FIRST GRADUATIONS AT TWO SCHOOLS: Commencement exereises will be held this year for the first time at Sacred Heart, Taunton and St. John the' Evangelist, Attleboro. 'Eighth grade class officers (left) a~, Sa~red Heart: l-eft to righ~, James Bradshaw, president; Michael'
Bianchi, vice president; Mary Ann Martin, treasurer; Mary Kelly secretary. . St. John's officers (right) are: Nancy Arruda', president; Elaine Jette, secretary ; Neil Cassidy, treasurer; Robert Lynch, vice president. Many of the graduates h6pe to attend Catholic high schools.
Elementary Schools to Graduate ..1,827 . "
The ANCHOR
, A total of 1,827 boys and girls will graduate from the grammar schools of tho Diocese this month, an increase, of 231 over 1960. First graduations 'will be held by twe schMls: St. John the Evangelist, Attleboro, which will graduate 43; and Sacred Hearl School, Taunton, graduating 34. Sisters of Mercy staff St. John's and Religious of the ,Holy Union are at Sacred Heart. This .year's' largest , graduating class, as for the last two years, will be that of St, Mary's, School, North Attleboro, which' has 90 in the eighth grade., It. will be closely. foliowed by St. ~atriGk's,School, Fall River, which will graduate 83.' ' . ,
Smallest class will be that of St.·'MarY's Home, New Bedford, n'J:nberihg three. St. Mary's 'also, .tft AnchtW of the Soul. Sur. and Pirm-ST. PA.uL ',han las~ year's smallest class. Many ,of the eighth grade graduates will continue their education in: one of the '11 'Catholic high· schools in the'Dio-' PRICE 10e ces~. "By September a twelfth © 1961 The Anchor $4.00 per Year will be added: Bishop Feehan" Second Class Mail Privilefles Authorized at' Fall River: Mass High School in Attleboro. This year's number of elementary ,school graduates-l,827_is 1m increase of 231 or about 15% over last year's figure of 1,596.
fall River, Mass., Thurs4;lay, June 15, 1961
Vpl. 5, No. 25
New Bedford,' Jesuit Ordi~@)ftiorrn Saturd~v
Rev. Mr. Raymond P. Bertrand, S.J., will be one of 24 J'esuits ordained tQ the priesthood Saturday at Weston College, Weston, by Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston. )Born in New Bedford on Dec. 21, 1929, Father Bertrand is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon Bertrand. After attending St. Anthony High School, New Bedford, and
Boston College, he entered the New England Province of the Society of Jesus on Aug. 14, 1951. He made his novitiate at ShadowQrook, Lenox, and studied philosophy at Weston College. From 1955 to 1958 he taught at College No~re Dame de Jamhour and the University <of St. Joseph in Beirut, Lebanon. ][n September, 1958 he returned 00 Weston College where he has iust completed three years of theology. Father Bertrand will celebrate his first Solemn Mass at St. Joseph's Church, New Bedford, !it 11 A.M. Sunday, June 25. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Louis E. Prevost, pastor of St. Joseph'!>, will be the assi~tant priest. Rev. Gerard Boisvert of Notre Dame de lLourdes, Fall River will be the ]l)reacher.
Stating tha,t there was no national "catholic position'O on federal aid to education, .Very Rev. Arthur T. Geoghegan, Sup e ri n tend e n t of Schools 'of the Diocese of ProviANNIVERSARY MASS: Rt. Rev. Louis dence, expressed his personal belief that federal aid to parochial pastQr ,of St. Joseph's Church, New Bedford, schools should be limited to the, Deacon at his Jubilee Mass of Thanksgiving. pu~chase of texts and materials" . in "areas of nationai concern" such ~sscien.ce, mathemat.ics,'
E. Prevost, blesses the
Msgr. ' LOUIS .' Prevos t Mor ks Ordination Golden Jubilee
Emphasizes Lay Apostolate Need In World Work
REV. MR. BlERTRANlIJi, 8.J.
C~erwonka R~~tYlD®m
Other officers o~the Mass WCil&'@
,Idea of Aid
phYSical Speaking at 'Brown University. ' Monday to the 1961 Conference Rt. Rev. Msgr. Louis E. Prevost, pastor of St. Joseph of ·the Women's. Council on InChurch, New Bedford, observed the Golden Jubilee 'of hill tergroup Relatlo~s, of Rhode, ordination and First Solemn Mass by celebrating a Solemn Turn to Page Four High'Mass in the church Sunday. He was assisted by Rev. and Seated lnthe sanctuary were Lou is R . Boivin'deacon .' Rt. Rev. Msgr. Alfred J . E• Re v. Roland Bousquet , sub- Bonneau, pastor of Notre Dam. deacon. Rev. Joseph A. de Lourdes,'Fall River, and RtJ Martineau directed congre- Rev. Msgr. Hugh A. Gallagher. gational singing and preached. pastor of St. James, New Bed'"' ,PATERSON (NC) - The The three priests are the JUbi- ford. ,Turn to Page lEightelm founder of a lay apostolate larian's assistants.
. : The Most Reverend Bishop celebrated a Pontifical Requiem Mass Monday morning in St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, for the late Rev. John S. Czerwonka, assistant at the: parish, who died Wednesday in Middletown, R. I. Assistant priest' was Rt. Rev. Rev. Arthur C. dos Reis, deacon; Msgr. HumbertoS. M.edeiros, Rev.' Adalbert' Szklanny; SUbdeacon; Rev. John G. Carroll and eh~ncellor of the, Diocese. Rt: Rev. Msgr. Alfred J. Rev. ~rnest E. Blais, ac;olytes. Bonneau and· Rt. Rev. Msgr. Hugh A.'Gallagher were dea~QnB . , n<>nor.
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Rev. Casimir S .. Kwiatkowski, thurifer; Rev. John P; Cronillo book bearer; Rev. Manuel Po 'l'um. te Fage 'Ewelvtl
group says U.S. Catholics, "must awaken to the fact
New Bedford ,Rallies to Aid
that they live in an international community." "If, they don't act to help the In an outpouring of fraternal charity, New Bedford un,derdeveloped countries, the area Catholics have joined to welcome 17 Sisters, Religious communists will," warns Gerald Mische, founder of the Associaof -the ,Love of God, who are refugees from ,Castro's Cuba.. tion for International- DevelopThe'Sisters, who arrived in New, Bedford Saturday, are ment. from 14 schools operated by Chief guardian angel for tpe Representatives of the Grail, the, International Catholic Auxi- their community in Cuba. All Sisters is Rev. Clement R. Kil.. liaries, the. Young Christian ln,stitutions were confiscated goar, SS,cC., pastor at· St, Workers and the Women Volun. by' ,the government.. They Anthony's. He has headed ef· teers Association are contemare, ,staying, at St. Anthony's forts to make their acoommodtl plating a four-point educational Convent;'Mattapoisett, where tions comfortable. , : Many Helpers program . d~signed to spark spe-' 'M:othet Angeles 'Perez, R.A.D.. is, He has had many helpers !tI'l ciftc action, Mr.· Misch~ reports., ,superior. They. will remain,there '"First," he' said, "tnere ,is the' until' planaare'made' for theil' laM project. They include (1M Tum M PaMlel !i'!ftoo~ . Tum io Page lWeiV-. , . .fut\,Jl'e. .'
Of Love of God, Religious
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riv~r- Thurs. June 15, 1961 I
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Parents" Must "", Correct.'·····
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Catholic School Idea'
National Accounts' $lZ5
CINCINNATI (NC) - Catholic parents will have to "correct the false image which the public has of the Catholic school" before they can hope. for relief from unjust taxation. This challenge came from Father James E. Shappelle, assistant superinte!1dent of . right to send their chlldren to schools in' ('the Cincinnati Catholic schools.' archdiocese in an ad,dress at "It is not unusual," he' went the dedication of the. new,'on , "for a Catholic family in a suburban area, living in a modest
Brokston Chemical Co.
$;5 Man Scaffolding Comp~... $10 Land O'Lakes Creameries, _
·Fall River $500
dwansea Print Works. ,home, to pay $200 a year in $50 taxes for public schools. In addiBuilding Materials Co., i\sh.. : tion, the family must also pay .~ . worth Brothers, Inc. for books, bus rides, and fees for $Z5 all its school children. Somerset Boat Co., AssonelB ROBERT BRUCE "In former years. when school CONSTANCE· GABRIEL Sand & Gravel, Dr Elmer LeiQl/a taxes were low, it 'was not too J~ . ; much of a burden for Catholic $15 . parents to pay extra for a CathDr Wilson E. Hughes, R. B. ,olic' education. But today, with Smith Company, Pleasant Dine!: 'increased school taxes a'nd-in. . Miss Constance Gabriel of St. has received the annual scholar- ~~ I creased costs in Catholic schools,. Patrick's Parish, Wareham and ship granied by 'the Rev~ Francis $10 '. . there is threat to the continued .Robert Bruce of St. Rita's misRiverside Floor Service, AttF . expansion of Catholic Schools to sion Church, Marion,: have be- D. Callahan <:::ouncil K. of C.l " The:daughter of Mr. and,Mrs. Robert A. Bogle, Goldberg He~ : meet .the' wishes of Catholic' come recipients of scholarships . George Gabriel of St. Patrick's . stitching & Pleating Co., Terry Iii parents. Such a threat·.to private nam'ed hoilor of two former . :!i'arish,. Wareham, Constance":has .CraWford, St. Anne's· Hospit(;i and, parochial schools is.. a ' yery . pastors; achieved a high scholastic rating NurseS Alumnae. real one, and a very intentional Miss Gabriel has been granted Dr William Mason, Gram• one the part of some educa- a four-year scholarship'. named' . and plans to enter the Boston College School of Education in Liquors Inc., Murray's PharmaCJ/e . I tors. in honor of Rev. Joseph P. Lyons, September. ' "They do not want to see Cath. first spiritual director' of St. . The recipient of the K of C National Cash Register Co." Plymouth Square Fruit Market. :olic schools expand, They want J;'atrick's CirCle, and Mr. Bruce grant is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gray . Typewriter Compan~ i the state to have a monopoly in Robert Bruce of· M~rion .. ROQert Hall's Music Store, Stella. An~ I education," the priest-educator has been accepted at Providence Frocks, Fall River & New B~ asserted. Good CitizenshiP' College where he plans ·to major ford Express·Co., Andrew's M~ in Education. .. ' ket Inc. :. Speaking of the benefit. ~f Catholic schools to the communhe continue<:i, was "written into ity, Fathe.r Shappelle emphasiz~d state laws as a result of tile' WORCESTER (NC) ~ A nativist, anti-Catholic feeling of that "they teach their students HOLY NAME . \ the 1800's." . 'good morals and citizenship." ,Bishop likened the position $20 BUFFALO (NC) - Canisiu6, · Joseph C. Rogers & FamJJ:lz. : "Therefore, it is manifestly "The work of you. parents unfair to accuse' the Catholic of a policeman in regard to College will almost double its here-today is to show your non- schools of being divisive or of human law to that of a priest student enrollment and 'greatly Catholic friends why we have .being less democratic .than the in regard to the divine law. . . expand. its physical plant in the !. Catholic schools and how they public schools," he said. 'BishopBernard J .. Flanagan next decade, it was revealed I>y -IMMACULATE CONCEPTIOlf benefit the community." he said. , Noting that "approximately $10 of Worcester has reminded Father James J. McGinley., S.J.. Father Shappelle warned that three out of every 10 children of policemen and other law .enforce- 'president, at commimcement ex~r &: Mrs John Keohane. "the extra burden of taxes is school age in Ham.iltonCounty ment agents that adherence to ercises. . making it increasingly difficult. :are in Catholic schools," Father their religious duties "provides The president estimates 181at for Catholic parents to use their 'Shapl?elle said that "Catholic you with help to uphold the by 1970 the arts program increase. from 750'to 1,300 stuparents can well be· proud of sacredness of both tlie law of 8'1'. BERNARD'S dents, the busines program from what they· are doing. We' hope God and the law of man." $Z5 FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sun- that the citizens of this'area ap. Preaching at the annual Jllem- 280 to 500 students and the nursManuel C. Rogers big program wil grow from . 1'46 day. IV Class. Green. Mass preciate the burden carried by orial Mass of the Archangel · $10 . . . ,. ., . Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Catholic parents." . . Guild of. Hie Worcester Police to 200 students. Mr & Mrs Joseph Nacau1a,_ He called the new 'School a Common Preface. Department, Bishop. Flanagan & Mts .John Baptist. . In addition, the college's eve:. ,', .. SATURDAY-St. Gregory .Bar- itribute to' the Archbishop and to empha~ized: . ning division' will show' an 'in':' ;. barigo, Bishop. and Confessor. the Catholic laity. '. . crease froIil55!'stu'dents'to '. " : c, . Set Example. . "But most of' all,' McAiiley III Class. White Mass Proper; in the. undergraduate . (N'Ogra~ ' . . ,iY9ur relationship to' ·the'law Gloria; no Creed; Common 'HighSchool is tribute "10 ~he and from 500 to 75(1' in tlle' grad:' of :mlin ill" like' that of the' priest Sisters of Mercy;'" he "~id';' '~wtio Preface. " ,uate program,' he "pre<iicte>d:" to the 'law'of God. The priest has SUNDAY-IV Sunday after Pen- :have made a great financial sacTop priority'in the );uil'dilig ;. 469 LOCUST· STREET .. ' tecost: IT Class. Green. Mass rifice and haVe gone' in~.· de,bt lisacrEla responsibility to giv~an program will indude two dofm,'; .•.'. I .• ,. • :... . 'exaniple'to the laity-an examp,le Proper; Gloria; Creed; Prefmalee the school po~ibl~.", ... FALL RIVER, MASS~ ,., itories housing 300 men ands . Moreover, . ii. . new, Cat,h,oJjc of great·'holiness and regard'for ace of Trinity. the law of God and all it means faculty-studehtcenter, an extenOS -2-3381 '::, MONDAY-St.. Jliliana' Falcon-· school is "a tribute to.. the Ajner- in our·I1ves:· , sion of the present science buildieri, Virgin. III Class,. White. lean ideal of freedom' educa· Wilfred C. . James·L . }'·In,"somewhat the same' 'man- ing and an expansion of thtdilcMass Proper; Gloria; Second hon, .. he said,. , Driscoll 'Sullivan;' .....: . . ,,'" '" ulty-priests' r~sidence hall.,: :ner;'.'the prelate contimied;:"you ' ,.. Collect '55, Gervase and Pro." have' 'that· relatloiJ."shipto·ward tase, Martyrs; no Cr,~ed; Com:- :Ne~ ,Bedford.,CY~O the 'law· of' !hen. You have IiI'remon Preface. AUBERTINE,~""~' 'sponsibillty' to give' an eXfi:mple .TUESDAY - Mass of, previous Summer planS for the New , to others of the sacredness and Sunday. IV Clasll. Green. Mass Bedford Catholic Young Adult sanctity of law and the due re~ Proper; no Gloria; Second Col.' FUNERAt'HOME spect men must have ~or it." lect 51. SilveriuB, Pope and Organization include monthly 986 Plymouth Avenue '. Hfllen Aubertine Brough Martyr; no Creed; Common meetings featuring. ,s"", immi 11g Fall River, Mass. Owner and Direetor parties, dancing and other Sum-' Preface,' • Tel. OS 3-2271 The following films are to be WEDNESDAY. ' - St. Aloysius mer sports. Spcicioui ~arkin9 'Area ' .DANIa ". HARRINGTON "" Gonzaga, Confessor. III Class, '. I Sunday morning, June 25,. added. to the lists in: their re. WY 2~295i . Licensee. Funeral Director White. Mass Proper; Gloria; members will receive corporate spective' classifications:· . " cmcI- Registered' Embalmev:, 129 AJleaSi. . New Bedford,' Communion at 9 o'clock Mass at . Unobjectionable for. general no Creed; Common Preface. THURSDAY St. Paulinus, St. Joseph's Church.. >They will pationag~: ,:Th:e Gambler Wore I '. '. . .. Bishop and Confessor. III meet at 7:30 that evening at a Gun. .. .... f' \.~ :.~:: '.. ; Un9bl~ctionabl~' for adults and Class. White. Mass Proper; Kennedy Center. .. ,f'; CYAO activities are 'qilen 'to ,adoleScents:.. The :Peadly ComGloria; no Creed; Common ·funera/,·Hom.;, ~:~; , 1:(:,1' single Catholic men and",!i>men ':' panions;' L~st Time. I Saw Preface. between the ages of 18 and,: 29.. ' Archie. . .... 571. Second St. Bo_ ; 1VIonthly meetings ar~held ~f~he: ..: 'Objectionable i~ part for all: fall River,' Mass... Kennedy Center. ' ( ,; • 'Morgan the Pirate «lbjectionable .. : , 550 Locus'S'" OS 9-6072 , , .. ,- dancing,.': costuming :and BeFall River.· MasL ." FORTY HOURS ~'. quences) ;'20;000 Eyes (low moral . MICHAel J. McMAHON OS 2-2391 THE ANCHOR lists thedeatlh. -', tone; detailed description of licensed Funeral Director Rose E. Sullivan DEVOTION anniversary' dates of, priests .' 'crime). '. Register~d Embalmer ' Jeffrey E, SullivaD · who served the Fali. River. . .' " June 18-St. Mary, New BedDiocese since its foririatioiiAn·.' ./ ..... .; r , . :...,. ,. ford. . 1904 with the intention·:~at.' Blessed Sacrament, Fall ,the .faithful will give tbem;'~" o • River. prayerful remembrance.. ,~,... '.,. by' '. June 25-St.Eiizabeth; Fall' .. .rUNE 18 " '. River. • Rev. James M. Coffey, P.R., \ 51. Mary, Norton. 1935, Pastor, 51. Mary, Taunton.,.' ,.. . .... ,' .' : ~. July' 2-our Lady of Purgatory, New Bedford. i Rev. Deslauriers, St. Francis Xavier, Hy1916, Founder, St. Anthony"Ne.w:'::t.i·~:o··· . ;:.~ .. ,~;; Sp' 5 23'36 ,:... -.. .' annis, . ,'" "'1 ·"yannls.:,- ." .- . Bedford. "'1 ""; .>t"i ··,:t' Holy Trinity, West HarJUNE 20 ':. '.........'. ...__,:·ioI/3;;.:_.'~"·..;;.. _ wich. Rt.· Rev. James J. Coyle, P.R., .\:.\" . . /. ',' July' 9-St. -Joan of Are, LL.D., 1931, Pastor, St. Mary.. ~~~:'8ROOK·tiA Orleans. McAuley High School here. . Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati officiated at the dedication of the $2,500,000 girls' high school built by the Sisters of Mercy. Occupying a 13-acre site adjacent to the Archbishop's residence, it was op ene 4 last September for freshmen only. EventuallY if will accommodate 1,200 students. Father Shappelle declared. that "Catholic parents 'feel the gross unfairness of the laws which charge them the sa:ne tax rates as everyone else,but make no .return to them of their tax. so that they can spend it on t'he kmd of education they de~ire." In Catholic schools, he said, "we teach all the subjects required by the SLate for good cit'Izenship. But because we add religion, we get no return on . t b our tax dol.lar - no even IH transportation." This kind of discrimination,
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Our Lady of the Assumption, Osterville. THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. Published eve~·Thu..day at 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River,' Mass.. by the Catholic Press of the Diocesc of Fall River. Sub.cripiton price by mail, postpaid $40.00 per year•
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.' Taunton. .JUNE 21 ;~"i>'~(~NERAl HOME, INC. i Rev. Desiree V. Delemarre, &. Marcel Roy _ C: Lorraine ao, 1926, Pastor, Blessed Sacrament, " ltotler LaF'i-alleo Fall River. . FUNERAL DIRECTORS · Rev. Francis D. Callahan, 1~, . Pastor, St. Patrick, Wareham. 15' mVINGTON CT. Rev. George A. Meade, 1949, WY 7-7830 Chaplain, St. Mary Home, New NEW BEDFORD Bedford..
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ALSO VIStf OUR ~ sfQRE'M NEW BEDfORD
Priest from Fan Rive;: Celebrates
THEANG:HORThurs .• June 15, 1961
.A native of Fall River serving fa the Rockville Center DiollIese, New York; is observing the Silver Jubilee of· his ordination ilJo the priesthood. Rev. John J. Madden, son of the late John and Bridget Madden, is a brother of lVII's. Thomas F. Higgins of Fall i!1tiver. He is an uncle of Dr. ~homas F. Higgins of Fall River and Maryknoll missionary Sister Maureen Thomas, a surgeon in, Cle mission fields of Bolivia.
Say
Silver ~ubilee of Ordination
FATHER MADDEN
I!Iather Madden hall served as assistant at Holy Redeemer Church, Freeport, since his ordination in 1936. Father Madden studied at Holy Cross 'College and then pursued the study of law at Boston University and Harvard Law Schools. He rece'ived his law degree in 1927 and spent the next five years as a practicing attorney in Fall River and in White Plains, N. Y. . Father then entered St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore' where he received his M.A. degree in 1933, an.d completed his training in theology at Immaculate Conception Seminary, Huntington, N. Y. He was ordained on June 6, 1936, for the Brooklyn Diocese, and upon ordination was assigned to Holy Redeemer Parish where he has remained. While Freeport was still a parish of the Brooklyn Diocese, prior to the formation of the Rockville Center Diocese, Father Madden served as regional director of the Brooklyn Diocesan Apostola'te for the Instruction of' Non-Catholics. In December, 195'1, he was named Director of the Catholic Lawyers Guild of the Rockville Center Diocese. Father Madden is well known in the greater Freeport area for ·his genial temperament, wit and "oratory-qualities which made him· a successful lawyer and which he has dedicated these twenty-five years to the service ot' God.
Mora I ~~@ [J'otril©1 ment Movem®8't1U' Leads \t@ ~~~a~iOMS' '~lrl(!liffere~li'o~fJ'\J't) ST. LOUIS ,NC) - The Moral Father Coerver listed three movement (MRA) objections to MRA: lB. Q' "moral ideology which lel:\ds 'One Good as Another Clo religious indifferentism and 1 Its b l' f thO t . ' 1 ' b oR. f . d ,,' t • e Ie a peop e ,can e ,...~re ore IS angerous, a prIes "directly illuminated" by God,' "tulosopher warned here. without the need for a church The warning came from with the authority to teach. i!a~her Robert F. Coerver, 'C.~.,2. It leads to religious indifphtl~sophY professor .at Kenrick ferentism, because it holds that 8emmary, after a senes of three one religion is as good .as tluU-page advertisements advo- another. ~ting the movement appeared 3. It has no concept of God as ID. a local secular newspaper. the Author of the supernatural Fether Coerver reminded that order, but instead bases its pracOle Sacred Conw;egation of ~he tices on "the unseen but everBoly' Office had forbidden priests preseht Power which ascribed to IlBd Religious to participate -in the Holy Spirit." ~,anY'Ya~. The Vincentian ··.I!'Qullder and leader of MRA is prtest also 'saId that members of a former Lutheran minister, Dr the Catholic laity should be dis- Frank Buchman. ' ' .uraged from involving them"'ves in the movement. He recalled. the 1958 pastoral letter of Bishop Thomas Noa of Marquette, Mich., forbidding all Three students of " Blessed. f:atholics in his diocese to attend Sacrament School, Fall River, MRA activities. The headquarters ., the movement in the U.S. are have placed among, winners in located at Mackinac Island, a French essay contest' open to studentJs 0 f Franco":American Mich., in the Marquette diocese. schools throughout' New England. ' Gerard Goulet, first prize winner, merited a cash award and a trip to Montreal. Other Blessed. Sacrament winners are MARYKNOLL (NC) - Fo~1;j' e-o young Maryknoll missioners Diane Paquette, second prize eeceived their mission' crucifixes and Paul Maltais, fourth prize. The contest, sponsored by La and lifetime overseas. assignments in the' annual Maryknoll Societe des Artisans, was' on the subject of the debtow~ to one's lIeparture ceremony held here. Peals from an Oriental bell' parents. Entries were iii. the French langua~. . ~naled the start of the depart. are ceremony for the 5,000 peo. l'Ie attending. The bell, which tong ago called Buddhists to prayer at a pagan temple in lepan; now only rings once a ~r, on Maryknoll's D-Day. WEll, I« L£ASV we Bishop John W. Comber, M.M.. ,AGREE THE PLAOE TO tJuperior General of Maryknoll, GO FOIl PlEASANT, announced the assignments and El'f\Q£Nf PRESCRIPTION presented individual mission sEltVta 1& .... .-ucifixes.. Consecrate Life The priests and Brothers who participated renewed their oath of fidelity, by which each promised to consecra'te his whole life· .. the' work of the missions com.utted to the s;ociety. Members of· this year's depart.-e group ",ere assigned totha .issions of Africa, Japan, ~or-. IDosa, Korea, the Philippines, ,-,iddle A~rica, B9livi~,. Peru, Chile and the Hawaiian Islmds. ~earmament
Students Receive French Awards
Departure Rites At Maryknoll
BANGKOK (NC)-SchooI children have been taken from Laos to Hanoi and Moscow for communist in- • ?octrination, according, accordmg to reports reaching Thailand.
FATHER DONOVAN AWARD: First winners of Rev Charles A. Donovan Award, tuition scholarship to Bostoti College, are Paul Raymond (center) and Douglas Mello, Presenting certificates, Dr. John E. Manning, chairman of alumni group responsible for award.
Boston College Alumni to Present Init;al .Father Donovan Awards Through the efforts of alumni and played varsity baseball in the Fall River area, headed three years. by Dr. John Manning, chairman; , As a CYO member, Mello is active in his parish unit, presiAtty. Charles Hague, treasurer; dent of Anawan CYO social comand John Kineavy, secretary, mittee and a member of CYO two city boys will receive tuition awards to Boston College, baseball and basketball teams. He was chosen as a Boys' State renewable yearly for four yea~s. member last year and belongs , They are Douglas Mello, sento the Portuguese Civic League. ior class president at Durfee His father belongs to the city High School and Paul Raymond, senior class p'resident at Prevost fire department and a sister Cheryl, 12, is a student at MorHigh School. They will receive ton Junior High School. the Rev. Charles A., Donovan Award. Presented for the first lP'rev6st President, time this year, it memorializes Paul Raymond, a member of the well-known chaplain of St. St. Anne's parish, is the sOn of Vincent's Home arid rector of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander RaySt. Mary's Cathedral who was mond, 168 Forest Street. He has for many years 'a~ outstanding been on the honor roll throughfriend of area youth. out high school ·and . held class All A Student offices in all four yea,rs. . 'Mello, son 'of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond. has 'played 011 basJohn C. Mello, 1147 President ketball and baseball teams for Avenue, and a member of' Holy both Prevost and the CYO and Name. parish, has been a four has been active as a Sodalist year member of the All A List . and on the school debate team. at Durfee, on the Principal's List He is treasurer of Anawan CYO social committee, a member of and .a member of the National St. Anne's Holy Name Society Honor Society. He earned the and vice president of the Fali Williams Book Award as' an River Scholarship Committee. outstanding junior. The award winner. has a President of his class throughout high school, he is a member brother, Roger, a pre-medical of the student council, student student at Providence College, activities' association and the al10ther brother, David, at Prespeakers' bureau. He has been. vost, and a sister, Rachel, at ' a homeroom director four years Mt. St. Mary's Academy.
~BVE~o MA.§~o
Special Center Close communications seem to be maintai~ed between XieIig Khouang, where the communist Pathet Lao and their allies have their headquarters in Laos and Hanoi. Russian planes have 'been bringing war supplies and men from Hanoi. During the week before the Russian and .British foreign ministers iss!led thedr cease-fire call, most leaders of , the Xieng Khouan~ regime WCoFe reportedly in Hanoi. Now Hanoi is apparently providing a special communist indoctrination center for Laotum boys and girls while Moscow will train those picked as future lead_ ers, of a communist Laos.
NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMAll
SULLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS Main Office and Plant LOWELL, MASS. Telephone Lowen Gl8-6333 and GL 7-7500
Auxiliary Plants BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, R. I.
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.Very Happy Father's Day r.·.. , ···.r
Oblate Retreat
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The Pathet Lao are sending children to Hanoi, capital of the communist regime in North Vietnam. The more apt students are then sent on to Moscow. Parents in regions occupied by the Pathet Lao fear that more children will be taken to Hanoi and Moscow when the current school year ends. Since last December boys and girls who evacuated 'Vientiane with the troops of Capt. Cong Le (now a general) have been asked to go to H,l1loi and Moscow. Gen. Cong Le's force joined . t~e Pathet Lao a'nd they have been operating together since.
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PHARMACY
202 ROCK StREET
, I
Commu~c$ts B~ai~ Wa~~BIm~ laos Clm~~d[]'®[]'i)
TOUHEY'S
All chapters of Oblates assoelated with Portsmouth Priory' wi'll join in a retreat at the ~iory the weekend of June HI to 18. Relatives and friends o{l Gblates are also invited to attend.
3
B. M. C.
Durfee Trustco. •
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"HE At ::~ :"::-Diocese of Fall River,.-Thurs. June 1.J, 1961
By, Fathei- Jamt IL 'JIInIoma:s~J Surf., Ass't Sociol'ogy Prof.-St';.
IT;;oms; IITiJiw£sitY;
Wheru my £allier died sevena:li Slea'l's: agpj, motili:eir could!nIt keel? up' the' home' either fin3llIC:fu:ll&' em' pliw.siC~ I was: the only one of the foux: married; c1iilllireru wliOJ o:ffe17edl 00.' take her. in. Mother's no. :fiinaill:aiall pl!obfem" ,but; soners' 8\ . helpless,. passive woman. with: of n~,' own;, sne' may find! this: _ g,reat emo,tional needs.. My 1:Iffi£icul'll. to) alloet!.t;, yet: slie must: sistells, ancL bllotherseldo1Il\ reco~ that: t!ioug!i; she~ is' wel'-. ~all here, and nev.er ilLvite camel. she~ is; not iill cli:ang~;; nOlt her to. visill. them~, y.et she defends. can: slie! expect: ~ur: f3m:i;1~ ao,.,·
ti.'rities; to; be: r.uled' by her- likes: tJiemo and expec.ts- my home and or disIill:es;. family to be.• at. MUslt Amsw.eil' #;'oj SOdi her disposa1. Your siStexs; andi bmthel!' have Please spell out, a\ serious; ooIi:g;lnom 00) hap.: Y;01lI 1lie morar prin:' pllo:v.ide~ for.' liex' emotionalJ neeas;. c.i,p res t hat. ,They; !tno:\w slie: tends; to} be~ pas;.." , sfiould: guide. all sive;. depe.ndent;, andi lacltin/f, in of' us in this initiati'9:e~ andl tlieYi' consequen~ matter." musu share' tfte~oum:reno:fi"R:eepfug; 'To'begin with', j her- reasonaOIy; conte.nt Oy viSi1j;. Eo; r want to' in~ hen,' ftequentl:w andi D~' in,. compliment you' viting her to stay with them, so ORGANizE NATiONAL VINCEmIAN WOMEN'S GROUP: Plans are being for!lDo· on' y'our' £fne .that ~our.' famiIy may' expeDilmce lated' for a National Federation of' Ladi'eli of Charity to coordinate charitable activit_ sense' of gener:, some~ flleedollD and'. l!eli~:. ous loyalty and' Discussing l?lans at a St. Louis meetfug are,. left 1;0. right" Miss, Diana Ruth Downey of , Aocording; to, y;oun- letter" they; eonsiOerateness: In the not unwa Angeles'" president;: COadjuto:u' Bishop Leo C.. Bymeef Wichita, episcopal chairm~ common' finniTy' situation' tliat have Been guilty of. selfish, dis,. gracefuf negI'eetj and' tnough she Sister M. Basil' of Washi'nKton, of'the Daughters of Clil-irity and Msg:u. Raymond Gar.. ~ your lettelldescribes, in is very easy for married children to find seems to take their part, you' lagher of' CfeveI'andl, secretary of The. National COnference of Catholic Charities, spirittMt tliat they lacK. room,. their pant- must make it plain to them that director.: NC. Photo~ nen won:t. stand for it, or: their they, are~ actihg like; pagans; andl must answer to God' for it. eHiloren, will resent it.. ,&£& **-9-4 • Urg,es; IF'frm JHrandling; 'What. the~ ane' really. sayinm. , Parents who must liv:e.-in. with, oiL cou~se, is, that the~ do nOF' their cniIdren also ha.v.e, Goligii-' want. to, be' distur:bed\ -If some,. body, else will, bear the' burde.n;. tions. They have, a. dght. to exthey are' quite reliev.ed and: pect support, respect" and. affec,. promptl:t procee<b to; forge1l aTh tion" but: they; must. also. be ooop_, about, them ow-a obligatJions' ilD . el;atLv.e in adj,usting, and adap.t:!ng to their new. situation. the.: matter. , 'L'here: is: no. inherent. reason It should be, obv.ious- that indi.~ vidual circumstances' may; oe why, older- people! mustt be(lome~ such than alL the' chi:ldren in, a: in£lexible" critical, on the~ ~wr,. family. not, be' able' tOl com·· ciukiishl~ self-c.entened·and! dis;.tribute: eq!1alIy;,. but this sho!11d! interested, im people\, events; and! nott be: used! as. am excuse' to> a:v:oid: ideas; Man~, ne.ven· do, andlit: ill; a' pri:vileg,e tmlive· with: thelIll.. ,all responsibilitiy,:, Your pl10bllmll cal:ls; for fil','n Gene.J:;Qus, Few; Do, Wodu In this connection" it. is in- handling;,E<h Do not.bedisturbed teresting to note> than an inves- by, falSe criticiSITh, ~Gur' sisteI:s: tigation of any, OI:ganized! human' and! brother- must::leatru that; thew 'and! yOU1t l':ouP community, parisn, ha.v:e' Ob}igatiollS, school\. v.oluntanyl association, JIlothen' must, leaJJDJ that. YOU2T' famil:w, andi so on-,,--rev:ealS; that famJ1Js has' righ.ts. .There nta.;jV be a.:few teaDs'snedl only a relatively limited number r oti persons ane, w:illing, to assume in' the adjust:ntent.. but: who~. il8 responsibilitw.- 01;: taKe' on work the: present- sifuatiOl1l l'eall;y> 1iJ'tA;NK Y~U; .•. for the. r,eaponse to our "SAVE: benefi tfug:!1 ' tliat is not strictly required'. .CA-SHf' Nver.tisitlg, fltor~ • .' .' tb.. enthusiaatic The·majority·sittoack' and1wait II. ~!..Jl Comment. made In: our 81'eru and, In the: letlena for the nex.tlfello:w tOlst'eplUP and VI Ala: Pleva wr-itten" even, 'phone caUs to oUr· of'. you, take the iob, In' all such. ~oups, €oDtiilued1 frOlDl 1PlIiitw. One) fice . . • aU have lDeen, Il: source of genuine most of tfie' worK- is' done' by a l latisfaction. We llppredat& this. incr8uing.· cooperatL'9:el. g~neJ:ous. '!=ew;. &d Island; Ms~: Geoghegan' saia be dees not! believe> tfi:a1:' parochlOll . pa.tror:la~. It pVQ//es, to A&P that people realty' iti is generally the same fewwant good' vel'ueS', q~elity; ~s at the fowest others alway.S' manage' to find' schoen!' sliould' receive' federal' aid! for- construction' costs Il@1!' excuses. passil!Jle prrices, .. prices ,that don,', F.i&.v& to Wouldn't it be 3' tremendous sa'lilries' fur' religiouS' teaching- in' absorb unnecessllJjY eXfllsnself, but give cnh " bJ:eak-through, in; eduoatiom if we the' schools: saviftgJ that am add. up iA the best l'ittl'8' b00k Msgr.. Geognegan. pointed' out: could discov:er- hOWl to, make )lOU. ha,ve- •.• YOlll'; manIC; book;, that federaI. aid: to education. iih people generous? ' primarily 'for tne Benefit of'the rnconsistent Attihld'e , child and so every child attendYour letter also points .up an- ing any school-public or private . other interesting feature, com-. ---:is entitled to the benefit af a mented up'on in the family literfederal aid pcog,llam,. 'lllielle~ is no> ature of all cultures. When one question that public funds alchild' generously assumes total ready aid all schools indirectly, responsibility for a needy parent, public and parochial, but the ( the parent tends to take such ch,ild is the primary object, of \ services for granted and lavishes assistance. IfRESH, TENID-ER" R'EAI!)'f,·110..COOK - 2 V2-3 IL8S affection and attention on the The Providence Diocese: offiother children and their families. cial rejected the charg~ that This inconsistent attitude is parochial schools are divisive- in, IlQt easily explained, but since 3 community, and stresse!L tltatl. it appears so universally, I'm the .chief opponents of public' LB .. LB', . : inclined to think it indicates the school bond' issues are not, Cllvli.. parent;s unconscious attempt to olles whose children gp: to, par.:-, disguise the painful fact that she ochial schools but children. of\' is neglected by the othecs and I1l!operty owners of all religions. consequently a desperate Bid to MSgr:. Geoghegan's stand) onl ". gain affection'. these matters was seconded Ol'f' She is sure of the one, and Providence Attorney MiItol1l though she dare not face. it, Stanifen who spoke Oll! tHe: same! sq~arely, she tem:s; the othellS no·' pl'\ltform. longer care for- hen: The school official added' that/. Wife in Charge he had. not yet come to a defin~ What princ~Rles shOuld. gU1de: conolusfun about, federal 8sSilJ1>., you, your sister:s' and brother;, anceo- to! pay the salllries of lQl and your motheY'? teachers in parochial schools. and -IIiIORT IMAt« 4 10 6 181 Well, Ed, in the first place you w6uld perhaps advocate such aid I, ( are. married; you have a wife in; the future, since such assistaDd children of your own, and ance would' not' be aid to l'eligion they have rights that must be but for. the benefit of the child. recognized. YOur family life, should not, be built around your mother, though she is now defiPHILA,DELPmA (Na)-FOl1', nitely: 'a part of ,your family~ . ' . ' . the fourth. straight year the By this I lpean that all must, Philadelphia arohdiocese's Cathl'eCognize imd accept that your olic Charities Appeal was overwife is in charge of the home, subscribed. 'The 19,6'1 goal was that the discipline of. children, $2,500;9001, At last count" the conthe socjal life of the. fiunily', the tributions; had reached, $2.,j)OO,~OO, unique climate or atmospneJ:e 01' wiUliJ donatioll'S;: stilll being re!the home, must.. be estaBliShed ceiv.ed. ~he annual' campaigJl' by you and yourr wife: was' origihat~ ih 195e" byt tl'le' Because your mother has been late John Cardinal O'Hara, CS.c. accustomed to running a home .,
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NEW YORK (NC) -
The Jewish communi1;y should .. z::aihink its position on the question of Federal and state ~ ~ucationalaid to religious schools and stop putting • mtacles ~. the path 'of those who favor such aid,. a leading " I~wish educator has stated. . · William W. Brickman, pro- their children top.ublic .schools and thus escape the double bur· fassor in the .department of den." Weak Position 'wstory and philosophy ·of "At best, this is a weak posi~ ~ucation at New York Univer· &ty, asserts also' that the Jewish tion," he continued, "since it : @l)mmunity should.. strive to get overlooks !l number of fundaossistance for its day. schools, mental facts: first .•. public edu[lmcluding government aid, in- cation would become chaotic in many cornmunltiesall over the · !Stead of fighting against It. · Mr. Brickman's opinions are country if the Catholics should 'apressed in an article, ''Public close a substantial number of • Aid to Jewish'Day Schools,"ap- their parochial schools. Second, , ~aring in the Spring, 1961, issue the parochial ·01' nay school is · 00: Tradition, a journal of Ortho- . no.t a private-venture school" but rather a eommunrty or other • (i'f)x thought published in New form of group enterprise and YQrk. pel"forms, UII1:J.er the state comlPoses 'Qaesti.ollil .' Be poses the' following ques- pulsory school 'attendance laws, prec:i,;;ely the :same functions ,as .~: "Why do Orthdox bodies do the schools paid for by the •cr;:nd individuals, who .are compublic purse. 1~itted to Torah ... show so much "Third, these semipublic or cwncern for the sacredness 9 f :lJ9parationism .when they should quasipublic schools are under · ~ struggling for the recognition state control and advance the welfa,reof the people ·of the state ~ religion and religious educa.tbn as rightful· components ,of and of the nation." Day Schools · rJJnr society?" "In the name of the right for 9:t may be," he replies, "that «'he rabbis are .fearful of apply- the 'free exercise .ofreligion, .as .tog theological authority in guaranteed under ·the Constitution, .Jews .should demand that .urch~state-school issues ,be_use they believe that an appeal their children should be free to ccmslitutional .authority will from ·exposure to 'Cln'istological be more pleasin,g and .conse- and other religious teachings quently more convincing to· . and .obsenr.anoes in the public Christians than reference to schools. "At the .same time, ,they .should ,Jewish sources." expand andintensit;y their ,day Religious Issue school::;ystem .so .as to proy.i.de ""So strong has separationism . a positive program ,of reli,g.ious.,. i!rec0me," Mr. Brickman adds, secular education ior' lat:ger ~b.Qt even orthodox :rabbis 'benumbers.than heretofore. lrome secularist in their 'approach "Tbis calls for a firm .support ~ wha t is essentially a Teligious by the Jewish .community. It tJsue." also calls for financial aid from Declaring that «the time has other sources, including Ithe gOY:cnrne for a reassessment 'of this ernment." . .tdtuation," Mr. Brickman in the Mr. Brickman states that the cnurse of his article makes sev- entire Jewish .community should .e;ral statements -ag::.inst the posi- make a serious effort to obtain §,on of those who object to the public aid for its day schools. @'anting of public aid to TeliO"enMind '@ous schools. "At the vet:y least," he co];)"'Liberal thinkers;" he points eludes, "it should :restudythe ~, "have usually countered the OO'gument of the unfairness of queslion, keep its mind open, lihe double taxation of parents and· refrain' from .puttir\g 'obwho send their children to par- stacles 'in the path .of .those who @Chinl schools by saying that are convinced oithe .feasibility aueh parents are f"ee to transfer aud advisab·ilit.v of goY:ernmental support for rE!ligious schools." f1"'l 111I b.._
Broi'tl1er T~(!)mas
New Coy~e Head
Brother Thomas 'Gallagller, ·~.6.C., for the past two years fice principal, 'has been named 'principal of Coyle High 'SChool, Taunton, replacing 'Brother 'Eudes Hartnett, C:S.C.,who will -be stationed at Bishop Hendric~]ren High School, WarwiCK. Two other members of the '&yle facu1tyhave 'been trans'~red and their places taken by ·other Holy Cross Brothers. , They are Brother i\lbertus '<amitb, C.S.C. and Brother Albert :eiri, C:S.C., who will 1each 'at 'Notre Dame High School, West Maven, Conn. . · 'Their places and that of Bro. "Thomas wi11be filled ''by Bro. ·.iogues Walsh and Bro. 'Carl Win:" .tel'S, C.S.C from Holy 'Cross High School, Flushing, 'N:¥'. 'and 'Brother Michael Roper, 'C:8:0. 'fr6m St. Edward's University, 'Austin, Texas.
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BALTIMORE (NO) _ The maj.or ne.1i:g.iotlS -:faiths ,of 'Baltimore have lOrganized ;a :counCil desi~ned taaid £o:ne.ign ·5tll.1dents .in the N.S. ' The Baltimore :Council ifor Inte.l1national Students seeks Ito fUl'l.thergood;will ihnoug!l .per_ sonal contacts betw.eenforeign students and American families iIi Baltimol1e. l".artiaipa:bing ,organizaiiions -in t'he 'COuncil :ar.e: the. 'Mlfl'yland ·Council .0T :Chur.ches, ilhe ,Ca'U!lc,.. lie Archdiocese of Baltimore, '[!he .Jewish .community 'of the pity and !the :Gneek :Or.t:hodox :JOll'l-
'JlJDCGR])' ·GWT;: More t'han 5,000 class'ical records va:lued at .$20;'000 have been donated to Niagara University by radio stations WHLD and WVRLD-FM in Niagara Falls, N.Y. Earl C. Hull, owner of the stations, discusses gift with F-ather Joseph T. McCahill, C.'M.,Niagara',s academic -Vice pr.esid.ent. NCPho'to. '
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H~!fEREST
,ON YO,UR SAVINGS .lNYJESJmIN CA1HOLlCCHUR£:H AND I:IOSP.ITAL .BONDS In Uriits of $5:00 or More
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:for 'detailelll information write to CHA:lRJLlES .EA. 1V[U.RJ?lHIY
Registered Representatiw ,145 Pond Street Winchester, Mass• 'PA
9~2696
'Name JOSEPH CARIGNAN
\WA'NiTiED: Gl'i'i~ :sAERmBlWESSES !Might !l\ot Ghrist••the· G""d Sh<:IJheril. :be calling you to His service? The SiRters Servan.t.~ of ,the ~l:mnll1aulntc !Heart 'of ,Ma17 :8er~e tthe tdh1ine $hepherd ofsO\l1~ in 'the :rdllow'il\g ·:ficlds: 'meacliing, Social \Work, :NnT'Ring, J.~o'toign IMissions. !Domestic' ; Wmk. Ror details wete': 'R",,,erenil 'Mather l'.rov'ineilil. :Prov'ineidl lIIous" of '&he .Good ,Sh~pherd, Bay' Wlie.w •.-Saoo. ·'MJiin".
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'THE' 'BRoTHERS O'F ':rRE SACRED HEART
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The oouncil.tis :offering its ser:vices to coLleges :and other ':liiu.cational insti:IJutions in Ba'1'timore and vicinity..Its imma!tiate aim is to pro:vide <ho!!pitality to for.e.ign .students in .Amer.team homes befGre they ;b~g:in 1Jlhcir .studies.
CHICAGO (NC)R. Sar,gent 'Shriver Jr. would like industry and business to provide two-year leaves absence ior employees willing to join the U.S. Peace Corps \\llich he 'directs. He suggested that .the leaves provide reemployment benefits. 'Middle Mal\Power' "1 am 1l0peful that labor will gr.ant. its .people who enter the Peace Corps 'the re-employment TIghts that have been accorded up to now to veterans of wars," Mr. Shrjver .said in an address at the 63rd annual convocation 01 De Paul University. :He revealed 10,000 persons who already have volunteered . for the Peace Corps constitute "onb' a ,drop in the bucket of . demands that have been made and will be made." The big demand is for volunetf,ers who can fill "middle manpower" jobs since underdeveloped countries generally have 'skilled lenders at the top and an :abundantsupply of manual labor ,at the -bottom, Mr. Shriver said. Presents (GhaUenge :He called .for volunteers .£rom ,the ,academic .community and from ~griculture and added that women are needed to serve as nurses' 'aids, 'teachers and chiId- ' .care wonkers. The success :of .the corps depends lIPon a "total .response" 'from Americans, be said. "Communists are 'not supermen. They are average -human beings who often per.form below average. If we fail,. it will be because we 'did not give the best that is in us," Mr. Shriver declared.
of
i~ the term used by Holy Family lI'igh 'Schoo1. seniors to describe their 'class 'Pres'ident, handsome 18-:y,ear..,old.Joseph .Carignan, in their yearbook. "P,er.sonality plus," ~sa\y:s-Sister Vil'ginia, principal of the · N:ew 13ec1'folld high school, Joseph served as vice-president but adding 'somewhat rue_of 1:he:5tudent council. , .c 11 th t '''J h . .He IS ,the son of Mr. and Mrs. · aU y a ' QSep 1S ,an ,ave- 'George 'E. Carignan, 386 Union T,age ·student." Joseph was Street 'Mr. 'Carignan is New . ,cleated by his .classmates as rt:heir Bedford Joint 'Board director of .p'1:esilflent durin-g Fxeshman, the ,Textile Workers Union of .J'Ul'I:ior and :Senior years. ,He is America (AFL-CIO). The youth :completing .the ;general course was graduated from Holy Fam;and wiill major ]in ibusinessad- By Grammar School and isa :minif>tr.alion .at New Bedford communicant of St. Lawrence .:Lt1stituteoTIDechnology,which be Church. plans to enter in ·September. The family ::;pendseach .SumAn .avid .basketball :fan, Joseph mer in Maine where Joseph has ;play.eel .tile ,gaane ,at Ho~y FamilY secured a job 'for the coming duriug his mst .three .y.ears at the .geason. He is undecided '.about ·.school .and was .mana,gerduring .his e;ventual car.eer but a teacher his' fies.t, .third .and fo.ur.thy.ears. characterized. him as ill "born He played on.the .school baseball leaCl~ and a ve:r:y fine boy." ,teaJ,u ·asa .freshman. . IRe ,w.as a .member cof ,the .'Sewin,g ·Macliines.P.;u Mcikes: ~s~:$!ll" s.c.hool',g RiS.tcll:y Club this year, AT WHOLESALE PRICES f,j a li.bJ:al:Y aide' last y.ear ,and ,a
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THEANC-HOR'Thurs., June 15, 1961
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Grammar grades 4-5-6-7-8 . THE BROTHERS Of 'TME -S'AtlRIEIO HEART
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THE ANO:O~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 15,1961
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-Commencement-Talk' . ~
,Asserts Disparity Among P~oples 'Core of Unrest
Centennial··
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Perhaps the most formidable task these days is the commencement talk. ' , The speaker so unfortunate as to have been persuaded into giving such an address is confronted by two unenviable choices. :He may draw a dismal pict'ure or the modern-day world, inveigh against Communism, moral decay, or . whatever evil of the,-time that has particularly impressed him or caused him the most serious inconvenience lately. In line with that, superhighways' and traffic problems qualify as acceptable topics for 'commencement talks. And into this firefighting world he mercilessly projects the graduates, with a tone that indicates for ~1l the' world that he is quite delighted to welcome to the ranks of fellow-sufferers his hearers who ruive been protected in academic cocoons up until now. That IS one approach - the prophet of doom angle. The alternative is equally 'boring. , ' This is the "world is your oyster" speaker. He spends , most of his talk sending the graduate forth - and always to conquer, to succeed, to meet challenges. By the time ,he finishes he is giving a quit~ literal description of himself as a success and smugly concluding that if he could do all those wonderful things then the graduates ~an 'too although a too satisfied tone often betrays an inner conviction that they probably won't; Yes, the challenge presented to the speaker is really the great one. . ' , It is given only to a fe~' men - a prime minister, a president, a secretary of state - to give a commencement ,address that will have world-wide repercussions. And that is probably just as well. For such world shattering talks would take the focus from the graduates, who are, presumably, the centez: of attraction, and give it to a stranger imported for the occasion as a certain amount of window dressing. ' So the speaker might just as well satisfy, himself 'with a few homey and honest, comments on education,' congratulate his hearers on their work, and wish them . God-speed for the future. , He might do well simply to repeat the words of St. Paul , who gave advice to the Christians of Phillippi by saying "'whatever things are true, ,whatever' honorable, whatever just, whatever holy, whatever lovable, whatever of good repute . . . think upon these things. And the God of peace will be w.ith y'ou." , And what more is to be desired.
'BALTIMORE (NC)-'"
gulf between the people "wile have and those who haw \.t'
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A NATIONS'
AGONY
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, 'Th.n.Ou.<t h thf. Weeli With th£. ChWlCh. I ' By REV. ROBERT
W. HOADA, Catholie U.iversity [I
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TODA,Y-Ma!iS as on Sunday. ,MONDAY - St. Juliana FaiBefore' we can act in the' world' ,conieri, Vo-gin." Betrothal and' with universal, opeJ;lness and jealousy and watchfulness again charity, we must first learn it are the themes of the Epistle and around the altar. Whim we 'offer' 'Gospel. Virginity in the Chrispraise and prayer we must be- tian view,has 'nothing to do wi~ come,conscious not only of pray- a negative disappro;val of sex. ing in the name Of, the Son of It is' rather a human attempi at Man but also of ,praying on be- the fullest and r.1.ost perfect love, half of the' whole of humanity. a love without the possibility ,When we offer Jesus' sacrifice- of rivals. , And the Church, as 'spouse of we must be aware of the full scop'e 'of his intention to draw Christ, is the archtye of this all men, to Himself. When we beautiful faithfulness. What is share His Body' and His Blood indicated is not a choice between our Communion lacks reality if the love of God and the love of 00, leW 0 e~ it does not reach out to strangers men, but ,a love of God by means and to enemieso of a love of human beings, withAs the Father of the whole Church, Pope John h asTOMORROW-Mass as on Sun- out demands, with expectations. as an ever-pressing concern-the training of men for the day. How pitiful it is when our priesthood. In words that deserve wide quotation, speak- Mass intentions and our memenTUESDAY-Mass as on SUllling to a group of seminarians from Italy and Sicily, the tos, and petitions at Mass are day. That unity which is the Holy Father hit upon a truth that lay people, as well as week atfer week solely con- product of chaste love will not clergy, would do well to take to heart': "You are not' pre-, cerned with our own narrow in- be realized perfectly in this terests, our relatives' and friends. world. So creation, as the Epistle paring yourselves for service in an ideal, chimerical world; For if the human heart is not says, is in a state of evolution if you have been thinking this you are in for bitter disil- drawn out of itself and the con- and travail, constantly attemptlusionment. Make no mistake about it. The true priest of templation of its needs in' this ing to give birth to that which the Lord does not live by noudshing dreams of unattain- action of public worship, it will be realized fully only ill able' earthly happiness, much less of comfort.'. and, well- would seem doomed to a pereh- God's consurnm.ation. Ilial narcissism. The languishing This is the Christian idea: II being. Nor does he waste time lamenting past happy ages, state of Catholic social thought refusal to settle for '''prUdent'' which never were in reality. It' is the same today 'as it was is certainly to be explained in , and established ways; a restless yesterday and always will be: we shall have to fight, and part by a public worship which is striving to incarnate,' to bring . I'd' f °th d h 't " still largely an a-social and pri- into the flesh and human realto remam so 1 m aI an c an y. vate affair of individuals rather ity, the individed humanity This view, which the Pope called "a clear, cool view of than the comqJ.on prayer 'of a assumed by the Word of God in present reality; a reality which is full of anxieties, just as community. His coming. ' , it always has been," is a refreshingly honest one. Many SATURDAY _ St. Gregory WEDNESDAY - St. Aloysius times leaders-both clerical and lay-are so intent on lBarbarigo, Bishop, Confessor.. Gonzaga, Confessor. Christian painting the goal that they hope to attain, describing the The Mass for 'this new feast is morals are the morals of acceptutopia -toward which they are' bending their 'efforts, that the Mass of a confessGr bishop, ance rather than rejection, of beginning "Statuit," with its the temptation enters to equate religion and lack of anxi- ,Gospel parable of the talents.. love rather than hatred, of affireties, holiness and the absence of any cares, the family of Again, it is the man who ven- mation rather than negation. "He God struggling hei'e on earth 'and the family of God tri- tures out, who takes chances, is not the God of the dead, but of umphant in heaven. ; " not the One who hides at home the living" (Gospel). Not dead escape, but living engagement. There will never- bea day" when the' ideal world to protect what he has, who , Not dead refusal, but a living gains the Master's approval and exists on this earth. This is a fact-not a source for blessing. The Bread of Life we "yes" to life. Not dead protection, discouragement in work nor dampening of zeal. What all -share in Word and Sacrament at " but living danger. This Mass of a great moral must work for-fight for with faith and charity-is the Mass is food for an apostolate in building up of the New Jerusalem, the kingdom of God, which no man is an alien and no teacher returns us to the fonts of morality, which, for the Chrisin the souls of men and 'in nations. Accompanying this country is foreign., tian, are, not human doctrines, task' will be struggle, cares, anxfet,ies, failures-but the FOURTH SUNDAY AFTER however good, but a divine covPENTECOST - Jesus .teaches enant. A covenant in which borb presence, also, of the One who' told' 'Hisfollowers' "take', from His position in Peter's boat. eourage, I have overcome the world." " So it is in every Mass. Not only morals and dogma are servants of unity and love. is Jesus present, teaching; offer'ing, communicating His li~e :to Receiy~ men, but one of the w3ysin Mother, which He is present is in the Loyola U.' Degrees , , person of the celebrant, the ,NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A president of our public worship. And this president is either 'a mother ami' son were graduated bishop in cOmmunion, with from Loyola ·University of' the OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER : Peter's, Chair at Rome or the , South h~re. For 20-year-oidBill Caldwell, pr,iest-vicar of such a bishop.' Published weeKly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 'This is why the Catholic is so a major in political science, it 410 Highland Avenue jealous of unity 'in worship was the end of a' four-year Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 around one altar, Every Mass, is course, made in three years and a visible sign of unity with that summer sessions. He wi!' enter PUBLISHER ancient primatial See. whose the university law school in SepMost Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. special business is the oneness of tember. ASST. GENERAL MANAGER GENERAL MANAGER the universal Church, a oneness For Mrs. Morris Caldwell It which certainly. has its constitu- was a goal reached' after 24 Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll tional'and organizational aspects years in evening, school. Her . , MANAGING 'EDITOR but whose basis is sacramental degree was in elementary eduHu~h J. Golden and liturgicaL cation.
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not'" is the real problem .... derlying world crises, the Undelf Secretary of the United Nati_ stated here . Dr. Ralph J. Bunche said .graduation exercises at LoyoJlll College that this disparity amoDll peoples "provides the sternest long-range test for the Unitea Nations and the world." Dr. Bunche, who received _ honorary degree at the exercise,. 'declared that the distance "betWeen the one-third of t'world's peoples regarded as developed ... and the two-thirdle who are ,underdeveloped ... ~ unhappily, not only wide bua steadily widening." Potentially Ominous He referred to it as "a concRo> tion that is most ominous in iIIIIl potential for stimulatig restiveness, desperation and uphelW4ilI among peoples." But the U. N. official did mtiJ paint an entirely black pictUM . of world affairs. He said "theM need be no third world war," and that "despite the most receJl4 discouragements and setbacks;" there is "a strong dispositioa among people everywhere • avert war." He added that "it is the prime purpose ,of the United NatiODll to seek to harness the peace:fld desire of peoples and to create of it an irresistible force agaiDIIJ war." Referring to the recent ra~ incidents in Alabama and Missiesippi, Dr. Buncheasserted: "ThflW could have been avoided, I believe, with a, little commoa sense and tolerance and were .. not for the callous and rachril attitudes of some state and loe8l authorities who openly endol'M bigotry." "Such officials," he stated, "ani the relatively few who form the ,mobs who savagely attack defenseless ,people are a, discredit to a civilized people and are noll representative of the Americaa community. They do, howevella give much aid and comfort .. our communist detractors."
Urges Emigres Aid Vocations",
, ROME ,(NC)-The most prOJDo, ineot Polish churchman outsiet. Poland called on his fellow Polish emigres to preserve ·~tbII heritage of our forefathers" and cited the work of Polish-Am~ icans in this respect as a "b~ liant example," " Archbishop, JozefGawlin1ft, Miiitary Vicar of the Polish armed forces during World Wu II, issued to Poles,living abroad a message concerning the coming lOOOth anniversary of the co&version of Poland, A longtime resident of Rome, Archbishop Gawlina is now secretary of 000 of the preparatory commissiOml for the coming ecuqJ.enical ,co~ cil. He told Polish emigre grouprJ they have two ma'in tasks': 'the education of their youth and the fostering of vocations to 'the priesthood. After stating 'tiia!l Polish young people should pl. active roles in the culture of the countries where they live, _ ,went on to say: . "It is nevertheless essenChil that our children preserve' tile heritage of our forefathers, tblla they kno:w not only the langua.... but the history, the merits aIMl cultural values which Pol'" brought to the treasury of ~ 'manity, and that 'they bepr~ :of them and surround them wia love. This is the task of 'the fa... ily home, of the Church and' _ school. '''Our' honorable 'fellow-couiitrymen in America give lIS • brilliant 'example in this respeet. Their contribution to the gro~ of' the Church in the UniW States is huge, and their' adm.... able generosity supports the spirit of, our brothers in . . homeland and the refugee. scattered throughout the worl" Let their, exemplary PoliA schools, which have passed t!be test magnificently, be a shinq example to all,of us!"
\ .t:atholics Protest St. "'Red .Attacks' i: 'in Mexico ";. PUEBLA (NC)-An. ea,t i mat e d 150,000 M~i~D .Catholics have staged PJ,888 demonstrations to protest
THE ANCHOR...... , ',7 lean Baptiste, FaU River,> Fifth .Fre~ch· Thurs., 15, 1961 Asserts Personal P~h in Area, Serves Over 2,000 Jvne
By Marion Unsworth .\ By 1895, the need of a fifth parish for French-speaking Catholics in the city of Fan RiVer was realized and Dominican prie sts eame to serve the people in the Stafford Road area. By 1901 St. Jean Baptiste was established as a parish, and Rev. Joseph S. Fortin became its first pastor. Father Fortin. however, remained in Fall River oilly one year before his transfer r.·... ------.-, , . to Woonsocket, R.I.. and ;. .: Rev. H. J. MuStJely succeeded him at St. Jean's. From the f '
against increased communist' at·tacks on the Church in :tbi3 cOuntry. . ' '.: Approximately 100,000 persoM -oome of them coming ~om 'some 20 nearby tOwns - tOok part' in the anti-Red. .dem- beginning of the parish, parishonstration here, which was 8Iso ioners used the basement of a aimed against the seizure' of building at the corner of StockPuebla University by RedS' 1D ton Street and Stafford Road IUl a church. April. . An anticommunist demonstraWhen Father Mussely died. in tion by Catholics also took place 1908, Rev. Joseph E. Potvin and m the industrial city of Leon later Rev. Norbert Blanchard . where a crowd estimated at succeeded him for a short while, 60,000 participated.', until Father' Potvin returned to In contrast . with previous .St. Jean's for his second pastorcommunist-led' demonstrations, ate. During this time the church which have never exceeded 20,- on Stafford· Road was built in 000 participants, the Catholic 1926.. 'demonstrators completely filled Ever since the parish had been tbJa citl of 200,000 inhabitants. form'ed, a·' house on Tucker Street had served as rectory. Seize University , Approximately 2,500 police Originally the Tucker. Farm House, Monsignor M. P. Leonidas and soldiers were placed . on "alert status" here following the Lariviere, p.re~nt pastor, el!tidemonstration. The Mexican mates it is 125 years old. constitution includes a ban, on New School Church activities of this kind. along with other anti-Catholic Another house on Stafford ,provisions, But in recent' years Road was purchased a year after such provisions have not been' the death of Father Potvin in strictly enforced by the govern-' . 1937,' and after renovation was .ment. . established as St. Jean Baptiste , In Puebla, 79 miles ~rom Mex-' Convent. That· same year, the ,teo City, communists, have . new school was erected, "one of stepped up anti-Catholic activ- .' the finest in the area," Montty by lltreet fights, demonstra- :. signgr Lariviere proudly r.eports. tions and the stoning of a par-" , The school situated ne~t the " ,.ochia!, school . sinc~ they "cap-", rectory and dortvent, contains 12 " I, ' ,tured th~ UI1lVerslty here., "'classrooms' housing eight grades ST. JEAN' BAPTI$~E, F:A.LL RIVE~" \ ,,' Approxlmately.1,OOO commun- "and a' kindergarten. With. an , 1st-led students, about .one fift.h :: enrollment of' 367 students, it is Assisted ·by Rev.' Donald" E. Society of Ste. Anne, Holy Name Society, Children of Mary, CYO, "the ~otal enrollmen'~, selZ~ UI1l- ", staffed 'by the': Sisters of St. Belanger,' and Re~": Maurice verSlty classrooms In AprIl. The ... JO'seph The' schoOl'and convent Jeffreys, Msgr. LarIVIere cares Confraternity of Christian DoeRed students still ~old the uni- were built by Rev. Philias Jal- for some 2287 souls. Active or- trine, Boy and Girl Scouts and. verslty by threatenmg to throw . 'bert, who succeeded Father Pot- ..I ganizations in the parish include a BroWnie troop. bombs at anyone who attempts vin as pastor in the French par' to dislodge them. ish.
'. · t Lea der ....St.Monsignor Lariviere came to Ca IyanlS Jean's in 1945. He set himself t P M,a¥ V·· 151 ope'
EDINBURGH (NC)-The heir of John Knox as leader of Scot-
land's staunch Calvinists may ;robn
pay' a courtesy call on Pope early next year.
the task of reducing the parish debt of $55,000, which he has ,accomplIshed, as well as building . up the parish treasury for the "constrqction of a new rectory, a project scheduled to start in the "near future. He has also placed stained glass windows in the 'church.'
Sick of Co racas .Offer Sufferings For R d e Success osaryerusa
CARACAS (NC)~Hundredsof, patients in Caracas hospitals ~re offering their pain for the success of Father Patrick Peyton's current Rosary crusade here. 'A' Rosary "task force" which has been showing movies on the Rosary in the city's hospitals enlisted the patients in 'this campaigri Of suffering. Father Pey-' ton's assistants mad'e a point of explaining the role' of suffering and how it can be turned to good use in the Christian life. Father Peyton's campaign to establish the Family Rosary in this Venezuelan capital began March 25 and ends July 25. Teams of movie projectionists ,,' f . and catechists tour the slums 0 . h the city with color movIes on t e Mysteries of the Rosary. The Rosary crusa d e 0 f th e I' rIS h - b orn Holy Cross priest also uses house-to-house convassing, radio broadcasts and 'mass rallies.
Such a visit by the Very Rev. A. C. Craig, Moderator (presidfng officers) of the (Presbyterfan) Church of Scotland, was . ,Pa~(l;7JIl"IIUlay ReBeaSie~ tentatively approved by the de~ nomination's General Assembly 'Catlho~ic Pl!'i$~ftlers .' here. The General Assembly ap- ' ASUNCION (NC)~Paraguay's proved a motion to this ,effect Catholic Action ieaders.have obCD condition that its intertained the release of five more church relations committee agree. : of' their organization members , The motion proposing the visit w'h'o were arrested by police as eo the Pope was'onmade by the of Glasgow, '''communists'' after they took Rev. Roy Anders 'g who noted that Dr. Cral wI'11 be part in a student demonstration. in Rome early in 1962 for the The five were arrested at the centenary of the Scottl'sh church same time as Eliseo Sosa Conthere. stantini, editor of .ParaguaY'1! 'He described a meeting be- Catholic Action weekly, Comuntween the Pope and the moder- idad, who was tortured by police. ator as "an example and a sym- Comunidad had been critical of . f P araguayan P resPia, y Important Role bol of hope" to a world torn by the regune 0 divisions and bitterness. ident Alfredo Stroessner. ParaFather Peyton said that in his . . 0 g~ay's Bishops and' Catholic orRosary. crusades in other parts Welcome Pope's Attitude ganizations, the Catholic' Press of tne world he has always tried ,"'I sometimes have doubts Association' of the U. S. and to enlist the, help and prayers of about the future pattern of what Canada; and the L~tin American the sick. the church should be," he added. . Union of the Catholic Press have "All we have to do is make elf view with some discomfort all issued protests against the them aware of the meaning of the possibility of there ever police brutality used against Mr. suffering," he said. ' being anything like a monolithic Sosa, who has 'also been let out "In Africa we saw,.hundreds structure for ·a world-wide. of jail. of lepers more than anxious to murch. ,. Release of the five other jailed . "For too long the separa~ .c~tholic Action plembers was' SishHl'S' ,~htll'ches, our, own among them. ,S!lc.ur~ by the '. organization'a VIENNA (NC)-About 10,000 have sought to defend themselvell ~at~Qnal .C9uncil,and Coadjutor Sisters belonging to 41 different smugly behind ecclesiastical cur- ,Bishop Anibal MaricevlchFleitaa communities still 'survive m. . ~~s. Today tile curtainS are be- J' Of Villarica, nat~onal: coW1Bclo:r communist. - ruled' CzeehasloIna lowered·littl~· by li~tle. The' 'of Catholic Action." , " . . vakia.' . Iblghest curtain natural17 remains between- the Church of. ; Rome and the Refoi:mecl '~',., " . , ,'; ",u~ches.. , :',' '~,.. " .. ,"I think we.m\Jst an have wcl-. · '~med the' .new ecUmen~eal llttltude' of Pope Johri, his setting '.,\ _ ,~ o( an eC1.pl1e~('al.co~ttee. : the sendingC\lt observei'll to St. ,.~\ . :.. .. • ~drews (meeting place of the ! " Ip,entral 'Coi:i1ll'ittee of the World '.. " .~u~cil of ~.hurch,es) last Sum- , . @ PARTIES e eANQUm. o' WEDDIN9S mer and the promise of sending . observers to New Delhi thhJ ~ .COMMUNION BREAKFASTS Summer. "Equally we must appreciate 1343 PlEASAAr ST. ~. 'AU RIVER that the Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr. Geoffrey Fisher) OSborne 3-1780 t\~ . sought to show his own appredation and that of Angllcmtn ~ IWiJ recent visit to ~ Vatican..'"
lay their constant pain and ~ guishat the feet of Our Lady as soon as they understood. the value of their suffering." . Father Peyton said tbe sick have played im important role . in winning the 10 million. pledges for the Family Rosary he bas received since lauching his erusad~ 19 years ago
Sfill Work
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work today according ta tMI founder of a new CathoUtl group for service to the pOOl". Diane Ruth Downey of Loo Angeles believes "if St. Vincentl; de Paul were alive today, be'd redouble his efforts." Mim Downey is president of the As.ro= elation of Ladies of Charity. Miss. Downey is convinced th~ there is a greater need today fex? Ladies of Charity than when St. Vincent liv~d. She noted that much welfare work today 111 impersonal. "St. Vincent believed In Pelb sonal service to the poor and the Ladies of Charity believe in pel'sonal service to the poor," she stressed. "That is active, personal service, given in visiting hOGpitals, visiting the poor, the sick., bef,?re any other aid is given to them.'"
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ST. LOUIS (NC) - Th.t.l need for and the increasing absence of personal service is major problem in socia!
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'To Guilds; C!ubs Beginning in the Fall a meej' demonstration will be avaA12rbJ«l to ·guilds· and other women's C\\b ganizations throughout the Di&. ,cese, which can guarantee ~ "'audience Of 100 or more. . . Sponsored by A & P .~ I .Stores, arrangements 'fu1r tJtc demonstration can be ma~ hlr writing to A&P Sales Off~ Harris' Avenue, Cranston, R. L.· _. Requests should be made G :fi:tr in advance as possible Em<!! state date, time and place dl , meeting. The presentation tak~ . from 45 minutes to an hour ancl includes the.reducing of varioue wholesale cuts of meat to retail! size. ',The cuts are donated ~ . prizes. Inspectiozi and grading stan~ . . . a r d s are explained and budget:" PRAYING ROSARY IN JAPAN: Rev. Damel Perry, stretching tips on meat purcb. SS.CC., G'f Fairhaven and his converts pray the Rosary asing given. . . ' :. before beginning their Legion of Mary meeting. To attract; ' . The demonstration has. ~ · f . h' d" h' . gIven to many church groupS ... a tten t Ion o pagans In 18 IstrlCt, Tsuc lUra, Japan, Father, the. Boston.area and is also ~.:
to have a large kitchen with III ,fireplace, this is the spot for your eating area. Place a trestle table in front oj tl!e fireplace and you'll find the kitchen the' most· lived-in room in your house. This table is roomy enough for hOl]lework or a card game wiUn Perry says it is often necessary to make devotions to ,the children. Jesus and MarY externally impressive. To overcome dangers: If you aren't '&ble to build II wide cotinte~ or have a perunsula entailed in this, Father has taught the eonverts value of' in your room, try placing Zl table prayer so that their devotion to Mary will be a true homage against your window, parallel Oll' ,from their hearts.. ' "t right angles, :for Zl sUDny setting. A sawbuck table at ,right angles won't take up too much space. A single pedestal table is also a great convenience, ~n Pursu~t for it aHords lots of room 100Following completiQn of work 'she was admitted to mem~ knees. , Whatever plans you ean mam ,ilor a 'Master of Education de~ ship in PI Lambda Theta, nation.... gree in the Academie Year" Into pro.vide a cozy, cheery sp~ ,lOll' Irtitute sponsored by the Nationai al honor and professional assothe family's snacks 01' hurry-up Science Foundation at Harvard eiation for women in education. P~ss-Tllrough" meals will please them and give Following her Summer work . Did you ever give a thought you ll' great feeling of aecom- University; Sister Barbara Mary, to a little pass-through counter? . plishment, because you are 821l'- S.U.S.C. will, continue work at a¢ Harvard,' Sister will teach Harvard thiG Summer, having mathematics' at Sacred Hearts One .tbat is easy to install, -and ing yourself time and lab~ won a scholarship .for a~vanced .Acadelll,Y, Fall River. She ill 't~ easily disguiseable, will accomwork m the field <Ii statistics. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vinmodate seats for two to four Nun-Author Receives :Already the bolder eli a B.S. ' cent F. Scully, Taunton,' and 8l people. When not in use louvered University Award! . cllegree, summa cum laude, in graduate of St, Mary's High doors . close off the kitchen, , DAYTON (NC)-The Unlvell'- mathematics, and 1II veteran of IS School. in th~t city. leaving only a shelf on the dining room ~ide, where you can City of Dayton's annual llwaM years teaching experience, Sister Psychology MajOe arrange a bowl ,of fruit or an fur the year's outstanding book Barbara Mary added to her lauon the Blessed Virgin Mary hoo rels this year when, in addition Graduated from Seton Hilll eye-catching long planter. been awarded to Sister Mary tl9 earning her master'&! degree, ~ollege this month with, high Those on the kitchen side can Pierre of the' Sisters 'ocf Merc~ honors was another member at. lIleach' for more coffee or what- North Plainfield, N:J. the Holy Union community, Sishave-you and serve those on the Guild! The Marian Library Medal! dining room side. • New officers fer the Catholile ter William MariB. A psychology . was awarded for the book "Mary 'Women'll Guild m¢ otis Air Force major, she has been awarded aD Many people maintain that the Was Her Life," a biography GI! best place to eat in unaffected Sister Maria Teresa Quevedo o!f Base will be installed Sunday, assistan~hip in her field at Fordeomfort is the kitchen. Do you the Carmelite Sisters of Cha.ri~ July 9. 'X'hey mclude ll&rs. John ham University, to become· ., " . , . . : E. O'Donnell, president; :Mrs. . effective ~n· September. need to "wake up" your break- in Spain. She is the daughter of Mi'. Qnd fast corner? A few decorating Sister Mary Pierre'll nwaNi Anthony Hernandez, vice presio tricks can make it gay. Let's. opened the 1961 Marian. Institute dent; :Mt!l'18. EdweKd I.: Slatter~ Mrs. ':William Cleare of' lBl~lW ~ . Name parish, Fall'River. 1Uldertake the job of: changing. it." o.nthe university ,campus. Purchase on outstanding wall- . I' paper (you probably won't· need Sucordium Clubo' 100 many rolls, so you can be a ,Mrs. Raymond J. Connors, bit' extravagant) and a braided ,general chairman, will. be aided' 1 rug. Be sure to get a washable . by a large committee in prepara- . plastic wall covering and a rug tions for a fashion show to be that is tubbable. This tug, of sponsored Tuesday. Sept. 12 by , , course, is put on ii spatter lino- . the Fall River Sucordium Club. leum, with warm bright colors- The event will be staged at l'eds, greens" yellows. \Tenus de Milo "restaurant, and An old pine table (or even a. ~ill be open to the public. sawbuck picnic table) with benches, some captain's chairs end maybe a dresser or commode against the wall will be cheery on the dullest of mornIngs. Another treatment of this PRIVATE DAY CAMP /bOrner 'might be to cover the IN' SWANSEA ~. walls with white paneling. You ean ,get ·color through gay cur~ OPENS JUNE 26 tains, colorful plants or fruit·, .lIupervised Water ActivitieG. prints Ott the walt
Holy. Union Sisters Win Honors of Advanced Studies
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Insignis Medaf NEW YORK (NC) - Frall'lldl Cardinal Spellman, marking tb0 50th anniversary of his graduation from Fordham College, hall been awarded Fordham Uni~ sitY'sI~signjs Medal.
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'THE
Le:isurely Sun'dayBreakfast Delightful Time of -Week
ANCHORThurs., June 15, 1961
Academy Seniors Merit Honors
By Mary Tinley Daly S-u-n-d-a-y B-r-e-a-k-f-a-s-t •.. It carries a leisurely *Klnotation all its own. Though the rate afternoon and evening hours of Sunday may be crowded, Sunday morning-into aoon-is family time, and a wonderful occaSion to entertai- f r i end 8 infonnally. cut side, broil and serve with -come on home and have maraschino cherry in center. keakfast with us," is such Kidney stew can be prepared _ easy invitation to extend the day before and be beated .. people new in the pariah, or .. those who do not have family eommitments. With five keakfasts durlag the week, . .ten more or - less on-the-run, ald the sixth *etchy, Sunday .. the time to enjoy companIonship, along with a really llearty meal. At our house, tile word "brunch" is OUT. (My angers fumble-I can hardly tap it out on this typewriter.' The Bead of the House loathes the word and that is sufficient reaIIOIl for making it anathema. 1Ia~ of fact, we feel the same ..,.: it's one of, those sticky terMs, altogether too "togetheraeIsy" to be uttered without lIe1f":consciousness. '"It's either breakfast or lunch." -.e Head of the House says, Jorthrightly and perhaps a bit .gmatically. "But if it's the first aeal of the'day-no,matter how lMe--it'jj still BREAKFAST!" O.K. So it may go on until past noon? It is still delightful, that Sunday breaking of bread after attendance at Mass. Fat Sunday papers are spread from here to ~re, corners may even dip into the butter. syrup may drip into the middle of an account of President Kennedy's plans for all upcoming conference. An argument over the state of the world may be iIiterrupted by. "'!Kore coffee?" There is no hurry, no flurry. • is a long time until the week'. atiea take hold once more, in tbe or«inary househOld. Of course, when there are . . . .J' small children, Sunday aornmg is not a time of leisureliness. It's a wash-feed-dress, *'ess-feed-wash routine plus the ebanging or-the guard to get te ..... Even so--and we remem.... well Sunday brings a . . . .-calm. On the practical side, of course, Ill. yin g that big breakfast planned, even partially prepared ahead of time. is a great saver of tkne and nerves, a bolster for ORe who would offer hospitality. Some . of the readers of this eolumn have offered tips for that Sunday breakfast we'd like to pass on: Cut and prepare grapefruit the .gbt before, overturn. Next aorning spread brown sugar on
next morning: Cut kidneys from tendons. In frying pan saute kidneys (we prefer lamb or yea! to beef) with onions and celery; shake flour over when nearly done. Add water, finely chopped potatoes, carrots, mushrooms, salt, pepper, oregano and simmer. Serve over buttered toast and wait for the applause, and calls for seconds and thirds. There is the easy and always acceptable sausage and scrambled eggs, creamed chipped beef on baked potatoes, and corned beef hash with eggs baked on top (be sure to cover eggs so they won't get leathery). With calorie consciousness ignored for the time being, special adjuncts are the "bot breads," a special Sunday morning treat. We used always to make these from scratch on Saturdays for, goodnell8 k now s , packaaged goodies can run into real money when one is feeding a large family. Now that our family is smaller and ,the cook older and lazier, we turn to the packaged items and do a bit of doctoring: add raisins to dough, put seeds and melted butter on top, perhaps some cinnamon, brown sugar or nuts. After a whopper of a breakfast, the day is free from kitchen work until a late dinner. Nice day-S-u-n-d-a-y!
Somerset Women Plan Picnic Annual family picnic of Somerset Catholic Women's Club will be held at Cathedral Camp from 1 to 5 Sunday afternoon, June %5. Families needing directions to the camp will meet at St. Thomas More Church, Somerset, at 12. Soda will be available and picnickers will bring their own lunches, according to Mrs. Llt1iis Magoni, general chair-
man. The afternoon's program will include games for adults and children, prizes, and supervised swimming. It will close at 5 with Benediction. It is Stressed that parents will be responsible for tbeirown children's safety. Committees planning the eve n t include games, soda, cleanup, parking and prizes.
Taunton Women
Clotilde Nason heads the Queen's Daughter!> of Taunton fOl' the coming year, aided by Mrs. George Saxon, vice president; Mrs. James Downing, re'cOf'ding secretary; Mrs. Stuart 'relate Confirms Class PI-.ce, corresponding secretary; M1's.: Francis Sarac-eo, financial Retarded Children secretary; Mrs. 'James Blount, SYRACUSE (NC) - For the treasurer. first time in the history of the Srracuse diocese a group of re'tarded children received the .crunent of Confirmation a& a .,eeial class. Bishop Walter A. Foery of Syracuse administered the sacr.ament to the class of 18 at a special ceremony held in Holy PRIVATE TUTORING' ero. church in nearby Dewitt. IN STUDENT'S HOME '!.'be class had been preparing for iIae sacrament for 18 months. Sementary and Junior Tell. of the children had reHigh School Subjects ~iYed their First Communion Call OS. 2-7320 • few days earlier, making the between 6·9 P.M. first tilDe in the diocese that retarded children made their First .mmunion in a group.
Honors merited by graduating seniors at Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River, include scholarship insignia to Carolyn Howarth, Mary Ann Christensen, Joan Majkut, Sylvia Laureanno, Diane Perry, Beverly Leach, Cornelia Harrington, Lynn Basinger and Janice Lapointe. They were highest ranking academic students. Miss Howarth also merited a gold medal for superlative achievement from the National Association for the Promotion of the Study of Latin and a four year partial scholarship to the University of Massachusetts. Miss- Per.ry earned an American Legion Auxiliary award for outstanding character, scholarship, leadership and courage, and a leadership award went to Caretl Chrupcala, student council president.
PRESERVES PRICELESS TAPESTRIES: A Franciscan Missionary Sister f1f Mary labors over one of the Vatican's pric.eless collections of tapestries in Vatic.an City laboratories where a small but highly skilled group of experts preserve for the world the rich heritage of the past which is part of the Vatican Museums exhibit. NC Photo.
'Work Horse' for Confraternity Marks Half-Century in Rei igion GLEN RIDDLE (NC)-A Thi,rd Order Franciscan nun who has been acclaimed widely as a "work horse" for the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine marked a half century in religious life here in Pennsylvania. Sister' Mary Presentina, cosupervisor of CCD work in the Spokane, Wash., diocese, came across country especially for the jubilee celebration, At the sisterhood's motherhouse, Our Lady of the Angels Convent, she joined with 11 other nuns in marking golden jubilees and 46 others who celebrated 5 years ia the sisterhood. .. . C A specI.alist m. CD meth~ and. techmques, SIster Presentma durmg her stay at the motherh 0 use addressed postulants, novices and professed Sisters on her work. Teachin~
Team Sister Presentina is teamed with Sister Mary Maurina, alBo of. the Franciscan community in supervising the Spokane diocese CCD work. She and her "harness-mate" were decorated with
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Benedict Circle 61, North At'Daughters of I~bel1a. wM1 hold a day of recollection 'I'Inlrsday. June 29. other fortheeming activities include a mys~ . , . ride in charge of Mrs. Fran. . Reilly and Mrs. Linwood Stone, and a oowling team which ..ill be activated in the Fall by lIIn. Bernard Miramant. Mrs. Beatrice Leary is in charge of .-rangements for the circle'. 8eptember meeting.
the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice award by Pope John in Septembel', 1960, for their "outstanding work." Sister Presentina has been named by Father John B. Collins, S.S., director of the CCD Nationa I Center in '!ashington, ~. C., as ~ .consultant In pro~p~c tlve reViSIOn of CCD religion course manuals. The two "workhorse" nuns are the co-authors of 18 workbookfl and courses in religion which now are "standard texts" in the Archdiocese of Portland in OrelfOIl and the Dioceses of Spokane, Baker, Ore., Yakima, Wash., and Helena, Mont. The,. have been a teaching teem for 31 years.
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Scholarship Winners Scholarship winner. also included the Anthony Imbrigli. music scholarlJhip, Michele Pomiret; Cosmopolitan Women'. Club, Marlene Brown; BostoD University, four years partial tuition, Janice Lapointe; Women's Board oJ: Union Hospital and Laura Cusson Memorial Scholarship, Mary Wheatley; Simmons College, four yean partial tuition, Joan Majkut; Firestone ScholarlJhip, Mary Alltl Christensen.
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THE ANCHORThurs., June 15, 1961
'"C
Cardinal Gives Facts on Church In Africa NEW ROCHELLE (NC) -"Moderate and stable governments in the various African states" are a "very important requisite" for the growth of the Church in Africa, Laurian Cardinal Rugambwa said here. The' Bishop of Bukoba, 'ranganyika, told alumnae of the College of New Rochelle that auch governments are able to maintain law and order while also granting individuals the liberty to follow their conIciences. Maturity "Without this respect for law by both governments and citizens," that Cardinal stated, "the individual African cannot grow up to civic and political maturity. ]Je cannot become a fully responsible person thinking and acting for himself according to the dictates of his conscience." The Cardinal gave these statistics on the Church in Africa: -Baptized Catholics number lome 20 millions (about 9.5 per cent of the total population). -Africa has some 13,000 priests, about 2.000 Africans. -Religious Brothers, African and non-African, number 5,500, and there are about 21,000 Sisters. ~There are in the whole 01. Afric~, including adjacent islands like Madagascar, 260 church jurisdictions dioceses, vieariates and prefectures. Of the prelates in charge of these, about 40 were born in Africa. Education -The continent has a considet'able number of seminaries, hospitals and dispensaries, and the education of most of the leminarians is paid for by Catholics in Europe and America. -In 1959 the total number 01. pupils in schools in Africa directed by the Church was about 3.5 millions. -Africa has two Catholic universities; Lovanium, at Leopoldville, the Belgian Congo; and Roma, in Basutoland.
Columbus Day Bill WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill to make October 12, Columbus Day, a national holiday has been introduced in the House of Representatives by Rep. Dominick V. Daniels of New Jersey and re~rred to the House Judiciary Committee.
IMPACT OF CHRISTIANITY: A young member of the Legion of Mary who belongs to the Karamoja tribe of Uganda, Central East Africa, holds a younger member of the Legion. Young and old gather at the call of the Legion teacher, usually a young lay teacher who travels from tribe to tribe. The parish of the Karamajong owes much to the Legion for the gre3lt progress made in their understanding of Christianity~ NC Photo.
Catholics Loyal to Both School Systems NEW YORK (NC) - Catho-, lics feel strong loyalty to both public and parochial schools, a Catholic educator said here. Msgr. Edgar P. McCarren, school superintendent fYI. the Rockville Center, N.Y., diocese, declared that most Catholics "feel a definite obligation to support the public schools." He made the statement during a television panel discussion OIl parochial schools. Panelist Samuel Barowsky, general secretary of the National Council of Jewish Education, said the problem of support for parochial schools is no longer considered merely "a Catholic problem." But he added that education in a church school is a privilege for which one must be willing to pay. Msgr. McCarren, however, de-
clared that such education is more than a privilege. It is a right, he said, connected with the constitutionally guaranteed right of free exercise ()f religion. This right, he continued, beoomes merely theoretical for people who cannot financially afford to exercise it. He said the growth of religious schools, non-Catholic as well as Catholic, signifies that there is an increasing number of people who "find the Sunday school, the home and even the church and synagogue inadequate for religious instruction." Need Systematic Instruction "They feel the content 00. religious doctrine is such that it benefits a great deal from some form of systematic instruction in a school setting just like any other SUbject," he said. But, he added, it is ha.ppenlnc
more and more often that people who have paid their taxes for public schools are unable to pay in addition for the religious edu_ cation of their children. Msgr. McCarren, in an interview after the TV show, deelared th~t the exercise of Ireedom in religious education ift this country now involves an economic liability. Financial PenaUy "It would be more democratic," he said, "to remOVe the financial penalty. The poor should be able to give their chil_ dren a religious education at! well as the rich. "There is a moral issue here, not only for those who Ieel obliged to seek government assistance in religious education, but even more for those who are asked to approve the giving of. such aid," he said.
Religious Jilies ~
GrOup To Work
Force Polish Cook to Quit
With Students In Colle~es
NEW YORK (NC) Stung by "ridicule and hl!lmiliation" leveled at her betause of her Catholic
PITTSBURGH (NC) Bishop John J. Wrlg'llI; has established an Oratory of St. Philip Neri whose members
Faith, a 37-year-old Polish cook has defected from the household staff of Poland's United Nations delegation here. Miss Aniela Wojtowicz has toM Walter Zachariasiewicz, executive vice president of the PolishAmerican Immigration and Re~ lief Committee, Inc. she was mistrusted by the family of BogdaJl. Lewandowski, Polish U.N. representative, and had been told tbat she would soon be returned to Poland. When she heard a Polish ship was scheduled tit arrive soon, she decided to flee. Destroys Prayer Book According to Mr. Zachariasiewicz, Miss Wojtowicz was constantly being harassed at the Lewandowski household about her Catholic Faith. She said the Lewandowski children laughed at her when they found a rosary in her possession and told her only stupid people went te church or believed in God. On another occasion, she said, when the children found her prayer book, it was taken away from her and destroyed. Mr. Zachariasiewicz said Miss Wojtowicz, who joined the delegate's household staff a year ago, was not permitted to listen to the radio or to read POlishAmerican newspapers. During her shopping trips, he said, Miss Wojtowicz was kept under con.tant surveillance. Not Fooling People Her passport and. a PolishEnglish dictionary were confiscated when she arrived in this country, he said, and every effort was made to prevent her from becoming friendly with PolishAmericans. Through her spokesman, Mi9B Wojtowicz had this comment: "We Poles have a deep affection for America. We know that the people who work here are not slaves and that is why I could not stomach the AntiAmericanism and hatred for persons with religious feelings which I encountered in the Ambassador's household."
will work among Catholic students at non-Catholic collegetl. in the area. The Oratory is a society fYI. diocesan priests living under obedience in oommunity but without special vows. One of the best-known of all Oratorians was John Henry Cardinal Newman, 19th century ·British convert churchman. Cardinal Newman at one time planned to establish an Oratory at Oxford University. Though he was not successful, his idea helped inspire the Newman CI.ub apostolate to Catholic students on non-Catholic campuses. Two laymen will begin studies for ordination as priests of the Pittsburgh Oratory. They' are William Clancy, editor of Worldview magazine, publication of the Church Peace Unions, and a former editor of the Commonweal and Newsweek magazines; and John Charlot, a student at Harvard University and son of artist Jean Charlot. Three priests of the Oratory have already taken up residence here and begun the work of setting up the new foundation. They are Fathers Philip Walsh, John W. Greene and John J. Ryan. Since the Oratory is a diocesan foundation, established by Bishop Wright, members will be incardinated Into-that is, made priests of-the Pittsburgh diocese. Billhop Wright said in a statement that establishment of the Pittsburgh Oratory "may well prove the opening of an entirely new chapter in the relations between the Church and her students on general campuses of universities and colleges ill America." The Bishop has disclosed that he has conferred with' officials of some of the schools whose stu'" dents will be served by the Oratorians in connection with setting up the new foundation. The Oratory of St. Philip Neri traces its origins to 16th century Italy' and the circle of priests and laymen whom St. Philip gathered together for "Oratory meetings." These included spiritual reading, mental prayer, conferences, discussions, liturgical devotions, music and other exercises aimed at spiritual and mental development.
New Bedford Blind New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind will hold a cake sale this Saturday at the Star Store. Regular meetings of the unit will resume in September.
THE ANCHORThurs., June 15, 1961
11
Catholics Decrie Racial Melees In Alabama BIRMINGHAM (NC)Alabama Catholic spoke&.. men have deplored recent outbreaks of racial violence
lEANNE a
BOUSQUET
DOROTHY T. TARDIF
CLAIRE BEDAaD
DIANE COMEAU
LUCILLB DAUTEUIL
BLANCHE LAMARRE
ANITA TALBOT
DORIS CARON
St. Anthony Graduates to Enter Religion Eight graduates of St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, will enter religious life thil Summer. Miss Doris Caron, 85. Martha and Mary parish, Lakeville, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Caron, will enter the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in Marlboro, Mass. OIl Aug.8. Miss LuclYle Dauteuil, St. Anthony's parish, New Bedford, will enter the Servants of Our Lady, Queen of the Clergy in Lac-auxSaumons, Quebec, on July 22. Six girls will enter the Sisters of the Holy Cross in Manchester, N. H. on Aug. 14. The Holy Cross Sisters staff St. Anthony's High School. The entrants include, from St. Anthony's parish, Miss Claire Bedard, Miss Diane Comeau, Miss Blanche Lamarre and Miss
Vacation Pa'rty Bishop Cassidy Council, Swansea Knights of Columbus, will hold a Vacation Special Party this Saturday night. Arthur Leite and Paul St. Laurent are chairmen.
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Dorothy T. Tardif. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bedard; Mr. and Mrs. Simon Comeau; Mr. and Mrs. Luke Lamare; and Mr. and Mrs. Gerard E. Tardif. st. Ann's Parish From St. Ann's, New Bedford, comes Miss Jeanne R. Bousquet, daughter of Mrs. Lauria Bousquet.
Film Censorship Bill In Italian Parliament ROME (NC)-A bill has been introduced in the Italian Parliament to prohibit children under 10 years of age from entering motion picture theaters. The bill also raises the minimum age limit for "adults only" movies from 16 to 18 and requires that scripts for all movies and stage productions be submitted to a special governmental oommission for its approval befor they are shown to the public. The bill was introduced following 5() public debates held by the Italian Cineforum Federation throughout Italy which had a total attendance of over 50,000 persons.
Miss Anita Talbot, Sacred Heart, New Bedford, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louiil Talbot.
Cardinal Rugambwa To Visit Washington WASHINGTON (NC)-Laurian Cardinal Rugambwa, only Negro member of the Sacred College of' Cardinals, wili be received by G. Mennen Williams, Assistant Secretary of State for -African Affairs, during his visit to the nation's capital next Sunday and Monday. The Cardinal, who is the Bishop of Bukoba, Tanganyika, will
arrive Sunday and will offer a Mass at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception at which Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York will preach. The Cardinal will receive citations from the Catholic University during his stay here. After visiting this city, the Cardinal will visit Philadelphia. The reception by Mr. Williams at the State Department is scheduled for Monday.
in connection with antisegrega-. tion efforts by "Freedom Rlders.The Catholic Week, newspaper of the Mobile-Birmingham diocese said Alabama was "disgraced" by the "public inhumanity" of the riots here, and ill Montgomery and Anniston, Ala: 'Sad Situation' The Catholic Week charged that the State and local law enforcement officials, "by culpable default," had allowed "unauthorized persons blinded by fury' (to) take the law into their ow. hands." "Whatever these professed 'Freedom Riders' deserved, and indeed they too must examine their own consciences beiore God and the welfare of their country, it certainly was not the public inhumanity that has disgraced our State," the newspaper said. "It has been said that becl\u" of these riots, fear has stalked our cit.y streets," the Catholie Week added. "But sin has stalked them too-sin against the greatest of all the commandment-. 'Thou shalt love the Lord Th,. God and thy neighbor as th)"self: " t Satiate Mob Passion ~ It continued: "Christian chat"ity, Christian patience, Christiaa forbearance, Christian understanding, Christian tolerance. Christian integrity, Christiaa justice were all sacrificed te satiate the passion of the mob. "Christ again was crucified and the wounds of His Passion reopened not only in the wounds in the bodies of victims of the mass violence, but in the hearts of its perpetrators who so forgot their own .human dignity and religious integrity as to stoop te the level of a mob seeking v~ geance:' The Catholic Week put special blame for the violence on t.he "silence and apathy and indi£..: ference" of citizens. Such people, it said, "have lee all the talking and planning tAl the ext.remists on both sides of our racial problem and have allowed local and state authorities to mouth irresponsible ani non-representative utteranc.. calculated to condone mob rul, if not incite it. -
'New Negr.' Theme Of Catholic Meeting
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CHICAGO (NC) - "The New Negro" has been selected as the theme for the convention of the Nat.ional Catholic Conference f~ Interracial Justice which will be held in Detroit from Aug. 24 •
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Mathew Ahmann, the organization's executive director, saitJ the theme was selected to focus attention on the significant changes in the interracial activity among American Negroes and point up the need for vigorou8 leadership in the interracial justice field. "The changes we find as a result of the sit-in movement ani the activity of the Freedom Riders, for example, are having. tremendous impact on man,. American communities," M.. Ahmann said. "So far the change.! which have occurred in response to these movements have bee. experienced mainly in Souther• cities and states. Soon, howeveJ; cities in the North will probabl1 experience the same pressure.."
Prelate to Consecrate Auxiliary on July 2 . ST. PAUL-Rt. Rev. Geral4 O'Keefe, Chancellor of the Archdiocese of St. Paul, will be COD-< secrated a Bishop on Sundar afternoon, July 2.. in the Catbeoo dral of St. Paul, Minn. ' Bishop-Elect O'Keefe will btl consecrated by Archbishop William O. Brady whose Auxili-. he will become. .oll
THE ANn:,
12
-?-:cese-of FaliRlver-Thurs. June 15, 1961
I
The World Situation
Dr. Lenski.fs Volume Exites Research in Economic Field
God Love You
By Msgr. George G. Higgins
How do Catholics, Jews, Negro Protestants and white Protestants differ in political and economic valu~s, in the eompetition -for economic advancement, and in patterns of family life? This and a number of related questions are ..ised and tentatively aA- sion is not meant to be inter8Wered by Dr. Gerhard Len- preted as "a damning indictment .ci, a professor of sociology of Catholicism." He is at pains to at the UniverSity of Michi- emphasize that "the Catholic
Influence 01 Hel"italfe "'In v iew of the social heritage fill. contemporary CathiJlicism," Dr. Lenski concludes. "it seelM .uikely that in the forseeable Ilature any devoutly Catholic -.te will become a leading ia"'strial natioD--,.()ne in the foreIront of economic development Mad progress. Catholicism ~ .. contain too many elemeRts which are incompatible wi"' -.ch a role. As an extension 0( this proposition, it would .ppear -.at as the Catholic segment IX • pluralistic nation (for example, -.e United States) Increases, this will tend to reduce the nte 0( eeonomic growth_" In fairness to Dr. Lenski, It lItould be noted that this ooncl.-
World Work eontinued rr- Pace 0 of hospitality for the iIoI'eign students and visitors who come to this country. We BWSt open up our homes, 1MI1"ltearts and our organizatioDsto, -.ese peo91e. But to Ii~ this -we auJIt train lay 1eaflet's ia the ..-cial apostolate to o v ~ . . inertia 'which presently Mnipers work ill this field ," Next, he stressed • pl'o:...m . , recruiting aDd Orientatinl people for overseas opportunities throu_~h such ol"ganizationB • the Papal VolUnteers forLatin Ameriea, the Peaee Corpa ~ lay mission-sending societies will be mapped out at the .eetin~, The third part will be con...ned with the business oom..unity. He pointed out there are "110,000 AmeriCllDll livinc in Tenezuela, but most live in ~lden Ghettoes,' ccmttibuting .. the 'Ugly AIDerieul' im~":
. .tiler
Excllaace
Church has never claimed to be concerned primarily with materialistic values." I think Dr. Lenski would have been on firmer grcund, however, from the point of view of objective scholarship, if he had limited his remarks to the practice of Catholics in a given place in a particular period of time and had refrained from saying that Catholicism as such seems to contain too many elements which are incompatible with the promotion of economic progress. Apathetie Atti&ude It may well be true that some
Catholics-too many Catholics perhaps-ill some countries are apathetic about economic progress. A number of contemporary Catholic scholars have said much. To cite but one example, Canon Jacques Leclercq of Louvain University complains in a recent book that "even today although man's attention is attracted by social reform, although contemporary techniques provide many means of combating pauperism institutionally, the duty of social action in this sense is far from being considered as a duty, not only by the mass of Christians, but even by the large majority of clergy and Religious." (Chril"tians in the World, Sheed and Ward, New York, $3.50).
a.
-. Mariiain's Interpretat~ The great French Catholic philosopher, Jacques Maritain, and many other Catholic writers of our generation have made substantially the same point. But thefr criticism, like that of Canen Leclercq, is directed at the practice of Catholics and not at Catholicism as such. While they maintain that too many Catholics throughout the world have not been sufficiently concel'ned about social and economic progress, they insist that Catholicism, properly understood, commits its members to -take the lead ia working for progress in every sector of the temporal order. Dr. Lenski ia correct when he says that the Catholic Church h«s never claimed to be concerned primarily with ma~erial_ istic values. The operative word in this sentence is "primarily." Of course the Church isn't primarily interested in economic progress. But that doesn't mean that Catholicism tends to act as a brake on economic progress. The goal of the Church ia this area is stated with unmistakable clarity in Pope Pius Xl's Encyclical On Reconstructing the Social Order: "For then only will the social eC()nomy be rightly establisbed and attain its purposes when all and each are supphed with .U ~ goods that the wealth and resources of nature, technical achievement, and the social organization of economic life can furnish. And these goods ought indeed to be enough 50th tn ~~n+ tho clemands of necessity and decent comfort and to ad\ ~- " people to that happier and fuller condition of life which, when it is wisely cared for, is not only no hindrance to virtue but helps it greatly."
NEW BISHOP: Magr. John F. Whealon, rector &f St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Wickliffe, Ohio, since 1953, has been named Auxiliary to ArchbisOOp Edward F. Hoban of Cleveland. He will be consecrated July 6 ilt St. John's Cathedral by Archbishop Egidio Vag-nozzi, Apostolic Delegate 110 the United States.
Fr. Czerwonka CoaUau" from- Pace 0_ Ferreira. candle bearer; Rev. Bernard R. Kelly, gremiale bearer; Rev. Vincent F. Diaferio, mitre bearer. Masters of ceremonies were Rev. John H. Hackett and Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski. Rev. Joseph F. Sutula, pastor of St. Casimir's Church, Ne\\ Bedford, in his eulogy pointed out how Father Czerwonka's whole life was characterized by devotion and hard work, both when he first came to this country in preparing himself to enter the seminary, and throughout the years of his priesthood. This was especially noted, Father Sutula said, in the last years of Father Czerwonka's life when, though afflicted witll multiple sclerosis, he still weat about his parish duties, ~ times hardly able to walk. Such dedication, the eulogist said, ia rewarded by God but should also be remembered prayerfully by the people amon« whom Father Czerwonka speftt himself. Most Rev. James J. Gerrud, D.D., V.G. presided at the Office of the Dead Sunday afternOOll. Chanters were Rev. Vincent Wolski, O.F.M.Conv. and ReY. Felix S. Childs. Father Czerwonka was borft .Tan. 12, 1893 in Grodzisko, Malopolska, Poland, the "" el the late Adalbertus and. Teckla Piela Czerwonka. After elementary sclleel ill Poland he came to the Ulliteci States in 1912 and attended higta school and college' at St. Mary'. College, Orchard I;ake, Miell, He studied philosophy aRd SS. Cyril and Methodfus ~minaq, ()rchard Lake and theolGg7 at !It. Bernard's Seminary, Roehe8ter. N.Y. He was ordained May 21, 11M in St. Mary's Cat~edral bF lIhe late Most Rev. Daniel F. FeehaR. D.D. His first assignment wu Our Lady of Perpetual Help, New Bedford, where he served un til his transfer to St. St.aislalla, March 14, 1933.
Ford Grant NOTRE DAME (NC) - 'l1le University of Notre Dame Au received a $25,000 grant frOM the Ford Motor Company Fund.
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Building Contractor Masonry
AID and other groups, he said. to encourage JQUI1g people .... take advantawe of these ill4u.strial and business opportunitie8 overEeas and to repair sOIne .t. the damage that has been 6xle in the past." 'l'he final part is designed to eocoura.4e students to take ad'V'811tage of scholarship and ex-.nge programs with the idea 7 JEANETTE STReET -.at they might return to the eountry d their training after FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321,. 8lMdUB&HIJl.I'1 f f "I t I I I I ! II '1::ltS::1bt::st=!!:ItlIl:!i!I!!Ii!:!!l~s!I:~~~SI.l ~
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"Go teach ye all nationll . . • • These words of O~ Blessed Lord, almost always invoked to prove the missionary character of the Church, were pronounced after His Resurrection. before _Hi. Ascension. But the Missions have a more profound relatioD. to Our Lord after His Ascension into he.ven. The Ascension WM the condition. Pentecost or the lending of the Holy Spirit UPOR the infant Church had to come before the sending Of disciples to all nations. Listen to st. Paul: "He ascended high upon 1Ihe heavens• to fill creation with His Presence." In other wordB. 1ne Prese~ of Christ in the Church, in the Eucharist, in the souls of the- faithful was precisely because He triumphed over death and fl'Yil and ascended into heaven. St. PaUl then describes the effects 01. the Ascension: "Some he appointed to be apostles, others to be prophets, others to be evangelists, or pastors, or teachers. They are to order the lives of 1lhe faithful, minister to their needs, build up the frame IX Christ's Body until we all realize our common unity throu/dl faith in the Son of God. and fuller knowledge of Him."
Dil"ector, NCWC Secial AdioD DepU1aea,
can, in a new book entitled The Religious Factor (Doubleday, New York, $5.95). Dr. Len"d's stUdy is tlased on exten• i V e research earried out by the Detroit Area Study. a facility of the department of ~iology of the University 0 f Michigan. This writer is DOt qualified to say whethe.- 01" IlOt Dr. Lenski's book meets the teet of objective scholarship i. 4Ile field of sociological researcll. Dr. Lenski himself, however, 4Ioes not expect his book W be -.e final word on the lNbjecl IMat hopes that it will stimulate turther research in this area. "Religion," he says, "is far too i1nportant a matte.- to be icnoreei • dealt with superficially, _ lies been the custom amon« American social scientists for • teneration or more." It remains to be seen whether • not further research on the abject will either invalidate or IlUbstantially modify any of Dr. Lenski's findings. Meanwhile I llave my doubts about several of his conclusions and about one .. particular, namely, that Catholicism tends to act as a "'-ake iJn economic progress.
By Most ReT. FuitOil J. Sheea. D.D.
JB
St. Mark also depicted the missionary aetivti,. IX the Cltul'Ch as au effect of the AsceDsion: "And 1IO the Lord when 1Ie- h&cI finishltd speakinc to them was iaken up into heaveD, and is seated DOW at the rich' haDd of GocI; and they went .ut - and preached evel"ywhere, the Lord aidillC'them, aDd a«estill&' His words by the miracles that weDt with them." Note the contrast between the humiliatbt of Christ's descent into our humanity aRd His exaltation after Qalvary in the Ascension. In Bethlehem He "emptied Him.elf"; in Pentecost and the continued mis_ sionary life of the Church "He fills up all things." The Mountain of Heavenly Glory was hewed out of the ValleT en Earth's Shame and Cruei-fixion. As we str1l&'cle to develop a mi!!Sionary eoD.,loullile. in the Amedoall Catholie we wonder if promotions and propaganda are not missinr: the pOint. If Christ did DOt make the Church missionary until His AsCeDsioll, how can we Interest the faithfal ill The Sotliety for the Propagation of the Faith nntil we first lift their miDds to the Glorified Christ in heaven! Aftel" all. deal" reader, will you ever be absorbed in tbe horizontal expansion of the Church until you first have a vertical contact with the Head of the Church in heaven? You can build gymDasiums and scien«le halls without your mind and heart and soul being one with the Glorified Christ. But you never help an orphan in Hong Kong Of' build a chapel in VietDam unless your mind is in heaveD.
will
Maybe this is why the poor and the mortified and the holy help the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. They love the Missionary Pentecost of the Church because they liJve the Christ Who pours out His Spirit on missionaries. As we help you to love God more, then will you help the Missions. Hence, "God Love You" means "May you love God more and 1nore." If you love Him because you read this column send YQUf" sacrifices to His Society for the Propag'8tion of the Faith. GOD LOVE YOW to Mrs. A. L. for $I "r. aeDdiac my wia...... from bbac. to hel" Ute Missions." • . . to Mr. G.P.M. for ''Tb. etter.... • _ tballkSC"ivin&' f . neca,Uve reRltII ill a, recent medieal exawination." ... too Mrs. S.D. f . $51 ''I am DOW 7. yean old. lNribda, the pOOl' of Ute
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The ideal gift for priests, nuns, seminoarians or laymen is a lUbaeription to WORLDMISSION, a quarterly review of missionary activities edited by Mo8t Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. Send $5 for a ooe-year subscription to WOBLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, New Y-ork 1, New York. Cut out this column, pin your sacrific~ to it and mail it to the Molt Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for Ute Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue. New' York 1, NY., or TOUI' Diocesan Director. RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, M8 North Main Street, Fall Rivei'. MaN.
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Thurrs., June U,
40th Anniversary
Parishionem of st. Mary'. parish, Mansfield, are planning
REV. EDWARD L. O'BRIEICl
Interest Grows In Memorial
Interest is growing in the Rev. :J 0 h n J. Sullivan Memor.ial Scholarship Fund, according to Edward Casper, president. The fund, organized this Spring by friends of the late Father Sullivan, will establish a permanent scholarship to be administered! by the Bishop of Fall River. Open to any eighth grade' boy M gi,ri. in the Diocese, it wilJl provide a grant usable at any Catholic high school in the Dio«:ese. Father Sullivan was known as «he "Piccolini's Sheyherd" and there have been many inquiries lilS to the origin of this term, according to Mr. Casper, who explains'that "piccollni" meeD!! a nice little boy. Father Sullivan's Piccolints were boys between 14 and 16 belonging to the boys' club of Holy Rosary parish, Fall River, of which the priest wes pasto!' iloI' many years. Threefold Purpose 'fih.e Piccolinls were active hi the depression years of 1929:1935. "Unemployment was the order of the day," said Mr. Casper, "and Father Sullivan took oteps to see that young boys were developed and their minde would not be warped by erimA1001 actions. "The Piccolinis' pur;pose was threefold: body, mind and spirit. Athletic teams cared for physkal culture, and members were requid'ed too attend Mass and reeeive Holy Communion faithf~lly and participate in the pal'ish as altar boys. '''l'hrough Father SIIll!wo's efforts, many young men went on ~ college and today are lead.;. ers m their, chQsen professions. He executed his pastoral duties willb great effiCiency and stilll found time to develop the body. mind and spirit of every boy iG his parish." ContributiON! to the :fuad mav be sent to 48 Purchase Str~ Fall River, noted MI'. Caspa:.
children believes the measuro will be endorsed in a refel'eu(;um next year. Delegate Herbert E. Tyler cd Baltimore County is so confiden~ be does not plan to reintl'odlic0 the bus bill in the State Legis-
lature. He said opponents of the meas"exercised a constitutiondl right to force the bill to refe11'- ' endum-and I have no intent tel deny that right." Repassage ~ the measure would be Q meane , 01. getting around Q referendul1ii!l.
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The measure, limited to Bal~ more County, would have benefited an estimated 10,000 private school -cn1ldren, 9,000 in parCco chial schools.
proper role in Church affairs. Father Raymond T. Bosler, editor of the Criterion, Indianap,olis archdiocese newspaper, told the 51st annual Catholic Press Association convention that the . layman must be given Q larger role in temporal and other affairs of the Church in the United States, outside of doctrinal fields; "The layman should be given tl greater role in the conduct 0If Catholic schools," the priestroltor said. "He should be eonBulted on such matters ao the hours of Masses in parishes and Oll!. how money should be raised Bnd spent." The I 'a y m a 1lI. already bae Iilchieved such II role in the ChurcQ in Italy and other European countries, Father Bosler £laid, and should be accorded !l snmilar role ilm. the U.S. SuggestiOll6for Press CathoUe newspapers can pave the way for this greater participation by highlighting the role of the laity in' its columns, Father Bosler said. He suggested .Ill "layman's page" in which the laity may express views l'egarding Chu~h customs, devOtions, 'forms of, liturgical WOT''ship and lay participation in the ,life of the Church. Another step a Catholic papeli' can take to' improve the image of Church, Father Bosler said, io to show definite interest ift' community affairs. He said this 'q:ivic involvement" by a paper would have a particularly favorable effect on P'rotestant minis, ters, intellectuals and leadem kl tlhe community.
,Dorothy -Cox Home made CANDIES CHOCOLATES
150 Varietue# ROUTE 6 near Fairhaven Auto Tl1eCllire
. ON THE LORD'S BEACHHEAD: Five seminarians to be ordained priests of the Glenmary Home Missioners at Glenmary Seminary,' Giendale, Ohio, prepare to plant the cross on new beachheads in "No-Prieg.t Land, U.S.A." From the left: Rev. John Gilhooley of Akron, Ohio; Rev. Donald Levernier of Glenview, :m.; Rev. August Gupenberger of Batavia, N.Y.; Rev. Lea Schmidt of Fort Recov~ry, Ohio; ~nd Rev. Francis X. Ellis of Philadelphia. NC Photo. income but it relieves parents, teachers and students of endlesc diSruptions and annoyances' dull'log the school year," said Msgr. James T. Curtin, archdiocesaD ooperintendent of schools.
"The decleion doGs illGt i'educe
MEW REDFORD. MASS.
SAVE MONEY ON
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Ban French Nov~
WASHINGTON (NC) - The Post Office Department haG banned. "Tropic Of Cancer" flrom ' the mails pending a fuliD« 0Cl whether the novel is obscene. Too action t.: based on II como Piaint ~ the department gen-eral ,eounsel, Louis ;1. Doyle, against Grove Press Ioc" oil New York and the Paperback Bookcase, a New York book shop that tz'ied to mail the bOok. , A Grove Press spokesman said 00,000 copies have been printed and most are ill tine handa etl booksellel\ll. Most WeN ehi~ Mt mailed, he said. "Tropic Of Cancer" was ~ bv Henry Miller in Paris in the .. 193O's.oA !"ederaI judge nnled lit obscene iB. 1900, and_banned J1t§ importation imlto ~ countlW.
FAIRHAVEN, MASS.
A Delicio\Ul& treat
fewer Ticket Sales in St. Louis Schools ST. LOUIS (NC)-From now on, moms and dads &nd old grads must sell their 'own tickets for benefits and ,other fundraising activi~es, the st. Louim Archdiocesan Parish High School Board has decreed. The' students still may sell ticketi for concerts, recitals, plays and other cultural affairs at' their '!lChools but only with-~ the expressed perinisliion of the archdiocesan superintendent Cl1f ochools.'
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BALTIMORE (NC) The sponsor (}f n controversial law to give tax-pai<ll bus rides to private school
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t1 reception SundaY' alternoolll from 2 to 4:30 honoring their pastor, Rev. Edward L. O'Brien, en the 40th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood. , The reception will take placo in the Church Hall and Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament will follow. Father O'Brien, who has been pastor of the Mansfield parish since 194,2, served, after his ordination by the late Bishop Feehan, in St. John's' Parish, Attleboro, from June.of 1921 until September, 1925. He was then assigned to St. James Church, New Bedford, where he was assistant for the next eight years, and them he became Director of the Catholic Welfare Bureau in New Bedford, III position he held until 1942 when he went to Mansfield as, pastor. The Most Reverend Bishop will attend the reception on Sunday and will give Benediction. Plans are under the direction of Rev. 'James F. Kelley and vice chairmen of the affair are Stephelil. ~ Conroy and Ginesio Ginesl.
Urges La rger Role for Laymen In Important Affairs of Church VANCOVER (NC)-A priesteditor contended here that the image of the Church in the United States can be improved best by giving the layman hMJ,.
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,HANCHOR-DloceM ~ fan River-Thurs.:June
15, 1961
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REFUGEE, NUNS: Religious.of the Love of GOO rejOICe as they reach haven in Mattapoisett convent after flight from Castro-dominated Cuba. Their educational institutions on the Latin-AmeriCan island have
Help Nuns Continued from Page One parish St. Vincent de Paul Conference, which made itself responsible for procuring 17 beds, together with members of St. Mary's parish, Padanarum and of the New Bedford Particular Council of the Vincentians, who cooperated in pr<Jviding mattresses. Blankets and pillows ~re secured through cooperation of Homer Langlois, purchasing agent at St. Luke's Hospital, New Bedford, and Mary Halloran, R.N., also of 51. Luke's.
Money for bus fares to New Bedford for the Sisters came from 51. Vincent de Paul Conferences of St. Joseph's and St. Mary's parishes, Fairhaven and St. Boniface, New Bedford. A contribution was also received from Rev. John McNamara, a California priest. Surplus food has been made available to the convent kitchen by Rev. John Hogan, New Bedford director of Catholic Charities. The Sisters will transfer their novitiate from its former location in Cuba to the Mattapoisett convent. Permission for this has been given by Bishop Connolly and one novice is already en route from Cuba. The Religious of the Love of God are at present active in Our Lady of the Assumption parish, New Bedford; St. Mary's, Fairhaven, and as workers at the newly-opened Center Hispano Catolico which serves Puerto Ricans of the New Bedford a,rea.
Says Discrimination Exists in Vermont MONTPELIER (NC)-A priest said that there is "Some discrimination in Vermont against Catholics and Jews and a great deal against Negroes or other racial groups." . Msgr. Edward J. Fitzsimons of Burlington aire'd his views at a legislative hea.ringon a fair employment bill now before the Legislature. He was one of a. group of Burlington residents, who appeared before the House Judiciary Committee in behalf of a measure which would provide penalties for discrimination' against minority groups in employment and promotion procedures. The group said there are "severe evidences of discrimination in the housing field" and KJndications of diserimination in employment" m the BurlingtOll area.
been taken over by the government. Left, group picture of new arriva~ inset, Sister takes religious article· to new resting place; right, Sisters ~ welcomed hy Mother Superior of Mattapoisett house.
Fairhaven Sacred Hearts' Academy President' Directors Report On Funds Scholarship Holder and All-Round' Student By A vis C. Roberts. . For four years Celeste Zerboime, a, senior at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, dreamed of representing her school on Student Government Day at the State House in Boston. She was elected to the post by.the st uqent body and earlier this month was a student member of the State Department of Motor Vehicles. A four-year scholarship student at Sacred Hearts, liam Street, South Dartmouth, High School benefitting the Celeste" 16, . has served as 'Cele!!te and her fa'mily are com- academy scholarship fund. class president for the past municants of St.' HyaCinth She has supervised plays, a two years. She is an honor Church, New Bedford. A brother, Christmas bazaar for the school, stltdent at the academy and has been accepted' at Stonehill College. Celeste plans to major in chemistry and to teach school after college graduation. Her sister, Therese, is a freshman at Stonehill this year..
st. Hyacinth Parishioner . Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Zerbonne of 36 Wil-
Richard 12, is a sixth grader at St. Hyacinth School- Celeste's alma mater. In addition to being class pres;' ident, Celeste is editor of the' academy yearbook,' Aymerian. She is a member of the academy Glee Club which last Sunday gave a concert at New Bedford
a dance to raise yearbook funds and she was in charge of a fashion show held at the school in May. . Celeste is hoping for a scholarship to Stonehill College. She is an excellent swimmer, a good dancer and she plays piano. in addition to enjoy~ng drawing and sketching.
Vatican Charoty
Proposes Tax Relief For Religious Group
TAIPEI (NC)-Fifty thousand dollars, part of the funds raised by the sale of Vatican City's World Refugee Year postage stamps, has been turned over to aid refugees from China in Hong
WASHINGTON (NC) - U. S. Senator Joseph Clark I)f Pennsylvania has introduced a bill in the Senate to exempt persons whose religious beliefs do not permit them to receive social security benefits from the pay- ment of employment taxes. He said the measure was intended to protect members of the Amish church, which teaches members to avoid insurance in any form. "Permitting exceptions from the operation of general laws where reUgious principles conflict and the exeption does not operate to the detriment of, the general welfare is well establishd in' American' legislative custom,': ·the Senator stressed.
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In announcing it!' total contribution of $460,000 to U. N. refugee programs in Geneva in May, the Holy See' stipulated that $50,000 be allocated to Chinese refugees in Hong Kong.
REAL ESTATE
POWERS
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This was announced 'after t'he annual meeting here of the directors of national branches Of the Society for the Propagati~ of the Faith, the Pontifical Oilganization of St. Peter the A~ tle, the Missionary Union of tlW Clergy, and the Pontifical Asso>Ciation of the Holy Childhood.." Nearly $8 millions will be ~ voted to ordinary maintenanCe .of the missions. The rest will ~ to particular work!l such as tbG education of native clergy an(! the construction of new bui.kj,., ings.
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ROME (NC)-Papal missi.... ary organizations reported heAl t~at they collected a total f!III $20,311,022 for this year's m~ sionary budget.
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B.OYS! Something New in Summer Camping
SALESIAN RETREAT • CAMP All the fun of camp life .plus the solid good of a mid-vacation boy's retreat. The Salesian Fathers and Brothers condu.ct 5-day camp periods for boys entering the 7th-8th-9th10th grades. Retreat Offering only $15.00. For full information write REV. FATHER DIRECTOR ~ACRED HEART JUNIORATE IPSWICH, MASQ.
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: :'ccese' or FaH Ri'ver-Tfrors. Jone 15, 1961
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By! lEtt. lR2v. ~g;tr~, j:ohn 8". Kamed)7' ;; .A new novel b-y E'd'win O''corrnor inevitably' invites oompmson: with his- mem@);able' popu1!ar success of a few yeairS; ago~ ''F.lre Last Hunah'. Now comes: "Fne E.dge of Sa'drress' (Atl'antic-Littl'e,. BroWIll.. $5.):, wJllicliD~ irnsettmg and in many of' tllJ:e chara:cte:rs:, the Ca:uIDOdys sets, Father Ken00: welli as fuJ qa;aJ.ity of dfur. nediy to, reviiewi'Ilg,b:i:s'eareer. He logue and gene:r-al' strtre:till:r~ fiadi started! out in the priesthood mg;, bears marked! resem- gl'owfu:g with zeaJi, .constantly 'blances to the' earlier' DOOk. It is,, however; a; more: serious: book, Raced! with. melancnol'y. It evi"den~es;profound\ Un:dieJ:'Standing·; of'the' ways andl, WO$' of human'. b e i til g. s, an. dI ~augb: it often' bas: a' stinging; ~11" the over:.., impressiOn!, ts one of grem: Gompassion. 'm'J.m;e' are two' lMam faults 'int Tire E'd'ge of: lisadDess. 'libe fil!st is excessive lhen:gth.. 'lime wOl'k: coulCi. advantageousl'y have, been trimmed. ~n:si.sting. mostly.' of: dfu]:ogue. motIolhgp.e, and! the' reminiSceD>-, ees: oil the naDafo-r:;, it: tendS: 00: prolixity.. The' :mamrafun's, power' elf total recalll is: stunning. Be: flail! remember ii!u as1ioniShirig:de- 1 tan long-ago conversations. He. . ElPills tnem farth' without stmt,. and it is in. th,iS: same way that l most of his characters tally.
buSy, and tingl'fugl'y happy. His first assig,m:I:I;i:eJ!l!tas eurate had been, at St. Raymamdi"s, a tbriving parish of middle class Irish. At St. Paw's he has. gone his q~t way, sometimes as a recluse, accepting' his own limitations\ s1J:ipped of his old illUsfunscmdi his; need of them,. at peaee'. But he still! has an excruciating. crisis; to> meet. It is oeeasi6n-' ed' bY Charlie' Carmody's inva'-, sian' of his, retreat. This: sets ·off a. seri:es; of meetings: with memDen 0:1!' Cb:axlie's: family that bare' mum about the past which Father Kennediy has not yet faeedl. He seesa!t~never before the confIiets within. that family -their origins, history, present state, Pl'iests l\-Ieet. Theapparent'climaxlsreached' wit!'IJ Cbaxliels suffeTfug a stroke; Con.vinced! that he is, dying be sends: fGr Fathe,r Kennedy, and I'n the sickroom occurs a lengthy conversation in which tlle secret Charlie Carmody is exposed.
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, Second Fault The second flaw is VeEY imperfect focussing. This read'er"
But the real climax coines in
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GRADUATION AT LAST: 'rhe joys, the· pain's, the !fork, and the chllenge of four of college life are. mirrored on Marilyn Whitecotton's face as she embrac.e.s Sister ....... " f h Francetta,president of. Web~ter College, Webster. Grove~, Mo., a ter receIvI~g er diploma. Scenes like this are being repeated through~ut thIS month, wher~ an ~~tImated 50;000 students are receiving diplomas fromCathohe colleges and UnIVerSItIes. NC
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::' ¢neipal c)la:cacter-the narra-: tion to whieh the' former still SOLEDAD (NC) _ For more floor 1~2 feet long, unearthed a~so modern day child's toy (::alit, a' priest named Hugh Kenclings. Father Kennedy is at last than a cen,tury the Mission last winter, marked the lo.ngslx.,shooter. ·oedy,. or a foxy olll Irishman able to begin in the world of Nuestra Senora De 1a. Soledad sought location of the origlnal Along what was the mission's Damed Ch~rlie Carmody. . divine and' human reality. l\ved up to its name....,. a windchurch. Mr. Pesch said six or north wall ·two granite mill. Their stories are not so much Notes Advance &Wept, solitary ruin. sev~n other graves were U!ll- stones were uncovered on the Intertwined as· juxtaposed', and . . covered along what once was site of the mission gristmill and ~ reader shifts, from the mst Fundamentally this novel is Now a proJect IS underw:a~ to the mission's south wall. -next to it metal was found which (\;D the second wondering which about love,· its nature, its nerestore. this . last ?f .the o;lgmalestablished the locations of the earI:ies'the prfucipal theme of cessity, the crippling injury m21 ~liforma IDls.slons m the The ciTiginal mlSSlOn was mission's blacksmith and cark meted' by its' denial and r.efusal. Salinas v~:y dedicated to Our abandoned after it was damaged penter shops. The m iss ion ~::~~1ieves that the: question Th.at 'comes dearly thr(;>ugh at Lady of Solitude. by floods in' 1824 and 1828. A priests' quarters and g u est t:I. finally answered;, but by the the close. But one eannot say it ];n 1934, Father William Stuhl-, second chapel on safer ground, rooms also were found. flime this classification is acbiev-. fsas .clearly conveyed in mueh mann, then pastor of 'Our Lady built after the floods, was reMission Soledad was founded ~~. ~"l undue amount of attention' of the' acti(J)n,~ or tnat there is l·t d ch ch h . d stored in 1954. This chapel now,. . ....... ~ fuTh or' satisfaeto"'" exp'lamition - of SOl u e· ur . ere, rrose conbains -the original stations,' ·in 1791 by Father Fermm ,de has: been giveru. to' the sec~ndary.' ",r a large wooden cross and offered LilUsuen. Its first b8ptism was strand. . Gfi the' various- relationships in Mass amid the mission ruins. altar stone and bell.' recorded on Christmas Day. lLead's Q'I!lie~;lIilXistence 'which the theme 'is exemplified. Under his direction" asearcbfor Exoavationsfor the site ofthc! 17!h. Records showed that the Father Hugh~ KEmned'y, is' 55 • Sharper selectivity' and point- thEioriginal mission location. was mission were 'begun in septemIridian population grew to 727 ,.ears old. He is' pastor' of Ol'd ing woUld. not only have tightenstarted. The key in the search ber, 1960. BitS ,of tile"broken by 1805 and' the mission had St. PimPs Church' in: an' unnamed I ed, the book meehanieally. but ' was . the grave of ,Jose Joaquin glass, old cmnaware and' pot- 16,000 cattle, horses and other crlty which ~eems' to' be in' New ,also, ha,ve 'Cl!lmmUIDlCated' its ,de. Arrillaga, first Governor of tery now carefully pieced to- .animals. The mission was the Engl'and. St. Paul's' is' a' ~l~m mea.ni:ng wiltbJ more foree. Alta California, known to haye ·gether. were found. Amine' de"' center of social life of, the area parish, containing the communIty: Still, this is an. advance. uPon been bUried: ben~th the ,center 'teetor turned 'up 'rusted tools, until 1818 when French pirates Skid Rowand. mostly compris-' The Last Hurrah, showing aisle' of the orIginal mission naila, door-hinges, buckles, a forced the population to flee to mg floaters. The parish' plant is greater maturity and a willing-, . churoh. . Spanish dueling pistol and Monterey. derelict, and there is; no prospeet ness to attack a subj'ect more Two months ago the r.emailbll of renewal. complex and subtle. It is a marof the :Governor were found. , Assiste.d by yoong, energetfu, velousl'y funny book, often pro- Shortly after, the remains of 'Daive, and rotund' Fa,ther Stanley ivoking loud laughter. Father Florencio Ibanez, W1ho ::Da'llowski. the pastor has, a, qu.iet,! , There is an arr.ay of shrewdly. died at the missiO'1l in 1818, were :werr passive exislience. There is I studied. and. projected charact- . unear:tbed on what had been the :SOllle mysterY' as. to, his being. fu ers: the loquacious old a~tago- Gospel sid~ ClIftbe mission '~is place and his self-contained nists of Charlie Carmody; his church. "way of Jiving. i '~yptic, and lugubrious sister.; Tohese discoveries; accordfug Charlie €armooiy ,hlS' sIIek, . hard, Ivy League to Olii Pesch" reStoration suI 'grandson; priests, parishioner.s; . e The mystery is explained' d'1;rr:. and a sagacious and sympathetic perv.lsor, confirm that a til(3 llng: the couJ::se! of. many mee.tings • 'bishop'. 'with Charlie Carmody. Carmody . h Beneath the hilarity runs a 'llInexpectedly telephones Fat er strong 'ti:d:eof wisdom-and' even Kennedy to invite him to an 8Ist birtQ.day partly. The priest had I spiritual significance: Mr; 0'nOt. heard for several years: ,from, Connor has grown :perceptibly.
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this contemporary- of his own' father. He had. in. youth, been a Aeigl'Ibor of the Carmody farru.Dy; had' been: ia' the seminary with .charIie'sl S@1W" Father John '~armody. no.wpastOJ:' of his llla:tive St, Rayrmo.nd's;. had lbeen :&iendJ.y wi.th Johtl.'s. brother Dan. and his, sister Helen.. 'l1he. 'association' had! eormtin1md. :after :ordination. : Then came a period: witbout
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WASHINGTON (NC'J UniV<'TSlty is" pt<l!n'mng 'to replace i'ts present law oenter with new hl.~;,l.-iing-s by ~9'lO.. IOOth' anoiver~.. ry of, the law .center.
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LOUISVILLE (,NC),-A uni: form salary scale for lay teachers, effective next September, has .been set up ila, tbe AJ:chdio'1.365 NORTH FRONT STREfT) . cese of Louisvine'. NEWBEDFORD , I Salaries.until .now were de- ~ termined by the individual :par:.. : 'ish. Now salaries will be the '~WYman, 2·5514 same in all parishes. ~. . . . . .~~. .~.......~..."~........~.....~........~~ .
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'eommllllliieatiOm, NoW' Charliie:m-· ;sists on a reunion, and pesters ,fihe priest d'ay and' ni'ghtwith . phone calfs· and visits. What,can ]lle be'after. Father Kennedy can":' 1Il0tsurmise. When uJtimalteliy Hie author reveals Charlie's purpose,' &: hardly fusfrfiies an the sus.pense. The rercwa1 of contact with,
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The' Parish Parade ST. MARY'S. 'FAIRIlIAVEN Mrs. John Caton is newly mstalled .president of the Ladies of the Sacred Hearts Association. She will be supported by Mrs. Custadio Marshall, first· vice president; Mrs. Frank Morria; second vice president; Mrs. Leo Grenon, secretary; Mrs. Manuel Allonse, treasurer.
a'U. nOCE, li'AJLL mVIER
A mystery ride is pmnned for Wednesday, Aug. HI by the Council of Catholic Women. Mrs. Roland J. Robillard is in charge of arrangements. The unit will hold lil 'fashion show' Thursday, Sept. 14 at White's restaurant. ST. ANNE,
¥ME ANCHORThurs .. June 15, 1961
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.NORTH ANDOVER c(N(4)' -Western civilization is m its most critical period ~ histoz:y because of the th~
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of international communism &(? cording to Ric'hard Cardin:!il Cusiling. The Archbishop of Boston £::m . told .the graduation class 4l5e Merrimack college that jntern~ tional communism is "the gr~~ est 'enemy that has ever ~ Christianity." "If .t~ Western world is n~ aware of the peril," the .J6luli> prelate stated, "it is the fault e>1 its leaders and due to our 6w;[l' apathy and complacency." The Cardinal also said 00 "cannot understand why wu cznnot teach the principles .ciI ccmmunism ;as something i!llP trinsically evil." "We teach ;sin as somethintl evil," he pointed out, "and iii iJli3T cpinion communism is intrnn.sicaUy evil. The ·basic works dl communist writers teach t~ is no God and the objective ~ communism is conquest of ~ world."
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KrALL RIVER
The SOcial Group will install new officers at a banquet, to be held at Pocasset Country Club at 7:30 Wednesday pight, June 21. To be seated are Mrs. Mariette' St. Pierre, president; Mrs. Pauline Gauthier, vice president; , Mr,ll. Jacqueline Lauzier, junior ST. JOHN EVANGELlS'll', ,vice president; Mrs. Simonne ATTLEBORO New officers of the Mothers' Desrosiers, secretary; Mrs. JeanClub include Mrs. Mary Kenny, nette Laliberte, treasurer. president; Mrs. Eileen Jodoin, SACRIED 1lH1EAl1t'll'. ~ , vice president; Mrs. Elsie Spell- JFALL RJIVER _..... man, secretary; Mrs. Mary Clegg, Miss Madeleine McDermott ._._....EIiI• • treasurer. will head the Women's Gulld for .OUTFIT REFUGEE J?lfUESTS: Many Spanish priests OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL the coming year, aided by Mrs.• ~king refuge in Miami from Cuba arrive in civilian clothes. John J. Patota, vice president; HELP, NEW BEDFORD Father Angel Sansegunao, O.P., pastor of the Church of Mrs. Robert Nedderman, secreNew Women's Guild officers tary; Mrs. Kenneth Leger., the Patronage of Our Lady in Cienfuego, receives .clerical include Mrs. John S. Izdebski. garb at Miami's Centr'o His-pano Oatolieo from Fatb-eJ." president, Mrs. Mary Szeliga, treasurer. vice president; Mrs..Josephine ST. STANISLAUS, Primitivo Santamaria, O.P., one of the Spanish .center staff. T. Murach, recording secretary; FALL RIVER NC Photo. Mrs. Jeanette Tobojka, treasurer; Installation ceremonies fOi' the Mrs. Adele Ponichtera, financial Parent Teacher and Almuni Asto secretary; Mrs. Jane Pietraszek, sociation will return Mrs. Joseph corresponding secretary. They Gromada to the office of presi",: V5sitcl'll$J will be installed this Sunday dent. She will be aided by Mrs. . WASHINGTON (NC) - The , with Mrs. Cecilia Mandeville in Mary Gosciminski, vice presi- Church's only Negro cardinal, dent; Mrs. Wanda Wroble, secre- Laurian Cardinal Rugambwa, charge of arrangements. ARE ALL CATBOLICS,WiJG~DtlIlLESSOF .Rn:.u:, EQllJAlL liN Parishioners welcomed Rev. tary; Mrs. Stella Erdll).an, treas- will address the National PIl'CSS TillE CifiJRCH? Of OOlll'se, they liU'e ...llDd ithePc:;;:a. wantll neryone to kn'OW so. . Last Ai;lril,for Seraphin Stachowicz, new pastor, urer. Mrs. Helen Bednarz and Club next Monday. at a banquet sponsored by com- Mrs. Julia Stasiowski, aided by the 'first fune .in lrlstol7•.~ JE!c!ill.~ The event is the latest arraE.p;lt em ~e UikJ \vestmeots and bined societies of the church. mothers of sixth grade students, e~..s0crat5Cl 1l,'Bis:hap ,8.lllltlr~ to t.!:c The event also marked the 34th are in charge of the installation. goo in the tight schedule of the two-day visit to the nation's B~tine Liturgy. The language he anniversary of Father Stacho- ST. KILIAN, capital by the Bishop of Buko~ was not Latin;U wasGTeek. wicz' ordination. Program in- NEW BEDFORD ba, Tanganyita. WHY DID POPE JOHN .FOLLOW cluded high Mass, the banquet, New Holy Name Society offi.. · speeches by representatives of 'Jl1!l[1!: EA~TERN LITURGY? Be wanbJ A. long list of prominent percers include Peter Gazdik, presparish organizations, a presentalie imderstood that aU Catholic Rites sons, including heads of states, tion of flowers from school chil- ident; Leopold Blanchard, first have appeared before the Nation(the 'EastemJUteli as weUas .the Latin) vice president; Romeo St. dren, singing and dancing. . 'ne equal .••• that all :Catholics are al Press. Club. A quarter of II Amand, second vice president; eqaa'fly his children. Be knows, too" ST. MARY'S, Frank Filipek, secretary; Ernest century ago another cardinal was The HtJt, FiZthtr's.M.ission Ail thlli Catholics of the !Eastern Rite. NORTON a guest of the club-Eugenic> Kobza, treasurer; firtht ,OrimkiJ lJhmh must play an Jmportant ,part if 160;Cardinal Pacelli, who later beNew Holy Name Society offiMILLION OKTlIODOX CHRIS'rIA.NSunan, ,of ,them in the came Pope Pius XII. HOLY CROSS, cers include John Drane, presMIDDLE EAST aDa 'NEAR 'EAST) are to be brought back to ident; Homer Simmons, vice FALL RIVER New PTA officers include Mrs. union with ,Rome '. • • Eastern Rite ,Catholics are the .I!latm'ai president; Victor Pelchat, secrebriage by which Orthodox Clu'istiaDS .m returD .•.•.• ThhI, IJt,. tary; Americo Camara, treasurer. Ruth Piekos, president; Mrs.' ei.deDtallY. Ja ,. major purpose of theCA:!I'HOL!lC 'NEAR EAST Helen Uchman, vice president; ST. JAMES, WELFARE ASSOCIA'.I'ION. Manw <Of ·.thepriestll, tltsters.and Mrs. Virginia Levesque, secreNEW BEDFORD IllY w01'kea wbom-withyourhelP-We.ir'y to support. belong til tary; Raymond Plichta, treasuMsgr. Noon Circle will meet rer; Mrs. Stanley Fronczek, one or another of the Eastern Ritea. l'overtN~trmkeD In pagmll at 7:45 Wednesday night, June 21 IllDds" they look to .us lor prayers, Ilacriflces, financial IIliIiistanee. financial secretary. in the lower church hall with Their pUghtill not well .kOOWll amemx .Ameri:emOaiholies . . • Mrs. Leo J. Telesmanick as pre- ST. PATRICK, Friendly hcnpitaJity. New swimming pocI I'et AmericmCathol.iesare .their Oldyh~. Will 7tJU hdp in garden setting. Sports facilitien. siding officer. Pupils of Miss FALMOUTH . "build • brlc1ge" to 160,000,000 ORTHODOX ,CJmlSTIANS? WiD 'OCiaI lIIYents•. Children's p1aygrouM!. Evelyn Geary will provide enThe' Women's Guild will conyou pray" sacrifice~ give us ,financi&ll .aJd? .Ilclp;stve our mtsCocktail lounge. TemptiA£l tertainment and refreshments duct a food sale from ·10 to 1 ,sionaties the lools. 'Pinyour cOlltrilmtioD,l~rge,01' :small, to tM. food. Churches nearby. will be served by a hospitality Saturday, June 17 at the parish ,.' . $70-80 a week per pereoll eolumn aDdmaillt to us. Youl1 knmvyOD've baa:. share In thfl committee headed by Mrs. Kath- house, on the lawn if weather including: oU meal.. JW work of Christ. We'll know, too. that w.ith ycur ,contribution leen Walden and -Mrs. Marjorie permits. Mrs. Armand Ortins and : color folder .... reaervaticrn. we have your ,prayers, your sacrifices. Kulas.. :, write Fra!lelIJ S. X ..Jiel7, Mrs. John J~ Farrell are co" Owner-MBL chairmen. ST. MICHAEL, IF THE .EASTERN .RITES ARE SOMETHING OF A MYs,. ~._ .':i- West Yarmouth l7. FALL RIVER OUR LADY OF ANGELS. TERY, WE'LL 'SEND YOU A SPLENDID LITTLE .PAMPHLET CAPE: COD. ~A$$. The CYO will hold a Com- FALL. RIVER FREE OF CHARGE. :OROPUS A NOTE,WI'il.'B YOUR NAME munion breakfast in the school Members of the Women's AND ADDRESS. hall following 8:30 Mass this Guild will attend a month's mind Sunday morning. Mass and receive corporate The EASY WA'yl' MllSSION CLUBS IMMACULATE CONCEPTION. Communion for the late Rev. James V. Mendes. The unit's anFALL RIVER SUPpose you had etarted,lBl!lt January, to send us something f1er themissiol1lS ouce ID :month. ThilIk what YOUl' ,(fonati= wCllltll New officers of the Women's nual banquet, postponed in rebe doing foroUl' Priests mnd Sistersmthe llllgnn world II'igbI) Guild include Mrs. Harold Ward, spect to Father Mendes, will be DOW! We started our mission clubs with t~s 'PlD'.POSe fn mind president; Mrs. James Bentley, held Sunday, July 23. Mrs. Mary --to make it easy for)'OIll t.o ,participate In u;,:isslon work . • vice president; Mrs. Joseph E. Velozo and Mrs. Mary Silvia NEW BEDFORD regularly. Like to join? The duesz:re ,only '$l.{)Oa mcntb. Here Roderick, secretary; Mrs. Henry will be co-chairmen. The group also plans a Separe some clubs toseleetfrom: Gillet, treasurer. tember penny sale. o DAMIENLEPER ,FUND .... ,cares ,far ~ ST. PAUL'S. INDUSTRIAL 'OllS '0 ORPHA~ BREAD ..••••. feeds orphans TAUNTON o PALACE OF GOLD .•••••. ,cares:lm·tJ:e:Bged The Holy Name Society win HEATlNG OILS 'THE 'BASILIANS . ..•• • •• .81IPpm'ts Cc.1ho1ieschoolB sponsor an auction Saturday. THE MONICA GUll]lA!)" . • • •• mwtces, et:l., ~f(\l'ehlIl'ehea June 17 on the church grounds. TlMKEN OCHRYSOSTOMS ...••••••• edueates na~e :Priests OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL, [J MARY'S 'DANK .•.•••••••• trldD!inam"e:~ NEW BEDFORD . Oil BURNERS The Women's Club will hold COMPANY combined business and social OUR REFUGEES & meetings in July and August, We can't give them steakUlcl strawberry .sundaes, but for $18 Complete Line wrth Mrs. Palmeda Vasconcellos • monthweean .FEED A FAMILY of PaletiUne Refugees. IJI in charge of July arrangements the name ,of Cbrlst, Who knew what ,It .means ,to be hungry. B~ilding~ Materials 501 COUNTY ST. and Mrs. Eulalia Medeiros chairplew;e .hel;p our victiIml cl the Arab"lsraeli War• .If .yOll \\\in man for August. NEW BEDfORD • SPRING ST' f FAIRHAYEN I FEED A FAMn..Y FOR.II. MONTH ($10' we'll,shaw our lIP'preciaST. ANN'S, tlon by sending you aD Olive WoodBosary .from the Holy Land. WYman 3-2611 RAYNHAM WY 3-1751 The Rosar, is oUl' sileD~ BUUesiion that .youp1~8ffor'our !'eftaOfficers for t'he Men's Guild' gees,too. iIlclude John' Scanlon, president; .James Dolan, vice president; Leo STIPENDS COME IN - SEE - and DRIVE Poirier, sooretary; Arthur Booth, Your offering whe.a a misslollllD'1 celebrates M8SS for you, Is IdJI treasurer. prlnotpal means of suppOrt. Our mlsslOl1lll'resare :1iI"" inneecl n. LAWRENCE. ,of Mass ,1nteni'tn:Da. Write 'Us, too. about GUEGO.RIA.N iWASBB& NEW BEDFORD <Wfhe WOI'IcI'. MOlt Beautifully Ptoportionecl The Couples Club will have as . at DeW officers Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sheehan, presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Kelley Jr., vice NANCIS·CAaDlNAL tPliUMAN. Pre.ld..... presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert M9 Y.a;" ....... lOnnerly Motor Sales Company Wall, treasurers; Mr. and Mrs. ~ toI .John Walsh, recording secreFORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS CATHOUC NEAl EAST WELFAIE ASSoctAnOH taries; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Lem480 Lexington ~ cJl ~ S~~ ~ '\i'affi TI67i?·,J, enager~ corresponddDg aecre1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedfo~u MaIL 1ories. ST. MARGARET, BUZZARDS BAY SS. Margaret-Mary Guild wiii hold its annual Summer bazaar from 2 to 7 Saturday, July 8 Cil1 the church grounds.
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Press Club He«llll' CardinQl6
POPE JOHN: A'NOTUER
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A~CHO~",,!)ic,ces~of FaIlRiver-:-Thurs. Junel~i';1.9~1
·SeeS Pre$ent' .H~miliGtion As B~®~~Brrog in Disg~~~® By Most Rev. Robed J. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop of lIteno
•' "There are worse things than hurrfiliation. It would not ~avebeen believed, 50 years ago, that America would ever :,oome to the point of eating humble pie. In the heady days of. the nation's adolescence it was assumed as a fixed principle that the flag was far greater danger 'of losing' our mviolable 'the world over, , soul than we are. with the Constitution crowd- , For we have given evidence in ing'on its heels to protect the our time of the same lust for
imperialism thaI' has brought mghts of our citizens wherevet 1Jhey might roam. In the spirit of ,cou~tless great nations crashing to their ruin, We are brought up, the old rattleinstead, to a situation in which snake banner of we not only must look to our rthe Revolutionsurvival, but in which we are ~y ,days, "Don't forced to answer the question of Tread, on Me," why we should survive at' all: ~e American lIn Love With Ideas was as safe in America' was launched on the ,Zululand as he basis of a philosophy of life. , was in Keokuk, Deeper than any of the inci- Those days are dental discontents resulting from jJCme. We travel the ineptitude of 'the British' , ll10W at our own crown, broader than ,~ny ec'o·'risk. If, 'like the · ,Old Man of the , nomic argument for independent , llliver, we get a little drunk and action, was the determination to : establish freedom within a ~Jand in jail, the chances are that, · we will stay there until the' ex-. workable moral frame, To a larger extent than was piration of the term. , One by one our sister nations ever true before our DeClaration __ the globe are discovering that or than has been true since, we .. ilo,special immunity is attached were a nation of philosophers in , '~ an American visa, and are love with ideas. They were more ',liuick to make use of the dis- important to us than blood or treasure, worth purchasing at (jOvery. The flag we have called '.'Old' whatever cost. They demanded a capacity for <iitlory" is exposed to insult .in a doz'en places every fortnight, but understanding and appreciation the only punishment is a polite which placed a heavy strain upllletter from the State Department 0:1 the average citizen. It is not eieploring such unbecoming 00-' easy to ,be a philosopher first and a practical man of business "nae,vior., second. " 'Fairly Innocent' Different from Original 'Phis is humiliation, Our fathers· Prosperity, especially the un"would have had fits of apoplexy, exampled prosperity that came ·if they had read of such goings: to AmeriCa, is not the best 08. Was there on incident in breeding:"ground ',for a philo-' Venezuela? Speak softly" but sophical interpI'etation of life. aarry' the Big Stick: Were '. the : We grew to be cor-tent with the lP'anamanians getting out of obvious fact that the system was Illand? One could always derive working and to be annoyed with -, llI8tisfaction from the ultimatum, > the Cassandras who p'ointed out,;; .. toqk Panama." that it would work only so long" : Was there Ii mysterious explo- as it wa~ nourished by 'its 'own j. l1ion on the battleship Maine in substance." ' '; lIIavana harbor?, :,Mr, William 'We created an image of our-' 1Bandolph Hearst. ,said that it was selves which in time becanie 'ii: IRQnifest that Spain must get out something' far different 'from : .: Cuba,and out of Guba 'Spain the original concept'. We' were ! iHthwithgot., ' not far' from thinking, that 'we j Ai that particular date, let it were the' Lord's, anointed' and' 'lae said' in our defense, we enter- . ,the whole world was our oyster. :~ined no suspicions of strange Must Take Stock . ! characters like Machado, Batista , It could, well be, even in : an4, Fidel Castro: .For, , 'all' our , deep designs of Providence, that ; bluster we were fairly innocent. our present humiliation is the , Alternative t'o War, happiest ,thing that has ever , It is useless to prete'nd that we come to us. It is 'no bad thing ! llike our new medicine. We take , that we be forced to take stock jtt ' in· small gulps, reluctantly. ,of ourselves, of our actual re'Il'be question simply is whether sources of spirit no less than the it is good for us; whether in the materials of war: ' Dew world which has succeeded We may have to fight again the Second World War we are before this ordeal is over, but if i nOt actually obliged to ,t~ke 'it we have b~en taught more' clear, l!S the alternative to Armaged- ly what it is that compels us to don. " our defense;' our victory, please : Samson pulling down the pil- God, will not be a repetition of ,'Jin's of the temple on his own !the ~arren spoils of the past.. , laead ,may' symbolize a certain : reckless courage, but' if the !,~mple happens to be the whole' I structure of civilization we are KAMPALA ·(NC)....:..The ' B~n ;'ilot so sure that recklessne~ is .'~acaroli ·have a new Ssenkulu, , 1Ite right recipe, ! We are growing older and per- ,their fourth, ,The Congregation of the Ban,haps a little wiser, We are less mclined, for example, to scoff ,~acaroli is the" first All-African , at the British Empire 'for having. ord!!r 'of; Brothers. The new Ssenkulu-Superior General-is .' aNanged her own ~issolution. Brother Avito, who joined' the End of Chapter . , But humiliation need not mean ;Bannaca,roli in 1933, when' the ~e end of 'greatness. It does end , congregation was six years, old. the chapter which describes a The Bannacaroli now have 150 eertain phase in American his- professed Brothers, working.. in Cory, and not the 'most admirable five Uganda dioceses, primarily as ,teachers in ,primary _ and phase. This, ':certa'inly, needs to be, said, that ,if Amer:ica'had secondary schools. emerged from the rec"cnt wars ~m'pletely , viCtorious, "with a .e·ar field for expansion and ex::' ' '\IIIoita,tic;m, we !!light now' be· in. ' ..
POPE RECEIVES BELGIUM'S ROYAL COUPLE: Pope John 'stands with Belgium's King Baudouin and Queen Fabiola during private Vatican audience. The Holy Father revised an ancient custom, allowing Queen Fabiola, to wear white at the audience. Women :cu$tomarily wear black. King Baudouin wears the Vatican's Supreme Order of Christ around his neck-the order given only to reigning Catholic monarchs. NO Photo.
BedfoB'd Prelate Observes Ordination Jubilee Communions. In addition, chilception Church, No. Easton; Rt. . Continued from Page One dren of the parish acquitted a Also Rev.' Joseph S. Larue, Rev. Msgr. Osias Boucher, late pastor of Sacred Heart, North - pastor of Blessed Sacrament, , pledge of 1,400 Holy Communions for his intentions. ,Attleboro; Rev. Henri Charest, Fall River, and 'Rev. Joseph N~rbert Hamel, late pastor of pastor of St. Mathieu, Fall Apostolic Blessing St. Theresa, New Bedford. River, and Rev. Henri Canuel, The jubilarian received the Parish tribute' to 'Monsignor pastor '~f St. Hyacinth, New Prevost was paid in, the form ~f Apostolic Blessing,' and the folBedford.' , ' lowing message from . Bishop "Monsignor Prevost, 74, has a spiritual bouquet of Holy ,Connolly was read to the conserved as pastor of St. Joseph gregation: fQr seven years', coming to New "It gives me great satisfaction Bedford after 26 years' service to associate myself with your 1\s pastor of St. Louis de France, JERSEY CITY (NC) - The many friends and admirers in Swansea, which he founded in Newark Archdiocesan Develop- grateful appreciation of your 50 April, 1928. years of priestly devotion in ment Fund Campaign has been !Founded Swansea Church oversubscribed by more than $5 the Diocese of Fall River. May the Lord rew,ard you richly for , He is the' sole survivor of a million. all your generosity arid unselfgroup' of four priests ordained :'Archbishop Thom!is A.Boland June 10, 1911, in St. Mary's of Newark reports a total of ish service, and may He give Cathedral by the late Most Rev. $30,475,125 h!ls been pledged. so you joy in' your priestly Jubilee year and for many more years 'Daniel F. Feehan, D.O. He cele- f~r. The goa~ wa~ $25 million. . brated, his First, Solemn Mass Funds will be used to build eight , to come." the following day in Notre new high schools with a total Dame, ,Fall River.' C\assmates ,capacity of 12,000, shidents, an Very Rev. Vincent C. Dore,', were Rev. Charles A; :o.onov'an, add~tion to the maj"r seminary late, pastor of Immaculate Con- at -Darlington and four homes for q.P., Providence C_ollege 'faculty member for 30 years and. ac'att,le aged. demic vice president since 1950, has succeeded the late Very Rev. Rooert J. Slavin, O.P., as presi, Reports, from Blessed Sacra'BOl'fN '(NC) A former dent of the' Rhode Island institument parish,' Fall River and Our Notre 'Dame University stuQent, tion. Lady of Lourde's, Taunton, were Konrad Kraemer, has Deen . ap'heard at the June DioCesan Curia {)ointed, editor:'in-chief ~f KNA, . Over 33 Years Experience meeting of the Legion 'of Mary , the German Catholic News at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River. ~~ency. . ; , SUBURBAN Five Legionaries made 280 visits and distributed 161 pieces , BOTTLED AND BULK GAS of literature in Blessed SacraGAS APPLIANCES ment parish, while' 12 junior Legionaries in Taunton 'made 4 Show Rooms to serve you 245 visits, giving out 553 pieces Hyannis Falmollth' Eo Main St. 696 E. Main St. of literature. SP 5-0686 ' ' KI 8-1560 The', ,Curia's next meeting is Set for Sunday, July 9. Orleans Provincetow.. , .94 TREMONT STREET
Newark Archdiocese Raises 30-Million
New President
the Legionaries Report Activities to Curia
'Order of Bannacaro'~i :Has NewSsenkulu:
-,.OS ~Angele5Paperr, . "Qpposes School Aid , , WASHINGTON (NC)-'- U. S. 8enator Barry Goldwater of ,.rizona has placed in the Con~ssional Record an editorial ... Federat aid .to education , which appeared in the Tidings, llMwspaper of the 1;os Angeles lIl'Chdiocese. The editorial op-poses, Federal aid to education ,and pro t est s discriminatory treatment of· private schools.
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nilE ANCHOR-, ~:9 1TfrluB"s., June 15, 1961 '
Boston College in NC,AA ,Semifinals at Omaha
Tired Of ' Secuiarism In Education
AmericG[ffi$
By Jack Kineavy Boston COBege entered the semifinal round of the . N.e.A.A. baseball tourney earlier this week' by virtue of a eome-fr<,>m-behind" 4-3 victory over Duke University. The 10s8 was the second for the Blue l)evils who joined Colorado State and Western Michigan Durfee Vusit:r. .,..... ~y Playoff on the sidelines. Still alive The curtain will be lowered on in the double elimination tourney, which has been the interscholastic Spring sports aptly described as the collegiate World Series, are two ,former double winners, Texas and Southern California. Th e Eagles, coached by the fiery Eddie Pellagrini, former Red Sox infielder, posted a first. round 3-2 victory over Western Michigan and the club continues to get fine pitching from Robinson, Niemie and Bunker. Jim Bridgeman, Colby's No. 1 hurler and an All-Maine choice said that the Eagles looked terrific in the District One plaYOit'll at Springfield last week and that be wouldn't be surprised if ,they went all the way. Syracuse University give. the East 11 second representative m the Tourney. Tbe. five team Suburban CYO League is in full awing and the competition promises to be kee~ er than ever. The Intermedia~ All-Stars, piloted by Fran Regan, made an auspiciou8 debut over the weekend, whitewashing StMary's 9-0, behind the stellar 3-bit hurling of Terry Lomax. The Stars lineup features a number of college playen who are ably complemented by the area's outstanding high school' operatives. ' Playing first base for the Starn Is Charley Carey of Colby College and fellow Mule Dick Bonalewicz is in right. These boys played vital roles!n Colby's annexing the Maine ~hampio~ ship. Bill Contreras, outstanding freshman prospect at p. C. is in ,centerfield and John Cippolini, Friar SQphomore holds, down third. ,The keystone. :combination has Doug Mello :of. Durfee at short and Gerry Cunniff of Coyle at second. Both ,boYs have good hands. Behind the plate is Bob Hargraves of Holy ,Cross who.' wilA handle the slants of Lomax, Bill Walkden" Richie Oliveira and Don Murray. Dick Bonalewicz may also be summop.ed for mound duty by manager 'Regan. The Stars, incidentally, have a brother combination in the Bonalewicz'" Dick and Bob who had a fine sophomore year with
season Saturday when the finals. of the Eastern Mass. Baseball Tournament are scheduled to be played. Only Holy Family, Narry Co-Champion, survived the quarterfinal, round. Coach Jack Nobrega's neophytes bolstered by the fine hurling and distance hitting of Leo Paradis lowbridged Hingham, Old Colony runnerup, 10-0, then took the rubber game from Narry CoTitlist Case, 9-6. The teams had split in regular sason play. The New Bedford Parochials drew a tartar in the semis, however. Their Tuesday opponent at Oliver Ames High field was tourney-tested Milford High, Midland League standard bearer and defending 'Class B Champion. Milford took a 10-1' season's record into the· Holy Family game. Whatever the outcome, Holy Family may point with pride to the achievements of its athletie teams in this the first :vearot Coach Nobrega's reign. The, bonus bOyS were at it, again last week when h1gh school "phenoms" across' the country terminated their scholastic careers. The Red Sox outbtd 14 other clubs for the services of Boston English first baseman, Bob Guindon. The amount of toe bonus was not divulged but speculation ranged from to $100,000. Guindon was signed to a Seattle contract; then optioned to Alpine, Texas. When Grady Hatton, former' Red Sox third baseman, now D scout for the new Houston club of the National League, mentioned Guindon's name in a T- V interview Thursday, we' recalled a eonversation that took place three years ago at. of all things, a football meeting in Boston. The setting was'right, however, , because it was in the press room at Fenway Park. " BOnus-Player GUindOB ,. . , At the' time' CoaCh Bill· Stew.art Jr. Who' heads up the footbail, hockey 'and baseball pi'ogr'ams at Boston English, mentioned to 'us ibid he had a yoUngster with terrific potentiai cOming up. In fact so impressed was"he' with this boy's future in baseball that he refused to let him play foot,ball, despite the' 6'-1"·185 v.ital statistics. The prospe<;t, Qf collfse, was Bob' Guindon. The Subject of high bon,uspay:ments to talented but untri~ youngsters has evoked a. maelstrom of criticism, not the least of which has originated with the hand-wringing baseball executives 'who themselves have sanctioned Ule'ricUculous practice. In essence, it seems to be baseball's way of keeping up with the Joneses. The kid that signs for a sandwich and a coke. often proves out, while his bonusladen contemporary is busy elippil).g coupons.
$SO.ooo
Nutmeg, Stater Joins Papal Vohi,nteers, . HARTFORD (NC)-Insurance agent Richard, Cullina will leave Sunday, June. 18 to begin his work as the' first 'Connecticut , man to join the Papal VolUnteerS for Latin' America. He will take an accelerated 'training 'cOurse ,in CU-ernavaca, Mexico, before his assignment to Peru. Mr. Cullina will supervise recreational programs for 'members of the J flmes Peruvian Navy. "
COYLE COACa: B. Lanagan Jr., for two years "as8i8~I\t, basketball' and foOtba.ll/co~1:l at Coyle High Scl1ool'. :~aunton, will replaceiJohn.O'Brien as head, , ·basketbaJl'COach. A grad.;;' uate of COyle', 'Mr. Lanag~ " played varsity, football and basketball in high ·school. He graduated from Storiehill College in 1958, also playing varsity basketball there, and majoring in eduootion.
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WINOOSKI PARK (N~ -"The American people aM) fed up to the neck with goo" uIaI' education," B ish 0 Jl J2JJ1es J. Navagh of Ogdensbui'6> N. Y., said at St. Michael's Col-
K OF C CLAMBAKE: Enjoying the outing held Sunday by Mattapoisett Knights are, left to right, Grand Knight Thomas Clark, Chairman Melvin Miller, and Bake'master Joseph Nunes.
Church Works for Radical Changes In Social Thinking in Spain
MADRID (NC) - Marcos 11'- all his movement's centers. rueta, a skiiled engineer working Bdreats for a factory in industrial VizAnd at Granada during one cl caya province, has renouneed the spiritual "co~ando-type" , half his pay and asked the man- retreats known as "Cursillos de agement to use it to i~crease .the Cristiandad" (Exercises in Chriswages. of the plant s neechest tianity), one rich merchant rose workers. , in front of 300 men' to promise He 'was making 15000 pesetas that he will make restitution to a montb (about $250), which by society for his excessive profits. local standards is a high salary. There in sight of one of the "Some people call it charity. world's 'marvels of Moorish arI prefer to call it social. eonchitecture, the Alhambra, Fathei" sciousness;" the chaplain of the Miguel Peinado, showed me local union added in telling ahe some of the sections of his parish story. of Our Saviour perched atop the , Complaint surrounding hills. , Not less strik~g, but for op"'It was a Marxist nest, such )l4)site reasons, was the· complaint was the spiritual neglect," he ex~ I heard from a Sister in a large plained. "It took a fierce battle city of Andalusia, in southern during the Civil War to capture Spain. this Red stronghold, but that "Imagine, Mr: Reporter, the was easy compared with the wealthy women who ~nd their silent struggle to overcome the daughters to our school have people's resentment against reliwarned us not to teach them the gion 'during the years since" I social doctrine of the Church. . . came." The y, had burned They say alms are enough for churches and religious houses. the poor." ,,"You 'Father Peinado Of course, the SiSters did not added, "it's hardtotalk~bout oblige."':'" 'Christian forgiveness to a widow ,'Quietly, the 'Church inSpajn and her grown children in' fi-'ant is' work'ing a' radical chl!ll.ge of the picture': of her execu'ted 'iI)' the l!ocial'thinking of ~p~- husband.;" ' '.' iards, so ~at s.ome day there in,l:lY "But patien~e. charity a~d ihe be . more Marcos Irruetas and miracle of the Holy ,Mass did the fewer women without social con- trick'," he sighed.' , , sciences. ' '. " ",' " Father sums up the situatiQ,n Bitter Gap ~isely:whel) he 'says: "We qaye Several groUps are spearhead- Ii rich class, p,ious indeed and ing the effort to close the bitter sound' in family morals, ,but gap between 'rich and poor; 'be- nUl'ilb' to any social responsibil'tween' management and' labor: ity. And acrosS the tracks,.a pQQ,r Catholic Action organizations class, somehow bitter and insenand the parish revival arid spiy:.. sitive to organized religion. itual movements. "What we need, and soon,-' is a At Madrid headquarters of Fe Christian society' at both ends: '1:1 Catolica (Catholic Faith) - an working class with dignity, reli:" adult catechism movement~ Fr. gious faith and hope of better Ramon Sanchez de Leon, S. J .. days, and a have-class willing to told me how among its 600 share in generosity for the com"fishers" or leaders, he is mOst mon gOod." 'proud of Joaquin'Tesser, once II radical worker and a memoer of the brigade headed by the Red leader, El Campesino, of 'Civil War ill fame. "The fervor he once had few the Red cauf!e has now turned to Christ," the priest told me while sh0wfug Hie map marking Commercia'i • Industrial Institutional Painting and Decorating, PWMBlNG & HEATING, INC. 135 Franklin Street ~. for'Domestic
WY 2-6216
EMMITSBURG (NC) - JlIil, Robert B. Kline, 41, has bee.Il inaugurated as president of Mt. St. Mary's College here. The 4/}c. yeal1'-old native of Willi~ has been philosophy professor Ill! the college. He sUcceeds l\ofsgIil, .John L. Sheridan who has servecll ~ president 25 years and will eontinue as president emeritUll.
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Emmitsburg College Has New Prexy
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lege baccalaureate services. "One of the absurdities ~ American life is the divorce be-tween education and religion,'" the B~shop asserted. "This if! m divorce which I.am convinced iB against the will of the averago American father and mother." PubDie SiclI He, said the American publ~ "is sick ... of juvenile criminalS\; the lack of that nobility wh,icb goes to make a man a man imt!! ail woman a woman,all the 8UFo thenUc results of educati«m ,which ignores the fact of thcl Creator and the fact of our dutiGIJ ,to Him." . : Bishop Navagh, recalling' h~ service. as ,Auxiliary Bishop,' ~ Raleigh, N. C.. stated: "My' ~ ronal experience has convinceCl me that this dissatisfaction i!5 just 3S widespread among PrM= estants as it is among Catholie& lin my five years in Raleigh, II found 'that one-third of om' pupils were Protestants, sons an«lJ daughters of parents who wante<! DO part of this mvorce of reM» ~on and education." , ,
CA 2-0234
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Famous for OU~ Primtl, Aged Charcoal Broiled Steaks - also Roast Beef - Sea Food ,
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A Wedding, Shower, ~, .q.. or Meeting-CalJ our Ban~ few clofails. All Parties gi_ OW Expon Attcntion-eaf:l
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91 Crandall R«I. Tiverton, R.D.
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. [;.;ocesan· ,High Schools Confer·D·IPlomas on 636 G'raduates
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