D. Denault $20 Mr. & Mrs. Henry C. Rod riglies, Frank Costa $10 Maria Furtado, Gilbert R. Coelho, John R. Airozo, Arthur B. Cabral, Manuel Pacheco Gordon Vieira, Jose Aguiar Jr., Donald Rezendes, Jesse Mathews, Jaime Fonseca Maria C. Almeida, John Me deiros, Octavio Jorge, Donald Menezes Helen Roberto, Claude Pa quette, Aurelia Lacerda SACRED HEART $25 Dr. & Mrs. Gene Paul Grenon $10 'drs. Edward Allen ST. JAMES $100
Dr. & Mrs. James S. Manley
ST. ANNE
$10
Mr. & Mrs. Aldei Lafrance
PRINTED' AND MAILED OSborne 2·1322 WYman 3·1431
ST. LAWRENCE
$25 Mr. & Mrs. Leo st. Aubin. $20 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Mitchen • $12 Mrs. Robert Wilson $10 Mr. & Mrs.' Albert Anderson, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Connor, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Dupont Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Fred Fredette, Mr. & Mrs. P,aul Gelinas Mr. & Mrs. Harold Holmes, Mr. & Mrs. John Lynch, Mr. & Mrs. Arthu'l" Rose, Arthur Sylvaria, 'dr. & Mrs. John Tweedie ST. MARY'S $10 Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Cartier, Mr. & Mrs. John Hernon, Mr. & Mrs. Sylvio Peitavino, Louis Walsh ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST $25 Mr. & Mrs. Louis Bettencourt Sr. OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMEL $25 Ohldren of Mary Sodality $10 Club Uniao Faialense, Oliveira Travel Agency Inc., Beatrice Oliveira, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Theodore ST. HEDWIG . $150 Franciscan Fathers, O.F.M. Conv.
$10 Mr. & Mrs. Konstanty Nowak, Mrs. Helen Jamilkowski, Mr. & Mrs. Boleslaus Arabasz, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Baron, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bland . Mr. & Mrs. Ulric Benoit, Mr. & Mrs. James Blackledge, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Borowiec, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Bartkiewicz, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Bobrowiecki Mrs. Charles Bentley, Mr. & Mrs. William Benoit, Aleksander Boc, Mr. & Mrs. John Canto, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Cembalisty Mr. & Mrs. Harold Cameron, Mr. & Mrs. Roger Demanche, Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Dubois, Mrs. Marya Galus, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph' Gonet Mrs. Rose Feeley, Mr. & Mrs. John Hemingway, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Jablonski, Mr. & Mrs. Tadeusz Irzyk, Mr. & Mrs. John Janasiewicz Mrs. JaJ;lina Michalska, Boles laus Midurski, Mr. & Mrs. Jozef Midurski, Stanley Murach, Mr. & Mrs. Ignacy Nikonowicz ' Stanislawa Olszowy, Mrs. Stephanie Pabis - Mrs. Mary Stanek, Mr. & Mrs. Mitchell Pielech, Mr. & Mrs. Czeslaw Ponichtera, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Ponichtera Mr. & Mrs. Frank Rezendes, Mrs. Ludmila Rzeszutek, Mr. & Mrs. Casimir Smeka, Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Thomas, Mr. & Mrs. An thony Zerbonne
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$15 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Dabrow ski, Mr. & Mrs. Konstanty Lef kowicz $12 Mr. & Mrs. John Izdebski, Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Marnik
SS. PETER & PAUL $15 Frederick Hayes
$50 Rep. & Mrs. Manuel C. Faria $10 Anth<>ny Pacheco, Amelia Soares, Beatrice Costa, Stella Souza, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Cor deiro & Family, Victor S. Aguiar
19
OUR LADY OF PERPETUAl HELP
$10 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Medeiros Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Enos, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel C. Silva, Mr. & Mrs. Dimas Craveiro, Con ference of St. Vincent de Paul
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA
$100
Rev. Laureano C. des Reis
$75
Rev. Joao C. Martins $30 St. Vincent de Paul Confer ence $25 Angie's FashioD'" $10 Carolina Sousa
THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 28, 1964
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 28, 1964
Senator Kennedy To Speak Sunday At Stonehill Commencement exercises at Stonehill College are, an nounced for Sunday after noon, May 31st. Principal .peaker and honorary degree re_ cipient for the occasion will be Senator Edward M. Kennedy. Approximately 200 graduates will receive degrees, marking the largest graduating class of the college since its foundation in 1948. In addition to Senator Kennedy, the college will confer honorary degrees upon Very Rev. Michael P. Walsh, S.J., President of Boston College; Joseph B. Fernandes, Norton, civic leader; Miss Loretta W. Quinlan, educator and President of the Massachusetts Teachers Association; and Myer N. Sobi 10££, civic le~er of Fall River. At the exercises, Senator Kennedy will unveil a portrait of his brother, the late Presi dent John F. Kennedy, which will be hung in the gallery of portraits in' the recently-com pleted campus library building. Father Walsh, who has been President of Boston College since 1958, will deliver the bac calaur.eate address to the grad uating class 'Saturday, May 30. He has beel). associated with Boston College since 1942 when he was assigned there as an in structor in Biology. As a mem ber of the Boston Civic Progress Committee, Father Walsh has been instrumental in furthering Boston College leadership in citizens' seminars which have contributed to the social and eco~ '''Ylic growth crf the area. Mr. Fernandes,born in the Madeira Islands, Portugal, was educated in the United States and served with the United States Army during World War II. He is a member of the Board of Advisers of Stonehill College and a Knight of St. Gregory the Great. This year he was awarded the "Man-of-the-Year" award of the National Conference of Christians and Jews. In addition to holding numerous community service posts in Massachusetts, Fernandes has served as Special Consulting Representative of the' U, S. State Department to the Alliance For Progress For .Latin America. Miss Quinlan, currently teach. ,ing in the Whitman, Massachu setts school system, has been a director of the Massachusetts Teachers Association for the past 14 years, and was elected Presi dent of the Association in 1963. She has held a succession of high , positions in the National Educa tion Association, recently rep resenting that body at the World Conference on Teaching Organ ization and Education at Rio de Jar,eiro. She has received numerous citations for her extensive wel fare \\-ork, educational activities and work with children and youth, both in'school and church • affiliation. She was appointed a Lady of the Holy Sepulchre ill the Equestrian Order of Jerusa lem by the late Pope Pius XII and was recently designated as Lady of the Grand Cross in the same Order by Pope Paul VI. Fall River Leader Mr. Sobiloff is a member of the Board of Advisers of Stone· hill College and chairman of the Stonehill Area Citizens' Seminar Committee. He is trustee, direc tor or officer of numerous local and national civic, philanthropic, inter-religious and educational organizations. He has been a leader in the economic resur gence of the Fall River area as one of the founders of the Greater Fall ..' liver Industrial Development Corporation. He is also a founder of the Albert Ein stein Colle~e of Medicine.
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