06.06.63

Page 1

-

.

....... ... .. ,

.

'

<

'

-

...

,

'<

r

'< <

Pontifical Requiem at Cathedral Tonight

Obsequies for Supreme ·Pontiff

Take Place As' World Mourns

In an unprecedented action, St. Peter's Basilica remained open Tonight at 8 o'clock in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, the priests tltroughout last night to allow untold thousands to pass by the body of and faithful of the Diocese will join with Bishop Connolly in offering Pope John XXIII, lying in state before the great high altar and over the a Solemn Pontifical Mass of Requiem for the repose of the soul of the very spot where the first Vicar of Christ was martyred and buried. The universally loved Pope John XXIII. In all Churches of the Diocese. The first of the nine daily Masses - Requiem Masses were scheduled for Pentecost. Every day in the Octave ot Pope ~~ll be bur~ed at 6 tonight in a time that would enable the largest Pentecost is a first class <feast and a-tradibonally prIvate ceremony and for the Pope will begin tomorrow. From number of parishoners to attend Requiems. are ordinarly prohibited on hts body will be placed in the crypt tomorrow a tall catafalque topped with of St. Peter's not far from the tomb the papal tiara or crown will stand and yet permit all the priests to be first class feasts.

<

of his predecessor, Pius XII. On Tue9dclY evening, in an outdoor procession, the Pope's body was »rought to St. Peter's from the Apostolic Palace where it. had lain in state since his death 011 ~onday night.

before the' altar where the body had been <placed... . . Already t~e Cardmals are begmnmg to meet dally to make plans for the June 19 conclave and to handle the Turn to Page< Thirteen

The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, June 6, 1963

Vol. 1, No. 24 ©

1963 The Anchor

PRICE lOc ....00 per Year

High Schools ]n Diocese To Grant 713 Diplomas Seven hundred and thirteen seniors will graduate from 11 high schools of the Diocese at ceremonies Sunday, June 9. and Monday, June 10. They include 308 boys and 405 girls. Holding its first graduation is Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth, torian and Anne Louise Gibbons which will have c~remonies will deliver the valedictory. in: the school auditorium at Class day at the Fall River 3 Sunday afternoon. Bishop schQol will take place at 3 to.

present at tonight's Mass at the Cathe­ dral. A special permission was granted by .the Sacred Congregation of Rites <to all < churches, chapels and <oratories throughout the world to have a Requiem for Pope John during the Octave of

Assisting Bishop Connolly at the

Mass Solemn Pontifical Requiem will

be Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros,

assistant priest; Rt. Rev. Leonard J.

Daley and Rt. Rev. Francis McKeon,

Turn to Page< Twenty-one

Death ,Erases Three 'Names 'In- Petto' VATICAN CITY (NC) ­ T h r e e churchmen who m Pope John XXIII picked to become cardinals three years ago lost their prospect of join­ ing the College of· Cardinals with· his death. It <was at the consistory of Mar. 28, 1960, when he published the names of seven other new cardinals, that Pope John reo vealed he had also chosen three others "in petto." The term is an Italian one meaning "in the breast"-or secretly. " If a Roman Pontiff announces the creation of a cardinal, but reserves the name to himself for special reasons, the person thus promoted does not enj oy the rights and privileges of cardi­ nals. But at the time the Pope does publish his name, he takes seniority over other cardinals created after the time of the reservation in petto.

In this case, however, the Pope died without publishing the names of the three in petto cardinals. Thus in effect their appointments to the College of Cardinals died with him.

A PRAYERFUL TRIBUTE TO A BELOVED POPE

Connolly will preside and con­ morrow afternoon, also in the , The last cardinal who was < chosen in petto was Frederico fer diplomas with Rev. Patrick auditorium. I. O'Neill, Diocesan superin­ .Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall < Cardinal Tedeschini, the Apos­ tendent of schools, as master River, will graduate 60 seniors tolic Datary who died in 1959. of ceremonies. John McDev­ at 2 Sunday afternoon in the Pope Pius XI chose him a car·

itt, former Waltham sUiPe~in­ school auditorium. Bishop Ger. dinal in petto on Mar. 13, 1933, tendent of schools and past rard will preside and confer die choosing to keep him in his post

chairman and present member plomas, with Rev. Paul McCar­ as Papal Nuncio to Spain. Pius Rev. Mr. John Francis Dias, C.S.C., son of Mrs. el. the Massachusetts Board of rick presenting the graduates to XI made his name public in the Education, will be the main him. Atty. Francis Meagher will consistory of Dec. 16, 1935, and Marianna Dias, 53 Ocean Grove Avenue, Swansea, will be 8Peaker. be main speaker. . he was automatically recalled ordained for the Congregation of Holy Cross Fathers at 10 Saturday morning, Jun~ 8 in the seminary chapel of St. 'Some 25 scholarships will be Turn to Page <Twelve to the Vatican. awarded to the school's 154 Joseph at North Easton by graduates, including full awards His Excellency, Most Rev. to Emmanuel, Boston College, James L. Connolly. He will Notre Dame, Holy Cross, Provi. offer his first solemn Mass dence, Salve Regina, Fordham at 11 Sunday morning, June 9 and Pueblo, Colo., in addition to at St. Michael's Church, Ocean many partial grants. Ocean Grove. Highest ranking graduates at Rev. Joseph A. Cournoyer. Stang are Teresa Bourgault, pastor, will be archpriest and Doris Prefontaine, Alfred Saul- < Rev. Dennis M. McNelis, C.S.C. ners, Janet Saulnier, Colette By Rev. Edward J. Mitchell By Russell Collinge will be deacon, with Richard J. Lemire, Lorraine Beaulieu and Vaughan, C.S.C. serving as su~ H Any day is a good day to be born," The tickets were pink, for seats one and Patricia Vogel. < Pope John had said on his 81st birthday, deacon. At Sacred He;lrts Academy, two in Section 27. The morning was 'clear Rev. Joseph F. Hanna, C.S.C. "and any day is a good· day to die." The will preach for the occasion. Fall River, 74 girls will graduate and bright with sunlight filling the whole at 3 Monday afternoon in the vast plaza of St. Peter's. A few people bells of Rome are now mournfully tolling A reception will follow the school auditorium. Rev. John H. moved aimlessly here and there and the group out the news that Pope John's "good day to die" Mass from 3 to 5 Sunday after­

Hackett will preside and Bishop of stout gentlemen, <each with his large briefcase . has finally come. As remarkable in death as he noon at White's restaurant.

Gerrard will confer diplomas. was <in life, the kindly shepherd of the flock

or small suitcase, had not yet broken off their Navy Veteran has at last laid down his staff and gone to meet Rev. Norman J. Ferris <will perpetual and seemingly violent argument and Rev. Mr. Dias is a graduate of the Good Shepherd. address the graduates. Special started their individual efforts to sell rosaries B. M. C. Durfee High School. The crowds of the faithful, which kept watch Fall River and of Thibodeau's bonors will go to Anne Louise and medals. The time was shortly before nine' - the in St. Peter's Square as the pontiff's life slowly Business School. He attended the Gibbons, Marlene Gauthier, Rita ebbed away, are returning to their homes. A School of St. Philip Neri for

Sullivan, Mary Beth Jette, Nancy month was March - the date the 27. A Wednes­ cloud of Sadness envelopes the Eternal City. Davis; Cornelia Adams, Mary day '" the day for public audience. It was a Delayed <Vocations, Stonehill

'It isn't fair," a woman said with tears in College and Holy Cross College.

Anne Latella, Margaret McCon. beautiful day, the -tickets were pink, safe in their folder, and ready for use. her eyes. "He made himself so close to us that Washingt~n, D. C. nell, and Diane Dube, scholar­ now it is like losing a member of our own We joined some other early arrivals in the ship winners; also to Susan A World War II Navy veteran, family." < Fagan, winner of an English outside corridor leading to the Bronze Door, the ordinand was institutional achievement award and Alana climbed the steps to the iron grille, and were "He was the best pope we ever had," said representative for the BOT Almeida, recipient of a home. told by the official on duty to come back about an old man. Sc04ts of St. Michael's parish maker award. What a contrast these words were to those and h" "l~n ~Pt'veil ". oocretar)' 11. of the Holy Name Socie~. Turn to Page Eighteen Diane Dube will be salutaTurn to Page Twenty~two

Bishop Connolly to Ordain 'Navy Veteran Saturday

<

-'

Two Recollections of Pope John: Past Audience---Present Sadness

,:"

<

I

J


~

i

2

THE ANCHOR- . Thurs., June 6, 19.63:'

:t,',

Marian Doctrine Major Obstacle To Protestants

sem­

WARWICK (NC)-A inary professor said here Catholics m u s t recognize that their devotions and doc­ trines about tbe Mother at Christ are a major obstacle to Protes­ tants in any talk of unity. Father John Randall of the faculty at Our Lady of Provi. dence Seminary here, 'One at three speakers at a meeting on "A Study of Mary," added that Catholics also must recognize the validity of Protestant objec­ tions. . Father Randall said there are ways in which Mariology can be made a help rather than a hindrance in the ecumenical movement. By recognizing Protesta'nt ob. jections and sharing Catholie beliefs with Protestants, Catho­ lics will make their own doc­ trine of Mary more solid and perhaps more appealing to Pro­ testants, he said. "Clean the coMvebs of! our Marian devotion and bring it up to date," he advised. He urged also doing away with excesses and becoming Christ-centered, "and then we will become more Marian." Thia ean be done, he said, by seeking .Christ and His voice everywhere -in the Bible, in church, in one'i neighbors.. "The persons who are closest to Christ· are closest to Mary even though they may not know :Mary," he declared. A nil: ~:er of Protestants at­ ~ended the meeting in response 10 an invitation from the dioc­ esan branch of the Legion 01. Mary, the sponsor.

POPE JOHN XXIlI AT HIS CORONATION - NOV. 4, 1958

Significo~t Do,tes in Life of Pope J~hn

Teacher, Chaplain, Diplomat, ~A·lways a Sheph.erd

The following· are significant dates in the life and career .of His ·Holiness Pope John XXIII:

NOV. 25, 1881 Born as Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli in Sotto il Monte in the proviIi,~e and Dio­ cese 9f Bergamo. The third of 13 chil­ dren of Giovanni and Maria Alina Roncalli and their first son. 1892 Entered minor seminary at Bergamo. 1898 . Received minor orders. 1900 Began theological studies ~~t Cerasola College in Rome. 1901 . Studies intel'TUpted by one year of military service. , AUG. 10, 1904 , Ordained in the Church of Santa Maria in Monte Santo, Rome. 1905-191~ _ Served as private secretary to Bishop Giacomo Radini-Tedeschi oj: Bergamo as professor of Church history, apolo­ getics and patrology at th4~ Bergamo seminary: Protestants, Jews 1915 To MQke Retreat Recalled to military service as a private FRESNO (NC) - Protestant in the medkal corps of the Italian and Jewish husinessmen will Army. Promoted to' sergeant-·major and join in a retreat the weekend of . then to a chaplaincy with the rank of June 7 at the Monterey-Fresno lieutenant. retreathouse for men, San Juan

Bautista. The idea of their participation was suggested by John J. Sulli_ van, a Catholic banker. Msgr. James G. Dowling, vicar general of the Galifornia See, extended a formal invitation in a letter to community leaders. . Several of thOSf who replied that they could not make the re­ treat asked that another be scheduled for them at a later date.

Necrology JUNE •

ttev. John S. Czerwonka, 1961, Assistant, St. Stanislaus, Fall River. JUNE 9

Rev. Timothy J. Calnen,' 1945, Pastor, St. Joseph, Woods Hole. JUNE 1.

Rev. William H. Curley, 1915, Pastor, SS. Peter &; Paul,l"all River.

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

June 9-SS. Peter and Paul, Fall River. LaSalette Shrine, Attle­ boro. St. Mary, Mansfield. Our Lady of Purgatory. New Bedford. June 16-Corpus .Christl, Sandwich. St. Elizabeth, Fall River. June 23-Blessed Sacrament,. Fall River. St. Mary, Norton. Sacred Heart, North At­ tleboro. June 30-8t. Mary, New Bed­ ford. -, St. Francis Xavier, Hyan­ nis. Holy Trinity, West Har. wich.

1918~1920

~eturned

to teaching at.. Bergamo seminary. MAY 7, 1921 'Named monsignor (domestic prelate). by Pope Benedict XV, and president of the Italian SOciety for the Plropagation of the Faith. 1925 Organized the Mission Exhibit in Rome for the 1925 Holy Year. MARCH 19, 1925 , Consecrated as Titular Bishop of Areo­ polis with the personal titll~ of. arch..; bish9P and named Apostolic Visitor to Bulgaria. OCT. 16, 1931 Appointed firBt Apostolic Delegate to Bulgaria. NOV. 21, 1934 . Named Apostolic Delegate to Greece . and Turkey and appointed Apostolic . Administrator of the Latin :Rite Vica­ riate Apostolic. of Constantinople. DEC. 22, 1944. Appointed' by Pope Pius XII as Apos­ tolic Nuncio to France. JUNE 1951 , Named by Pius XII as the Holy See's first permanent observer at the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNE:SCO). NOV. 29, 1952 Named to Sacred College of Cardinals. JAN. 15, 1953 Appointed as Patriarch of Venice. OCT. 1954 Served as Papal Legate. to the Marian , '. Year Congress in Beirut, Lebanon. MARCH 25, 1958 , . . Went to Lourde~, on ~he lOOth anni­ versary , of the \ apparjtion9 of St. ·Berriadette there, ~ consecrate the un­ 'deground 'Basilica of St. :Piu;~ X. ' OCT. 25, 1958 Entered 78th conclave to eleet a Pope. .OC'J'•.~ 1958· Elected 88 Pope. Took naRM~ of Joh.

XXIIL .

NOV. 4, 1958 ._ Crowned as Pope in St. Peter's basilica. DEC. 15, 1958 .Created 21 new cardinals and named two more "in secret." JAN. 26, 1959 Announced' intention to summon an Ecumenical Council. APRIL 12, 1959 , Canonized SS. Charles of Sezze ami Joaquina de Vedruna de Mas. JUNE 29, 1959 Issued his first encyclical, "Ad Petri Cathedram." AUG. 1, 1959 Issued his second encyclical, "Sacer­ dotii Nostri Primordia." SEPT. 26, 1959 • Issued his third encyclical, "Grata Reeordatio." OCT. 11, 1959 Presided at centenary eelebratioDs at the North American College in Rome. NOV. 28, 1959 Issued his fourth encyclical, "Princeps Pastorum." DEC. 14, 1959

Created eight new cardinals.

MARCH 28, 1960 Created seven 'new cardinals, bringing college of cardinals to record total of 85 members. MAY 8, 1960 Consecrated 14 missionary bishops in St. Peter's basilica. MAY 27, 1960 Canonized Gregory Barbarigo. JUNE 12, 1960 Canonized John de Ribera. JAN. 16, 1961 . Created four new cardinals. MAY 11, 1961 .. Canonized Bertilla Bosca~din. JULY 14, 1961 Issued his fifth encyclioal, "Mater et Magistra." SEPT. 29, 1961 Issued Apostolic Letter on the Rosary. NOV. 11, 1961 ' . . Issued his sixth encylical, Aeterna Dei Sapientia (The Eternal Wisdom of God).

MARCH 19, 1962 . Created ten. new cardinals, bringing the college of cardinalS to~a new record. total of 87 members. . MAY 2, 1962 .' . Canonized Blessed' Martiri .~ Potres, Negro Dominican Brother. . JULY. 1, 1962. '" . .' Issued his seventh encyclical, Paeni­ tentiam Agere (Practice .of Penan"ce by the World). ' '. OCT. 11, 1962 Opened the Second Vatlcail.:·Council,in Rome., . . . MARCH 17, 1963,. Beatification of Mother Seton.... APRIL 10, 1963 . Pacem in Terris Encyclical. First En-, cyclical addressed not only to Catholics but also to all men of good will.. The Encyclical was dated April' 11; 1963 but issued the previous day. MAY n, 1963 Pope John's~rsistant efforts 'for peace was recognized when ,he received the $160,000 Balzan Peace ..Prize~He was the first person to receive the award. The Holy Father immediately announced that he would use the' prize money to create "a pertpe,~ual funci ia fa¥or of peace... .'. .

Men. :Will·Hear .. Boston Doctor

Dr. Frederick Rosenheim, BO&­ ton psychiatrist, will address the Men's Club of Sacred Heart par- ' ish, Fall River, at a communion breakfast following 9 o'clock Mass this Sunday morning. Dr. Rosenheim, who last spoke in this area at a joint Serra Club meeting in Taunton in 1959, has been associated since' 1946 with the Boston College School of S0­ cial Work, where he lectures 011. psychiatry. A convert from Judaism, he br a former director of the Judge Baker Child Guidance Center in Boston. He is a graduate of Co­ lumbia University School of Medicine. His professional affil­ iations include membership in the Boston Psychoanalytic So-.· cielyand the. American Ortho­ psychiatric Association. To Install Members of the club will meet at 8:30 in Ruggles Park to march to Mass...rr'he breakfast will also feature installation of Willard Piper as new president· of the unit. Dr. John E. Manning wiD introduce Dr. Rosenheim. Tickets are available frOlll Piper, 547 Robeson Street, Den­ nis Hurley, 90 Winter Street,and from Sacred Heart Rectory.

Plan) Medical Plan For Mi~rant Labor MONTELLO (NC) - Catholte groups here in Wisconsin will be asked to organize a compre­ hensive program of medical caJ'e for migrant farm workers durin« the Summer months. Details. of such,. medical pro­ ,gmm were discussed at . the Spring meeting here at the Wi.. eonsin Bishops' Migrant Com­ mission. The commission reco~ mended that planning be done DOW, 90 that such a program tlOuld be i'nstituted in 1964, whee Federal funds would . become available.

MaslOrdo FRIDAY - Ember Friday After Pentecost. I Class. Red. Mag Proper; Gloria;' Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc. of Pente­ cost. Votive Mass in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus not permitted. SATURDAY - Ember Saturday After Pentecost. I Class, Red. M ass Proper; Gloria; Se-. qU!!DCe;' Creed; Preface, ete. of Pentecost. The Celebrant may omit the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th lessons with their ver~ si,cles and prayers appointed for this dtly. The first lessoll and the Epistle,'however, must be said, SUNDAY-The Most Holy Trin­

ity. I Class. White. Ma."s Prop.

er; Gloria; Creed; 'Preface of

Trinity.

MONDAY-St Margaret, Quees and Widow. III Class. White~ Mass Proper; Gloria; ne' Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY~St. Barnabas, Ap«»­ tie. III Class. Red.' Mass Prop.. er;Gloria; Creed; Preface 01.' Apostles.. WEDNESDAY-St. John 01 sa. Facundus, Confessor..III, Class.' . White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second. Collect 5S:' Basilidea and COMpanions; Martyrs; no Creed; Common Preface. THURSDAY---:Corpus ·Christi. I

Class. White. Mass Proper;

Gloria; SequenCe; Creed; Com;.

moo Preface: In the' MaS.

.which is followed' 1. \,' . the Procession, the Ceiebrant·' sings Benedicamus' Domino, and the Last Blessing and Lasi . Gospel are omitted.

Pre-Cana Confe're'nce A Pre..cana .Conferepce . tot ... .engaged couples will'be held' at' . 7 Sunday night, June 9'at sacred . Heart .school auditorium,' FaU' River.·' . , ..

M-K Restauran,-. ..',

"f"tUrinl '.'

''The Gaslight.oom':1 Ideal

for

'COmmumoD

Brea.~

futa. Organhiatlcm B.nq,ueta

H6'A~~e;.'Ave. ',. N. .·,....,..·

.cal. WYman! 2....703·


Cardinal. RiHer

tHE ANCHOIt..:.

Thurs., June 6, 1963

Scores Cr~elty Of Seg regation

Recollection Day .For Girl Scouts

ST. LOUIS (NC)-Joseph . Oardinal Ritter charged here that "the weapons of segre,­ gation, discrimination and ec&nomic oppression can be everY bit as cruel as gas cham­ bers and concentration camps." Dismissing the doctrine of racial superiority as "insane," the Archbishop of St. Louis arged citizens to unit in a "holy discontent" at instances of race prejudice. "We can never rest content 10 long as injustice remains," Cardinal Ritter told the St. Louis Conference on Religion end Race held here. The Cardinal said racism is being practical in St. Louis as In other parts of the country. He particularly singled out bousing discrimination for con­ demnation and said it is esti­ mated that 70 per cent of aU Negro homes in St. Louis are in MOlighted" areas. .Church Approach "Surely it is a grave injustice end discrimination when one segment of' our population in this area is forced because of economic conditions to live in SUbstandard dwellings, or even more so when that segment is denied freedom of housing be­ cause of public sentiment and by the' manipulation of unscrupul­ ous . and greedy realtors," he aid.

Outlining the approach of the ehurch to such problems 'as racial discrimination, he com­ mented: "The Churdl is DOt and auld not be a power bloc, eapable of forcing compliance with directives of its leadership. "Rather, it is for the Church 10 enunciate principles and their application to modern problems clearly and without equivoca­ tion, leaving it to men of the Church as free citizens to de­ yJse the most effective means of applying them to concrete lIi·fuations."

Philadelphia to Try Shared-Time Plan PHILADELPHIA (N <;:) _ Public and Catholic school of­ ficials here are proceeding with plans to launch a major shared­ time experiment next Fall. . The first participants will be lOth grade pupils from the 12 Catholic high schools in Phila­ delphia. They will enroll in two public technical high schools for voca­ tional courses not offered in Catholic schools. They will ~nd half of each day in the public schools and the other half in their own high schools. Eight hundred Catholic high school pupils have expreSsed an interest in taking the vocational eourses, according to Msgr. Ed­ ward T. Hughes, diocesan super­ Intendent of schools, who said the pupils probably will have to arrange their own transporta­ tion between schools.

Over 300 Girl Scouts and leaders were in attendance at a . day of recollection held at Our Lady of the Lake day· camp for New Bedford area members of the organization. The program included an opening ceremony, and an out­ door Mass sung by Rev. William McMahon, assisted by Rev. James Lyons,' Taunton area Scouting chaplain. The Mass was offered for the Holy Father by the Scouts. A conference by Rev. Walter Sullivan, D i 0 c e san Scouting chaplain, emphasized the' har­ ~ mony of the Girl Scout promise and laws with the teachings of the Church. A tour of the day camp followed the conference and girls also participated in a singing session, highlighted by the rendition of one hymn in five languages: Polish, French, Portuguese, English and Latin. Living Rosary Sister William. Catherine of the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity conducted a closing ceremony consisting of a living rosary. The traditional Goodnight Circle of Girl Scout­ ingwas directed by Mrs. Ralph Patunoff North Attleboro, and benediction was celebrated by Laughlin, Father McMahon.

GROUNDBREAKING FOR NEW ATTLEBORO CHURCH: Rev. John pastor of the Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro, turns over the first shovel of dirt as work is started on the erection of a new Church to supplant the old one built in 1921. Left to right: Rev. Edward Sharpe, assistant; Father Laughlin; members of the construction staff.

.Set Closing'Mass At No. Attleboro The Ozanam School of Charity sponsored by Attleboro Particu­ lar Council of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul will hold closing exercises at Sac red H ear t Ohurch, North Attleboro. Friday night, June 21, feast of the Sacred Heart. Bishop Connolly will preside at a Mass scheduled for 8 o'Clock, . which will be celebrated by Rev. William D. Thomson, Diocesan Director for Vincentians~ Supper will follow in the parish hall, with Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson as toastmaster. Reservalions deadline is Mon­ daY,June 17. Reservations may be made through conference presidents. Wives and guests of members are invited to attend.

R. A. WILCOX .CO.

OFFICE FURNITURE

ia Stock f.r I......'. D.llnl7

• DESKS • CHAIRS FILING CABINETS • FIRE FILES • SAPIS FOLDING TABLES AND CHAIRS

R. A. WI"COX CO. 22 BEDFORD ST• • ALl RIVER 5·7131

Lowell Priest Heads St. James Society LIMA (NC) -

Father John

Darned superior in Peru of the

Society of St. James the Apostle, founded by . Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston. Father Thomas will direct the tlCtivities of 43 American priests assigned to 14 parishes in this South American country. He will also serve as liaison officer be­ tween St. James missioners here and Cardinal Cushing. Father Rudolph Masciarelli, who had served as superior in Peru since the U.S. congrega­ tion began its work here in 1959, bas been assigned as pastor of Christ the King parish in Neg­ ritos, where Father Thomas w. pastor for two ·years. The St. James missionaries, who have 11 more priests etudying languages at theit' training center .in Cieneguilla, will soon begin work in a 15th parish in Pampa de Comas north el Lima

His ~ HolinesS Pope John XXIII

LARIVIERE'S

It Thomas of Lowell has been ~i8Sionary congregation

General chairman for the event, planned to be held annu­ ally, was Mrs: Theodore Aleixo, Taunton.

Pharmacy

' ....cription. called .... and delive'ed· , HEADQUARTERS POR DIETETIC 'SUPPLIES

600 Cottage St. WY 4-74"

New Bedford

1881-1963

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •1

~'4 BARBER SHOP 1122 RIVERSIDE AVENUE . SOMERSET

IIIIt lortlI If .,....tmIn strelt-lr"

MEN'S - BOYS' - INFANTS' CHILDREN'S BARBERING SERVICES OPEl ':00 A.M. - ':00 P....

TUES. THIU SAT.

-~

NEW ENGLAND

.


THE ANCHOR-Dioc4;!se of .FolJ River-Thurs., June 6, 1963 . . ,

Korean Fr. Kijun,. Once Believed

Killed, Marks 50th Anniversary

~

The Parish Parade

HOLY ROSARY. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER NEW BEDFORD New officers of the Women's New officers of the Women's Guild are Mrs. Roger Toni, Guild wiil be installed at '1 president; Mrs. William Bosi, Monday night, June 10 at White's vice-pr~ident; Mrs. Raymond restaurant. To be seated are Mrs. McGuire, treasurer; Mrs. James Russell Nelson, president; Mrs. Amarantes, secretary. Roland Blanchard,' vice-presi­ SACRED HEART, dent; Mrs. Mark Sevigney, re­ NORm ATTLEBORO cording secretary; Mrs. Knut The Bishop will preside at an Benes, treasurer. 8 o'clock evening Mass Friday, Thirty-seven cub scouts of June 21, feast of the Sacred Pack 18 were hosts to their" Heart, and patronal feast of the fathers at the second annual parish. Forty Hours Devotion Communion Breakfast on Sun­ will begin with 11 o'clock Mass day morning. Certificates were Sunday morning, June 23. presented to cubmasters and den New members will be received mothers. . into the 'Ladies of St. Anne SS. PETER & PAUL, Sodality Friday, July 26, feast FALL RIVER of St. Anne. ~.Officers of the Knigpts of the

Parochial school graduation Altar are Michael Kearns, pres­

ceremonies will be held at 8 .ident; Raymond Giroux, vice­ Monday night, June 17 in the president; Charles Maitland, sec­ church. Following the cere. retary;Francis Taylor, treasurer. BISHOP ARRIVES: The monies, prizes 'will be awarded, ST. THERESE, first native Icelandic bishop a scholarship winner announced, NEW BEDFORD since the Reformation, the and a social will be held, all in The Couples Club announces Most Rev. J ohamles Gun­ the parish hall. a "Cotton Frolic" dance from 8 New members will be receive.d to 12 Saturday night, June 8 at narsson, S.M., right, Bishop. into the Holy Name Society.fol­ the Fireside- restaurant, West. (llf Reykjavik, Iceland, ar­ lowing 7 o'clock Mass Sunday port. In charge are Mr. and Mrs. rives at New York Inter­ Ralph LeBlanc, aided by a large Ilational Airport for dedica­ . morning, June 9. Mrs. Raymond Collard a~d committee. Proceeds will bene­ tion ceremonies at the new Mrs. Roland Tondrault· will be fit the parish building fund. Montfort Fathers' seminary, in charge of the social following 'ST. 'jOHN BAPTIST, the elementary schOOl gradua. CENTRAL VILLAGE . nay Shore, N.Y. He was met tion scheduled for the 17th of T~o ,e~en'ts will highlight by Father Roger M. Charest, June.

. Saturday, June 8 for the Worn. 8.M.Fall River native and ST. MICHAEL,

en's Guild. From 8:30 to 2 a llrovincial superior of the rummage sale will be held in OCEAN GROVE

Montfort Fathers. NC Photo. Annual parish bazaar and the church hall 'and at'8 Satur­ penny sale are set for Thursday day 'night a whist party will take through Saturday, July 4 place, also. iri the hall. Mrs. Es­ through 6, on the school grounds. 'telle Ferreira and Mrs. Muriel White's Farm Dairy General chairman is Gilbert Rogers' ate' chairmen of' the "SPECIAL MILK Howarth, aided by a large com- - .latter .activity. mittee. Parishioners wishing to ST.: FRANCIS, FromOu'r Own

assist with the project may con­ NEW BEDFORD Tested Herd"

tack Rev. Richard P. Demers or 'Ne~ 'Ladies League officers Ac~ihnet, Mass. WY 3-4457

Jos~ph Cyr. . are Mrs. Libera Busnengo.. pres­ ident; Mrs. ~obert Morelli, vice­ ST. JOSEPH, • Special Milk . ATTLEBORO 'pr~sident; Mrs. Anthony P. Car­ • Homogenized Vit.·D Milk New CYO officers are John. dulIo, treasurer; Mrs. Lionel J. • Buttermilk Cummings, president; Denise Neron and Mrs~Joseph Galipeau, • Tropicana Orange Juice Perry, vice-president; Paula ·secretar·ies. • Coffee and Choc. Milk Goulet, secretary; Michael No. ST. JOSEPH;' • Eggs '.... Butter lan, treasurer. FALL RIVER The unit plans carwashes Sat­ Cub Scouts will conduct a urday, June 8 and Saturday, paper drive Sunday, June 9. June 15, from 9 to 2. They will CYO Juniors will sponsor a be held beside the church. Girl dance from 7 until 10 tomorrow Where A members will represent the CYO night at the Brightman Street at a field day Saturday, June 22. parish hall. Volunteers are requested to aid in leadership of a Girl Scout ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT troop. Lane's restaurant, Tiverton, Fall RI'ver fl'r e de p a r t men t Means A will be the scene Tuesday night, members will hold their annual June 25 of the installation ban­ memorial Mass at 9:30 Sunday quet of the Women's Guild. morning, June 9 at St. Joseph's Members traveling by bus will Also on Sunday, the Women's meet at 7 at the parish hall. Mrs. Guild will conduct its annual Warren L. E. Johnson is in InS . tall a t·Ion b anque. t charge of installation arrange­ ments and Mrs. James Stedman ST. PATRICK. will serve as chairman. F ALL RIVER Parish Cub Scouts will visit ST. JOHN BAPTIST, Cathedral Camp and Newport NEW BEDFORD Naval Base this month. Also on The Couples Club will meet their program is a tour of the Saturday, June 22. New Bedford Whaling Museum. ST. WILLIAM,

FALL RIVER

Competition Keen InStallation ceremonies and LOS ANGELES (NC)---Qltho­ dinner for the Women's Guild are set for 7 Monday night, June lic high schools of the Los An­ 10 at Sunderland's restaurant. geles archdiocese wiU graduate In charge of reservations are 6,700 boys and girls in June. The Open Evenings Mrs. Leo Hayes and Mrs. John places they vacate will be sought by 14,580 eighth graders from )\Ialgieri. 263 parochial elementary schools NOTRE DAME,

FALL RIVER

YOURS TO LOVE AND TO GIVEI The Council of Catholic Women the lif. of a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL lclvo God

announces a June Basket whist "'0", and lIiv. to .oul. know". alld IeYO of

party for 7:30 Saturday night, God by "FYinll Him ill a Million which "'" the

June 8 in Notre Dame SChool ;~r.lI. Radio, Mcition Pldures and ·tv,' tli bring hall on St. Joseph Street. Theme Hi. Word to .ouls .vorywh.... Zealous young . will be bridal and graduation girls. 14-23 y.a... inter..ted in thi.' unique baskets and Mrs. Lucien Rous­ Apo.tolo'. moy writ. to: seau and Mrs. Robert Messier, REVEREND MOTHER SUPERIOR

eo-chairmen, announce that over DAUGHTERS' OF 51. PAUL

.100 baskets will be awarded. 50 ST. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 10, MASS.

'Tickets will be available at the door. ,ST. PATRICK, FALMOUTH . The annual Father and Son Communion Breakfast will be held Sunday morning following the 9 o'clock Mass. Joe Mullaney, Providence College basketball coach, will be the guest speaker.. . The new slflte of officers will be presented at the breakfast. They are: Richard Pratt, presi­ dent; Harold McCormick, vice­ president; Austin Stokes, treasu­ UNION WHARIF, FAIRHAVEN rer; JoseIlh Rose, secretary.

SEOUL (NC)-Father Thomas Lee Kijun, 79, fo~ whom a Re­ quiem was offered in the· Sum­ 'mer of 1950 when North .Korean communists controlled most of South Korea;. celebrated <the 50th anniver~ of 'hie' ordination here. Father Lee was Vicar General of Seoul's apostolic vicariate when North Korean communists invaded South Korea in' 1950. Archbishop Paul RO .of Seoul, who was then Apostolic Vicar of Seoul, was in Rome for his "ad limina" visit and Father Lee was in charge of the vicariate.

A Requiem was offered for him in Pusan when it was re.­ ported that he had been shot. But Father Lee was found stiB running the vicariate whea Seoul was liberated. Among those present for tba jubUee celebration in Immacu­ late Conception Cathedral here were A-chbishop Ro; Arch­ bishop Antonio Del Guidice, Apostolic Delegate in Korea; and John M. Chang, former prime minister of Korea.

ATWOOD

OIL COMPANY

Norris H. Tripp

SHELL

SHEET METAL J. TESER, Prop.

RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL' COMMERCIAL,

253 Cedar St. New Bedford WY 3-3222 .,

FIRST

HEATING OILS.

,

.

South •. Sea Sts. Tel. HV $1

Hyannis

NATIONAL BANK . FOR .FAMILY BANK.lNG

ATTLEBORO.' SO. ATTLEBORO • SEEKONK MEMBER F DI C

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

ANDERSON & OLSEN

INDUSTRiAL and DOMESTIC

HEATIN.G - PIPING and

AIR CONDITIONING

CONTRACTORS

312 Hillman St.

WY 7-9162

New Bedford

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

GOOD NAME

GREAT DEAL

IGEO. O'HARA

CHEVROLET

KING $IZE:lb.

565 MILL STREET

POPE JOHN XXIII

NEW BEDFORD -

Pontifex Maximus

39

C

.

Maclean's Sea Foods

May He

R~st

in Peace

LINCOLN pARI{

ROUTE 6

NORTH DARTMOUTH


.Church in Latin' An,erica

Major Concern of Pope

By Fr. 10hn J.

Considin~

Illinois Senate .Curbs Tax-Paid Birth Control

M.M.

J

NCWC News Service

The need to strengthen the Church in Latin America was an intense concern of Pope John XXIII; This concern was, manifested in one of the first acts of his pontificate,' and in one of the last. Only 30 days after his coronation Pope John told Latin Ameri­ Latin ~merica, he congratulated ean bishops assembled in .the prelates on the "exemplary , Rome of his "very affection~ fruits of a living charity" rep"­ ate concern" and "very spe­ . resented by the increasing num­ etal solicitude" for the problems they .faced and for their efforts '110 meet them. As late as Aprn, 1963, the Pon­ wrote to the Bishops and Religious superiors in the U,S. • thank them for their genero­ aty in responding to his ap­ peals for Latin America, and to wge them ~ persevere fr~­ _ntly" in this aid. AsslstaDee Programs In November of 1959, at the 1Il'ging of lI'lS Holiness, repre­ sentatives of the Hierarchies of Latin America, Canada and the United States met at Geor,ge­ .wn University in Washington, D.C., to consider the grave dif­ ficulties of the Church in Latin

".ff

~erica.

An outcome of the meeting wes the establishment of as­ '.istance pro g ram .for Latin America in the United States and Canadawhicll marked the beginning of national level :,48­ elstance prograDlS throughout the world. , A total ot. 13 countries has andertaken such programs­ Cermany, Spain, Italy, Holland, Belgium, France, England, Ire­ land, A u s t ria, Switzerland, Malta, Call6da and the United States. On Marcil 25, 1960, Pope John .Ued together in Rome the teneral superiors of men's' and women's religious orders and eongregatiOl18 as well as the lay institulies and klid before ~em the immense needs of the ioatin . American continent. In view of the urgent difficul­ lies existing, he stated, colla­ boration with the Latin Ameri­ can Church could not "be limited to the very notable efforts put' eorth up to the present • .... Per­ IIOnnel must in fact be sent there :In the greatest number pos­ lible • ..." Fruits of Charity On Dec. 20, 1960, he addressed • letter to 1lhe Hierarchy of Canada. Expressing his joy over Ole recent creation of a Cana­ dian Episcopal Commission for

Vincentian, Too LOS ANGELES (NC)-James :l'll'ancis Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles, has been named an affiliate member of the Congregation of the Mis­ sion, popularly known as the Yincentian Fathers.

ber of priests, religious and lay collaborators sent from Canada to Latin America, provision by Canadian seminaries of 'scholar­ ships for Latin American semi­ narians, and the ·recently un­ dertaken erection and main­ tenance by the Canadian Epis­ copate of • seminary in Latin' Amei-ica. As one of his lastoffidal acts, Pope Jobn on April 21, 1963, addressed a letter to the Most Reverend Ordinaries and Major Superiors of the Reli~ious Con­ gregations of the United State•• . Urges Perseverance "We are heartily grateful," said the Holy Father, "for the ready generosity of proposals and actual achievements by which the Church in your coun­ try .... has once again re­ sponded to Our heartfelt ap­ peals. ". • • We are prompted to ex­ press once more Our sincere thankfulness • .. • and' also to . send Our words' of encourage­ ment to persevere fervently therein. The most serious prob­ lem to be workd on in Latin America, nam·ely the shortage of clergy, is still far from its hoped­ for solution. We obtained autho­ ritative and sorrowful Confirma­ tion of this from the Latin American Bishops who came to Rome for the Ecumenical Coun­ cil ••• "We ask you, Beloved Son (0ardinal Cushing), 'to convey to the Bishops and Religious Supe­ riors of the United States the concern and the hopes We have expressed to yOll, and to examine with them the best ways .of achieving ever greater results."

SpaINGFIELD (NC) The State Senate has voted almost unanimously to limit . sharply the new program of

PARlSH TESTIMONIAL: Parishoners of St. Mary's Parish, New B~ford, gathered Sunday to bid farewell to Rev. James· A..Clark, parish assia.tant, as he was to report to Washington as assistant director of the Latin America Bureau program; Left to right: Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Con­ sidine, Diocesan Director of the Propagation of the Faith; the mother and father of Father Clark.

Volu'nteers To Spend .Summer On Projects in EI Salvador RAMSEY (NC)-Twenty-three suggested is the procurement young men and women aged 20 and installation of a submergible to '28 have volunteered to spend pump to obtain fresh drinking six weeks on construction and water for villagers who now use social work withou~ pay in El the same stream for sewage and for drinking. Salvador this Summer. Pay Transportation They were recruited by the In another village, YCW mem. Young Christian Worker group at St. Paul's parish in this New bers will build a small adobe . school and help get a chicken Jersey community. farm started. In another place They learned of the El Salva­ they hope to build a small clinic dor needs through Joseph Bat­ to be serviced by Sisters. taglia,director of the Catholic In a slum area, girls "'among Relief Services-National Cath. the volunteers will give hy­ . olic Welfare Conference. pro­ gienic education, distribute food gram in that country. Battaglia and teach catechism. moved into St. Paul's parish at a The volunteers will live with time when the YeW group was native families in some cases, looking for a Summer I?roject in, Catholic schooi dormitories as a follow up to the work done elsewhere. The)' will pay their in Mexic~ last Summer. . . own transportation costs, about One of the jobs that has been $300 per person.

tax-supported b i r t h control among public relief recipients. The Senate approved by a vote of 45 to 2 a' bill to prohibit the Illinois Public Aid Commission from giving birth control infor. mation and contraceptives to unmarried mothers or to mar­ ried women living apart from their husbands. '.# Issues Injunction The proposal would permit use of tax funds to support a birth control program only for women on relief who are living with . their husbands and who request state assistance. The bill's sponsor, Sen. Mor­ gan M~ Finley of Chicago, told the Senators that the commis­ sion's original plan to finance birth control for unmarried mothers and women living away from their husbands would in. volve "the expenditure of public funds to 'foster, condone and even encourage immorality." In Chicago Superior Court Judge John J. Lupe said he would issue a temporary injunc­ tion to stop the birth control program, which began April 1.

Vocations Campaign ST. PAUL· (NC)-More than 20,000 volunteers called on some 132,000 homes in the St. Paul archdiocese 'in the annual cam­ paign for the support of reli­ gious . vocations. They asked Catholics in the 212 parishes of the archdiocese to pray for the incx:ease of vocations and to give financial aid for the training of. seminarians and Religious.

Graymoor Priest Wins Marian Award DA YTON (NC) - Father Titus F. Cranny, S.A., of Gray­ moor, Garrison, N.Y" was named winner of the University of Dayton's 1963 Marian Library Medal. Presentation was made at the 11th annual Marian Institute, sponsored by the university's Mari,an Library. The medal goes each year to the author of the preceding year's best book in English about the Vir gin Mar y. Father Cranny's "Our Lady and Re­ union" was this year's winning book.

PONTIFEX MAXIMUS

IN MEMORIAM

.~gelo

'Giuseppe .Roncalfi

POPE JOHN "XXIII POPE JOHN' xxm

Pontifex Maximus'

F. A. FOREST CO.-SULLIVAN'S

FALL RIVER-HYANNIS

5

THE ANCHOR­ Th~rs". Jun~ 6, 1963

Requiescat in. Pace

WM.

T. MAN N liNG

co.

FALL RIVER-NEW BEDFORD-HYANNIS-NEWPORT


6

'Our Brother' Is Deacl'

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs., June 6, "63

btets" PAVU

"• • • Whose Name Was John" " ... tend the flock of God which is among you, gov­ erning not by constraint, but willingly, according to GOd; nor yet for base gain, but, eagerly; nor y~t. a,<; lording it' over your charges, but becoming from the heart a pattern to the flock. And when the Prince of shepherds appears, you will receive the unfailing crown of glory."

As the sun began to fade from the great dome of St.

Peter's in Rome Monday, the two hundred and sixty-second

shepherd of the flock of Christ was called home by the

Prince of shepherds. Having born in his person that image of a shepherd that St. Peter called upon his brother bishops to be, he surely received from the hands of the Good Shepherd the crown of unfailing glory. At his coronation Mass, Pope John had insisted: "To us, the function of the Pope is to be a shepherd to the whole of his flock. ... The central point is the zeal of the shepherd, the zeal which is ready for any undertaking, however delicate, which is single-minded and -constant, however great the sacrifice."

Pope John was the shepherd, the world was his flock. And he was - from the heart - a pattern to the flock. To prisoners he could say simply, "You could not come to me so I have come to you." Speaking of ehildren he recalled that, like a .baby, . sleep did not always come to him in the night, and in those hours of dark wakefulness

he prayed for all the .babies born into the world that day.

Drawing the non-Catholic Council observers around him­ self in the intimacy of a family circle, he poured out his soul to them in the words, "There burns in my heart the intention of working and suffering to hasten the hour when for all men the prayer of Jesus at the Last Supper will have reached its fulfillment - 'That all may be one.''' The world of John's reign was a world of progress,of technological advances, of scientific achievments, of won­ derful strides of human endeavor. He captured the hearts of men by becoming from the heart a pattern to the flock. . He showed that men, all men, look to and touched by good­ ness and simplicity and humility. His touch went beyond the minds of men and reached deep into their hearts. It is not exaggerating to say that seldom in the history of humanity. has there been so much rove for one man and so much sorrow at his passing. It is not exaggerating to say that because of Pope John, the world carinot be the same again. The rare combination of the man and the office made an imprint on the hearts of millions and on history. Speaking the universal language of charity with sim­ plicity and sincerity, he initiated within the Church a re­ newal and in his person showed to those not of the Catholic Faith what he once expressed as the only epitaph he de­ sired - "a true priest before God and men, a true lover of all nations." Pope John was always himself. He on-ce ~id that simplicity meant being natural, and the natural was touched by the divine, for it was of God. During the· last several days of his illness, many persons throughout the world prayed to God for a miracle. They pleaded that it might be the Will of God to grant a dramatic restoration of strength to Pope John, that he might serve, yet a little while longer, the flock committed to his care. People prayed for something exceptional,' something extraordinary, from God. How many realized that, in a s'ense, God had already anticipated and answered their pleas? Had already given them the exceptional, the extraordinary? The answer was given in the words that drifted through loudspeakers into the -dying Pontiff's bedroom, fro~ the Mass said on the steps of St. Peter's. The Pope died just. as the Last Gospel of the Mass was being said. And the words which might well have been the final ones echoing around the person of the dying Servant of the Servants of God were the prophetic words of the Beloved Apostle writing from across the centuries, words that sum up how, in this age, God had already answered the prayers of men for the exceptional, the extraordinary:

REV: JAMES A. CLARK Assistant, St. Mary's Church New Bedford

Assistant Director

LQtin American Bureau, NCWC

The Sign Magazine for May has an excellent article along with pictures com­ paring the Peace CorPs and

C'rhnou.q.h .the Wu:k With the Chu.nch By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University

"

,

TODAY-Pentecost Thursday. The ECUInEmic.al Council has madE! all Catholics more aware of the meanin~ and function of the bishop in the Church. If we have ever been tempted to think of him in terms belonging to a secular administrator, today's Gospel in Pentecost week force­ fully reminds us that ~his au­ thority and presidency is itself a work of the Spirit and not merely a matter of organization. "Andl the crowds with one ac­ cord gavE. heed to what was said by Philip" (First Reading). For the Catholic, this is a normal' means of discerning the Spirit's voice,. TOMORROW - Ember Friday after .Pentecost. The great em­ phasiis in the Masses of this week on visible evidence (miracles, etc.) of the Spirit's presence may tempt us to tnink His presence capricious. But the real test of the c:ertainty of His indwelling, as we can see in the lessons of the week, is love of Christ, com. . mittE!d discipleship, faith. Then He and the Father come to us, and wJth them the Holy Spirit. Evidences of miracll]~ll~' powr>r are not the necessary fruit of this indwelling. Rather is it that the :Spiri' "will recall w your minds everything that I have taught you." EI\'[BER SATURDAY AFTER. PEN'rECOST. - (Ordinarily, the second to the fifth lessons are omittect.) "The charity of God is pour~d forth in our hearts by his Spirit dwelling within us" (Entrance Hymn and Second Reading). The indwelling .and grac(~ of which we must be fresh­ ly cc,nscious this Pentecost week mean hope and dignity, mean fervent cultivation of the means "There was a man, for increasing and strengthening ene sent from .God, His presence: worship, sacra­ whose -name was John." men1:s, prayer, dedicated work, reve;rent personal relationships. TI!~INITY SUNDAY-A unity of b,~ing so rich, so far beyond the things of our human experi­ ence or the categories of our human thought,. that threeness does not contradict oneness is the mystery the Church hymns in its public worship today. OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVEI. The Father's love has become visible to us in the Incarnation Publilhed weeKly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of fall liver of the Son and together they have poured the Holy Spirit inw ~10 Highland Avenue our hearts--from Advent until Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 Pentecost we have celebrated PUBLISHER and' made liturgically present MOlt Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0.. PhD. this history of salvation. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Now we begin a period of Aev. Daniel f. Shellao. M.A. Rev. John P. Drilcoll more exclusive attention to its M"'·'· ""NG E'I' ITOR present effects. The fact that Hugh J. Golden saJvOltion is both .. mystery and

@rheANCHOR

utterly God's free gift is the burden of the First Reading. The Gospel proclaims Jesus' cem­ ·mand to make universal among the human species the divine -in­ dwelling and his promise: "I.am with you all through the daYll that are coming until the con­ ,summation of the world." M 0 N DAY - St. Margal'et, Queen, Widow. "Things new and old" (Gospel) belong fiG the man of faith. And they belong to the liturgy, t<l the public worship ~f .the "kingdom" as we know it now, as well. Bible readings .and bymns, prayers hoary with the age .and collective, wisdom of many Christian generatWns,symbols and signs as old as the recor-ded . story of man, sacramental rites 'which make present God's Ili-s­ toric saving deeds--at wONOhip we are one with the race aereSl'l time. Yet the new is present also-­ in the presence and activity. the prayer and song, of this Hving congregation, in preaching, in those spontaneous expressioll1l which at least traditionally hav~ been a part of the liturgy, in ~r petitiOI:S, our gifts, the life ~nti love and unity we build up and share.

TUESDAY -

St. Barnabas,

Apostle. The Gradual Hymn af­

the Papal Volunteers. The story has a description of a Papal Vol­ Wlteer nurse ­ Virginia Jack­ son - in Peru <ind a descrip­

tion of a Peace Corps man­ We s Stewart. Then there is an interview with Rev. John J: Considine, director of the

NCWC (Na­

tional Catholic Welfare Con fer e n c e) LatiD America Bureau. Fr. Considine compares the two different movements and shows how each complements the other. The PavIa pro ....ram - which pre­ ceded the Peace Corps - is,. Catholic a~tempt to help Latin America in s!lecifically Catholie areas. Father Considine notes how the Pavla program has been helped by the publicity given to the Peace Cor)s. Such publicity creates a climate 'of helping Latin America and introduces people to the notion 'of giving some years of service to Latin America. Thus the PavIa direc­ tors are not introducing a com­ pletely new idea when they an­ nounce their need for volun­ teers. Father also compar~ ~e economies of the two programe; the Peace Corps bas a much larger. amount of money t~ work with but on the other hand it needs a greater sum since- it cannot call upon sucl1 atreet number of volunteers promot-orll and processing agents .as eaA the Papal Volunteers. Every diocese h<ils a Papal Volunteer di1'4!Ctor and this isa source. of free M­ llistance to the program in ,gen­ eral. The training is simi1ar ill both movements; both ~re s~. tive and the PavIa program .adde an apostolic element te the training period. Father Detes that the failure rate f~r the Papal Volunteers is less than 10 per cent and reports that some Volunteers are struggling to work'out their three year hitch while others have been capti­ vated by the work and are thinking of joining again. The Catholic colleges of the COUBtry have been responding to the Peace call in pr~portion te the number of Catholics in the gen­ eral population. The interview closes with the important point that the V 0 I u n tee r s - both Papal and government - are de­ sired by the people in Latin America. The unfortunate faet is that they desire many more than are 'present in Latin America. Thus the search for capable, de­ pendable, spiritual PavIa volUft­ teers goes on. We recommend that you rood .the whole article in the Sign ror it gives an excellent explanation of both programs and does 80 ill an entertaining manner. If you have any questions after reading it send them w UI! and we will answer them :for you' in this column or by regular eor­ respondence. Meanwhile PJ'9y for PavIa!

ter the first Scripture lesson and the Alleluia. before the Gospel' proclaim our faith in the Chris­ tion mission as a mission of the word, of preaching. The Apostles, after the Lord Himself, are our great proto­ types, our heroes of the word. The Mass, the liturgy of the Eucharist, cries out for that preaching which has been tradi­ tional in its celebration. It is a sound ·T1stinct. which feels the Mass somehow incomplete with­ out it. WEDNESDAY - St. Johll ., San Facundo, Confessor. We cel­ ebrate St. John as a reconciler of enemies (Collect). In the light of Pope John XXIII's phenom­ enal contribution to the work of reconciliation, today's Mass re­ minds us to give thanks for his Giving Alumni " ministry often and w 'pray for him. Alumni of Stonehill Colle,.

By the calling of the Coun~il, have launched their first annual

by encyclicals (especially Mater giving program .and seek 70 per

et Magistra and Pacem in Ter­ cent participation among gradu­

ris), by the institution of the ates of the North Easton insti­

Secretariat for Promoting Chris­ tution. Heading the 1963 cam-.. tian Unity, he has worked paign is Thomas J. Curry. ArM mightily w reconcile East and chairmen include Leonard A. West, Protestant, Orthodox and Alfonso, Bristol County, and Catholic, the Church and ·the .Joseph E. Doyle, Barnstable aJMl modern world. Dukes Counties.


me ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River.-Thurs., June 6,1963

DIOCESAN GIRL SCOUTS: More than 400 Girl. Scouts from all sections of the Diocese set aside Saturday for a Day of Recollection at ilhe Retreat House at Cathedral Camp. Left photo : Rev. Walter A. Sulli­ Yan, Diocesan Director of the CYO and the day's speaker, visits the Shrine with Kathleen MeKenDa, New Bedford, and Susan Grant, Taunton.

Director Asserts Catholics ·Failing In Race Justice ST. MARY'S COLLEGE (NC)-The national director of the Catholic Council of Civil Liberties charged here that U. S. Catholics have' failed flo do their share to aid racial justice and civil and religious liberty. Thomas Francis Ritt said the Catholic community "for the most part is making massive eontributions to a deadening conformity where dissent and deiiance are looked upon with IIUspicion and ·distrust." . In the area of race, Ritt said in a talk (May 24) at St. Mary's ,College, even now "there are many dioceses of thisnatioD where a chapter of the Catholic Interracial Council is not per­ mitted, and there are countless dioceses which have not organ­ . ized to cope with the problem, preferring, apparently, to· preJlerve the l!tatus quo of 'Iii)" white' parishes." Cries to Heaven "Here is the greatest moral cancer of our age, reeking with injustice, crying to heaven for IIOlution-but Catholic participa­ "tion is· sadly lacking except in isolated instances," he said. "Where are our Catholic 'free­ dom riders', where is the Cath­ olic participation in resisting the vicious animals of Birmingham turned loose to tear the flesh of American citizens who demand only· their rights?" he asked. Ritt said the Catholic Council on Civil Liberties seeks to steer • middle course between ex­ tremists of both right and left.

,Name Shriver First ··Catholic,_~ecipient .. , WASHINGTON (NC) - R. Sargent Shriver, Peace Corps director, has been named to re­ ·oeive the Layman of the Year . Award by Religious Heritage of America, Inc., here. The first Catholic layman to receive the award in its 12-year history will accept the honor at • dinner Saturday, June 22, .whieh will climax the 13th an­ nual Washington Pilgrimage, sponsored by the Heritage or­ ganization. The Pilgrimage will bring to­ gether leaders of different reli­ . gious faiths for' a three-day lItudy of America's religious heritage and its democratic in­ atltutions.

Center photo: Rev. William J. McMahon, Diocesan Director of Retreats, explains the MisSal to Patricia Harrington, Seekonk, and Deborah Baptista, Taunton. Right photo: Ela"ine Bedard, No. Attlebgro; Mrs. Theodore Alexio, Tau:nton, Recollection Day chairman; and Priscilla Proulx, Attle­ ooro, attend the outdoor Mass. .

At Home in Kitchen

Their Crime-A Walk to Ask for Freedom

When Patriarch of. Venice. Pope John frequently made trips to the kitchen to thank the cook for having provided something especially good or novel that day; and. he was as much at home there as in the diplomatic circles of France where he spent seveR years as Apostolic Nun­ cio.

Black Man Paying for Crimes of White Brothers ·CULLMAN (NC)-The presi. dent Gf an Alabama Catholic col­ lege says the blame· for "the sordid display of barbarity" in Birmingham's racial crisis rests on "all of us who have cringed from defense of the defenseless." Father Brian J. Egan, O.S.B., president of St. Bernard. College, declared an adult world "hope­ lessly crippled by inner preju­ dices" has placed an 'indelible mark of injustice and falsehood on the impressionabU! souls of young children." Father Egan, in a pre-com­ mencement talk, said: "Children have been hustled off to prison in school buses. Their crime-a walk down the street to ask for freedom. "And suddenly their young hearts and minds are introduced int& a twisty, nasty reaImof adult fantasy where justice clm mean injustice, peace can be violence anu truth can be false­

triggered except that the so­ called defenders of the status quo were t-otally sick with preju­ dice." Father Egan added: "When one man's freedom. is imperiled, the freedom of all

who stand '>y silently is imper­ iled. The black man is still pay­ ing for the crimes of his white brothers, and it is our hope that as graduates of • Catholic col­ lege you will do your share to change that sOOry."

Requieseat • In

Pace

hood. t •

Americans Fall Asking with whom the respon­ sibility lies, he answered: "All of us. Clergymen who have timidly weighed insignifi­ cant claims against blatant in­ justices in the name of prudence; Pusinessmen whose .worship of the almighty dollar blinds them to any more important consider­ ations; politicians who have sac­ rificed justice to political expe­ dience and power; everyone with a morsel of Christian com­ mitment who has dared sanctify his inner prejudices with the halo of self-righteousness; men who have played the game of negGtiation not towards a just solution of a complex problem but towards the destructIon of the thirst for freedom by the stratagem of legal gobbledygook and procrastination." The Benedictine educator said the . Unit~d States is making great sacrifices throughout the world on ·behalf of the principle that .might does not make right. But, at home, he said, Ameri­ ·cans seem "not able to under­ stand that might can take many forms - political, economic and social- although, the principle still remains true that might does not make right." Father Egan declared it is im­ possible to "absolve our con­ sciences J;ly. imputing the vio­ lence to pragmatic politicians or opportunistic demagogues, for the violence could not have been

7

Angelo· Giuseppe Roncalli

POPE JOHN XXIII Pontifex Maximus

WEBB' 10 DURFEE STREET

OIL

co. FALL RIVER


8'

NOrth CZarohia Solo~ "

THE ANCHOR-Diocese Of'aII River-:Thu...., June'~ 1~63

Sonctio,", Stermzation" RALEIGH (IIC) - The, 'Nor4Il

New' Priest, Golden Jubilarian

Carryon Priestly Tradition

Carolina Legislature has passe4 a bill giving legal sanction • doctors who perform a, steriliza­ tion on a person. who request!l the operation. ' Final action eame when ate Semite approved the mea,su. by IQud voice vote. It earl. had passed the House. Patterned after legislatioa , adopted in neighboring Virgim., in 1961, the legislation was de. scribed by sponSOR as aimed at cutting the number of illegiti­ mate children supported cae public welfare. '

'

By Mary Tinley Daly , Early June, days of celebrations for graduates, young, , marrieds, newly ordained and for annIversaries of marriage , and ordination. By coincidence" within two days it was our happy privilege to witness a marriage and a golden anniver­ sary celebration of marriage; an ordination and a golden speaks authoritatively on moral anniversary celebration of questions of the day: boxing, cigarette smoking, ordination; The wedding of a earlY-dating, gambling, managed news.

young couple is always a moving and inspiring sight. However at , the conclusion of the wedding we attended of a recent morn­ ing, there fol­ lowed an even m 0 r e mOlling and, inspiring sight, renewal of marriage vows by a couple who had been married for 50 years. Though we did not know personally the hansome, gray-haired couple in­ side the altar rail, we and most of the other people in the ehurch remained for the .impres­ sive ceremony followed by a Mass all of' instinctively praying and wishing .them well on their continued" journey , through life together.' Two Receptions Needless to say, we all prayed that the' young, newly married eoupleJ11ight some d~y ,enjoy a similar experience. The following day, ,it was our

privilege t<> attend two recep­

tions, both fO,r priests, and both

most happy occasions: one ,fol­

lowing ordination of young

Father. John J. McGarraghy, the

other a sotial get-together in

honor of Father Francis J. Con­

nell, C.SS.R. Father Connell was

to offer a solemn Mass of thanks­

giving marking his, 50 years in

the priesthood two days later.

With hundreds of other

friends we formed in line to re­

ceive a blessing from the hands

of Father McGarraghy, newly

ordained "a priest forever."

We rejoiced with his parents

and friends as young, handsome

and dedicated "Father Jay-Jay"

began his priestly life.

Scarcely an hour later, we

formed in line to greet the gold­

en jubilarian, Father Connell,

dean of American Catholic theo­

logians, now . celebrating the

50th anniversary since he was

pronounced "a priest forever."

By a simple matter of arith­ ,metic seems that young Father JaY-J~y was born at the time Father Connell was celebrating his silver jubilee of ordination. And now these two, separated by an age difference of a half­ century, are carrying' on the priestly tradition. As friends of both, we were struck. with the spirit of joyousness, of ,true hap­ piness in their vocations, evi­ denced by both guests :of honor. Not one to sit in a corner, the young-in-spirit Father Connell greeted all comers with a cor­ diality ~nd zip hardly imagin­ able, unless you know Father Connell. At the age of 75, he has just signed a contract for still another ,book, has scheduled a two-week retreat for 'priests in Wyoming, has many other lec­ tures and magazine articles in the offing. Going strong, in other words. 'Retired' Dean This is the "retired" Dean of the School of Sacred, Theology at Catholic University" presently holding down the position ,of Dean of Religious Communities, still teaching, writing and lec­ turing. '. The unruly whitehair still stands on end as Fat~Eir Connell

us

Nurses' Retreat Fall River Catholic IIt"'urses Guild will hold its annual re­ treat this weekend at Our Lady of Good Counsel Retreat House. Mrs. Kathleen Sherry is in charge of arrangements for bus transportation. The unit will not hold a regular meeting this month.

All of these questions and many more have come into Father Connell's ken during his years as an expert in moral the­ ology. He is prepared to deal with them. He also is abciut to accept re­ ,,!ppointment to the. Ecumenical Council when it reconvenes on Sept. 8, serving as an expert on problems of moral theology. As acceptance 01 advanced age, Father Connell reluctantly gave up his daily game of tennis when he reached the age of 70, but still continues to swim two or three times a week. Though slightly "slowing down" physicallY, there is defi. nitely rio slow down intellectu­ ally or spiritually, for. this ded-, icated priest., '. , May Father McGarraghy and other newly ordaiqed pi'i~stS in the year' 2013 have as joyful. Golden Jubilee! .

Homecoming Weekend . Alumnae of theelasses of 19.

and 1958 at Salve Regina C~

lege, Newport, will, participaie

in a homecoming weekend t1M8

Saturday and Sunday. Evel1lll

will include a Campus tour, •.

Polynesian luau and a Commu. . '

ion brunch. A dutch treat sup.

per is slated for Sunday night ..

the Cliff Lawn Manor.

OLD FRIENDS MEET: Joseph H. Newman, left, a Cleveland director of Caritas, a Catholic interracial group, greets 'an old neighborhood chum from New York's east side, Ed Lopat, manager of the Kansas City Athletic,S, at. a Cleveland baseball dinner. Lopat, honored guest at tlie . festivities, is a former pitching star of the Whi-teSox and Yankees.' NC Photo. . .

~~-~-=====

Build . Catholic . School With Public Funds WHITEHORSE (NC) - The Yukon Territorial Council bas approved a budget item $75,­ 000 to build the' first Separate (Catholk) school in the "l(ukon Territory at public expense. The school is to be located at Watson Lake in this Canadian terrUory. Construction is scbe-' duled to begin this Summer. Harry Thompson, superinten­ dent of schools, told the council . there were 35 white and 23 In­ dian children who wished 1;0 at­ tend the school. The council also was told that the Catholic Churc·h would build a convent for Sisters who will teach at the school, but the territory would be asked to provide accommo­ dation for lay teachers. .

LEO B. BDUBI:, M.r.. 951 Slade st. .rei. or .1\-711', "

IF YOU NEED A ,

!'

'

MORTGAGE

of

Southeast.rn Mauachusetta'

Lar...' Independent Chain

110 :BIG STORES

"SEE

us

TAUNTON SAVINGS BANK

12 ·14 COURT ST., TAUNTON, Tel. 824-8644

We Give Gold Bond Stamps'

St. Francis

Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN

196 Whipple St., Fall River

Conducted. by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary

ROOMS -MEALS

OVERNIGHT HOSPITALITY

Inquire 05 3.2892

LEARN SERVICING On Saturdays, 'practical .1 year courses starting June 15. Efficient placement service.

NEW ENGLAND TECHNiCAL

INSTITUTE OF R. ••

184 Early St., Provo 467·7744.

HATHAWAY:

Oil CO. INC. NIW IlDfOlD

POPE .J 0 H N . XXIII

Of Blessed Memory

1881-1963

INDUSTRIAL' OILS HEATING OILS TIMKIN

Requieseat in 'Pace

OIL IURNERS

50'.1 & Service, 501 /COUNTY ST. '

NEW BEDFORD WY 3-1751

GERALD' E. McNALLY CONSTRUCTION 454 MAIN STREET

co.

~OMERSE'l

....

,,'


O',. "

Daug

h"<';:' ..., . M''.. ~i1~.:.;.ii">' . '"p..

d

O "

. •

;' ;.~·'1t"_~"'. ,~, ., . .~.

"'."':

:te.r 5 ar(la'ge< ,r~$ents In-Law Problein"for Parehts

~m.

NEW YORK (NC)-President 'Kennedy's chief adviser believes it is "difficult" for the nation's first Catholic President to sug­ gest an equitable way to give U. S. aid to church-related schools. Theodore C. Sorensen, special counsel to the President who is know'n as one of Mr'. Kennedy's closest collaborators, makes the statement in a series of copy­ righted articles distributed by the Columbia University Press. The articles will be made into a book at a later date. IQ discussing the pressure of public' opInion on presidential actions, Sorensen says: "While it should not be ini,. possible to find an equitable constitutional formula to settle ehurCh'"$Chool aid problem, it is diffic'ult 'for that formula to be _ suggested by the nation's first Catholic ·President."

adult who loves them and is yet not primarHy an authority image. Talk Things Out­

Reduced to itl parts, the in­ (7) Ground Rules: In-laws law problem' is two-fold: a) can be imposed upon too, and if definite interference by the they are not prudent, some wUI parents, and b) an excessive de­ find .themselves placed in a role pendence of the couple on their of nightly baby-sitters or handy parents. finance companies. Knowing that you love your· daughter very much and that Remember even as you grow iosing her will be something of older in your. marriage, you still • wrench, let's consider a few have responsibilities to each practical ideas you might medi­ other as a couple and to your tate upon. We will 'call them role in work life and community eautions for in-bws. life. Avoid Clinging , It might be a good idea to (1) Criticizing: Some parents ,I: define clearly for the young find fault with everything the coL!-ple just when you are avail­ . IT'S THIS WAY, FATHER: Father John Mahoney, ,o.:thg couple . .'does, from the al?le to h!'llp. them (emergency. S.S.C., a' native of· nenver, Colo., gets a few pointers in typeface on the wedding invi­ situations. as~de" of course),and tiiltion to thc{ ilniddle name of i "'bat kllid ofriotice' you win ~blueprint reading from a young' parishionerdurihg t~e, the first grandson. need. It's better to talk some construction of a new church iIi, Raviravi, Fiji Island~. Th~ - i. Young couples need encour­ of these t¥ngs out than to grow Columban missionary priest is surrounded by native parish-· agement and tolerance, They are resentful. . ioners who assist in the building. NC Photo. jUst learning. They don't have l.our experience and perspective. They will probably make mis­ eakes. They will certainly do things differently, but this is .$)art of their gre~ adventure. . (2) Clinging: Watch out for too-frequent phone calls to Joe, Or visits to Susie, or setting up patterns when they simply "have to" spend every second Sunday land all the holidays at your. ttouse: Choosing Sides (3) Clearing paths: Some par­ ents try to cushion their children against every possible hardship. Running to them with checkbook drawn and pen ready may .imply make them confused and dependent. ·It is hard for a father to face the fact that his daughter pre­ iiers some other person; that she doesn't need him, her very own 6:tther, any more. Faced with Chis, some parents try again to make themselves important, or . even indispensable· to their .ndren. . ;, (4) Choosing sides: Let's face a, there is no young man good enough for your daughter, but when quarrels and problems IiIOme, remember your child eould be wrong. As an in-law, ,.our concern should be for the tfood of the marriage and not· ­ inerely for ''my'' son or "my"

ANTONE S. FEND, JR.

DISPENSING

OPTICIAN

Prescription.

for Eyeglasses

Filled

Office Houra

1':oO.5:00

except Wed. . Fri. Eve.

6:30-8:30

Room 1

·7 No. Main St., l'allRiver OS 8-0412

His Great .Love For All

1V~Live

Manl~ind·

Forever

~ughter.

Psychological Struggle (5) Competing: Sometimes both sets of in-laws vie for the young couples' attention and af­ fection. They get into a psychol­ ~ical struggle to see who can ,ive the more expensive gift or ~e more pointless luxury. Get to know your son-in-law's : parents. They may not be your ~ind of people; they may be trom a different social stratum, • different national background, ~ut they produced the things in ·Joe" that your daughter loves. AnQther challenge to your maturity is setting up communi­ eation, even friendship, with his parents. 'Notorloua SpODen . (6) Child Raising: When ~ndchildren begin to arrive, ~ey bring fresh (jhaHenges with ~em. Remember you are grand­ parents, not parents. Grand­ parents, gratefUl they have seen . tltheir children's children," are ilotorious spoilers. ; Months of patient training and ~bedience can be demolished by ~ two-hour visit to grandpa's. It ean get so, Susie dreads her mother's coming, because she knows when mother is gone she. ~ces a complete over-haul OR ller children. . But grandparents have a great deal to give children - a sense 'of the past, a ihistory and tradi-

-9

Difficult for President To Act on School Aid

Dear Father: My wif~ and I are in our middle forties and our daughter is getting married in two months. The young man she has ehosen is nice enough, but she is our only girl and we have been very close and are concerned. Any suggestions for us future in-laws? Martin L. Dear Martin; tion of the family, and even of I am pleased that you and the city and town in which they Jour wife are trying to think live. They can in effect bestow 'through this new relation­ a relationship with a mature ship you wlll have with your daughter and her husband. It is a sign of mature parental con­

., •

THe ANCHORThurs., June. 6, \ 1963

. . . . ,....

His Holiness Pope John XXIII May He Rest

10

Peace

's

PLYMOUTH AVENUE-At Rodman Street-:-FALL RIVER

'


,1.0

..

J'HE ANC~O~~Dloces,of Fan· River,...Thurs., Ju", 6, 1963

.'

- ...

.:

..

.

~'}

Arthbishop Gannon Asks Catholics

.Preiy for' Protestant Meeting ,

ERIE (NC)- Archbishop heartening" he. said. "While the

-John Mark Gannon has called day 'of complete' reunion' seems

upon the 212,000 Catholics of the far in the future, we must con­

Erie diocese to pray for the tinue to pray daily for all those

success of the World Conference who sincerely seek to. be God's

on Faith and Order, called by agents in bringing it about."

The conference at McGill Uni­

the World Council of Churches ,(Pi-otesiant and Orthodox) to versityin Montreal for which

Archbishop Gannon asks prayers

meet Friday, July 12 in' Mon­ aims to promote Christian unity.

treal, Canada. "We ask all Catholics to join It will be the fourth such con­

with other men of gOOd will in ferenee in 36 years, The first

northwestern Pennsylvania in was at Geneva iri1927, the sec­

praying that the Montreal con-" ond at Edinburgh in 1937, and

ferenee will be, guided by the the last at Lund, Sweden, in

Holy Spirit in seeking unity in 1952.

truth" the Bishop of Erie said.

"The leadership of Pope John Limitelass Number

XXIII and the response of the whole Christian world to the ' 0,' tu ents

deliberations of the Second WILMINGTON (N C) - A

Vatican Council have made re- gradual program of a maximum' union of all Christians a bright of 50-students-per-class will be

pro~ect." ' _ inaugurated in September, 1964,

The Archbishop will. be host in the Wilmington diocese e~to 1,500 guests at a ecwnenical . mentary'schools. '

banquet at Gannon College toFlither Howard T. Clark, dio­

day. It will ro~d out a full day eesan superintendent of schools,

, . 'which BtartSwith. the college said the program' will be in..; commencement at 9 A.M. .,with augurated with' ffrsi:'; grade Gov.' William lV.Scranton 8S classes in the 1964"';65' school . ~ker ' and' ineludes awarding year and· eventually . will .be of'j)apai honors t.o 38' priesis spread to the full eight gI'8des. .' and laymen in St. Peter'. i Public ,5,«;b<>ol, 0 ff i ,c h Is , Catbeclr~l•. " . : '., '~. . " . thro.ugootlt 'Del~ware, Au'been '. .' Fovth Conlerenee , notified·. C1.f.the 'new policy,

H'11he ecumenicelprogress of Father Clark, said, to give' them Christians in our area in, the ample time to .pr~pare for in­ )NlSt. few ~, :hai! been mo~ ereased. enrobnentS. "

SUPER-RIGHT, HEAVY STEeR BEElP

BONELESS

CHUCK POT,

T 50 S d

ROAST ,

, -IUPER.;RIGHT IONIUII, IHOUU). ­

FIRST: Rev. WiUiamE• Calh90n, 'leav.es the' Atlanta Cat h e d r a las the first

.eolored priest ordained the

Georgia Archdiocese: .

c

.Oven Roast·· .. 8S S'9 Rib Roast cur. SSC Pol Roast

in

La

.. aRb to 6TH Ria

. (FlRST,'2 RI81 tb 79c) C .SHORT . CUT tB .

FRESH BRISKIT

(STRAIGHT

I;'•

tb $5c)

',RONT' CUT

LB

DUCKLINGS SUPER-RIGHT, READ~' TO-COOK, 4-5 LBi .

.LB

39'

Picnic Shoulders li~:2.99:··

COLONIAL CANNED

Re~l~seat')li "Pac1e '.-

.'

'.

.... :

PO P·E,' ..J.O·H,N '

.

.' .',.

"

.'

.

JANE PARKER

Blueberrj Pi.~ ~': '

".

Large 8-lnch 1 lb 8 0. ..

lave 20c Reg. 69c ~

C IACH -.

](XIII ,:. ,.

49

Angelo:' Giuseppe ,Rol1cdli' ,"

1_'

,,' ;

.. "..

.

'.....---­

'·Pa"rTow.I."~n,u..;~~~9C.

~

· leke'n . IION-Cot&~l~ ·2: '''~,CJ 2· Ie, Ch wllh IlIce • NM4Iee . lANa· . 'lal~d Dr".ln.·: :~lY~' - .~::~",9c .

~l88r~l963'

.' J

. , ,

'S" W'--' Pea•. Af:'~N ; ·':;,"';·2>"4f1~,. ' ,', , .' ,/~I' . , . . . . " ., ,' ..

.:",:'

-;,F, " . , " ......... 101Mt

..

.~ , ;'. ,JiMiH''''''';&

,-,.,:,

~~' ~f.' ",

~!

:

, ..

.

-

'"'IS "....1lN . , -:....~ ­

..

,..

IItn.III\• • • • ·• " ','~.'

_,~"IIn.AU.A..,._

IMt._~..,

;~.,_,

.

""'1\IiIf1Htiil': . ..:.~

.'

.~

:._,,.. "'""'."

i:':"., ,

-'.

t.

... :.... ..'

'"1':,'

......

-

-~. "~-'

"­

....

'

• "

.J......;:;-'J.:.. ~~...::--..:,•. ~:i~, ;::~t/';, '.;';:-'_

•~··~__5: .. ,-~ ~-;... ._;.. ......,.::..

1'""""":'-

~ ~' .. -

.., ;...;.

·f~·' ......·,

~.:. 't.

. : ~

'i~'~'''';''

.' ...... \. ' . .

'; , ••

....

".


explains ~etting"tor Wortcrs"air Display of Michelangelo's Pieta

""

. Priest Disputes 'Claim '

High point of the Vatican Pavilion at the New York World's Fair will be Michelangelo's Pieta, loaned by t~. Tatican for this occasion.' Jo, Mielziner has been eomnlls­ 8ioned to design a setting for the world-famous sCulpture. He has given the assignme~t against a "background of the ut­ deep tho u 'g h t and hIS most simplieity." Four lines- of. lighting plan and setting re­ sJngle rows of people will enter fleet hhJ realization of "the the room where ~t is dis~layed at

=r

a time. Three alSles WhICh they will use will be automated and, the fourth will be for those who may wish to view the sculpture more leisurely., Liturgical music and subdued lighting will set the mode for the Pieta, which will be displayed at a height and angle ideal for viewing. The background for the dis­ play will be blue and the Pieta will be surrounded by vertical rails supporting a screen of vo­ tive candles. A shadowy Cross will be behind the sculpture, since the Pieta "is in essence part of the Mama of. the descent from the Cross."

nsI'bility and the challenge"

V· were

his'

leWers w

in

see the Pieta

Obscenity Worry Is Just Concern LOUISVILLE (NC)-Mrs. Kathryn Granahan, Treas­ urer of the United States, believe'S parents have a right to be "deeply concerned" about the "frightening" problem of obscenity., "But it must be fought intel­ ligently by encouraging children

Extend Eve'n.-ng M ' Fu.,eral, ,asses,

to see the reading of good liter­ ature as a joy and as a subject of discussion," said Mrs. Grana­

ban. a foaner Congresswoman from Pennsylvania who was a leader in anti-obscenity efforts. M chairman of a House postal eperations subcommittee. Family AttU~des, Addre81rlng the League of. Catho-lic Parent-Teacher Asso-' elations, she ,stressed the impor­ tance of the home environment an gUarding chUcken against ob­ lcenity and said: ' "There must be' the 'kind ()f home environment in which, ~he ehlld shares learning experi­ ences 'and reading experience. wltl1 a family~ home environ­ ment in which books suitable for children are read With the child, .nd discussed and used· as fur­ 1ber stepping'stones for further learning experiences. shared be­ tween parent and child." Mrs. Granahan emphasized that family attitudes are con­ trolling. She said, "some parents find it hard-almost impossible -'to discuss sex matters with their children for fear of t.elling Chem, 'too much.' Instead they tell the children far too little. And there is a wall. Buntlnr Ground ''The child decides either that 1be parent is too dumb to know, or has no intention of sharing any knowledge. So he is in a receptive mood for knowledge eutside the home.", She termed this type of home Mthe happy hUll'ting ground" for the obscenity peddler. ''He eounts on a certain percentage • such homes turning up in any -.ailing list of. children."

P UE-BLO (NC) - The success of a four-month trial of evenfngfuneral Masses in 'one ColoraE!{) parish has; -led

't. extension of the'privile~ to the- entire Pueblo diocese. : This was announced by Bishop Charle. A. Buswell of Pueblo who said that at the discretion of. each local pastor' evening funeral Masses may be permitted uPon req,uest of the family of the deceased. "The evening funeral Mass fulfills both of the conditions n:quired by the Holy See for granting permission for evening MasSes: a special occasion and the convenience of. a large num­ ber of the faithful," he said., Pennission for the trial pro­ gram. was given in January. Bishop Buswell said at the time that changing work conditions have made it difficuU for most persons to attend funeral ser­ vices held in the morning. As a result, he said, the Rosary 'service is given an undue stress and he hoped the evening funeral Mass would help put the emphasis back on the Church's official liturgy for the dead. At the evening Masses, the absolution rite follow9 the Mass. Burial takes place the next morning. ,The remains may either, stay in the church or be returned to the funeJ:la1 home.

Educator Challenges Congntion Negroes Mentally Inferior to Whites

SAV~"NAH (l(C)-A South­ em 'Catholic educator has dis­ puted claims o~ oppdnents in. school desegregation suit who argued that the Negro is intel­ lecrually inferior to the white.

Father Timothy Dwyer, S.M.A., principal of St. Pius X High SchOol her~, commented in .the Southern Cross, Savannah ~I?Cesan newspaper, on a deCISIon by Judge Frank M. Scarlett of Federal District Court. The judge denied a petition by Ne­ groes for integration of Chatham County public schools. , Judge Scarlett based his de­ cision on a claim that integra­ tion would be harmful to whites

10 Mn:LZINER Des~er

because the colored chUdrell would be an academic drag. He said it would be injurious to the Negroes because ~hey would de­ velop ~SYch?loglcal problems over theIr failure to keep pace. , Father Dwyer challenged tes­ timony of the Negro's inferiority to white intelligence. "Actually, educational testing has shown no great distinction in innate ability," he said. ' He said testing must take into account more than school work. ' Among important additional fac­ tors he said are home environ­ me~t com~unity environment, moti~ation a.n 4 educational background. IntelledualJ1' Equal Furthermore, he claimed, tests have differed. In some,' Negroes . are superior; in others, whites are top. '''Anny tests have shown," he added, "that northern Nei'roes score higher than white Georgians." "Given, equality of opportu­ nity," he said, ''Negroes are in­ tellectually equal to' any, other group. Unfortunately, that equal­ ity, is not available todaY. ' , "Too many Negroes find their environment too great a' handi­ cap in the race for 'educatiMl. Someday this ' handicap will' be removed and the oppOltun!t7' for progress 1!quaIize4..., '

of Pieta Settinc

Non-Christian Japanese Women Ask Permi'ssion to Become Nuns NEW, ORLEANS (NC) - ~n Wakayama City, Japan, young women who aren't, even Chris­ tians have kRocked on the door (,f a convent and .asked perIni.}­ to become Sisters. . Nine of them· have been bap­ tizedandare -now members of. the Daughters of Charity work. ing; wi~b American ,nuDS ,in cat.­ ,ing. for the sick and poor., ." Theii- atol-y, ,va&- told here by Sister Mary Moran, administra­ tor of Altoku Seishien, a lOO-bed crippled children'. hospital at Wakayama City. Sister Moran, a native of Slay­ ton, Minn., and three other Daughters of Charity established their mission foundation in WakaYam8 City in 1954. The nine Japanese women who are now members of the community are the only members of their families who are Christians. ' Foroe of Example When the young Japanese woman becomes a Christian she

"tends to dedicate herself fully to the religioua It£e,'' Sister MOran said. These youn.g ,women, she added, had no contact with Christianity until they -left their hoines' to ,go to, schOOl or , ',''They,sa,.. ua worlling with the liek and poor in their city and knocked on our door and saki theY, wanted tit help usc" ihe eXplained.,

sion

work:

First Federal Savinfrs AND

LOAN

ASSOCIATION

OF

ATl'LEBORO

4% on all Savings AccOunts 1% Extra on Systematic Bonus Savings

SERVING

'lr-

FINE -ITALIAN FOOD

GONDOLA}

l l RESTAURANT and LOUNGE I on lak. Sabbatia I 1094 Bay Street I TA~NTON ' VA 4~75~ I

...

PONTiFEX MAXIMUS ;,Angelo ,Giuseppe Roncalli

...

-.-.

'Protect,

What ,You Have

1881~1963

McGOWAN

Insurance, Agency TEL Myrtle '-1231 ,

R~quieseat in

MIAMI

XXIII'

JOR,N

POPE

~·NM'RTH ~IN STREET

NORTIt 'Ar'I'LEBORO

Pace

B:i!'ACH AWARD· Jlsgr. Cbmeliua P. Higgins '.of Sacramento. c.lif., DiOce&8nDir8etor of. the Holy Name Society. will NCeive the 1963 Father 110­ Eenna Awatd 'of the Na­ ~al Headquarters of tM Holy Name Society.' Me

ftloto.

-

F.

L.~COLUNS .1'

~'

m'

:'& SONS, •

In~.

'

CONTRAcroRS

ACADEMY BUILDING

FALL RIVER. MASS.


12

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs:, June 6, 1963

Food Shortage In Red China

Graduation at 11 High Schools ,

HONG KONG (NC)-Chinese Continued from Page One Also in Taunton, ,Coyle High communists are fearful because Graduating maxima cum laude School will graduate 129 boys of a food shortage and are re. will be Mary Ann Feereira. at 8 Monday night in the school sorting to terrorist tactics te Magna cum laude graduates are . auditorium. Brother Thomas keep the people of the mainland J~dith Ann Bednarz, Judith· Gallagher, C.S.C. will be pre­ in line, according to a Chinese Callahan, Linda Ann Ferreira, siding officer, with Bishop Con. priest here. . EleanOr Kitchen and, Theresa nolly conferring diplomas. Msgr. Father Leo Chan Pak Leung,

Viveiros. Cum, 'laude diplomas George V. Kerr of the Boston the last priest to escape from

a~e merited by Diane Boulay, Archdiocese will address grad­

Red China, was commenting oa

Mary Elizabeth De Ciccio, Ev- uates. Class day is also sched.

reports from the nearby Portu-"

elyn Dussault, Diane Driscoll, uled for June 10 at Coyle, with

guese t~rritory of Macao. Re­

Maureen Harrington, Susan Kon- ex~rcises taking place at 9 that

ports said that a public trial and arski, Evelyn Richard and Mar- morning. in St. Mary's Church..

execution were conducted by garet Sullivan. Maxima cum laude graduate is communists on Lappa island jn Linda Ann Ferreira will be' Neil Bowen, 'with Joseph Costa fun view'of,Macao's inner har_ salutatorian and Mary Ann Fer- and Christopher Godek gradu­ bor. One of three defendanta reira will be valedictorian. ating with magna cum laude was shot and roBed into a gl'ave.

Scholarships and grants will diplomas. ' Father Chan, who reached

Joseph Costa will be saluta­

go to Mary Ann Ferreira, Judith h~re from communist territory'

Ann Bednarz, Judith Callahan, torian and' Neil Bowen will be

a ,year ago,. was asked why the

Margaret Sheahan, Florence Ra- valedictorian. .

Reds staged their trial so it

posa and M. Claire Managhan. . New Bedford Schools

could be seen in Macao. He aR­

A' school spirit award will be In New Bedford, Holy Family

swered:

cOIlferred on Kathleen Cordeiro. High School will graduate 26

. Prevost High Schoel boys and 39 girls at ceremonies

At Prevost High School Fall to be held at 7:30 Sunday night Terrify People 'River, 53 boys will recei~e di. in St. Lawrence Church. Bishop "When 'the communists are plomas from Msgr. AlfredJ. Bon- . Gerrard will award diplomas 60 YEARS A PRIEST: Rev. Vjncent Marchildon, O.. P., scared, when there is sabotag~. ­ neau at ceremonies slated for 8 and Rev.' John Hayes, pastor of whc:n they fear riots, then more. Sunday night in Notre Dame Holy Name Churth, New Bed- first director of St. Anne's Shrine, ,Fall River, is congratu-' than any other time they do such hall. Rev. Henri ChareSt will ford, will be prindpal speaker. lated by Doreen Gronlund, Achusnet, on' the 60th anniver.. things publicly, hoping to terriI, apeak and highest ranking grad- Father Hayes will be marking sa:ry of his ordination. " t h e Chinese people o,n the main. uates are announced as Paul the 40th anniversary of his own land and Chinese and W'esterne r • R' h d J d t' f HIS outside China. The' .communI·S·­ · . D umals, IC ar usseaume, gra ua Ion rom 0 y Family. . WI Gerald Mailhot and Norman Class day exercises for Holy are scared now beCause there .. Dumaine. Jusseaume will be Family took place yesterday at . little food." " . aalutatorian and Dumais valedic. Kennedy Center. C:leveland . Superintendent Believes Day The priest also said he thinss 1orian. St. Anthony's High School, the ~ommuniSts. will try to pre­ , Class day will be held at til' also New Bedford, will hold its, ,ma Ig' .C 00 S. 5 asslng vent another mass exodus fro.. tomorrow morning on .the Pr~ commencement cerem.onies at 8. CLEVELAND' (N C) - TIle . . Red China. to Hong Kong like Yost campus. ' . Sunday night iIi the school au... ' dall of the small high schQOlitl ~hool, he continued,' ,enough . th~ one tbP.t tQOk place last yea'r. : Msgr. Bonneau' '.will also be' ditoriuin, with Bishop Connolly ,plUltling, according to Auxiliary studen~ to provide adequate:" He said the Reds "did not want ~esiding officer for Jesus-Mary. pr'esid'ing and a'warding diplo...· Bi~:hop Clarence E. Elwell of • iy'broad curriculum' with. teach:' it ~ last' year, but could not . . Academy exercises, to be held at, mas.. Twenty-six girls and nine CIE!Velandi ers sp'echllizing in their·siibjeCtS. 1irely prevent it/' '. S:Sunday afternoon in the school boys will be graduated. Bishop., nishop'ElweH, who also is dio_' aUditorium, Fall River. Twenty-: Connolly will speak in addition cesan :superintendent of schools; five gii:ls will receive. diplomas' to acting as .presiding ·officer. . believes 'the minimum enroll-'. hom the prelate and, will hear" '. Scholarships ·h a v e bee Jl . ment for economical and quality 'Rev. Alfred Desautels, ,S.J., de- awarded to Richard Methia,Ro~ hig'h school operation is 500 to liver the commencement address. land Bedard and Richard Beau- 750 students. That gives the Claire Amiot will be salutatorian lieu, 'of the graduates. Methia and Barbara Boudria will be val. will be valedictorian, with Bed­ edictorian. ard and Charlotte Parker shar­ 'Class day is being held today, ing the office of salutatorian. also in the school auditorium. Class day exercises for St. AnRev. Eugene Robitaille, SS.CC. thony's are slated for 9:30 to. will addless' 55 graduates of morrow morning, also in the Dominican Academy. Fall River, auditorium. CITIES SERVIC.

at 4 Sunday afternoon in the academy auditorium. Bishop DISTRIBUTORS

Gerrard will confer diplomas. •Class day took place yesterday Gasoline

at the Fall River school. :Highest ranking graduates are , Fuel and Range.

named as Pauline Gagnon, Claire L~voie, Jeanne St. Arnand, Rita Chouinard, Jeannette Laroche' a~d Cecile Levesque. OIL, BURNERS I Fairhaven Academy YOU'LL, : Sa~red Hearts Academy chapel E. BOILER BURNER UNITS

hi Fairhaven will be the scene TlCKLlD"j for graduation exercises ,for 25 for prompt deliv.ry seniors, who will receive their & Day & Night S.rvlce diplomas fro m ·Rev. John OI'yery-Cal OIBrien, SS.CC. and will hear Rural Iottl... Gal S.rvlce an address .by Rev. Damien Veary, SS.CC. 61 COHANNI' ST. In Taunton, Bishop Cassidy , TAUNTON 373 New Boston Road High School announces gradua­ Attleboro - No. Attl.boro tion for 4 Monday afternoon in Fall River OS 8-5677 the new school auditorium. Taunton Bishop Connolly will preside and award diplomas to 38 girls, while Mrs. Rose Sullivan of the Fall River school committee will be pfincipal speaker. ' ;Louise .Bury, Janne Gallagher aJld Maureen Gam'ache are an-' " :: . nbunced as summa 'cum laude gt;tduates. All received letters ", Qt, commendation fot superior i'dting in national merit tests ·and '. .J*nne Gallaghe: was accepted' at· 'l:'rinity College, Wash.i.ngton,' D; C. at the end of her junior year under the advanced place­ . . . .. rn~iIt plan. Having.: completed her freshman year i,n l<ol.l,eg~,.sl\e. has returned to graduate with • her class. Highest ranking graduate at Bishop Cassidy is Louise Bury, also valedictorian. Scholarship "May .the Anl~els and award winners include Mal'7 !Jean Yelle, Christine Haggerty Saints Receiv(! Him, .• ~~ al)d Collette Murphy.

• Chang'e.· ees Ed uca't.•o'n.

Of S

II H" h S h I

I

P

,,

an

~W.H.RILEY

,..-----------""'1

~L

SON, Inc.

OILS

8.

et .

"M

IDEAL LAUNDRY

,.,".)

'Angelo' Giuseppe 'Roncalli

POPE .JOHNXXIIl m Pace.'.

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

A FAMILY 'IlEAT

BARRB·Q CHICKENS

ROSELAWN

POPE JOHN. XXIII

REQUIESCAT IN PACE

FARMS

L45 Washington S~ Fairhaven

it...............

Just off Route 6

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

Slade's .Ferry Tl'ust Company SOMERSET, MASS.

FALL RIVER


. THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., June 6, 1963

Crusaders to Represent East In College World Se·ries

13

Prelate in Tribute To Atty. Donovan

By Jaek Kineavy _ The Holy Cross, NCAA District One champions will emplane this weekend for Omaha, Nebraska where for the second successive year they'll represent the East iIi the annual College World Series which is scheduled to get underway on Monday. Coach alumnus of ~oly Cross. Hop Riopels' veteran nine Leading Game .was sparked in its successful One of the best schoolboy defense of the District title games of the season drew a ban­

BROOKLYN (NC) - The Bishop of Brooklyn observed that today "the only person who is able to talk serise into Khrushchev and Castro is one who has breathed in and cher­ ished the spirit of St. Francis for many a year," Bishop Bryan J. McF:ntegart paid the tribute to Att1>rney James B. Donovan in an address at the dedication of the new home of St. Francis College, '8 five - building complex in the Brooklyn Civic Center. At the ceremony, an honorary regree was awarded Donovan, chairman emeritus of the Coun­ cil of Regents at tire Franciscan Brothers' College. Donovan ne­ gotiated the. release of the Cuban invasion prisoners held by the Castro regime.

by a pair of talented sophomores ner holiday crowd to Hanson in the persons of pitcher Dick Field last Thursday and the Joyce and fans were treated to an exciting catcher Tim contest that ended abruptly in Murtaugh. the home half of the seventh Joyce is the when Case hurler Joe Santos much heralded balked home Henry Seaman young lefthand­ with the only run of the game. er whoreported. Until then, the only runn.er who ly turned down had come close to the plate was a $100;000 bonus Case third baseman Dick St. from the Bos­ Pierre who had missed the plate ton Red Sox in the first inning on the front prior to enroll­ end of a double steal and Was' ing at Holy subsequently tagged out: Cross. His bat­ . Pitching. SironI' terymate, chunky Tim Murtaugh,

This was a tough one for San­

ill' the son of Danny Murtaugh, .. , CLOSE FAMILY: An'gelo RoncalIi, Apostolic Nunicio skipper of the-Pittsburgh Pirates, tos and the Cardinals to lose .and after . his perfonnance but it was the type of game that in Paris, is shown with his three brothers who, with their. against Providence College last you felt one run would decide. widowed sister,survive Pope John. ~Left to right, Giuseppe, Saturday, there just may be a Both Santos and Somerset's Jim "Saverio, the late Pope, Alfredo. hot line installed from Pitts- . Goodwin pitched strongly all the way. Each was equal to the oc­ burgh to Worcester. casion when runners moved into Scouts Get Eyeful Yo un g Murtaugh literally" scoring position and their de­ wrecked the Friars who dropped . fenses until the SOIfierset sev-' washed and doors locked to .Continued from Page One thomas F.. Monaghan Jr. both ends of the doubleheader, enth-p~oved adequate. Frank IJlIfeguared the conClave secrecy. most pre 8 sin gmatters con-­ 11-0 and 7-4. In the opener, 'he SUl,livan; Case shortstop, had Pope John's' bodY,as it lay , Trea.u..... had two triples and Ii, double in two hits. and played errorless. fronting the Church. During the . instate, .was clad in the MaSB vacanCy in the papa'cy the affairs vestm~ilts ot a Bishop --:' red in' " five'trips, driving in '1, runs, and' ball8field.. :. his triple of' the . afternoon The fi~lding gem of the day of the Church are directed by . color for this is the papal color sending two more ruml across was turned in by Dick Ferris, the Chamberlain, Benetto Car­ ot mourning. On his finger was. , . 142 SECOND STREET the plate was the big blow in the Somerset centerfielder who dinal. Aloisi Masella, assisted by a Bishop'~ ring, .one mounted . first inning of the nightcap. Tim raced in to make a shoestring the heads of the three orders of . with it sixth _ century coin . OSborne' 5-7856 wasn't through yet by a long catch of a sinking line drive C8l'dinals - Eugene Cardinal bearing the' image of Christ. The shot. He belted two more singles . which apeared ticketed for a Tissel'ant, Dean .of Cardinal­ FALL RIVER Pope had bought it in' Istanbl,Jl Bishops;. Santiago Cardinal Co­ , where he stationed when Apoe­ dUring the course of' the after­ ron; The loss dropped the Car­ noon, -t:halked up another RBI dinali; into a first place tie with peila, Dean. of the Cardinal­ . tolic Delegate' in Turkey. and when it was all over he had Dighton-Rehoboth whom they Priests; and Alfredo Cardinal Ot1iaviani, Dean of the Cardina~­

gone 6 for 9 and aceounted for were scheduled to meet on Mon­ 10 runs. day. Both teams' began tourney Deacons.

.MEN 17 .. 25 Over 35 Years Experience: Joyce, meanwhile, racked Even as the Church mGurJ1S

play on Tuesday, Case entertain­ JOIN THE NEW his second straight shutout in ing Silver Lake and D.R going for the Pope and expressions of

LET US SUGGEST post season play-he beat Boston against Wareham at Old Roch- sorrow Pour in from every part

A PORTFOLIO Society of Brothers of College 4-0 a week ago yester­ of the world except Communist

ester's field. . day-and in so doing avenged an Asia, Cardinals are arriving in

OurLadyofProyidence CominA' Changell .Rome to augment 'the 30 who early season 2-1 setback at the .' For information write to: If the Red Sox continue to hands of the Friars, the only were present in the Eternal City FATHER MASTER loss he has sustained in his col. founder as they have in the past when the PoPe died. Workmen Returm three week's, look for additional St~ Joseph the Worker aJ,'e already beginning to prepare legiate career to date. The stylish changes in the Red Sox pitching ';" " Novitiate portsider who hails from Port-. for 'the conclave which will take iNSURANCE. Warw~ck N.eck, R. I. land, Maine gave a bevy of major staff. Delock's' dismissal· was place the week after next - by abrupt but not unexpected. Evi. UTILITIES law, no less than 15 nor more league scouts an eyeful, as he !lently, his reluctance to take a effectively throttled the Friars turn when the Red Sox 'were than 18 days after the death of BANK STOCKS the Pope.. Rooms in the Aposto­ with 8 fourhit performanc·e. hard pressed a couple of weeks lic Palace are being readied for OUR SPECIALITY Good Hitting ago spelled doom for the veteran write for more infor~ation On I y Providence .catcher hurler who has been in the Red tile Cardinals and their atten'­ dqn~s, throries are being set up Frank Canning was able to solve Sox organization for some 16 for the Cardinals in the Sistine . . Joyce's slants with any consis­ . years. Chapel where the balloting takes CAU·· tency. The husky receiver had A quick look at the National place, windows are' being white­ tHree hits in four trips, all League averages indicates that singles. He, too, had a fine day a couple of highly-regarded ~ 31 MILK STREET at the plate going two for two, junior league castoffs are having ~­ . BOSTON, MASS•. both doubles, in the second their difficulties. Pete Runnels I ~ game to give him a five for 'six was hitting .223 for Houston and ~' ...

HU 2-4750 total for the day. Holy Cross Bill Skowron an equally anemic ,. . CO. . \ 39 MAIN RD., T1V-=RTON,R.I. or New Bedford, Mass. rightfielder, Hank Cutting, also .221 out at Los Angeles~ Skow- .. ~ Telephone MA4-8472 had a great day at .bat with a ron's performance would seem , ...

WYman 3-5494 homerun and four singles to his

to substantiate the ·old bromide ~ ~ credit. But Murtaugh's per­ to the effect that· the Yankees , ... formance eclipsed all. never trade a player who hall '" "

The Crusaders will be mak­ anything left. . ~ 365 NORTH FRONT STREET .,

Ing their. fourth trip 'to Omaha

and only .Southern Califorltia, ·NEW Texas, Arizona and: Colorado

The Papacy includell 82 saints, \:- . WYma.. 2;,5514 . ' . ' . , h:we participated :in more N:C.A.A. championsllip '. - series. :;;'~~-iWO of.whOm w e r e m a r - . I . , , , , , , , , , , . , , .... Holy Cross won the nationai· title in' 1952. under the late Jack B~rry. As we 'mentioned earlier; t~is is a veteran' Crusader nine with the exception of the tal­ ented battery tandem: of Joyce­ Prizio, shortstop· Paul Morano Requiescat in· Pace and Murtaugh. Second baseman and first baseman Bob Arena have been together since their days at St. John's; High' of Angelo: Giuseppe Ronealli Worcester to which they were instrumental in· bri~ging the State baseball title I~. 1959. Lomax In Reliel: 'Sophomore T err y Lomax, P.C,'s leading pitcher,' was in­ serted in the eighth' inrting of the s~ond game in relief' of Ray Caddigan who pitched creditable ball for 6% innings. The young righthander had pitched 'a ter­ rific game against the Univer­ sity of Connecticut on Thursday and so was unavailable to Coach \ Alex Nahigian against the Cross except in short relief. Terry pitched just the eighth, giving HOME OFFICE: 1 North Main St. cor. Bedford up nothing across the board. On hand for the doubleheader waa SOMERSET OFFICE: 149 G.A.R. Highway, Route 6 Joe Hathaway of Fall River, for­ mer Durfee coach and local

.

:Cardinals Gather for Conclave

MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE CORP.

up

For Stability Growth and

TRAVEl.ING!

"""""'1 DEBROSSE OIL

Sisson' Travel Bureau, Inc.

Landry & Company Investments

Heat.··ng O.·ls and Burne'rs

Saill't~ .

)

:IEDFoRD.

POPE JOHN XXnl

\

.POPE JOHN XXIII Requiescat .in Pace

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS

OF FALL RIVER

White's Family Restaurant White Spa Caterers


Parish' Gifts

14

Special Gifts National , ,$215

· Rev. Thomas F. Daley

POo

.

· Holy Cross Fathers-St. J(M. -Ph's Hall

'150

Fulton Packing Co.

$100

$25 . Bishop Cassidy General Assem­ bly Knights of Columbus L & S Concrete Co. Exchange Club of New Bedford Greater New Bedford & Cape Cod Labor Council AFL-CIO Laurans-Standard Grocery Co. Harry Silverstein Catholic - Nurses 'Guild of, Greater New Bedford MacLean's Coastal Fisheries Schmidt Manufacturing Co. Debson Fabrics me.

IIiOLY NAME-Fall River

$100 Dr. & Mrs. VictoJ' A. Palumbo $10 Jane Phillips ft. .JOSEPH-Fall KIYeI'

. $15 Edward Bliss s~r.

MlCHAEL'S-FaU. River S10 N orman Mello 8T. PATRICK-Fall Rift,.

$20

Joseph, D. Murphy

John E. Fuyat

$40 · Brokston Chemical Co.

S10

·,C. B. Dolge Co.

Attleboro

Anderson & Olson Federal Motor Transport Co. Gilt Edge Textile Mills Inc. $15 Dr. Max Weinshel C. F. Cushing & Co,

Machinery Sales Corp.

S10 ' Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Guidotti 1\11'. & Mrs. Samuel Taylor Vincent Studio

so:r.

wn.LIAM'S-Fall River

$10

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Hardy

Mr. & Mrs. Patrick McElroy

HOLY NAME-New Bedford

$U'

Alliance Fabric Co.

$10

S250 .

Dr. Ralph D. Brackett, Liona Antaya Brothers, Inc. $100

Club of New Bedforcl, Kroud­ $100 Jumes Dufficy vird's,Bakery "First Federal Savings & LoaIt United Auto Workers CIO-­ $50 Association of Attleboro 'LocatNo; 1113, J. A. Hagen&; Mr. & Mrs. Frank McLaugh).iD $50 Co Inc., In Memory of Mrs. Delia 'IJ Mr. & Mrs. William Flynn, " C. Smith, Dr. Nathan Mitnick, I. Francis CrowleT Morin's Diners Inc. Slocum Mill Inc. " $10 Attleboro Lio111l Club Cape Cod Fabrics Inc., Pelt­ .Mrs. 'Rosalina Bell, Cb3rles Cathoiic Nurses Guild of At­ avino . Silk Mill, InC., Harwayne Couza, Mrs. Russell Crawford,­ tleboro Area ' . Mills Inc. ., . Mrs. Rose A. Jones,' Edward St. John's Couneil404 Knighta ' Lea!!lT ell' Columbus ., Charles ,Tapper 'Leaveils 'Manufacturing Co~ ,.'1 Inc: omt LADY 'OF, AS8tJMP'n0lf $15' Alexio Insurance Agencr New', Bedford ' Mr.'& Mrs. Harry J.Flynn . $51 $lt ~ .. Standard Plastics Co. Ine. Marie AnneCourcT, Lou.Ilr loseph V. Smith $25 " Courcy, Polish American CIti­ PI Flynn's Hardware Co. Inc. zen Club Abty. Bernard Kestenbaum., Catholic Women's Club Marathon Company 'Otra LADY OF PERPETUAl. Wells Inc. , Reardon & Lynch Co. IRe. . REALm-New Bedford '$20 $GOt $81 Miss Olive A. Nerne7 FaU River Gas Compan)' Dr. & Mrs. Francis P. GreBIl

TOURNAMENT DEBATERS: MemberS of the Holy Family High School peba,ting Team that participated in the National Catholic Forensic League Tournament in Pitts­ , burg, were, left to right:, Thoml;lS Azar, Edw'ardParr, '. ~rilyn Mulcairns, Richard Perras.

WiD The Real Lebanese-Americans Stand, Up .,

. Taunton sao '

TH& LEBANESE-AMERICANS, a friendlJ olole-bn JTO'" .eet III .-arlOlUl oUI.. to· euoJ' tile'" kadUlonili fooIIa lind ...... '

,,'..

t 'jh'" ,. For Die older folb. bora III Lebano.. , Lj .,&-S . !'J,." th.. an btta ., De.,.. " .... eN , " ·V, .. , ', .. '\couDtrJ tie thare • • • Did bow ~

$15

$300

S10 Sillman's Shoe Store, Samuel 111. Stone Jr., Guyot' Brothers Co. Inc., Ernest Rotenberg

North Attleboro $50

Brook. Manor "

C. Ray Randall Mfg. Co. Ine. Capodanno Inc. 'Manufacturers National Bank of Bristol Coimty A. T. Parker & Co.

·$35 Benedict Circle, No. 61 Daugh­ ters of Isabella

$30

,

.

S100

' ,

in Memory of'Most Rev. Jamee

,

$50

In Memory of Rt. Rev. M.PL. Achin's Garage Lariviere Standard Metals Divlsfon Cook­ Durfee - Buffinton InsuraDce 'Standard, Ine. . Agency Inc. Robert H. Moquin Met. Ins. Gendreau Furniture Consultant Gendreau Moving, Trucking &; Sf. Mary's Parish Guild Rigging Inc. Robert A. Munroe . Troy Co-operative Bank Nolan's Flowers Everett Motors Building Materials Co. Dr. Maurice D. Grant Shelburne ShiJ:t Co. Inc. Holy Name 'Society-St. Mary's Fall River Emblem Club Church

FaD River Retail Liquor Arn's Park Motel

Dealers Association Rotary Ciub

. $35 . $15 John Braz Sousa & DeMayo Inc. Atty. Richard K. Hawes

=0.

no

..

$10

..

New Bedford

s. ltinC BiacIer

'"

eor..

. Rodney Metala ~: hllset Cleaners &; DTeni , States Nitewe.r IIfc. 0.. 'rile KeystGne MargesoR ~iD« 0.. Mew Bedfor4 ~ ... ,Q ,a. P. O. :&}Q

..

S10

ST.,

MARY-North AUlebon

$25 :Mr. & Mrs. Albert Levesque $10 Mr. & Mrs. Setrak Yergatian, Mrs" Eva Kivlin, Mr. & Mrs. Wnuk, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Monaat, Dr. John Cotter· -

_JUNE IS FOR BRIDES

We bave the nam.. cd mllDJ' J'ouq women wIshlnc to become "Brides .. Christo" The,. need. help to pu ezpensea of their two-year novitiate, which are $156 • ,.ear ••• NameS such as SISTER ROSE MARY and SISTER MARY CYRIL of the Car­ meUte Sisters of KoUtamllDl'aIlDl, .Indla! We bave also man)', aemJnariana desirous of becomJnc priests • • • Their education eosta $600 eacb ($100 • year), in Ute case of ANT~O~ GEORGE EETICKAL and JACOB ~AUL VADASSERY 01 BanralOl'e, fD.

ST. PATBICK-Falmoatit

Sl!5 Jo,hn T. Sheehan

$lZ

lIfa.

Mlrs. Jeanne Lane

FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY JUNE ie. Why 'Dot • Mass said for his intention? 'A'MEMOlUAL GIn too will keep on, remembering him when placed. in some mlssion chapel. We'D send a.lovely ~ATHER'S DAY GIlT CARD to let him know what you have _ done. We suggest: Vestments ($50), Monstrance ($40.>, C~aUce ($40). ' . Clborium ($40), Tabernacle ($25), Censer (nO), Stations of tbe Cross ($25, Al~ ~eiJl (,II) Sanctuary Lamp ($15)~Salictuary Bell (.,t.

ST. FRANCIS XAVIER-Hyannis·

.

Mr.

. '$10", ' & Mrs. EdwarJJ;':MeOartb,­

lI'l'. ANTHONY-Mattapoisett

$10

Klr. & Mrs. Richard Kenned)'

1'1'. J08EPB-N.... DIP_

$20

$1'

KJr. & Mrs. Clarenet'! MahoRer

$15

R. E. Smith Company

Dixon Burial Vault Co.

Somerset Milk Can .

Korber Hats Inc.

Dr. Samuel BrOWll

t:

Cornell DubiMer Howard Motor. IDe. , ,: Universal RoofiaC It Sheet 'Metal Co. I. F. St. Aubin Co. IBe. K:iwanis Club of Mew Be<tfoN·

ST. MABY'S-Taantoa

Lapre's Turkey F'arm

$It ,

'100

V.

$25

Cascade Drug C~ :M. Josep'h Madowsky.' Atty. James seligman Dr. Owen L. Eagan Stap-Ie, Coal Co.

. Sunbeam lIabry

$ft

$30

Mr. '&i. Mrs. Warren Herrick

.

;'Men always ring a tittle bell

When the sacrwg time is here,

And then shalt thou do reverence

To Christ Jesus' own hiJjh presence."

(From a 13th century Mass Book). In 18 Near and Middle East countries, our MISSIONARY PRIESTS, 15,000 In Dumber, struggle against· difficulties ot climate, lack of finances, need for helpers; to bring the "high presence" &f Christ Into the midst of their people. Your MASS STIPENDS are often their only means 9f daily .upport. Please remember them from time, to time. Thanul

Dlr. William Donahue, Wm. I. Donnelly, Janet McKenna, Dr. I. ' Mat,e,sanz .

S70 Borden & Remington Co.

Inc. " Carl MacDonald, Harold RI­ oux, T-Bowl, Gibney's Wheel .t\ligning Service, Sirois Bieyele , Shop. Community Theatre, Marie'. : Beauty Corner '

SACRED HEART-Taunton $25 JE'anette R. Whittle

E. Cassidy Anderson Little Co. Inc. Norbut Manufacturing Co. IDe.

P5 .

we .et· lUI appeal neb .. the cae from the YlUlII'e .. MCHlER 111I "-J TIRO dlocl!se ID Lebanon. The ril. ftr tht OrietittJ CJnmh lagen, mOllth pOOr larm worken. about 1,0001D number. are tryiDa' to replQce their Imall, inade­ Quate and very rundown church with a lar&,er more suitable one . . • Encouraged by their Bishop. they appeal to ua lor , ",000 to bU~d outside walls. The)' have Ute land and if Ute)' oan, have help wiUt the walls, tbey feel l they will be able to linlsb the bulldw&, from their own smaU earnings and labor. Will you belp Utem? Any amount will be appreciated ..• Per­ baps one 01 tbe many Le.banese-American &TOUps would like to make this a special work 01 cbarit71 Please "elp Dowl

$10

,

+

that maD7 of ~elr mel'Clhllllta wen- , . ltPODSible tor the popularltr," ~ .0nClS, lac., UneMo Orilllltal nIP and Near Butloods III thIa eOUDilT' 80 H1IUle famed acholar, Dr. Philip IL Hi"I, ... the En0701opedia 01 IIlam ••• We think ftf tbue people nell

Dr UJ.. PaIhtr's MisJiM .AiJ

Bedfo~

Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. Callahaa

$150

fA

+

elT. MARY-New Bedford,

Monaghan Acceptance Corp.

::s

0-

$12

$114

0

QI

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Keeping

$10 Mr. & Mrs. William Winsper Mr. & Mrs. Gerard McCra

Catholic Memorial Home ResI.­ dents (additional donation) $115 New England Poultry Co. Inc. $110 H. Schwartz & Sons Inc.

Dr. Domenic Basile

,Art's Three Hour Cleanaers, B & L Cleansers Inc., Diamond'. :. Cafe, Enterprise Case & Display Co. Inc., Fuller Box Company

liT. LAWRENCE-New

Greater Fall River Joint Board Textile Workers Union of Amer_ ica AFL-CIO

"11

~.

,....

Fall River

The Robbins Co.

,

,_out_

.. QUOTABU QUOTE. "'What'. WUlted . . . . . a lot ell ~(' UU~ plaee., tIoIiJc a' lot 01 OWe tIdD....· Lalli LllUtti. qaoW .. AMERICA......... .

JJMPIe, til' a let 01

ItT. lOAN' OF AaC-Or.....

$10 1Il~ JlktWd Gould

.

IOta

...e

. .­

$1"

JOiePh Diu & 80M ~rr.

DOMINIC-Sw.....

S10

Jl(1~ • •

Mrs. Joseph ,",

~

r

lI'l'. PIUS : X ~ . y $II'

"\

___ .

Be. River Liquor 9t.ore 11M. 'Mr. & Mrs. .JobD CrawfoN

...

EIT. OE6ItGE-W. . . . lAwrence J. LubJ'

$1. &elM

~Ilt.l

L1TI'L£

WAYS TO

" .\

of our MISSION CLtl'BS.

.r:.r- '. . ,

Por. dC)1lar • IUIItb. ,... eM help lIlT of these: . ,

DAMIEN LEPER CLOB (ClU''' for 1epeftt,

PALACE OF GOLD (Provide.' feil' aced)

o II P R A .N S lIllE A. '0' '.<feed orphUaJ

THE JlA8ILIANS' (.lIPpOrta mluloa lOboolal

MONICA GUILD, (proviclet chaU.-, altan

an4 other ItemI for cbape~t. . .. . ,

lIT. MAIlY-'SOatia Darim....

,

Atty. Lester Bakst, Dr. Ken­ neln N. Shand; Parker Candy 00. Inc., Sanford Yarns Inc., Mrs. I. I'recI Beckett Sr. Joseph V. Murphy, Katherine Griffin & 'Anna Fennessey, J. E. Amiot: & Son, Dr. Kenneth ~JIlP~n, Tom ,Ouellette Whole­ Beef It PrcwiaiolUl. Jo»ephine Louette, Ellz8betil Datr, Buffinton Florlsts, DI'• Aleunder B. RoiItler,- Eagle l'i­ uaee Corp. Highland DeUeateasen, Tiek­ Tack Frocks lac. l\etail Clerks VQioo - RiCIA i.ee&l • • 1_ AIL...cJG

SOME

ODe

12ear SSttnissiOllS" ..... . fIANCIt CAIDtHM SHUMAN, "

.aM.

'

~,.a;..

. . . . . 11_

';

CAYMOUC NIAI MIf 'a_A1IOft • . . ,....... AYe. tit:'" .... :••••:,... t1;.... Y•

~

...


DIOCESAN YOUTH· CONVENTION: More than 200 CYO members from .all sections of the Diocese' h~ld their· aim~al Convention w:ith the ;Fall . River u~it 8S host. Left photo: Bishop·Gerra-rd.V.G., eo~tulates John M. Hiekey :on h.ifJ re-election to the Diocesan presidency. Center· photo: JamesW. Lawton, registrar of motor vehicles, .·guest speaker, meets

Paula Szxaja, New Bedford, and Cynthia Femandes, New Bedford, before he addressed ~he .c9n.ventiori. Right photo: officers for the' coming year r are, left to ·right: Peter~ullivan, New Bedford, treasurer; Anne Louise Cibbons, Fall ~iver,· sec'retary;John .:M~ Hickey, Tauriton, president;

Rita Estrella, New Bedford, vice-president, -' .

a

tolate; Bisbop Flanagan Mid, ~ . 8OCiety··· to be link betWeeil penetratesoc:iet7 . and restore it them." to Christ...· . The laity, the Bay State pre­ . "The laymen'. real and8JleClal late .averred .'are full-blown, :role," he continued, "is. to ·medi" ·legitimate members 01. bOth ate between the ChurCh and ~ivjl iIocieties·and, short of divine re-

StreS$es Special· Leiy Apostolate Role in Church

.ve1ation, are the only mearui by · !'eal- 'competence' in the social apostolate to make Christ live ia . whiCh Christ and Christianprili­ -ciples will be made -part .01. the ·the major' temporal institutiona of .9OCiety .;.... family· live; ,reC" -temporal order."'. - . "In fact," Bishop Flanagan · reation, ·education, ecc,momk and . -added, "only the' layman:'has the politkal aUairs." ...

WORCESTER (NC)-The lay apostolate is not a stop­ gap operation in which the Church asks laity to hold the fort until there are enough priests to do the work, a bishop said here. "The lay apostol-ate is the ful­ fillment of your vocation as baptized and confirmed Chris­ tians," Bishop Bernard J. Flana­ gan lJ1. Worcester has told the annual convention of the Dioce­ san Council ·of Catholic Men here. The Bishop said it· is impera­ tive "that a militant, zealous, well - informed core. of parish leaders ••• be developed· to meet the challenges faced by the Church in the 20th Century." . Special Role . "There isn't a parish in any diocese," he said, "which does not have more than its share of lapsed,. dormant or non-prac­ ticing Catholics; none which does not have an even larger group of minimal' Catholics ­ those who fulfill only some of the basic requirements of the·· Church with regard to ~ligiot.is requirements." . Worf must begin now to make the parish become once again . "the missionary unit of· the Church in which priests and people form a team to bring the Gospel to each other imd to the entire neighborhood oommunity and to the entire world they toucll outside the parish limits,· .the Central MasseChulleUs OrdiDary asserted. . Thi8 is the aim of .~ epos­

Iar Plan Mass for Food

Congress

XXIII

JO·HN

POPE·

'·Angelo .Gi1J.seppe· Roncalli

Delegates

.....

WASHINGTON (NC)-Arch­

bishop Egidio Vagno;w, Apos­

tolic Delegate in· tlM! United

$tates, will .offer . a .Pontif.ical Mass in St. Matthew's: cathedral­ here Sunday, June for d.ele-. ,ates attending .the ·World J'00:d..

PONTIFEX MAXIMUS·

,

..

'

..

."1881-1963 :

\

0:

. ; Auxiliary Bi~ PhUipM.

Hannan of Washington win preach the ~rmon. _' ..

The World .Food Co.QSreS:lJ, IUP:-;o . ported by .th" J'~ ·an~ AgricuJ­ tUN Organizatl9n 0# t!ie Unite4 JI Nations, 18 • ,hig~light of the... five-year worldwide progtam in. the F AO Freedom trom Hun~r. , campaign that' starte4 in 1960. The sessions will be. held heN

~,

..

~,

l '. .

,

CoDgresa.

~.Tue~,.Ju~:"

'

.

, '

..

,.-,~.

... "

.;·;,,-·~~escat.. ~ ~; .....

"

.

,

Pace

'.

. '.

.'.':,':'

"',

.: -,"­

",

. .~,

'!r .... I •• ~ -

••.•

<

" ' I -',~

._

'.';!'"

M.·EDiAL ·S·R·E·A b-"'·"·'··· "-

'Mental Health ,.1. ,-:'

'Z: ..• :

• .'i

....... , v

~

··FALL "':'

:1' ,':

'..• ~

:u·'

J

.'.:

; ... ,.;. :.' : '.'

~

.( . ~

".' '-.

,

'/.

' . : • I ,.'

-

RIV~R· .•":.i. ~~~~'.

...

.....

•• ~

~.~ ••••

.

WASmNGTOJf (Me" - Tbe' lSell6te Lebor and PUblie We).] fare Committee ~ ,~Rro.ved .•. bill est&blfshing an. ~33. ~D!~ _. Federal program to fight mental illness and retardatlQDo

..

:.;p

.~

'to

..

1.-'

•••

~

••

~


Bishop ·Eh~elr 'Suggests" Centtcll

Fund for School' Financing

16

Laws Safeguard Workers'

Riqhts in Unio·n Shop

By Msgr. George G. Higgins

Director, NCWC Social Action Department

The General Electric Company re~ntly published a

report on "Compulsory Unionism" which is more restrained

in its criticism of the "union shop" than the typical publi­

cation of its kind. The author-Mr. Philip D. Moore, man­

ager of General· Electric's

Federal legislation provides Employee Relations Service several other Il3feguards of indi­ --keeps his rhetoric fairly vidual rights. A union cannot

well in hand and is reason­ require membership as a condi­

ably fair to organized labor. Now tion of employment unless it has

and then, however, he is some­ been· chosen as the bargaining

.hat less than

agent by a majority of employ­

objective. in his

ees in an election conducted by SUPERIOR: Father John eriticism of the the NLRB, or unless the employ­

·labor· movement

er himself is satisfied that the E.. Thomas of Lowell has ap:d of its elected

union is supported by a majority. bElen named superior in Peru o f.f i cia I I • There can. be no legal or en­ of the Society of St. James Mr. Moore's ba­ forceable union shop without the the Apostle, the missionary ltic argument is employer's consent eKpressed in co,ngregation f 0 u n d e d by· that the union a written contract signed by the

Richard Cardinal Cushing. mop is an un­

employer and the union. ,Archbishop of Boston. warranted in­ Protection Available fringement on the freedom of Other forms of protection are ~ also available to the individual -{ t'ti e individual pays union worker. General Electric feels worker. As long as dues and fees uniformly re­ 110 strongly about this matter that -it would have the govern-. quired ,of ,all . employees, he cannot pc. required ~ attend. ,.' meJ;lt prohibit the union shop. .union' m:eefings, take an oath of··' . Favors 'Right to Work'

"Force destroys confidence in loyalty to the union, strike, IOvernment," GE pointed out in picket, pay fines or special as­ 135 FRANKLIN. ·STREET '...' . , " .. •.1952 policy statement referr(!d sessments, ,nor can he be ..law.-, f:ALL RIVER· OS 2-0211· to.·by Mr·. Moore In his report.· fuAy prevellted .~OJ1\1 performing "Government ·should protect· . actions, that, . might jeopar;diZe· freedom. Rather than £ondoning the union's !!ecurity. His hostile actions may lead or; worse yet, being a party JO any scheme of corporation and to his expulsion from the union, anion officials to take money but they cannot be a cause of ~.. discharge from his job. and freedom awa~' from employ­ Im.~ •• ~ •••• ~.~ •••• ees by force, the governm,ent En~ .A..,fument ,hould protect employees against I would say, then, that the· Just that." , union shop is ethically defensi­ i I take this to mean that Gen­ 6-al Electric is in favor of some ble and should no\ be prohibited by law. There is obviously ample Jorm of "right-to-work" legisla­ room for honest d.isagreement tion at the State level and pos­ iaibly at the Federal level as well. as to. whether or not the union INC. shop is the best possible way of ! General Electric's basic argu­ ment against the· union· shop handling the problem of union security. ·(and in favor of legislation pro­ The quickest way to end this hibiting the union shop) might Seem to be plausible 'on the face argument would be 'to create a 'WHOLESALE· & RETAIL of it, but, from the point of"view situation in the United States in Of sound social ethics, it· leaves which it would be universally taken 'for granted· that unions Inuch to be desired. ' .SHUCKED CLAM~ are not only legitimate but de­ Morally Defensible STEAMERS & FRIERS , To say that the government sirable, and even necessary in our type of economy. Then there' should not compel workers to join a union is one thing, but would no longer be any need : DELIVERIES WITHIN : unions to be, concerned about to argue that the government for 4 6·., their o,wn security. A 75 MILE AREA . : .Should prohibit labor and man­ agement from voluntarily enter-

Ing into a union shop agreement

,:« Restaurants • InsHtutions It another matter altogether.. Roadside Stands : A law compelling all workers large or Small Clambakes .Truclc Body lullden to join the union representing Aluminum or St.el them at their place of employ~ 944 County St. ment would p~obably be hn-· can supply lobsters, Oysters moral, because Some unions are NEW BEDFORD. MASS. $hrimps,Scallops in Season eorrupt or are under the dom-. WY 2-66'1 Seaweed for Clambakes also ination of communists or racke­ Available

'. leers. But the union shop, as ituch, is morally defensible.

; Of course, safeguards for the. ~IO THIRD ST. r FALL RIVER Individual worker~s rights must be provided where the union OSborne· 4-5693 .hop is authorized. In general, eiXisting Federal legislation pro­ :Vides such 'safeguards. , Modest Burden FOUR CONVENIENT OffiCES TO SERVE YOU : . Probably the most valid rea­ ONE-STOP lBANKING lIOn for contending that· the union ahop of itself involves no unrea­ iwnable curtailment of individ­ Ual liberty is the modest burden which union membership im­ poses upon an employee under existing Federal law. OF TAUINTON Under the Taft-Hartley Act, as lnterpreted by the National North Dighton North Easton Norton Taunton Labor Relations Board and the Spring Street Main Street W. Main Street MainStreet ~ederal courts, the union shop in those industries which come Member Federal Deposit Insuran~e Corporation ~nder the jurisdiction of the NLRB requires no more of an ~ ~

'employee than the payment of

reasonable initiation fees, peri­

·odic dues, and assessments to

the union that legally represents

.bim in a collective bargaining

contract.

~ Financial Liberty Only _

I In other words, the "liberty"·

,conferre:i by Ii· right-to-work

.law, correctlY' interpreted, can

only be a financial liberty. It

frees the employee from the ob~

OFFSET LETTERPRESS . -.. ,ligation of making a monetary contribution to the union that 1-17 COFFIN AVENUE Phone WYman 7-9421 is his bargaining agent. The

New Bedfolod, Mass.

Federal law prohibits all other

obligatioa:s, unless tl,~ employee

vQIlLl\tarily consents to them.

be

CLEVELAND (NC,)-Auxili­ ary Bishop Clarence· E. Elwell of Cleveland has urged that the - economic burden of operatipg parochial schools be eased by having parishes pOOl funds and appeal to business for aid. Bishop Elwell, diocesan super­ intendent of schools, recommen­ ded setting up central funds on a diocese or district basis, Each parish would contrLbtite accord­ ing to its income, and receive according to its need. Money from the central fund, Bishop Elwell explained, would help meet all school expenseS--

including salaries, maintenance and replacemen.t or expansion of facilities. . Bishop Elwell explained that setting up central funds would require a change in canon law. At present, he said, each parish manages its own income except for . certain specific diocesan assessments. It ia not likely that a change will come from the Second Vat­ ican Council because the prob­ lem isn't world-wide, he said. But a change could be made in other ways, he said, including joint action by the U.S. Bishops.

.:*~

CAlllN' All

THRIFTYSHOPPERS Here's Where You Save. - Twice ­ Low PriCes 114 ~W StIIlPS!

'HUTCHINSON'S .ART·SHOPPE

_----_...

• Picfu;t;Fiaming·

• .ArfSupplies·

B&5

I I,

L

CHUCKRGAST

34 ~

First National's ·famous quality choice beef - Mak. delic~ Pot Roast _ Great Saving I .

..

III ..

c

L8

..

BONElESS-"Choice, Lea'.;;,Moutn-Watering ~ All Good Eating

Shoulder Roast·.

FISHERIES of FALL RIVER

75c

69c

49c

L4J

BONE-IN - Cut from ·ChOice, Heavy Western Steer Beef

Undercui'Steak

'..

Heavy Steer Beef far Hearty Eating

Beef

Short Ribs

~,.,~",~""-.",-",,,.

Red Ripe - Luscious Beauties - A Royal Treat for tf1e Family

i

.SEGUIN.

"If.

• •

••••••••••••••••••

FIRST·MAC:H INISTS NATIONAL BANK

Year Books Brochures

Color Process Booklets

A'mericanlPress, Inc~ PRINTERS· -

Strawberries . I

QUART

59c

ARST Of THE SEASON - Bursting.witn Juice and Flavor

3

. Peaches .. .

LIS

.

39c

also BORDENS - Olive-Pimento, Pimento, Pineapple

. 2 J~~ ·49c

·,s~::el:s ::: 29c

Kraft . ~::~:S

also KRAFT - Vera Sharp, Blue, Roka, Old English

Borden FlNAST - Fresh from Ovens Cheese Bread Chocolate Rich Flavor Nestles Quik Our

,

Genuine Cheddar Cheese Added

L~~~

25c 89c ~~ 37c BONED TURKEY BONED 69C Lynden· . CHICKEN P;~d;~~~ aH;~h~toes ~:N .. 37C

also

2 LB 6

0%

CAN

Great in- Salads, Sandwiches 11 oz JAR

FINAST -' Fancy HAWAIIAN ..... Perfed for Salads

·Pineapple ~H~N~$ 21~t~~oz65c

FINAST.;. Fancy HAWAUAN Extra Heavy Syrup·' Pineap'ple SLICED·· 2~t~t~soz'65c ...;ift

FIRST

NATIONA-C=i STORES e

Same Low Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vicinity, :::

eWeRe5er~e the Right"; Limit QuantitiN)


Schedule . for' Dfoc'esan Stude.,'ts'·" . Includes Class Day Programs,

11fE ANCHO.-DiocMe of fan Inver-Thurs., June 6,

19~5

-

"7

Graduation Exercises, Proms The next two weeks will be busy for most of our Diocesan students. School will close offici'ally Friday, June 21, but graduations will be over by next Sunday. For some this will mark the close of formal education while for others it will be the begin­ alumnae. will hold their annual . ning of a new life at college Communion breakfast and com­ or nursing school. The Sum... mencement 'exercises 'will take'

mer vacation is awaited by place in the afternoon.,

everyone, students and faculty

alike. For the faculty, in many' cases, it will be another bout with books but this time in a different role. Teachers at Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro ar.e all plano, ning to attend Summer school. For some, it will be courses in. Math and science. Others will be studying language and journal­ ism. There is also an administra­ tion workshop in the plans of some members of the faculty. Class Da.y Our Lady of Good. Counsel Sodality at Holy Family High in New Bedford held elections dur­ ing the past week. The following were elected: Meg Gosselin, pre­ fect; Beatrice Abraham, vice­ prefect; Maureen O'Brien, secre­ tary and Christine Ponichtera, treasurer. Francine Filipek and John Finni were elected senior coun­ sellors and Gloria Harrington was named a junior cousellor. , Queen of Peace Sodality, Union elections will be held at Bishop Cassidy High' in Taunton Wed­ nesday, June 12. Representatives from schools where sodalities have been organized, will m~et at Cassidy to elect Diocesan offi.: cers for next year. ' And Class Day programs are very much in the 'news this' week. At Dominican' Academy exercises took place yesterday afternoon at 3. The ;class will, history and prophecy were writ­ ten by committees headed by Pauline Gagnon, Carolyn Panek and' Paula Nobrega: Cecile Levesque, school president, de­ livered the Key Oration and Irene Gagnon Junior A presi­ dent, presented the response. Jeannette Laroche was' awarded a certificate as the highest rank­ ing business student,' by' the Catholic Business Education Association. ' At Holy Family High, class day exercises were' also held yesterday afternoon. One of the features which marked the pro­ gram was presentation of the Paladin Leader Award :to senior Roger Robitaille, president of Holy Family's Mission Club. The award, a degree in the ,Order of Crusade Paladins, honor soCiety of the Catholic StudentS' Mission Crusade, is conferred for com­ pletion of a program ~of study during the current academic year. Another feature of the pro­ gram, which was held at the Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford, was the presentation of medals and certificates to stu­ dents who participated success­ fully in the A.P.S.L. Nationwide Latin examinatio}l. Out of 93 participants at Holy Family, 75 won awards for ou~standing achievement. Gold medals and Summa Cum Laude certificates were awarded' to John Finni and Fra'ncine'Fili­ pek. Silver medals and Summa Cum Laude certificates were awarded to Kathleen IKennedy and Carol Jussaume. The follow­ ing were awarded Maxima Cum Laude certificates: Sheila Har­ rington, Joel Regula, Mary Ann McQuillan, Chri~tine Ponichtera, Geraldine Vikre, Linda Eluz­ iario, Patricia Collis, Kathleen Goodman, Ma~reen ,: O'Brien, Kevin Healy, Donna Plqce, Mad­ - eline Araujo, Paul Belliveau and Michael Crowley. In ad~iti()Jl, 22 students received Magna Cum Laude, and 35 received "Cum Laude certificates. ! Physical FitnesS Today is Class day ~t Mount St. Mary Academy in FaIl River. Tbe program is being presented tbis afternoon for the benefit &f the student body and will be presented again this evening for parents. I On Sunda,.., June i Mount

Senior Mounties ,presented a tribute to Our Lady. on Tuesday of this week. The program open­ ed with Mass celebrated by Rev. Robert Kaszynski and closed ~ith benediction and a banquet in the afternoon. Meanwhile, physical fitness tests are being administered to all Feehanites. The program, in which all students take part, has had admirable success and the series of tests being administered is designed to show progress of students during the past year. Mrs. Lois Cronan is in charge of girls' athletics and Harold Hane­ wich, Joseph Hughes and Fred Bartek are in charge of the boys' program. Hour of Recollection seniors at Bishop Stang High , in North Dartmouth are .having a social whirl these days. On Wednesday of last week the Stang gyni was ·transformed into' a beautiful ballroom decorated with hangings of red, white llrid blue for the first Stang senior. prom. Dancing began at eight and ended at midnight when a banquet was served., Music was ,pr9vided by Buddy, Reis and his' orchestra. The Stang photogra­ phy club provided a roving photographer and a booth was ' set tip where individual couples , could obtain photographs. . Today the seniors are enjoying their first senior class picnic at Rocky Point Park. This is the las( planned event in the series of special activities leading up to the first Stang graduation. Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, announces that a total of nine seniors have won' college scholarships. The brainy nine are Anne Louise Gibbons, C;:or-, nelia Adams, Nancy Davis, Mary Ann Latella, Margaret McCon­ nell, Marlene Gauthier, Mary­ beth Jette and Rita Sullivan. Hours spents with French ir­ regular verbs and the other Gallic inconsistencies of that language have paid off for Mad­ eline Thibault of Mt. st. Mary Academy, second prize winner in a National French Contest sponsored by t!te Boston Chapter of the AmeI:ican Association of French Teachers; and for Louise Blain and Anne Carbonneau at Bishop Cassidy High. Cassidians placed second and third, respec, tively, in the French II division of the contest. Prizes were cash ' awards and books of French poetry. National Honor Society At Fall River's Dominican Academy, seniors are practicing for a sung Mass this Sunday' at 8:30. Parents will attend and will be guests at a following Communion breakfast. The memorable day will conclude at 4 with graduation ceremonies at which Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard will officiate and Rev. Eugene Robitaille, SS.CC. will be chief speaker. In 'a satirical essay contest on "How to be Popular with Stu­ dents" open to teen-agers throughout the country, five students at Sacred Hearts, Fall River, earned honorable men­ tion citations. They are Mary Beth Furze, Kathleen Raposa, Donna Lynch, Alice Burgmyer and Susan Johnson. A National Honor Society as­ 'sembly is announced for Mon­ day, June 10 at Bishop Feehan High. At this time the Mercy Chapter of the NHS will be or. ganized. The program will in. elude a report on a,recent meet­ ing of delegates of honor soci­ eties from the southeastern Massachusetts area and a dis­ cussion of plans for the new Mercy Chapter. ' Also at Feehan, a cookie jam­ boree is in progress today, as the home economics department c0­ operates in fund-raising activi.

o

0

0

.. GREAT BO~KS: Charter members of Great Books Discussion Club at Mt. ·St. Mar/" Academy, Fall RIver, are, from left, Cecelia Poll{a, Diane Martineau, Madeleine Thibault, Joanne Bailey. ' ties at the Attleboro sChool. Va. rious specialties of foreign countries have tJeen baked' by home ee. students and the cafe­ teria's the place to find them and' buy them. Pro~eds will ben¢fit a fund to. purchase cheer leaders' outfits. Also in connection with the cheer leaders, a contest is under way. to design these new uni­ forms. Prizes will be awarded at a dance to be held Wednesday, Jun~ 19, also to benefit the fund. .Seventeeners' Prexy In Bristol County Girls' League competition, B ish 0 p Stang athletes have won second place in basketball and third place in volleyball. Their achievements were recognized at the ·league's annual banquet. Marybeth Donovan is newly­ elected president of the seven. teeners, social group at Sacred Hearts, Fall River. Other new officers at the academy are Gale Hicks, glee club prexy and Bev,erly Furtado, heading the orchestra. Summer reading is being pro­ moted at Mt. St. Mary's as so­ dallsis and student councillo1'1l sponsor a paperback book sale. Proceeds will benefit the sodal. ity,: and reading will benefit everyone who does it. Among Mount teachers, early farewells are being said to Sister Mary Adele, off to Win­ ona, Minn. to take Summer courses in French at the College of St. Teresa under a grant from the National Defense Education Act. ' Busy Week It's a busy week at Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton. Yes­ terday the senior class ventured off the mainland and to Martha's Vineyard for their annual outing. The previous night they enjoyed the junior-senior receptipn, fea­ turing a supper party and skits presented by juniors. Seniors read the class will and awards were presented to yearbook editors. .Scheduled for Sunday is a twi. light hour of recollection in the school chapel, to be attended by seniors and their parents. Rev. Norman Ferris will conduct the service and chief speaker at a supper to follow will be Rev. Robert Kaszynski. It's busy too at Cassidy's sister school in Fall River. SHA sen;' iors' enjoyed a picnic at Nana­ quaket in Tiverton and were in­ ducted into the alumnae associa·

25th Degree SASKATOON (NC) - When Louis St. Laurent, 81, former Prime Minister of Canada, re­ ceiv'ed an honorary degree from the University of Saskatchewan here,' it was his 25th such honor.

tion at • Communion breakfast. At SHA the new yearbook ed­ itor is Susan Johnson, Anchor

c

news reporter. Her "opposite numbers" in Taunton are Bren~ Buckley and Joan O'Hearne.

Requiescat in Pace

POPE JOHN XXIII

Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli

1881-1963

MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc.

H. Frank Reilly, Treas.


18

THE AN''''' . - - "'\:.,cese "offcsff River-Thurs., , June 6, 1963

'j'

Need Seminaries, Priests

~od

Sad Drama at St. Peter's .,

Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D. D.

And The W,atching World 'Mourns

LETTER TO PRIESTS Catholic native population of Africa has doubled within ten years, but the number of priests has become proportionately less. For example: in west Africa, the increase of Catholics within 10 years was 141 per cent, but priests increased by only 85 per cent. In Central Africa, the number of Catholics was up '100 per cent. while the increase of priests for the same period was only 73 per cent. There is only one priest for every 2,400 Catho­ lics in' Rwanda and Burundi, one for every 2,200 in Ni~eria and one for every 2,100 in Ghana. If space permitted, even more startling statistics could be given for the shorta~e of priests in Latin America.. Th~

greatness came from his very simplicity" At his coronation iliat were expressed nearly five Mass in 1958, the new pope re- .

,.ears ago when it waS an­

vealed his simple plan: "Some

nounced that Angelo Roncalli' hope to find in the Pope"a skilled

was the new pope. "Who is diplomat and statesman, others a

that?" was' the question on scholar, an organizer of public everyones lips. Now, no one was life, or one whose mind is in

asking for whom the bell tolls. touch with every form of modern It tolls for one they have taken progress without exception. Ven­ to their heart as they· have few erable brethren and beloved

.other popes in history. sons," the Holy Father con­

Pope John's fmal. words be­ tinued, "they are none of them fore lapsing into unconscious­ on the right track, for their ness were like a page from the ideal of a Pope does not at all Lives of the Saints - only far correspond to the' true ideal * * *

more real, since we have grown The new Pope has before his to know and love the man who mind, more than all else, that uttered them. "I offer the sacri­ Gospel picture which St. John fice of my life," the late Pope gives, in the words of the said with great clarity of voice, Saviour himself, of the Good "for the spread of the Kingdom Shepherd * * * This is what we DIRECTOR: Rev. Albert

of Christ, for the success of the wish to express from the very Chazelle, M.S., a native of Council, for all of mankind, first day of our pontlftcate, and France, is leaving his pro­ that there may be peace on earth to present ourselves before the • .... That all may be one .... * world as, above all, a shepherd." .fessorship at La Salette .Jesus, Jesus, Jesus * * * I am the Seminary, Attleboro, to be­ A true shepherd John h~s resurrection and the life * * • come director of the new La been. In visits to the sick. and I ask forgiveness of all whom I Salette Institute of Spiritu­ imprisoned, in Lenten visits to may have failed since the time the churches of Rome, in his ality in Rome. At the Attle­ of my youth until today. I have boro seminary for the past Ioyed everyone and wished them talks to the little ones and great ones of this world; Angelo Ron­ only well." five years, Father Chazelle calli has shown himself always To his doctors Pope John had as the kindly shepherd of the was formerly rector of La said, "Don't .worry too muoh flock. Salette National Seminary, about me. The bags are packed Tournai, Belgium and supe­ Influenced by this gentle at­ oanll I am ready." His bags were traction of the Good Shepherd, rior of the congregation's In­ indeed. packed, with the merit" of scores of non-Catholic leQders ternational Major Seminary, • life of love and service! have sought him out. Even the Fribourg, Switzerland. . During his few years on the Communist world has found in throne of St. Peter, Pope John him the champion of 'peace. XXIII had accomplished re­ The Rock upon which Christ markable things: the CmIDcil. and its renewal of the Church, built his Church has long bee'n the beginning of a. successful the rock of contradiction to those conversation with our separated not of'our fold. During the r~ign of Pope John it has become the t)rethren, the totally-committed pursuit of peace. But the greatest corner stone of our hopes for t-rue Christian unity. Why.opray your ·ro... and otlwr .• legacy that he leayes behind is How..........,. day? . .nld.'.. lI·

When the Cardinal Secretary • deeper love for the Church QUID IlO5"ETOX tpray concan" • that he has stirred in all hearts. of State came to the bedside of trot. k..p. on world... for SIVIN the dying pope, the Holy. Father DAVI Oil MOIl•••• and ....., His reign, by human 5tan­ .0011 oIflKlII1 1_",--_ J-. greeted him with the words of danis, was a brief one, but his 11.. - Itt Iftinllta. and..... • the pSlllm, "I rejoiced because • shadow of influence has ex­ ' - oIf 'Of' day•• flll"'"'lII...... tended to the ·ends of the earth. they said to me: We will go into aphidl. OW etc. the house' of the Lord." In OUI' And what the citizens of Rome PI.nll will ...., . . .

moment of _dness, we must alS(], are now saying in their grief net Ihiny..... '.

. et.... y.....allty.,.... . may one day be written into the rejoice that the Vicar of Christ lIlq /lIM. $0"1",_ is now lft home with the Master, books of history: that this man dilution. arouiKlCiiilO Tbe age of saints and heroes: from God called .John was 'one r• .n ' ChecJt L ow colt, oat l~ ,., is not dead. It can never die all of the greatest ~ of the gal. of .ray. C_ modern era. long as men like Good Pop4!! lolnt .-rn-.....,. Paradoxically, Pop e .John'. .Jolin walk our earth. Continued from Page One

r----·---,

I A 7·DAY· I

I ROSE SPRAY· I • IS HERE 1I0WI I I I I I .... I ........... I I I 'I1 '1 t rio :1 . -I I pro,,'" "S..,ln"" I'

I I ."'"I

_xcllNI".

I

·

I'

unlillllo. ~ '1uld 'orlllUlatlolt • •• ath... proyon l reeIIoML Oat ' lIQUto IOIDOX evtIntrIud 1...ld.....1......., til,... fr_ IonIde with. on," of IIItIIfactlotl. Only '$2.10 ~ pt¥ $a."9' pt.. q,.,. ~ pIw 2S¢ ,.,. "'Coo..

11I0""'."'" .'1

I

In Memoriam

.

j

".91 pte....

lWa ...... .".y

p,~Olt. , ....., 01 yew . . . . .

..

"11ooHty

Now, what can we do about it? We know we are ordained for the Church and only. for canonical and juridkal reasons are assigned to a diocese or parish: "My parish is the world." Do we, as we ascend the altar,

ever think of the faithful of Brazil or the faithless of China clinging to our chasubles? When we lift the Host, do we not lift up Christ in His Mystical Body, heavy with the gravitational drag of souls who know not Its mystery of love? .

You may not be able to go on Ute

M~ions, but you can, nevertheless, make

a small sacrifice every month to help educate a seminarian. One bishop from

Africa informed us he could take only 15

out of 300 applicants for the seminary be­ . cause he lacked the means. There is hardly a priest in any large diocese in the United states who could not sacrifice $250 a year to prolonc his priesthood in another laud. Our priesthood is eternal once we receive it, as. the soul is immortal once breathed into a body: But mothers, after having go~ through the labor of birth, continue their' motherhood in their daughters. To us priests, a~ it is giVeR to immortalize our priesthood Oft ·earth by making acts of self-denial, until we see a spiritual _ sllanding before the altar with It host and chalice in hi. haRds. We have just returned from Rome. where there was a plain­ tive plea for new scm'inarles and priests. What a beautiful op­ pOI'tanity to make up for our imperfections by respondin~ to this appeal. Mosi of as have ears or &elevisions. In the Name of Christ Our Hi~h Priest, let us also have a priest. whom we are supportin&" in the Missions. Send wha&ever sacrifices you can to The Society .f st. Peter the Apostle for Native Clergr throup The Society for the Propagation 'of the Faith. , GOD LOVE YOU to A Mother for $5 "In thanksgiving for a

new sister foc her three older brothers," * .. * to M.E.R. and Fi"ienEis for $6 "In behalf of myself and several non-Catholic workers in

our Mfke. Use it to aid all of God's poor." .... to- R.V. for $50 "I will be' ordained this month, and I want to offer this sacrifice te beg God's blessings on my priesthood and te help educate semi­

narians in the Missions." .. .... t& E.K. for $50' "I have received 90 many favors from God. ~w I ·want to start returning them by ;helping The Society for the Propagation- of the Faith." We are not onl,. asking fer your saerifleetl;. bui for your ....a)'el'S. Send your re4uest and au offering 01 $2 for the WOItLDMlSSION ROSA,ltY. and we will seBd 70U these multi­ colored beads blessed by Bishop Sheen. Each time YOIl sa,.. the WORLDMlSSION ROSARY you will remenaber'o put aside a da"-r saCl'ifice f . the Holl' Father.

cut _t this eolumn. plu your saerlfleeto It- au mall It to the'Most Rev. FUItOD J. Sheen, National Director 01 the Society for the Propal"ation 0.1 the Palth, 366 Fifth Aveaue, New York 1. M. r., ... your Diocell&ll Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. C6NSlDINE, 3iI North MaIn Street, Fall Itiver, Mass-.

·I !.2~~o~!;

-"-.:-r

.._------

3141: N ••• n.... 0 "UtlOa 4;1f:'; 0....... CloInlItII rorillllllton SI_lm

SAVE MONEY ON

\

POPE JOHN XXIH

Charcoal Briquets lag -Coal - Charcoal

YODROll HEATI

cd

=

CHARUS F. YARGAS

1M IOCICDAU Av.-II

..., ...oBi. MAlI.

1'881-1963

GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc. rei. ~."

WY 6-1271

New ........

• • • • •"'• •'Yj

...

CAMP SACRED HEART

"..

SHARON, MASSACHUSmS

...

"~PACIC?US Ft,REPROC?f

"..

.

IIIIr....

SlEEPING QUARTERS.

.For Boys 7 ~ 14 Y8Of'S otd $i.x week season: June 30 to August 10

THE HUB

".. IIIIr....

Register for 2, or .., or 6- week. . Free Tutoring if Desirecl

·S. Gourse & Sons

,.

THE BROTHERS OF.. THE SACRED HEART

FALL R.IVER

Io!fllklt

_lIN".,

~,

HEATING OIL

~

~. ~

• . • • • •

.•

SACRED HEART SCHOOL ~

SHARON, MASSACHUSms

~

"..

A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS

~

.....

, Grammar Grades ....5-6--7.. _ ntE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

...

~

~

~ ~

..


THE ANCHOR~Dioces4t of fa"ltiv...-ThUf'~., .rune 6,1961

'9

Reciting Rosary, 10,000 Follow Route of Lancastet MO!rtyrs

PROFESSION: Four members of the Dominican Sisters ot Charity of -the Presenta­ tion of· the Blessed Virgin Mary professed their first vows in the presence of Bishop­ Connolly at a ceremony in St. Anne's Hospi tal Chapel. Left to right: Sr. Catherine. of Jesus;, Sr. Angela Francis of the Cross; Bis hop Connolly; Sr. Marie Claire of the Infant Jesus; Sr. Michael Joseph. ' •

LAl'."'CASTER (NC) - More than 10,000 people reciting the Rosary followed the route along which . 15 Lancaster Martyrs were dragged to their execution during the Reformation some 300 years ago. For nearly an hour traffic was stopped as the long processi6B wound its way along the narrow streets of the ol~ city and past its castle to Low Moor, scene of execution, where Masr. was of-­ fered. The procession at the castle' was joined by a gl'OUp wearing period costumes representing the 15 Martyrs and bearing large palms. Carr,. Relies Following them three priests oore Martyrs' relics--the skull of Blessed Ambrose Barlow in a glass box reliquary, a relic of Blessed John Southworth and a silver casket containing other relics, including one of St. Thomas More, Lord Chancellor of England who was beheaded by King Henry VIII.

. At the "Gallows Field" at Low Moor just outsicre the city ia pouring rain, protected by urn­ brellas, -- -,-',,'p Brian Foley of Lancaster offered the Mass at a portable altar thought to bave been used by the Martyrll, Blessed Edmund Campion, 5 ..1.. and the Venerable John WOOO­ eock, O.F.M.

Williams' Funer.' Home EST, 1870

1 Washington SqUCtN NEW BEDFORD Reg. Funeral Director and Embalmer

PRIVATE PARKING AREA TEL WY"I091

Michael C. Austin Inc. ­ 'UNERAL SERVICE • HYANNIS • HARWICH PORT • SOUTH YARMOUTH

549 COUNTY ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

"Save With, Safety" at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET

CO-OPERATIVE BANK

.

1-15 WR,UAM ST.

NEW BEDFORD, MASS. -

"

INVESTITURE: The following novices from the United States were invested with the habit of the Sisters in the presence of Bishop Connolly. Left to right: Sr. Mary Mar­ garet of the Sacred Heart; Sr. Paul Denis o:Z the _ j;iMl ea--. ' Sacred Heart; Bishop Connolly; Sr. John

Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli . ,

Pontifex Maximus Requiescat .in Pace

TOUHE Y' S PHARMACY-SURGICAL SUPPLIES SO. AMERICAN NOVICES: Also rece iving the habit from Bishop Connolly were: Sr. Ines of the Holy Spirit; Sr. Angela Con ',uelo of the Incarnation; Sr. Jose of the Pre­ sentation; Bishop CO!1tlo11y; Sr. l\1::~I Nino Jesu::;; Sr. Luz Amparo de la Mil'ced; Sr. Martha Oliva of the Incarnation; &C. Martha lues of the Nativity.

202-206 Rock Street

. Fan River


20

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 6,1963

l

History Sometimes Comes \ Close to· Repeating Itself By Most -Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D.

Bishop 01 Reno

On Nov. 15, 1890, Captain Willie O'Shea filed suit for divorce from his wife, Katherine Wood O'Shea, on ground of her notorious adultery with Charles Stewart Parnell. In itself it was a noisome affair, for it was oommon knowledge that for at least the previous sent manna to those who had decade O'Shea had manifest­ an interest in the destruction of ly connived at the relation­ Charles Stewart Parnell - and ship in the hope of gaining their name was legion.

,~

political and financial prefer­

ment' through the influence of

Par n ell-,

the "uncrow~

king of Ireland"

and the mag­

netic leader of

the Irish minor­

ity in the British

parliament. The

suit went uncon·

tested, though

not before the

Crown prosecu-_

tor, stopping at

DOthing to de. stroy Parnell, had dragged the sordid details through the Lon. don gutters. Parneli was an Irish Protes­ tant and Kitty O'Shea was the daughter of the Reverend Sir John Wood, an immensely aris­ tocratic and intensely indigent­ Anglican parson, and had been reared in the splendid delapida­ tion of a huge Essex rectory. O'Shea himself, son of a Dub­ lin attorney, was a Catholic of sorts, educated at Oscott, but far more successful as a bon-vivant· than as an officer, a business man, or a gentleman. Acts Without SanctionNo question either but that O'Shea had blinked for years at his wife's infidelity in the pleasing expectation of sharing the. fortune which ultimately came to her, shortly before the divorce proceedings, on the death of an aged and domineer­ ing aunt. When he found that he was not so much as mentioned ill \he will he discovered simulta­ neously that he was a deeply injured husband. Even so, when be piously applied to His Emi. nence, Cardinal Manning, for permission to enter the bill of divorcement, that astute church­ man bluntly refused to grant it. Two wrongs, in his opinion, did not make a right. Where­ upon Captain Willie went ahead without episcopal sanction. Devastating Effect The O'Shea divorce case shook society to its foundations. Even in England at the time such events were rare and were dwelt upon with loving partial­ ity by the penny press. The effect in Ireland was devastating. It l~d to that tragic political cleavage known as "the Parnell Split." . Catholic Ireland had worship­ ped Parnell with almost the same devotion it had lavished upon Daniel O'Connell a gener­ ation earlier. It had watched with gleeful pride as he maneu­ vered men like Gladstone, Mor­ ley, Labouchere, and the other leaders of English Liberalism into a position of definite com­ mitment t1) Irish land reform and to home rule. Manna to Enemies Parnell had the strength and the weakness of genius. He was both brilliant and bashful, bold and shy, perceptive and blind. So confident was he of his hold ever the loyalty and affection .t. the Irish people that it seems not to have crossed his mind -that his private life might have Some bearinc on the security of his grip. '. He had just been vindicated ef the charge of complicity iit u.. PhoeniX P·ark murders, when Lord Frederick Cavendish, chief secretary to the Irish Vice· roy, and his aide were shot down in the heart of Dublin by Fenian terrorists. The case against Parnell rested on the forgeries of one Piggott, and the exposure undoubtedly embarrassed the British Crown. O'Shea's suit came as heaven­

Scandalizes Ireland :r>."'ow. Parnell's illicit relations with Mrs. O'Shea were not un­ known in Ireland. But the fact that the whole miserable busi. ness was dragged out in public sent· a wave of scandalized reo vulsion sweeping over the land. The Irish hierarchy and clergy, whatever their feeling toward Parnell and his manipulation of the Liberal party, felt con. strained -to repudiate the leader. ship of a man whose private life ,frankly flouted Christian morals. There are those critics of Irish ecclesiastical leadership' who have denounced this attitude as mean and bigoted. The charge is hardly justified. Men like Archbishops William Walsh of Dublin and Thomas Croke of Cashel were anything but narrow-minded pettifoggers; they had supported Parnell, a Protestant of thp. old Ascendency, in spite of his sometimes thinly­ veiled contempt for the Church, and in spite of his periodic flights of political fancy which threatened the very cause he was fighting for. Parnell Resigns But the divorce case, no mat­ ter in how bad a -light it placed the hitherto complaisant Captain O'Shea, revealed the Irish leader ­ • as a confessed and quite unre­ penitent adulterer. It was more than Catholic Ireland could stand, and within a matter of· months Parnell was forced to resign as chairman of he Irish delegation at Westminster. When he tried to snatch vic­ tory -from defeat at the Irish polls, the intensity of feeling was crystallized in the cry of a woman on the streets of Ennis, "May God .forgive you, Mr. Par­ nell; you've broken my heart!" His attempt failed, -and in lit. tle more than a year the leader himself was dead, his own heart broken. Fresh Approach Tragedy it was, useless and bitter. Yet in the view of an Irish scholar, Emmett .Larkin, writing in the current issue of The Review of Politics '(Notre Dame, Indiana), the- "Parnell .Split," by throwing Ireland ~ack upon her owlJ. resources; political and spiritual, opened the way to the great literary re­ vival of 1890-1920, and made in­ evitable the Republic which now stands. It is a verdict which may be questioned, but it is a fresh approach. The story is more than seven decades old now, forgotten' by all save those whose particular delight it is to con the story of Kathleen, the Daughter of Houli­ han. History, they say, never re­ peats itself. But there are times . when she comes within a hair's breadth of it. .

NO JOI TOO 110 NONI TOO SMAll.

SULLIVAN BROS•

PRINTERS

AWARB WINNERS: From left, Mary Ann Latella, Kathleen Medeiros, Susan Fer­ !'ance, sch,olarship winners at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River. :Mary Ann and Kath­ leen are recipients of Tiverton Lions' Club scholarships. Kathleen has been accepted for a three year course in X-ray technology at Union Hispital and Mary Ann will attend St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing, both Fall River. Susan's scholarship came from tl)e American Portuguese Loyalty Association.

Attempt to Save· Faith FORESTVILLE (NC) - The Sudan's seven Catholic bishops have launched a crash -program 10 prepare at least 500 lay cate­ <:hists in an efiort to save the faith of approximately 500,000 Catholics in the southern part of that country. Alarmed at the stepped up ]lace of expulsions of mission­ aries by the 'Sudan's Moslem uovernment, 'the Bishops also

of

plan to sponsor the higher edu. cation of at least 250 young Sudanese in the tJ. S. and Europe. Fat her Anthony Todesco, F.S.C.J., U. S. provincial of the Verona Fathers at Sacred Heart Seminary- here in Ohio, said "We. must act to avoid religious annihilation in Central Africa." 'Victim 01 Islam' H is announcement coincided

500,000

with publication of a first-hand report of persecution in the Sudan written by Father Joha Trivella, 37, Verona Fathers mis­ sionary who was expelled last month after 71 days of imprison­ ment. . One of the crimes of which Father Trivella was accused w. "using a tape recorder to tran.. mit religious music.·

Angelo Giuseppe RoncaIli ,

.

POP E

-J 0 H N XXIII

May H~ Rest in Peace

Me'" OHi.. anll Pia'" LOWILL, MASS. rel.phono Lo~'" 458-6333 and 457·7500 Auxiliary Pia.... BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTlfCKET, R. I.

GEORGE M MONTLE 806 NORTH MAIN STREE'r

FALL,

RIV~a

j


mE ANCHOR-:Dioc;:ese of FqnR\ver-Thurs., Jun.e 6, 1963

Recent·' Events Recall. Scientific Studies at Catholic Schools' WASHINGTON (NC)-Cath. olfc institutions C1l. learning here in 'the Capital had some pioneers in "far out" scienti1icresearch even a century ago. This has been recalled to mind by tWQ recent evepts-the start 01' daylight saving time and the earth orbiting C1l. Astronaut Gor­ don Cooper. Supporting a bill he had intro­ duced to "establish daylight saving time uniformly through­ out the United States during the months 01 June, July and August of each year," Sen. A. Willis Robertson draw attention to the achievements of a fellow Vir­ ginian. He spoke of Matthew Fontaine Maury, whose studies of winds and currents cut pne month off the sailing time around Cape. Good- Hope, was one of the founders of the Naval Observa­ tory here, and has been called the "founder of the modern science of oceanography." . Maury, it develops, received an M.A. degree from George­ town University, the Jesuit­ conducted institution here, In 1845. He became widely known

21

as. an oceanographer and hy­ drographer as an officer in the U. S. Navy, but resigned his commission in 1861 tQ join the CQnfederate Navy, in which he became a rommodore. He was sent to England and obtained many ships for the Confederary. Jesuit Astronomer While he was director 01 the Naval Observatory, in the years before the Civil War, Maury was the ~lose friend and collaborator of Father Angelo Secchi, the noted Jesuit astronomer who was then at Georgetown. Astronaut Cooper's orbiting in space recalls the earliest efforts in this country to' produce a heavier-than-air flying machine. Samuel P. Langley, then secre­ tary of the Smithsonian Institu.,. tion here, was a real pioneer in this effort late in the last cen·· tury. Among those who encour. aged him were two Catholic priests at the Catholic University of America in this city. The priests were Fathers George M. Searle and Clarence E. Woodman, both Paulists and converts, to the Catholic Faith.

Lt. Cramer Shot by Vie'tna", Reds, Won Respect of Lepers, Nuns SAIGON (NC)-The lepers of St. Joseph's Hospital, Bensan, 28 miles from Saigon, mourn Lt. Parker D. Cramer, young Amer­ ican officer killed by Viet Cong communists May 6. Be won the admiration of the lepers, their chaplain and the Sisters of Charity when he was stationed near them last March. Lt. Cramer, 26, from Wantagh, N. Y., had volunteered to serve as an adviser in Vietnam and had come to this country last November. He was one of a group of American advisers at­ tached to Vietnamese army units operating in "Zone D," a thinly populated, ,wooded region where communists had exercised con­ trol for years. "The lepers remember him

very well," Father Victor Ber­

set, C.M., chaplain at St.

Joseph's hospital said. "They

w~re greatly impressed by him

and another American officer

who assisted at daily Mass here

whenever they could and re­

ceived Holy Communion. During

the day they were seen visiting

thil chapel. The children re­

mernberthe plentiful gifts of

chocolate and candy. ­ "We had a Requiem Mass for him here on May 9. Our lepers pray for him and his sorrowing parents." The Vietnamese soldiers had a high regard for the young lieu­ tenant, the priest recalled.

Requiem Tonight Continued from Page One Daley and Rt. Rev. Francis Mc­ Keon, assistant deacons. Rt. Rev. Alfred J. E. Bonneau and R't. Rev. Raymond T. Con­ siliine will serve as deacon -and subdeacon, respectively. Also participating in the Mass will be: Rev. Joseph A. Marti­ neau and Rev. Edward A. Oli­ veira, acolytes; Rev. Edward' A. Rausch, thurifer. Rev. A. ArmandQ AnnunZiato, book bearer; Rev. John R. FoI­ ster, candle bearer; Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski, gremiale bearer; Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, mitre bearer. Rev. John H. Hackett, episco­ Pill secretary, and Rev. Paul F. 'McCarrick, mosters 01 cere­ monies. The priests' choir under the direction of Rev. Paul G. Con­ nolly will sing the Mass. . The Bishop will give the • absolution at the conclusion of the Mass. In attendance at the Mass will be the Knights of St. Gre­ gory and Pro Pontifice et Eccle­ sia 'honor recipient who were named by Pope John during his pontificate of four and one half years.

On May CS, the· jeep in which Lt. Cramer and a Vietnamese lieutenant 'were traveling near Ben Cat was hit by a grenade or gunfire. About 40 Viet Cong rommuni~' surrounded the dis­ abled vehicle, killed the driver and marched the two lieutenants away as prisoners, then shot th,em. Father Berset, Swiss Vincen­ tian who formerly labored in China, was struck by Lt. Cra­ mer's idealism. "He told me that on leaving the army, he would dedicate his life to teaching," the priest said. "He was glad 'he had corne to Vietnam. As a teacher he hoped to instill the spirit of service to others." Already, by his example, Lt. Cramer had done his teaching.

. ~LKS AID CANCER HOME: The Rose Hawtho~e Lathrop Home, Fall River, was reCIpIent of· a check from the Massachusetts Elks to aid in their work. Present on the occasion, front row, left to right: Walter E. Quinlan,!:,:E.R., P.D.D. of ,the Fan River lodge and p~st ,president of the State Elks; Siste~ Mary Paul, O.P.; Bishop Connolly; Leo ,Gaffney, P.E.R.;· back row, left to right: Henry 1,. Buckely, P.E.R.; John ,J. Gal. lagher, exalter ruler; George W. Hopkins.

,

"e"

Requiescat m Pace

Holy Cross College

Gets Federal Grant

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Federal government will lend $1,470,000 to the College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, Mass., to . help finance construction of a $2,100,000 faculty residence hall and college infirmary. This was announced here by the Federal Housing and Home Finance Agency whose Com­ munity Facilities Administl'6tion ,operates the Federal College Housing Loan Program.

Sturtevant &

Hook

Elt. 1897

Builden Suppli. 2'.c3' 'urchole Street· New Bedford

WY ~5661

Angelo Giuseppe Roncam

CORREIA & SONS

POPE JOHN. . . .XXIII

. .

ONE STOP SHOPPING CENTER . • Tt!levlsioD • Furniture • Appliance. • Grocer~ 104 'Allen ·St., New Bedford WYman 7-9354

.

'

.1

Pontifex Maximus :

~.

"

,

-~

• ~.

.\

.• t

... ,

, •••>

'.' .~ "

"

,.:

;",.; ';

.',

i:

G U I M O"N D :·:FA R M S

~44 County $t. New Bedford

"

li


22

THE ANC.HO~7"Diocese. of. Fall River.:-:Thurs., June 6" 1~63·

March. 27 Papal Audience Vibrant Pope Meets His. Children monies in full court dress waved us into Box 27 and there we This left us two hours .to· wait were-not more than 20 feet and we sat on the stone base of from the spot where the Pope • column and watched a small would sit during the audience. party' engage in the compli­ A magnificent situation. (It pays cated process of taking pictures to be associated with The Anchor with much moving of Millie next and, through The Anchor, with to Joe and discussion of the fact Bishop Connolly.) that no, Millie was in the other . Here He Is shots. and why didn't George get And now we had time to look in this one. The ,sun was warm around and watch the Monsi. and I relaxed. . gnori and Bishops and honored But my wiff' refused to be laity take their places around lulled into a mood of false se­ the throne. And to take sympa­ curity and kept an alert and sus­ thetic note of the near desper­ picious eye on the doings around ation of the Master of Cere­ the portal. And things were get­ monies as problem after problem 'ling active. More and more peo- . called for solution, including pIe arrived and more and more finding extra seats for special but people joined us in watching the unexpected arrivals. gate and assuring each other Across from us the box was that the man had said 11 o'clock filled by a delegation of girls -.but .just the same * * * from Peru, all wearing what must have been priceless white Waiting Game lace mantillas. And the hall floor Then there seemed to be some filled with row on row of men form of order being introduced and women from everywhere in Ocf,; one side of the corridor and the world. Groups, delegations, my' wife rose like a rocketing clubs, and just plain people. And pheasant and, with me close be­ behind them, out in the entry hind her, became a part of the way and the pt.ssages, more peo­ head of a rapidly forming coil ple. lined up four abreast. At least it About 6,000 in all-making for started off four abreast - but a dull roar of busy voices, rest­ there were Sisters who were en~ less movement arid an excited eouraged and aided by all con­ expectancy. And more people cerned to .ooze" through 'the are crowded' into the space tangle of humanity and take a around the throne and the last place at the head of the line. Bishops take their places. and And there were young semi­ the frantic officials relax slightly. Daria~ who simp\y could not And a faint handclapping and, stay in place but made circles of shouting is heard from outside three or five or more for easier the hall and inside there is a discussion, argument, and .talk. sudden quiet and every head Our immediate set of laity held turns to the entrance. A tension our ground and became a cohe­ builds, a physical tightening of sive unit with a loose alliance the senses, a sharpening of per. for mutual protection. And we ception. Everyone is straining began' the game of "what color to see something whi<:h is not in tickets meant what" and "why, sight-trying, by sheer concen­ If we had seat numbers, were we trated will, to hurry the proces­ ·in line at all" and "I know you're sion and bring the awaited mo­ right, but I'm going to play safe ment into being. and stay here." And now, row after row, peo­ And as we }lame to understand ple rise to their feet-the clap­ that the growing mob, stre.tching ping and shoutipg swells to back as far as we could see, thunder as the chair appears and would be turned loose at 11 to. a great wave of tenderness and find and secure points of van­ respect and reverence and love tage-we began to flex our calf and joy breaks over the occupant. Here he is! The Holy Father muscles and cast dark looks at those who were, all too obvious­ * * * the Pope * • • John the ly, our superiors at track work. Twenty-third! All the waiting, Eleven o'clock! The windjam­ the crowding, the pushing, the mers and clippers, represented arranging, fade into nothingness. by the spreading headgear of All that matters is the here and the Sisters, surged out and away now-the realization that this is with the seminarians a close sec­ not a picture or a movie. It is .ond. Our particular little gaggle real and live - and you are moved forward with appropriate there. Wistful Prisoner dignity-marred a little by a The procession reaches tht> end gait that was half stride and half of the aisle, the chair is lowered lope. and the Pope leaves it and walks Up the steps, through the gate­ to the throne. There is a chance ..."ay, and into the 'long corridor to breathe again and make inane stretching ahead for at least a remark&-the commonest being mile. And here control began to that "he looks just like his pic­ break-the hurry was contagious. ture." Most of the crowd were frankly It is obvious that he is making· running. Elderly ladies showed· no effort-this is not a task, it ;. tUrn of speed that made the is, in a way, an "outing," some· four minute mile seem childish. thing he wants to do, something We found ourselves carried along to be enjoyed. He listens with in­ and showing an unsuspected. terest as various groups are "come from behind" spirit that named. as being present and earned us envious glances. asked to stand up for recogni. tion. As each group rises the Pink Tickets Win However, as an aside;' may I members applaud themselves suggest that you do not allow vigorously. The largest group yourself to be talked into a presented, certainly the loudest, match against the Sisters. They is the American servicemen and do not seem to hurry, they do their families from Germany. When. the introductions are not become undignified,' they exert no unusual effort - but finished the Pope speaks to us they cover ground. Levitation in French and ·Italian. Thanks with the elimination of normal to my wife and a kindly priest earth-friction may be the answer. I am able to follow most of what he says. The opening is rather As another aside, I may say wistful-"I am' a prisoner, they that all the waiting in line was' will not let me go out and walk unnecessary. As the official ori­ around. So I am happy to see ginally told us, we could have you-to have this chance to visit appeared at 11 and walked right with you * *." And there is a ­ in. But, as my wife said, we reminder that the Mass is the know that now-but it was bet­ same in the smallest church as ter to be sure. in the greatest cathedral, that So we reached the Audience the' miracle of consecration is Hall where several hundred the same for the poorest· priest people were already against the as for the Pope. J00den barrier surrounding the And there are some small . entrance. The pink tickets were jokes: "When I was a little boy shown and we were waved in. my fath.er used to carry me side and on up the aisle almost around-now I have put on some to the throne itself. . weight and it takes eight men to There the Master of Cere­ carry me." Continued from Page One

WE A R Y: Dr. Antonio Ga.sbarrini, one of three phy­ sicians in almost constant at­ tendance on His Holiness Pope John XXIII, rubs his eyes as he is driven home from the Vatican after death of the Pontiff. NC Photo. Watching the crowded benches you see that eaoh individual is leaning forward, eyes fixed on thE! speaker and, unconsciously attempting to force himself ~ fraction nearer his person. And you turn again to the focus of thEdr attention. Of course I had heard about thE~ .Pope about his personality, his charm. I had read about the

.effeCt be bas Mlpeople. 1'ut the. ~~ ,fo1lc?w ~~~ngtbe 1~, ~.nt actuality still came 'as -a' shock . a. bit Unreal and drained emo­ and a marvel. Pope John has the .tionally and exalted all at. the faculty of making you feel that same time. Outside, in the sun he is speaking directly to you as and gentle warmth of the plaza, . a person-that he is glad you we decide we will just go some­ are there and is pleased that this where quiet and have black cof­ small meeting came about. fee and sil' and go over every And there is no doubt of his ·detail again and savor all the sincerity-no doubt that this pleasure and excitement and be Pope loves his people and that properly grateful. the audience is no rigorous neAnd now I understand why, cessity of his position, no empty when I said I 'had seen the Pope . gesture of· protocol to be en- on TV ar.d read all about "'J"i. dured and ended as quickly as ences, those who had been there possible. This audience is a shook their heads and said: '.'h s pleasure, an adventure close to not the same." It isn't. . his heart, an opportunity to speak his love, to give a word of Man to Trust comfort and of guidance to those .Since this account was writ­ he calls "my children." For to ten Pope John has had a serious Pope John "my children" is relapse and died on June 3. just a simple statement of a We now know that we saw the simple truth. Pope at a peak moment, when And on this day, seeing and he looked and acted as one in hearing John the Twenty-third, the best of health - the last I felt that here is a man to trust, audience under those conditions. not only. with my life, but with At that time we could only re­ my soul. joice in the change' and add our Over Black Coffee prayer of gratitude for his re­ Now comes the announcement covery. He had been ill-now of the Papal Blessing, including he was well. Amazing"but true. religious articles. The young That was our only thought. near us confides that she has Certainly, as far as we were over 200 medalS in her bag for concerned that was no premoni­ her CCD class back home. And I tion of any kind, no feeling that. confide, in return, that my wife all was not well. So th~re is is also liberally strung and nothing I would change about packed with medals and rosaries. the audience. The image drawn A great .stillness - and the is that of the Pope as we saw Blessing. . him. I can only repeat what I The Pope returns to his chair, felt at that time: Here was - a there are last minute presenta- man to trust with your soul. And tions.and compliments. Then the now, as never before, he is in a chair is hoisted to the strong position to carry out that trust. shoulders of the bearers and And he will-for I am sure he carried out of the halt· still regards all' of us as "my The people begin to leave and . children.'~

POPE JOR'N XXIII

PONTIFEX MAXIMUS POPE OF PEACE 1881-1963

Requiescat in Pace FALL RIVER NATIONAL BANI{ 55 NORTH MAIN STREET FALL RIVER


Col,I'e"ge:of'.82 ":CCirdi'ncils . To' Select New Pontiff

THE ANCHOR-DiOcese

23

Officials Silent as Fight Flar~s Over Bill to Bar Expressway

Election of a successor to Pope John will take place the week after next in a secret conclave of the Cardinals of the Church. While they can choose any male Catholic, the Cardinals traditionally select one from their number who must be el~ted by a Maurice Feltin - Archbishop two-thirds majority of those of Paris, France. voting. Cardinal Mindszenty Carlos de I. Torre - .Arch­ will undoubtedly be llilable to bishop of Quito, Ecuador.

attend the conclaye as he la • virtual prison~r in Hungary, having taken refuge from the communist regime in the Amer. ican Embassy since the 1956 up­ rising. Sickness may impede others from attendance. The list of 82 comprising the ~ollege of Cardinals follows:

Giuseppe Slri - Archbishop of Genoa, Italy. James Francis Mclntyre­ Archbishop of Los Angeles. Giacomo Lercaro - Archbish. op of Bologna, Italy. S t e fan Wyszynski - Arch. bishop of Gniezno and Warsaw; Primate of Poland & Member, Eugene Tisserant - Dean of Secretariat for Extraordinary the Sacred College of Cardinals; Affairs. Prefect of the Sacred Congrega­ Benjamin de Arriba y Castro' tion of Ceremonial; Librarian and Archivist of the Holy Roman - Archbishop ,of Tarragona, Church; Member, Presidency of Spain. Fernando Quiroga y Palacios the Council. Archbishop of Santiago de Clemente Mlcara - Vic a r General for His Holiness of the Compostela, Spain. . Paul Emile Leger - Archbish­ City and District of Rome. op of Montreal, Canada. Giuseppe Pizzaaodo - Prefect Valerian Gracias - Archbish­ of the Sacred Congregation of Seminaries and Universities and op of Bombay, India. Giovanni Montini - Arch­

President, Commission for Sem­ inaries, Studies and Catholic: bishop of Milan, Italy. Schools. Giovanni Urbani - Patriarch Benedetto AlolBi Ml&sella­ of Venice, Italy. Prefect of the Sacred Congrega­ Paolo Giobbe - A p 0 s toll c tion of Sacramental Discipline; Datary Camerleng() of the Holy Roman Fernando CeDto - G r fl n d Church and President, Commis­ Penitentiary and Pr e sid e n t, mon of Discipline of the Sacra­ Commission for the' Lay Aposto­ ments. late, the Press and Entertain­ Giueppe Ferr~ - Member ment. of the Vatican administrative Carlo Cbiarlo - Member of .taft. ' the Vatiean administrative steff. AmIeto Cico«nam - Pap a I JOBe Garibi ., Rivera - Ardl­ Secretary of State and President, ,bishop of Guadalajara, Mexico. Secretariat lor Extraordinary Antonio Barbieri, O.F.M. Cap. Affairs and President, Commis­ - Archbishop of Montevideo; sion lor the Oriental Churches. Uruguay. Manuel Goncalves Cerejeira Carlo Confalonieri - Secre­ - Patriarch of Lisbon, Portugal. tary of the Sacred Consistorial Achille Lienart - Bishop of Congregation and Member, Sec­ Lille, France and Member, Pres­ retariat for Extraordinary Af­ idency of the Council. fairs. Richard Cushin« - Archbish­ Maurllio Fossati - Archbish­ op of Boston. op of Turin~ Italy. Alfonso Castaldo - Archbish­ Ignace Tappouni - Patriarch op of Naples, Italy. of Antioch of the Syrians; Mem­ ber, Presidency of the Council. PaUl Marie Richaud - Arch­ bishop C?f Bordeaux, France.

Santiago Copello - Chancel­ lor of the Holy Roman Church. Jose Bueno y Monreal­

Pierre Gerlier - Archbishop Archbishop of Seville, Spain~

of Lyons, France. Franziskus Koenig.- Arch­ GregoriO'!' Pietro A«agianian bishop of Vienna, Austria. - Prefect of. the Sacred Con­ Julius Doepfner - Archbishop gregation for the Propagation of of Munich and Freising, Ger­ the Faith and President, Com­ many Member; Secretariat for mission for the Missions. Extraordinary' Affairs. .lames McGuigan - Archbish­ Paolo Marella - ,Prefect of op of Toronto, Canada. the Sacred Congregation of the Clement Roques - Archbishop of Rennes, France. ' Basilica of St. Peter & Presi­ Carlos de Vasconcellos Motta dent, Commission for Bishops - ArChbishop of, Sao Paulo, and Government of Dioceses. Gustavo Testa - Member of Brazil. Norman Gilroy - Archbishop the Vatican administrative staff of Sydney, Australia; Member, and President, Technical-Or­ ganizational Cqrnmission. Presidency of the Council. Albert Meyer-Archbishop of Francis Spellman - Archbish­ Chicago and Member, Secretariat op of New York; Member, Pres­ for Extraordinary _Affairs. idency of the Council. Luigi Traglia - Pro - Vic a r Jaime de Barros Camara­ Archbishop of Rio de Janeiro, General for His Holiness of the City, and District 'of Rome. Brazil. l"eterDol - Archbishop of Enrique PIa y DeDiel - Arch­ bishop of Toledo; Primate of Tokyo, Japan. ' Joseph Lefebvre - Archbish­ Spain; Member, Presidency of op of Bourges,' France.

the Council. Bernard Alfrink - Archbish­ Joseph Frings - Archbishop

op of Utrecht, the Netherlands of Cologne, Germany and Mem­ ber, Presidency of the Council. and Member, Presidency of the Council. Jozsef Mindszenty - Areh­ Rufino Santos - - Archbishop bishop of Esztergom (impeded in his office); Primate of Hungary: of Manila, Philippines. Laurian Rugambwa - Bishop Ernesto Ru'ffini - Archbishop of Bukoba, Tanganyika. of Palermo, Italy and Member, Joseph Ritter - Archbishop of Presidency of the Council. St. Louis. Antonio Caggiano - Arch­ Jose Humberto Quintero­ bishop of Buenos Aires, Argen­ Archbishop of Caracas, Vene­ tina and Member, Presidency of zuela. the Council. ' Thomas Tien, S.V.D. - (exile) Archbishop of Peking, China; Apostolic Administrator of Tai­ pei, Formosa. Augusto da Silva - Archbish­ op of Salvador, Brazil. Valerio Valeri - Prefect c.f the Sacred Congregation of Reli­ gious and President, Commission for Religious. Pietro Clriael - Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of the TIte FalmoutIt Nafio1KJ18_ Council and President, - Com­ Falmouth, Mass.

mission for Discipline of the ., tile ,nla•••,.... Slwft tOt

Clergy and Christian People.

ofF~It".iver:"";Thurs., June 6, 1963':

HOLY ORDERS: Rev. John F. Dias of Swansea will be ordained Saturday for the Holy Cross Fathers, Luis Concha - Archbishop of Bogota, Colombia. Jose cia Costa Nunes - Por­ tugal. Ddebrando Antoniutti - Italy. Efrem Forni - Italy. Juan Lan dar; uri Rickets, O.FoM. - Archbishop of Lima, Peru. Raul Silva Henriquez. S.D.B. - Archbishop of Santiago, Chile. Leo Suenena - Archbishop of Malin~s-Brussels and Member, Secretariat for Extraordinary Affairs.

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - Offi. cials of Incarnate Word College here remained silent as contro­ versy flared over a bill which could stop routing of an 'express­ way through the college campus. Texas Gov. John Connally likewise maintained silence on the measure, which has been passed by the state legislature. But San Antonio Mayor W. W.' McAllister urged Connally to veto the bill. ,The controversial expressway, which if built would cut through the college's property and an adjoining park, has been tied

up in the courts for more tbaa two years. On April 15 the u. S. Supreme Court refused to hear a plea by the Sisters of Charity' of the In­ carnate Word, who conduct the college. The' legislation passed by the legislature would permit the

college campus to be annexed

by the City of-Alamo Heights,

which is a municipally incorpor­

ated area within San Antonio.

The reasoning is that San An.

tonio then could' not run the expressway through the prop. erty without Alamo Heights' approval.

Alfredo Ottaviani'- Secretary of the Sacred Congregation 'of the Holy Office and President, Doctrinal Commission for Faith and Morals. Alberto di Jorio ­ Pro-Presi­ dent of the Pontifical Commis­ sion & for the State of Vatican City and President, Administra­ tive Secretariat. .Franeesco Bracci - Member of the Vatican administrative ·Staff. Franeeco Roberti - Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature and Presi­ dent, Administrative Tribunal. Andre JulUeD - Member of the Vat i can Administrative Staff.

Arcadio Larraoua, C.M.F. ­ 'Prefect, Sacred ,Congregation of Rites President, Commission for Sacred Liturgy. ' Francesco Morano - Member of the Vatican Administrative Staff. William Heard - Member of the Vatican Administrative Staff. AUl:uatiD Dea, S.J. - Presi­ ' . . dent of the Second Vatican Council's Secretariat for Pro­ moting Christian Unity. Antonio Bacci - Member of t ' , Vat i can Administrative Staff. ~LlCbael Browne, O.P. lre­ land. Aase.... A1ba.reda, O.S.B. ­ Spain.

Requies'eat •in "Pace

\~

'POPE JOHN XXIII Pontifex Maxilitus The death of His Holiness Pope .:r~hn.Xxnli8 a' )6~ to the entire world. ' ' During his -all too short reign 'as the Supreme Pontiff, , his every eff(}rt _was aimed at improving the lot of. all peoples. He, by calling the Second. Vatican Cou~cil, has forged great, strides toward improving the social' contacts between people of differing religious background.

.

It can be truthfully said that he was, during the past, four years, the world's greatest singlefoice' forpeaee. ,

His entire life as priest, bishop and pope; reflee~d God's· will. His peaceful holy death reflected his acceptance of that Divine will. ' ' . -' His simplicity, innate goodnes~, alld"desir.e for peace and, unity, will be missed by all mankind. On behalf of myself and my family"and'~ all the people of Fall River of whatever religious :per~ua~on, I ·offer the prayer-may he rest in peace. . ,' \

'JOHN M.' ARRUDA Mayor of FaD River

....


Ito

24

THE

ANCHOR~Diocele of

~iver-Thurs.,

Fait

June 6,

196~1

STONEHILL GRADUATION: Upper right, at com­

mencement exercises at Stonehill College, Charles J. Lewin,

editor and general manager of the New Bedford Standard-'

, Tims, honorary degree recipient; Bishop Connolly ; John S. Drummey, also recipient of an honorary degree; Very Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, C.S.C., Stonehill president. Bottom right, section of 140 students receiving degrees. Above, Hon. Mary Ingraham Bunting.. president of Radcliffe College and Rt. Rev. Humberto Medeiros, Chancellor of the Fall River Diocese. Both received honorary degrees, and Msg:r. Medeiros was baccalaureate speaker the day preceding commencement.

Msgr. Medeiros Urges Stc)nehill Graduates Accept 'Folly 'of Cross' Stonehill College in North Easton granted 140 degrees in course and six honorary degrees at outdoor Commencement exer­ cises held Sunday afternoon on the Lower Campus of the Col­ lege,. Commencement speaker and honorary degree recipient, Rt. Rev. John Tracy Ellis, Pro. fessor of Church History at the Catholic University of America, called for a forceful official Church statement on the right and the duty of every man to follow the dictates of his con­ science in worshipping G<>d. He

Area Nuns to Attend Apostolic Meeting Missionary Serv>ants of the Most Blessed Trinity from At­ tleboro, Hyannis, Osterville and Wareham will be among partici­ pants in a conference on the lay epostolate to be held at St. Mary's Center, North Plymouth Sunday afternoon, June 9. The public is invited to at­ tend the program, which will be­ gin at 2 with an -address by Rev. Edward Duffy, followed by, seminars on the daily apostolate, the teen-age apostolate and apostolic teaching. The latter discussion will give practical ad­ vice to Contraternity of Chris­ tian Doctrine teachers. An address by Margaret T. Healy, Ph.D. will follow. Her topic will be "The Missionoary Cenacle." Benediction and re­ freshments will close the prQ':' gram.

spoke of the necessity, in this pluralistic society in which the Catholic Church lives, of the Church's upholding the right, as the late Pope John put it, I)f every man to follow the dictat,~s of an upright conscience. Men look to the Church for such a

Wisconsin May Vote Again on Bus Rides, MADISON (NC) - The Wis­ consin State Senate has ap­ proved a proposal to amend the Wisconsin Constitution to 'per­ mit tax-paid s<:hool bus rides for private school pupils. The As­ sembly approved the, legislation last month. The proposal now must be signed by the Governor, then resubmitted to the 'Legislature two years from now. If approved again at that time, it must J~O before the_ voters in a referen­ dum. Many legislators opposed to bus rides have made clear in their remarks that they have supported the resolution only to assure a referendum. In 1946, an amendment seeking to make tax-paid rides for private school pupils clearly constitutional was . defeated. About 60,000 children /llt­ tending parochial and other pri­ vate scp,ools in the state would be eligible for bus transporta­ tion.

Paint and W~lIpap.lr

PASADENA (NC) -The ele­ ment of faith is obvious and more important than ever in America's space ventures, Brig. Gen. Robert Campbell told the Military Chaplains Association convention here. The commander of the 146th Air Transport Wing, California Nat.onal Guard, said "it seems appropriate that this convention should be in session at the very moment astronaut Gordon Coop. er is in orbit in his capsule named Faith 7." , James Francis Cardinal McIn­ tyre, Archbishop of Los AI\­ geles, gave the invocation at the convention' dinner.

IJ

Dupont 'aint •

-

Q,,~..,

New Bedford cor. Mlddl. St. 422 Aculb: Ave.

BUY - TRY

PARK

MOTORS

• e

Whj!lther. the damage involved an automobile or a truck the plac. to call for pric. and workmanship Ia

-

-

-

DAHILL 'CO.

OLDSMOBILE Middle Street.

Accident Recently?l.

Maintonanco Suppli..

SWEEPERS - SOAPS

DISINFECTANtS

PlRE EXTiNGUISHIRS

4

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault

And loyalty to truth arid seek. ing to please God is a life that is impossible without prayer. This is the true wisdom of God. "Those around you will change because of you; but the quality of the change will depend in great measure upon you. They will change from darkness to light, if you so live as to show that you love your brothers, that Christ's love is the driving f'Orce of your wif'e, that the ab­ surdity of the cross is your wis­ dom, that Christ is for you the wisdom and the power of God."

'j

SCHOOL

BEFORE YOU

87

in prayer. Graduates of a Catholic Col. lege are committed to the truth and to abandon the truth for expediency would be to betray Christ Who died for the truth. The Catholic college graduate's union with /Christ ripens into obedience to the Father and to the just laws of legitimate au­ thority. '

Laliberte, A.I.A. Stonehill architect. In his Baccalaureate address delivered at Mass on Satutday, Msgr. Medeiros spoke to the graduates on the text from St. Paul's First Epistle to the Corin­ thians: "Since the world with all its 'wisdom' did not attain to the knowledge of God from his wis. dom (~eflected in creation), it pleased God by the 'absurdity' we preach, to save those who be­ lieve." God Given Wisdom Monsignor stressed that Christ is God-given wisdom and He brought this wisdom through "the folly of the cross." By ac­ cepting the foUy of the cross men live worthy of the G<>spel of Christ-they please God, which means following Christ, reproducing in their lives His own life of loyalty to truth, of perfect obedience to the Will of the Father, of Union with Him

Have You Had An a

-

PARKING Rear, of Store

•••••••••••••

J.

t t Deschenes Auto Body t 1693 Pleasant St., Fall River t 24-Hour Wreck... Servic*

CENTER

Says Faith Obvious In Space Progrant

defense of the man's conscience, and the right of a man not to be forced to accept a way 01. wor­ ship to which he cannot, in con­ science, commit himself. Msgr. Ellis' words flow, of course, from the Church's tradi­ tional teaching on the sacredness of conscience and on the teach. ing that faith is a free gift of God to the individual. It is time, however, 'as Msgr. Ellis pointed out, for these teachings . to be expressed in forceful terms and from the very highest authority in the Church so that men of every nation and creed might see the Church's teaching in unambiguous terms and in unmistakable language. Honorary Degrees Honorary degrees were also awarded to Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Chancellor of the Fall River Diocese and pastor of St. Michael's Church, Fall River; Mrs. Mary I. Bunting, President of Radcliffe Coll~ge; Mr. Charles J. Lewin, Editor of the J.I."'ew Bedford Standard Times and President of WTEV-TV; Mr. John J. Drummey, prominent Boston attorney, accountant, and financial expert; and 'Mr. Eme17

~

Falrhaven~

t • • • • • • • '. • • .~

lB86 PURCHASE ST. NEW BEDFORD

In Memoriam Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli

.

'

POPE ,JOHN XXIII

.FALL RIVER TRUST CO.

WY 3-3716

J


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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