........
Charity of Faithful Greatest Ever
Establishes Nelv Diocesan All-Time Record High
Final Tabulation Figure Places Gifts at $712,083 . "'The Appeal is ended !H The result exce'eded Our fond est expectations! , Due to the hard work of
thousands of solicitors, led by the parish chairmen, and to the generous support of tens of thou sands of folks and business firms throughout the Diocese, it is my
The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, June 3, 1965 Vol. 9, No. 22
@ 1965 The Anchor
PRICE lOe $<4.00 per Year
privilege to announce that the grand total raised by this year's Catholic Charities Appeal stands at $712,083.13; $31,971.22 more than last year's figure and the highest sum received in the his tory of the Appeal," Chairman Rilchard K. Martin stated. Special strength was evidenced in parish contributions. This section increased $.:15,000. Ninety parishes attained Honor Roll membership. St. Joseph's Parish of Fairhaven had an increase of
34 per cent over last year. In actual contributions,' St. Lawrence of New Bedford took the lead over its perennial rival, Holy Name of Fall River, fol lowed by st. John the Evangel ist, Attleboro third and St. Mary's, No. Attleboro, fourth. Said Chairman Martin: This is indeed a fitting tribute to Bishop Connolly, who in his 15 years as Bishop ha" labored so hard and accomplished so rriuch for everyone's benefit. The re-
The Top 15 of the Diocese The fifteen leading parishes of the Diocese are: St. Lawrence, New Bedford $23,642.50 Holy Name, Fall River 22,117.6'7 St. John the Evangelis~ Attleboro 18,584.00 St. Mary, North Attleboro 17,976.50 St. James New Bedford 16,249.55 St. Francis Xaviel' Hyannis 12,773.50 Mt. Carmel, New Bedford 12,131.60
St. Mary, Taunton 11,532.75 51. Joseph, New Bedford 11,058.50 Sacred Heart, Fall River W,886.50 Holy Name, New Bedford 1~,355.99 Immaculate Conception, North Easton 10,165.00 St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River ~,035.50 St. Patrick, Falmouth 9,934.00 St. Mary, Mansfield 9,619.91
suIt of this year's cal!l1paigl1 as
sures the'Diot:ese of the where
withal to aid its 28 charities now in existence, and to provide something in the nature of cap
ital to 'found new agencies for
good as the need :trises:-
"In behalf of the lay leaders of
this year's effort, may I thank a " who had any part in making the 1965 Appeal the marked success it has been." , In a statement of appreciatiol His Excellency, Most Rev. Jame; J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop ,0 t Fall River, said: "The outstanding success I rl , the 1965 Catholic Charities AII peal gives me, and I'm sure the people of the Fall River Diocese. a tremendous sense of apprecia tion. We consider the extraordi nary response to this year's 9P-: Turn to Page Seventeen
CCD Conclave to Hear Bish'op Greco The Diocese of Fan River will sponsor the annual New ~l1glal1d Regional Congress of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine this year starting Thursday, Aug. 26 and oontinuing until Sunday, .4\,lJlg.
have accepted assignments to give main addresses while many other Bishops will preside at the various sessions. Most Rev. Charles P. Greco, D.D., Bishop of Alexandria, La., and national chairman of the
:9. Bishop Stang High School, N@. Dartmouth, and the New BeOl
furd Hotel will serve as Congre38 Headquarters. Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Dioe-' e:mn Director of the CCD, has announced that in addition ~o Bishop Connolly, Ordinary of the Diocese, and Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, lour members of the Hierarchy
Bishops' Committee ()f the CCD, will preach the homily at the Low Pontifical MailS opening the Congress at 8 o'clock, Thursday evening, Aug. 26 in the Bishop Stang High School Auditorium. Most Rev. Bernard J. Flana-
gan, D.D., J.C.D., Bishop of
Worcester, will be the guest
speaker at the special luncheon in the Stang cafeteria for all priests attending the Congress on Friday noon, .'\ug. 27. Turn to Page Five
Hits Negative Criticism of Schools PHILADELPHIA (NC) Liturgical formation and ee umenical activity, while valu able in' themselves, are not reasons for neglecting Catholic schools. Auxiliary Bishop Clar enee E. Elwell of Cleveland told BOme 2,000 persons here. Speak-
Asks Laity Be Constructive In Speaking About Church . BOWLING GREEN (NC)-Bishop George J. Rehring .f Toledo said here that laymen who are eritical of policies
and Church leaders should take a more constructive tack. Bishop Rehring said "sane eriticism" from laymen ia wel come and is fla service t-o those criticized. Sane criti cism will always be gratefully received by anyone who iii net a victim of the insufferable r
ing at a Solemn Pontifical Mass commemorating the 75th anni versary of the founding of Ro man Catholic High School, Bishop Elwell contrasted "use less negative criticism" of Cath olic schools with the generosity
Fast and Abstinence Saturday, the Vig,il of Pente d~y of Fast and partial abstinence. Meat may be eaten at the main meal. Next Wednes day, Friday and Saturday, June 9, 11, and 12,are Ember Days. Fast is obligatory on the three days, but meat may be eaten at the main meal on Wednesday
and Saturday.
cost, is a
of Thomas E. Cahill, Philadel
phia layman whose will bequest
cd funds for establishing the School. It is the first free cen tral Catholie high school in the United States. "Would that the example of this man would lead some of Turn to Page Four
BISHOP CHARLES P. GRECO
Contributions to 'Missions 'Suo-pass Former Donations ROME (NC)-Catholics the world over gave almost $31.8 milli<m in 1964 to the missions through the Church'a official channels-an all-time record. Contributions to the Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the F-aith in 1964
totalled $26,922,000 -accord
ing to the society's secretary
general Msgr. Raymond P. Etteldorf of Dubuque. Thi~
Schedule Ordination of Two Jesuits
delusion of personal infallibility i and impeccability," he said.
But, the bishop added in aD I address after dedicating a new men's residence at Bowling Green State University, there is 1 a~s() room for improvement m the approach of the critics. He recommended that the lay critic "modify his style ~f :writing, that he drop flippancy, cynicism, brashness, sarcasm, fault-finding, castigation, vitri J' olie and acrimonious language, and adopt the attitude of Cardi nal Newman's gentleman - the attitude of courtesy, considera
tinn, docility, respectfulness and
open-mindedness, without, h.ow
. ever, any thought of sacrificinl 8oi;ncerity, forthrightnesa a a.
••ltiPQkenness."
. Tumw Pac~ I'i...
f
&
Two residents of the Dio cese will be ordained priests in the Society of Jesus next week. They are Rev. Mr. George P. Winchester, S.J., and Rev. Mr. John G. Krebs, S.J. Rev. Mr. Winchester, son of Mrs. Ralph J. Shea and the late Charles A. Winchester, 60 Bridge Street, Osterville, will be ordained for the Society's New England Province on Saturday, June 12 at Weston College. He will offer his First Mass at 12 noon on Sunday, June 20, in Our Lady of the Assumption Church, Osterville.
He will be assisted by Rev.
John T. Higgins, archpriest; Rev.
Gerard P. Kirk, S.J., deacon, and Rev. Lawrence A. Burke, S.J., subdeacon. The preacher :will be Rev. Daniel Linehan, S.l. TUI'R _ Pale Fourteea
~
4I'Y
is an increase of $2,043,319 over
1963. Another' $4,869,056 was
raised for mission seminaries by the Society of St. Peter Apostle for the Native Clergy. Msgr. Etteldorf noted, how ever, that despitE' the increase. the money given the Society for the Propagation o~ the Faith by Catholics t.hroughout the world still falls far short of the needs in many mission territories. "With the money collected in. 1963 for instance" the Iowa prelate said, "the society was able last year tC' meet a little lesa Turn to Page Twelve
Fleet Blessing The annual Blessing of the Fishing Fleet will be held Sun
day, June 27 at Provincetown.
with a lifgli. Mass being oele
JKated aH-l tAatmotninc.
."
Proper of Mass for Pentecost Sunday
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
2
Total of Individual Parishes FALL RIVER
1St. Mary
$10,035.50 Blessed Sacrament 1,991.15 Espirito Santo 1,789.00 Holy Cross 1,057.00 Holy Name 22,117.67 Notre Dame 5,933.00 Our Lady of the Angels 6,662.89 Our Lady of Health 2,454.00 Holy Rosary 3,048.00 Immaculate Conception 6,579.55 Sacred Heart 10,886.50 St. Anne 4,970.50 St. Anthony 1,737.00
of the Desert 1,819.00 St. Anthony of Padua 1,224.00 St. Elizabeth 3,433.00 St. John the Baptist 6,049.50 St. Joseph 3,649.00 St. Louis 2,321.00 St. Matthew 4,580.25 St. Michael 7,309.80 St. Patrick 5,892.00 SS. Feter & Paul .2,786.00 St. Roch 2,243.50 St. Stanislaus 4,772.00 St. William 3,822.05 Santo Christo NEW BEDFORD Holy Name 10,355.99 AssUr.:lption 1,647.00 Holy Rosary 502.00 Immaculate Coaception 4,668.04 Mt. Carmel 12,131.60 Our Lady 1,997.65 o{Perpetual Help 954.00 .. Our Lady of Purgatory 4,208.60 Sacred Heart 2,129.37 St. Anne St. Anthony of Padua 4,952.50 412.75 St. BOdiface 1,082.80 St. Casimir 1,939.50 St. Francis of Assisl 869.75 st. Hedwig 1,859.15 St. Hyacinth 16,249.55 st. James 8,721.39 St. John the Baptist 11,058.50 St. Joseph 4,691.00 st. Kilian 23,642.50 St. Lawrence 6,348.00 st. Mary 6,075.00 St. Theresa NORTH A'rl'LEBORO Sacred Heart
St. Mary
6,276.25 17,976.50
TAttNTON Holy Family 4,311.25 Holy R'Jsary 2,226.00 Immaculate Conception 5,646.00 Our Lady of Lourdes 3,648.00 Sacred Heart 6,578.00 St. Anthony 4,606.70 St. James 3,511.00 St. Joseph 6,504.00 St. Mary 11,532.75 St. Paul 5,969.00 ATTL£BORO 3,565.75 18,584.00 4,912.00 7,442.50 4,146.00 '7,342.70
Holy Ghost St. John St. Joseph St. Mary St. Stephen St. Theresa
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
June 6-St. Joseph, Taunton. Holy Name. Fall River. Holy Trinity West Har Wich. June 13-5S. Peter and Paul, Fall River. La Salette Shrine, Attle boro. St. Mary, Mansfield. st. Elizabeth, Fall River. Our Lady of Purgatory, New Bedford. TNt MeHOI
sec",", Class Postage Paid It Fall Rlve~ eve" Thursday at 41v fall llIYer Mass. by the Catholic Press 0# the Diocese of fall River. SubscrlptiOl ,,1eI ... ..... IIIItPilll Mo_ Mass. -'~abllshed
"lghlanG Avenue
.., ,til.
TOWNS
Acushnet- .
St. Francis Xavier 3,2l:i.50 Assonet1,643.00 St. Bernard Buzzards Bay St. Margaret 5,503.00 CentervilleOur Lady of Victory 4,116.95 Central VillageSt. John the Baptist 2,402.00 Chatham Holy Redeemer 4,194.00 Dighton1,667.50 st. Peter East BrewsterOur Lady of the Cane 1,839.50
East Falmouth-
St. Anthony 7,591.00
FairhavenSt. Joseph 9,241.67 1,940.35 St. Mary 866.00 Sacred Hearts Falmouth 9,934.00 St. Patrick Hyannis-St. Francis Xavier 12,773.50 Mansfield 9,619.91
St. Mary Mattapoisett 3,433.50 St. Anthony NantucketOur Lady of the Isle 2,640.00 North Dighton4,686.00 St. Joseph North Easton Immaculate Conception 10,165.00 North Westport Our Lady of Grace 2,508.45 Norton5,498.90 St. Mary Oak Bluffs-2,800.00 Sacred Heart Ocean Grove3,926.00 St. Michael Orleans-2,218.00 St. Joan of Arc Osterville 3,627.00 Assumption Provincetown 3,294.00 St. Peter Raynham3,862.00 St. Ann Sandwich 6,583.02 Corpus Christi Seekonk6,226.75
Mt. Carmel Somerset-
3,669.50 St. John of God 5,167.00 St. Patrick 7,991.00 St. Thomas More South Dartmouth- '7,840.13 St. Mary South Yarmouth- 8,308.50 St. Plus X Swansea 5,071.83 Our Lady of Fatima 3,625.00 St. Dominic 3,878.70 St. Louis of France Vineyard Haven 2,000.00 St. Augustine Wareham8,867.35 St. Patrick Wellfleet Our Lady of Lourdes 2,037.00 West Harwich 3,702.00 Holy Trinity Westport7,446.50 St. George Woods Hole3,101.00 St. Joseph
Necro!ogy JUNE ~ :Rev. Jose P. d'Amaral, 1949, Assistant, Santo Christo, Fall River. Rev. Louis J. Terrien, O.P., 1920, Dominican Priory, Fall River. JUNE S Rev. Thomas J. McLean, 1954, Pastor, St. Francia Xavier, Hy
annis. JUNE I Rev. John S. Czerwonka, 1961, Assistant, St. Stanislaus, Fall River. JUNE • :Rev. Timothy J. Calnen, 1945, Pastor, St. Joseph, Woods Hole. JUNE It :Rev. William B. Curley, 1915, Pastor, 88. Peter and Paul, Fan River. Rev. George A. Meade, 1949, Cba.plain, St. IIar7 Home, Xew
BecUord.
INTROIT: Sap. 1,7 The spirit of the Lord fills h world, alL :uia, is all-embracing, and knows man's utterance, alleluia, alleluia, alleluia. Ps. 67,2 God arises; his enemies are scattered, and those who hate him flee before him. V. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy _Spirit. The spirit of the Lord fills the world, alleluia, is an.. embracing, and knows man's utterances, alleluia, alleluia, ~~L
.
GRADUAL Alleluia, alleluia. V. Ps. 103, 30 Send forth your spirit, and they shall be created; and you shaD renew the face of the earth. Alleluia. (Genuflect) V. Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful: and kindle ill them the fire of your love.
SEQUENCE Come, thou Holy Spirit, come!
And from thy celestial home Shed a ray of light divine! JUBILARIAN: Sister Mary Jeanette of the Felician Sis ters, superior and principal at St. Stanislaus School and Convent, is celebrating her 25th anniversary in the teaching order.
Visitor Pr(~ise$ U.S. Church Attendance NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The number of persons attending Mass, especially daily Mass, in U. S. Catholic churches caught the eyE' of Miss Madeleine Dain, a leader of Caritas Christi secu
lar institute.
Church attendance in this country is high compared to most countries she has seen, the French-born woman said in New Orleans on the last leg of a trip around the world. Miss Dain, who works full time coordinating activities of the secular institute for lay
women, came to the U. S. after visiting Caritas Christi members in the Middle East. India, and the Pacific.
FRIDAY-St. Francis Caracciolo, Confessor. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Preface of Ascension. Two Votive Masses in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus permit ted. Gloria; 2nd ColI. St. Fran cis Caracciolo, Confessor; no Creed; Preface of Sacred Heart. SATURDAY-Vigil of Pentecost. I Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Preface, Communicantes and Hanc igi tur of Pentecost. SUNDAY-Pentecost Sunday. I Class. Red. Mass Proper; Glo ria; Sequencej Creed; Preface, Communicantes and Hanc igi tur of Pentecost (also each day during 4:he Octave). MONDAY-Pentecost Monday. I Class. Red. Mass Proper; Glo ria; Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc. of Pentecost. TUESDAY-Pentecost Tuesday. I Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Pref ace, etc. of Pentecost. WEDNESDAY-Ember Wednes day after Pentecost. I Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Se quence; Creed; Preface, etc. of Pentecost. THURSDAY - Pentecost Thurs day. I Class. Red. Mass Prop er; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc. of Pentecost.
AUBERTINE Funeral Home Inc. Helen Aubertine Brough
William H. Aubertine
Brian J. Aubertine
Spacious Parking Area WY 2-2957 U9 Atle" St.
New Bedford
Come, thou Father of the poor! Come, thou source of all our store! Come, within our bosoms shine 1 Thou, of comforters the best; Thou, the soul's most welcome guest:
Sweet refreshment here below; In our labor, rest most sweet: Grateful coolness in the heat; Solace in: the midst of woe.
o most
blessed Light divine,' Shine within these hearts of thine. And our inmost being fill!
Where thou art not, man hath naught, Nothing good in deed or thought,
Nothing free from taint of ill.
Heal our wounds, our strength renew;
On our dryness pour thy dew; Wash the stains of guilt away: Bend the stubborn heart and will; Melt the frozen, warm the chill; Guide the steps that go astray.
On the faithful, who adore
And confess thee, evermore
In thy sev'nfold gift descend; Give them virtue's sure reward; Give them thy salvation, Lord;
Give them joys that never end. Amen. Alleluia. OFFERTORY Ps. 67, 2-30 ConfirM, 0 God, what you have wrought in us; from your temple, which is ill .Terusalem, kings shall offer gifts to you, alleluia. COMMUNION Act. 2, 2 et 4 Suddenly there came. sound from heaven, as of a violent wind blowing, where they were sitting; alleluia; and' they were an filled with the Holy Spirit, speaking of the wonderful works of God, alleluia, alleluia.
JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN Funeral Home 550 Locust Street Fall River. Mass.
OS 2-2391 Rose E. Sullivan
3effre., E. Sullivan
BROOKLAWN FUNER~L
HOME, INC.
I. Marcel Roy - Go lorraIne ROJ
Roger laFrance
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
15 Irvington Q.
995-5166
New Bedford
O'ROURKE Funeral Home 571 Second Street Fall River, Mass. OS 9·6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director
Reglstere" Embalmer
D. D. Sullivan &Sons FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET FALL RIVER, Masa.
os WUIFed Co
Driscoll
2-3381
Ja..... E. SunivClft, h.
HYANNIS •
HARWICHPORT
~~'!'~
Special Gifts
National
$1,l)O0 The Great Atlantic & Paclfie Tea Co. Our Lady's Chapel-New Bed ford $150
John Fuyat
Fulton Packing Company
. $100 Rev. James F. Greene Joseph Murphy $25 Sisters of the Sacred Hearis
Fall River $1000
A Friend
Guimond Farms
$500 International Ladies Garment Workers Union Loca~ No. 178 Henry J. Feitelberg $250
A Friend
Reise's Dairy
$200
A Friend
$150 Radovsky & O'Donoghue Stafford Furniture $115
A Friend
$IOG A Friend . United Labor' Council of Greater Fall River Sherry & Medeiros . $65 Gendreau Furniture $50 Simon's Supply Co. Inc. Riveredge Printers Inc. International Brotherhood of Laborers Local No. 610 Mr & Mrs Normand Chouinard North End Laundry $45 Nira Warehouse Mart Jlnc. . $40 J. A. Boynton Co. Inc. $35 Flynn's Package Store Inc. Dr. Harry Cooperstein $30 Thomas J. Ashton & Son Atty. Lincoln D. Brayton $25 . Delta Electric Co. Elmer ~tafford Hillhouse Convalescent Horne Inc. Cliff Lawn Nursing Home Cliff Manor Nursing Home Cliff Haven Nursing & Conca lescent Home Cliff Gables Cliff Heights Nursing Home Dr. George J. Bounakes Dr. Frank L. Collins Odins Dumont Mrs. Harold S. R. Buffinton Mass. Catholic Order of For esters Our Lady of Victory Court St. Joseph's Men's Club A. Soloff & Son Inc.
Motor Truck Sales Inc.
August Badwey & Sons
$15 Mullen Bros.-Jewelers Pine Sportswear Inc. Bedford House Convalescent Home Retail Clerks Union - RCIA Local No. 1325 AFL-CIO Pleasant Super Market Atty. Philip S. Brayton Dr. Harry Levine Everett Sportswear Gendreau Moving, Trucking & Rigging Co. Inc.
New Bedford $1000 Berkshire Hathaway Inc. $500 Loranger Construction Corp. SoiOO
Paul G. Cleary & Co.
$250
Seguin & Caron 1m:.
$150 Seguin Truck Body Builders Debrosse Oil Co. $100 Alden Corrugated! Container
eo.
$75
Stanley Oil Co. Inc.
Acushnet Fish Corp.
Thurs., June 3, 1965
Ask Disas~er Aid Bill to Include Private Schools WASHINGTON (NC)-A plea to include private schools in a bill providing as sistance to educational insti
tutions damag~d by major nat ural disasters has been made here. The proposal was made b¥ Msgr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, director, Department of Educa tion, National Catholic Welfare Conference in a statement plac ed in the record of hearings by the Senate education subcom mittee headed by Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon.
$15
Max Levovsky
Carlos Pereira
Colonial Textile Co.
Whitney J. Bent Inc.
North Attleboro $150 Robert V. McGowan Insurance Agency $100 Swift & Fisher Co. Duvernay COli" il No. 42 Un ion st. St. Jean Baptisted'Amer ique Mrs. Eva Morin Diamond's Funeral Home $50 Brook Manor Thos. P. McDonough Counclt No. 330, Knights of Columbus Reeve's Drug Inc. C. Ray Randall Mfg. Co. Ioe. Atty. Ronald A. Brais $40
North Attleboro Foundry Co., Ine. $25 Mr. & Mrs. Ag ~rd Deschenes Ach' . Garage Dr. Robert Bedard Mr. & Mrs. Milton F. Cash Doran & Johnson Mfg. Corp. Dr. Henry R. Bedard . Community Theatre
$15
Dr. :hn P. Cooper
F. E. Viens & Son
Souza & De Mayo Inc.
Taunton $233 Residents of Marian Manor $100 Ralph M. Handren May.or Benjamin Friedman Knights of Columbus Council No. 82 New Process Twist Drill Dr. Theodore R. Thayer $75
The First Machinists National Bank S50 Dermody Cleaners Bristol County Trust Co. Allan M. Walker & Co. Inc. W. H. Riley & Son Inc.
Orsi Brothers
McCabe Sand & Gravel Co.
$40_
Taunton News Co.
$35
Weir Cooperative Bank
$30 O'Hearne Insurance Agency $25 Sisters of Marian Manor Taunton Guild of Catholic Nurses Paragon Gear Works Inc. Weir Pharmacy Trucchi's Discount Food Stores Bacon Felt Co. Casey-Sexton Cleaners Daniel F. McNearney Taunton Cooperative Bank Pobel's Hanson & Company Inc.
$15 Bernard Hyland Mary E. Burke Gertrude Hartney Leddy's Variety Italian Naturali7;ation Club Williams Lumber Co.
3
THE ANCHOR-
$50
Brockton Public Market
Building Materials Inc.
Coastal Fisheries
Ernest J. Flood
.Continental Elastic Corp. $25 Greater New Bedford & Cape Cod Labor Council, .A.FL-CIO Building - Construction Trade8 Council Atty. Louis Stone Dr. Carl Persons Local No. 168 UAW, AFL-eIO L & S Concrete Co. N. B. Tire Service'
Jay & Bee Fillet Co.
I;aborer's Union Local No. 385
$20
Crystal Ice Co. Inc.
ART WEEK IN NEW BEDFORD: Elaine Brouillette and Lorraine Tri·al, students at St. Joseph's School, New Bedford, enjoy the display of drawings, paintings and creative art produced by the pupils of the school to com memorate Art Week in Massachusetts.. .
Bell· to To-II Maryknoll Seminary Landmark to Ring At Departure of Missioners MARYKNOLL (NC)-A huge 114-year-old bell which once called Buddhist monks to prayer at a temple in Japan, will ring June 13 for 47 Catholic missioners, many newly ordained priests. The bell, a landmark at the Maryknoll Major Seminary here. now rings only once a year-on Maryknoll's Departure Day. The men for whom the beR will toll on June 13 represent 29 archdioceses and dioceses in the U. S., Puerto Rico and Canada. They will include 39 who will be ordained to the priesthood June 12. The missioners will be assigned to posts in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The bronze bell has become a
Send More Supplies To Quake Victims NEW YORK (NC) -A ship ment of additional relief sup plies for victims of the earth quake in EI Salvador was dis patched from the headquarters here of Catholic Relief Services National Catholic Welfare
Conference. A spokesman for the overseas relief agency of U. S. Catholics said the shipment consisted of 3,000 pounds of blankets, valued at $4,500; 450 pounds of milk; 300,000 pounds of vegetable oil; 600,000 pounds of corn meal; 1,865,000 pounds of bulgar wheat and 300,000 pounds of bread flour. The spokesman said the materials were shipped by plane through U. S. Government facil ities.
CRS-NCWC had stockpiled a large quantity of relief supplies at its San Salvador headquarters,
which was made available to the needy after the quake shook the
capital city area.
DONNELLY PAINTING SERVICE Commercial Industrial Institutional Painting and Decorating Fall River
OSborne 2-1911
74 Williamson Street
symbol of the mission-sending ceremony of the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America, bet tel' known as Maryknoll. Cast in 1851, two years before Commodore Matthew C. Perry sailed into Tokyo Bay, the bell was for more than 65 years part of a Buddhist temple, When a fire ravaged the temple, tlie bell was sold and eventually given to a priest, who gave it to Maryknoll.
Korea Missioners Discuss Problems INCHON (NC)-The ecumen ical spirit is beginning to catch
on in the Pusan diocese. Catholic and Protestant mis sioners, Father Joseph H. Davis, M.M. of Williamsville, N. Y., re ported, have been meeting to gether recently to discuss ecu menical problems. "At present," he said, "the aim is to gather to gether as Christians and pray for Korea, and to stop commu nism."
The meetings are run like a .
Protestant service, with hymns, invocations, Scripture readings and homilies. Following the meetings, the missioners join together in a meal. during which they informally discuss their ideas.
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Morse is sponsoring a proposal (S.289) whiet, would extend Fed<.:ral as;;istanc~ in the event of natural disaster.; to cover re habilitation of damaged publie schools. S pedal A!!Sistanee Msgr. Hochwalfs statement said that private school pupig whose inst~tut!on<, are affected by disasters, such as earthquakes and floods, may need special as sistance to resume their school 1.ng as quickly as possible. The monr.ignor noted that un
der the new federal aid to edu
cation law parochial and other
private school pupils will be
given servtces through publie schools and lent textbooks and certain equipmer:t. "In time of disaster," he wrote, "cannot the federal government follow this salT'.e pattern by au thOrizing the U. S. Commissioner of Educat:on and local educa tiona! agencies to provide mate rial:; and services that will as sure a quick resumption of schooling for private school children as well as public school children?"
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4
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
Dominican Priests Hope to Make Thomism Relevant to Space Age
Tens Teenagers Character
DENVER (NC) - A priest psychologist said here in Colo rado Dominican priests in the Unfted States are out to make the scholastic philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas "relevant to the spage age." Father Michael Stock, O.P., professor at the Dominican House of Studies, Dover, Mass., said Dominicans already are busy on two major projects toward achieVing that goal. They are: translation of all the work of St. Thomas, with publication tentatively scheduled for 1974; and an interdiscipli nary institute of studies which aims at organizing to carry out research and publishing in the fields of theology, philosophy, the sciences, and humanities. Father Stock readily admitted
Key to Real Personality By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. . We make so much of how a person looks today that we don't spend enough time looking into what he is. None of the ads offer any assistance to our character, but only offer to help us feel all right, look our best or to smell adorably. And all the time wouldn't necessarily make it's qui'~e possible that there fact it right. can exist a fragrant, gor These people live in fear, geous, healthy idiot, or an largely the fear of being called unfragrant unhandsome, ordi. nary appearing person with ill tremen dous personal ity. As a class, and before their instincts get warped, teen agers are about the finest judges of human nature there are be cause they auto
matically judge a person, not by what he looks like, but by what he is--which is the only reasonable way to judge anyone. This is why teen-agers, before they are "taught" otherwise by their elders, are not prejudiced racially at all. They know better. They know that a man's looks don't count for much of anything at all. It's what he is that counts. Unfortunately, teens too can sometimes slip into an overem phasis on surface appearances, sc that "the life of the party" type of boy, or the school hero with nothing else to recommend him, or the "Miss Junior High" type who is still more egg shell than real chick becomes their ideal. Most Popular Girl But the key to real personality is character. And most of the "cool" or "smooth" types have about as much character as a wet piece of asparagus. Dig deep enough into "the life of the party" type or the "most popular girl in her class" type and you will find, more often than not (unless you're talking about real leadership and not just surface "popularity" which we .are talk ing about here), someone char acterized inwardly, not by great personality, but by weakness, fear and immaturity. And this doesn't make for character, but for the lack of it. The trouble is that, more often than not, their popularity is gained by crowd pleasing rather than by character-which can't always please the crowd. They judge everything, not by stand ards of right or wrong, nor even by whether or not they really want to do it, but by what imp!'ession it will make on others. And these "others"--es pecially the loud, influential others-must be pleased at all eosts. But the lack of character goes even deeper than crowd-pleas ing. When they do descend into the intellectual realm, for in stance, they will read only to confirm their already existing ideas and never to learn new ones, much less anything which might shake their "philosophy of life," which is based on "popu larity at any cost," and "how to succeed at part:es by really try ing." Live in Fear These types will, for instance, read about a thing called "the new morality," and never ques tion the validity of expression or the headlines or the so-called surveys, but read only enough to figure that if "everyone" is aparently doing it, it must be all right. They are, you see, afraid to check and find out that (a) not everyone is doing it, and (b) even if everyone were, that lone
"squar~," which is an infinitely worse epithet than "immoral." To this group, it doesn't matter so mueh that a thing might be objectively wrong, because ·they "reason" that any action, good or bad in itself, can become all right in their case when there is enough in the balance to war rant it-such as the fear of "losing one's boy or girl friend. Scale of Values
They are immature, these peo ple, because anyone guided by fear and weakness is immature. But immaturity is characterized, above all, by a haywire sense of values--and the scale of values these characters profess has about as much relation to truth as newspaper headlines have to reality. But I started out here with the statement that most teens have enough sense to recognize the character beneath the surface. And they do. It is just that the minority who do not recognize it seem to be more articulate and much more efficient with their propaganda-largely, of course, because they play on the tend ency in human nature to accept unquestioningly a helping hand downward. The. genuine teen-ager, as op posed to the one who always turns up in polls and headlines, has great strength to draw on if he will. He has the sort of in dependence which is rational, the sort which fits him to make his own decisions in the face of a crowd which might possibly sneer at him. The real teen-ager knows very well indeed that maturity and responsibility and independence do not mean the denial of legiti mate authority, but rather obe dience to it. Any other sort of "independence, responsibility or maturity" is pure phoney. Honest, Courageous The genuine teen has the strength for real leadership, which consists not in the "pop ularity" nor "the life of the party" tag, but in leadership in the right direction, which Clln be quiet and unassuming, and which may well lead away from' "the crowd" instead of towards it. Beneath the shell of every teen-ager there is a teen-ager with tremendous strength, cour age· and character, and at least potential personality. This teen ager is honest - which means humble and perceptive. He is courageous to the point of not caring abo u t consequences where a cause is worthwhile. He is, and should be, completely un moved by the offer of mediocrity in any line, because he knows the secret of using even very ordinary things extraordinarily well. Discove this teen-ager beneath your surface and you can start living instead of going through life like a zombie. You may not II'ake many newspaper head lines, but you'll set records where they really count.
Pre-eana Meetings Pre-Cana Conferences for en gaged couples will be heUl at '1 Sunday night, June 6 at Sacred Heart School, Fall River, and Kennedy Center, New Bedford. Interested couples may register at their redoriea. .
VALEDICTORIAN: Mrs. John Sullivan, Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, will be valedictorian Sunday, June 6, for the graduating class of Stonehill College. She has majored in English and phil osophy, and .will receive a medal for maintaining the highest philosophy average in her class. She is also the first Stonehill woman to choose the philosophy major. She will graduate magna cum laude, standing second in her class. Active in many campus organizations, she is also the mother of two chil dren and has held a part-time position with a Fall River law finn.
INDIA: ELEPHANTS AND SISTER IDA THE HOLY 'ATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH
SISTERS STAY WHERE THEY'RE NEEDED
Hits Negativism Continued from Page One our modern, very vocal, and at times extremely critical Catholic laity to see hew much more can be accomplished by unobtrusive but positive and constructive action than by a negativism that wounds, discourages, and even tually impedes progress," Bishop Elwell declared. Suggestions Turning to suggestions made by some Catholic writers that the present p~oblem of extend ing Catholic education to all children can be solved by ad vancing the liturgical movement, Bishop Elwell said: "The i;turgy, it is true, is the great vehicle of religious forma tion and even of information. But there are some things it cannot do, and it is precisely for these things that we need Chris tian schools." Of proposals that Catholic schools should be closed and the children sent to public school systems for ecumenical purposes, Bishop Elwell held that "the sa craments alone do not supply the knowledge anc habits necessary for effective ecumenical action." "A Christian school is a neces sary component in the total process of preparation" for ecu menical a!ld apostolic activity, he said.
Miracle Proclaimed MARSEILLES (NC) The Marseilles archdiocesan court has ruled after six years of in vestigation that the cure of a French woman of a bone disease following a visit to Our Lady's shrine at Lourdes is miraculous. The case concerns Juliette Tam burini of this city who suffered for 18 years from oeteoperiosti
W.
scholastic philosophy has become irrelevant to modern man. "St. Thomas built his philoso phy upon a minute study of things," he explained, "the sci ence of his time, the Scriptures, the writings of the Fathers, Ap plying his brilliant mind to these perceptible things, St. Thomas reached reality, expressed m monumental abstractions. "The Catholic world - espe cial!y the Catholic world that was then under attack and soon would be even more embattled -seized upon this structure of philosophy and held on to it," No longer was there any need to do the work, Father Stock said because St. Thomas had done it. He added: "This sufficed for several hundred years, but it does so no longer."
The Sacred Heart Sisters in Ariankavu, south ern India, live In mortal fear of elephants. "One never knows," writes Sister Ida, "when they'lI come thundering out of the forest causing de struction, misery and pain. Many a time we Sisters have nearly been killed." Why don't the Sisters leave the village? "If we leave" Sister .Ida replies, "who will teach the child~en, care for the old people and the Incurably sick? We Sisters stay here because people need us." To continue their work In Ariankavu, however the Sisters must· build 8 school ($2,000), co~vent ($1,450), and medical clinic ($925). Construc tion costs are very low because the people in the village, who see the good the Sisters are doing,. will provide all of the labor free of charge. The. SIsters need money only for lumber, nails, cement, and other building supplies. Won't you do something to help the sacred Heart Sisters help the helpless? Build the school, convent, or clinic (or all three), In memory of your loved ones, and in honor of your favorite saint. Give at least whatever you can ($100, $75, $50, $25, $10, $5, $2, $1) In thanks for all God has given you. No sacrifice is too large, no sacrifice too small, for the suffering. The Sisters are giving their Jives In India. They need your help desper ately. Please help them.
e MASS IN THE HOLY LAND
A missiMlIry priest, who depends on Mass offerings for his food and clothing, will offer promptly for your intentions the Masses you request. Simply writ~ to us.
o NEW
ARAB
PRIESTS
High caliber young Arabs, trained by readers 01 this column, will be raised to the holy priest hood in Jerusalem June 29. For the rest of their lives, these new priests will administer the sacraments In the Holy Land. like to "adopt" now a· young man who Is just beginning his studies for the priesthood? He will keep you Informed of his progress, and you may write to him. The cost of his traininR is only $100 a year ~or sIx year. ($600 altogether). You may make the payments to suit your own convenience.
e R!FUftEES
AND ROSARIES
Dear Mons1llnor Ryan: Please return coupon with your offering
For liS little 88 $10, you can feed 8 refug~ family for a monthl In thanks, we'll send you an Olive Wood Rosary from Jerusalem.
INCLOSED I'LEASE FIND 'OR
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ITREET CITY
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THE CATHOLIC !\lEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
NEAR EAST
MISSIONS
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President MSGR. JOSEPH T. RYAN, National Secretary Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840
,THE ANCHORThurs., June 3, 1965
Be Constructive
Continued from Page One Bisho,? Rehring said the writ ing of lay critics is "often more than provocative and chaUeng ing; it sickens some people', dis gusts others and raises u~ re sentment in still others." Motives The bishop said he does not question the motives of such eritics and does not· deny that there are "complacent and apa thetic people who need to he prodded into action." But, he add~d. a critic should be sure of his facts and of the sound principl.es that apply to them." "One sometimes suspects the cocksure and the all-knowing writer of treading ground that he cannot possibly have had suf ficient opportunity to acquaint himself with in a thorough way," he commented. Bishop Rehring said the lay eritic should "recognize the rela tively small number of laymen who possess the necessary :re quirements to talk out on sub jects relating to the sacred sci ences that have been the pecu liar province of the clergy over the years." "Often peopll'! who write to a facile and fluent style on prob lems that are complex and in volved have only a superficial knowledge of their subject," he said. "Their English is beautiful and sparkling, but their think ing and research, to say the least, are lacking in depth." Influence He cautioned that the lay crit fe "should not be unmindfuR of the influence that he is exerting on minds, immature and not well-informed, who may easHy be misled." ·Bishop Rehring also charged that some critics have "more to say about the defects of the Church. than about her good '~ualities and works" and are "more negative than positive." Bishop Rehring said that while he does not agree with all the "generalizations and assertions" of lay critics, nevertheless he believes such laymen have "le gitimate, commendable aspiI:a tions'! and can make "fine con tributions to the mission of the Church." At the same time he urged that laymen move beyond criti cism to constructive action. "The laity," he said, "must not rest satisfied with thE. knowledge 8f what is deficient in the Church, it must not content it lrelf with articulating well founded criticisms and recom mendations, but it must be ac tively and constructively coop erative with other members of the Church in bringing Christ to the world." "Why don't we see our place In. the Church and see the work that each one of us must per form for the Church?" he asked. "It is time to put a mute on tbe talk and to act."
Bishop Greco Continued from Page One Most Rev. Christopher J. Wel don, D.D. Bishop of Springfield, will speak at the general session scheduled for Friday evening, Aug. 27. Most Rev. Ernest J. Primeau, S.T.D., Bishop of Manchester, will address the general session on Saturday evening, Aug. 28 at 8 o'clock. All phases of the work of CCD will be considered and studied at workshOps and panel discus sions. Exhibitions will constitute an important factor in explain ing the entire field of the work of CCD, Committes have been appoint ed by Father Powers and pre liminary arrangements have al ready been completed for the 1965 New England Congress..
5
Prelate ASs2rts War on Poverty Personal Affair NEWARK (NC) - It win take personal involvement by Catholics to make a dent in the problems posed by pov
AT BISHOP'S DAY: Auxiliary Bishop lVIost Rev. James J. Gerrard was guest of honQr at the annual observance of Bishop's Day by the Diocesan Guild for the Blind in Holy Name School auditorium Saturday afternoon. Awaiting the start of the meeting are, from left, Kemp Smith, Attleboro; Em rna Silva, Taunton; Rev. George E. Sullivan, diocesan director; Mrs. Lottie Tolley, Fall River and Adelindo Sylvia, New Bedford..
Advises Journalists Seek Middle Ground Stresses Area Between Silence, Criticism NEW YORK (NC)-The edi tor of L'Osservatore Romano said here the mission of the C.atholic journalist is to seek a middle gr01md between servile silence and uncC'lltrolled criti cism. Raimondo M'lnzini, editor of the Vatican Cit:,- daily news paper, delivered thl~ keynote ad dress at the 7th World Congress of th'3 Catholic Press. The Second Vatican Council offers Catholic journalists "a new and broad testing ground" in seeking their place between freerlom and authority, the edi tor l'aid in his address prepared in French and simultaneously translated into other languages at the congress' keynote lunch eon. Manzini said that civilization tod:!) would be inconceivable without exercise of the right to information. "In areas where it is rejected or bridled," he added, "thel'e arises a crises in the so cial order." But he saia that today this right is carried to extremes. "People want to know every thinq; everything must be said," he CQmmented. Illnesses Develop "The area of reserved domain and that of prudence seem to be constantly smaller, more than reason demands. It seems that in journalism the Gospel statement is coming true: 'what you do in secret will·be proclaimed from the rooftops,''' he said. A9 a result of "all excessive
Volunteers Assist In Moving School FORT LEE (NC)-Nuns, stu
dents and parents all pitched in
to help move the Academy of
the Holy Angels from the site
it has occupied here for 86 years
to a new $3.15 million school and
convent in Demarest, N.J.
Professional movers were hired
for large pieces of furniture
and equipment, while smaller
items, including the 8,000 books
of the school library, were trans
ported the eight miles b)' volun
teers.
amount of indiscreet and pas sionate informatior.," there has developed "illnes.<;cs" which need "the medicine of truth, clearly understood and wisely adminis tereel." T~e Ca~holic journalist, he sa'id, must strive to orient the new:; of the world in a Christian way. The norm for the Catholic journalist, he Said, should. be charity - "which impels us to
Dedicates Windows At National Shrine WASHINGTON (NC - Two ornate stained glass windows, gifts of the National Alliance of Czech Catholics, were dedicated here at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. Msgr. Martin A. Krizka of Chi cago, Alliance chaplain. blessed the windows and offered Mass. Father Joseph Adamec, C.SS.R., ot Baltimore, preached the ser
mon.
A large delegation of Alliance members from a half-dozen states attended the ceremonies.
recognize in the freedom of others the limit placed upon our own ~reedom."
Asserts Reds Losing Radio War of Words
erty in this area, Archbishop. Thomas A. Boland said here in New Jersey. The archbishop told a confer ence on anti-poverty sponsored by agencies which are coordi nating Catholic cooperation in tl:e war on poverty program: "It is not enough to just give to the poor. This is only temporary aid. We must teach them to help themselves, to become self-sup porting. The Economic Opportu nity Act throws responsibility on the community and on individ uals to do this." Archbishop Boland said priests are in an excellent position to help because many are located in or near poverty areas. Being aware of the needs they can re cruit men and women to become involved, he ~aid. Negro Hit Hardest' Disagreement with some as pects of the program, the arch bishop asserted, "is no reason for not taking part. Destructive crit icism has no place there and even constructive criticism must be followed by personal involve ment." James Wilson, executive di rector of the Urban League of Eastern Union County, the key note speaker, noted that poverty has hit the Negro hardest. He cited progress in the civil rights campaign but said "our Negro citizens may wake up one day with a mouthful of civil rights and a barren breakfast table."
MARYKNOLL (NC)-A com munist propaganda maneuver to undermine a Cath0lic mission project in Latin America has proved to be "extremely ineffec tive" after five months, accord ing to Father Robert E. Keams, M.M., Bronx missioner who di rects the Maryknoll "radio schools" project in the altiplano of Peru and Bolivia. For the past five months, Radio Moscow and the "radio schools" have been engaged in a war of words-and the com munist are losing that war, says Father Kearns.
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6
THF AI',rl-lf")p-niocese of Fe'll River-Th,:,rs., June 3, 1965
The V/ay to Peace
.
The Best . Everyone likes to establish a record. To be able to say
that something is the best or the finest or the most is a
satisfying feeling. Those who gave so generously to this
year's Catholic Charities Appeal must be indeed proud to
be a'Jle to say that their gift helped make this Appeal the,
greatest ever-with a sum exceeding the magic seven hun
dred thousand mark.
Just a few years ago such a figure was thought of as being in the realm of wishful thinking. But it has been realized. What makes this year's Appeal the best is not only the great amount of money realized but the knowledge of how the very best efforts of so many persons went into the Appeal so that the best of care might be taken of the many in need who depend, to a greater or lesser degree, on the Appeal for suppo~t.
This is what makes this Appeal the best. The Catholic Charities Appeal is based not on dollars and cents but on love. Its appeal is to the heart rather than to the pocketbook, for if the heart is moved at the thought that Christ is helped when His brothers and sisters are
helped, then the heart will cause the hand to open in giving. This is what has been happening year after year. And
this is what has brought this year's Appeal to such a happy
eonclusion. The amount of money raised is heartening. The efficiency with which the Appeal is conducted is aswunding. What other comparable fund-raising endeavor can promise that almost ninety-nine cents out of every dollar given will go to 'charity, with expenses kept to ~ ridiculous low ot just over one per cent? The work that the Appeal monies will do will continue throughout the year. A gift once given might be forgotten after a little while by the donor. It is not forgotten by those who use t~e money to do good, by'those who are recipients of the charity of others, by God Who sees both gift and giver.
police and Society
Af1l0NTH (J!I" TillIE
":~'
.
§AICU IflIMl!{ll' REV. JAMES A •. CLARK Assistant Director
Lotiri American Bureau, NCWC
A Stricken City Santo Domingo disinte grated during my three weeks absence. As a vacation spot of the' Caribbean, it
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Disagree With Clergyman On Public Prayer Custom By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) .The April 14 issue of The Christian Century features a provocative article by an Episcopalian priest, Father David Edman of Stone Ridge, N.Y., on the subject of public prayer at civic gatherings-graduations, dedications, par ades, meetings of legisla tice. On the other hand, I am tures, trade union conv.en inclined to think that Fr. Edman tions, Chamber of Commerce has overstated the theological gathp.rings, bridge openings, case against the practice as such:
cornerstone layings, and what hav.e you. In summary, Father Edman argues, Perhaps the tide is beginni.ng to turn. with consider With monotonous regularity the New York newspapers able fee 1 i n g , ,used to print accounts of how policemen were being attacked that the "prayer mongering" which in the course of exercising their authority. The impression takes place on given was that whatever part of the public was not openly such occasions hostile to. the police was apathetic. is "ll vi"olation· of the third But within a few days there have been reports of a few commandment, a . instar.ces-not many or especially impOrtant ones-where step, however well intentioned, citizens have assisted the police or, at least, have not inter into the dark fered. with them in the carrying out of their duty. precincts .Can it be that men and women are beginning to see of blasphemy." Clergymen, he contends, bear the heaviest re the policeman for what he is-the extension of the citizen· sponsibility for the perpetration himself, or his desire for law and order and justice and . of public prayers." They are said peace? to De "either incompetent or cynical in dealing with the A society can live only on the level that it chooses to practice." live. If it wishes the rule of reason it will establish and· Actually I have heard a num . support those agencies that will introduce and keep alive ber of clergymen of all. faiths debate the issue pro and con. in society the regulations of law and justice. Some tend to go along with If a society will not support its police, if a society Father Edman's opinion that too refuses to recognize the police as its own agents, then it many civic prayers are lowest common-denominator, all-pur is turning its back on the very safeguards of its own peace pose orisons which are theolog and 0rder. ically insipid, to say the least. Moreover, contrary to Father T::ue, policemen have the obligation to be worthy and Edman's belief that clergymen, intelligent upholders of the law of society: But citizens following the rule that' "we must treat them with respect and encouragement and sup. learned" ':' ':' soon after we left port. ' . the seminary," strive for brevity above all, many professional "prayermongers" are perfectly willing to admit that civic ori sons are, on the average, much too long. Clergy Not Convinced On the other hand, I must con fess that I have met very few clergymen who are as worried OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER as Father Edman seems to be about the practice of civic Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River prayers and fewer still who are ready to join a crusade to elim 410 Highland Avenue inate the practice all together. Fall River, Mass. 675-7151 As for myself, I really don't PUBLISHER know what to think after care Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD., fully rereading Father Edman's thought-provoking' article seve ASST. GENERAL MANAGER GENERAL MANAGER ral times. On the one hand I Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll would agree that civic "prayer MANAGING EDITOR mongering" often enough leaves Hugh J. GoldeR IlOmething to be desired in prac-
®The ANCHOR
.
. :::~:"Y\~· ~;i!,';Ji
His basic argument against the practice of civic prayer - any kind of civic prayer, on any and all occasions-is strictly theolog ical in nature. He argues, in sl'mmary, that "in the Judeo Christian tradition prayer, far from being a public matter, is undeviatingly, unambiguously private. It is an act of purest spiritual intimacy in a radically individualistic I-Thou relation ship." Theology Unacceptable . Father Edman is so deeply committed to this theological position that he ill-advisedly adds, for good. measure, that "in at least one of the synoptic tra ditions the Lord's Prayer is given as an alternative to pray ing in public (or public prayer, which amounts to the same thing), with its virtually inevi table hypocrisy," I mean no offense when I say that this highly individualistic theology of prayer is unaccept able from the Catholic point of view and, with all due respect tn ?dher, Edman, also sounds strangely un-Episcopalian. The Catholic tradition - and 2.1so, :;: would have thought, the Episcopalian allows ample room for public, non-liturgical prayer at civic as well as reli gious gatherings. Indeed many of the better prayers which I have heard at civic gatherings were lifted, with' or without credit, straight from the pages of the Roman Ritual.. Slight Exaggeration , I ",,"ould also disagree with Father Edman - this time on constitutional rather than theo logical -grounds-when he' says that the Supreme Court has "cast doubt on the propriety of public prayer in a religiously plunllis tic society. The Supreme Court hasn't done anything of the kind and, hopefully; never will. The mat ter of civic prayer (in the sense' which Father Edman is using' the term) is simply none of the Supreme Court's business.
"Jsed to have a gentle calmness about it. Young folk peacefully strolled along its magnificent seawalls. 0 I d Iol k s found
aging bon es soothed by its warm climate. The city died on April 24th. Soldiers were always a com
mon sight here but now they are American
not Dominican.
Now there'is no television and the radio features propaganda i'ather than enter tainment. The city is oftetl without water, electricity and phone service. . All customary normal living has been disrupted. The city i8 split across one of its main streets. In the safety zone it ill difficult to purchase anything. The rebels control the shopping heart of the city. Schools are no longer for learning but for living as refugees from combat zones seek shelter. The threa~ of shortage in many items spreads fear; gasoline, food and medicines are objects of concern. Disease hangs in the aIr. Shots fill the air. Passage
along any street is impeded by
repeated inspection of automo
biles and examination of per
sonal' papers. It is worth one's life to be about without a pass port. Reports from the rebel zone indicate widespread suffering. Crowds mill in the streets. Bands of outlaws shoot without reason and create terror. When I was last here there was a noticeable anti-American ism. I returned armed with ar guments to justify the coming of . the American army. I found that I didn't need my arguments: The people have -welcomed the troops. There are some anti American demonstrations and some' who argue over the need for our intervention. But most ordinary people who feared for their live:> during the rampage were happy to see the arrival of a force able to restore order. The city is crippled. Friends cl':nnot meet, All entertainments are shut. The entire country is suffering with the sick capital. Governmental employees are without pay. The port is closed. Gradually the city is lick~ng its wounds. But the· Santo Domingo that existed when we had a l\1arian-Mariological Congress here in March is gone. Probably it is gone for good. Now instead of preparing for . tourists we are. working to assist local citizens. We have spread food across the city to help those who are unable to buy food. We have visited jails and hospitals to gather information on loved ones for an office of information run by the Christian Brothers. We have assisted the chaplains in providing and procuring priests for Sunday Masses. The city is old. The problems are old. Santo Domingo will continue to have political and military revolutions until it can achieve a sociar" revolution of a fairer distribution of wealth and a better life for all rather than the few.
Expe'cts Council To Strengthen School Plan
THE ANCHOR- 1965 Th un., June 3 ,
Catholic Edition Being Published . In En$1Jland
LOS ANGELES (NC) The Second Vatican· Council will call for strengthening of Catholic education and not for phasing out any part of It, according to Bishop Francis J. Green of Tucson. The Arizona prelate, preach ing at Loyola University's gold en jubilee,'asserted: "All reflect in one way or an other the excellence of Loyola. When one considers these happy reports, it is disturbing to hear the voices of discordance and unrestrained criticism of the place of Catholic schools in the present day, and particularly in the United States." Education Ideals The Bishop declared that he Joined his voice with others in saying: HAll prospects for the future would seem to be grounds such as we have never had before in our country's history for a vig o~ous non-apologetic, non-tem porizing, non-watered system of Catholic education. "True to its goals an dtradi tions, not compromising spirit or doctrine to become 'more like secular institutions, or presum ably approved by ·them • • • the country needs the example of our massive commitment to re ligion and to religious ideals in education." Light of GoSllei Bishop Green \Vas critiea1 of elerical and lay Catholics for public charges of alleged fail ure of Catholic education. "It has almost become the badge of the Catholic intellectual to get headlines for condemning Catholic education .as anti-intel lectual," he added. "While it is the fervent hope and prayer of· the Pope and the Bishops that the Second Vatican Council will be a real aggiorna mento for the Church, and that from it will come a new impetus to carry the light of the Gospel to men of our time as fruitfully as did the Apostles to men of their time, the Second Vatican Council should in no way be thought of as a revolution or a complete reversal of the past," he also said. Strengthen Schools "The Council," he continued, "may determine a new vesture for the Church to wear in the modem world, but it neither can, nor does it desire to change the nature of the Church and its commitment to its divine mis
alon. "'The Second Vatican Council will doubtless publicize pro nouncements in the field of edu cation, but rest assured, such pronouncements will call for the strengthening and developing, and not any phasing out of Cath olic education."
Sect Wants Change In Taft;.Hartley Law WASHINGTON (NC) A half-page advertisement was published in two daily news papers here, the Post and the Star, advocating ar: amendment to the Taft-Hartley Labor Law which would exempt certain religious conscientious objectors from having to join labor unions as a condition of employment. The ad was signed by Leonard Baldwin and Ernest C. Mitchell of Washington, and Peter F. Waskey of Baltimore. It was ex plained they were acting in a nationwide campaign for mem bers of the Plymouth Brethren No.4 whose Bible-oriented be liefs forbid them from becoming members of any formal associa tion - trade, union,. professional w otherwise.
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LONDON (NC)-A Cath olic edition of the Protestant Revised Standard Version of the New Testament will be
IN SANTO DOMINGO: Rev. James A. Clark of New Bedford, who is now repre senting the Latin American Bureau NCWC in relief work on the personal request of the Papal Nuncio, took the above picture of Father (Lt. Col.) Corbin W. Ketehersid offering Mass on the outskirts of the city (or a congregation of troops from Nicaragua, Hon duras and Brazil. NC Photo
Catholic Relief Service in Rebel-Held Area Msgr. Schneider Directhl9 Santo Domingo Aid By Rev. lames A- Clark SANTO DOMINGO (NC) Working at the main checkpoint between the international safety zone and rebel-held territory, Msgr. Alfred Schneider, director of Catholic Relief Services-Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence for Latin America, arranged . for trucks to haul food in the._ rebel areas during a 24-hour. truce. The truce, arranged to provide . for the recovery of wounded and· dead in strife-torn areas, per mitted the passage of irucks au thorized by Msgr. Schneider. Loaded with 28,000 pounds of rice and 11,000 pounds of vege able oils, the trucks carried enough supplies to feed 25,000 people. Drivers, fearing for their safe ty as night fell, were guaranteed safe conduct 'out of the rebel area. Previously, CRS had lost two trucks which had entered the rebel neighborhoods but were not permitted to leave. Priest Distributors The food was taken to parishes and distributed by priests. Father Guillermo Rodriguez, di rector of Caritas, the Catholic charities organization, had acted on reports of widespread hunger in rebel sections and requisition ed trucks to move the food Between 20 and 30 CRS-Caritas trucks had already been diverted to the interior of the country where there was a critical food shortage. CRS-Caritas operations have been hampered by· loss of the main Caritas warehouse to the rebels. A receipt for the ware house and its contents was re ceived by the Caritas office. Rebel forces distributed the 300 tons of stored food there. Records Lost With the warehouse CRS Caritas lost all records and pro graming schedules. Food distri bution in the country is current ly under a President's Emergen q Food Commission in coordi
nation. with the Organization of mmtary forces are providing American States. The voluntary immediate food relief under agencies (CRS-Caritas, CARE, their Civic Action Program. and Church World Service) are The U. S. Agency for Interna supplying distribution services. tional Development is providing CARE has long been the largest funds for transporting provi relief food agency in the coun sions throughout the country. try. Church World Service The ship Alcoa Ranger docked planned to discontinue its food with two million pounds of corn. program by June 1 to concen flour and oil consigned to the trate on other services. Due to . American ambassador. This food this, its current food program is has all been dispersed. U. S. small. CARE has loaned its Marines have guaranteed pro tection for unloading the food warehouse as a central distribu tion point for all food. The U. S. aboard a second ship which was due to arrive. Rafael Garcia of Caritas and .Tack Fazio, CRS representative here, meet regularly with other agencies involved in feeding the WASHINGTON (NC) - Twit hungry. U. S., Geneva and D0 priests testified before a Senate minican Red Cross perSonnel are subcommittee here in favor of a arranging for medical assistance. pair of bills involving education CRS-Caritas has prepared an for the handicapped. eDlergency feeding program for 800,000 people over the next Msgr. Joseph A. Dooling, di rector of Mount Carmel Guild, three months. social welfare agency of the Newark archdiocese, and Msgr. John P. Hourihan, in charge of the guild's work for the deaf tes tjfied on behalf of a bill to pro vide training for ·teachers of the Reg. Master Plumber 2930 handicapped and a bill provid GEORGE M. MONTLE
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published here early in June. Fathers Bernard Orchard,O.S.B.. and Reginald Fuller, who did the major part of thE' editing, pre sented a specially-bound copy to Pope Paul VI this week. Tne work began more than .ten years ag·j and will continue until the full Bib]" is ready for issuance, possibly by the end of the year. The latt' Bernard Car dinal Griffin of Westminster was about to put his imprimatur on the project when he died. His successor, the Jate William Car dinal Godfrey, disapproved and the work stopped The present publication bears the imprima tur of Archbishop Gordon Gray of St. Andrew's and Edinburgh, ScoUand. Differences between the ori ginal R.S.V New Testament and the Catholic version are slight, and all are enumerated at the end For one example, the story of the woman taken in adultery in St. John's Gospel is included in the main text in the Catholic version, while it is only a foot Dote in the Proteb-tant version. Father Fuller said the work eannot be described as a "com mon Bible," but could be called "the last step on the way to one."
Mundelein College To Honor Spouses CmCAGO (NC)-A husband and wife have received honorary degrees Wednef.day, June 2 here at the 34th annual Mundelein College commencement ceremo nies. Brig. Gen. David Sarnoff, Radio Corporation of America board chairman and his wife, Lizette H. Sarnoff were hon ored. Gen. Sarnoff delivered the principal address.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
High Court Bar Admits Nun
Folks Take 'Third' Seriously
At Home of Columnist Daly
_ By Mary Tinley Daly .. Apropos of "keeping the Sabbath," a line from Sir lames M. Barrie's "The Little Minister" pops into mind: "Has it ever struck you that the trout bite best on the Sabbath? God's critters tempting decent men." Probably we've all been tempted, not , only to go fishing on Sunday hav~ ~hen we re simply itching . to fInIsh up a new dress or some but to catch up on thls-or other short-term jobs are a little that. And it's this time of less than holy. year, late Spring-early Summer Matter of fact, we've accused when we resent the "Sunday our Sunday sanctifier of not ban" at 0 u r wanting to cut the grass, wash house the most. the car or whatever, but this Everybody else isn't really fair. He will do all in the neighbor these jobs on a Saturday or any borhood is gar other day of the week, welcome dening, build the assistance of his sons-in-law ing a patio or a in like projects. But if anybody boat· or a bar is going to wash a ear or cut becue pit or grass on Sunday, it will be his I!l 0 met h i n g , ear, not ours; the grass his yard, painting the Dot ours. shutters, getting Amen and 80 be it, resulting w 0 r k accom sometimes in the hours from plished. Not that our standards after Mass to bedtime becoming are set by "everybody" but we like the traditional "Sunday in do wistfully wish that we too Philadelphia." As far as garden could get a real chore or two ing goes, we may pick flowers out of the way during a long but we must not do the grubby Sunday afternoon. gardening. We may paint a pic But no. There's tbat "Sunday ture (''That's intellectual, artistic ban," strictly enforceo. by the work") but not the porch furni Head of ibe House, imposed by ture. We may read, nap, watch Church law but brought to his TV, go swimming, attend a con attention in its strictness by cert, write letters, go fora drive Eileen when she was a little girl. (in our unwashed vehicle) and As I recall its oriwn, the Head visit friends who are more often of the House was himself doing than not engaged in semi-servile a bit of "servile work" one Sun tasks. day, finishing up the last hour's And of course we may cook, painting that remained in the routing some of our servile en kitchen after a full day of Sat ergy into a roast with all the arday painting. trimmings and a Sunday-best A shocked eight - year - old dessert. Eileen gave him the business: Again in fairness to The Arbl "'Daddy, that's servile work and· ter., I must confess that probably Sister says it's a sin." all of us are more rested and Like the devil quoting Scrip ready to assume the week-day ture, he came back with tbe Bib tasks with more zest than we lical saying that if your ox falls would have been if we had into a pit on the Sabbath, you broken that Sunday ban, or eve. eertainly shouM pull it out, just cracked it. shouldn't you? It's Gospel. Proposes Tuition-Free That didn't satisfy Eileen. "You're n,ot pulling fin ox out of College Education a ditch, D~ddy. You're painting NEW YORK (NC)-Buen G. and it's servile work." Gallagher, president of City Col That was the en<'l of the paint Ing and, I might add, the end of lege of New York, suggested even the semblance of servile here that the Federal govern work on Sundays forevermore ment and colleges should split the entire tab for every student'. at our house. Telling him he's trying to be education. Speaking to • "Republican holier than the Church itself, Task Force on Education," a that a short chore, for fun or ex ercise, is allowable, leaves the group of GOP House members Head of the House completely who heard witnesses in the U.S. Court House at Foley Square, adamant. "I leamed my lesson from Gallagher said his plan would Eileen" (wh'o had learned it cost the federal government a from Sister-theologian in the bout $3 billion a year. He claim- . third gJl'ade). "Besides," he ed the money would be made points out, "The Third is the up by income taxes paid by only commandment of the Deca graduates. logue put in positive form, no Gallagher said public institu -:r'hou shalt not's' about it: 'Re tions could meet their half of member tbou keep holy the the cost under his proposal with Sabbath Day''' tax funds. Private schools, he It's positive at our house, aD said, could get funds from en right, and 80 is its proponent dowment, alumni and corporate though lome of the thoughts we gift8.
Women Roam Jesuit .Cloistered Quarters. ROME (NC)-Women roamed through tbe cloistered quarters of the Society of Jesus here, but it' was perfectly legitUnate. They had a special dispensation from the Holy See. . The women were rePorters at tending an on-the-spot news briefing on the society's recent general congregation. and elec tion. In fact, it was the first such meeting in Jesuit history to which tile city's entire press corps was invited. . The reporters were conducted through the generalate head quarters to the election chamber, where Father Luigi Renard, S.J., explained in detail the proce dure to be followed.
Seven j" One Fam"y
At School for Deaf
CINCINNATI (NC)-The old
est of !even deaf children in one family, all of them pupils here at St. Rita's School for the deaf, ls being greduated from tile IlChool's high school deparimenlt Sunday. Toby Petrie is t'he oldest Of the 10 children of 'Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam PetTie. The parents and the other three children have IlOl'maI hearing. Father Paul Klenke, principal of Ohio's only privately support ed Catholic residential school for the deaf, said the seven members from one ~lly set a new record at St. Rita's. The oth er Petrie children are in grades ;rangiDi dOWJl • kiDdergarteR.
WASHINGTON (NC)-A 81 year-old nun who served for. nearly a quarter of a century • Michigan's e hie f legislative draftsman has been admitted • the bar of the U. S. Supreme Court. She is Sister Frances Cath~ ine of the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati, who, before entering religious life in 1956, put more than 25,000 pieces of legislation into formal legal terminology aa chief bill drafter of the Michigu state legislature. She served with the legisla ture's Legislative Service Ba reau for 24 years. A widow and a convert to Catholicism - ill 1952--she is the former Mr8. Florence F. Royce. A native of Ann Arbor, Mich.. and a member of Phi Beta Kap pa and of the Ohio and Michigaa bars, Sister Frances Catherine studied law at the University of Michigan, receiving her doctor of laws degree in 1927. She a~ holds a certWcate in accountinJ,.
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Religions Convocation Fo!lows UN Meeting
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RECEIVES AWARD: Sister Mary Ambrose, O.P.,. teacher of French at Dominican Academy, Fall River, and for 10 years moderator of Cercle Litteraire sponsored by the school, shows award conferred upon her by l'Union St. Je~n-. Baptiste d'Amerique, to Sister Mary Gerald, O.P., p!lnClpal. The award recognizes Sister Ambrose's contribu t,i()n to the spread of French culture in New England.
Still Persecuted
Senator Dodd Scores Yugoslavia's
Policy Oft Religion
WASHINGTON (NC) - U.S. Ben. Thomas J. Dodd of Connec ticut has sta~ed a "policy of bru t~l t>ersec'!tIon of religion" con tinuf>s t.n Yugos~avia despite the reputation that country has for a "more liberal and humane" brand of communism. Yultoslav secret police made an u~successful attempt to kid nap in Trieste an Orthodox church leader opposed to Mar shal Tito'::I regimtl and bring him across the Yugoslav fron tier, the Senator charged. He said the case was featured in the ItaliAn Press last December. In a statement issued in con junction with the third volume of a report of ''The Church and State Under Communism," deal ing with Yugoslavia. by the Sen ate lnternal security subcom mittee of which bE' is vice-chair. man, Dodd identWed the church leadpl as Dr. Dragoljub Vurdel ~a, ?l'esident of tht' Serbian OJ' modox Chuhch of Trieste. Ctiefl mostI'aUoa "As is the ('.aBe in every other eommunist country, Church and Stat"l in Yugoslavia are theoret ically separate," Dodd said. "How separate they are in prac tice was dt'amatically illustrated by the recent conviction in Italy of live eonspiratoril who had been offered tzO,OOO by tbe Yugoslav secret police to abduct
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Dr. Dragoljub Vurdelja, Prest dent of the Serbian Orthodox Church of Trieste and deliver him via an unguarded route aero'.lS the Yugo-slav frontier." Th . e ~enator SaId the attempted abductI.on was to remove Dr. VurdelJa to that pro-Belgrade e1eme?ts couI.1 take over the in ~~:Ial. au~ we~lthy Orthodox unIty m TrIeste.
SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Members of the world's religlol1ll will meet in the Cow Palace here Sunday, June 27 following the 20th anniversary meeting of the founding of the United Na tions. Lending support to the U1If peace objective, the Convocation of Religion for World Peace win bring together leaders of Christ ian, Jl!'wish, Moslem, Hindu and Buddhist religions. Archbishop Joseph T. Me Gucken of San Francisco, one of the three cochairmen of the religious meeting, stated: ''The purpose of the UN was to estab lish and maintain peace in tile world. Peace is a subject in the minds -and hearts of people Ja the world-certalnly peace eM-. responds to the hopes of all man kind. Here is one issue in whicll we are of one mind and ClDe hearl."
- Queen's Daughters Taunton Queen's DaughteN will meet at 5:30 Monday night, June ~ at River Ridge Rose Ranch, Assonet Neck, for a bos lunch party.
Foresters' Audion st. Eulalia Court, New Bed ford Foresters, will bold an auc tion Wednesday, June 16 in Car penters Hall. Mrs. Mae Manning will be auctioneer.
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Planning Fomi Iy Sex Eduoation
By Joseph and .Marilyn Roderick ,A friend said'to me recently," If you really want to help my gardening, tell me how to keep children out of my garden." I can sympathize with him because I have had murder in my heart on several occasions when some thing I really liked was des- the Holy Spirit .~ Pentecost troyed. IJ?- fact, I have a Sunday. In some European peony whIch I planted four churches there was an opening years ago which I have not in the ceiling called the "Holy seen in bloom. The ants crawling Ghost Hole." Through this aper on the peony buds are too much ture, during the Whitsunday ser al an attraction for the children, vices a dove would descend, 101 and they have not failed to lowed by a rain of flowers. In knock off every bud. I expect some towns people even went nothing different this year. , as far as to drop pieces of burnDespite my difficulties, I feel ing wick or straw from this I have been fairly successful opening to represent the flaming with children so I shall attempt tongue ,of Pentecost. This prac to answer my friend as well as I tice, however, was stopped be can. Generally, I have found cause it caused the congregation two methods fairly productive. to burn externally, instead of in The first is shouting. I figure ternally as the Holy Spirit had that I am bigger and noisier than done at Jerusalem. they are, so children will at least If your family favors a more be frightened if I scream at them formal manner of celebrating at the top of my lungs. this feast day, rather than a picThe second method has been mc, a formal meal could be much more successful; it is based planned with a small figure of. on the idea that the greatest a dove incorporated in the cen single drive children have is to terpiece to convey to the mem h a v e well-filled stomachs. bers of your family the signifi Therefore, if you are able to cance of this day. Last year, keep their hunger satisfied with when the Fall River Catholic garden goodies, they are more Woman's Club had its tour, likely to enjoy and respect the "Come, Follow Our Feasts," a source and therefore not destroy review of the feasts of the Litur it. Like all theories, this does gical Year, the table in the home not take into account the unex- that represented the celebration pected; a ball thrown into a row of Whitsunday was beautifully of strawberries, an urge to pick set with a red and white theme, some pretty flowers for Mommy, colors of the Holy Spirit. It was etc., but given the normal traffic, adorned with a delicate white it does work. china dove and brightened with Right now, when the children seven red candles symbolizing eongregate near the garden, I the seven gifts of the Holy Spir pick a few stalks of rhubarb, fur- it, but the highlight of the set nish the sugar and sit back to ting was a cake decorated with watch them go to it. Of course, seven glazed strawberries, the I also give the children a little fruits borne by the gifts. These lecture to the effect that if they are Fear of the Lord, Piety, run in the garden or pick anyKnowledge, FortitUde, Counsel, thing, they may not be· able to Understanding and Wisdom. eat strawberries, raspberries,. This cake, like all the others bluberries, grapes, currants, ap- which graced the tables on this pIes, or pears later in the Sum-, , tour, was baked by Mrs. Albert mer because they will have been " Mendes of St. Patrick's parish in destroyed underfoot.·.As th~, Fall River. Summer progresses, the chi1dre~ , Two-Egg Cake are made to understand that cup shortening they may have any fruit or vegIlf.i cups' sugar etable they please if I am' al1 teaspoon vanilla lowed to pick it for them. 2 eggs' ' Actually, except for cases of 214 cups sifted flour wanton destruction which should 21f.1 teaspoons baking powder not be tolerated, we should be 1 teaspoon salt tolerant of children in the gar1 cup plus 2 tablespoons milk den. If they do not do everything Preheat oven to 375 right, neither do they do every1. Stir shortening to soften. thing wrong, although at times Gradually add sugar and cream the scales seem to ~ weighted thoroughly. toward the latter. 2. Add vanilla. In ihe KUchen 3. Add eggs, one at a time, .As Maria in ''The Sound. of beating well, after each addition. Music" sang joyfully as she 4. Sift together flour, bak danced in the meadows in the in~ powder and salt. Austrian Alps, we too .should 5. Add to creamed mixture enjoy the blessings of nature on alternately with milk, beating the closing day of the Easter after each addition. eelebration, Whitsunday or Pen6. Bake in 2, 9 inch round tecost. In many sections of Eueake pans, lined with greased I'Ope, it is still the custom to as- paper. Bake in a moderate oven eend hilltops and mountains (375 for about 23 minutes. during the morning of. this day PosY Cream Frosiiq to pray and thank God both for . 1 Cup vegetabie shortening' the coming of the Holy Spirit Ih teasp~n salt and the blessings of the Spring Approx. 3 cups sifted confee harvest. We are a little short of tioners sugar Austrian Alps and mountaiDs in cup soft butter this area but a picnic or even 1 teaspoons ·vanilla extract backyard ~arbecue could serve,' red:fOOd coloring " the pur{)9Se .as w e l l . ! . . With electric mixer at meIt is a marvelous occ~on. to . . dium speed cream the veg~table ase the fruits of our garden and shortening with salt and 1 cup we could grace our picnic with of the sugar until light and fluf early rhubarb and strawberries. fy. Add, alternately the rest of' The Ember Days, days on which the sugar and butter beating un-' lDan offers.his first ~r¢ts to his til very smoo,th. heavenly Father, always fall 2. Add vanilla and a ve1'7 during the octave of Pentecost. small amount of the food colorA symbol of the Holy Spirit ing to make frosting pink. that has come down to. us from Adorn the cake with 7 straw early Christian times is the dove. berries to represent the seven It is a liturgical sign that is still gifts of the Holy Ghost. This. used on vestments, altars, sa~' can be done several ways, one ~ed utensils and in many reliof which is to pla~e a replica of gious paintings. In medieval the dove at the top of the cake times the figure of the dove was with ribbon or white frostin, used tc> dramatize me desceDt of end.inli: in a strawber17.
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THE ANCHORThurs., . . J_une 3" 1965
to Thank God For Spring; ,Harvest Blessings
BOSTON (rjC)-A course ia sex education for Catholic fam illes, parents as well as children, will be inaugurated in the Bos ton archdiocese next Fall. Dr. William A. Lynch, gyne cologist and author of "The Catholic Marriage Manual," told the annual Massachusetts LeagUe of Catholie Women convention here the program will be di rected by Father Russell Novello, director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in the arch diocese. The plan has been ap proved by Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston. Boys and girls will be in structed in separate groups, Dr. Lynch said. The course will be designed for youngsters from the age of 8 and older, he asserted. Dr. Lynch said it was decided to inaugurate the program be cause of the importance the Church attaches to sex education and preparation for marriage course. He said Catholic physi cians will be among the lectu rers in the courses for adults.
Religion· By Mail
STUDENT COUNCIL: From left, Student council offi cers at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven are: Carol Oliver, president (seated), Claudette Plaud, vice-president; Ros anna Ventura, treasurer; Dale Wingert, secretary.
, LONDON (NC) - Two thou sandCatholic children in isolated v!.llages throughout Britian are now receiving religious instruc tIon by mail, thanks to an or ganization called Our Lady'. Catechists.
Sucordium Leaders New officers of the Sucordium Club of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River are Mrs. Stanley Bo chenek, president; Mrs. James DeMello, vice-president; Mrs. Edward Chapdelaine, secretary; Mrs. Roland Boulay, treasurer.
Nuns Among Refugees Dominican Sisters Hope to Resume Teaching In Dominican Republic •
MIAMI (NC)-Twenty Adrian, is the Colegio de Santo Domingo, Mich., Dominican Sisters, the a school for about 900 girls only U. S. nuns stationed in the opened in 1946 on a 14-acre plot. Dominican Republic, arrived In. addition, the Sisters staff a here with a pledge to return "as .parochial school in San Juan and soon as possible" to their teach a catechetical center in Las ing work in the island Republic. Mat3$. The Sisters reached Miami ~
after having been .terronzed with other Americans by rebel troops in Santo Domingo and spending four days aboard U. S. Navy ships. They were flown here from San Juan, Puerto Rico, with more than 1,000 other Americans : SO. Dartmouth : and foreign nationals. The Sisters expressed concem •. an d Hyannls •• • • and sympathy for the "suffering
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fat! River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
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CYO CONVENTION: Participants make last minute plans at seventh annual Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Youth convention, held at 'Cathed.ral Camp. From left, Connie Swift, Cape area; Ann Richard, Fall River, ~ew England Area CYO vice-president; Robert Kostka, Taunton area; Warren Sanford, New Bedford area. Right, delegates discuss con-
Bishops Protest Turkish Stand
vention theme: Unity thrcugh Understanding. From left, David Bisbee, ('ape area treasurer; Linda O'Bara, Taunton area; James Gibney, Fall River area president; Susan Kuszycki, New Bedford area vice-president; Ann Shepardson, Attleboro area president
Pope Paul Hurls Challenge at Salesians Urges Up-Dating Rules and, Teaching Methods
PARIS (NC)-Joseph Cardi nal Martin of Rouen has voiced VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope are valid always from those "astonishment and concern" on Paul. VI has chaHenged members which changing conditions of the behalf of the French hierarchy of the Salesjan order to bring times render outworn and inef at the "new difficulties" being their rules and teaching methods fective. thrown up by the Turkish gov ''The deVf~topm('nt of a modern up to) date wh~le preserving es ernment against the Orthodox sential traditions. school, of professional qualifica Patriarchate of Constantinople. Addressing 20C delegates now tion,;, of culture, as well as the Cardinal Martin, head of the • in Rome for the 19th generai changing a~pects of social life French bishops' commission for chapter of the society founded in demand without doubt these promoting Christian unity, is distinctions and new choices, al ·1859 by St. John Bosco with spe sued a statement here calling it • cial E'mphasis or.. youth and mis ready in the process, of being unjust to make the Ecumenical sionary work, the Holy Father made in the field and yet your Patriarchate a football because suggested the impetus toward teaching always finds its most of the unhappy conflict between upd:lting the Church, prompted vital roots in your order's, basic the Greek and Turkish commu,. "by the Ecumenical Council, and charter ,"onc'apt-knowledge Jlities in the Republic of Cyprus. and love of youth." but he warned the delegates to The statement, signed also by ,"distinguish essential forms of 'Council Meanin~ Archbishop Paul Gouyon of updating from those that are ac "The moveme'1t is toward al':' Rennes, urged the Turkish gov way~ grea~cr fidelity to the cidental; interior forms which ernmen< to reconsider its posi are the guidinr spirit of your teachings of tr-e divine Master. tion and to take into account the teaching system and your meth It IS a movement' toward universally acknowledged moral ods of education from exterior , strengthemng, his spirit and his authority of Patriarch, Athena methods. It i<; a movement forms which are Of themselves goras I of Constantinople in the toward auth~-nticity and sanctity subject to pr:rfection and diverse Christian world. experimentaTion; for.ms which in the Chri!.tian life" toward deeper comprehension of the his Turkey had announced a week tory of saivation. And it is a earlier that it was expelling all mor·:l brotherly and apostolic Greek citizens from the country ability to approach modern man, and opening an investigation his p.:oblems. his weaknesses, into the affairs of the patriarch his resources, l'-is aspirations." ate, whose heatlquarters are sit WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxil It is a great misiake, the Pope uated in the ancient section of iary Bishop Philip M. Hannan of Instanbul known as the Phanar. Washington praised President said, to intelpret the Council as "a relaxation of the interior Johnson here for his "deeds of commitments (If the Church charity" in fighting poverty and toward its faith, its traditions, its providing economic opportunity doctrine of asceticism, its char for needy Americans. . ity, its spirit of sacrifice and adThe prelate lauded the Chief MONTEVIDEO (NC) - Dele Executive at a luncheon follow gates to the second Latin Ameri can meeting of the Catholic ing presentation at the White ROME (NC)-The new Jesuit Action Labor Movement here in House of the first annual Mother Superior general, Father Pedro Uruguay were urged to involve McAuley Award of the Sisters of A....rupe, S .J., will hold his office Mercy of the Union. The award themselves in "an active Chris for life, according to a decision is named for the community tian presence" in factories and rcached in the general congre foundress. farms. gation of the Society of Jesus. Mr. Johnson was selected for The meeting brought together Catholic worker representatives the honor by a vote of the com munity's major superiors. The from Argentina, B0livia, Brazil, award is a handcrafted ebony Paraguay Chile and Uruguay. and silver cross. The stress on the need for a "Christian presence" was made by the organization's L at i n American counselor, Fathn~ De Pienne. JULIET (NC)-A hotel for the Speaking at the final session, aged has been opened here in which was attended by Archbis Illinoi& by the Carmelite Sisters. hop Raffaele Forni, papal nun Available to oersons in good eio to Uruguay, Father De Pien health who ar~ 62 years old and PRINTED AND MAILED ne declared: "We must truthful 91der, ,the St. Patrick Retirement Hotel ,has no race, color or creed lyadmit that there have been Write or Phone 672-1322 barriers. It fe::ltures an institu moments when reppresentatives 234 Second Street - Fall River iion with a hotel 'atmosphere ia of ,the Church have taken stands the downtown section. which injure workers,"
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herence to the Words and Cross of Christ. It IS a mistake to con sider it an indulgent acquies cence to ffi<y'ile and fleeting relaHvist mc'ntality of a world without principles and without goal~ beyond its own confines, or 3S a Christianity more com fortable and less demanding."
Critic, Commonweal Take Top Awards NEW YORK (NC)-Two lay directed journals took the larg est number of honors in the magazine diviSion of the Catho lic Press ASSOCIation 1965 jour nalism awards competition. Th"! Critic (;of Chicago took five 7lwards and 'Commonweal magazine of New' York took three 'The contest winners were announced at the annual awards luncheon of the association's 55t!1 annual convention held here in conjunction with the 7th World Congres.i of the Cath olic Press.
CCD Center Plans Workshop at CU WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Center of the Confra ternity of Christian Doctrine has scheduled a 12-day workshop starting Thursday, June 10 at the Catholic University of Ameriea here. Among those who will conduct sessions are Msgr. William W. Baum, E'xecutive director, Bish ops' Committee for Ecumenical Affairs; Father Frederick R. McManus, executive director, Bishops' Committee on the Sacred LitUlgy, and Father John F. Cronin, SS., assistant director, Social Action Depart ment, National Catholic Welfare Conference.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01
Fan RTvw-lhur,., June 3,
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1'96511
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DISTRICT MEETING OF SERRA INTERNATIONAL #40: Serrans from the Diocese of Fall River and Providence eonducted their annual district meeting with the Fall River organization as host club. Left, Dr. William S. Downey of New Bedford, district governor of Serra; Joseph B. Reilly of NewJerl;l~Y, national trustee llQminee; and John T. Farrell Sr..
Bishop Stresses Role of Mary WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop .John j. Carberry of Columbus, Ohio, stressed here that the Sec ond Vatican Council "in no way de-emphasized the place of Mary in the mystery of Christ and the Church." "To the contrary, the council has given to the world and to posterity a solid theological trea tise on Mary which will be stud ied for centuries," the, bishop said. "With sound Scriptural and traditional teaching, Mary's role' in the Church is placed in true perspective, which is the per spective of Christ.'" The bishop spoke in conjunc tion with thededic'ation of the Mary, Queen of Hearts chapel dedicated in the National Shrine 6f the Immaculate Conception here as a gift of the Montfort Fathers and Brothers, and the Daughters of Wisdom, a com munity of nuns.
Cites 'Priest's Role In Rhythm Question WAYNE (NC) -A seminary theology professor said here in New Jersey it is not the priest's job to decide when a married couple might use the rhythm method of birth limitation. Father Frank J. McNulty of Immaculate Conception Semi nary, Darlington, N.J., said it is thE' priest's place "to teach them the moral guidelines" He spoke at a seminar on contemporary married life sponsored by the Paterson diocesan Family Life Apostolate. "Economic conditions have changed so much that the family that could support four or five children in the past can now support perhaps only two. Peri odic continence may be practiced if there is a resaonable cause, if both parties are willing and if both can abstain without moral danger," Father McNulty told a seminar on contemporary family life.
Fall River Serra Club president. Right, visiting pYe!'idents meet the gue~t speaker. Dr. William B. Muldoon, New Bedford president; Rev. Edwart1l Halton, O.P. of Providence College, main speaker; Judge Arthur A. Car rellas, Newport president; Joseph V. :Ryan, Taunton president.
Holy Father Hails Journalism Vocation
Health Funds
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NEW YORK (NC) - Pope Paul VI reminde~ Catholic jour nalists tha4: the popes as well as the Second Vatican Council "have forcefully affirmed the value" of their vocation. The Pontiff expressed his tribute in a letter tc the Seventh Worid Congress of the Catholic Press here. It was addressed to Raimondo Manzini, editor ol L'Osservalore Romano, Vatican City daily, and president of the' International Union of the Cath olie Press." . Pone Paul said both the popes and the council have encouraged journalists to pursue their ef forts "often quite extraordinary, 10 be faithful to that very ideal whil.:h in point of fact, is the theme , of your discussions: ~ruth in the Pursuit of Lib erty.' .. The Pope noted that ~e "combined notion of truth and liberty" is dear tu the hearts of all Christians. "The Church, the minister of truth, is likewise the minister of liberty and you are assured of the de;:l'est undertak ing and support of pastors with the responsibility in this field when you assert tho:: proper rights of truth in the pursuit of lib erty," the Pope's letter stated. "Furthermore, that which ap pears to the Christian as a re quirement of his faith is-and who would not rejoice in this a value being more and more af firmed in the modern world by
Only Alive Art CANTON (NC)-Film is the only art "alive" today, Father Anthony Schillaci, O.P., wid a Walsh College audience here in Ohio. Father Schillaci, superiOl' of the Dominicans House 01. Studies at River Foreet, nt, heads the eolleg~ and semi nM·ieS divis.i~n of the National Center for Film Study it!. Chica go, estQ'blished by the U.S. b . Aopi.
men anxious to work for the eommon goon of !':ociety. Human Value "Employed in the service ol truth, a free press helps its read ers 10 be better informed with • view to better understanding and thus better action. It helps to enlighten and ~nstruct men in a climate of charity, and to in sert them in their I'ightful place in the community of men whose natural bonds of solidarity re sult from their being part of the great family of Goers children. ''This indicates the importance of the objectivit~' with which Catholic journalist,; inform their
readers of world events since a newspaper, whether it is pur chased bec'lUse of need, interest or desire, <liffuses as a medium of information, day after day, a conception of life, ah order of values, a hierarchy of ends, vi sion of the world'" * • "While respecting the laws of finalHy of the medium yOll are using you givE' it the human valup that thus allows you to transmit m your own fashion the message of salvation which each Christian, today more than ever before. ough't to feel the desire of. makin: known aroWld him."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
Faces ._ of Christ
Pope Johrl's Autobiography Reaches Best Seller Ranks
, '
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D. I have just returned from a trip around the worleL Not Rather around the Missions for the world exists for no other purpose than to be a Calvarlan rock on which to erect a Cross. to bf' be a network of highways and bywayS on which mission aries carry good tidings of salvation. SwaUowing the world in one gulp does not develop indigestion but deep disturbance 01 soul Just take Asia alone: It bas one haU of the earth's popu lation yet only one per cent Is incorporated Into the Mystical Body of Christ. Has the Cross faUed? Is the Arm of God .. shortened that He touches only our affluent West?
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy The mystery, or one might even say the miracle, of Pope John XXIII continues to absorb the minds and hearts of men two years after his death. It is easily predictable that such ab8orption will long continue. This interest ac counts for the quick rise to the end, the full price had to be the best seller ranks of his paid excruciatingly, and, in pay book Journal of a Soul ing it, he gave the world a les (McGraw-Hill. $7.95). Peo son not soon to be forgotten. Thought of Death ple want not only to learn the Another note running through secret of his i"ad.&nt goodness his writing is advertence to but t.l!'o to fir.d
death. He keeps the thought of the means of
it in focus, and makes point of attaining some
preparing deliberately for it. thing of the
But he was the least morbid of sort in their
TLC: A sister in Tanzania men. As we well know, he was own lives. Will
shows the tender loving care cheerful and cheering. they be disap
given to babies at the Catho Perhaps some readers will be appointed in the
puzzled by the fact that while lic orphanage in Dar es book? At first
Pope John could, in examination Salaam. NC Photo. glance they may
of conscience, find no serious sin be. Its contents
in his whole life, he nevertheless lU'e principally
often says something like the ."note;:;. resolu following: I still feel shame and tions. medita tions written on the occasion of grief for my 'countless sins, of various retreats and Spiritual fenses, and negligences:' " Is SPRINGFIELD (NC)-Nearly Exercises from 1895, when the there even a hint of hypocrisy? author was barely 14, until 1962, No. A person who lives, as did 1,000 people rallied at the Illi a few months before his death," Pope John, in such awareness nois Capitol building here to l'egh ter support for fair housing bis eecretary. Monsignor Loris of God and his perfect goodness, legisJatior... CapO\'illa, tells us They· have cannot but perceive how far Msgr. Danid M. Cantwell. short of that goodness he himself beentranscr~bed {rom "bundles chaplain of the Catholic Inter cf dog-eared papers, rumpled falls. The book shows us that Pope racial Council of Chicago and copybooks" whkll "he kept * * • member of the Chicago Confer John had many of the same dif alvrays by his side, often re readlllg long passages in which ficulties we ourselves encounter. ence on Rfligion lmd Race, told For example, he finds that he the assemcly that the "double he rp.cognized his old self." The record is marked by an talks too much and must stop housing ~arket injures the whole community:' doing so. Again, he has frequent extr~ardinary consistency. We "It destroys all of us, not just can see the seeds of the future ly to accuse himself of wasting pope b greatr.ess being sown in time; he goes so far as to speak our property, but our inner cpirit." sa:d Msgr. Cantwell. "It his earliest years. His home, his of his sloth. eats away at our faith in God, family, the parish priest of his Inner Lifeyouth all had a formative and His revelation of his inner life because we do not love Him lasting influer..ce upon him. also shows us that the same unless we love each other." The rally wa~ held at the References to Pain means of advancing in godliness He recogffizes, too, what he are ready to our hands as to his. opemng of public hearings by owes to his temperament. As For the priest, there is, to name the Senate License and Miscel pope, he writes that this tem one, the Divine Office, which lany committee on a House passed bill to ban discrimination perament has preserved him obviously was a principal instru in ,the sale or leasing of homes. from anxieties and tiresome per ment of Pope John's sanctifica Msgr. Cantwp.ll, spea)ring for plexities and gives him' "a tion. For the priest and layman strength of daring simplicity, so alike, there are the Mass ,and the Chicago conference on Re wholly evangelic".l in its nature meqit.ation and. much else. The' ligion and Race, said "legislation that' it demands arid' obtains point is, first, that he said-and, is one of the resources .of the universal respect and edifies meant-:-"Holy I must arid will com m u nit y for establishing many." be," and, secondly, that be used , souna social policy." Yet he was not free of suHer means which are ordinary. Ing. Again and again, for exam All his life long, he went ple, there are references to the weekly to confession. "Medita Continued from Page One pain caused by the attitude of tion," he wrote on one retreat, others toward hin. Of this- he "never to be omitted; it may be than one-third of the total re does not complain, but he ~otes brief if it cannot be longer, but quested in 1,102 well-founded it must be alert, intelligent, and petitions received from the mis it and resolves to profit by it. sionE> For ten years he was the Holy tranquil." Above all, he was genuinely "These requ('stll were for spe See's representative in Bulgaria. This assignment was attended humble. As nuncio in Paris, he is cial aid in the construction, im with much frustration, and he out of sympathy with some in provt"ment and repair of chapels, his entourage, but he goes to churches, schools, colleges, uni often wonder<!d whether his su great lengths not to show it. versi.ties, dispensaries, hospitals ~~eriors in Rome hac! forgotten Another man might, in view of and orphanages, and for the es him or had any use for him. the dignity of his office, have tablifihment of other essential Frustrating Doubt missIonary enterprises such u There followed another decade reproved, but he graciously de as Apostolic Delegatp. to Turkey ferred. Again, as Pope, he takes social services and the press." daily lessons in Latin so that he' Some 770 ecclesiastical terri and Greece, with more frustra torie:> are, under the jurisdiction tion and doubt as to the efficacy may not make mistakes in ad dressing the Council Fathers. of the Congregation for the of his work. Council Inspiration Propagation of tht. Faith. Most Even as pope, hf' observes The same is true of his famous receive grants from the Society what he regards as less than for tne Propagation of the Faith proper respect from some, and inspirations as pope. Of the sum _ separate entity from the con this hurt. Finally, there was the moning of an ecumenical coun gregation. Another 33 territori. agony' of his last illnesS. He had cil, he said that it was an inspir depend directly. on the Consis had intimations that his life ation "fromrthe Lord, speaking.' torial Congregation and each of would reach its climax in acute to the heart of' his poor servant" these also ·received aid in 1964, suffering; this he related to because of the servant's "verY
Msgr. Etteldorf said.
Christ's immolation in love, and simp1e merit of mere acquiescence and obedience." "Regretably the sum, that
gladly accepted. could De granted to each was·far Often in this book are, explicit Simplicity and diligence, these from adequate... the U. S. mon aSsertions that 'he 'chooses the are cardinal notes in the spiritu- signor stated; ''The need for Tiay of the Cross. And we can , al progress made by the saintly, more help is obvious since mllD7 see that he did walk it without John. They are not beyond any worthy causes WIll be inade turning back. Its exactions were of us, but they demand work. While making' a retreat in quately aided because of the lack at first, and indeed for a long means. Thcugh urgent and time, relatively minor. But, in Bulgaria, he wrott:, "When I ask of necessary ~hey will have to yield myself what more I can do to please the Lord, and to make to others that lire more urgent and necessary." Sets Commission' myself holy, I find no other an WINONA (NC) - Bishop Ed swer than this: continue under Mass Duty ward A. Fitzgerald of Winona obedience as you are now; do MUNICH (NC) - Tourists ia has established an 18-member your ordinar;- things, day after Diocesan Commission for Ecu Germany's major tourist centerw day, without over-anxiety, with menical Affairs com:9osed of out ostentation, but always try will soon be able to fulfill their p~ests, Religious and laymen Sunday Mass obligation on Sat ing to do them with greater fer hi;\re in Minnesota. vo~' and perfection." urday afternoons.
Support Mounts Fo!?' Fait Housartg
Mission Gifts
No. I saw Christ's Presence in new Gethsemanies, Mounts of Temptation, and other places of capharnaum. Where a material istic prosperity flourished, one saw on faces the sadness of those who had every thing but Love: hands full. but hearts empty. One saw Christ in them negatively as when one thinks of life in viewing a corpse, or food in seeing hunger. But Christ was present every where--in lepers, the sick, the swirl ing dU3t, the teeming white-skirted lm poverbhment, the Crying children strap ped to tl:eir mothers' backs. We who are blessed with faith see other Presences: the Eucharistic Presence in the Taber nacle, the l\lystical Presence in the Church and the Charismatic Presence in the soul. But does not a g:'ea~e!' faith see Christ in those Unknowns of whom He spoke: "I was hungry • • • I was thirsty • • , I was n~ked • • • I was homeless • • . I was in prison • • • "? Even on the Last Day, the sa.ved will confess they did not see Christ in these roaming multitudes with wasted limbs. sunken eyes, and wide open sores. "Lord, when did we see Thee ••• '1" We in the prosperous West save our souls by faith and good works They save their souls by existence, faith in life, quiet un rebellious submission to the, forgetfulness of us Christians, and by uncotlSciously bearing the hunger of Christ on the Mount, the loneliness of Christ in the Garden, His thirst on the Cross and above all Bis despisal by those who had much. I never saw so many faces of Christ In my life! I never' before realized that the reason we have misso, or "are sent" is because they have passio, or "are suffering". The tabernacle lamp revedis one Presence bat the sunken cheeks in a mud hut reveal another Presence. Maybe our whole mission technique is wrODl'. Maybe we have been trying to bring Christ to these people when we should be bringing Christ forth from them. These millions haVI! been more closely united to the sufferings of Christ than I ever will be. They may not know that Christ lives in them. but I saw Christ in those tabernacles as I circled this tiny orb of ours. l\1ay these good people intercede for me for not doinl' more for them as the head in the United States of the Pontifical Mission Society. May they intercede for you for not being more responsive to my appeals. Here I see the Occidental Christ In our eomfortable churches but there I saw the Oriental Christ in un eomfortable tabernacles of wasted human flesh. Oh, my friends -take my word for it, Christ wears a different face in the Eastern world. Help! For His sake.
GOD LOVE YOU to the seventh graders of Roseville, Mich Igan f.or $5 "This comes with our many prayers to tell you that we are practicing our belief, that we are our brothers' keeper, ••. to Mr. ,& Mrs. J.B. for $387.50 "Although we are also poor we are sending this for GOO's less fortunate. It is money we could use for things we actually need.Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and maO It to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10001, or to your Diocesan Director, Rt. Rev. Raymond T. COD sidine, 368 North Main Street, FaD River, Massachusetts.
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GraduatloR Montil of June Bus, Time for Students, Teachers At Diocesan High Schools
AHCHOR• .,••, June 3, 196.
Protestant Asks' Establishment Of Schools·
For those·who woodered: the hiatus in the school news column was eaused by pre-empting of all available space for the Catholic Charities Appeal list of contributors. Silver lining: if the school column space hadn't been taken over, :it would have meant that many fewer contributors to geon, Gilda Monge, Natalia La brie, Linda Waite and Barbara the "28 HeartB-in-One" drive. Fontes. It was off to the Fair for Meanwhile, Mount Seniors are the Prevost Bowling League. waiting until Tuesday, June 22 Other students at the Fall River for their Big Night. Prom theme boys' high were invited along as will be Till We Meet Again and well. chairmen include Margaret Fer Nancy Regan, top ranking stu reira, Linda Mello, Geraldine
dent at Sacred Hearts Academy, Rapoza, Cynthia Moniz, Chris
Fall River, has received a $4600 tine Sowa, Gail Kerrigan, Eliz
full tuition scholarship to Ford abeth Lane, Gayle Correiro,
ham University; at Holy Family, Janice Gagne and Patricia Gun
New Bedford, Donna Dauplaise ning.
has received a grant from the
Boys' State, Girls' State Bowlers' Association. She plans Elsie Pelton will represent 10 attend SMTI. Also in the scholarship club is Claudette Mt. St. Mary at Girls' State, to be held at Bridgewater State College Auger of Mt. St. Mary Academy, this month. She'll participate in Fall River, who has received an award enabling her to study mock governmental activities. pharmacy at the University of At Boys' State, to be held at UMass, Coyle juniors Michael Connecticut. She's secretary of Bates and Robert Lackey will be the National Honor Society and among attendants. a Sodalist at the Mount and haa Silver jubilee celebrations just been announced as top stu were in order for two school dent among graduating seniors. chaplains, Rev. Gerard Boisvert Where are the nine? Right of St. Anthony's and Rev. Don here: Grace Mikolazyk, Nancy ald Belanger, sodality director at Ferris, Lucinda Camara, Paul Dominican Academy, Fall River. ette Thibault, Linda Teves, .Ami In honor of Father Boisvert Witengier, E I a i n e Medeiros, both high school and grammar Kathleen Prayzner and Janice school students attended his an Bednarz. niversary Mass; and at DA so
dalists presented Father Belan
Student Council Raee ger with a cake and gifts, then
Winners in a "tightly competi offered a musical entertainment tive race" for student council program. positions at Coyle High, Taun ,;More students are off to col ton, are James Murphy, presi lege: Claire Beauchesne, Nancy dent; Thomas Kalaher, vice president. They will attend a Fournier and Pauline Pelletier leadership school for one week at DA; and Cynthia Dansereau, during the Summer, together Ann Marie Hebert, Diane Roy, Robert Lizotte, Vivian Rioux, with two sophomores. Cecile Le Clair, and Daniel Patrick Carney, junior at Fournier at St. Anthony's. Stang High School, North Dart Also from St. Anthony'. mouth, has been elected presi Jacqueline Hebert, Janine Ro dent of the Mass. Assn. of Stu bida and Jeanne Quintin have dent Councils. Elections were been accepted at schools of nurl held at a state convention in Ips ing. wich. Some 150 schools in the And at Bishop Stang, John state belong to the association. Keavy is rejoicing over his ap Another Stang junior is a. pointment to Annapolis and Ber president, too. He's Myles Til nard King over his to We8t lotson and he was chosen presi Point. . dent of the Southeastern Mass. Honors, Awards Regional Assn. of National Hon Hooray for lots of people: tar or Society Chapters at that instance, Sal Stazzone and Rich group's annual meeting in Ply ard Dugal of Prevost, who win mouth. represent their school at an ora Students at Mt. St. Mary'. torical contest in New York; al heard a talk by an alumna, Sis so Kathleen Kennedy and Barry ter Ann Mary of the Missionary Harrington of Holy Family, Servants of the Most Blessed who'll also be competing in the Trinity. Sister spoke on voca- big city. . tions and her life as a Trinita Then there's DA's \"PKU ~ rian, and showed a movie, "In pert," Pamela W hit e, who the Spirit of Love." earned an honorable mention Commercial Club members at award in the Mass. State Science St. Anthony's High in New Bed Fair at MIT; and Alan Roszkie ford have visited two of Boston'. wicz of Stang, who has received "most business-minded build a scholarship to a five week ings": the Prudential Center and Summer course in computer pro the John Hancock Building. gramming at Northeastern Uni versity. He was chosen fcH hi. Da~s. D.anee8 outstanding achievements ill Polynesian Paradise .. the math and science. theme of Prevost'sseDior prom, Also Diane Viera and lIBt'Y 10 be held at Old Colony Motor :Beth Soares of Mt. st. Mary, who Inn, Cranston. Also Polynesian received honorable mentions in was the junior. prom, which had the Ford Foundation National . a Hawaiian motif. And the sen SCience Program; They were iors apparently can't get enough competing in a. field 01. IDOre· of the light fantastic, £Orin addi 1I1an 6,000 enn-ies. . tion to their prom they'll have.
"'Last Fling" tomorrow night. lfteetiOIl . . . . .
At Holy Family, Barry Bu Juniors at Holy F8mlly held their prom, Harbor' ,Lights, at rington win head the National New Bedford Hotel, flancing to Honor Society next year, with the mwlic of the Kingsmen. Robert Gaudreau as VP; Mary And in Taunton, Coyle &ftd Cote as secretary; and Donna Cassidy student coUncils are Place as treasurer•. planning a second .fresJunan School leaders at SBA 1I'aJ1 sophomore mixer, to 'take place River are Christine Baldaia, this month. . eaptain 01. the school; St. Agnes' Strangers in Paradise was the eaptain, Louise Correia; St. M8l'o theme of SRA Fall River prom, garet's eaptain, Patricia Mc arranged by Christine Baldaia. Guigan; St. Agnes' squad leader, And the junior prom at Mt. Beverly Barnes; St. Margaret'8 St. Mary, had as theme My Fair squad leader, Deborah Powers; Lady. Committee heads included sodality prefeet, Mall. ~ De.. --_._- Norma HefWOOd, Maureen Tw- meuiua. . .J
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WASHINGTON (NC) U. S. Protestants should establish more parochial schools, according to a Pro
STUDENT COUNCIL: Student council officers at Holy Family High School, New Bedford, are from left, Louise Trahan, secretary; Kathleen Kennedy, treasurer; William Synnott, president; Peter Azar, vice..president. Sodality officers at Mt. st. Mary are Joanne Greene, pre fect; Janice Brady, vice-prefect; Carol Sheehan, secretary; Anne Sullivan, treasurer. Cheerleaders include Cynthia Bishop, captain, and Carole Laroche, Marjorie Lowney, Jacqueline Moura, Cor inne Pilotte, Vivianne Prevost, Judith Raposa and Nancy Say ward, squad members. And student council leaders at the Mount are Monica Polack, president; Geraldine Arruda, vice-president; Carole Laroche, secretary; Elsie Pelton, treasu :rer. Here and There High school writers for the Providence Journal enjoyed a dinner recently, at which Val SUnton of Dominican Academy was a prizewinner. Also at DA, yearbook staffers sponsored an auction of pictures used in the annual. Proceeds will help in publication of next year's book. Coyle juniors attended a per formance of Macbeth at North Shore Music Theatre. Also at Coyle, aft orientation program for 170 incoming freshmen and their parents was held recently. An assembly at Bishop Stang honored Blessed Julie Brilliart, foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, and a follow ing assembly heard a speech by Atty. John Tierney on the sig0
Defends Action
In D. R. Crisis
MARYKNOLL (NC) .A. priest-specialist in Latin ADler lean affairs observed herr. "Latin American leaders ma,. eomplain loudly about the United States aetiOll in the D0 minican Republic, but they win respect us more because of it.· . Father Albert 1. Nevins, 141\1.. J'eCently returned· from a three . month visit to Latin America, .ud·in an interview. "Secretly, LatiilAmerican leaders welcome our firmness in tbeDominican Republic crisis. "Their protests," be said, "ue mainly for internal consumption. Internal difficulties pre v e n t them from being more frank about this matter. "They don't w:mt to see __ other Cuba in this hemisphere any more than we do," said Father Nevins. "They are feeling the power of communist subver sion every day from Cuba, and they certainly do not want to see the communists gain control of another base of operatio~·
nificance of Memorial Day. The school !'lpirit cup was awarded to the music department. Sodality candidates were re ceived and next year's officers installed Tuesday evening. ill DA's chapeL Memorial Mass Students at Mt. St. Mary's at tended a memorial Mass for the repose of the soul of Anne Brownell, aft e r which an nouncement was made of the awarding of a memorial scholar to Maureen Anne Janick. Anne herself had been a scholarship student. A father-SOD evening, fonow ed next day by a mother daughter Communion breakfast, were featured at Bishop Stang. Msgr. Humberlo Medeiros ad dressed senior boys and their fathers, while Miss Eileen Lard ner spoke to the senior girls and their mothers. Also at Stang, rooms 105 and 306 emerged as finalists in a girls' intramural volleyball tour nament. Final winners were the juniors of room 306. G r a d u a t ion announcement cards are out for Prevost High School. The event is set for 4 Sunday afternoon, June 20 in Notre Dame Church. First, though seniors face their final exams, the week ,)f June 14. A class picnic will follow Thursday, June 17 at Myles Standish Res ervation. DA'. traditional Spring eon eert is set for this Sunday. Sis ter Mary Pius will conduct and alumna Jacqueline Beaudoin will accompany. Selections from Mary Poppins and Brigadoon will be offered. Also at DA a hootenann,.· ill planned for Monday, June 7 by the seniors. Proceeds wID benefit the prom fund.
WH ITE1S
testant educator. This view is expressed by William H. Fisher, associate pro fessor of education at Texas Western College of the Univer sity of Texas and former school superinten~nt in Las Vegas, N. M., in an article in Christillll ity Today magazine. Noting the U. S. Supreme Court's rulings barring prayer and Bible reading from public schools, Fisher says the "only sure way for Protestants to get around the problem is to set up more of their own schools." While it is "highly unlikely that there will be a great rush by Protestants" to do so, he says, nevertheless there is likelihood of "a gradual tum toward e:t[ periments in Protestant paro chial and parent-controlled Christian education." Referring to the argument that public erlucation should be "the great leveling force in our dem ocracy," Fisher insists that "democracy does not rest upon a monolithic education founda tion." "Rather, as we have been told . ttme and again, we have a plu ralistic society. Setting up new Protestant schools would simply add another element to a culture that eschews uniformity and en eourages pluralism. Therefore a movement toward more Prot estant-related schools would lead toward more, not less, deDlOCJ'&oo q.," he says. .
Bishop Joyce Backs Anti-Obscenity Bill BURLINGTON (NC)-.Bishop l\dbert F. Joyce of BurlingtoB has urged citizens to write their legislators in support of a blll pending in the Vermont legisle ture aimed at barring distributioa of obscenity to young people. "Indecent reading matter has become a most serious menace to our youth, and it calls f(yr prompt and energetic action OIl the P3rt of all adults," B ~ Jcyce said in a statement.
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Parvuli Dei awards win be presented to 19 in CUl) Scouts in ehurch ceremonies at 3 Sunday afternoon, June 13.
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER, BYANNlIS
The Annual Guild banquet· will be held Thursday evening, .June 10, in the New Englewood Hotel in West Yarmouth. Miss Mary Morris, chairlady, has announced that members will be called regarding reser vations. ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT, FALL RIVER
'-,'-
New officers of the Blessed Mother Guild are Mrs. Shay As sad, president; Mrs. Michael Ha bib, vice-president; Mrs. Fred Nasiff and Mrs. Ernest Cabral, secretaries; Mrs. Norman Habib,
treasurer. A Communion break fast is planned by the unit for Sunday, June 6. ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER
The Women's Guild plans • banquet at the Coachman res taurant Wednesday, June 9. , ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER
The Council of Catholic Women serve a potluck supper at its meeting Tuesday, June 22. A board meeting is announced for Monday, June '1. w;'~
ST. .JEAN BAPTISTE. FALL RIVER
The Council of Catholic Women will hold a mystery ride Satur day, June 12, with Mrs. Roland Lafleur and Mrs. Matthew La becki in -charge of arrangements. A May crowning ceremony saw Miss Suzanne Roy, eighth grade student in the parish school, erowning our Lady as winner of an essay contest on hel' attri butes. SANTO CHRISTO FALL RIVER Th~ annual parish patranal
feast is scheduled for Sunday, .June 27. The Holy Ghost festival will take place Sunday, June 6. ST. MATHIEU, FALL RIVER
The Council of Catholic Women announces its annual installation banquet for Monday, June ., at White's restaurant. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER
Forty Hours devotion opens in the parish with a high Mass at 11:30 Sunday morning, June
ST. KILIAN, NEW BEDFORD
At '1 Sunday night, June 13 a testimonial will be held at Gau dette's Pavilion Acushnet for Rev. William J. McMahon, par ish assistant and director of Cathedral Camp. The occasion will honor Father McMahon's 25th ordination anniversary. He has served at St. Kilian's since ordination and for nearly 2:1 years as Cathedral Camp di rector. In addition to providing vacations for youngsters, testi monial sponsors note, he has offered the camp facilities for spiritual retreats and has guided a generation of seminarians in their work as camp counselors. Committee chairman is Francis J. Callahan, aided by a large group. SACRED HEARTS,
NORTH FAIRHAVEN
To benefit the new ftdonace fund a cake and food sale will be sponsored by the Ladies of St. Anne after all Masses Sun day, June 6. Donations may be lp.ft at the schoor cafeteria from 3 to 5 Saturday afternoon or be fore any Mass on Sunday. Items will be picked up if donors will call the rectory.
ST. JOSEPH,
FAIRHAVEN
Corporate Communion f(N members of the 'Association of the Sacred Hearts is scheduled. for the 8:15 Mass Sunday morn ing, June 6 and the organization will conduct its last meeting of the year Sunday ev~ning at 7:30 in the Church Hall. Mrs. Albert Mandeville, chair lady, request that all reserva tions for the mystery ride sched uled for June 30 be made at Sunday evening's meeting. ST. MICHAEL FALL RIVER
Among the festivities listed for the celebration of the Feast of the Holy Ghost are a "molko de figado" supper on Saturday night, June 12 and a malassada supper on Friday night, June 18, followed by a block dance in the school hall featuring Buddy Reis' orchestra. No admission will be charged for the dance. A bazaar, featuring a variety of booths, will be featured si multaneously with the dance. Portuguese and American food will be available throughout the entire evening. ST. JOSEPH. FALL RIVER Senior C Y 0
members will conduct a earwash in the school yard from 10 ,to 3 Saturday, June IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,. 5. . FALL RIVER Parishioners planning a testi The Women's Guild will meet monial program for Rev. George at 8 Monday night, June '1 in E. Sullivan will meet at 7:30 the churcl1 hall. A tea to wel tonight in the school hall. The come the new pastor, Msgr. Ar observance is set for Sunday, thur W Tansey, will be held, June 6 and will begin with a sol with past presidents as hostesses. emn Mass of Thanksgiving at 11. Msgr. Thomas Walsh will speak ST. GEORGE, and a luncheon will follow in the WESTPoRT school hall for clergy and re The Women'~ Guild announces ligious. In the evening a banquet a whist for 8 Saturday night, is planned for '1 at White's res June 5 in the school auitorium. taurant. Atty. James P. McGuire will speak. Deadline for tickets VISITATION GUILD, is today. NO. EASTHAM The Women's Guild has as Mrs. Leroy Babbitt, Mrs. Leon officers for the coming year Mrs. Allman and Mrs. Edmond He bert will be in charge of the food James A. Bradshaw, re-elected sale to be conducted Sunday president; Mrs. John Lane, vice morning ofter the 9:30 Mass at president; Miss Valerie Foley the Visitation Hall on Massasoit and Mrs. Albert Michaud, secre taries; Mrs. Louis Kroger, trea- Rd., No. Eastham. A meeting of the committee surer. An installation banquet planning the buffet supper to be will be held at 7 Thursday night, held on Saturday, June 19, at June 10 at Jean's Steak House. 6 o'clock, will meet in the home Reservations close Monday, June of Mrs. John Connors, Camp '1. The unit plans a rummage Ground Rd., on ~", - day night, sale Friday and Sa~. June June 14, at 8 o'c., 18 and 18.
6.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
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Jesuit Priests Continued from Page One The ordinandus studied at St. John's Preparatory School and was awarded Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees by Boston College. He is at present studying for a Master's degree in English Literature at the Bread Loaf School of English, a division of the language schools of Middlebury College, Vermont. Taught at Jamaica Rev. Mr. Winchester entered the Society of Jesus at Lenox, Mass. in 1952 and later taught at St. George's College, Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies. He also taught liturgical chant at St. Michael's Seminary in Jamaica and directed the Holy Trinity Cathedral Boys Choir. On his return to the United States for theological studies he became director of the Weston College Choir. He expects to re turn to Jamaica on completion of his studies. Next year, while finishing his seminary training, he will assist the Newman Club chaplain at Boston University. Rev. Mr. John G. Krebs, S.J.. the son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. JUNlPERO CLUB: Junipero Club officers· at Bishop Krebs, 36 Bulfinch Street, North Stang High School, North Dartmouth are John Golenski, Attleboro and formerly of Glen dde, L. I., will be ordained to secretary (left). and Joseph Boucher, president. the priesthood on Thursday, .JUne 10 in Fordham University Chapel, by His Emmence, Fran cis Cardinal Spellman. The ordinandus will celebrate a first Solemn Mass at Sacred CINCINNATI (NC) The intensive programs to halt the Heart Church, Glendale, at 11 non-violent protests against civil vicious circle of poverty and Sunday morning, June 13, and a second Solemn Mass in St. wrongs have their roots in the cultural deprivation." Mary's Church, North Attleboro, Christian Gospel, • priest said He advocated pre-school elin here in Ohio. lea for children of mothers who at 11 Sunday, June 20. After receiving h1s early ed Fat her Bernard Patterson, must work. He said in these O.S.B., first Negro to head a schools teachers "must establish ucation at Sacred Heart School in Glendale and Regis High Benedictine monastery in this contact and meaningful commu School in New York City. Rev. country, said the non-violent nication to reconstruct the so protests "have restored a sense cial concepts and aspirations of Mr. Krebs entered the .Jesuit Novitiate at Poughkeepsie, N. Y. of dignity to millions," but added deprived children. in 1952 for Novitiate and classi "many problems of social disor cal studies. In 1956 he began the ganization" remain to be solved study of philosophy at Berch Holy by other means. The prior of St. manns College, Cebu City, Pbil . Maur's priory in South Union, ippiHes, earning Bachelor of Arts Ky., who was a leading Golden and Master of Arts degrees. Gloves boxer before he began WORCESTER (NC) - Father From 1959 to 1962 he taught studies for the priesthood and is Boland de Vaux, O.P.. professor a cousin of Floyd Patterson, of Catholic studies at Harvard English, Latin. history and re ligion and prefectcd boarders at . former heavyweight champion, University divinity school, will· called the non-violent protest be awarded an honorary degree Xavier University High School, movement in civil rights the at the 119th commencement cer- Cagayan de Oro City, Philip "only effective method against emonies of Holy Cross College pines. In the Summer of 1962 he began his theological studies a well-armed majority." here Wednesday, June 9. at Woodstock, Md. Father Patterson told the Others honored will include f 0 u r t h annual Communion Robert C. Weaver, Housing and breakfast of the Cincinnati Cath olic Interracial Council, that the Home Finance Agency adminis trator; Dr. Nelson Glueck, pres integrity of the two chief mod ern apostles of non-violence, ident, Hebrew Union College Ghandi and Dr. Martin Luther Jt:wish Institute of Religion, and King, "has never been chal Dr. Joseph E. Murray of Peter lenged by honest and sincere Brent Hospital, Boston, president Residential - Commercial men." . cf the American Association of He advocated major efforts to Plastic Surgeons. at help "the many who haven't
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"Our job is to shore up the Society of Brothers of inner guards of these persons OurLadyofProvidence so they can achieve integrity and gain social skills," Father South Dartmouth, Hyannis For information write tal Patterson said. "This calls for FATHER MASTER Dennisport
Fr. Patterson Lauds Non-Violent Protests Against Civil Wrongs
Cross Names Degree Recipients
CAPE COD MORTGAGES
Bass River Savings Bank
Graduation Speaker BALTIMORE (NC)-Milton S. Eisenhowp.r, president of Jobna
Hopkins University here, will be
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iirst Catholic college for women.
Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of
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THE ANCHORThurs., June 3, 1965
Panel Asks End Of Preferentia I Postal Rates
Norton
WASHINGTON (NC) A Post Office Department advisory group has urged an end to all preferential mail
ST. MARY
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Mrs. L. G. Balfour $15 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Gustafson Carole Fisher $15 Mr. & Mrs. Vincent DeAngelo
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Somerset ST. ,jOHN OF GOD $15 Mr. & Mrs. George Coul<>mbe ST. THOMAS MORE $25 Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. Mobuck ST. PATRICK
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JUNIPERO CLUB: Officers of the Junipero Club at Holy Family High School, New Bedford are, from left, Warren Sanford, treasurer; Karl Kober, secretary; Luke Sweeney, president; Dennis Kennedy, vice-president. Club promotes religious vocations.
Methodist Says Catholics Have Charter for Christian Unity
ing rates, including those for tax-exempt organizations, such as churches and labor unions. It said Congress has the right to extend postal subsidies, bat the panel called for a complete review of subsidies and said that if 'Lhey are continued, the money should come directly from the Treasury, not the Post Office. The panel, whose report went to Postmaster General John A. Gronouski, was unanimous in support of various steps to make the Post Office Department self· supporting, except for the call to end preferential rates for ta~. exempt groups. James A. Suffridge of Arling ton, Va., president of the Retail Clerks International Association, opposed abolition of special rates for publications of. churches and labor unions. Gronouski said of the report: "While there are some poinu with which we may not agree, it is 2 most thoughtful and bold :report and I expect to find )t. very useful in shaping the finan cial policies of the Post Offiee Department." The '. panel, noting the Post' Office Department .runs about $762 million in the red, said that about'$300 million is ruri up each year for "public service costs" for mailings by tax-exempt groups.
DALLAS (NC) ,Catholics . that joining of the ways which: God has prepared for us, all now have a charter for the long , $85
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·the Constitution on the Church good providence. $50 "Meanwhile and at the very approved by the Second Vatican St. Vincent de Paul Society Council, a Methodist theologian least, you must not misread the A Friend told the 1965 biennial National signs of your times: your tide is In memory of the Deceased now rising to the sort of floQd Council of Catholic Men conven members of the Pacheco Family tion here in Texas. which must be taken at its peak." $25 Dr. Outler, an observer at the Dr. Albert C. Outler, head of Rose M. Peardon the Perkins school of theology at Vatican council, said he' regards . $20
Southern Methodist University the chapter ."On the Laity" in A Friend
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address; told the delegates: "The in all the council d9cuments. He $15 unity· we seek is a church that said "that chapter alone could Munroe's Restaurant exhibits .Christ to the world in furnish the substance of an Mr. & Mrs. Everett Rogel'll the manifold' witness born of epochal development in the idea of the laity in the theology of men doing their daily work; in the church." . their family life; in their neigh ST. PETER
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St. Vincent de Paul Conferenee The first Protestant to make a "The laity is the church in the $40 major address at an NCCM con . world, by divine vocation and NEW BEDFORD
Mr. & Mrs. John Snow vention then appealed: "Show us eommission and by hum8ll $25 . the way, and if we fail to follow ehoice and commitment." Boat Little Infant or fail to find our own equiva Mr. & Mrs. Napoleon Poyant lent, then the judgment of his 520 tory on us will be the more iron Mr.·& Mrs. Edward Dahm ic--':'that the Romans have recov George Leyden ' ered what Protestantism once Mr. & Mrs. Cyril Patrick had and then lost because we Mr. & Mrs. Frank Taves were sure that it was ours by Marcey's Oil Company right." $15 Dr. Outler added: "My dream Mr. & Mrs. Samuel -JanopoHs and hope and daily prayer is Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dirsa . that we 'shall take heart from Mrs. Anna L. Silvia you and be ready to meet you at Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perry Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Coelho R.ayn~Qm Mr. & Mrs. George Lemos ST. ANN Mr. & Mrs. Isadore Ferreira $25 Mr. & Mrs. James Cordeiro Dr. Frederick G. Doran Mr. & Mrs. Edmond Dalpe $20
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of !=oll River-Thurs., June 3, 1965
Sa~!s
Many Heavy Drinkers On Road to Alcoholism By John J. Kane, Ph.D. . "My brother, 29 and single, has been drinking regularly smce he was in his late teens. He usually has two' or thre~ martinis before lunch, two or three before dinner at home and e1en drinks three or four bottles of beer at night or a few highballs. Late!Y he. . see to f t h t' . 'd thiIlg IndicatIon that there is some ms. orge w. a lle ~al wrong. and dId before gomg to oed :f the alcoholj(" continues to even though he' does not drink other symptoms will ap appN,r drunk. Is he an alcoholic" There are many asgec~ of yoU! brother's behavIOr},; hat you have not mentioned and about which I <can only specu late I aS5Uml: ]he has a job and works reg ularly because liquor c ,) s t s \II' moneyesppcial «:ially martinis. ][ also assume h.. that drinking nas not yet inter fered with his job. ]I wonder w'th whom he drinks or does he drink alone? Alcoholism is not easy to de fine. It is, of course, real. enough and those who have lived with an alcoholic husband, brother or fatheI' may not agree that it is diffic'.llt to define. Perhaps the best approach i" to say. that alco holism is compulsory dl"inking in ~xcess of what an ordinary soci~l drinker would usually eonsume.
Social Drinker
An ordinary social drinKer is one who drinks when it is the socially approved thing to do. He doc; not drinl~ to excess or at leas!. rarely drinks to excess. He can drink or not drink as he sees fit. The alcoholi-: does not drink because it is socially approved b'lt because he ha~ a compulsion to do so. For him drink has now become a drug. Just as aspirin relie.,tes the pain of a headache, alcohol relieves the psychic pain he suffers. ThE' natural history of most alcoh:)lics covC'rs a period of eigilt to 10 years and sometimes !on!!er. Most of them begin to drink while in their teens and in a year achieve their first' intoxi cati....n Of course, some become intuxir.ated the first time they drink but this is th€ more usual pattern. Temporary Amnesia A few years later they begin morning drinking and experi ence blackouts. This is what ". seems to be happening to your brother. Blacking out is not the s~:;:c as passing out. It ;s quite dhlelE~nt. . A blackout !s.a type of tem porar)' a~esi~, I.e. lo~ o~ ~emory. DurIng 1~ th~ IndIVidual may converse lDtelligently, per form rather co~pllcated tasks ~ut upon awakenIng next morn . mg not kn~w ho~ he rea~hed the place m which he fmds him~elf.
'-l'uther can he re~ember all of t.he events of the mght before. Alth h d b f' d. th t .~ug ass'!l"f' Y. rle~ s a he thIngs, he . said and dId certam . Simply cann~t rec~ll. them. ~or some alcohoha. thiS IS the first
New University PANAMA CITY (NC)-Pres ident Marco A. Robles and Edu cation Minister Eduardo Ritter Aislan have signed a decree for mally authorizing the establish ment of the Catholic University of Panama. In the planning stages for yea r s, the pro jected university was given a major thrust forward late last Winter when Archbishop Tomas A. Clavel of Panama turned over to it his four-story residence.
pear as warning signs. One is the daytime bout, Le. when the per£(.n becomes int.oxicated dur ing the day when it is not a Saturday, Sunday or holiday. The:n come what alcoholics call the "benders". The person goes on a drinkipg bout of at least two days duration. He has ceascj to care about his job, his famiJ~ or his friends. By this tim~. of course, he has already become a problem drinker. His wIfe, if married, or relati ves if lftngle will begin to worn' about him. His employer will warn him. He is well on the way to complete alcoholism. Cirrhosi~ of Liver If drinking con:lnues various other phases follow, such as con vulsions afte:' drinking. The al coholic begins to worry about his supply of liqt.or and takes elaborate precautions to hide it in the. most unmmal places. Quite 0 ! ten physical complications may now appear. Onp of the dise!lses associated with, but not caust'd by, drink ing is cirrhosis of the liver. This is a rather serious condition but onl~ a~out 0!l~ o~t of four alco hohes In ~he U:mted State~ suf fer~ ~rom it It IS really a dIetary deflCle~C! brought about by the alcoh~l~c s refusal to eat. l?'.lhnu~.tre;nens may occur. ThIS conditron usually follows a prolonged peri0d of drinking in which the drinker has ha~ li~tle foo~ or .sleep. ~n the begInnmg he IS qUIte .a?XlOliS and restless. ~ the delirlU~ be really be; lleves he sees pInk ~lephants or .some type of ammal from which he may flee or pursue. He: sometimes hears voices whIch threaten or ar~ obscene. . Perha.ps from thiS you can ~udge, fIrst wh~ther your broth er IS an alcoholic or not; second, just ho~ far down the road to alcohC'hsm he may be. Heavy Drinking Symptom On the basis of what you write he is not presently an al cohohc but he is a regular, heavy drinker. Unfortunately, over half of the regUlar heavy drinkers do become alcoholics. Statistically speaking, his chances of devel oping alcoholism are fifty fifty. M;:;ny believe heavy or exces sive drinking as well as alco holism are symptoms. Just as a fever tells the physician there is something wrong with your body, so alcoholism or excessive drinking in d i cat e something wrong with th<: ps)'che. A true cure requires both insights into the cause and motivation to re move it. Since you. have expressed concern over YOUi' brother, I suggest you write to AI-Anon, an aff'I' I H\ t e 0 f Alco h 0 l'ICS An ony mOU3 for the wiveJ and children or relatives of alcoholics. They have an excellent pamphlet "A GUide for the Fi.'mily of the Alcoholic". Their address is: 303 West 42nd Street New York, New York. You are also welcome at open meeting,:, of A.A. or meetings of AI-Anon.
Most Ever SANTA CLARA (NC) - The University of Sada Clara will grauu:'lte 571 on June 12 - the largest class in the 114-year his tory of the Caliiornia Jesuit in sti.tution.
CONSULTANT : Father George H. Moreau, a.M.L, has been ap::Jointed guidance consultant a~ the NCEA, Washington, effective Sept. 1. Father Moreau, a former president of the National Catholic Guidance Confer ence, is on the staff of Niag ara University in the Buffalo diocese. NC Photo.
Brother Herman Aids Missions NORTH EASTON (NC) Brother Herman E. Zaccarelli, C.S.C., who's expert on all foods from growth to consumption, knows a thing or three about the art of slicing. too. So right off the juicy revenue top from each of three Summer workshops about food prepara tion, storage a:ld department management, Brother Herman said he will carve $1,000 "to be sent directly tC' Father Frederick A. Maguire, C.M., executive sec retary, Mis s ion Secretariat, Washington, D. C., to be used for the needs of the Church in South America in anyway he sees fit." In addition to the $3,000 do nation, Brother Herman said two scholarships to missionaries go ing overseas, particularly to South America, will be awarded. Brother Herman is the found er and director of the Food Re search Center for Catholic In stitutions at Stonehill College here. The schedule of 1965 Sum mer workshops. each for 12 days, includes: Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wis., June 9 to 21; Stonehill College here, July 5 to 16, and St. Michael's College, Toronto, Ont., Aug. 1 to 12.
High Schools Find New Location OTTAWA (NC) - Expansion forced a high schQol for girls and a high school for boys to seek new locations on the out Ekirts of this Canadian city. Notre Dame High Sch<lol for girls acquired a 26-acre tract and began plans for a new school. St. Patrick's College High School. for boys bad difficulty finding a site, but came up with • money-saving idea. The two schools agreed. to build a co-eampus modern com Jllex which will oost $3,500,000 and split 1;\1e expense. The schools will house more than 1,000 students.
Awareness Lacking MADRID (NC)-Graduates of Catholic colleges of Latin Amer ica are unaware of the Church's duty to champion human rights and put itself at the service of the poor and the downtrodden, according to Father Robert Bose. S.J., professor of sociology at the Catholie Institute of Paris.
Gold Label .. atlttersauce
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Sharp Cheese Ch~:dEa~ LB 79C Pofalo Chips ;:~~R l:K~1 49c, Salad Dressing SULTANA J~~ 39c Ketchup ANN PAGI 2 ~~l 33c Drinks Or.. Hi-FllIvor Fruit 4 1 qt 14 99C Grp.. Punch ..os Tollel Tissue ;::: ~~:ilpt~~ 89c Pruerve. Itr.wberry-Ann.Pll~e 7'7I C 10e OH-2 Ib 2 POR 27(; Spaghe"1 llraneo-AmeriClln /ZlIn OJ:
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Deviled Ham U;~:;::'I 2 Por 69c Prle.. _ Ia \111, 1lI11Uarlftttt4 llIro Set., .IuN • • tffeoU.. It A~~ A"P Super Marttll '" thl' community _ "elollr. TallocM product. " II.... prohlbltM IIr low .....pI froM plaid slaolp olf...
Assonet
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ST. BERNARD
ST. JOSEPH
$75
Assonet Sand & Grave! Co.
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs.. june 3, 1965
$50 A Friend
$25
Nationa! Co pc~ol To Have St"atue Of Fr. Damien
$30 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond BarberG
Anonymous
$20
A Parishioner
$15
Mrs. Emil Kleiner
A Parishioner
Centerville OUR LADY OF VICTORY
OZS
John E. Van Tassell
$15
Mr. &. Mrs. John Dean, Mrs. Peter G. Sheaffer, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cannon, Wilton Childs, Mrs. Roy Dupuy Mr. & Mrs. Donald James, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Huriey, Mr. & Mrs Edward O'Neil, Mrs. Edward & Laura Dean, Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. MacAleese Mrs. Arminda Coneia, Mrs. Robert S. Elliott, Mr. & Mrs. Francis G. Capra, Mr. & Mrs. .:rames E. Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. Armand C. Goulet
Central Village ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
$15 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Potter Mr. & Mrs. Richard Trinidad Mrs. William Grindrod Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kalisz ST. MARY
$75
$25 $20
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Ehmann
. Falmouth ST. PATRICK
$25
Alice Creemer
$15
Mr. & Mrs. Fred Toran
Dighton ST. PETER
$20
Dr. Rose Borges
$15
William & Mr. Grover
East Brewster OUR LADY OF THE CAPE
$200 La Salette Fathers
Hyannis ST. FRANCIS XAVIER Guertin
East Falmouth ST. ANTHONY $HIO Falmouth Dry Wan Corp.
$75 Falmouth Cement Works Ine.
$50
Anonymous
Anonymous
Alfred M. Soares
$45
Manuel S. White Jr.
$35
Cape Town Moton Inc.
Anonymous
$30
Arthur Andrade Jr.
Manuel R. Lopes
$25
George Barboza
Joseph L. Dias
George Mandigo
$20 Anonymous, Anonymous, Carol Crane Doran, John Lopes, Ar thur W. Marshall John B. Pacheco, Mrs. Amelia Pena, Michael P. Roderiques, Stanley Santos, Anthony Souza, Frank Souza Jr.
$15 Edward S. Anderson, John Andrade, Lester Dias, Richard Geggatt Jr. Anonymous John :racome, John B. Leigh ton, A. A. Marks; Anonymous Caesar Miranda, Ernest Peters Manuel Peters, Manuel Reine Jr. Frank Rego Scoba Rhodes & Elnora, John L. Silvia Jr., Sisters of the Holy Ghost Society, George Sylvia, Charles V. Wahl, John J. White
South Dartmouth ST. MARY
$50
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Flynn
Mr. & Mrs. Angelo DeMello
$25
Mrs. Helen Broughton
$15_ Mr. & Mrs. Wilbert Divis Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Alfonso Mrs. James P. McCrohan Mr. & Mrs. Charles Catin Mr. & Mrs. James Baldwin Mr. & Mrs. Charles McKenna Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Viveiros Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Viveiros :Mr. " Mrs. Thomas M. Brooka
~50
Brother~ewelers
~25
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Gelinas Mr. & Mrs Eugene L. Raymond John A. LaFrance Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Paul Kelly Mr. & Mrs. W. P. Morse
$20
$25 Mr. & Mrs. Murray Booth
The bill was previously passed by the house and now requires only the signature of Gov. John A. Bt;:rns. The governor is ex pected to give his signature on the 92nd anniversary of Father Damien's landing on the island of :\l:oIokai to begin his 16 years of wo::-k among the lepers. As <Ii result of his work, Fr. Damien contracted leprosy, and dien in 1889.
$15
Mr. & Mrs. Americo Gabriel, Mr. & Mrs. George Beaulieu Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Herman Roy, Mr. & Mrs. Weber R. Torres Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Augustine Perry Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Norgeuira, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bachanda, Mr. & Mrs. Everett Gracie, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Sylvia, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Alves Mr. & Mrs. Edward Bouley, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Klubowicz, Fernando Couto
$25
$15
SS.CC., as the first of two Ha waiian citizens to represent the state in the U.S. Capitol's Statu ary Hall in Washington.
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Horrocks Dr. & Mrs. Robert Gaudreau
$200
Mr. at Mrs. Milton Breault
HONOLULU (NC) - Ha waii's state senate has unan imously passed a bill naming Father Darnien DeVeuster,
St. Vincent de Paul Society
Mr. & Mrs. John DeNadal
St. John the Baptist Ladies Guild
17
Atwood Oil Company
$15 Mrs. Audry Hoole Mrs. Lillian O'Neil The Santos Family John Bright Shoe Store Cape Cod Candies Airport Motors of Hyannis
South Yarmouth ST. PIUS X
$150
Mr. & Mrs. John F. Martin
$75
Rev. Philip A. Davignon $30 Beatrice M. Mollica
$28 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond MeDe
$25 Angelo's Market Jennings Oil Company Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Trinque A Friend
520 Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Ardito Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Hayes
$15 Mr. & Mrs. William Griffith Mrs. Hope H. Moulton Martin Powers Riverway Lobster House Wayside Printing Studio
Wareham ST. PATRICK
$50
In Memory of Justin Lopes
$35
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Sellwood
$30 The Robert Deans Family
$25 Dr. & Mrs. Ralph Angus
$15 Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.
& & & & & & &
Mrs. John Texeira Mrs. Maurice Pirelt Mra. Eugenia Baptista Mrs. Joseph ·Govoni Mrs. Frank Norton Mrs. John Bell Mrs. John Barrett
IN 50th STATE: Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Aposto lic Delegate in the United States, visits the original grave of Father Darnien DeVeuster, SS.CC., at Kalawao on the island of Molokai to place a lei on the grave. NC Photo.
Prelate~
Rabbi Debate
Toronto Archbishop Stresses Objectivity of Truth TORONTO (NC)-When there are contradictory beliefs, both cam'.ot be right, Coadjutor Arch bishop Philip M. Pocock of Tor onto stress::!d here in a dialogue with a Jewish rabbi. "Tolerance has I.othing to do with a denial of logic and meta physics," the Catholic prelate said. The archbishop took speedy issue with a statement by Rabbi Reuben Slonim that, for the sake of toJerancp. and:; better ordered soci"lty, church and synagogues should de-emphasize theology in relation to one 3l'other and con centrate on ethical behavior. Archbishop Pocock stressed the objectivity (If truth. He said: "I do not believe that contradic tory statements can both be true. Chril'tians belie"''' that Jesus Chrir-t is Divine. Jews believe ·'hat he is !lot Divine." There are two contradictory stat~ments. If Christians are right. Jews :lce wrong; If Jews are right, Christians are wrong. We are not both right, and tol erance has nothing to do with a denial of logic and metaphysics." ThfOY agreed on many points in the dialogue on Christian-
Fall River CYAO Greater Fall River Catholic Young Adult Organization win meet Sunday, June 6 and plan an athletic program for Sunday, June 20. All interested young adults are invited to attend the meeting at the Catholic Commu nity Center, Franklin Street, Fall River.
The movement for the selection of Father Damien was begun two years ago by a group of Catholic laymen, the Young Men's Institute. The idea was endorsed by resolutions from each of the state's four counties, and by many labor unions and other organizations. A companion bill, authorizing the governor to appoint a com mission to select a sculptor of the statue, was passed by the senate and is expected to pass the house.
Holy Family Alumni
Jewish relations at the Primrose Club here. The event marked publIcation of Rabbi Slonim's book. "In the Footsteps of Pope Paul", foJ' which Archbishop Pocock wrote an introduction.
Appeal Is Ended Continued from Page One peal as a definite manifestation of the widespread loyalty, de votion and affection people have for our beloved Shepherd of the Diocese, Bishop Connolly. "He has been for us a Priest's Bishop as well as a People's Bishop. This successful Appeal is a personal tribute to him, indi cating sincere approval of all his efforts to give honor and glory to God through love and service to all the people of God under his jurisdiction. I, person ally wish to thank everyone, workers and contributors, in cluding those who prayed for our success."
Holy Family High School class of 1940 will hold a reunion dinne::- at 7 Saturday night, June 19 at the Rendezvous res taurant, Dartmouth. James J. Rogers, in charge of arrange ments for the New Bedford school's event, notes that reser vations should be made by Mon day, June 7.
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YOUR OILHEAT!
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First Federal Savings
Wellfleet
AND
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OF
ATTLEBORO
OUR LADY OF LOURDES
$100 Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Frazier Jr.
$20 First National Bank of Cape Cod Mr. &; Mrs. Kenneth Snow
4 % % on all Savings Accounts
··..'4-'"4:li£;~.~;,". :).'Y;"':.;"
';~it
.',
The Falmoufh National Sonic
Falmouth. Mass.
I, tile Vlllale ere" SiRce 1121
1% Extra on Systematic Bonus Savings
'.
THE ANCHOR-
18
Thurs., June 3, 1965
Taunton
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
$75 Rl'v. James F. Lyons llev. Barry W. WaH ~50
Mr. & Mrs. ROgN Champagne
$25 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Colton Mr. & Mrs Patrick McDermott Memorial to Edward & Isabel .Murby
$15 Mr. & Mrs. Alfred S. Rose OUR LADY OF LOURDES
$50 Dr. & Mrs. Henry A. Alves Jr.
$15 M,., & Mrs. Frank Cabral Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Pina SAOltED HEART
$30 Mr. & Mrs. Vincent :Brimley Mr. & Mrs '!'imothy Taylor
Benedictines Moving Inter-Racial Priory I~DIANAPOLIS (NC)-Mov ing the interracial St. Maur's priory from South Union, Ky." to Indianapolis is under study. . Father Bernardin Patterson, O.SoB., Benedictine Negro, pri or, said St. Maur's board of trust ees had decided .to relocate from their 300-acre site in the Owensboro, Ky., diocese in favor of the educa'tional, cultural and growth potentials of a metropol itan area. St. Maur's was established as a dependent priory in 1949 by St. John's abbey, Collegeville, Minn., "to demonstrate interra cialliving in peace and harmony when motivated by Christian charity." Nine of the 27 monks at the priory are Negroes. 'The foundation, which became inde pendent from St. John's in 1963, has 11 priests, 11 Brothers and five s'tudents for the priesthood
Catholic Journalists Honor John Cogley
Teaching Role Grows Priest Says New Responsibilities Challenge Elementary, Secondary Instructors MTAMI (NC)-A priest edu cato- said here elementary and secofldary school teachers are being challenged by new respon sibilities plus an increased im port:mce in this age of special- ization. . F3 toher Theodore McCarrick, director of university develop ment at the Cathulic University of America, Washington, D.C., told the annual meeting of the Diocese of Miami Teacher Guild, the importance of teaching in e I e men tar y and secondary schools is growir.g to the pro portion of "a revolution in edu cation," affecting higher educa tion and "making it more 'and more an area of specialization." "A':J secondary and elementary
NEW YORK (NC)-John Cog ley, religious affairs writer for the New York Times has been given the Catholi.: Press Asso ciaUon's 1965 award for distin teachers you are going to ear1'7' guished contribution to Cathol.ie the burde!l of preparation for life," Father McCarrick said. , journalism. The award presented. by Fran "You are the lowest level on cis Cardinal Spellman of New which the highest principles are York at the 55th annual associa going to be delivered to young tion convention o! U. S. and sters. You are not just teachers Ca.ladian Catholic press groups, of history, or science, or spelling, is a bronZe statuette of St. Fran but teachers of men and women cis de Sales, patron ot journalists. in a real world." . 0
He sugg.:-sted secondary and elementary school teachers pre pare themselves for "subtle changes" by becoming involved in cummur..ity and special proj ects. such as civil rights, aid to the Spani':Jh-speaking, particu larly the migrant workers, aid to the handicapped and similar programs.
Gift to Hospital PONTIAC (NC)-A $1 million pledg~ was received from Gen eral Motors Corp. to help finance the expansion program of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital here ill Michi~an. The hospital seeks to add 150 beds and remodel an exisHng huildings at a total cost of $6.5 million
$15
•.
M:: & Mrs. Joseph Burke ST. JAMES
$25
George Mador
Raymond Nolin
$20
Ludger L. Lemley
ST. MARY
$50 Rev. Bernard R. Kelly Dr. John Fenton
$30 Dr. Normand Larocque
$25 Dr. Edmund Fitzgerald Laughlin's Market James Ward
$15 Dr. Carmine Carrucci, James Fahey, Andrew McBreen, Bar bara O'Brien, John O'Hearne . Ge,~:,ge Overton, .Tohn F. Laugh lin, James Nasise. Mrs. William .Rayment
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HUNDREDS MORE REGULAR PRICES BUCED
ST. PAUL
$700 Rt. Rev. Joseph C. Canty
AND Famous
$250
JW Green
Stamps!
In Memory of Rev. Raymond Bourgoin
$25 St. Paul's Catholic Women's Guild
$20 Mr. & Mrs And::ew Gravel
$15 Mr & Mrs. William Acheson M:-. & Mrs. Louis Bartel Mr. & Mrs. Charles Bliss Ml' & Mrs. WillIam Boarman MI'. & Mrs. James Duffy Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Raymond LaBrie Mr & Mrs. Stephen D. Martin Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Parisi. "!r. & Mrs. Johr. Schondek William R. Spaulding Mr. & Mrs John Crowninshield 11":1' & ~rs. Theodore Dupuis Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Benoit David Rogers Mr. & Mrs. Frank Thom9son Leun Trahan Mr. & Mrs. Leo Benoit
;.)
North Attleboro SACRED HEART
BONE·IN All CHOICE GRADE
HEAVY WESTERN
STEER BEEF ONLY
C
(No Processing Please)
Center Cut
LB
$40 Jos~ph
Bressette
$2ji Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Lambert
$15 M" & Mrs. Joseph Carriere Mr & Mrs. Paul Dion Mn. Amy Girard Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Gui mond Mr, & Mrs. Edward SU9renant ST. MARY $50
Mr. & Mrs. Aime Grenier
$30
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Thorpe Sr.
$20 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Brown
$15 Mr. & Mr. & Louis Mr. & Mr. & Mr. & ~-
Mrs. Robert KeHey Mrs. James Kearney Grimaldi & Sons Mrs. William Martin Mrg. Paul Levesque Mrs. Joan McConnick
Plump, Meaty - 3V2 to 4 lB Average
FO ,L
WHOLE FARM FRESH
LB
CREAM STYLE
FINAST CORN 7
1L~
CANS
SI·OO
I
NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST RETAILER OF FINE FOODS!', Prices effedive in Fall River and Somerset
.
Fan River
New Bedford
HOLY NAME
HOLY NAME
$1,000
Anonymous
$25
Mr. & Mrs. Anthon,.
Gea!7
$20
. John McDonald, Mr. & Mrs. Ed mund Geary, Mr. & Mrs. Jose Silva -4.r. & Mrs. John T. FarreD NOTRE DAME
$75
Rev. Roger P. Poirier
$25
Valerien Dupms .
$15
Emile J. Amiot
Robert Messier
OlJR LADY OF BALm
$125 Rev. Manuel M. Resendes
$75 Rev. Arthur T. de Mello $30 A Friend $20 VIncent Miranda
$15
Edward Simard
Francisco Pacheco
Arthur Pereira
HOLY ROSARY
$15 Mr. " Mrs. Mario Lueclola IMMACULATE OONCEPTIOX $25 Holy Name Society $24
Ely Bamaby $20
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rodettek $15 Joseph Benevides Mrs. Gerald Cloutier Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Lafleur M:o. " Mrs. John Mello
Ernest Raymond
Michele Sperling
ST. ANNE
$20 A Friend ST. JOSEPH $25 Atty J'rank M. Silvia Jr. $15 Mr. " Mrs. Edward S. Blia Mr. & Mrs. Napoleon Goulet Mrs. Thomas F. Monaghan William Wontley ST. LOUIS $25 ·Mnl. Marion F. Murphy ST.M1CBAEL $20 Manuel Rezendes ST. PATRICK
$100
St. Vincent de Paul Soci~
$15 DRniel J McCarthy Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Louis Shea JE. Mr. " Mrs. John DePaola Mr. & Mrs. Albert Beausolafl M"C'. " Mrs. William Murray Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Fay SS. PETER" PAUL $20 Mr. & Mrs. James E. RogeD $15 Mr. & Mrs. stanley M. Jamdl: Mrs. Thomas Rogers Pao:k 1'7. Troop 1'7, Boy Scoata eli America
ST. STANISLAUS
$50
A Friend
New Bedford ST. JAMES $50
Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea $30 Mr. " Mrs. James Boltoa
$20
Mr. " Mrs. Andrew O'Nefi
Mrs. Walter F. McCormack
$15
Mr. Ie Mrs. Harold Sherbme
:Mr. " Mrs. Joseph Charade
John Bauer Jr.
Francis Coffey
Mr. & Mrs Richard J. M ~
Genevieve MulTllJ'
Ca\.herlne Ne~
Mr. II :Mr•• LeonaN . . . . ,
HOLY GHOST
$15
Mr. & Mrs. Lyman Wilbur
M.'. & Mrs. Manuel Martinez
lIenry Stewart
.£dwin L. Nunes
ST.JOHN
ASSUMPTION
'25
$50
Mrs. Leland B. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Philip Cronan Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Kenton
Abramson, Titus & Levenson
$25 Bernard Kestenbaum
$20
$20
$15
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
$15
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. CaJnal
$50
~
M~. & Mrs. Arthur J. Caetano Mt. Carmel St. Vincent de Paul . Mr. & Mrs. :::ePh Ferro
Mt"S. Maria C. Ferro
Mr. & Mrs. Oswald Castro
.II!!lll~;<-"h,".,i:~
NEW DIOCESAN CYO OFFICERS: Elected to serve the F'aIl River Diocesan Council of Catholic Youths for the coming year are, left to right: James Murphy of Taunton, treasurer; Linda O'Bara of Taunton, secretary; Irene Gag non of Fall River, vice-pr~sident; and James Gibney of Fall River, president.
$15 Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Cambra. Mr. & Mrs. Francis Lopes. Alex andrlna Macedo, Zulmira Ortins, Louis L. Rita Mr. & Mrs. Louis Roderick, Kenneth & Hilda Sylvia, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Aguiar, Anonymous Mr. & Mrs Francisco Bettencourt Mr. & Mrs. Charles Correia, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Estrella, Jo mma DaLuz Mr. & Mrs. Amadeo Mendonca, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Rapoza Jr.. Anna Varao, Sophie Varao Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Oliver OlJR LADY OF PERPETUAL HEALTH
$200
ST. LAWRENCE
$50 Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Ban.
$30
Jankowski P'amily
$25
Kaszynski Family
Mr. & Mrs. David Amarfd
$20
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Mr. & Mrs. Zygmunt Stankiewcz
$1'7
Mr. & Mrs. Konstanty Le1kowicz
$16
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Dube
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Mrs. Amelia· Bariteau, WaIter Bobola, Alexander Boc, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Dabrowski, Mrs. Bose Feeley Mrs. Marya Galus & Family, Mr. & Mrs. John Izdebski, Mrl& Mrs. Frank Midurski, Stanislaw!! Olszowy, Mr. & Mrs. Chester Ponit.:htera
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$75
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ft. ANTHONY OF PADUA. $35
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Talsop Lee
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$25 !Il Memory of Arthur Lussfer ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
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FLORAL TRIBUTES TO THE DEAD: Plat 21 of St. Patrick's Cem
etery, Fall River, i;:: popularly known as the Shrine Section, a forerunner
of the cemetery of the future. In this section, the statue of the Immaculate
Pope Paul Urges United Europe VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI again voiced his support for a unied Europe dudng an official audience for Luxem bourg's royal c~lUple. Speaking h French. the Pope toid Grand Duke Jear. and Grand Duchess Jo!:'ephine Char-' lotte that their country has spe cial importar.ce because of "the role which i';s geographic loca tion and its peaceful character have led it to play at the inter national leve~. "By receiving on its soH one ef the oldest and most notable of the European c....mmunities-the European Coal and Steel Com munity - the Grand Duc~y of Luxembourg has contributed its "'part to the fulfillment of a task which is difficult but which we regard as most useful for the common good: the construction ef a [united] Europe." The Pope ;::lso referred to the eoming celebr<>tion of the 300th anniversary of the consecration ef LuxemboLirg to Mary, Con soleI' of the Afflicted. He said: '''She whom vour ancestors ehose then as theIr 'very loving protector and perpetual patron' has not ceased to surround with lher maternal protection her sons of Luxembourg. And the)' on their pl\rt haye alwavs been dis posed to offer h':!r throughout the centuries the h·.lmage of their love, supplicatil.ns and wishes."
Brazil Mission ATCHIS'ON (NC)-Two young JBenedictLne ':lriests have been cssigned to S't Joseph's Priory, l\Iineiros, Golas, a dependency of St. Benedict's abbe~' here in Kansas, Fathers Eric Deltch Man, O.S.B., 31, fo~merly of kansas City, Mo" and Luke Wenzel, O.S.B., 27, formerly of Steinauer, Neb., will leave. for ::.eneir new postoi ill September.
Concepti~n of the Blessed Virgin Mary is the predominating figure becau8e no headstones are permitted and only markers flush to the ground are allowed.
Confers Honorary Degree on McShane
Says Catholic Schools Satisfy Catholics Chicago Researcher Reveals Poll Results NEW YORK (NC)-American Catholics are "very satisfied" with Catholic schools. Director Peter H. Rossi of the University of Chicago national opinion research center, says a "charitable view" of the support behind ('rTfi,.:; of the schools is that it amounts to about 10% of the- Catholic population. Survey Facts Results of a nationwide su;r vey, he told the 62nd annual convention of the National Cath oli~ Education Association, lead to the conclusion: "If sufficient provision were made for families who would find tuition costs hard to sustain, between half and three quarters of the Catholic parents would ta'ce advantage of Cat h 0 li c . schooling for their children." At present, he said, Catholic schools educate about 45% of the nation's Catholic children of elementary school ar and about one-third of thosp of high school age. He said 45 per cent of the general population could not suggest any improvement for the schools. Among crW~isms the survey did uncover, how ever, were these: "Fourteen per cent thought that the schools should have better physical plants and an eql'~' proportion were for im
provements in teaching; 11 per cent for a wider 'nulum;
10 per ~~.,t for less crowding;
.Review Obligations LONDON (NC)-The Jesuits are reviewing their school and parish commitments in Britian owing to a shortage of memb~rs. They have already handed over a new secondary school at Born church near London to the dio cese of Brentwood and are think ing of relinquishing graduaU7 more of the H ~chools~
10 per cent were for a wider intrigui" - when we also see crowding; 10 per cent for a that t"~ Protestant sample in modernization of the appr":,n~h terviewed did not achieve as (less homework, less discipline, much economic mobility, given more emphasis on religion, etc.);' . the same parental origins and six per cent were for better amount of educational attain athletic programs and an equal ment," he declared. proportion were for lower tuiRossi SOlid the survey's results ti~ rates." are clearly against the assertion Better Economically that Catholic schools make for Among those Catholic parents divisiveness or separatism in who did not send their children personal associations, economic to Catholic schools, he said, the lif'" and participation in demoe biggest single reason "is the cracy. schools' unavailability or inaces"Although Catholic s c h 001 sability. This was true for 62 Catholics were most likely to per cent of those with elemen- have a majority of their friends tar7 school children and 42 per Catholics when they were sev cr • of those with high school enteen, when interviewed as p ag children. adults they were not significantRossi stressed that repudiation Iy different from Catholics who of the school:?' critics by the had gone to public schools," he public does not mean they have 1'1"- '-1. nothing to say. "I am not advocating that you run Catholic schools using pub lic opinion polls," he said. SAN GIOV ANNI ROTONDO Rossi also told the educators (NC)-Padre Pio, famed Italian his survey shows that Catholics stigmatic Capuchin priest who who went to Catholic schools had been ill and unable to cele "do better economically" than brate Mass since Easter, cele Catholics who went either part brated his 78th birthday May 25 ly or entirely to public schools. by offering Mass in the monas Notes Similarity tery chapel hf're. He has resumed "This finding is particularly a full schedule of activities, in cluding the hearing of hundreds of confessions daily.
Resumes Work
CINCINNATI (NC) - Xavier University awarded an honorary doctorate of laws to Chief U.S. Marshal James J. McShane at its l27th commencement. He headed the U.S. marshabl who protected the Alabama "freedom riders" in 1961 and guarded James Meredith, fir·gt Negro student who entered the University of Mississippi in 1962 He served 20 years on the New York police force and was John F. Kennedy's chief bodyguard in the 1960 presidential cam paign.
Honors Attorney LORETTO (NC)-William B. Ball, general counsel for the Pennsylvania Catholic Welfare Committee will deliver the prin cipal address and receive an hOll orary doctorate of laws at the 118th commencement exercises of St. Francis College here ita Pennsylvania.
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Baptists Approve Council Observers
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)- The American Baptist Convention at its 58th annual meeting here adopted a resolution expressing the denomination's willingness to send observers to the f-ourth session of the ecumenical coun cil, which opens Sept, 14 in Rome. The Amel'ican Baptist Con vention, formerly known as the Northern Baptist .Convention, has more th·all l,a million mem
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