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In a commencement' address at StoLoui. Would he be concerned that a missionary, _ .educated .and :trained men- and women who University, 'U.S. :peace 'Oorps Director R. Sarlike Redemptorist· Father,' John Schomber ~of build' dispensaries and schools and hospitals. gent Shriver, Jr:,' charged-that 0atholic colleges New Bedford, would, be expeilecl"froni'the Doand colleges, men' and women who iive and eat apd universities'in this' country are 'falling down lllinican Republic by a, dictatorial chief of state - . and work among the poorest of the poot iI). those in 'their obligations to Latin America. 'for living and. Working among the poor of lands, menanq . women concerned· not only for souls but for weak bodies, and empty ~ stomachs Shriver, 'who is also President Kennedy's' that land, and, this just' a few months before and outraged human rights. brother-in-law, charged tha,t Catholic instituPorfirio, RUbirosa, long-time henchman of the tions have provided only a small number of same infamous and murderous diCtator, was The huinoious keeps 'cropping up. It is volunteers for the Peace Corps. enjoying himself at the Kennedy compound on really comical to see the head of a "Johnny", the Cape? , come-lately" group such as the Peace Corps _ He pointed out that Latin American stuThe Director fears that America to 'those a worthy organization but one still, as it were, dents admitted to Jesuit and other American in other land§! means people like Marllyn feeding on Pa-blum - lecturing "old pros" in colleges are from aristocratic and upper class Monroe. And is this the same Marilyn Monroe ' the Latin American field. families, thereby indicating where the interest whom the news services reported as having Long before there was a Peace Corps there of these institutions is. flown to Washington recently to entertain at were Catholic missioners in Latin America. Mr. Shriver cited the Peace Corps as the the Presiden~'s birthday party? ,Long before the Peace Corps Director became "greatest export the U.S. has ever made" since, To meet the issue at hand, however, has concerned ~ commendably - over Latin Amerfor most people of other lands, "America means ""W'Mr. Shriver ever ica, men and women from this very Diocese, Al Capone, Billy the Kid, Marilyn Monroe .•." :::1 heard of the Papal like Maryknoll Fathers John Considine from First, to dispose of the h~morous aspects Volunteers for LatNew Bedford and John Breen from Fall River, of Mr. Shriver's talk. ,in America? AI- .the two Redemptorist Fathe'rs Schomber, and so many others - had Latin America on their ; ready these repreThe Director is concerned that Americans minds and in their hearts and labors for years. eater to the upper class in other countries. Does sentatives of the So, please, Mr. Shr.iver, work hard for the he mean, for example, the spectacle of an ,Pqpe - one hunPeace Corps. It is a' most worthy project. American, one with government ties, who goes dred and twentyt9 a country, India for example, and' is feted f ive men' and And if there is anything that long-experiand dined by the aristocracy, w 0 me n are' enced Catholic mission groups could teach you 'with', the ,whole tour photo:, .W,orki'ng in Latin about Latin America, Qe as-, graphed 'and -paid for by the,' America; and more' . sured that these will oblige. United States government to volunteers are in :Arid, please;. be very carebe shown' to the poor? ' 'training. ful of the audience you lecture . Does 'he mean the state of Has Mr. _Shrito 3bout concern for Latin American 'diplomats'in toreign . ver ever heard of America. You many find yourMr: ,Shriver' the thousands of co'untries ,who cannot even" self in the slightly ridiculous speak the language of -the, pri~sts, Sisters, 'and, Brothers whom the pO!iition of advocating to these for their future a.ction what i'g "country in which they repre- ' ,'Ohurch'''' in ,America' has been sending for sent Arperica?; , '. decades to Latiil America. These are ~ighly Fr. Considiiie already their ancient history. ~Pope John ' .. I'"
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State's Citizens ·Again Insist Sunday Be Protected'
The ANCHOR A" Anclor of the Soul, SUN) iznd "if'm..;-ST. PAUL
Ifa!! River, Mass., Thursday, Vol. 6, No. 25
(C)
JUIflIS
1962 The Anchor
14, 1962 pRICE 10c
$4.00 por Yoar
Fall' River Superior ,Reports On Canonization Cause Very Rev. Roland Huot, S.S.S., superior general of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers and a native of Fall River, has announced progress in' the cause for canonization of Blessed Peter Julian 'Eymard, founder of the congregation. Father Huot said that the S. a c red Congregation of Rites in a meeting held last month accepted the report of a medical 'commission on
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genuineness of a second miracle attributed to Blessed Eymard. The first of two required, miracles was accepted in 1956. Beatified by Pope Pius XI on July 12, 1925, the cause of the canonization of Blessed Eymard has been futhered principally by Rev. Henri Evers, S,S.S., a F r e n c h Blessed Sacrament Fatner, who is postulator, and in' this country by Rev. Ralph Lavigne of New York, vice-postulator. . , Blessed Eymard, who founded Ole 'congregation of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers May 13, 1856, Turn to Page Eighteen
Citizens of the Common-' wealth have once again indicated to their legislators that they are opposed to making Sunday a "business as usual" day. , The' State Sen ate, after passing an amendment that would have permitted persons closing on Saturday to open for business on Sunday, reversed itself on Monday after lawmakers had received numerous complaints from constituents objecting to the "open for busi-
~ppeal Total C~imbs Ov~r
$@30cOOO' A new high of $630,103.25 has been reached' ~n the Catholic Charities Appeal. This final figure rvpresents an increase of $2,548:33 over last year: Seventy-three parishes surpassed their 1961 totals and form the honor roll for the twenty - first Diocesan _ wide Appeal. ivI. H!lrry Condon,' lay chairman, emphasized, as the books Turn to Page Four
ness" Sunday this would create. Legislators commented that they had' not seen the full implications of the amendment when it was first proposed and passed, and had not realized the pressures the amendment would put on' Sunday-observing employees of employers closing on Saturday and opening on Sunday. While all respect the consciences that impel those observing a Saturday Sabbath to close on that day, the citizens of the· State who observe the Sabbath on Sunday ask that their consciences also be respected and that they be allo'wed to keep the traditional Sunday "day of rest." In a pluralistic society this differing
Elem~ntary. Schools
List 1702. June Graduates A total of 1,702 boys and girls will graduate from the grammar schools of the Diocese this month. Some 679 will be from Fall River 'area schools, 427 from New Bedford and 104 from North Attleboro. The r'emainder will be from the· other towns and will receive diplomas in cerecities of the Diocese. A first monies at 8 Sunday night, June graduation is scheduled by 17 in the school hall. Rev. St. George's School, West- Lorenzo Morais, pastor, will' ofport, where 35 boys and girls
300 Catholic Collegians: Volunteer ill• For If.llSSlOn Work. in Mexico MARYKNOLL (N C ) -Some 300 CathOlic students from 29 U.S. universities and colleges have offered their Summer vacations to engage in voluntary work projects in Mexico. The project labeled "Operation: Good Neighbor" by the students was sparked by a suggestion of Father Felix McGowan, M.M., a Maryknoll missionary veteran of 10 years in the "green hell" jungle area of northeastern Bolivia. He is .Dow
serving as associate editor of World Campus, a journal of opinion for college students. . His challenge "to participate" presented to Yale students during a talk last year resulted in a student group going, to a slum area outside Mexico City where they built a community center and school. With Father McGowan serving as drumbeater, news of the success of the' Yale project spread rapidly to other colleges. So far this year 29 colleges and universities have been invited
on matters of conscience does work a hardship at times on one or' another group. As the Boston Archdiocesan newspaper, The Pilot, pointed out editorially: "The exceptions for sabbatarians that should be written into law are recognized by all. These allow kosher shops to open on Sunday for the sale of kosher foods and further allow any labor which does not create a nuisance to others. These· exceptions are reasonable and should be passed. There is no need of destroying Sunday for the rest of the community to relieve the religious necessities of sabbatarians." ,Area Senators voting to overTurn to Page ,Three
by Mexican groups to undertake similar projects throughout their country. . "All the' credit for 'Operation: Good Neighbor' belongs to, the students themselves," said Fr. McGowan. "All we did was show them the need and they generously volunteered, giving up their va'cations and the chance to, earn a few dollars during the Summer.1t ' , It is a joint Mexican-American project, the Maryknoller said. A coordinating office has Turn to Page EiahteeD.
ficiate. Largest graduating class is that of St. Patrick's School, Fall River, with 79 in the eighth grade. St. Mary's, North Attleboro, top-ranking school for the past, two years, is in second place this year, with 78 graduates. Smallest class will be that of St. Theresa School, New Bedford, numbering four. With increased high school facilities available, a larger' proportion of the elementary graduates will be able to continue their Catholic educations than in former years, officials noted. There are now 12 high schools in the Diocese. By September, the number of girls of the Taunton area in Catholic High Schools will increase with the added facilities that will be available in the new Girls' Memorial High SchooL
. ' Jew, Protesta,nt Debate Pra.yer ..... In Schools •
Simon's Supply Co. Inc. Bristol Knitting Mills, 'Inc; Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Morley' Fall River Retail·· Liquor Dealers Association Harry Gottlieb _. Mr. & Mrs. J. Dana Ramsbottom . $40 J. A. Boynton' Co., Inc.
$35 Thomas E. Murray Co., Ine. $25
Agostini Construction Co.' , $15 . A Friend $10 D. Dixon Donovan, Inc.
. fall River $1000 Caritas Guild $950 Catholic Memorial Home ResIdents $600
Fall River Gas Company . $500 Artcraft Fixtures Div. Special Products Co. 'of Tenn. Inc. $400 , International Ladies Garment Workers Union No. 178 $300 Fall River Five Cents Savings Bank' . . Citizens Savings Bank .
$261.30
Mr. & Mrs. William T. Man· Ding Jr. $250 First Federal Savings & LoM Association of Fall River $200 William T. Manning Co.; Ioe. $160 Mr. & Mrs. Herve Lagasse '. $150 Monaghan Acceptance. Corp. , $100 Anderson-Little Co., Inc. Lafayette Co-operat~ve Bank Somerset Catholic Women'. Club . Oliver M.. Cherry Ann Dale Products $60 ·S. S. Kresge Co: $50 ' In Memory o~ Rev. Joseph P. [,yons Lorenzo E. Savard . Mt. St. Mary's Alumnae Ass~ dation John F. Doyle Contracting Co. Dr. Alan G. Sampson
Necrol.ogy JUNE 18 Rev. James M. Coffey, P.R., i 1935, Pastor, St. Mary, Taunton. .TUNE 19 ' ReV: Hormisdas Deslauriers, 1916, Founder, St. Anthony, New Bedford JUNE 20 Rt. Rev. James J. Coyle, P.R., LL.D., 1931, Pastor, St. Mary, Taunton. .TUNE 21 . Rev. Desiree-, V. De~lemarre, 1926, Pastor, Blessed Sacrament, Fall River. Rev. Francis D. Callahan, 1948, Pastor, St. Patrick, Wareham. Rev. 'Geor~e A. Meade, 1949, Chaplain St. Mary Home, New Bedford. .
FORTY HOURS DEVOTIO'N' June 17-St. Mary, New Bedford. St. 'Elizabeth, Fall River. June 24-Blessed Sacrament, Fall River. . St. Mary, Norton.. Corpus Christi, Sandwich. July
I-Sacred Heart" North Attleboro'. . St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis. Holy Trinity, West Harwich.
July 6-St. 'Joan of Arc, Orleans. Our Lady.of the Assumption, Osterville.. '1'IlJlO tUlCBO& Becozul Olaa Posuoa- "aill a' FaU 8Iv•• M....... Publiabed eve., l'bureclu at UO HlJrblaacl AVeDQ_ Fall Rlv.. b, the OathoUc Pftu ~f tile Dloc.. crt Fan River SubBerh'itoa price b.J malL
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poII'Pai4 ".00 per ,eu.
$25
Nelson R. Cherry Engine Service &. Supply Ine. Sullivan's Motor Sales Ray's Auto Radiator Works $15 ,Atty. J. Clark Williams Cropper Florist Dr. Wilson E. Hughes Manny's Truck Sales & Servlee American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees Local No. 1118 Edward McConnell $10 National Cash Register Co., Capitol Fruit Stores, Langfield Battery & Electrical Service, A. A.Plante & Sons . George W..' Graham, The Wiliows, Dr. Burton D." Bryan, Highland Delicatessen, Empire Chevrolet Atty Alfred S. Sherwin, 'Motor Truck Sales Co., McLellan Stores, Universal CIT Credit Corp., Mell Jewelry Co. Joseph Nadeau & Son'
North Attleboro $50
Sperry-DeBlois, Inc. C. Ray Randall Mfg. Co. $35 , Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Levis . $25
Mervin C. Gay Robert H. Paquin $20 John R.Blackinton $15 Am's Park Motel Deschenes Bros.· $10 B & L Cleansers, Ine., Cub Scouts, Pack 26, Walter H. Murphy, Rattey's, Thomas J. Rush
Mass Ordo
FRIDAY -'Ember Friday After Pentecost. I Class.. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc. of Pentecost. SATURDAY - Ember Saturday After Pentecost. I Class. Red•. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence: Creed; Preface etc. of Pentecost. The Celebrant may omit the 2nd, 3rd, 4th,' and 5th lessons with their versicles and prayers appointed for this day~ The first lesson and the Epistle, however, must be said. SUNDAY-The Most-Holy Trinity. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of '1'rinity. MONDAY -St. Ephraem, Deacon, Confessor and Doctor of the Church. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect SS. Mark and MarcelHanus, Martyrs; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY-St. ,Juliana Falconieri, Virgin. III Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect SS. Gervase and Protase, Martyrs; no Creed; Common Preface. WEDNESDAY-Mass of I Sunday after Pentecost. IV Class. Green. ·Mass Proper; No Glo. ria; Se~ond Collect St. Silver_ .. ius, Pope and Martyr; no Creed; Common Preface. THURSDA ~--Corpus Christi. I . Class. . White. Mass Proper Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Common Preface. In the Mass which is followed by the Pro. _cession, the celebrant· sings' Benedicamus Domino, and the Last Blessing and Last Gospel are omitted.
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CINCINNATI, (NC) - A Jew and a Protestant'd&bated at a Catholic university here. whether courts
F: W. Woolworth Co. Hub Clothing Dr. Robert H. Moe Linjay Mfg. Co. Wilbur Cafe . Decor Fabrics of Fall' River Flynn's Package Store, Inc. Sacred Hearts Academy Alumnae Association Riveredge Printers, Inc. Fall River Milk Producers Association, Inc. Howard W. Durfee . $20
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SPACE STUDENTS: Diocesan high scholars are learning first hand of space age problems as National· Aeronautics and Space Administration speaker Guy E. Johnson Jr. tours schools. From left, Susan McVey, Sacred Hearts Academy, .Fall River; Diane D'Amour Jesus-Mary Academy; Mr. Johnson; Gerald Mailhot, Prevost High School
New Bedford $300 D'Hara Chevrolet Co. Paul G. Cleary CO. $150 DeBrosse Oil Co.
Attleboro $100 Att'1eboro Trust Co. L. G. Balfour Co. Shields Inc. ·$60 Saart Bros. Company.
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should run prayers out of tbII public schools. . Focal point of the discussioa at Xavier University was an appeal before the U. S. Supreme Court which asks that the tribunal declare unconstitutional the voluntary recitation in New York public schools of a 22-worCl ."non-sectarian" prayer. Harold K. Goldstein, a rablLl before entering the practice ~ law, spoke against the praye? and Francis L. Dale, past presno dent of the Cincinnati Bar Assc= ciation and active in officilil Protestant lay circles, defendeclt the constitutionality of its recita1\. Basic Case Goldstein said that thei~ prayers in school show a preSo erence over non-theistic rel~ gio~. He said promotion C!fl prayer by public schools is a:Il establishment of religion. The session was sponsored b?!7 the Natural ~w Society cfl Xavier. William L. Blum, a sc=> ciety memoer who was modelb atar, told the- audience that th::D . Supreme Court "never befOJ\D has considered a ease so basf;;u and fundamental" in the area c3 religion in public schools.
$100 . $55' Kiwanis Club of New.Bedford First Federal Savings&' Loan Alden Corrugated Container 'Association of Attleboro Legi@n of ,Decency Co. $50 Aerovox Corp.' The following films are to.' h:J Morin's Diners Inc: .... Dartmoutr. Clothing Co. added to the lists in their 'N> Attleboro Lions' Club Cornell Dubilier Electric Co. ' Alcazaba Circle .. Daughten spective classificaiions: of Isabella . . \ .. Unobjectionable for gener&3 $80 ,. patronage: Story of the Count c1 $35 Sunset Cleaners & Dyers Monte Cristo; Stowaway in th3 Mr. & Mrs.. William R. Flynn $15 Sky (highly recommended). Standard Plastics Co., Inc. Acushnet Fish Co; Unobjectionable for adultJ $30 and adolescents: Barabbas; Tal£:) $50 William· R. DWllap Co., Inc. of Terror. Leigh Textile, Inc. $25 Unobjectionable for adu&:l Stanley Oil Co. Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Flynn. Rider on a Dead Horse.' The Keystone: Flynn's Hardware Ernest Flood Marathon Co. Kaplan' Bros. $10 Margeson Plumbing London's Inc. I
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Aiello Brothers, Inc. Laurans Bros., Inc. Damien COWlcil K of C . N. B. Stevedoring Co. Brewery Wor-kers Local 19'1 Atty. Louis' Stone Jay & Bee Fillet Co. MacLean's Fish Ziterion Realty Corp. Babbitt 'Steam Specialty Co. 'Kay Jewelry Co. PlumberS Supply Co.. Atty. Jack London Glennon ~oofing Co. State Road Cement Block Co. Herman's Liquor Store Local 384, UAW, AFL-CIO Union .Liquors ' Co. Mason & Taber Insurance
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,~ THf·ANt~o'R~···... · thu~s., ~~une 14; 1962
Warmer Relations'
Editor Asserts Rides· 'Sord id'
NEW YORK (NC) ....:.- The policy making body of the National Council of Churches has hailed signs of ~warmer relations'~ with the Catholic Church. The national council's general board expressed hope that- the warmer relations will be "increasingThe resolution on improved ly reflected" in the U.S. The relations with. the Catholic general board made its com- Church expressed the national ments in a resolution unani- council's "gratification" over mOl.sly adopted at the close of its 'spring business meeting (June 7-8) at the Riverside church here. The board is composed of 270 representatives of the 33 Protestant and Orthodox denominations which belong to the Council of Churches, the nation's largest federation of Protestants and Orthodox. ,The general board also authOl'ized a national study conference on Church-State relations. The conference will be 'held April 7-10, 1964, in Chicago, and will bring together 500 representatives of Protestant and Orthodox groups. Pluralistic Society . A statement by the national eouncil cited the "expanding role of government" in Ameriean life and "the need to examine the piace of religion in a pluralistic society" as reasons for . the study conference. The Rt. Rev. Malcolm E. Peabody, retired Protestant Episcopal Bishop of the Diocese of Central New York and chairman of the council's Department of Religious Liberty, said at least eight denominations have already begun official studies' on Church-State relations and al'e cooperating with the council in preparations for the conference. Church-State The 1964 conference will deal with such issues as the use of government funds for church hospitals and schools; use of pUblic laws to enforce public morality; religion in public achools; tax exemptions for ehurch property; and the influence on free choiCe of religion exercised by court decisions and rulings regarding the placement and custody of dependent children. Gratification Preparatory work for the eonference will begin next fall with the 'appointment of study commissions to collect and summarize materials dealing with these issues.
LITTLE ROCK (NC) - The segregationist": sponsored cam": paign to send Negroes north on "Freedom Rides" is "sordid," a Catholic editor said here. Msgr. Thomas L. Keany, editor of the Guardian, newspaper of the Little Rock diocese, said in a column in .the newspaper that "all parties concerned must share in the blame," including Northerners who have sought to exploit the situation. The worst feature, he added, is that "the people of Little Rock will have to bear the stigma brought upon the city by the dastardly act of a very small group of its citizens."
such developments. . It ci.ted in particular the action of the Vatican in sending observers to the World Council of Churches' assembly last year in New Delhi, India, and inviting Orthodox and Protestant groups to send observers to the Second Vatican Council, which will open October 11 in Rome. "The National Council of Churches welcomes the prospect that these warmer relations will be increasingly reflected in the life of the churches in the United States," the resolution added.
Priest Offers Father's Mass Rev. Edward J. Sharpe, assistant· at the Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro, celebrated a Solemn High Mass of Requiem Monday morning in St. Joseph's Church, Needham, for the repose of the soul of his father, Richard F. Sharpe, who died Friday. In the presence of Most Rev. James J, Gerrard, D.D., Auxil:. iary Bishop of the Diocese, Father Sharpe was assisted -bY Rev. James A. McCarthy, deacon, and Rev. Armando A. Annunziato, Ilubdeacon. Chaplains to Bishop Gerrard were Rev. Edward L. 'O'Brien and Rev. John A. Chippendale.
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"Envy shoots at others and wounds herself./I
STATE WINNER.: Phyllis McNabb, eighth grade student at St. John's School, Attleboro, shows Sister Mary Frederica, principal, the first prize certificate she received in the State:"wide Safety Poster Contest.
Protestant Leader Urges Unity At Catholic College Graduation
INDIANAPOLIS (NC)':"'- A top U.S. Protestant layman told the graduating class of a Catholic college hE;re that Christians . as "a minority in a hostile world" must strive· for unity to save the world from destruction befote the "ultimate weapon" is exploded. J. Irwin Miller, Columbus, Ind., industrialist who is president of the National Council of Churches, addressing the 25th Continued from Page One anniversary commencement of throw the amendment that Marian College, said this unity would let down the traditional . can be achieved by a consuming· Sunday bars were State Senabrotherly love which will not tors John F. Parker of the First allow doctrinal differences to Bristol District, Mary L. Fonseca muffle the call. of the Gospel. of the Second Bristol District, "Our differences are grave, and Antone L. Silva of the run deep and are not quickly Third Bristol District. Voting to to be resolved. But if we can't retain the amendment was Ed- speak with one voice, the world ward C. Stone of the Cape and race might run its course to Plymouth. destruction," Miller told the 86 In the July 2, 1959, issue of graduates of the coeducational The ANCHOR, Bishop Con- college conducted by the Frannolly, in a front-page editorial ciscan Sisters. warned all of the danger "of "My scientific friends tell me making Sunday 'Just another th:;tt the ultimate weapon, the day'." one which can totally destroy the race and make the world un_ fit' for life, is now Clearly possible, and will almost certainly be in human hands within' a decade," Miller said. He likened Christians to a ter's degree in education at family in which love of one for Bridgewater State College. another should transcend all The new Stang guidance di- differences, allowing the family rector has a certificate in guid- to achieve unity in spite of diance and is present'y pursuing versity. Without this unity, he courses in counseling and psy- said, the West is "ill-prepared chological testing. to respond to the peculiar call of The husband of Grace Delaney this age. "The time is short," Miller and the father of two children, Mr. Delaney is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney of Fall River. He has two brothers serving in the Diocese,' Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, assistant at ~ ~ the Sacred Heart Church, Taunton and teacher of religion at Coyle High, and Rev. Edmund T. Delaney, assistant at Holy ~ Name Church, Fall River.
Sunday Sa les
SAVE
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·added. "The ultimate weapon is at hand. The issue could be declded in your generation. The burden is on you graduates as never before. Surely, only by individually losing ourselves in love and affection for others can unity be achieved. Our differences involve beliefs which we hold dear, and should hold dear. There are too many people who say 'one faith is as good as another. But we can differ in love and work as one."
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Daniel De~aney Guidance 'Director At Bishop Sta ~g High School Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Superintendent of Diocesan Schools, a~nounced today the appointment of Daniel J. Delaney of Fall River as Guidance Director at Bishop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth. Mr. Delaney is a graduate of Stonehill College where he received an A.B. degree in history and government in 1960 and Sunday he was granted a mas-
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THE ANCHOR-Diccese of Fall River-Thurs., June 14, 1962
Leado'f1llS} Parishes
P'hotcgraphs of St. Th~res~ Unretouched in ,New Album
Holy Name, Fall River $21,492.05 St. Lawrence, Iiew Bedford 21,284.511 St. ,Mary, North Attleboro 16,201.00 St. John the Evangelist, Attleboro 15,355.00 St. J.ames, New Bedford 14,207.50 Sacred Heart, Fall River 12,669. • St. Francis, Xavier, Hyannis 12,563.50 St. Thomas More, Somerset' 10,26U5 st. ,Mary's, 'Taunton 10,268.75 St. Mary's, Mansfield 9,600.00 Mt. Carmel, New Bedford 9,542.95 81. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River 9,149.95 81. Joseph, New Bedford 9,040.05 Immaculate Conception, North Easton 8,802.00 Holy Name, New Bedford 8,756.00
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By Rt.'Rev. Msgr. John S.Kennedy Therese of Lisieux is a saint about whom .controversy has swirled. The authenticity: of her holiness has not :been questioned. But there has been shalCP difference of 'opinion as to the accounts of her, the portraits 'of 'her, and the first v~rsion of her autobio- tin 'sisters, "wel.'e disappointed graphy issued by the Car- at not finding (in the photomel in which she spent her .graphs) that indefinable quaiity religious life. The charge which fascinated them about
FALL RIVER AREA
:St. Mary Blessed Sacrament Espirito Santo " Holy Name Holy Cross
1;400;00
NEW BEDFORD AREA
Holy Name Assumption Holy Rosary Immaculate Conception Mt. Carmel ' Our Lady of Perpetual Help Our Lady ,of. Purgatory Sacred ,Heart St. Anne' St. Anthony of Padua St. Boniface St. Casimir St. Francis of Assisi St. HedWig St. Hyacinth St. James St. John. the Baptist St. Joseph St. Kilian 81. Lawrence 81. Mary 81. Theresa Acushnet St. Francis Xavier Fairhaven 81. Joseph St. Mary Sacred Hearts South Dartmouth St. Mary
8,756.00 1,164.50 5-65.00 3,952.35 9,542.95 2,076.55 810.00, 3,973.00, 2,140.00 4',834.00 302.00 780.00 .1,572.50 596.00 1,390.25 14,207.50 6,679.50, 9,040.05 4,318.75 21,284.55 5,012.30 3,588.25
has been made and denied that Therese, and they. carefully tried 1,261.41 the nuns, and especially her to reconstruct it 'by incessant, 3,328.00 but questionable, retouchings." own blood sis5,641.00 ters, falsified It appears that they did not 3,195.00 the reality by consider the pictures sufficiently 1,864.00 erasing every spiritual, or sufficie.ntly com3,755.12 ,wrinkle, sweet.,. municative 'of spirituality, ·and 6,975.20 enirig the origidecided that they. should be 6,528.50 nal, and making made to convey it. 2,590;50 Therese" so com625.00 2,680.50 Naive View pletely (and in'4,482.~0 Celine was an amateur artist. credibly) ethe1,574.70 5,607.05 She had talent, but virtually ,no real a creature 1,592.47 training. She was wont to say as to convince '1;890.00 611.00 that her teacher in art was our the ordinary blessed Lady, and she 'believed person that im2,159.00 5,767.00 itation was impossible and her that prayer was the one m.eans to advalJ.ce in skill in' drawing "little way" beyond his powers. 2,702.70 HYANNIS AREA , There now appears a large and painting. These 'are naive views. It is and fascinating volume called 3,409.00 Chatham Holy Redeemer 3,119.00 The' Photo Album 'of St. Therese extrl;!mely important that the of Lisieux (Kenedy. $12.50), artist,' as well as anyone else, be 3,124.00 Centerville , a person of faith,and prayer. But with commentary by Francois Our Lady of Victory 1,746.00 4;842.50 de Sainte-Marie, O.C.D., trans- the strongest faith and the 10;269.25 East Brewster lated (and with some emenda- purest prayer will not, in th.emIrnmac. Conception' 1,125.00 tions) by Peter Thomas Rohr- selves, develop one's powers ·of 4,930.75 East falmouth bach, O.C.p. In it is found the execution as .apoet, sculptor, 3,416.00 St. Anthony 6,054.00 entire dossier of photographs of musician, , etc. 3,596.50 Falmouth The photographs begin with St. Therese in the possession of St. Patrick 7,241.00 the Carmel of Lisieux. Most of some of Therese as a child and 6,591.00 Hyannis go through to almost the eve of . the' pictures have never before St. Francis Xavier 12,563.50 her death, with some taken of TAUNTON AREA been published. Orleans her remains laid out for ·burial. Nuns Before Camera , St. Joan, of Arc 1,52~.00 Those made in, life show the Holy Family 3,193.50 That ,such a dossier should changes in her, not just the Holy Rosary 1;828;00 Osterville exist at all, is more thill1 slightly chronological changes ,or those Im1I).aculate Conception Assumption 2,908.00 4,301.50 startling. ' We do not expect in health and vigor, but also in . Our Lady of Lourdes Provincetown 3,526.00 cloistered nuns to be sitting for the spiritual maturing which Sa<:red Heart St. Peter 3,224.00 4;860.20 the camera. But, although they' went on in the rather short time St. Anthony 3;428.35 Sandwich hide their 'faces from the world, between her entry into Carmel St. James , Corpus Christi ~,94H>0 3,668.00 there is no reason (on second and her departure from life. South, Yarmouth St. Joseph 5,191.00 thought) why, within the comSt. Pius' X 5,398.00 If she is the center of interest St. Mary 10,268.75 munity, there should not be 4,342.00 Wellfleet for the reader, she is not the so.le St. Paul some photographic record of its subject of the"' photographs. Dighton Our "Lady of Lourdes 1,630.00 members and activities. St. Peter Many depict the community, 1,437.00 West Harwich Again, it has been the common gathered at recreation,' doing North .Dighton Holy Trinity 3,646.75 thing that' saints are averse to laundry work, having, observing . Woods Hole St. Joseph 2,632.50 ha~ing their portraits painted St. Joseph 2,431.00 a special feast, etc. They afford, North Easton 01' their pictures taken. Evitherefore, a glimpse within the Immac: Conception 8;802.00 dently the 'majority regard NORTH ATTLEBORO AREA walls of a nineteEm~h century Raynham either as mere vanity or waste Carmel. They also allow us to . St.'Ann 2,697.50 Sacred Heart 5,143.00 of time. study the other' Martin sisters St. Mary . 16,201.00 But some few have not shared WAREHAM AREA and compare them with Therese. the general attitude, among this Moreover, they let us see minority being, for example, St. Mother Gonzaguewho, ac- • Buzzards Bay ATTLEBORO AREA Bernadette of Lourdes who cording to some, was bitterly St. Margaret 4,206.50 Holy ~host 4,103.00 often' and willingly posed before unjust to Therese, and, ac- Mattapoisett . St. John 15,355.00 the lens (as Leonard von Matt's cording to others, a conscious 2,-646.50 St. Anthony St. Joseph 3,822.50 splendid book of photographs ' agent of providence in lier Wareham St.':Maiy 5,485.00 of her reminds us). Patrick 8,092.00 St. charge's progress to perfection. St. Stephen 3,392.50 Matter of Obedience One is struck, first of a~l, by St. Theresa VINEYARD BAVEN "AREA ~,187.65 In Therese's case, being photo- the difference in age between Mansfield graphed was, in part, a matter of the two. Then, there is the in- Nantucket St. Mary 9,600.00 obedience. The community was telligence in Mother. Gonzague's Our Lady of the Isle 2,933.00 Norton having a group picture taken on countenance, with the hint of oak Bluffs St. Mary 3,985.50 this or that occassion, and she, irony' and' obliqueness. It is a 2,645.00 Sacred Heart as part of the group, went along. rather enigmatic face, but not Vhieyard Haven seekonk But there was more to it than that of a villainess. 3,656.25 Mt. ~armel 1,859.00 51. Augustine that. The photographer in the Lisieux Carmel was none other than Therese's own sister Celine, who also painted the portraits of the saint which have caused so much dispute. Celine ,brought photographic equipment with her when she entered Carmel, and the strong bond between these two sisters has something to do with Therese's agreeing to be a subject for Celine's camera again and again. . That camera was primitive by present standards, and the process of picture-taking laborious. The procedure was for Celine to arrange the composition, and fOr 'another nun, on signal, to work the instrument. In 41 of Be sur.e to show how Celine's "pictures, Therese figures. much you. think your As they appeat- in the new book, they are completely un'Pop's the Tops! retouched. Many of: them previously' published' have 'not until now appeared without what was intended as im!lrovements by Celine. Extreme pains,. and I suppose , risks, have been taken to restore these precious pictures. to their pristine state, so that the eviB. M. dence of the camera can 'speak without being censored or corrected. ....aU Hi".,.. Why w,ere the pictures' ever tampered with in the first place? Celine, and others of the Mar-
Happy Father's. Day!
c.
Durfee Trust Co.
App~~~ Continued from Page One were closed, that the increase of ten dollar donations was a great factor in passing last year's total. Mr. Condon closed his chairmanchip with these. words, "Please convey my prayerful' thanks to all who contributed their time and offerings towards this most successful Appeal. I will remember 1962 the rest or my days".
THIS MUI(JNI WILL MiKa 'vou Wlttt' TNe. PRESC"IPT'O"l WAS FI LUtD AT
TOUHEY'S
,PHARMACY
••••• 60 WI! KNOW rr5 WHAT THB DOCTOR ORDER\::D.
THE ANCHORThurs., June 14, 1962
Explains Factors in Social Conditioning of Children
Designates June. ,Education Month
By Father John L. Thomas, S. J. Asst. Sociology Pro'.-St. Louis Univenit)'
"My wife and I go ,along with you completely in your Yiews on early dancing, dating, going steady, and so on. Although we've managed to hold the line fairly well, now that our two oldest are in high school we sometimes wonder what ,we may be them? As in all other problems, doing to our children by the answer will depend on one's raising them so differently. point of view. If we consider the real, long Will they resent our~treat ment later on? Will' they be ~cially adequate and ready to eompete when' , the time comes? Bow far can parents go in bucking popular trends that a ff e c t their children?" I think that in one form or another, Hugh, all serious Christian parents ask themselves these questions. They are eonvinced that ~any current social customs and patterns are detrimental to the best interests of their children, but they recognize at the same time that their children probably lack the prudence and experience .required to judge these practices eorrectly and consquently may feel that their parents are denying them legitimate opportunities for entertainment and social development. As you have indicated also, such parents may wonder whether their restrictions may no handicap their children later in life, since the young people with whom they must associate will have had many more years of social experience. 'Relative Deprivation' Hence it appears that we are dealing here with problems rela' _·1 to what may be called "relative deprivation" and "cultural continuity." By relative' deprivation we mean that our awareness of a loss in a given situation is related to the extent that the -present situation fails to meet our expectations as derived either from past experience or from a comparison with what others i r similar circumstances now possess. For example, your children may feel resentful about your l'Cstrictions not primarily because they experience a need for more social life, but because they feel they have a right to enjoy the same freedom as. 'others in their age-groups. 'Cultural Continuit)" , By cultural contin'-Yty we mean that each step or stage in the child's development should logically lead to and prepare him for the next stage. The term cultural indicates that we are talking about continuity of de·velopment in regard to a speci,fie social system and its distinc.live requirements. . For example, if optimum suceess in our society requires that young adults have the social .proficiency that can only be acquired by ~early and extensive experience in cross-sex associations, then teen-agers who are permitted only relatively late and limited participation in such associations will not be prepared for the next stage in their ,development. I think if you look for the basis of your own questions, as. well' as of the reasOns many 'modern parents advance for promoting or toleratlug the early social conditioning of their children, you will find it is related to one or 'both of these factors, Part of Culture Parents don't want to deprive their children of what others are permitt~ to enjoy, and they want their children to be socially adequate, that is, prepared to compete successfully as young adults in a society that places such a high premium of. what has come to be called "human relations." Are these factors real, and do they have all the force that modern parents tend to give
5
range interests of young people and of our society, there can be no doubt that current practices must be judged irrational and detrimental. Nevertheless, they are presently a'part of the culture, and this raises the question of how to avoid the deleterious effects of the two factors we have described. Positive Approach In dealing with relative deprivation, parents must realize that a mere negative, prohibiting approach is not adequate. In such matters, we destroy only what we replace. Hence they must provide their children with substitute forms of recreation and social life. both in the family circle and in association with other like-minded parents. They must carefully channel . lHIE MAKES HiS OWN: Newly-ordained Father Ronald and guide the interests and asa.S.R, who offered his first Mass last week, Mahnke, pirations of their children along legitimate lines of development -couldn't find the kind of chalice and paten he liked, so he by aiding them to think about designed and made his own. An amateur silversmith, he future goals, by giving them an worked on it for three months at St. Andrew Benedictine active part in family discussions, Abbey in Cleveland. He will teach at nearby Benedictine and while fostering their natural High School next Fall. NC Photo. idealism, by challenging them to reach high. . In this connection, Catholic parents have both an obligation and an excellent opportunity to ~s $w~bo~ ())~ stimulate interest in Catholic BUFFALO (NC)-For people action and the apostolate by exhood as a Conventual Franciscan. plaining the meaning of the who know him, courage is a man On hand, too, was the nun who named Ray Budoch. Mystical Body and the roles taught Ray Boduch to speakAs a result of spinal meninthat Christ expects his members Sister Aloysia, formerly of St. gitis, Ray, 27, has been totally to fulfill within it. Mary's School and now in charge blind and deaf since he was less One does not have to be a of the infirmary at Mount St. trained theologian to explain than two years old. Joseph Teachers College. Yet despite his handicap he the practical demands of charity has achieved things of which or Christian brotherhood, yet all too often, parents fail to show anyone would be proud. The latest milestone in his retheir children that their ChrisComplete tian herita,.ge constitutes a life- markable career came in a ceremony at St. Mary's School for long • challenge to work for the Deaf here, where he received justice and love. a Certificate of Meritorious Will your children experience Achievement. ' the effects of cultural disconThe certificate marked his tinuity when tliey grow up? This prevalent parental fear is based . successful compfetion of a spe. for Bristol County 'cial course in 'radio electronics. on false assumptions. PremaFor some two years he h.as ture or excessive teen-age' dating teaches young people worked for the Sierra Research Corporation in nearby .Cheekvery little that is pertinent towaga, N. Y. .about human relations. Buiids' Hi-Fi . . On the contrary, such practices defieet their interests' and , Among the proofs. of his pro.energies away trom necessary ,ficiency in his chosen work is.the high-fidelity set in his home, formal training and leaves them TAUNTON, MASS. tragically unprepared for col-' built by Ray himself. Ray's parents, Mr. and Mrs. ~ge and responsible adult purTHf BANK ON Chester Boduch of Lackawanna, suits. N. Y., were on hand for the cerYou and your wife have no TAUNTON GREEN emony, as were his two sisters cause for worry; Hugh. At the same time, never hesitate to and his younger brother, Edwin, Member of Federal Deposit .remind your children that they who is studying for the priestInsurance Corporation are privileged to be followers of 'Christ - and Christ carried a r·~4':>"·"'41><3>···" • A FAMILY T~EAT • Cross. '
Dhe@§o Bland Menotrngotss VBctim
Courage to AU
NEW YORK (NC) - Fr.ancis Cardinal Spellman has called on all pastors in the New York archdiocese to devote their sermons during the month of June to the cause of Catholic education. In announ-::ing that June" -will be designated Catholic Education Month in the archdiocese, the New York Archbishop asked that sermon's' 'cover the philosophy of Catholic education, its value and the needs and achievements of ~e parish school. The sermons also will highlight the role of education in New York State and in the nation and point up the partnership of public and private schools for the benefit of the public. During the month, elementary and secondary schools in· the archdiocese will conduct open house programs to acquaint parishionGIIS and the general public with the parish school and its operations. ~Oe:m.I)_IIc:::.U~II~~C.c::::>tlc:::::=J.(JC::::>C)=-O
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The St. Vincent de Paul Society of Fall River will conduct ·a Rummage Sale for the underprivileged on Friday ,and Saturday at the Salvage Bureau, 236 ,Bedford Street, Fall River. Members Of· the St. William Women's Guild will sponSor the · sale hom 9:30 to 5 .o'clOCk'· Oft · Friday and from 9:30 to 'noon on Saturday.
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THE A"'r",... .. ,.... '."~~s~ of FalhRiver,-Thurs., June 14;1962. . •• _ '•; .. ,: \.:.... 't ,.' ";~
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. A discussion held several years ago in rtai'y H1t: degree of reverence that should be accorded the Bible. And it was suggested that ·the book of the Bible be solemnly enthroned in every Catholic household, since ,the volume~ eontaining the Word of God is above all other objects of 'the crucifix. "devotion, not excepting . ....
Council By Rev. Wm. F. Hogan,C.S.C. ~ Stonehi.llPrafessor ~
~'
-. The suggestion is a ·worthy one: Moses entrusted the' bOok of.the Law to the Lt;lvites with the words; "Take this book, and put it in'the side' of the ark of the covenant of the Lord 'your God:" . '
.
-
, Twelfth Ecumenical Council ,' . . . .
Pope Innocept, III, whoij accused by many historians ~f usurping many of the rights of the. state, calle~
. MaJ:1y Catholics pay great hono,r to various religious. symbols-statues, pictures, and the like. All this is normal and·to the good. However at- times there is misunderstanding, with' more emphasis 'placed on these sacramentals than on the' sacraments, with more attention paid' to the external than to the internal, with more confidence in their mere outward presence than in the inward change they.are ineant, to '·excite. After all, ·it is much easier to wear' a medal .. than go to Mass, to light a candle than change it b~dhab.it; . to pqt 'a' -statue Qh a dashboard than to drive re~ponsibly~
the Fourth Lateran Council, thG twelfth general council of t~ Church,'in 1215, 'the year before . his death. Some scholars assert that Pope Innocent III had as' an aim in calling this council to assure that religion, and . Bible in the home would be therefore the way of showing honor to the Word of God. And it would Pop e, would rule over poliremind-as all books rerlIind-that this Book is meant not tics and the. for show but to be read, to be pondered, to be contemplated, emperor in the' Church-State to be woven into the very fabric of one's life. united society of his day. This is an unfair assertion because So it would be with the Bible. The humblest edition, even though the Pope did entel' placed in a shrine of honor in the home, surrounded with ,fnto civil matters at that time, an aura of reverence and dignity, would be an invitation to he al~ays did' it for·.t1)e protec~ the: tion of the· spiritual. rights of "taste and see that: the Lord is' sweet." tile Church and .to ',avoid greater By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic ,University No better object of' devotion could be found· for the evils. Laity 'Represented iCatholic horrie. And how effectively this would answer the The decsions' of the twelfth fears of non-Catholics that Catholics do not, reverence enough the Word of God. Ho\;V. much this simple practice TODAY-Thursday in Pentecost. guarding and cultivating the ecumenical council' reflect the lessons today teach us of the grace-life He has planted in us, influence of Canon Law, which would bring to the non-Catholic the security of knowing The power of the Spirit, a power with bringing it to some prac- was coming to the fore during that Catholics know and love well the Bible, draw from it which in the end is not to be ~ical fruition in our lives. that period, and the ecclesiasthe texts of the Mass and other prayers ofthe public worship counteracted by anything 'lIutical legal background of Pope man, n'or by the human side of MONDAY-St. Ephrem, Dea- Innocent III. . of the Church. the Church as i~stitution, nor con, Confessor, Doctor. We comTwo years of preparation were This could be an effective instrument in the dialogue even by'infernal powers. What- memorate in our celebration of carried on before this council now-happily-going on with greater intensity than ever ever. victories' seem to be the Lord's Supper on this day a . actually convened, Nineteen carwrought against it are oniy ap- great deacon and teacher of the dinals, 400 or more archbishops .before between Catholics and non-Catholics. parent ones. But it is important, early church at a time when the from more countries than ever Many experts in the ecumenical discussion feel that the as the Gospel clearly tells' us, forthcomi,ng ecumenical council ·before 'at a general' council, and that the Church regulate and may. conside,r restoring the role· 800 ab,oots attended; in addition great meeting place of all Christians will be in. th~ ,field of discipline and guard her human of the permanent de'acon in par- there were m,my lay people Scripture. Catholics must be very sure th.at they have not and institutiona: side very strict- ish life. Our prayers for Eph- present, for the Pope wished the neglected the Word of God-for their own soul's sake and ly, so as not to opp'ose the Spirit: rem's iiltercession will ask his laity represented' since so many to give the Bible the place in their lives that the Church asks "Take nothing for 'your journey, aid in' restoring in the life of, decrees concet;ned·the laityneither staff,' nor wallet, nor 'the Cill:istian community a func_ .but they did Dot participate in and to show their non-Catholic brothers that Chris,tians 'bread, ,nor 'money; neither have tion and, ministry for married forming'the decrees:'· . everywhere make it the'focus-of reverence and love. two tunics." men not strictly sacramental Excommunicates Barons TOMORROW-Ember Friday and not strictly temporal, aiding Pope 'Iimocent opened the the. former and bringing the lat:- councl'l wI'th an ad"'':;:'ss' I'n whl'-" in Pentecost. The overflowing t 'th' <U'" "'Uo gifts of the Spirit are the reasons ,t~ r~, In t~: ,ambit o~ the he sp~keof tti,e. situation in the' h , for the exultation, the gratitude, , ' u c .s. carl y. Holy Land, now reconquered by , . Atlanta's. Archbishop Paul HalIinan's~pastoralletter of ,the pra,ise of. ti>~a.y's ,Mas.S. Be,~ -" TUES·D'AY..:.. S. J I'" . Faa '. the Turks, and ~the spread' ~ "Pt;lntecost, apo~riCing Jle~egregation in all parochial sch~ls; ~~se of tpe, SpiI:it;,J~~9pu~~~is .:,eo~ier~; :yil'g~ri~;,As ;:l:~l'shi;;1': }h~::A~~i~e?s'!~p h~~.¢sY', ~t, t~ for>~eptemb~r' br~\}.ght, out a point that' should oot be not·~ commu~llty of s~nners wlth,.;our, FatMr: -today and' share in " sect':llid s,essl~n ,!J:e·h·!;?tC?~m~n~ . " out a hope. It is a commu,nityof (ih~ h,ol ,:',F 'd'f,' "1 " ,'d ····i~·. caed the bar611!l ~"o Aag l'lSE!'.' . overlooked.: . "', .,,' .'. " \, ., .'sinners Whose 'hope is bo-dndless'; i IJt~, us';~~: '&~O;e anII, agatns~ ~ King' Johp,:of ;:1j:ngl~ri~ , 'O~casiorially' thL.c·~iticism i~ leveled. that the Chu~h beqausefprgiven!!sSis ever with 'viigins:Jilnd . 'rel;giZ~S a'in .. ~i . .a'nq n~~li~~ed tliil'1aa: J,"?s .oath . ',bas a~cepted::or.:f::i<;!.§tered 'segregation- in the past with it. (Gpsp.el)., Christianity is .not ;Church'v&ho m[kevisiblein' ob~er~~ th~, M.~g~~,.;~h~rta.~/ . separ~lte' schools:;'J9'r N.egro.es, 'and is only ~w cr.ying out the little moralis{D of our folk-, 'their daily livei'( that betrothal . caus~, It. haC! ~een· ~a_de, '~,?,~~ .ways amI our mor~, our preju- to Christ of ..whIch the :iessOnS ~th~ ,}.nf,~uen~e .of, !,orce: ,..~:: for integration"iii the. name of a' justice long ignored Or .dices ,and 'our hypocrisies, but 'speak, All' of 'u~';are b.eWthed ' J:le d~d thiS In view .of ~.~,e faCl,t flaunted.' an· entrance into a new land olto Him by'. bapt's - .; 'b'u 't -t~af John .' . ' : '" I m, 1't'IS t rue, ff .Kmg d th h 1hadk'prev,lOusly d Of . , '. '. ,The ,Archbishop gave answer to that in his letter when peace and-love. for our daiiy life on earth:it'is . I ) epe, e w 0 ~mg om . he wrote: "Excellent. schools, as well as' pioneer Negro EMBER SATURDAY IN PEN':' necessary that some of the.Englapd and I~e,lan~ t~. th.e H~l~ mis ' h" b t bl' h d t h d t h h TECOST. Apart fro'm' conven'tua'l Church;s members illitstrate this See and subnutted to t~e Pope slOns, ave een es a IS e 0 reac an eac t e mor,e vivid.,ly, more' total,ly. Just as ~ feudal. overlord-m re~ ,Negro, not to' segregate him." .and o~dination Masses; the many as some of us must show Chrl'st's arabon for hiS .r~fu~1. to accept . ' . Scriptu,re readings of 'today's th pa al ho of A h ,. t Before for the world and:for ..e p c Ice an rc ..t' the C.hurch could even deal with the segregation- Mass may be simplified to the concern wo,rldly th' g . 'dl d bIshop of Canterbury and III In egra 10.'1 problem relative to the Negroes, it had to reach first arid the last two. They cli- . In S more VIVI y an d t "1 rt the Negroes. This it did with the use of schools and other max the Pentecost theme' of this more totally. ~~a~~st ~h:e~~~~n~a~~oSt~~~tfacilities aimed exclusively at him and for his exclusive week. Jesus is our door to the WEDNESDAY _ Mass as on ened to rise against him. Then benefit. These have done their work well. They are no Spirit (epistle) and therefore to Sunday. The Mass celebrated Innocent declared that Frederick ,.longer needed. The Negro has been reached and taught. health (Gospel), and therefore today is' that of the first Sunday II was to be emperor and not to salvation. (£irst reading). And after Pentecost, different from Otto of ~runswick. What was initiated as_a practical catechetical approach the Spirit is the Spirit of love, last Sunday's Mass of the Holy 'Transubstantiation' - separate facilities- now have outlived their usefulness for it is only love (entrance Trinity. And -its lessons are The doctrine of Abbot Joachim . t erpre t ed as a SIgn . 0 f"IllJUS t'Ice. hymn) which makes our fasting among the most important of of Flora concerning the Trinity and ml'ght be III ' ded by for on these ember days effe.ctive the Scripture readl'ngs we hear d' d b h d'd On both coun t s, th en, th ey h ave been d Iscar ourselves and for one anwas con emne ecause e I the Archbishop. '. other. during the entire Christian year. not maKe the proper distinctions The issue is as simple and practical and moral as that. ' They are the first principles in between the Divine Nature and FEAST OF THE MOST HOLY our application of faith to life. the Persons, TRINITY. Today's Mass,focuses And in our apostolate, our misThe Sacraments were affirmed our attention, as does every sion to our fellow-men. Credal against the teachings of the AIMass, on God. But it is con- - differences may be too' subtle bigensians and for the first time, cerned particularly with the . for some men. But they all know the term transubstantiation mystery of the Trinity. So it is ,when a man loves. They all (change of substance) was used called Trinity Sunday, and it ,recognize charity" in 'official ecclesiastical circles stands, one might say, betweep . to signify the "change of bread the two halves' of the liturgical .?"! .. ;;"..lInlote G"''''"nt "and wine into the Body and year. It stands between faith and \3.w(QJ"" ..... Blood of Our Lord. practice, between' creed and Robert Davis,' '76. Hillman .Seventy chapters, as they are OFfiCIAL NEWSPAPER Of THIE DIOCIESE Of FALL. RIVER code" between the sacred' events . Street, New Bedford, who re'- 'called, were issued in this of salvation history 'arid our ,ceived a bachelor of'a'rts degree council; most of these decrees ·Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River cultic celebration of the human':magna cum laude Monday frorrt have been incorporated into 410 Highland Avenue . response to those events. From ':Bost.on College evening division, Canon Law. Soine of these de'Fall River, Mass.. OSborne 5-7151 Advent until Pentecost we are has received a full-tuition schoL crees concerned the. rights of rehearsing in our public worship .arship .for graduate study in patriarchal see~ and provincial PUBLISHER at Sunday Mass the great facts . philosophy at Notre Dame, councils,' The procedure of Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0., PhD. of the work of our salvation as .where he will work 'for a mas- Church courts for trying crimiGENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER it was wrought by God through .ter's degree. A 1950 graduate of nal cases was determined. It waa Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll the mission of Jesus Christ. Holy Family High School, he. has forbidden to, found any' reliMANAGING EDITOP From now on, the Sunday held various jobs while attend- gious orders; one who wished to Hugh .J. Golden Masses are .concerned with ing B.oston College. . Turn to Page Seven
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:' SUDBURY (NC) - The de- saicfi3ishc,p 'Ai'ex~riderCar'te,r~of' \;1re for Christian unity is a more Sault'Ste; Marie. ,"The e'ciuneniessential development in t~is -cal movement ,grows 'by leaps age "than the conqu~st Cif and bounds, the natural result "space," a ,bishop said at co~- of this de:;;ire .of all Christendom CAMBRIDGE (NC) - The mencement exercises at Lauren;- to move to a closer and more inpresident of Notre Dame Uni"tian University here in Ontario. timate' sharing of the Christian versity urges scientists and. e~ " "Never perhaps since the 16th faith':" " , gineers to apply their knoy.reentury' have men yearned so The Bishop stressed that. the ledge to critical problems of 'much for unity in matters of road to Christian unity will be poverty and hunger rather than reli~ious importance and belief," a long, painful process. "But "pampering imagined wants." with good will and, ~harity, by F'ather Theodore M. Hesburgh, patient and prolonged dialogue, Vat~can C,S.C., addressing graduates of with prayer and' humility. • ., Continued from Page Six Massachusetts Institute of Techwho can say what the future nology here, said that he was not become a monk was to enter one holds?" he :lsked. ',' thinking "of more luxurious of the already existing orders Constructive Approach living conditions for Americans and follow the rule of either "Certainly, tremendous ad;. of every and any quantity," but Basil, Benedict, Augustine or vances have already been "of the broader context of the Francis. (This law did not re- made," he con tin u e d. "The world in which never before main in effect very long.) , whole atmosphere of mutual have so many millions of people Regulations for Clerics distrust and suspiCion is gradubeen more poorly housed. or A series of decrees governing ally :changing, Leading theolofed, or clothed." the clerical life were made; they gians of all the churches are KING 'OPENS IlIOSPITAL: Taking inaugural tour of ,forbade ,clerical immorality, taking a long, hard look at the 'Trivial Purposes' drunkenness, gambling and need for a more constructive ap;. Muashir Memorial Hospital in Amman, Jordan, is King '-r am slightly nauseated," he , hunting and clerics were forbid- proach to our mutual problems. Hussien, who opened the lOO-bed hospital to be staffed by den 'to wear secular dress, eS"Again the Laurentian (Uni- the Medical Mission Sisters. Accompanying him were Mother declared, "when I see science pecially greens and reds. versity) has its role to play in Elenore Leipitz, Rome assistant, to Mother Anna Dengel, and technology dedicated to trivial purposes like better deoClerics were further prohib- this great drama - perhaps the foundress and superior general of the Medical Mission dorants and better detergents, ited from taking part in trials most important developmentaf where there would be capital our time - more vital I would' Sisters, and Dr. Sa'ad Muashir, hospital head. The hospital better cosmetics and more aesthetic telephones, better garpunishment, from taking part in say than the conquest of space. was built by , the 'family of Dr. Muashir. NC Photo. den ,sprinklers and better reexecutions, from fighting and "In the i n tel i e c t u a 1 at:. mote control of wrestling and from acting as 8 surgeon. mosphere of a university," he horse operas on television." Moreover, they were never to stated, "such close relationship bless ordeals where one's inno- .; should serve to dissipate many cence 'or guilt was ascertained i errors and prejudices which by a physical test of endurance. might be excusable in the DONAT LOS ANGELES (NC) - Two Dr. Sorensen, 32, 8 convert, Clerics were obliged' to 'attend "ignorant and 1l1-informed but the divine office and to celebrate which can have no sense among physicia,ns and a de~tist froin will go to the 140-bed hospital INSURANCE AGENCY Southern California have volun_ of the White Sisters at Likuni or hear Mass regularly. men of culture and learning. All Kinds Of Insurance Every church was obliged, if 'tunited C h u r c h, Anglican teered to go to the African mis- Mission in Lilongwe dioceSe~ Nyasaland. He is a specialist, in possible, to have 8 teacher ,for ChurCh, Catholic Church stu- sions. II WlLWM STREET Drs. Herbert Sorensen and obstetrics and gynecology. His poor clerics and cathe(iral dents and profesSors will learn NEW BEDFORD. MAS& James Fitzgerald, the physiwife Doris and three children ehurches were to have an addi- to respect one another and live DIAL Wv a:.5153 tional teacher of theology. Wan- in, harmony. They wiil find that ,cians, and Joseph Kirby, the will accompany him. He was graduated from Cornell Univerdering preachers couid not beg they have'much in common in dentist, are members of MD '.nonal Service a mission aid association which sity school of medicine. ' without the au'thQrity ,of the the Christian inheritance." last year sent its first physician Dr. Fitzgerald, 39, was graduPope or the diocesan bishop. overseas. The three will, be ac- ated from Syracuse University Several decrees were passed against simony. jews were not to appear in companied by their wives, two menical school. He and his wife BishopS' ObllgatloDS public during Holy Week be- of whom are registered nurses will join Dr. Thomas Bain, first Inc. Epi~copal sees, were not alea,use in the past they had and will work as such in Africa. mission doctor assigned last' The three couples are being year, in residence at the 270MOVERS lowed to be vacant for more mocked, the lamentations of the than three months. Bishops were Christia,ns on Good Friday, and trained here in rnissiology and bed hospital in Driefontein, SERVING obliged to appoint preachers and had 'caused riots. Jews and ascetics before leaving for Africa Southern Rhodesia. Six Lay FaD River, New Bedford in September. Mission Helpers from Los Aneonfessors at cathedral churches, pagans could not be elected or Their trai~ing is being con- geles are a'so at Driefontein. Dr. Cape Cod Area and they were to see to it that appointed to public offices, for Agent: these instructions were given in they should not have control ducted by Msgr. Anthony,Brou- Bain and his .wife have their wers, archdiocesan director of four children there. the language of the faithful. over the followers of Christ. AERO MAYFLOWER the Society for the Propagation Dr. Kirby; 38, was graduated Provincial synods of bishops The council closed with the TRANSIT CO. INC. Creighton University, were to be held annually and 'announcement of a crusade to of the Faith and founder of the from Nation-wide Moven were to see to it that the reform save the Holy Land, the' Fifth Lay Mission Helpers Association Omaha, and has been' practicing WYman 3·0904 which has 100 persons now overdentistry for the past eight decrees were being carried out; Crusade, which took place two 30~ Kempton St. New Bedford general chapters of religious years later. The clergy were seas. He is also executive secre- years in nearby Fullerton. He too will go to Driefontein. , ' wders were to make similar sll- 'ordered to' contribute one twen- tary of MD. i?eryisions. ; tieth of their income for three : . Bishops .were warned not to years in order that ,the expenses ~b the cl~rgy of their churches 'might bernet. ' , " of a just recompense for their <.. 'To 'guarantee" enough ship !\ervices, and, they were, to s~e 'space' for thecr:ullllders all marithat th'e' Clergy are trained in :time,trade with the 'Mohammedthe administration of the sacra:' 'a'rii :Was forbidden for four years ments. ' 'iii addition to any trading 'with Rules for Laity 'them in' weapons. Large scille , 'As regards the laIty, every recruiting "for crusaders was '8 Catholic was obliged by this suCcess, but thecrus~de itself 'council to 'confess at least once , ended in utter failure. ' year to his parish priest and to Next week -.:.. The 13th Ecureceive Holy Communion at his menical Council. parish church. 'Legislation on marriage im,Pediments was reformed; no longer was it prohibited to marry relatives up to and including sixth cousins, but only to third cousins, whether by blood or marriage. This change was wel245 MAIN STREET 'ct'~p. because at that time society was composed of small comFALMOUTIH-KI 8-1918 munities which were relatively ARMAND ORTlNS, Prop. stationary. Marriages which were not publicly solemnized in church were forbidden by the council, but the council did not declare lNtem invalid. The faithful were to be encouraged to give volun• Blue Star Homes offer Gas heat-econom- Rome buyers can tary offerings at marriages and. ical dependable, America's most wanted UVE A funerals, but they could not be Gas ranges, with modern features MODERN " compelled to do so. like the Burner-with-a-Brain· that adjusts All who profess heresies were itself automatically 0" • Gas water heating, FOR LESSG NEW BEDFORD " Jaster, inore economical, more popular ••• WITH... to be condemned and to be suitplus many other modem Gas features: coolably punished by the state. Their VISIT THE CENTURV tl GAS ing drying, incineration, even outdoor goods were to go to the state. INDUSTRIAL OILS ••HIBIT AT THE SIlATTLIl 'lighting! Let the Blue Star guide ;vou to a If they were clerics, they were WORLD'S FAIR. APRI~ . ., TO OCTOBER ... W'" top quality. top value home! to be degraded and their goods HEATING OILS '4\.OoA. 'Mutt. Am. Oat ~ were ,to ,go to ~e church to which they had been .attached. TIMKIN '!'hose 'Suspect of heresy were obliged 'to' provii: themselves inOIL BURNERS DOcent or be exco~unicated.
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. ·rtfE. ANCHOR..,DiOcese June. '14, 1962 . Of Fan River-Thun:, . -
Of Conform ism
Says U.S. A.Wealthiest, One
PALOS' VERDES (NC) - A woman jurist warned young people against the "deadly anell dangerous conformism" of thoSe who accept the materialistic and amoral standards of their neigh., bors. , . Justice Mildred L. Lillie of the District Court of Appeai told Marymount College graduates she was concerned "with the problem of the individual living in a society in which the majority is inclined to surrender to conformity." She spoke against conformism with slogans and standards of "those who are indifferent to God or religion, who ridicule moral or spiritual values, who are dedicated to the ideals of this passing world." Among these, she said, l'ire educators, writers, film producers who,. through books, literature, movies and popular at;.. . titudes encourage thought patterns that lead to delinquence, materialism, destruction of ' home life, lifting of moral restraints and falling away from rel!gious practice~. James Francis Cardinal Me>Intyre, Archbishop of Los ADgel~s, awarded degrees to t1;Ie . graduates.
Of Unhealthiest Countries By Mary Tinley Daly The customer ahead of us at the drug counter gave her order: "A package.of 'sleeping pills, please; a package . of pills to keep me awake; a dozen of the things advertised in the window to avoid tension; three' of those big pills I bought last week to make me doctor." What ''family doctor"? super.;.alert." "Oh, yes," she In this age Of sPecialization, it added, and a bottle of is hard to find a doctor who will aspirin and a box' of the att~nd all members of a family, :'<. .
super-x to kill the cold I'm sure who will even see one patient . I'm getting." Calmly as though as a whole.. Says Dr. Ratner: "We are alhe were filling ready beginning to see in this a prescription specialist age that patients are, for' pink-eye, insisting on turning a given spethe clerk ascialist into a family 'physician sembled t~ e out of their need for a personal various boxes, medical advisor.· They realize totaled the that they are ending up with' an ,whole thing, array of specialists--one for the rang it up on father and husband, an'other for the cash registhe wife and m'other; a third for' ter, and that the children, and maybe a couple was that. of others for the variety of afThis was a flicted . parts falsely distributed eoncrete examBLIND GUILD : New Bedford Catholic Guild fo~ Blind ple of the "Pill-Happy and Axi- within the profession-but that. entertains Bishop G.errard at banque.t. From left, the Bishop; ety-Ridderi" people of today as they h,ave no personal health noted by Herbert Rl!tner, M.D., counselor to whom they can Mrs. Anthony J. DuPont, St. Joseph's parish, Fairhaven, professor of preventive medicine turn, no single physician with a . president; Gertrude F. Hancock, ,St.· Lawrence's~ New Bedand' public health at Loyola Uni_ unified philosophy of medicine ford, immediate past president. ' versity Medical School, Chicago. and the wisdom they are looking An eye-opening interview, pub- for, and no one to make a house lished by the Center for the c a U l " , Mrs. Dooley Receives Speaking of the preoccupation Study of Democratic Institutions gives Dr.. Ratner's views on with health in this country, Dr. Doctor-Son/s Awa·rd· many facets of modern medicine Ratner says it is evident by "the WASHINGTON (NC)-Pres-; . and medical practice, many of medical columns in newspapers, them particuuarly applicable to the . health .articles. in popuI8r ident. Kennedy presented ,a Conperiod~cals, the popularity of - gresslOnal Medal posth~J.D0usly families.. Among them is this: "The pa- television programs and books to ~,r: Thpma~ ~. D~oley In ~ec~ tient generally is too impatient on medicine. We, talk about ogmbon of hIS medical serVIces to . needy, peoples. to give nature a chance, even . health all the time." , ~ Prayerful ' The, Presiden,t ~avethe medal the Chance to unfold her story." And yet, Dr. Ratner says, "We to the doctor smother, . MI:s. Some Paradoxes America is, according to Dr. make health an end in itself. Thoma~ E. Do?ley of St: LOU.IS, Ratner, one of the best places in This is a sign of our materialisln. at ~ ceremOI~y m the presIde~tIal ihe world to have a serious ill- We have forgotten that health 'is offIce., .. . ness, and one of the worst cou~ really a means that enables a . The President said that Dr. tries for the simple ailments. person to do his work and' do.it .Dooley, W~o died Jan. 18, 1961, For the simple ailments, we well ... We . are the wealthiest of cancer "'went to the farthest use our life-saving drugs and country in' the world-yet one of reaches" of earth "to serve the techniques where nature itself the unhealthiest countries in the people," ;md .. all of us are imcan do better without interfer- world. We are :flabby, 'over- pressed by (his) extraordinary. ence. weight, and have a lot of dental ' example.It We have often wondered . caries, fluoridation notwithabout this. .Should life-saving standing. . Our gastrointestinal drugs be given our children for system operates like a SPlltteran ailment that for centuries has inggas engine. We can't sleep, BuildingC~ntra~tor been cleared up by simple drugs, we ,can't get goirig when we are or by nature itself? And will awake. Masonry : , the administration of those dras"Neither our hearts nor our tic means build up an immunity heads-!ast as long as they should. for some future time when suCh Coronary disease at the peak of drugs may really be needed?· life has hit epidemic proportions. For such things, we are ad- Suicide is one· of the l~ading vised to "consult your family causes of death. We suffer from a plethora of the diseases of Spelling Co-Champion civilization." 7 JEANmE STREET Lauds Nun-Teacher Dr. Ratner also says, "We have FAIRHAVEN ,.wY 4-732~ become an increasingly paying . , WASHINGTON (NC)-A, 14- animal. We act as if health were' ,SSSSSSSSS\S%SSSSSSSSS); year-old Catholic school student . from Dlinois was declared co- solely a commodity of the 'mar:' champion of the National Spell- ket-place'- Mea~while, we have ing Bee conducted. here. become a decreasingly a praying . aniinal as if spirifuai response Michael Day of St. Norbert's were \inreiated to, total ·health." School in Hardin, Ill., shared top honors with Nettie Cra\Vford Speaking of the "family docof the Berrendo School near Rostor" mentioned .before, or the well; N. M. Spelling Bee offi": general praCtitioner, ,Dr. :Ratner . daIs decided to award to each, Saystba,t it Is necessary "to give a prize of $1,000, a trophy.and a due recognition to the family . , . weekend trip' to New York City physician as the key' man·in the .. ' ,Southeastern Massachusetts' after the two finalists had faced praCtice of medicine and.to stoi> Largest 'Independent Chain each other iIi a gruelling duel· t,lIinking of him as Ii lackey who for over an hour.'· . . does. the leg work for others, or , Immediately after the Contest, ,. th~ whipping boy for: the' iDfla- .. ''We Give_GoldBond. Stamps' Michael said, "I wiSh Siste:r jer- tion: of the'specialist;s ego. ' . . emiah could see me now." He '''wliat the family'physician attributed to the DOmiriic'an nun, : lacks iD" depth ... he ,mOre than teacher at St. Norbert's school; . ma~es up for in breadth.to the lion's .share of the credit for Amen, Dr; Ratn~... Imagine ••• hone.y-swMt his proficienc~ iIj. spelling.
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9
Chubbiness Out of Style Today,-
THe ANCHORThurs., June 14, 1962
Even in Young Children
Nurses' Alumnae Set Prom, Picnic.
By Audrey Palm Riker Fat cniJdren are misera.ble children. Even roly..poly _bies are going out of style. In years past, the chubbier the infant, the more admiring glances and affectionate pinches he got. Today we know that the size of your child tells ;you nothing about the nutri- ~d play. Likely when he gets tiona! health of his body or out no one will play with himthe emotional health of his he's too clumsy or slow. mind. Overweight springs If you really want to help, you trom a variety of causes. If one . . both parents are fat, offspring M'e more likely .. be fat. Metabolism, or the ote at which ,. CIte body uses energy, plays a part. Emotions figure in, too;, children may evereat to gain parental atten-. tion or to es-: eape tensions'. • n d bickering at home. Too often adults shrug elf chilhood obesity as "baby fat." Or parents feel, "You can't fight heredity-we're all overweight." But rarely is a case a.opeless. You can do much to heIp an obese child. Good eating habits start in in_ Janey. Mothers who let their babies decide when to take the Ilipple and when to let go foster early independence and autonemy. But when you jam a bottle Into your infant's mouth and keep it there until it is empty, you let the bottle decide how bungry your baby is. Children who get milk, a paclAer, or a cookie every time the,Ilurt themselves or fuss for at.;. tention soon learn that food is • substitute for love and Companionship. Fee)iDp &boat Food We all cherish. deeply rooted lIttitudes about food. And we transfer theBe feelings to our ehildren. Ever reward yourself with a goo(,y sundae? Ever raid eae refrigerator out of boredom . . unhappiness? Sometimes parents who are fat themselves unknowingly jolter children's spare tire by oftering them more and morefoecl - often cake, ice cream and -.andy - to make up for the child's misery about being fat in 4IIe first ll1ace. Eating less food isn't alwayS the cure for obesity. For exam»Ie, Wlderexerclsing causes more overweigbt than overeating. Substantially stepped-up activItyalmost always results in weight loss even when there is DO drastic change in diet. Do you drive your child to school when lie could walk? Does he vegetate in front of the TV set when lie could be outdoors? Usually the fat child has a family history of inactivity. It iml't enough to nag him to go out
can mobilize the whole family to learn the games and sports that make a youngster acceptable to his group. And try family activities like bowling, bike riding or even old fashioned walking. Re-Edueation Real, lasting weight reduction involves re-education af eating habits and improvement in the total adjustment of the child. Ultimately, your youngster must assume responsibility for controlling his own eating, but you can help him tremendously by not shaming him, by providing a congenial climate at home, and by modifying the entire family diet toward more fruits and vegetables and fewer rich desserts and empty-calorie soft drinks. A period of overweight may be a normal stage in childhood or early adolescence. But where baby fat hangs on for years, consult your family doctor or look ,for a specialist who understands the causes of obesity as well as the psychology and special problems of the overweight child.
Pope Lauds Dedicating. Parish to New So i nt
CORREIA & SONS
NEW YORK (NC) - Pope .Tohn has praised Francis Cardinal Spellman for establishing • new parish dedicated to st. Martin de Porres. A letter to Cardinal SpeIlman, Archbishop of New York, from Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Secretary of State, cited the Cardinal's "untiring pastoral .licitude" and expressed the Pope's warm commendation. Cardinal Spellman established St. Martin de Porres parish in Poughkeepsie, N. Y., the same day St. Martin was canonized in eeremonies in Rome.
Break Ground for Nuns College in California DUBUQUE (NC) - Groundbreaking cecemonies were held Saturday for thP. two million lIoIlar Guadalupe College in Los Gatos, Calif., to be conducted by Sisters af <:harity of the BIe8lIed VIrgin Mary. The college will be the community's 3econd novitiate. It will accommodate 150 postulants and aovices aDd a teach!"', ataff of 110 Sisters.
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Urges MoratOf'ium On Negative Thinking CINCINNATI (NC)-President Walter C. Langsam of the University of Cincinnati called for a moratorium on negative thinking about the U. S. in general arid education in particular. . Addressing the 27th commencement d Our Lady of Cincinnati College when degrees were awarded to 127 seniorJl, Langsam declared: "1 think the timE' has come for Wi to stop elaborating the list of our national faults from juvenile delinquency through national selfishness to outdated educational methods. The time has come to cease handing our detractors more and more ammunition for their anti-American propaganda blasts." In the sphere of education, he said, '''the United States ranks high by any eomparison."
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Summer plans for St. Anne's Hospital Nurses' Alumnae Association, Fall River, include a senior prom Saturday, Aug. 25, co-sponsored by the alumnae and junior class members of the school of nursing; and a picnic for family and friends from 11:30 to 5 Sunday, July 15 at the Boys' Club Camp Committees are handfing registration, publicity, refreshments, games and equipment and prizes, under direction of Mrs. Helen Viveiros, program chairman. New Officers New association officers include Mrs. Alice Morrone, vicepresident; Miss Valerie Gesner, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Florence Berube and Mrs. Muriel Fingliss, board of directors. Other officers remain unchanged. .
MOTHER-DAUGHTER T~A: Junior Daughters of Isabella in New Bedford entertain mothers at annual tea. Making preparations, from left, Joyce Strong, president; Maur~n Roza; Patricia Roza, vice-president.
Catholic Friends' Interest in Boy Leads to Conversion of Fami! ies WASmNGTON (NC) - The interest of Catholic friends ·in a 12-year-old boy here has .led to the conversion of three families, a total of 17 persons. The story was related at the Baptism of the 17 in St. Anthony's church by Father John P. Lerhinan, C.SS.R., rector of the Redemptorist Fathers' Holy Redeemer College where the families were instructed. The college is near the parish church.
Father Lerhinan said Catholic friends took the 12-year-old to church on Sundays with them. "He learned how to use the missal and became determined to become a Catholic," the Redem.ptorist said. The boY's devotion impressed his own family and two neighboring families. The youngster knew a man who worked at Holy Redeemer College and through him, the families were introduced to Father Lerhinan and began instructions.
D of I Dance New Bedford Junior Daughters of Isabella will sponsor a dance from 7:30 to 11 tomorrow night at Kennedy Center. Students from eighth grade up are invited to attend.
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10
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-'rhurs., June 14, 1962
Says La ity Have Love, Happiness Made Possible at Nazareths Urges Graduates lIenge Threat Duty to Make By Appeal More Than Repay Contributors Cha Of Conformity By Patricia McGowan World Sacred BURLINGTON (NC)
MONTREAL (NC) Paul Emile Cardinal Leger said here that it is "the responsibility of the laity to take the world and make it sacred." The Archbishop said at an anniversary luncheon of the Christian Family Movement that the world can present a danger to sacred values, but Christians should face this challenge boldly. "Today it is not easy to be a bishop," the Cardinal stated, "because most of the time we have to keep quiet. We speak about essentials. But what is going on in the factory, the commuter train, the houses, we clergy don't know.
Marshmallow and peanut butter aren't liturgical parts of a bishop's attire, but when Bishop Connolly visits Nazareth Hall in Fall River, he's apt to come away with The U.S. is "in danger of such addit.ions to his vestments. "The children love the Bishop and run for hugs when he '. becoming a nation of homogenized conformists," Bisdrops in," explained Sist~r Maureen, R.S.M., principal. The Bishop doesn't mind the h.op Vincent J. Hines of Norsticky fingers a bit. The 45 crib was set up, even though- it wich, Conn., said ·in the bac- . children at Fall River's Nazis long gone. calaureate sermon at st. Mi",' areth, as well as those enThe children work very hard chael's College here. "This is not good for the: rolled at the second Nazareth with whatever ability they pos-
in Hyannis, are very close to his heart. Home-schools designed to fill the needs of retarded children, the spacious buildings are fUll of happiness each school day. The children enjoy coming to school and most are greatly irnproved by their contacts with other youngsters and with the Sisters of Mercy staffing the Nazareths, said Sister Maureen.
'Hi, Bish' The Sisters do their best to "But you know politics and prepare for the Bishop's freeconomics. You are dealing with quent calls, related Sister that every day. But you have to Maureen. "On one occasion we deal with it as Christians. This had trained the children very is the responsibility of the laity carefully on rising from their - to take the world and make seats and saying 'Good morning, it sacred. You have to baptize Bishop,' Everyone did beautithe world. We baptized you. But fully except for one little boy. you have to baptize the factory who stayed in his seat, waved, and the street." and shouted, 'Hi, Bish. Want The Cardinal stated that the to shake my hand?'" mission of the clergy is to go The children abs.orb instru<::forth and teach, and the mission tion very seriously, howeve:r. . of the laity is to "gO forth and Once Sister talked to them about sanctify the world." the importance of obedience, ending "So you see, children, We must be obedient." "You're damn right, Sister~" agreed one small listener. Most of the day at the NazaFAULKNER (NC) - Invita- reths is spent on academic study. tions to a Catholic-conducted re- "Retarded children, like any treat here in Maryland dr.ew others, must learn to study and such heavy response from Pro- must develop good work habits," testant clergymen that the res- emphasizes Sister Maureen. ervation list was closed more "These children have educa,than two months before the re- tional and emotional needs that 'lled if. they're not ..treat . mus t b e f I . . "sters, mc . I ud b ecome d'st rbed as well"· F I'fty- f our mml 1 U · l'lans, qUlC . kl y ac- ret ar ded . " ing 23 E plscopa cepted invitations to attend the Pray for Everyone d 1 tr t f Ch' t ~con annua re t a or rIS The school day begins at 9:2() Ian Clergymen, to be held at and children receive individual LIP t t t' oyo a - on - 0 omac re rea instruction until 10, when the)' house from Aug. 13 to 15. gather for morning prayers. The retreat is being sponsored "We pray for the Diocese and by the National Catholic Lay- everyone in it," said Siste!:" men's Retreat Conference, with Maureen. She noted that the the approval of Archbishop Pat_ children have special intentionS! ril:k A. O'Boyle of Washington. every day. "One day we prayed It will be conducted by Father for the SOUlf in purgatC)ry farQustave Weigel, S.J., professor thest from heaven and the next of, theology at Woodstock (Md.) day for those nearest. The third! ~ollege. day, a little girl suggested that Go Forth, Sanctify
Protestants Accept
Retreat Invitations
SISTER MAUREE.N we pray for those in between!" The children are very religious, said the principal, and frequent visits to nearby Holy Name Church are on the schedule. There youngsters have highly original conversations with God, she said, one little girl interceding for her uncle's bunions, for instance. Parties are held at every opportunity, and contests "where everyone wins" are featured. Christmas ~s a specially cherished time and Sister said that one little girl is still' faithfully praying each day at the spot in, the hall where the ChristmaS
sess, said Sister Maureen, often country and it is not good for', putting normal children to the Church," said the Bishop,' • "because the conformity to. shame with their efforts. They are exceptionally tender which many college graduates and loving. One child, said Sis- succumb is the conformity of secularism. te r , is afraid of a linoleum pat"The triumphs of technology tern on one of the floors. On one occasion she was "stranded" in the past two decades have: on it and dared not move.. A completely changed the pattern little boy noticed her plight. of our lives," he continued. and hurried to her. "Don't be. "They have had an: effect on the afraid," he reassured her. "I'm' way we think, act "and even be- ' lieve. here. I'll help you." Once' a dead robin was dis"For too many Americans the. covered in the school ,garden predominant values of life have and a funeral ceremony was. a~- become materialistic;' The sense ranged. "Let that dirt down of the spiritual is being easy," cautioned a mourner. . smothered. Ethical standards are No One Barred being forgotten ~r abandoned in Although children may have business and professional life," to wait to attend Nazareth due Bishop Hines urged the grad.uto full.;,up facilities, no one is ates to emulate the spirit of rebarred for lack of. funds, em- sponsibility of the early Chrisphasized Sister Maureen. There tians. . is' a nominal tuition charge, but ·"The pagan atmosphere lil this is waived in case of need. which the early Christians lived "We're not looking for satis- was even more powerful than faction in our work," she the environment in which we summed up, "but there's a gleam live today," he stated. "But in the children's eyes when those Christians refused to be they've accomplished something influenced or engulfed by it. that more than repays us for all They didn't ignore it or pretend our efforts." it didn't exist. They didn't run And, as Bishop Connolly has away from it. They didn't even noted, the gleam in childish eyes segregate themselves from it. at Nazareth is due in great part Instead they planned 8 program to the .gen~rosity of contributors of infiltration. to .Catholic. Charities, the Bish"Like the leaven in the Gosop's Ball and other special pel, they acted by good example events that help SUpport the until their influence was feltin Nazareths. every stratum of society. They No one who visits these insti- participated in every phase of tutions in particular can feel human activity . . . and everyanyth.ing but happy over his where they. radiated Christian contribution to this year's Ap-. morality. peaL "Eventually, by the power of their example and their actions," the Bishop conclUded, "they transformed the Roman ANTIGONISH (NC) - Four Empire." priests from the Antigonish diocese will depart for service in Central America next WednesNEW YORK (NC) The day here in Nova Scotia. Frs. Pius M. Hawley and D. Finlay America Press hal" published a MacLellan will.' work .in Costa 96~page booklet outlining prosRica and Fathers Alexander" pects for the Second, Vaticaa MacKinnQn and Basil Campbell CQuncil, which opens .Oct. 11 iil RQ1Xle. will work in Honduras.
Serve Latin Areas
Booklet On Council
Michigan Schools Save Tax Payers $150 Million
THE ANCHORThurs., June 14, 1962
Departure Rites For La Salette Missionaries
DETROIT (NC) - Catholic schools in Michigan enroll 292,254 elementary and high school students and 17,885 college and university students. Children in Catholic schools made up more than 15 per cent of the state's school enrollment in 1961. In the five Michigan dioceses, this represented a total savings to Michigan taxpayers of more than $150 million. This figurE' broke down diocese by diocese to: Detroit, $103,054,497.80; Grand' Rapids, $18,491,352.65; Lansing, 18,456,182.33; Marquette, $5,705,391.53; and Saginaw, $12,319,349.87. These were among the facts contained in the third of a series ,of four educational leaflets distributed in Archdiocesan chul'ches. SACRED HEART. NORTIl ATTLEBORO Mrs. Clarence ~isher and Mrs. Roland Letourneau are co-chairmen of the committee of mothers of 8th grade pupils planning an awards party and reception to be held in the parish hall follow-. inggraduation exercises in the church. Rev. Joseph Larue will preside at the graduation exer,ei~es and Rev. Reginald Barrette, St. Roch, Fall River, will preach the sermon. ST. MARY'S, SOUTH DARTMOUTH The Women's Guild will spon_ !!Or a Fashion Fair Wednesday, july 18. A planning meeting will be. held at 8 tonight in the parish hall. A cake sale is set, for Saturday, .June 30 in the Mello Shoppe, Padanaram Village, with Mrs. John Smith in charge. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER Annual patronal feast of the parish is set for Saturday· and Sunday, JunE' 16 and 17. Saturday's program will include blessing of St. Anthony bread and other foods a" 6 in the evening, followed at 7 by sermon, procession and benediction, then ·a oeoncert and auction. Stmday's program will include 8' solemn high Mass at 10:30 in the morning followed by an:' other concert and auction. A ba,zaar held in conjunction with the teast ism progress through
tomorrow.
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Seven La Salette Missioners are en route for the Philippines, .according to announcement from La Salette
FOUR GRADUATE FAR FROM HOME: Preparing for Xavier University's 124th commencement were four foreign students who traveled a total of 33,000 miles from their homes to attend the Jesuit university in Cincinnati. Wearing the cap and gown is Akram N. Daniel, whose home is Nazareth, Israel. Others from left to right are: Bartholomew T. Orangi of Kenya, East Africa; Jae K. Kim of Korea; and Edward ~.Kesselly of Liberia, West Africa. NC Photo. .
The Parish Parade ST. PATRICK. WAREHAM Catholic members of Wareham High SchooI graduating class attended a breakfast given by Rev. John A. Chippendale, pastor, following reception of corporate communion. Guests included highschool and junior high school principals, Walter Longmore and William Paling. SS. PETER & PAUL. FALL RIVERThe Women's Guild will sponsor a special foodbasket whist at 8 Monday night, June 18 in the church hall. Mrs. Roger R. Dube, guild president, will be chairman, aided by officers.' Mrs. Dube is also in charge of a mystery ride planned for Wednesday, July 25. Mrs. John Barry and Mrs. Louise Waskiel are making arrangements for a parishola Sunda~T. Sept. 16 and regular meetings of the guild will resume Tuesday, Sept. 4. VISITATION GUILD, EASTHAM Members will hold work meetings Tuesday nights through June, gathering at the home of Mrs. John F. Connors, Camp Ground Road, North Eastham. ST. JOAN OF ARC ORLEANS A food sale will be held on the Church grounds after eaclJ. Mass ~ Sunday morning. Pai-ishionerswill be contacted for donations during the weE!k.'
ST. ROCH, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women plans a pilgrimage to La Salette Shrine at 1:30 Sunday afternoon, June 17. Departure will be from the' front of the parish school. A clamboil is planned for August, and It rummage sale and fashion show are set for SeptE~mber. Regular meetings will resume Wednesday, Sept. 5. OUR LADY OF ANGELS. FALL RIVER Sunday night, June 24, at 6:30 is the time for the installation banquet of the Council of Catholic Women. To take place in tne Chariot Room of Venus de Milo restaurant, the event is utIder chairmanship of Mrs. Mary Silvia. Reservations will be open until Sunday, June 17 and Mrs. Silvia announces that State Senator Mary L. Fonseca will install new officers. The unit is planning participation in the parish feast celebration Friday through Sunday, Aug. 17 to 19. Dolls are being dressed. S.... ANTHONY, MATTAPOISETT Rosary Altar Society officers are Mrs. Evangelo Vangel, president; Mrs. Eugene Sackman, vice-president; Mrs. George H~~an, secr~tary;' :Mrs. ~evin Cadieux, treasurer.
ST. ELIZABETH'S GUILD, EDGARTOWN New officers are Mrs. Arthur Metell, president; Mrs. Robert Litchfield, vice-president; Mrs. George D. Jackson Jr., secretary; Mrs. Raymond Prada, Jr., treasurer. The unit will sponsor a Summer sale and tea Thursday, Aug. 9 in the parish hall. Mrs. Metell is chairman. Next r,egular meeting will be Monday, Sept. 24. ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER New officers for the ParentTeacher and Alumni Association are George Wroble, president; Carl Erdmann, vice-president; Mrs. Joseph Cichon, secretary; Mrs. Walter Zdabosz, treasurer. They will be installed Saturday, Sept. 8. Other plans for the unit include a, communion breakfast for eighth grade graduates, Sunday, June 1'; and a field day Sunday, Aug. 9. S!\.CRED HEART, FALL RIVER Executive board members of the Women's Guild will meet at 8 Monday night, June 18 in the school hall. ST. JAMES, NEW BEDFORD Msgr. Noon Circle members w.iU be, entertained by pupils of: Miss Eyelyn Geary at their final Dleeting for the season, Wednesday, .June 20.
mission headquarters, South_ bridge, Mass. Participating in departure ceremonies held at Notre Dame C h u r c h , Southbridge, was Brother Maximo Ramirez, first La Salette Filipino lay brother, who until now has been assigned to La Salette Shrine, Attleboro. Also assigned to the Philippines were Rev. Rene Gelinas, philosophy professor at La Salette Seminary, Attleboro; Rev. Alpho'1se Larochelle; Rev. Laurier Morin; Rev. Frederick Julien; Brother Rt:tilio Mallillin; and Brother Francisco Mailwat. Brother Mallillin and Brother Maliwat will be- ordained in Santiago, Isabela, Philippines, Wednesday, Aug. 15. ST. MICHAEL. FALL RIVER Holy Ghost celebration will open tomorrow with a 14 booth bazaar and block dancing with the orchestra featuring Portuguese and American music. The bazaar, dancing, and an auction will be featured Saturday night. The feast will be climaxed Sunday with a solemn high Mass at 11 in the morning, followed at I :30 by a street procession of all parish societies. Following the procession the bazaar, auction and dancing will resume. Booths will include nov-elties, candies, tOYs, and handmade articles. Malasadas will be made and served by Rosary Sodality members Friday and Saturday nights and members of the parish Council of Catholic Women will distribute refreshments to children, following Portuguese tradition. ,'4etivities will take place on the school grounds and proceeds will benefit the school fund. ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER Bishop Gerrard will speak at the fifth annual Fathers Day Communion breakfast to be sponsored following 9 o'clock Mass this Sunda:' morning in the Catholic Community Center by the Men's Club. Daniel HayeS is chairman.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 14, 1962 , ;. ". -:: . ... . . ,. '
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Devotion to Sacred Heart Admirable· Instrument
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D. D. Idolatry is the worship of the visible rather than the Invisible. Before Christ if was a brazen image; today it is an atom, or
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno
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Religion true and undefiled· is a union of the heart and the mind. It is intenect and emotion functioning together in balance, a combination of objective fact and genuine affection. An obvious statement, say you? Yes, ?ut so far less than obvi~U8 is a figure of the utmost sentiill the realm of comparative mentality, more of a weak repreligion as to suggest that resentation of femininity than of where it is discovered there masculine strength. ~ also another mark of the True Most of this, of course, is Church. And if this is true of nothing more than a relic of 19th objective reliCentury mawkishness, but it is gion how much aggravating how it does cling more so is it of to the devotion even now, 100 sUbjective re1iyears after. This is a perversion glon. of the genuine religion of the . .lAMES A. DONNELLY . It is a rare heart, a substitution of the feething tv find blest sort of emotion for the real the two things thing. balance in Summons Best Efforts any 't&houl. We If we were Pope for a day we are el .er ce!ewould immediately order the de.. bra! relt~oDltalsts struction of al' extant pictures ... s.en .Imen of the Sacred Heart, and the ' James A. Donnelly, a JunrellglO111sts; and b t't ti f h t? Th ' the one despises the other. He's su s I u on 0 .•. w a . e~ s ior at Bishop Stang High say or she's all the rub. But for the consolation · School and a parishioner of a 11 b ram, w~, of the reader, the likelihood of heart,. meanmg thereby n~ a our election to the Chair of SSe Peter and Paul Church, complIment but a condemnation.. . It is the glory of the Catholic Peter JS, as they politely say, Fall River, was elected President of the Queen of Peace Sodality Church that she holds the mind remote. and the heart in balance. She is But that the Sa?red Heart rep- Union at a meeting held at lilt. tlie guardian of the deposit of r~sents. ~e emotIonal appeal of st. Mary Academy. Also elected were: Mary Devhith and the teacher of the diCatholiCl.ty,. the way from the itt, Academy Of the Sacred Yine revelation; but she is equal- ~eart of G9d to the heart ~ 17 th B"d of Christ and the mao, need not. mean that It Hearts, Fall River, vice-presie n e .• sbould wallow l,I1 the cheapest dent; Mary JanE' Yelle, st. Vessel of the SpIrIt. sOrt of sentimentalism whether Mary's High School, Taunton, Perfect Combination in its prayers or in its ~ recording secretary; Mary Ann Concretely she is the Church It ought to summon fo;th our Ferreira, Mt. St. Mary's AcadaI. the Risen Christ and the b~t and our strongest efforts, emy, Fall River, corresponding . ChJl,rch of the Saere~ ~eart. She as the proper reflection of the secretary. presents not only His claima to. quality and strength of our love Delegates chosen to the Sodalctivio,ity but His actual hunger Certainly the Sacred Heart d~ ity Union Board were: Madeline for the love ~ man. .A;nd the serves better at the hands of His Valcourt, Jesus Mary Academy, Uleal of Catholicity. which. she clients than He has so far Fall River; Pauline Gagnon, proposes to ~. children IS a received. Dominican Academy, Fall River; perfect combmation of knowlAttracted Puritans and Arlene Paiva, Holy Family edge and love, of head and heart. High, New Bedford. .The symbol of the Sacred Heart Bow admirable an instrument Following the election, it was CCMIles to us from the Counter- for religious unity this devotion annoWlced that 41 sodalists and 8eformation from that period in could be, finely understood and moderators would leave by bus Church when she was beautifully pr~nted. Actually, for the Summer School of Cathstriving to restore a balance in as the late MOnsIgnor Knox reolic AcUon scheduled for Aug. tile souls of men gravely dia- minded his readers, the Puritans 13 to 18 at Fordham University. tu.rbed by the controversies. themselves were oddly attracted Plans were also drawn for a wars and bitterness of the 18th to the Sacred Heart, and one of Summer schedule of meetines CenhIry them, Oliver Cromwell's chapfor all sodalists. Religi~n had come to mean an lain, Thomll1ll Goodwin by name, hard and unbending thin&s.. wrote a thesin entitled, "The 40gmaUc formulas at the point Heart of. Christ in Heavea Honor Historian 01. the sword, confessions of flUth towards smners on earth, or, a ST. PAUL (NC)-Msgr. Philip lII'awn up by the embattled, Treatise demonstrating the erawhether at Augsburg or Trent, clous Disposition and tender Hughes, Church bJstorian and til brittle with intellect. aU ad- Affection of Christ in his author, will receiv~ an honorary clressed exclusively to the head. humane Nature now in Glory, degree at commencement exercises at St. Thomas College here st. Margal'et Mary unto all His Members all Sorts Friday, June 8. : That religion could also mean of, ~tie:;, either of Sin or of samething to the heart, or that MISery. it might still have something to Goodwin got sentimental in do with the love of God, was a his book, but likely enough he proposition not widely favored was literally starved for the love ~ those who delved in books of God. ENJOY for their spiritual sustenance. There are still Puritans I Perhaps it was to humble the around, still men and women FARM theologians that Our Lord con- hungry for the love of the Moo the publication and spread Sacred Heart. If they ask us for FRESH of the devotion to His Sacred bread shall we reach them a Heart to a little French Visitan- stone? MILK dine nun, a girl who had been a hoyden, St. Margaret Mary In Your Own AIacoque. "Throw Away Let us be candid about it: it is very much of a sentimental Catechist Diplomas Containerl LOS ANGELES (NC)~Auz dewtion. It appeals unashamed.iT to the heart. Granted that it iliary Bishop Timothy Manni.ng rests upon an admirably solid of Los Angeles presented cateQuality v Chekd theological fOWldation, which chists' diplomas to 621 laymen the embarrassed theologians here. The 621 join a corps of 5,000 TAUNTON were prompt to supply, it rarely refers to this background of. lay catechists in this archdioVA 4.6984 cese who are teaching 156,000 .unent respectability. Catholic children attending pubFeeblest Sori ef Emotien .AnLEBORO Its prayers are effective lic schools----an increase of· 20.CA 2.0292 n 000 pupils in one year. prayers, fnll of Obs and Ahs, and The diplomas certify to comi. language is borrowed from tile grammar of human love. It pletion of 80 hours of classroom instruction in subject matter and ·bas not even bothered ovennuch about the good taste in its art, methods plus many hours of itII poetry 01' its painting. It has prayer and study. bothered the liturgists dreadfully. It has driven the art critics
Sodalists Elect James Donnelly President
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How e&S7 It Is to lorcet the Invislble Lord! When . _ was on the moantain top communiDc with God" &be people below made a cod In the form of a colden calf, which they could see and touch. And oace they had this idol. the Scriptures _y: ''They _t down to eat and drink, and rose to play... Added to this was their black Ingratitude. They referred to "the man who brought us out 01 ECyptJJ : Moses was eredited with their exodus, not God. Such contempt 01 gratitude and self-denial and such love of comfort and pleasure are the lirst fruits 01 lalse religion. Oh! for the vitality of Faith in our lives! Faith. the evidence of things that are not seen! How much gold is still offered to golden calves that can be seen . • . how little is given for the propagation of the Faith that cann~ be seen. You can see your name on a gymnasium, or a field house, or a science building, but you cannot see grace in a Korean, or the gift of counsel in an Indian, or the Divine Indwelling in a Bantu. As St. Paul says: "The things that are not seen are eternal." Rave you allY old cold, jewelry 01 any kind that has served vanity in the past, .but which you now wish to exchance lor the blessincs that come to those who give Faith to the peoples of Africa or Asia? Then send it.. us. We wiD resell It aDd use theproceetls to aid missionaries laborinc on live continenllL GOD LOVE YOU to P.S. for $1 "I'm in the sixth grade aDd will be twelve tomorrow. I've been saving to have a lot of fun this summer, but I want poor children to share it." • • • to Mrs. M.O. for $'75 ''Please p~ this towards the education of a native seminarian. I feel very fortunate in playing even a small part in preparing a boy for the priesthood." ••• to Mr. and Mra. G.K. for $96 "After contributing to our parish for its needs, lite have this surplus. Use it to best advantage in the Missions," .•. to L.M.M:. for $5 "In thanksgiving for a favor,' I send 70U this to feed the hungry." Yo. C8I'TY the Blessea Mother's imace III your hean. h i not show It by wearlnc bel' GOD LOVE YOU medal., fte tell Ielien 01 GOD LOVE YOU form a deeade of the rollU'J' .. they enclrele this medal oridnated to honGl' the Macloana 01 the World. With your request and a correspondinc offering you may order a GOD LOVE YOU medal in &IlJ' of ihe foUowiDe wily
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Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and mall It to the Most Rev Fulton .I. Sheen, National Director of the SocIety for the Propagation of the Falth, 388 Fifth Avenue, New York 1. H. Y.. or lOur Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDDm 368 North Mala street, Fall River, Mass.
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And with reason, too. It is disturbing, and it is quite unnecessary, that whenever the Sacred Beart is portrayed what emerges
WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE AND
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MONTREAL (NC) - A 15minute twister caused $80,000 clamage tv the Seminary of Saint Apostles in suburban Cote Ste. Catherine. 'fttree students and _ professor suffered slight injuries.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan .Rtver-Thurs., June 14, 1962
Dedicated Qualified Lay Teachers Help Catholic School Faculties Cope With Big' Enrollments . By Clement J. Dowfmg From 1948 to 1961 the enrollment in Catholic high schools nation-wide increased 83 per cent. During the same' period the number of priests and religious went up only 37 per cent. The dire need of teachers has been answered in part by the recruiting of ries on sports and athletic activilay teachers who have filled ties for St. Mary's girls. a vital gap. Here in the Fall Father of five children, inRiver Diocese this emergen- cluding three daughters who are
cy situation, which promises to become permanent,· has been met by a group of educated lay people with a sense of service and dedication. The majority of our high schools have lay teachers - the others are gradually looking to that field. Scheduled to enroll its first senior class in September, North Dartmouth's Bishop Stang High has four lay teachers. Head athletic coach Carlin F. Lynch teaches religion, world history, consumer economics, and gym classes. A member of Somerset's St. Thomas More parish, Mr. Lynch is a graduate of Holy Cross College and the father of two boys and two girls. Another Cross graduate and St. Thomas More parishioner, Mr.· John C. O'Brien· teaches English and history as well as being head coach of basketball at Stang. Both of these gentleme~ are also Coyle graduates. From St. Lawrence in New Bedford comes Miss Rosemary Moore, a graduate of Bridgewater Teachers' College, who teachers Stang scholars religion, reading, and world history and coaches girls' sports. From New Bedfo.rd Scheduled to tranllfer from Stang to Bishop Feehan in September B 0 s ton College's Harold "Chet" Hanewich teaches algebra, geometry and coaches baseball and football: Chet is a resident of New Bedford and the father of three boys. Married to an electrical engineer; Mrs. Norman Lavigne teaches science and mathematics at Sacred Hearts Academy in Fairhaven. A communicant of St. James parish and a graduate of Holy Family High, Mrs. Lavigne matriculated to New Bedford Institute of Technology where she majored in chemistry. Member of Phi Beta Kappa and mother of five children, Mrs. James E. McGovern teaches biology, general science and Latin at St. Mary's High in Taunton. Educated at St. Mary's, she owns an A.B. degree from· Pembroke and an M.A. from Columbia. Another mother of five children and a Physical Education major from Bridgewater ·State, Mrs. Norris Marston· ~bly ear-
members of the community of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, Mr. Arthur Murphy teaches Latin and world history at St. Mary's, having in his possession an A.B. from Holy Cross and a mpster's degree in Latin from Brown University. Daughter of Mrs. James H: Walsh and the late Dr. Walsh, Miss Nancy Walsh has been teaching physical education since 1951 at Dominican Academy in Fall River. Possessor of a B.S. degree from Sargent College, Miss Walsh is also a Girl STUDENT COUNCIL: New student council at Bishop Feehan High School, Attle.. Scout troop leader, a Red Cross boro, consists of, seated, vice-president Diane Tarallo, and, standing, left to right, water safety an<l first aid instructor; and a waterfront direc- treasurer Kevin Martin, clerk of court Fred Garland, president Steve Nolan and secre..... tor for a Cape Cod Summer tary John Drury.. camp, having graduated from the National Red Cross aquatic him in the concluding question' this school year at the Attle- and square dance, funds from school in South .Hanson, Mass. and answer periods. . boros' . new school as the stu- which will finance a September Space Display . Graduation ex ere i s e s are dentS anxiously express hope party for incoming freshmen. Paying a visit to a number of filling the spotlight in 10 of 12 that he will return again in the .And next Thursday Sr. Mary Diocesan high schools with his diocesan high schools. Bishop Fall; tomorrow outgoing fresh:" Urban will preside as principal Spacemobile, Mr. ·Guy Johnson, Stang will have its first g'radu- men travel to Boston's Museum and give out awards at Feehan';" . a representative of the. National ating class next June while Bis- of Science while' looking for- first Honors .Day. . Aeronautics Space Administra", hop Feehan will not be bustling' ward to next Tuesday's trip to Meanwhile the C.C.D. girls at M4seum·· of Fine Arts; and tion, thrilled· student assemblies with such activity until 1965. Fall River's JeSUS-Mary Acadewith interesting and descriptive Not having to plan and carryon Monday will bring Mr. Jean my travel to Lincoln Woods ia a graduation these ,two schools. Moore, chem~cal engineer, to Rhode Island for a· picnic, while displays of' space problems. are still active, otherwise. des·cribe "New Techniques in Using colorful models of Science" to 'the assembled teen- the J.M.A. girls in Notre Dame'u . Prom Queen parish choir trip to Rocky Point rockets, space vehicles and agers. fur a day of swimming' and satellites, Mr. Johnson demonProm queen for St. Anthony's Scholarsliip Wlnnet's rides. strated the laws of physics con- HighSchool in New Bedford · cerned in rocketry. He described was, Muriel Payette, with her .Heading the list of scholarshIp Finally for the sake of the the whole history of space, men- court including Lillian Toussaint winners at New Bedford's Holy record, the high schools of thO , tioning the first rocket designed and Lucille Bousquet. Family High are Susan Aguiar Fall River diocese educated · by the ancient Chinese. . Class Day exercises featured and ANCHOR ·reporter Jean 3,902 students during the past Invited to the Fall River Dio- the "singing out" of the seniors. Krieder.· Susan ~aptured. the year. ease by . Superintendent of Graduates file through rooms, Veterans MeJDorial of $750 anSchools Rev. Patrick O'Neill, the bidding farewell to underclass- nually for four years as Jejln WEA.R' NASA repr~sentative s~ated ,that men with appropriate songs. received a $100 award tQ College three-quarters of the· present. U. This· is followed by a senior Misericordia.plus the Msgr. McShoes That Fit S. high school population could program in the school auditori- Keon award of $125 for highest "THE FAMILY SHOE STORE'! um, highlighting "moments to senior aV,erag~. . have excellent opportunities for · careers in the fields of space l'eDlember"of high. school days. Maureen Hayes took the $500 'study and work. Abbott Foundation gift, Kathryn Student Officers Impressing ()ll the girls the At Stang the Sodalists among Maguire the $200 per annum fact that science and research the . coeds have elected as '62 Municipal Scholarship ·to N.B. 43 FOURTH· STREET are not fields confined to men, prefect· Dartmouth's Margaret Institute of Technology, Bernard· Fall River OS 8-58,11 Mr. Johnson portrayed many as- Smith. New Bedford's Doris Cabral the $100 Ligno Francais award, and Philip Beauregard Prefontaine is vice-prefect. The pects of space work that offer thrilling futures for the fair sex. . joi~t Stang sodality is .planning and Bernard Cabral the $75 Describing the· problems· and attendance at the· Fordham Uni- Standard ·Times scholarship~. Seven H. F.er's received $iOO difficulties of space travel, the versity Summer School of. Cath-' NASA scientist declared that a olic Action· as well .as summer each from the H.F. Alumni PI~ZA·PATIO manned trip to the moon is meetings at the .homes of various scholarship fund while· six members. Once during the SUmothers received from $75 to $100 within forseeable· range of this ROUTE 6, HunLESON .AYE. high school generation. Proving mer the Sodallsts will return to each from the Catholic Women's Near Fairhaven Drive-In Club of New Bedford.. that modern youth is space con- . Stang for a Holy Hour. Italian Dinners Our Specialty scious, Mr. Johnson found himHaving a party to raise money Some 25 miles away at Bishop Service On Patio self surprised by the depth and Feehan, golfing instructions are for another party, Feehan's St:uintelligence of questions asked being given students by phys. dent Council plans a barbeque ed. Director Mr. Philip Norton; a square dance demonstration by 30 Feehanites is the subject of a school assembly; and new athplanes were u!1able to spot letic director "Chet" Hanewich Rockefeller, awidescale search briefs the school on next year's by boat was organizeq by police. athl~tic program, as well as (mission) ])pat, -accompani,ed by directing spring practice for an officer and fo~ native police Feehan's first football team. from Aglits; This was on,Nov. 20. Also, Father .John Driscoll .". "On th~, follC}wing day," ·writes delivers his last conference of Father Pitka, "Brother Paul set· oUt again with another search party to eheck· the cOastline and visit the villages beginning froni Agats itself .•• E;rom Owus around the point where the misArthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. hap occurred, and then up the DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM North Island River to Amborep. SUPPLIES Still no tra~e of Michael ...Fin", 204 ASHLEY BOULEYARD ally continuation of the search was considered futile. Gov. NelNew Bedford son Rockefeller· had retUrned to WY 3~840~ the·U.S."
the
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.BARBERO'S
Priest Reveals Role of Missioners In Search for Governor's. Son: FORT WAYNE (NC)-Crosier missionaries, particularly one Brother, were closely involved in the search conducted last . November for. Michael ·Rookefeller, 23, whq disappeared in the Agats area of Netherlands New .Guinea. . Brother Paul of the Crosiers' mission in Agats for severai days manned a boat that .took pari in the sear'ch for the son of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller' of New York. Michael Rockefeller ,is presumed to have drowned in the Arafura Sea when his native boa~ capsized and he tried to swim to shore. On the' boat ~ith. Rockefeller were R. S. Wassing, a Dutch ethnologist, and two Asmat natives, Leo and Simon. Leo is a catechist at the Crosier Fathers'· mission in Agats. Wassing stayed with the overturned boat and was rescued. The two natives swam through choppy water to safety. A detailed account of the tragedy and of the Crosier missionaries' part in the search for Michael Rockefeller appears in the New Guinea Letter, No. 12, . published here. at the provincial office of the Crosier Fathers. Father Pitka states that when
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FIRST FOR WOMEN: Emmanu,el College of Boston, first Catholic women's college in New Englimd, is' attended by many from·Diocese. Left, in new campus bookshop, Mary ~. Sullivan, Winif~ed Welch,' Margaret Fletcher; Sheila O'Donnell, Ba:rbara Tavares, ~ll F~ll.River; Jan.ic~ Faria, Swansea; Pauline Beaulieu, S9mers~t. Right, Diocesan girls at . snack bar, .
<;:aroly.n Mc~~ll1, :raIl .Ri~er; Eileen Texeti'a,Eas~~n; Carol. Alessandri, MansfIeld; Sylvia Laurean.-no and Diane Perry Fall Rive.r.; Maur~n Kelley, Att~eboro; Mary Ann Mulligan, Nortll Attleboro. Not ,shoWn, another girl from the Diocese,~artha K. Sullivan:·Fan River. The· 43 'year old college is. located. in' t,he Fenway. section of BostOn.
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Proposes College: Emmanuel, Founded by Sisters of Notre· Dame, .··Emphci~i%es· Program Follow First NewE,ngland Catholic W omen's College NationUnderGod Adult Workday Founded in 1919 by the Sisters of Notre Dame Qf Namur, Emmanuel Colleie in Ea~~::1B:::~~~::C~ged~:
MONTREAL (NC) _ A . Boston enjoys the d~stinction of. bei.ng~he~ir~t Catholic Colle~e for. women. in ~ew Eng- class of college ~duates .here priest _ educator has 8ug- land. 1\ four year h}:)eral arts Institution, It.18 located.'on The Fenway close t.o Isabella in. Ohio to d~fend' firm'y th~ gested that the college year Stewart Gardn?r Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, the' Boston Pu~lic Library and constftutional principle that. the be patterned according to Ha~vard Me d 1 c.a 1 Center. chemistry, physics, English, his- Sod a 11 t y, the D r,a m ~ ti c' U. S. is a nation under God. the workday schedule of adults ThI~ cent.r:al location .affords tory, langUages (Greek, Latin, Society, various departmental' Bishop :Nicholas ·T. Elko of the living in the city. ' unhmit~ contact ~th the , French, G~rni.an, Italian, Polish, clubs and student publications- Pittsburgh Byzantine Rite dioFather Maurice Lafond, C.S.C., artistic, scientific, historic Po r tug u e' s eo, 'Russian and Focus (college newspaper), Epi- cese spoke at a baccalaureate
IJUperior of Holy Cross College, ~ and literary. heritage of Boston. Spanish), music; "psychOlogy' and proposes that the academic year' Expansion-both physical and sociology.' - , -' consist of 11 months. The. work- intellectual-characterizes EmStudent-Teacher Ratio" day for students would begin at . manuel. In September, St. Ann's . Pre':'- pro~e!!s1on'al, ':preparation .' d'-' . 1 'k 8:30 A,M. and end at 5 P.M., . Hall, a new dormitory equipped f or.. 1aw, me rcme, ,soclawor k . . d - and teaching' are available with-· . t Of . Ii d an d conSlS 0 a ve- ay wee with double rooms, lounges an . . h week en d s f ree. curriculum: WIt _ _ x:e~reational. facilities, .will sup- in t"e '.. . His proposal is contained in plement Julie .Hall iil. providing Besides the Sisters of Notre " D. ame de N amur, the f.acuIty mfile monthly publication of the . for 350 resident students. Federation of Classical Colleges. The ta~inpus ~hop;.coniprtsiirg . eludes: members of 'the Domini" a snack 'bar; book, store and'post can, and Jesl,tit Orders, sec\.. I Year Round Student o'ffice, will be completed this priests and· ~r pr~fes~?rs in' ... The Holy Cross priest suggests ~·suinmer. Ground will be broken student-teacijer. ratIo.. ; Qf 10 "to· that college students have a ')pr;,the Emm~rhiel"Colleg~Li';':" one., ' ..' ". ;" ..' ~'" ..,- .. ' , social. . . . next sprU).g;. Summer holiday of one month, .b'rary. ," ..'.,,'.,"' ...".'. .... Campus .. .acade.mlc " . : and . '1'P~e bUild(ii~~. ",ill "a4'gm ent'" beha,Y;lOr ISii ;. ~eguI~t~d by, ,.an July; a Christmas holiday of 10 days; an Easter holiday of three A 1 \J, :J!)n a e .. :ija,ll, . .Tulie,.:a~lJ,~,'" honor syste~! adrrul(1~~tered ~y days; and two days off for the Mariail..Hall~ct: tpe .!\.cimipiJ!~: .,;. th~ Student qoverIl1Il~nt ASSQGiFeast of All Staints. tration:\Buildini .now" s~r,vi~g.. : atIon, .',;'. . :-; " OJ her .c:olleglate':activltles Noting that the present aca- Emmanuel's 1100 undergradu-' . . inc~ude the;.C~ildreii of ~ary demic year consists of 37 weeks, ates. . with a vacation of nearly 15 Senior Enrichment weeks, Father Lafond says his Intellectually, Sr. Marie of the program woUld be more likely Trinity, academic dean, will f~ to develop a year-roundstude'nt inaugurate aSe'nior Enrichment whose study' interests would program for the 1962-'63 aca~ stop with his formal educ~tion." demic" year. D'e d i cat e d to The program would also gIve a broaderiihg the student's cultural more ~ositi~e directio~.to the. . horiWit' beyond the .scope of her student s leIsure actiVItIes, he· major "area, the' program enstates. deavors' to foster independent study and thought. , Accredited by the New EngPredicts Few Limits land .. ,Association of Catholic Colleges and Secondary Schools To future .Progress and the 'National Catholic EduCHICAGO (NC)-A scientist cational Association, Emmanuel told graduates of Loyola Uni- . is affiliated with the Catholic versity here that man's progress University of America at Washin the last decade indicates that . ington, .registered by the Unithere are a few limits on what versity of the State of New he can ultimately hope to ac- York, and holds membership in complish. the American Council on EduAlan'!'. Waterman, director cation, 'the Association- of Amer... icanColleges and the American of the National Science Founda tion in Washington, said Ass 0 c i a.t ion'· of University . ' "sometimes we are so preoc- Women. The college offers fields of cupied ~fth the difficult probSR. ANN: ,BARTROLMEW _ concent~ation i~ art, biology, l~ms of our age ... that we tend to forget it is also, an age in which man's' ingenuity, hi;s GROWIN~ courage, and Ibis. iJilagination have soared to new heights." ,. Waterman recalled some of man's achievements in the' last SOMERSET, MASS. decad~ihe voyages 'of ·atomic submarines; the progress, esPec$200,000 $2,000,000 in Y ially 1'n .Antartica, 'made durin v. the International 'Geophysical Treat Yourself To Convenient Banking e:- Year, and Russian and American in . experiments into outer space. He Somerset Shopping Area at the Bridge expressed the hope that the enMember federal Deposit Insurance Corp."' tire world will cooperate ''for tile advancement of knowledge All Deposits Insured Up To' $10,0'00 and the benefit of in~nkind."
. logue (yearbook), .Ethos' (liter, ary' magazine) alid' Causeries. ~ Mass to graduates of tpe College '(French magazine). of " SteuberlVill,e, conducted by Third Order :Re. gul..ar -. Francis_~ister, ~nn B a rtholme.w, S D 11 cans. He stated-that "true democ..~. ,... co ege. president, ·is the first .Emman.uel graduate. to h.ea'd ". mcy, true- freedorn,' -nsist in ' .She, ,has spearh'eaded • freedoin wUh: God '-..~and not its faculty~ agal'nst HI·~." the current building campa.ig.n.
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'OUIl LADY OF PURGATORY $50 ST. LAWRENCE Cape Cod Sportswear Co., Inc. $1\H1 $25 Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph St. Aubin Mr. & Mrs. Hykel Simon $25 $20 Mr. & Mrs. ;fame's Murphy David's Trucking Company Mrs. Dennis Maguire Fairh'aven Lu"mber Company , . $12 $15 Mrs. Haze: McCrohan Mr. & Mrs. George R. Morad Mrs. Mary Sullivan $12 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Gelinas Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Thomas Mrs. Billy White $10 $10 American _ Lebanese Veterans Charles Balboni;' Mr. & Mrs. W. Kenneth Burke, Mrs. Elsie Association of, New Bedford, Inc., ,Ladies Guild, St. Joseph's Doyle, Katherine F~y, Mr. & Sodality, Catholic Youth OrganMrs. William Jefferies " Clarence Majndle, Edward T. ' ization. Peter Daher, ,Thomas Daher, Pina, Mrs. Edmund Therrien, Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Wilton F. Mrs. Marguerite S. Walsh Crocker, Mr. & Mrs. Dominick Mr. & Mrs. James Healey ' Mr. & Mrs. Owen Cox, Mr. & Roda, Mrs. Julia Kalife. Mrs. Mary Ponte, Mrs. Joseph Mrs. Harold Holmes, Mr. & Mrs. Preston Leboeuf; Mr. & Mrs. N. Joseph, Thomas E. Moses, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Joseph, Nicholas Arthur Ro~
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Kenyon. George Saba, Mr. &, Mrs. Thomas David, Mr; & Mrs; Joseph Attallah, Mr. & Mrs. George David, Mrs. Faro.osena' Peters. Louis A. Sarkes" Josephine David, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rodriguez, Baroody Family, 'Mr. &' Mrs. George Peters, & family, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Dupre. ST. MARY, $25 Mrs. Joseph Penler $10 Mr. & Mrs. Francis Canahan, Mr. & Mrs. Robert ~inton ST. KILIAN $10 , .dene Gendron, M~. & Mrs. Joseph LaPlante, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Spindola ' , ST. .JAMES $10 Mr. & Mrs. William J. Boyle Mrs. Eugenie Cote
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ST. JOHN .:rUE BAPTI~T ~ $40 ' "Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Motta $31l Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Zipoli
$25 Dr. & Mrs. Norbert V. Perry Dr. & Mrs. Manuel F. Souza $20
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-THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs., June 14, 1962
J.. ,.
Annual Diocesan
SchoolPinlic Tueso- Wedo - Thurs. J'U'NE 19 - 20 - 21 Rides-Midway-Prizes
This Message is Sponsored B,rTIt.Following, Individuals and Business Concerns;n Greater Fall River: Duro Finishing Corp., Enterprise路 Bre\Ning Co. ihe IExterminator ,Co. Fall River E,lectric Light Co. Fall Cliver Trust Co.'
Globe Manufacturing Co. KormonWater Co. . MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Mason Furniture Showrooms Mooney & Co~ Inc. Newport Finishing Co.
Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. . Sherry, ,Corp. SobiioH Brothe~ Sterling Beverages, 'nco Textile Worken Union of America, AFI.~CIO
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Attleboro ST. JOSEPH'S $10 Joseph Salvas, Mr. & Mrs. John J. Gibbs ST. -JOHN'S $100 Dr. & Mrs. Vincent O'Donnell $50 Mr; & Mrs. George S. Gibb $25 Hon. & Mrs. Edward A. Lee $12 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Jost $10 Mr. & Mrs. Lester Chadwick, Mrs. Barbara Greene, Margaret Clark, Mr. & Mrs. John A. Cummings, Mr. & Mrs. Rocco Gianni_
telli Mrs. Ralph Hudson, Mr. & Mrs Donald McCauley, Joseph McGee, Mr. & Mrs. George C. McNabb, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Nolan, Louis Perry
North Attleboro ST. MARY'S $50 Henry Gendron Mr. & Mrs. Edward Czekanski $25 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Thorpe $10 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hill, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Gallant, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Nolan, Gertrude Anderson, Mr. & Mrs. Edgar McGowan Mr. & Mrs. Francis Perry, Mrs Edmund T. Welch, Mrs. D.Joseph Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. James Bishop Mr. & Mrs. Donald Anderson, Mrs. Mildred Jenckes, Mr. & Mrs. Pasquale Grimaldi
Buzza~ds
Bay
ST. MARGARET $25 ' Raymond C. Sullivan $20 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Biagiotti $10 Bourne Mill, J & E Realty Co.. Mr. & Mrs. John Enos
Central Villaqe ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST $10 MI'. & Mrs. Rene Ouellette
Dighton ST. PETER'S $10 st. Peter's Women's Guild, Holy ,Name Society, J. Gerald & Mrs. Fleming, Joseph & Mrs. Pavao
East Brewster IMMACULATE CONCEPTION '$25
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore B. KIU$10 Mrs. G. Wilson Smith
Fairhaven ST. JOSEPH $10 Mrs. Everett Tighon, Armand W. Boulanger
Falmouth ST. PATRICK'S
$50'
Hyannis ST. FRANCIS XAVIER $100 Rev. James P. Dalzell $10 Mrs. Mary Roderick, ll(rs. Jeanne Lamb
Mansfield ST. MARY'S $25 Mr. & Mrs. William Jackson $10 Mr. & Mrs. Americo Day, Mrs. Anna DePillo, Mr. & Mrs Angelo Linari & Robert, Mr. & Mrs. William Pedini, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rotella
Nantucket ST. MARY'S OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $10 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Caldwell
North Dighton ST. JOSEPH'S
$iO
Mr. & Mrs. Bumberto Costa, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Rodier Jr.
US Mr, & Mrs. Constantine LeIkowicz
SIS
$1.
Atty & Mrs Edward Dabrowsld $10 Mary Kwolik Mr. & Mrs. Zygie Stankiewin
Mr. & Mrs. John Martins, Mr. Mrs. Arthur Ramos, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Ricardo
&
SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY FRESH, TENDER, U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED
Sandwich CORPUS CHRISTI $25 Mr. & Mrs. John R. Greenhalgh Joseph Shastany $10 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Roarke, Freeman Hebert, Mr. & Mrs. AI_ feria PassarG, Grace I. Forni
Seekonk OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMEL $10 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kandarian Mr. & Mrs. Manuel DeMattos, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Veader
Somers~t ST. PATRICK'S $50
Dr. & Mrs. Roland Chabot $40 Carlton D. Boardman $10 Mrs. Leon Simms Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Donahue
South Dartmouth ST. MARY'S $25 Dr. A. E. Senesac St. Mar:v's Guild $10 Mary B. Sarmento Mr. & Mrs. Frank Moniz Mrs. Margaret H. Greene
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HOLY NAME$10 Anonymous, Helmuth R. Bonner, Walter Bruce, William Demsky, William Kinney, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Nerbonne, Albert Ryder IMMACULATE CONCEPTION $20 Sylvester Silvia Gilbert R. Coelho $10 Manuel G. da Silva, Charles Mello, Francisco Penha, Phillip R. Silva, Mrs. Sylvana M9rrell, Anthony Edwards Seraphim Soares, Alice Marques, Ruy V. Lopes; The Correia Family, Jose A. Coutinho Libania Fernandes, Jose B. Pacheco, Cesar Miranda Jr., George Martins, Antonio Dias and Family J030' B. Alves, Heitor Silva, In Memory of Daniel Burgess, Daniel Cordeiro
South Yarmouth
GEORGE M. MONTLE
ST. PIUS. TENTH
Plumbing - Heating
$25
Bass River Liquor Store Inc. $20 White Cottage Donut $10 Mr. & Mrs. George DiBona
Swansea OUR LADY OF FATIMA $10 Mr. & Mrs. Jea,n N. Rousseau, Joseph Labounty 8T. LOUIS DE FRANCE $10 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Mathieu, A Friend, Franco American Woman's Club lne.
Wareham ST. PATRICK'S $10 Mr. & Mrs. Walters, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Rezendes, Mr. & Mrs. Jerimiah Murphy
Wellfleet OUR LADY OF LOURDES $25 The First National Bank of Provincetown $10 Chatham Fumfture of Wellf1e~t
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BISHOP. DESIGNATE: Msgr. Francis Reh rector of St. Joseph's Seminary, Dunwoodie, Yonkers, N.Y., has been appointed Bishop of 'Charlestown, S.C. NC Photo.
Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, R. D.
Many ••• extra Plaid Stamps at A&P on scores of items that are clearly marked and on display. No coupons needed ... buy all you want.
)itJJtill (/)4IJ Su'PIlldUOn1J! It. SY HERLIN-PLUS FEDERAL TAX 7 95 W)wmss W" a~~true§ & $39.95 'CASH REGISTER TAPES
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Mattapoisett ST. ANTHONY $10 Mrs. Wilford Eccles
MT. CARMEL
$100 Mr. & Mrs. William Freitas
Orleans
A Friend $10 Elmer Ross, Ten Acre, Inc.
OUR LADY OF
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OUR,lLADY OF PERPETUAL HELP
New Bedford
ST. JOAN OF ARC $10 Nickerson Funeral Homes
A!isonet
ST.. BERNARD'S $10 St. Bernard's Women's Guild, Gp"rgiana Cambra, Mr. & Mrs. Howard Dawson
'THE ~NCHOR7'"D!ocese of Fall River-Thurs., June 14, 1962
North Easton ' IMMACULATE CONCEPTION $25 Mr. & Mrs. William Condon Mitrano Chevrolet J. Frank Conley loc. , $20 Copeland Funeral Home Abbott Drugs Inc. $10 Abraham 'Brooks Insurance, A Friend, William, Knapp, Margaret M. McEntee' Geldart Colonial Reproductions, No. Easton Circle No. 564 Daughters of Isabella, Mr. &: -Mrs. James Rooney, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Travers, Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Beaucaire Mr. & Mrs. John Bellino
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.' "'"~" ;'~/::"'R~;~it~:,~if~~~~fli¥tiHp~";-:::';.' . Continued frol)1'Page bh~':,.,,;hQhpr th~,Bles~e4'Siicranien~::. was·considered asaintev,en,dur':': ,,:, . ,Firs. 'American, ing his lifetime. He was 'porn i~ ". ~ather.:Hl1<?t,superiorgen~ral, lsi1 at la Mure d'Isere, Franc~, :~s .the, first ArheriC~n, to be' a:nd died at his birthplace Aug. 1, el~cted.to this high post .and.is 1868. . ',_ ' 10th' superior general of the conEU(lharistic' Classics·, . gregiition: . . : So devoted· was he .to the The' super;or of the American' Blessed Sacrament, that lie province, with headquarters ~t wrote extensively.on the 'subject. 184 East 76th Street, is, Very Rev. His writings have become known Willia!Yl LaVerdiere, S.S.S. His as classics of Eucharistic truth family resides at Waterville, Me. imd piety. In the Brief of BeatiOther houses in the American fication thf Pope· termed .province are located in Hyde Blessed Eymard ".The apostle of Park, N. Y., Barre, Mass., Clevethe public worship of the Holy land; Ohio, Chicago,' Ill., AlbuEucharist," and the precursor querque, N. M.; Waupaca, Wis., of the great Eucharistic· conManila, P.l., and Wareside and gresses throughout the world. . Leicester, England. There are Not long after the congregaalso a church and school con,tion of the Blessed Sacrament ducted by the Blessed Sacrament had been founded, Blessed EyFathers in· Uganda, East Africa. , mard persuaded one of his former penitents, Miss Margue~ite Guillot, to form a congregation SAClRE~ HEART for women to bf' known as $25 "Servants of the Blessed SacraThomas Whalen ment." There are now two J. ·Howard O'Keefe houses in the United States, one $10 at Waterville, Me., the other at Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Delano, Pueblo, Col. . Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Belanger, , . The ·aim of the Blessed Sacra. .- ment Fathers is to provide ador-. Mrs. Harriet Mansfield, CatherineCrowninshield, William & ers for a 24-hour daily vigil beAnnie Cotter fore the Blessed Sacrament exST. JOSEPH posed on the altars of churches, $100 chapels and shrines throughou.t Dr. & Mrs. Robert Mealy the world. The cor..gregation also $10 has as its purpose the EucharisMr. & Mrs. Charles McGrath, tic apostolate by which laymeI1 He·l~n Fenton, Anna Fenton, Mrs and ·women all over the world ' a:.:l banded together in Euchar- E. C. Quegan ST. 'ANTHONY' istic leagues and societies to $10 . Basil, Costa, Celestina Pina, Frank Vaz ST. JACQUES Continued from Page One $10 been set up in. Mexico City to Donald Beauvais, Naura S. handle and assign th~ various Beauvais, Adelard Carbonneau, volunteer groups to specific Armand Desautels & family, projects. , Irene Gaouette. Catholic students from HarNormand· Hamel, Mrs. Rita vard, Yale, Holy Cross,. Notre Labonte, Albert, La 1 ! b e r t e, Dame Fordham, Smith, Rad:- Honore Levesque, Joseph Masse. cliffe,' to name just a few; 'fill, Louis Morin, Omer. Nadeau, be taking part in projects simi- Frands Rezendes, Lucien Rioux. lar to the one that ·the . Yale, ST. MARY students el)gineered last ,Sum:$10 mer.. Harvey Wilson Jr. The big problem is financial, ST. PAUL'S Father McGowan said, since $10 there are more volunteers now Mr. & Mrs. Marcel Casavant, than money for their needs. It Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Champagne costs the average· student about $300 of his own money for transportation to his project in MexST. ANNE ico he said. but some of the $10 schools are' undertaking camMr. & Mrs. Roland A. Depin paigns to raise finances. ST JEAN BAPTISTE Other groups will have to rely $20 'on contributions from charitable Louise Lavoie organizations. While working ~ndre Carrier on the projects, the students will Armand Thiboutot be housed and fed by Mexican Arthur Gauthier families, he said. ST. LOUIS $10 Robert Boyle ST. MARY $10 . In Memory ·o! Thomas H. PITTSBURGH (NC)-A ProtRiley" Mr & Mrs William Collins estant theologian will address ·the 17th an'nual convention of ST. PATRICK the Catholic Theological Society Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Cyr, Mr. on "The Protestant Concept of & Mrs. Norman Gagnon, Mr. & the Church," Mrs. Henry Urban, Lortaine Dr. J·aroslav Pelikan of the Bernier . University of· Chicago theology SS. PETER & PAUL faculty will speak to Catholic $15 theologians of the U. S. and CanMr. & Mrs. Edmund Crowell ada at a general session of the $12 convention Wednesday, June 27. Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Moore & Other sessions during the J~seph meeting will deal with such $10 . subjects as whether laymen have Mrs. ·James Bonas, Mr. & Mrs. it role in the prophetic· mission .Rayn:lOnd , Greeley, Jeremiah of the Church, and psychiatry Hurley, Mr. & Mrs. Philbert and the religious life. ' Maher,.Mr. & Mrs. William Mil-.
Taunton
Volunteers
Fall River
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Theological Sodety To Hear Protestant
ler; Mr. & Mrs. -John Mcqillick As .-tAo. Clergy Supnort 1 1 " . Mr.. ~ Mrs.A.bdellah Mizher, Anti-Crime Drive ,Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Moniz, Mr. &
, Mrs. August Morris, Mr. & Mrs. DETROIT (NC)-A drive to John Quinn, Mr. & Mrs. John enlist this city's clergymen in a Wilding .. fight against, crime was an,""·· Mr. & Mrs~ Odilon Audet nounced here. by; petroit ,Police ," ST.. STANISLAUS Commissioner George Edwards. $25 He said he is planniQg an all- . ' F 1 H day conference soon with m~re " Boyk? unera ome 'than 2,000 Detroit clergymen of all faiths to get·their cooperation and .support in an anti-crime. program. , The police official· termed the meeting "a grass roots move-. . . ment on the parish and individ:.. 870 BROCK AVENUE , ual church level" that would be "greatly effective" because it New Bedford, Mass. would bring to bear the clergy's CALL WY 2-5112 powerful . influence on church members.
HENRY'S BICYCLE DISCOUNT '(ENTER
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F-an, River,· . ~C>~Y 'NAMB~ . $80 :' ",: '•. ' •
Dr. & Mrs. Paui
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. $50 Mr. & Mrs Michael H. Sul1~v8l1 ' . $25 . Mr. & Mrs. EdWard Nasser . $10 ,. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McNally~ Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Shea, Mr. & Mrs. Edward· D. O'Connell, Mr: & Mrs. Robert J. Nagle, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas ,Po Donnelly , . Mary Hurley NOTRE DAME $10 Elie Dumont" Daniel Hubert, Eugene Hubert, Ge!>rge Hubert, Rene Guilmette . ,Fernand Lavoie Sr" Marcel Roy, Omer Caron
NEWMAN HONORS: Two St. Louis University professors, Thomas P. O'Neill, historian, left, and James Collins, philosopher, right, have been named recipients of the Cardinal Newman Award, presented each year to a Catholic layman who has made a distinguished contribution to the goals and ideals of the Newman apostolate. NC Photo.
Name Two Professors to Receive Cardinal Newman Award Medals
SACRED HEART $20 James P. Murphy $10 Mrs. Helen Little, Frank A. Connolly, Jerry L. Cuillo, John Franey Anibal Silva, Anna L. Rowley. John Burke, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Hartnett, Kathryn M. Drogue John Hunt
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION WASHINCTON (NC) - Two in non-Catholic academic circles, $10 St. Louis' University professors, . the Archbishop said. ~r. & Mrs. Jos~ph Chouinard 'l;'homas P. Neill and James Collins, have been narred for the Cardinal Newman Award, given annually to a Catholic layman who has made a distinguished FATHER GEORGE 'l'Hlll.uHL IS Ou& PAIUSH PRIES'!' IN contribution to the goals 'and PODIPPARA, INDIA. HE STAYS IN PODIPPARA BECAUSE ideals of the Newman apostol'; . S t I'h . HE'S IN LOVE WITH GOD. ••• To ate.. ~~ ~'J~' love God, it's said, you must have . Archbishop. Paul J, Hallinan .c.. <I'd' &bree hearts in one: a hean of fire of Atlanta, episcopal moderator tt!'. 0#' for Him; a heart of • flesh for yoUI' qf the National Newman Ap~s ~ ~ neighborl and a heart of bronze for tolate, explained that the award ~ (A yourself ••• FATHER THUNDYilL is made by the John Henry Carfo loves God. He has three hearta in one dinal Newman Honorary Society, ••• His life in' PODIPPARA, Is lonein the name of the entire Newliness and sacrifice • . • The Catholic. man apostolate. lie serves are ~ castaway minority. Neill and Collins will receive They live in huts made of mud, with medals at the closing banquet of Tht I: dirt floors and thatched roofs. They the National Newman organiza. HOI} FaM MissWn seldom have enough·to eat. Only one tion's cOlJ.vention in Pittsburgh, fir tht Orimtal Churrh in ten can· read or write • • • The reSaturday, Sept. 1. Neill will be sult? In P..ODIPPARA, FATHER THUNDYIL lives with bigotry, the principal speaker at the· filth, hunger, disease ••• A weaker man would be discouraged. banquet. Right now, however, FATHER THUNDYIL Is building a Cathollo Neill and Collins primarily school-a 'mIssion gift'from a Catholic in Wisconsin. Next, he'd have devoted their careers to like to build a church ••• "I stay in PODIPPARA because these teaching at a Catholic univerpoor people need a priest," writes FATHER THUNDYIL. "But sity, but both, through their what is a priest without a church?" ••• The present church, an writings and speaking engage-· eyesore, threatens to collapse. Thrown up hastily years ago to ments at· secular universities, provide for 100 peopte, today It's much too small. In PODIPhave brought much prestige' to PARA-thanks, under God, to FATHER THUNDYU-there are the field of Catholic scholarship usually 600 at Sunday Mass ••• But how to build the church? When a Catholic In PODIPPARA 'can find work, he earns 1'70 a day! Naturally, the Sunday collection amounts to almost nothIng ,' .•• To build a new church will cost $4,700-not much for ST. WILLIAM a church because FATHER THUNDYIL and the men in the , $75 parish will do the work themselves. The church 'will be simple, Mr. & Mrs. James J. Stevens functional, ,permanent, and clean-a fitting place to shelter the $25 Blessed Sacrament .•• Will you help? In PODIPPARA $10 is Alice M. Butler • fonune! ••. Perhaps, in memory of your family or someone you love, you'd like to build this church all by yourself. If so. OUR LADY OF HEALTH write us now ••• Or ,perhaps you can give the superstructure $10 ($1,350), the roof ($925.) or some of the materials ($500) ••• Arcenio Tavares Please .send what you can-$I, $2, $5, $25, $50 .•. FATHER THUNDYIL loves God. We'd like him to build in PODIPPARA • decent H\)use of God.
,INDIA: MEET· FATHER 'THUNDYIL
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Fall Rover
Real Estate Rene Poyant' Hyannis 335 Winter St.
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Sp.5-0079
~ Contractors ~tG/i . ~G Electrical
:f"4t ,944 County St. New Bedford
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BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAl AVE.
WY 2-6216 'NEW BEDFORD
WHAT TO GIVE THE GRADUATE . WHETHER HE'S FINISHING GRAMMAR SCHOOL, mGH SCHOOL, COLLEGE OR THE UNIVERSITY, the graduate this June who belongs to the CATliOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION receives incalculable spiritual benefits·... He'll participate in the benefits of more than 15,000 Masses each year. He'll share in the Masses of the .Holy Father, of Cardinal Spellman, of· all our bishops and priest.~. He'll also be able to gain a Plenary Indulgence on the day he is enrolled, on 53 days during the year, and at the moment of death ... The dues are only $1 for one year, $20 for a lifetime ... To enroll the graduate is easy. Simply send us. with your donation, the graduate's name and address. We'll send him immediately a GIFT CARD FOR THE GRADUATE, telling him what you have done . . . Write us now. We want him to have the GIFT CARD before he . graduates.
EASY DOES IT-QUR MISSION CLUBS You can help our missions regularly, at small inconvenience to yourself, by joining one of our mission 'Clubs. The dues are only $1 a month, a prayer a day. Clip this item, check the club (or clubs)· of your choice, and mall It to ·us with your name and address. We do all.the rel!t., " DAMIEN LEPER CLUB carC!! for lepeJ:S· ORPHAN'S BREAD. , , . feeds unwanted children t>ALACE OF GOLD ; provides for the aged THE BASILIANS , , ..•.• supports Catholic schools THE MONICA GUILD .•..• chalices, altli'rs, for churches CHRYSOSTOMS .• educates nat!ve priests . tl MARY'S BANK ...•.••.••• ·trains nativ~, Sisters
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YOUR MISSION MITE?-IT'S OUR MISSION MIGHT!WRITE ,TO US!
~'l1ear5stffii~ions~
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FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Mltr. Jose,. T. Ria... 'Nat', Sec', Sead all c_malleatloll. tOI . , CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARB ASSOCIATION 480 Lexlngtol' Ave. of 46th St. N9W York 17;'tI. .,.. . -.: ~~ ..... tI.'''....u ~ ie.,,"~ .. ..
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,Baseball' To~~.,e.Y:}:<Fi:.,a,ls ' Sc,heduled for Sat'u'rday
:rHE ANCHOR~' Thurs., June 14, 1962
ProvHd~nce
CYO Dro!}')! ioxing
By Jaek Kineavy
The end is in sight after two weeks of post· season competition which reduced the field in each of three classes of the Eastern Mass. Baseball Tourney frotrJ, sixteen teams to two. Only two area representatives made the select semi-finals 'which were to Montle's choice to face Somerhave been played yesterday ville. Harwich's victory over Falafter being rained out on mouth last week was doubly Tuesday.' Durfee was sched- sweet for the Lower Cape uled to meet Somerville at Boston College and Harwich, Cape Champion, had a d ate with M e d' fie I d at Mansfield. Coach Don Montk's Hilltoppers were the only undefeated club to make the semis. Their meeting wit h Somerville was the third between the two Durfee's great defense---errorless ball vs. Wellesley and Natick-timely hitting and solid pitching resulted in the 18-0 record which the Red and Black boasted going into the SomervIDe fray. The' mark rivals that of the great '5'7 team which Luke Urban 'pUoted ~' the Eastern Mass. and state Class A tlees. Two of the young men from that undefeated club (190) have since made their mar~s in baseball, Tom Arruda in the Giants' system and Russ Gibson with the Sox. Durfee's hard - hitting fir s t baseman, Woody Berube, has had a terrific season. We don't have any slugging statistics available but the youngster must rank well up there on the basis of the goodly number of extra base hits he has authored. Woody iced the quarterfinal vs. Natick with a homerun with a mate aboard to give reliever Pete Levesque his third victory of the season. Somerville StrOllA' Somerville in its own right has had almost as' good a year. A perennial power in the '40s and early '50s under the late Barney Curtis, the six-time Eastern Mass. champions have put together an outstanding 15-1 record. They had a close call in the quarterfinals before coining Oil in the ninth to score two runs to edge Boston Latin, 3-3. The winner will meet the victor in the Memorial-Melrose game for the title on Saturday. Owner of a unique scholastic pitching record is the ace of tbe Durfee staff, Carl Viens. Over a four year period Viens bas racked up 13 victories without a defeat. A crackin' good curve ball' and pinpoint control are Carl's trademarks. He hurled Durfee to a 5-2 win over Wellesley in the tourney opener and be' i8 expected to be Coach
Schedule Workshop For Teaching Deaf SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - A workshop for teaching religion to the deaf will be held at Seton Han University here starting Monday, Aug. 13. The University and the International Catholic Deaf Association (ICDA) are sponsoring the workshop. Father David Walsh, C.SS.R., director of workshops for the ICDA, said the workshop has a dual purpose: to enable trained teachers of the deaf to develop methods of religious instruction, and to serve as an orientation course for part-time chaplains and for instructors of religion at schools for the deat.
Open New Campus MOUNT ST. JOSEPH (NC)The College of Mount st; Joseph will open its new $13 mUlion campus here in Ohio in September. All eight buildings of the new campus are dow virtua11y complete. The liberal arts c0llege tcJr women is conducted ~ Sisten of Charity Cllf Cinckmaa.
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PROVIDENCE (HC) ~ Tht Catholic Youth Organization has dropped boxing from its program in the Providence diocese. Father Charles W. McConne!l. diocesan CYO director, said many changes in the CYO program in the last 25 years have put new emphasis on the parisl1 unit. A boxing program can beSI be carried out by other agencies, he said. Over the years, a number oj local boys who participated in the boxing program went intt Golden Gloves tournaments. A few became professionals. Tw( of the outstanding pros were George Araujo, whose spectacular rise was halted by Jimmy Carter, world lightweight champion, and Harold Gomes. Leo J. Hunt, CYO boxing director, was praised by Father McConnell for his years of service to youngsters and the example he presented for them. Hum... never encouraged the youngsters to become pros and persuaded many to remain in school.
Champions who not only annexed the Cape title for the first time but also moved into the semifinal round of the Class C competition. The Capesters anFIRST GRADS: St. George Elementary School in ticipated going against Medfield's sophomore ace, John Westport is proud of the 14 boys and 21 girls in its first O'Connell, who last week posted graduation class. Shown are, left to right, Janice LePage, a quarterfinal victory over Sl Rev. Lorenzo H. Morais, pastor, Sister Redempta, principal, Mary's of Combridge. and Francis Dubreuil. No Representative The area has no representative school in Class B ranks despite having had the largest number of qualifiers in the history of the competition. Old Colony runnerup, Middleboro, elbninNORWALK (NC) - A wid- C.S.Sp., director of Immaculate ated Narry champion Somerset owed mother of 13 children saw Heart Seminary, Bethel Park, and Case on succellSlve dates by 3-1 and 6-4 margins, respective- her fourth sOn ordained to the Pa.; George F. Healy, C.S.Sp., a priesthood here at St. Mary's missionary in Puerto Rico, and ly. Prevost which tied Case for . Patrick F. Healy, a Bridgeport second place honors ,in Narry S emmary. diocesan priest. was swamped by Randolph, 23-0 Father Jam e s K. Healy, The two daughters in religious in the opening round and Dartmouth after an opening round C.S.Sp., was one of three semi- life are Sister Marie Elizabeth a narians ordained to the priest- Sister of Mercy stationed 'in win over Foxboro .also sucho~d .for the Holy Ghost Fa~hers Stamford, Conn., and Sister cumbed to the same club. Randolph, Hockamock titllst, by BIShop Walter W. Curtis of Michael Mary, who will profess her first vows as Ii Sister of is coached by Fran O'Brien who Bridgeport. Later this month Mrs. Eliza- Mercy on June 26. skippers the Stonehill College Last year Mrs. Healy received Chieftains during the basketball beth C. Healy of Bridgeport will season. This is the club that fea- se.; her second daughter profess a citation as a model of Catholic PRINUD AND MAILED parenthood from the Institute of lures Barry Need~am of no-hit ~ows as a Sister of Mercy. In addition to the newly or- Religious Sacerdotal Vocations. fame and 'with Woburn's surOSborne 2-1322 prise elimination by Wilmington dained Fat her Healy, Mrs. at Fordham UniVersity, New WYman 3-1431 , Healy's sons in the priesthood York City. last week must be conceded the M team to beat in Class B. Need- are: Fathers Joseph A. 'Healy, ham worked against Dartmouth, R. A. WILCOX CO. Tr«lins Ministers giving up five hits, three walks and striking out 12 en route to WASHINGTON (NC) - The OFFICE FURNITURE an easy 13-4 victory. Veterans Administration said III Stock fow lm.edlau DeDvell7 here that 13,000 .of the 1,2()(),OOO NCAA Series • DESKS • CHAIRS Representing New England in Korean war veterans who have flUNG CABINETS the College World Series in gotten college educations under • FIRE, FILES • SAFES Omaha this week are the vaunted the GI Bill have studied for the Commercial • Industrial FOLDING TABLES Crusaders of Holy Cross who ministry. It offered, no denomiInlltitutional were schedulecI to meet Colorado national breakdown. AND CHAIRS Painting and Decorating, State in the opening round of the double elimination tourney. 22 BEDFORD ST. 135 Franklin Street The Crusaders prepped for the PLUMBING & HEATING. INC. competition by taking both encia FAll RIVER 5-7838 Fan River OSborne 2-1911 for Domestle of the home and home series ~ Ie Industrial from rival Boston College by 10-1 andZ-o scores. The '10-1 ~ Salesand victory ended a three-year Oil Burners' Service drought for Holy Cross In the WY 5-1631 traditional competition. 2283 ACUSHNET AVE. The Crusaders took an 18-3 NEW ,BEDFORD record into the Colorado game. Texas, 19-5 for, the ,season, and twice NCAA champions was Installed the pre-tourney favorite as a result of its disposing of Arizona in straight sets. Santa Clara, 35-6, must also be giveD consideration. And don't discount the Cross. What a ball club they'd have had with the two bonus boys, Len Merullo, Jr. and Mike Hegan! But then, they've come this far without 'them. Thomas F. Monaghan Jr.
Widowed Mother Has Four Sons Priests, Two Daughters Nuns
MONYHlY CHURCH BUDGET ENVELOPES
DONNELLY PAINTING SERVICE
R. A. WILCOX CO.
LEMIEUX
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MONAGHAN. ACCEPTANCE CORP. Treasurer
Papal Volunteers MILWAuKEE (NC)-st. Anthony'sparish here is sponsoring four p~pal volunteers from Marquette University who have accepted mission teaching assignments in British Honduras for the school year starting in
142 SECOND STREET OSborne 5-7856 FALL RIVER,
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SPACIOUS FIREPROOF SLEEPING QUARTERS' For Boys 7 to 14 Years Old Six week season: July 1 to August 12 Register for 2, or 4, or 6 weeks Free Tutoring if Desired tHE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART
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