'.f'h"·e -'ANCHOR .
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PRICI: IOc $4.00 De' Year
Vineyard. Haven Church Dedi'cation on 'Sunday By Patricia McGowall1l Probably the first Pontifical Mass ever to be 'celebrated .<I)Jli Martha's Vineyard will ·take place at 4 this Sunday afternoon when Bishop Connolly dedicates the new Church St. Augustine at Vineyard Haven. Thought the o~ly all-wood church in the Dio- attention to the altar. . cese, the structure, of conSunlight blazes thro~gh a ,huge temporary desIgn: is linked window in the rear of" the to the past by a 1OO-year-old church, but is softened by
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bell mounted atop its peaked mauve-shaded glass in side win_ dows. In harmony with the 1'00£. . The bell 'is heard thrice daily , maritime tradition of Martha's for the Angelus and announces Vineyard, carpeting and church doors' are of sea-green turquoise. Sunday Masses. ~ Of rubber vinyl, the carpeting Newcomers to the church aasp involuntarily as 'they enter. is guaranteed to withstand the Its 42 foot ceiling, soaring to a tramp of seagoing boots as well Ilharp peak, gives the feeliag of as the more 'customary muddy !mmense height, while a heroic and SilOWY shoes.of Winter. 10 foot 'crucifix draws immediate . . '.fum. to Page Seventeen
Pope John Urges Penance To Prepare for Council VATICAN CITY (NC)-:-PQpe John has issued an enerclical calling for t~e practice. of pen'ance by .the world:s Catholics in .preparation for the coming ~ume~llcal counCIL In the seventh encyclical of his reign, entitled Paenitentiam Agere (To' 1;)0 Penance), f~r it by prayer, the practice of Pope John al~ called on the the normal Christiall. virtues world's bishops to institute an~ voluntary mortification. • solemn novena. in hon~r Qf '. The encyclical pointed out
the Holy Sph;,it to iQvoke the that "if we Consult· 'the1?OOks blessings of divine grace on the of the' Old a~d New Te~taments, F3thers of the council... :~e'~ shall notice that everyocThe eilCyclical was dated Julr .easion of a. ~lore solemn'.' en- . 1, the feast of the Most Preci~us Turn to Page Nineteen Blood. Its Latin text contams " . .
OUR LADY OF THE CAPE CHURCH, BREWSTER
Celebrates First Mass in New Parish Church at Brewster .
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Services were held in th~ new Our Lady of the Cape parish church, at Brewster (lift Cape Cod, for the first time Sunday when Rev. Joseph A. Nolan, M.S., pastor, celebrated the first Mass. Beginning next Sunday - and continuing through the Summer five Sun-' day Masses will be celebrated ~t 7 :30, 8 :30, 9 :30, 10 :30 and 11 :30 A.M. Formal blessing of the' new edifice will be The church, with a seating Special attention has beeD. held at a date to be an- capacity of about 600, permits given to the parking problem.,' nounced, pro b a b I y near partitioning the front half for with ample facilities available m Labor Day. New Testament. year-round Use and shutting off . a very large lot. . "'accounts 'of Our Lord's associa- the rear section during the The church ia staffed 1>7 tion with the sea suggested the motif for the interior, carried out in scenes depicted in the 14 nave windows. Candelabra ,and sanctuary lamp are constructed in anchor fashion, and the altar reredos follows the pattern of a fisherman's net. '
Winter months. LaSal~tte Fathers, who reside M Basement of the structure will their seminary in East Brewstet serve as a parish hall, with. ~nd serve at Immaculate COIflo stage and kitchen facilities. ception Mission.
Physicians -Should' Allow ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dignity to Those Dying Cornerstone The Most Reverend Bishop, ·.James· L. Connolly, D.D., will 'Iay the cornerstone of the new Taunton Me~orial High School 'for Girls tomOrrow afternoon ai ~. o'cl\Hlk.· , ' . . This will be Die third Dioc- ' esanHigh School. conStructed ·under.'Bishop Connolly's diree·tion.Bishol)Stanr; High School 1n No;' Dartmbuth .and Bishop Feehan'High' School in Attleboro we~ ereeted i... that -order. .-
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LONDON (NC)-A dying person should be allowed. to die in peace and dignity rather than surrounded by such useless litPparatus as tubes and oxygen tents, an American psychiatrist said here. Dr. John R. Cavanagh of Washing., ton,. D.C., spoke, at a panel u. S. Guild of' Catholic Psychilt<> seSSIon on "The Hopeless trists. . Case" during the 10th Inter.; Dr. Cavanagh, who is editor national Congress of Catho- of the guild's bUlletin, asserted' lic PhysiCians. Another participant on the panel was Father Francis P. Rowley, S.J., of poughkeepsie, N.Y., chaplain of the Hudson River State Hospital arid an associate member of the
~~t~;~O~a~~~:~~eth:~e~hr;:: ,Penpal J!isswner$·From :Trinidad, Chile, Meet : : p~~~~~~ofh=naa~~a;:d:~:~ "At St.,; 1,hOlf1!ls .Mor~' Re~tory'",: in So~er.set cdered it indispensable "for the perfection of its sons and its better future." The POlltiff recalled. that ill the document convoking the ecumenical cO\1ncu. he has urged all Catholica. to prepare I
~ilgrims Leave
On Tuesday
One's a missiomiry'iIi Chile, the other. in Trinidad; 'they've been, corresponding for years-but they had to come to St. Thom~ More Church in Somerset to meet: They are Rev. Thomas Plunkett, M.M., Fall River native, -and Rev.· Maximilian ,Murphy.. Father ~lunkett, in Chile, saw a request in a Catholic peripdical for €hristmas card-sto be sent ....,~.,...,.. ....,-.' - . . " to,Trinidad. Replying, he. ~L~:',~~~";•.-,, struck up a correspondence 'I:~",b,,:"" with Father Murphy, o,rigin.~!:i" -.' any from Texas, but now
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For Europe The second Diocesan Pilgrimage under the personal leadership. of M 0 s t Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, will sail £l~ noon next Tuesday on the SS. Constitution from Commonwealth Pier 5, South ·Boston. C 1 erg y accompanying the lBishop on this pilgrimage will. be Rt. Rev. John J. Kelly of S8. Peter and Paul Church, Fall River, and Very Rev. A.rthur W. Tansey, rector of the Cathedral. The group will visit famed shrines and holy sites in Porrur,al, Spain, France, Switzerlend, Germany, Holland and England on the tour. Highlights of the trip will be visitR to the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima in Portugal and that of Lourdes in France.
MISSIONERS MEET: Rev. Maxmilian Murphy (left) and Rev. Thomas J. Plunkett, M.M. chat in St. Thomas More rectory, Somerset. Priests met for first time after carrying on correspondence for years.
stationed in the West Indies. The m~eting .came about when Father Murphy was scheduled to preach at ~t. Thomas More under the' Cooperative Mission Plan and Father Plunkett, on home leave from Chile, arrived to fill in for vacationing priests. " Comparing notes, they discussed their use of postage stamps and Christmas cards to ensure mission children's attendance at Mass. Father Plunkett has started his small Chileans on the hobby of stamp collecting, and he adds to their collections with ~ foreign stamp each time they come to Mass. . Father Murphy gives out Christmas cards. Both priests said that the cards and stamps are an excellent way of checking up on children. It they can't produce them the next day, U means they weren't at Mass. Father Plunkett was among Turn to Page Fifthteen
that most of the so-called "agony" of death. is in the minda of those surviving. Such indica:. .tions as labored breathing and the muscular contortions of th~ dying individual may give tlut impression of agony, he said, but they are "merely physical re.sponses of the dying organism.He added: . "Mentally; when the paijent feels that death is near, and th~' is usually the case, his state of mind is peaceful. Our nature iii such that we bear anxiety poorly. In the case of the dying, the anxiety of 'not knowing' is overcome. Now he knows. D)"jolJ is easy for the dying." . Dr. Cavanagh said, however, that the dying patient of today is often so surrounded by medical equipment and gadgets that "he looks more like a complicated experimental animal thu the human person he still is." Turn to Page Eighteen
French Bishops To Ask 'Local language Use PARIS (NC)-Many of th0 bishops of France at the forthcoming Vatican Council will press for the use of more of the local language in t,he Mass and for other reforms to make the Mass more meaningful to the people, according to the head of the French Hierar~ chy's new information office. Father Pierre Haubtmann told the N.C.W.C. News Service that French Catholics want greater use of French at Mass. He said that because many of the bisho> 'turn to Page Fifteen
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall ~iver-Thurs., July .12, 1962
Ap~eaIC@urt .Up~@md {LD01lh?etr~a~y's'
Right to
Urges Catholics To Recite Million .Peace Rosa W'ges
DB~mi$s f~Mlf )S)li'llil~J®ITTI~~'"
Catholics of the
Dioc~
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are asked to participate NEW YORK' (NC)-The' right statement of the students so they-' a Million Rosaries Crusade of St. John's University to dis- could be· graduated. The universponsored by Sacred He~ miss four Catholic students for sity then appealed the ruling. St. John's University's execuJunior P rae sid i u m of tM taking part in a civil marriage. Legion of Mary at St. JallKlSl ceremony was .upheld ~y the tive conimittee issued the fol· Church, New· Bedford. Appellate Division of the New lowing statement after the Appellate Division's ruling: Praesidium officials explam York Supreme Court: here. !nternal Affair the project is a spiritual crusade .The decision reversed an earSt. John's University is gratiof Christians who are aware oi Her ruling by Supreme Court the "drastic need of prayers fez Justice George Eilperin, who fied to learn' that its appeal to the security of world peace and ordered the universitY to r~in the Appellate Division has won the salvation of souls." state the students. The univer- a favorable decision. The deciParticipants are asked to l'&co sity, conducted by the Vincen- sion . recognizes the. basic issue cite as many rosaries as possible tian Fathers, is located in of the case, namely, the right of. for the triple intention .of world Jamaica, N.Y. The four students the university to manage its inpeace, salvation of souls ancll were to have graduated in June~ ternal affairs without interference. The decision is one which conversion of Russia. Three of the students took the . renders the highest service to' Notify Legionaries ease to court - Howard G. Carr educational institutions throughThose wishing to aid the and his wife, Greta Schmidt out the nation. '. crusade are asked to .notify Misa Carr, who were married in a "Weare profoundly sorry for Adeline M. Carvalho, 51 Nelson civil ceremony in Brooklyn on the unhappiness brought to those Street, New Bedford or Mi. March 13, and Jean Catto, a wit- students involved.' Though our Lucille Lebeau, 24 Mar gill ness at the ceremony. The other compassion' is great, however, it · Street, also New Bedford. The,' witness, John Sharkey, was not is our deepest conviction that HOPE FOR VOCATIONS: Bishop Ramon Lizardi, left, should i n' d i cat e how m~ a party to the suit. because of the circumstances of Caracas, Venezuela, and Bishop Gennaro Prata .of La rosaries they. will recite. Church Ceremony and the significant issues in- Paz, Bolivi~, discuss prospects for promoting the work of 'After the civil marriage the volved the university had no Serra' International in Latin AmerJca with the. hope of Urges Tearing Down mudents were questioned. by choice-but to take the 'action it increasing priestly vocations. NC Photo. university officials and admitted did." Barriers in Europe they had taken part in the cereWElDEN (NC)-Thepeople. mony. On recommendation of a , of Europe must tear down aJI' university committee composed the barriers that separate them. of students and officials;· the. whether national, religious ~ executive cominittee on April 12 KINGSTON (NC) - ' c'astro VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope years· and that he rejoiced that' class, the new Bishop of Regeneverbally notified the students burg said here. Cuba's constitutional court 'hils John 'has congratulated the his prayers had been' answered. they had been dismissed from ruled against an appeal by' the people of Algeria on their He expressed concern for Bishop Rudolph Graber spo~ the university. Church protesting the govern- newly won freedom and has as- "those nations· where a certain at .the city- hall of this UPJ>Q The Carrs then went throligh ment's confisl:ation of the Cath- sured them of his continued established order, while bring- Palatinate industrial City nfl • Church marriage ceremony olic Cristobal Colon cemetery, prayers. ing some economic .well . being, . Germany on' the occasion 0'£ h!:lJ witnessed by a priest of the according to a Cuban broadcast The Pope's good 'wishes were does not correspond to the re- first- visit since becoming he2~ bride's parish. Written notices expressed' -in a radio message quirements of the spirit··: .. to of the Church in this region. & of the students' dismissals were heard here in Jamaica. The regime of Marxist Premier delivered in French. Independ- .the rights and duties of the ca)led for a close merger of 1M] received by them on April 18. Fidel Castro took over the cem_ ence cam~'to the former French human' person." Christians and for a united EUlJ:, The 'Carrs and Miss. Catto etery in August, 1961. north' African ·territory (July 3) Each day,. Pope, John: said, ope. brought their case to the. New. . The Havana broadcast said the following an overwhelming vote "We speak to God of the needs York' Civil Liberties Union, N®«:rology ....hich instituted the Supreme cemetery was not the private' 'for freedom in the. elect~on of of the whole human family, and property of the Church, but July 1, 'which took. place aft.er every morning we gather all. Court suit in their behalf. public property because it con- more than seven years of civil peoples ,around. Our altar . . . JULY 14 On .June 6 Judge. Ellperin stituted a public:. service. The' war between French and Algeri- We are always anxious for those . Rev. Nicholas Fett, SS.C~ r:uled that the disciplinary radio spokesman declared: ans., nations where peace is uncer- 1938, Pastor, St. Boniface, Net)' ground on which the university , "The tribunal added that in Pope Johri said that Algeria tain or where it is lacking 81- Bedford. based the dismissals was too the ca~e in point, private prop- has been in his prayers in recent together." Rev. Edmund i Neenan, 194W, '"vague" and ordered the rein- erty which .has been acquired '. Recent events have oeen con- Assistant, Sacred Heart, 6~ and enjoyed as part of the patri-' !Boy SCCl>ut, ducive to confidence, he said, in · Bluffs. mony of the complainant is not view of the fact that young Episcopalians. Study JULY i6 involved, that it is rather an infoU' .Feat 'nations are drawing up their .Rev. 'Bernard 'Percot, .00J?." tegral part of a public service, LOS ANGELES (NC) _ Boy constitutions and making' .their Ruling Prayer 1937, ' .Founder, St. Domin~ the reversion of which to the Sco~t Bob Tolomeo, 15, has been free voices heard in the ·world. PHILADELPHIA (NC)-The local community does not consti- recommended for a life-saving Swansea. Episcopal Diocese of Pennsyl- tute, an irregular expropriation medal .. by . his scoutmaster for JULY n . w.nia has withheld comment which is susceptible to protection' rescuing a drowning boy in Name 'Bishop's Plane Rev. William' J. Smith, 19~ pending a study of t~e. V. S. under the courts." . Me~ica'n waters off the Baja For 'Saint Martin Pastor, St. James, Taunton. Supreme Court's ruling outlawCalifornia coast. JULY 19 ing recitation of the State Bpard PUERTO MALDONADO. (NC Mass Ordo .Young ,Tolomeo, who was Most Rev. D~niel F. FeehQo" of Regents' prayer in New York -A new plane' to be given 'to a state public schools. FRIDAY-:-Mass of previous Sufi_. graduated in 'Junt: from St. Se:- bishop here to help him' visit D~., 1934; Second Bishop oJ. Fcll . day. IV Class. Green. Mass. bastian parish school here, rush- outlying areas of ,his 'widesprecl EUver, 1907-34.' Sidney L. W. Lea, 'chairman edon a' surfboard to the rescue See is being named "Brother Proper; N.o Gloria or . Creed; of the' Department of Christian of drowning' father' and SOD Martin" in hoilor of Peru's IeCommon' Preface. Social Relations of the diocese,. at La Mison' beach. . SATURDAY-St. BonaventUre;' cently .canonized' St: Martin de appointed a committee of three The father'apparently already Porres. . aishop, Confessor and. Doctor Funeral Home to study the majority, concurof. the Church. III Class. White. was dead when Tolomeo reachThe plane is to 'be' presented - ring and dissenting opinions in 571 Second St. Mass PrQper; Gloria; no Creed; ed him, but the son was still to BishQP Javier Ariz Huarte, .the light. of "our understanding desperately trying to keeP afloat. Fall River, Ma~s . Common Preface. O.P. Apostolic Vicar .of Puerto of the Christian faith." The com_ Tolomeo pulled the DOY aboard Maldonado. It is being paid far SUNDAY-V Sunday After PenOS 9-6072 mittee was appointed at the retecost. II Class'. Green.. Mass his surfboard and brought. him by. donations from Peruvian ques.t of Coadjuator Bishop J. MICHAel J. McMAHON ashore. . Proper; Gloria; Creed;' PreCatholics and a grant from the Gillespie Armstrong. lIcenled Funeral D'irector Society fOl' the Propaga·tion 01. face of Trinity. Regiltered Embalme, "As a people grown accus- MONDAY-Mass of previous the Faith. . Issl~ners . cqulre tomed to invoking God's direcSun'day. IV Ciass. Green. Mass New U. S. LocCition tion in our public life, we react Proper; No Gloria; Second .DENVER (NC)-A 13-10t tract sharply to what may appear to Collect . Blessed.. Virgin of has been acquired here as the St. Francis rortail'the cherished embellishMount- Carmel; no Creed; new U. S. headquarters site for ments of our way of life. So Residence Common Preface. Punera' Dome much 90 ,that we overlook the· TUESDAY-Mass of' previous the Bethlehem missionaries. FOR YOUNG. WOMEN real import of this opinion." the Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass The property was acquired by 550 LocUS 8&. ' S Father Antone Borer,S.M.B., 196 Whipple St., Fall River Bishop said. Pcoper; No. Glorla; econd" U. S. Provincial of the society, FaD River. Mass. Conducted by Francisca• . Collect St. Alexius, Confes-. with the approval of Father Max Missionaries of Mary OS 2-2J91 sor; no Creed; Common Pre-.. BoechIinger, S.M.B., Superior face. Comfortable Furnished Rooms Rose E. Sullivan WEDNESDAY-St. Camillus De. General in Immensee, SwitzerFORTY With Meals Inquire OS 3-2892 Jeffrey E. Sullivan Lellis, Confessor.' III Class;,. land. . DEVOTION ,.white.. M;ass Proper; Gloria; rl<C::l>t::l<CloCec::lol:JoCX)C!eO=:!ol::)' Second Collect SS. SymphoJuly 15 - St. Hyacinth, New rosa and her Seven Sons, . Bedford. Martyrs;. no Creed; Common St. Mary, South DartFUNERAL HOME. INC. FUNERAL HOME '. Preface: . mouth. Il. JlIareoJ a..,. - 0. Lorraine a.., Excavating THURSDAY-St. Vincent de' 986 Plymouth Avenue Roger Lall'ranoo Pa'ul, ConfeSsor. III Class. July 22-51. Pius X, So. Yar-' Fall River, Mass. . Contractoll's White. Mass Proper; Gloria; mouth ' PUNERAl DIRECTORS Tol. OS 3-2271 no' Creed; Common Preface. . St. Stephen, Dodgeville~' ,. CROSS ST., FAIRI}fAVEN 16 mVINGTON CT. . DANiEl L HARRINGTON'
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P~pe John Congratulates Algeria
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Wilfred C.
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Anglicans Name Delegate Observer~ ~@[f Council "
THE ANCHORThurs., July 12, 1962
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Prayell' Decision Boon for Private, Parish Schools
LONDON (NC)~Too Arehbiship of Oanterbury has. announced the appointment of three.AngIica·n churchmen to. ·serve as "delegate observers" of the 40-million' member Anglican Communion a£ the Second Vatican COuncil. The clergymen who .will. attend . Churches as wen as to th~ .Orthe Catholic .council are the thodox and other Eastern Right Rev. John R. K. Moor- . Churches and the Old Catholic man AngliC!l.n· Bishop . of Church. Ripo~, England; the Rev.. Fred"The Vatican <;:ouncil w!ll. not
TALLAHASSEE (NC)The U.S. Supreme Court decision in'the New York state prayer case may increase
enrollments in private and parochial schools, Florida's state erick C. Grant of New York,.1le conce.rned. wlth. negotiations school superintendent said here. former president of the Protes- fo~ reunion. Arrang~me~ts are Thomas D. Bailey said he <tant Episcopal Church's Seabemg made· i~r the observe:s favored Florida public schools bury-Western .Theological Sem- from . the non-Roman CatholIc continuing daily Bible readings inary at Evanston Ill.' and the churches to be pre.sent at the < • " public " solemn the without sectarian comment as Ven. Charles deSoy,sa, Archdea1 seSSiOns . d I of t.ts well as recitation of the Lord's con of Colombo, Ceylon. general counCl an a. so a 1 Prayer, unless they are specifi-' Th Most Rev Arthur Michael closed general assemblIes. cally banned. . Ram:e Archbi~hop of Canter"In addition, the .Vatican. S~c Bailey said "the great majorib ~. t f All England retariat for Promotmg Chns~lan u~y'tonmi~i~ua~ leader of the Unity is to hold special seSSiOns ty of parents desire their chilan . p sp .'. d for the observers so that the dedren to receive a type of educaAnglican .Commumon, disclose liberations of the council can be , tion where moral and spiritual the appomtments at a. Churc,~ fully discussed. This will enable values are emphasized." 0f England assembly h~re. th b to follow closely He said at the same bme that e 0 se~vers . "Congress' by the passage of legislation such as the College "'deep doctrinal differences" be- :e WOrkl~gl of. t~:r~~~nc~~az~ tWeen the Roman Catholic and accura ~ y m .. Aid Bill, the National D.efense Anglican Churches do not stand matters of mterest ... Education. Act and the school in the way of "the call that lunch legislation evidences a disposition . to grant additional comes' to all Christians to pray tllot" the forthcoming Vatican tax money for the support ox council that· it maY by God's TAKE FINAL VOWS: Two Sisters of the Love of God private. and parochial schools," blessing serve the cause of .order took final vows Monday night at St. Mary's Church, Bailey said . Christendom in truth and "If these trends continue, STUTTGART (NC) Ger- Fairhaven. Rev. Edmund Fr'ancis, SS.CC., pastor, ceriter, lI:ighteousness." more private and parochial many's Catholic. press, which hands Sister Mary A.ssumpta; R.A.D. her ring. Sister Paz schools will be operated so that Sessions for Observers Hitler's Gestapo blotted out enArchbishop Ramsey said in his tirely by 1941, has. doubled its Alonso, R.A.D. is kneeling. Others. participating in cere- parents may have the opporstatement to the Church Assem- pre-Hitler circulation~ mony are altar boy Claude Sniezek, in background; Rev. tunity to place their childreR bly: where moral and spiritual This was brought out here at Manuel Aspurz and Rev. Jeremiah Casey, SS.CC. "As President of the Lambeth the annual convention of editors values can be etnphasized in the educational program. Conference I have been invited of German diocesan' newspapers. "In thinking ahead for 20, 4t to appoint three delegate 'obBefore Hitler's rise to power oJ;'. 50 years," he noted, "if these servers to· the Second Vatican in the early 1930's, Germany had trends continue, the public Council, which meets this com- more than 400 Catholic dailies schools may well exist as secular ing Autumn. Invitations are, I and 435 weeklies ari4 monthlies. BELLEVILLE (NC) - Mem- Protestant churches, a convert institutions with attendance by understand, also being sent t6 The wartime suppression of only those children whose parthe Lutheran and Reformed these publications was completed bers of small, anti-Catholic said here. Protestant sects may be better Thomas A. Brady, dean of ents are unable to pay a small by the destruction of m,any of prospects for conversion' in some social studies at the University private tuition or who have no their buildings and, presses by ways thaI?- ~embers of the larger of Missouri, Columbia, said interest in their children 'reAllied bombings. members of sects on the ceiving emphasis on moral and Yet today, the Catholic editors "fringes" of p'rotestantism "be- spiritual values in the pursuit 'Vas~ were told, 420 Catholic periodilieve religion is important... of their education." . FRANKFURT (NC)-P~ cals published throughout the' "That is a good place to start" country have" achieved an aggre_ testant and Catholic biblical eirculation of 15 million, . Forthcoming activities of Fall in the process of. conversion, he aeholars flre achieving vast gate double that of. the Catholic River Council 86 of the Knights told delegates to the 11th anBERLIN (NC)-City authoragreement in the in terpreta- press in 1932. ities of Poznan in Red-ruled of Columbus include Ii mystery nual meeting of the national lay tf.Qp of Holy Scripture, according comm'ittee of the Confraternity Poland forbade Catholics to Current circulation of Cathoto a leadipg student of the lic periodicals in' Germany is ride. Saturday night, Jury' 21. of Christian .Doctrine here in. carry religious banners in thw M'embers and friends will meet movement for Christian unity. about 10 percent of the com- at' 6:30 at Bedford Street and IllinOIS. year's Corpus Christi, processions. 'Father Thomas Sartory, O.S.B.; bined circulation of ·all periodiEven though the smaller According to reports, Archbishop Eastern Avenue North. Stephen of Niederalteich Abbey, editor cals in. the land. Protestant sects may be "mili- Antoni Baraniak, S.D.B., of Moore is chairman. • of the e'cumenkal magazine Una Poznan told Catholics not to be 22 Diocesan Weeklies Annual family picnic chicken . tlintly anti _ Catholic," Brady Sanda, spoke at. the 76th naintimidated by the new restricThere are 70 publications of barbecue and field day is set said, "the militant evangelical tional assembly of the Union of miSSionary and religious orders, Protestant is a better prospect tions. for Sunday, Aug. 19 at tbe Boys' German Cat hoi i c Students' with a combined circulation' of for conversion in many ways" Club Camp, Assonet. Clubs. than a "nominal" member of a three million. The almost 70 Members of the bowling larger church or non-believer. . He said that because of dog- pUbiications of Catholic trade matic differences, scholars ap- and vocational groups' have a league will meet at 7:30 ThursBrady said he would "rather proach .the Bible with precon- circulation of 2.8 million, and day night, July 26 at the counattempt to awaken the interest · eeived ideas: He said that be- the children's publications a cir- . cil home. Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. of these people in the Catholic eause of this, Catholic dogmas culation of 2.2 million. DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM religion than I' would to apmust be reillumined in the light Germany's 22 diocesan weekSUPPLIES proach, with the same purpose, of Scripture-not in the expec.,. lies enjoy a ,circulation of about 204 ASHLEY BOULEVARD ST. COLUMBANS (NC) a person who believed that all tation that they will turn out to %.5 million. Father James A. Kielt, S.S.C., religion of any kind was superNew Bedford oontain error, but in the realiThe 16 national weeklies have has been elected Superior Gen- fluous nons~nse and superstization that no human definition a combined· circulation of two WY 3-8405 tion." . can do justice to the fullness of million. There are also 192 eral of the St: Columban's Foreign Mission Society to succeed Divine Revelation. monthly and bi-monthly magaAbbot Basilus Ebel, O.S.B., of zines with a total circulatiOIl of Father Timothy Connolly, S.S.C.. Maria Laach Abbey, told the 300 2.'1 million. Fewer than 10 daily according to' reports received at delegates that it is essential for newspapers can be termed Cath_ the society's U. S. headquarters here in Nebraska. them to fulfill the social task in- olic. cumbent on them because of the fact of Christian brotherhood. Stating that the word "brother" carries more weight with Protestants than with Catholics, Abbot Ebel said it is only through the genuine awareness of Christian brotherhood that the painful scandal of the schism of churches can be overcome.
German Catholic Press Rebounds
Sa'ys 'Members of Militant 'Sects Best. Prospects for Conversion
Scholars Achieve· Agreement'
Fall Riv.er Knights Set Mystery Ride" Picnic
Reds Ban Banners
JANSON'S Pharmacy
. Heads Society
Greater New Bedford's 'Yes' Bank
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Hubbell said the Michigan school bus law authorizes local public .school districts which provide transportation for public school students to transport students attending non-public schools also. "The law also provides that no charge be made for such transportation," he declared.
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WASRINGTON (NC)The eight - million - membelz' National Catholic Youth Organization Federation in m statement issued here deplored the U.S. Supreme Court decisiOlll in the New York State public schools pra{'er case. . The federatio'n also issued 51 'second stat~ment objecting to 'another recent Supreme Court decision which, it said, "per,.. mitte.d the Post Office Department to become an agent for "the corrupVon of youth by allowing .obscene literature and periodicals unobstructed passage to impressionable young people."
Father John' JL. Thomas, S. J.
Asst So~iology Prof.-St. lLouis 'University "How can we help our children develop a real concern ' for the needy and unfortunate? Like most Catholic families we're flooded from a variety of sources with sincere requests for help, and though 'we contribute what we can", my wife and I keep wondering b t th 'ld I a ou e, poor and unfortunate Wh a t our c.h I ren earn from. in distant places T h th t ·· W 'd .' eac em 0 suc h f orms 0 f gIvmg. e ' identify the needy in their like to acquire an enduring, midst. TelI' them something personal sense of concern for about the victims of discriminathe needy" but where do we tion and exploitation, the handistart?" " capped, the poverty-stricken a.nd You have soci>ally inadequate crowded in raised an, issue our industrial slums. that s h 0 u 1 d lFalse Reasoning challenge a I I Remember, in Our Lord's des- ' The first statement said that modern Chriseription of the Last Judgement the court has "outlawed praymtian p a I' e n t.s, the selfish were condemned be~ in public schools," and. "thus, Ted. Americans cause they did not recognize in one devastating decision, this have a 1 w a·y s Him among the unfortunate in body of learned men has set been a genertheir midst - we see only what aside the entire r~ligious heri-' ous people, but we are trained to see. tage which spawned, nurtured the complexiAll too often, false traditions and has supported our nation." ty of contemcustoms, or habits blind us t~ porary social the misery and social evils about 'Shocking' Decision' problems requires our charities us. When they are called to our It said further: "We, the board to be highly organized, with the . attention, we argue that we of directors of the National result that our giving tends to didn't make the system 'and can Catholic Youth Organ'izatioD, be impersonal. At the same time d.o little to cliange it arid, berepresenting over eight million modern means of communica- Sides, there is the matter of youth throughout the country. tion have so enlarged the pos- original sin, so why expect the join our fellow Citizens in desible scope of our charity and world to be perfect - "the poor FIRST EXILE PRIEST: The first Cuban priest or- ploring this. shocking decision; the consequent requests for help you will always have with you." for, once again the Supreme that the average couple is likely No true Christian. should ,be dained in exile for the ,Archdiocese of Ravinia, Father RobCourt has overlQ9ked the spirit to become, a little confused if fooled by this specious reasonert Soler giv~s his first blessing to' Bishop Colenlan F. in ~hich the Constitutio!,\ w~ not some~hat cynical. ing, yet it is so 'comforting and Carroll of Miami. The parents of Father Soler who was written, a spirit of deep comLast Judgment ' convenient and ill acquired .so .-ordained'to the priesthood in Canada, are still- in Cuba. mitment to .religk>us values ..• Yet insistence on personal con- casually that you must con"Without, tQe religious founNO Photo. ' eern for the needy and un forsta~tly check your thinking dat~on of our comirion heritage, tunate runs like a leit motif agamstOur Lord~s description of there is no state," the statement' througnoiit the Old Testament, .the Last Judgment if you .:are' to co it tin u e d .' "Our .founding while the Savior elevated such free, yourself from it and defathers, in the preamble to the concern to a key position in His velop in your children a sincere Constitution, stated our ,belief ill teaching. ' "hunger and thirst after Justice." the proposition that God endoww What Christian' indeed can True Concern ' MEXICO CITY (NC) - When us with our freedoms. If we re~nder witho1;!t serious soulFinally, true. concern for U.S. President John F. Kennedy countries assures' a human livesearching Our Lord's graphic others demands pt'udent judg- urged l\[exicans to complete l!hood to all. They want the move God, we remove the source • of our rights as men: we redescription o,f, the Last Judg- ment..~ere sympathy or aim- ·their political revolution' with' same. "Pope John in Mater et Magismove the foundatiQn of government in which our effective re- less glvmg are not sufficient , an' economic revolution he was cognition of His identification -The .dignity of the human "per~ talking good Christian sense, an tra insists on their right to this ment. with the unfortunate in our S?n demands that wherever pos- American Catholic relief official fruit of economic and 'social jus"Let us, therefore,tContinue te tice" the' duty of a .national so- protect 'religion ,from goverrimidst becomes the criterion for Sible, our assistance should aim said ,here.' ciety to promote needed 'eco'noseparating the biessed from ·the at helping others to help themFather Joseph B. Gremillion, mic and social reform'; and the mem intervention, but let damned. ' selves. . ' socio - economic director" of duty of' 'have'· nations to assist n~t vainly attempt. to divide the "For I was hungry, thirsty, a Hence true concern requires Catholic Relief Services - Nacharacter of men by dividing his stranger, naked, sick, in prison, that we ;study the. situation and tionalC:athoHc ,«elfare Con- -the whole human fa~ily. .obligation to' society and nill "The words of President Ken- ?bligations to his Creator." . ete.,-Amen I say to you, as try to. dIscover the factors that ference, referred to President nedy and the Alliance for Prolong ,as you did it for one' of cause It. L' Kennedy's reply to. a 'speech of gress apply this Christian social these, the .least of my brethern, 'Many of those whom we must Mexican President Adolfo Lopez doctrine consistently." you did it for me" (Matt. 25:32- ~el~ are the victims of social in- Mateos welcoming hini to the 'y 46). ~ustIce, and in helping them, it country. Father Gremillion, at· Teach by .Example ,~s well to rem.ember that charity a meetin'g of the Mexican relief· How can pal"ents, teach' thi's IS no substItute for' ju'stice association, said: concern to their cnildren? Brief- though it has often been used ''President Kennedy reached LISBON atC) - The Portuly, it is a matter of developing for this purpose.' the heart 'of the 'Alliance for guese Information Ministry h~s correct attitudes, knowledge and . Major Go~l Progress in his plea for an announced the award of this judgement. Always keep in . In this connection it is pereconomic revolution :to complete year's Alexandre Herculano mind, of course, that 'as parents tIn~nt to, recall Tolstoy's obserthe political revolution of Latin Prize for history, to Father Ave_ you teach by what you are and vat,lOn that the Russian upper America.. ' lino de Jesus Costa. do more effectively than by c~ass would do everything pos.Father Costa, 54, was honored "CiviJ. rights mean little to what you say. , Sible for the peasants but get off for his two-volume study of the' fathers of fymilies who la~k jobs Developing correct attitudes their backs! origins of the ,Braga diocese in in this regard involves two Of course chiIdl'en will be and wages to provide their chilnorthern Portugal; which still things. First, children must ab.le ~o grasp these wider im- dren with, food, shelter, medimaintains a rite slightly differ. '. . A frCSIT'ilICD$Can Sister! aCQ,uire a growing· sense of plIcatIons of. Christian concern cine and education. ent from the Ron.an. Want Livelihood personal responsibility for only. gradually, yet if you GIVING YOURSELF to a A $525 award accompanies the "By the tens of millions the life completely dedicated to others, practical recognition of teach them to recognize their Iierculano prize. ' the salyation of souls ' . . the inconvenient 'fact that they essential unity with all the . peon on the farm and the man through p,rayer, work, sacare their brother's keeper, and members of God's family the on the. burro now knows that rifice and joy . . . by using their 'brother is everyman, par- realization that they hav~ re- econ<;>mic development in 'other your talents as a Nurse,' ticularly the needy and unfor- sponsibilities tow a I'd s others Bfl.!IBldloln~ Laboratory and X-Ray Techtunate. '. should follow in due course. UtlUlIi'gDCaJI nician, Secretary, AccountAlthough the belief that we Keep clearly in -mind that .0 SEATTLE (NC)--!..Applications ant, Dietitian, Seamstress, . are all created to the' image of your major goal is to teaeh per- from 32.states}md the Di!ltrict of Coo~, as well as in other God, are children of One Father, sonal inVOlvement, rather than .. Columbia have been received hospital departments and in an' through baptism have be- mere impers0tIal giving. ' here for the 1962 North Ameria new extension of oW' come interdependent members can Liturgical' Week to be held work in the Catechetical and of the Mystical Body furnishes on' the World's' Fair' grounds Social Service Fields,., the theological foundation for' 0 starting Monday, Aug. 20. such mutual concern, a helpful f There Is No Greater Charityl traini~g device is to teach your VATIC::AN CITY (NC)-,.Pope (Write-g:".-lDIi Four BJ{e--to 7 J~NmE 'STREET ~oeatioa DireclOr 161-30th Str"",children to put themselves in'. John paid tribute to the piety Roek {aland, lUinoia, for further FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321 the place of others and to think manifested in all ages by. the details of thL< nnllD~ life. I through what it must mean to peoples of' present day Czechobe poor, helpless, exploited, and' slovakia in a special audience in Plumbing - Heating 90 on. . which he r~ceived'the,seminari_ Over '35 Years Christian Attitude ans and faculty of the Pontifical of' Satisfied service Further, since concern for Nep0I.Ducene Coll~ge, the semiothers involves giv'ing, your nary In Rome for Czechoslovaks. 806 NO. MAIN STREET INC. children must acquire a Chris-' The audience was granted as faR River OS .5-7497 tian attitude toward things. a preparation for the celebraHelp them to develop a sense of ti~n .of ,the 11th centenary of the gr~titude to God for everything missIOnary efforts of SS. Cyril they have - food, clothing, and -Methodius' among'the Slavic shelter, parents, friends, health, peoples. Tqe centenary will be talents, and so on, - together commemorated next year.' w.ith the realization that as all Pope John recalled his own PIZZA-PAT~O good things come to us from visits to Czechoslovakia three God, we are to use them gener- decades ago while he was papal I,IfOUTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE. ously' in His .service. representative in Bulgaria' and Near Fairhaven Drive-In Developing concern for others later in Turkey.. He spoke FRANC:'S J DEVINE ARTHUR J. DOUCET Italian Dinners Our Specialty also requires knowledge. W'ho warmly of his visits to Prague Service 011 Patio are the needy? Where. are they? and its shrines to 'the great. ST. F~'LL RIVER, MASS. Don't tell your cliildl'en only saints 01. "those fertile re,ions." SiSSSSSSSSSSS$$%S\S\·jSSSiSSS% iSiSSSSSSS*,\j" I I
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""' ANafOR-Diocese of Fan liver-Thurs., Ju'y 12, 1962
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DSCHANG MISSION: Sister Helen William of Mansfield is among four American Holy Union Sisters laboring at an orphanage and school in Dschang, Africa. Top left, Sister Beatrice Therese holds, baby found bei'lide her mother's corpse; top center, Sister Blanche Agnes "in overcrowded "pouponniere"; top right, Sister Paul Anna helps to unload flour
Religio~
~xperts
Ag ree M@ O'O'iage Courses Ne~ded ST. LOUIS (NC) ..:- Catholic, Protestant and Jewish eXI~erts gathered here found th~mselves in full accord on the need for conununity courses on marriage and fami}.y life on every edueatiQl1al level. A seminar discussion at the 281" National Catholic Family Life Convention' brought out a consensus that a large proportion of parents today are failing in their responsibility .to teach their ch.ildren about marriage. Thc seminar was oJ!. "Catholic, Protestant" and JewiSh Appcoaches to Family Problems," Dr. Bert Glassberg, Jewish physician who gives marriage courses in the St. Louis public school system, said that' "school courses can be presented in a psychological con t ext which supports the Judeo._ Christian ethic but is nontheological and offends nobody's belief." 'Essentially S'ame' Father Gerard J. Murphy, S.J., sociology professor at St. Peter's College, Jersey City, N.J., said that "the Christian ethic lind the Jewish ethic are esscntiaBy the same," and there. fore there should be basic agree. ment on marriage courses. "If' courses are set up which Catholics and J(;lWS might have s~me minor qualms about, let us support rather than block them," he said. A minister from Detroit, the Rev. Donald F. Schroeder, ,concurred in the need for marriage education' in the schools. He 'said the 0 v era 11 Christian teaching on love and marriage is such that he is in full agreement with the exposition of' "Love and the Distortion of Love - Moral Guideposts" given the previous day il an address at a general .convention session by l"ather Henry V. Sattler, C.SS.R., assistant director of the N.C.W.C. Family Life Bureau. "I could give that same talk to any Protes.tant group," Mr. Scht'oeder said. "I don't think I would have to change one sentence in the whole thing."
Blind HeBp ISlind o LOS ANGELES (NC) The Catholic 'Guild for' the Blind here has presented a $100 check to be used to aid the blind lD the African miSsions.
shipment from United States. Bottom left, orphanage under construction; center, Sister Blanche Agnes and Sister Helen William study broken washing machine; right, "two of our beautiful big girls whose fiances are waiting anxiously for them to finish school so that they can marry."
Mansfie~dl Missioner' Am'ong Holy Union Nuns
LaborilJUg in 'Orphanage at Dschang, Africa Children in a comfortable Fall River clas sr90m, well clothed and shod, protected by I·shots" and immunizations against most pf the dread diseases of infancy, on the way to a sound Catholic education-these children gasped when they saw the photographs above and heard the stories that, went with them. Tears came to their, eyes at the tale of the Ii ttle one pictured on the lap '''Our greatest work, however, The conditions Sister' Beatrice of a Holy Union Sister in is that of our orphar.-age where Therese describes are illustrated Dschang, Africa. The baby there are 28 babies from one in her photographs. They 'show had been found beside her week _to eight months old; 36 the unbelievably crowded babies' mother:'s corpSe. ,The m,other had been dead for two days be-' fore she and me barely-living infant were discovered. Pictures and stories came fr~m Sister Beatrice Therese, S.U.S.C. ' I Ann f 8he, WI'th S·15t er pau a 0 Lawrence, Sistef. Blanche Agnes of Pawtucket and Sister Helen Willjam of ManSfield, 'Staff a home' for abandoned and orphaned African babies, in addition to a' school serving 450 childl·cn. Only Half a DaT "Our schools are overcrowded with so.ven classes bu"t only two classrooms," notes the missionary. "Half day sessions are held in order to reach all of the 450 students and even with that we haven't enough room so the primary grades a~ held in church, two in the morning 'and one in the afternoon, six days a week.
Jail
Catho~Dcs
BERLIN (NC)-An unknown number of Lithuanian Catholics were sent to prison in Klaipeda, nQw a part of the Soviet Union, after they pro~ested against turning the Queen of Peace church into a dance hall, it has, been reported here.
from one year ~o-one and a half; nursery, the Sisters laboring at and 25 little ones from two to a broken down washing machine, four. a father who walked for miles "In only four months 33 babies to visit his baby daughter at the have been received here. Most - home, and, on a happier note, of 'them naturally are of the first older' girls who have received group' which grows rapidlv be- training from the Sisters, and " are ready to leave the home and cause of the death of many enter married life. fever - stricken or neglected .' ·mothers. Address of the mission is "AU the babies are motherless Pouponniere, Orphelinat, B.P. 11, but some are fortunate to have Dschang, Africa. a father or some relative who will later take them in:to their family .once they are strong and old enough. "Just now our building iD much too smaJ.l and inadequate to give sufficient care to each one. At times of sickness it is especially difficult to keep diDeaSe' from spreading with one bed touching the other." \
PII"~yeli' Am~ndment
Is Gaining
Sup~ort
WASHINGTON (NC) - U. S. Sen. J. Glenn Beall of Maryland announces 14 senators have signed as cosponsors of his proposed constitutional amendment which ~ould permit voluntary prayer in public schools throughout the nation. The proposed legislation came in the wake 'of the U. S. Supreme Court decision which held unconstitutional a prayer composed by the .Board of Regents and recommended by the board for recitation in the New York state public schools. . Sen. Beall said his mail t. running severa' hundred to one in favor 'of the proposed amend_ ment. The Senate Judicial"J' Committee is expected to begin public hearings soon on the proposed amendment ana on other kindred measures dealing with the same subject. !f'C'rn
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Two, Needs , ,An ad~ertise~ent in a big city newspaper called for people "wh6 have opinions and can express' th(:im." The ad further stated. that. there were no restrictions 1ls, to . . age, creed or profession. . Presumably the individuals thus summoneq up wql be the answer to some producer's prayer as he turnl> and tosses trying to come up with material to feed television's voracious.. appetite; , But the 'ad does point up 'two needs in this ·age. One,' is for. people who 'have thoughts of their own. The other is for .people who' can 'exprel;is their thoughts clearly. The 'ad is searching not only .for those whose. ideas are bizarre 'or off-beat or controversial. Television might be afraid to touch anything too much out of line' wit~ accepted conventions. 'But th~ se~rching'is ~oi' people who have ideas on anything. There IS so ,much mtel~ectualfuz ziness and uncertainty that a hero's ,welcome IS prepared for the individual who' can ·.stand up and state what he believes in and why. And so the search is instituted for the man with opinions, ideas, answers to problems. Y~, the man who, ean give' his views with clarity and the common' touch is' the object of the twentieth-century Diogenes' search. Making an application to· the Faith; the s3:me .twopoint observation ·can be made to and of CatholIcs. . , How many know their religion well enough'to be able to carryon a conversation' about it,. in general and .as reC"fhnou9h thE CW~k With dl£ ChWlCh gards particular dogmas. And how many. can state the By REV. ROBERT' W. HOVDA, Catholie University teachings of the Church in clear' and understandable J . terms. ' As PaulClaudel has asked, "You who have the light, TODAY-St. john Gualbert. Bible lessons this Sunday. Here 'what are you doing with it ?" Abbot. We ask the intercession we thought we were ~afely in What' are Catholics, young and old,' educated a~d -today of a sa;nt who forgave his 'Church, safely with God, safely brother's murderer. The Gospel .out of the reach of all people poorly-educated,what are Catholics doing to 'deepen their appeals to our will at the point, who irritate us and' anger: and grasp of' the Faith? . , '... . perhaps, of its greatest ~luc- displease us. And the first thing And are Catholics trying to come to grIps WIth the 't3nce and rebellion: the com- God, does is' to put us face to modern world, answering its questions in language clear . niand to love our enemies, to face ,with each, of them again. love those woo hate us, perse- "'Be lovers, of the brethren ••• and understandable to those asking? . cute us, spread false ·stories not rendering evil for evil • • • . . This is always the ,task of the Catholic-to meet the about us. . Be reconciled to 'your brother;" "Forgive us our trespasses as MONDAY-Mass as OD S~Dworld's confron~tion with a clear answer. I
we forgive .... " '"Leave your day. We come' to offer Christ's gift there al)d go first to be sacrifice, 110 unite ourselves to reconciled to your. brother; then His perfect act of love, to lose come back and offer . . . " ourselves in His Passion .and His Public worship, coinmon prayer; Resurrection,' to receive the Man's optimism in the nobility of. his' fellow man re- requires a sense and' experience', spiritual nourishment of· His of community undiSturbed b¥ Body and His Blood. And what eeives a much-needed boost from time. to time;, 'envies, jealousies, hatreds. does ' the' good Lord do but Such an instance is recorded' in a currentaecount of TOMORROW -Mass on plunge us :right back into· two men who found a substantial sum of money lying.. OD Sunday. JesUs eStablishe~'~n . wor.ld we thought we'had left. : a sidewalk. They 'not only returned the money to its,owner order and asserts His mastery The'G,ospel asks us whethel' any,:" but pointedly refused even the, suggestion ofa reward. over things only through His one we ~ow h~s any ground members, through those who ~c- . for..complamt agamst·us.·If'anyThey reasoned that the money was not theirs, they had the cept His Mystery in faith'. Sin, 'one has, we. are war!led, 110 go obHgatlon to return it, they did so, and that is the enQ of ~:ffering ,and struggle;, there- out .. and, straIghten thIS out bef()re remain" realities in the fore we dare approach the altar. . the matter. , ". These two' meli --'- Jeho~ali's Witnesses - are indeed worid and w.m remain 'sO' until " 'TUESDAY-~assi as on S~ final 'realization of the 'king- ,~a,:.· TOOse ~ho accuse. Christ"just men.'.' They gave to the. owner. what was his due. the dom. '.' 'lam~y' of '. bemg an, opIate, of 'And they gave .to all the lesson that right must be done, Our worship sustains us in the servmg, men as an Ivory tower, ,for that reason alone, because it is right, it is just, and constant .effort the Christian of help~ng those defeated ~ formust make to confront· these ?~t theIr. ,troubles, and the real, with neither hope nor desire for any, reward~ realities armed with His coming, ItIes of life, s?Ould read the lesIt is unfortunate that men have made money sUch His victory over sin and death, sons of toda~ s Mass v.ery earean object of desire that confronted with such a situatio~ His eternal glory and His pres_~ullY. !or thIS EucharJs~ ma~es It. plam that 'our r~latlo~ps some would take the money and all too many might ~ ence in the Spirit. . WIth the people we hve WIth all turn it but with the high hope of a reward.' .SATURDAY-~t.lBona:venture week long (and even with the . It is too .bad· that mo~e people do not have the pride ,~I!lhop. Doctor.. In "the father- 'people we dOn't. see'. but for that once parents instilled into their children, the pride mg of the Church, reads the whom we still share a responsisong of ~day:s Mass, bility) are· pari [,nd parcel of that makes a person able to say "No, thank ·you"·to a gift, ~ntrance the Lord opened hIS mouth and the, gift we bring to Mass. a reward. Nothing so startles one today as tomee~up with filled him with the, spirit o! WEDNESDAY-St. Camillus such a polite refusal. It is rare that this happens. wisdom, and understanding . . . of Lellis, Confessor. The theme For Jh~Ug.h God's gracetouc~es of the Mass today, like that of And yet it was not such a rarity a 'few decades ago. all behevrng men. of .good WIll, Sunday, is love._ We honor 1\ Is that kind of pride outlawed now-the pride that the Church is still m a very saint who has' devoted his life 'makes a man satisfied that he has acted honorably and special.sense the community of to the' care of the, sick. AdmitSpirit. "Where two or th,ree are . tedly life is more complicated desirous of no other reward?' , .•.' " " . and more organize!i today. It Is that kind of detachment old-fashioned-,-the ability gathere.d The, Importance ~~th~hcs at- should' be. Our institutions for 'to refuse money? '\. tach to every ChrIstIan II p~e~the sick, our vaJ;ious programs The fact that .this incident was written up' in' the ence at. the. SundaY e~charlstk: to aid the needy-these all have c~l~br.ation 18 related to our c~ntheir place. But they do not express comments all too well on the' current attitude. It is fldence that such a gathermg cuse the' individual Christian another instance' of a trend materialism. It is good to ,is a un~~ue contact With. the from his' duty in love to respond see such a trend receive even minor set-backs' 9Ccasionaily. HQly SpIrIt; .personally to the needs of his FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER PEN- brothers. TECOST. If, the Church is' the community of the Spirit, it is still a community of men. And this :'1uman element of the Mys- Japanese Students :tical Body is evident even in her VATICAN CITY (NC) -Pope worship. Perhaps this is why so John has received in audience many of us Catholics retain, our two Japanese boys in a re':'enactrigid walls of isolation at Sun- ment of a visit made to a poPe day Mass, why we refuse to par- of four centuries ago by youthOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL ilivER ticipate, to jOnl our hearts and ful Japariese emissaries, voices 'in a common act of worThe two Catholic schoolboys Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of fall Rive!' ship greaie~than our private are Kazumichi :meguc~i Of Mi410 Highland Avenue prayer. yaziki and Kazuo otaki of TokFall River, Moss. OSborne 5-7151 For'it does require discipline yo. Their trip to Rome took less PUBLISHER and sacrifice. The others are sin- than 24 hours.' When their, preMost Rev. James L. Connolly,. D.O., PhD. nerS, too; besides, We inay not decesSors visited Pope Gregory like the way they look, the raspy YIn in Rome in 1585 they travelGENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER edge of their voices, the nasal ed three years. The 16th~century Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. DrizeoU. twang of. their song. envoys had been sent on a goodMANAGING EDITOR It is a rude jolt-the message will visit by powerful Catholic Hugh J. Golden the Church'has for· lIS in the feudal chiefs in Japan.
Minor Set-Back
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Pope Johl? Receives
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,Co,ming" Vatican . Council .
lily l'2ev. vym. F. Hogan, C.S.c.
""'= Stonehill ,Professor l~th
Ecumenical Councill
Toward the very end of his life Pope Gregory Xi brought the papacy bacli' from Avignon, France • . Rome. Two months later he wall dead and 'the Roman' people clamored for an 'Italian pope with the result that the. Arch'" bishop of Bari was legitimately elected as Pope Urban VL Shortly thereafter thecardinals gathered at Anagni outside Rome and, declaring Urban's election to have been invalido they chose' ~lement VII, • Frenchman, as pope. , With this began the 40-year period known as the GreatWestern Schism. r:rh~ Church was 'in a state of turmoil ami ·confusion as'· to which of the two was really' pope: Urban W at Rome or Clement, VII at Avignon. Both appointed bishops and cardinals, placed the other party under excommur:Ucati~n and .claimed to rule the Church. ,The scholars at the Univ~ ~ity of Paris said that the problem could be resolved only ~ both men resigning and a new pope being elected at a gener. council; underlying this sol1a.tion was the conciHar -theol7 that a general council is, supesoioc to the.: pop~. . .. " _ Genuine Council, Eventually the ~ a r din a h abandoned both popes, JlOlIIf Gregory XII in Rome and Benedict 'XIII in- France; and met at; Pisa in 1409 in 'a' "general 'couacil" of 500 members; there the)' . 'deposed' ·the two claimants ~' the pap'acy and elected anothei!' "pope",' Ale:icander. V. Anti-Po~ Alexander lived but a year' 300 was 'succe~ded by anti-PolIO John XXIII. ' When Sigismund of LuxeJDeo berg' was elected King of tb2 ,Romans in 1411, he saw to' • that John XXIII carried "out a mandate of 'the 'meeting at Pisia that a general cOuncil be held ill 1412. John XXlij: had one ill Rome, but it was very poorly at,ended; sO' Emperor Sigismunci saw to it that council would be held in Constance, Switzerlanci. Though this council was COD~ked by an anti-Pope at the insistence of the emperor, • eventually became 'a genuine ecumenical' council. ,New Procedure The council, which lasted over three years,: opened on Nov~ 1, 1414, . although' its first sessio. met only two. weeks later, witb over 600 ecclesiastics in' attendance. A new method of procedure was devised, partly' because John <XXIII had brought with him enough Italian bisJ:1ope to overrule the otqers. The council members were organized according. to natiom Italians, French, Germans, Eng.lish and later Spanish; each nation was to have one vote OIl important'matters and how tb8t vote would be cast would have to be determined in p~elimi nary meetings of the national groups. ' / Since anti-Pope John xxm had reason to fear for his fate at the' council, especially since writings denouncing his sm. were Circulated, he, fled COD'stance and caused confusion. But, at the emperor's __ sistence, the council membem declared that the "pope's" absence did not affect their stau. and authority as a council ,(1_ they considered themselves 'Tllrn to Page Sever
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be above the pope)• .Tohn XXIii was arrested and deposed by the eouncil for his crimes of flight, simony and immoral life. Resigns· Papacy Pope Gregory xn (the true pope) then sent two messengers to the council, indicating .that the council was not a legitimate ecumenical council; but he formally convoked it, malting it a legitimate council. . He then resigned the papacy, as a pope 1s allowed to do; for he realized) that the only solu. ti.-on to this crisis in the Church was the election of 11 new pope. Benedict XIII, the Avignon anti-Pope at that time residing in Spain, 'was visited personally by Emperor Sigismund, who tried to persuade him to resign. Benedict was adamant in his refusal, but finally he was deposed by the council in July, 1417. Much time had elapsed in . travelling to and from Spain. Conciliar Theory Now without a pope, the cOuncil passed a series of decrees, the most famous of wbich BISHOP CONNOLLY AT SAN VITO DEI NORMANNI AIR BASE IN !TALY WITH GROUP HE CONFIRMED stated that general councils were to be held frequently, at stated intervals, because they were the best way to keep the Church free from error' and B c h i s m s . P 0 R T L,A N D (NC) _. The . "We suggest that the child not groups: and: recei~ instruction of the far!lil3!"Sl total living eI. Here again one notices the Portland archdiocesali COnfia- be. told this is 'the greatest day m. how ~ help prepare their the Faith; tendencies of the conciliar ternity of Christian Doctrine in his l~e--his, Baptismal day . cl1irdrel:t.. -For man:l\',. the elimination theory with its idea that the . haS made "Family First .Com- was. of much more importance," of unnecessary expense. Digni~ ot Penance council is above the pope. It was . munions" a paJ't oR its perman- said Sister Paulita. "We, tFy also' to estaolish: theAdvantagea further decreed that every pope ent program. . . Famib' DaJ' I!labit. of going 1);); confeS'sion as Sister Paulita observed· fUl'on his election must make a proSister Paulita,. speaking for "But it should be made a .ver,. a familiy.r/'· Sisfer Paulita sail!. ther advantages from the· tealession of faith and whenever the Portland, Oregon, arcl'1dio- special family. day" with afes- ~l\:e children: make- their first. cher's: and the child's. pOint of a papal election was disputed, it 'ceSe>s CCD. said an expeEimenf tive breakfast afterwards.... Confession several weeks; before view-. would be the function of a gen- begun four years ago in. a PortPlacing some of the respon- First. Com..-n.union~ and' generailF "It allows the. child to coneral council with the civil rulers land . parochi31 schQol and. last: sibility for preparing clrildren. at least twice. This' givas. the centrate on Christ, rather thaD to pass 11 decision 'on the elec- year bi. C~ classes has bee11'. into the hand's. of parents. and . Sacmunenfi. at ~ its pro- on. the mechanics of IDling, down tiOD. a great success. "aUowing the chircr to concen- ~ dignity> and: p1'eVents its, the aisle properl.1 and getting Another decree stated that ' Under the. new program,.trate on Christ rather tl'lan.. OIL being. lost. in the' exciternentof in and aut of'the pew> in order," the pope. who was to he elected parents help prepare the child mechaniCs" were clfed. by :;lis>- First HoI,. Communion." she said. . should. ill collaboration witil for reception of his First Holy fer Paulita as. among. the ad"It. frees: many hoUrs: once FirSlli; rows; off ~f8: in the the council. reform the Church. Communion andl the child! re- vantageS of Family First pom- parish church are resenv:ed:. foil' spent 0111 pra-etice for.- more valuW7clif aDd Has: eeives' tb.e Host fOr· ~ first" munion. famitiesi Wiho.ge, e1tiJHl'eR are able religious: instruction. And 'I'be cquncil proceeded to i~· . time with his family at a SUn.. She explained: that generally making; Ji!mst (CommuruoU\. gen- i~ aHows the child' from the CeD vestigate the. teacbjD~ of .r'Ohn day Ma~. . eacil child has a full' year of. emdlIY at the MaSs:'tIie family claw t3!itL int'o, paris1\' life alOngWyclif and John Hus. Wyc1if, a n ' . twice-weekly religious instruc- eustomarilJr attends.. The names: side' the' cblld from the parochial Englishman', was already dead, ~nt of the cardinals and of an tion and a two-week religIous of chifdren reaeiving communion, SChooii.'" but his teachings were drcu- the bishops he could consult. A vacation school for special pre- are announced and fu.se!lted; il!. lating in Bohemia due to an ex- cfeeree was, passed against' paration under· the Portland. the pal'ish. lmlletin. om tl\:e £01. change of ic;leas and in~eresfs' be- simony and elections involving CCD pr~am, . lowing Sunda~. \ween the two countries. when' simony were declared henceParents; of fiilst·.·· 'lfJ1aders: a~ M'agr; 'l'b01tI3S1 JI. Tbbbl>\ 'VIfcar Just· AcrOSS' The tile E'ng],ish King had married fortl't null ane! void; aU parties invited to· th~ rectory in' smalf Genet1al 01! the Portland, archCog. . . Sf, Bridge; the sisteI" oi the King 'of .Bohe- involved would be excommunidiacrese andl pastor a£ .A1l Saints; mia. cated. even the pope. Says Latin AmeriCa pa1!i~ w;hpse- parochial schoolrritest Variety of .fohn Bus. the rector of the. Agreements With Nations . first Iaunchedl the filmilYJ ComtJniversiV of P rag u e,. was Pope Martin,. with the sanction Rests on' Volcano SEAFOQD muni::on plan;, cited, smne of' its; .'. spreading these teachings in of the council, entered a series . MONTREAL (NC). - AU aE. beDetits; Setvecf Any,wliere - AlSo Bohenua and these teachings of concordats .. (Church-State Latin America is: sitting' on· • -Making the receptioar of the SrW$-CHQfs,...cHlCKEN resembled. those. cIisl!Ieminated agreements) witb 'the five na- volcano, Bishop Gustave Prevosf;, sam.mnents: f(}]l" eaebi ehifdl a part later at the time of' the: pJro>-. ti,ons present at the council. Vicar Apostolic of PulcaUpa., testant Revolt: a rejection a£ . ,'l'hese concordats indicated' Peru, said' here; predicting that: the Sacrifice' of the Mass, an tflat Z.. would; be the maximum within five 01' 10 Fears, almost Tile overemphasis on Scrjpture. as oiunbez· of cardinals, that the of- all the countries. of: Latin, AmerOHice Eq,uipment. tlle on~ rule of faith. an a~ ffcial$. of the Roman Curia ica will have undergone social on the visible natW'e of the would be chosen-from various ..revoluticms.,..· . Salesroom Church. etc. nations, that disperisations for The Cnurch" is. seelting peaceNEW AND. USED' Wyclif"s teachings were eon- acquIring Church offices would WOod' alUt' Sreet ~ks and'; maim' demned by the council;. H'us. had be restricted; taxes l!nd indul;- ful changes for the betterment: I ;~, f'ding aaliinets. looksl"lJl· Blielv. of the people, but extreme leftisti So. Dartmouth already been excommuniCated .gences were also covered. . ing,; tables.. Bfhragn· eabincliJl, ~. forces constitute' /l' tfurem:,. he . wlU'drolles. em. by his own archbishop, and by On . April 22, 1418, the 45th • and Hyannis .John XXIII. The council de- and final r session of the coun- said1..in· a' talk. her.e. to~t=~_ Bishop Prevost praised the elared him a heretic and when ell was concluded. Pope Martin $0. Dartmoutlt -. ( '_ ,.~~ Uhion he refused to recant, he was V. stated' at this session that U.·S. Peace Corps for its efforts . i . . : NewBcdford in Latin .America. "For the first WY 7'-9384, handed over to the civil author- everything which the council . .'. WY .3~Z78S ities to .be executed, as· was did' as a. council (m. contrast to time;'~ he comml;!nted, "the' Hvannis 2921 customary at that time. what. was done by separate na- Americans are arriving in Latin .~~~= America with. advance preparaMethod -of Election .tions)'· was> to be observed~ tion on the social problems and; The scheme for electing the Papal: Conf"trmation p~ple." pope at this council was settled .' ;He :further gave his: confu;.· mentality of the. b upon; the co~nci1 members did matioo. to whatever was done by.not want to leave it. up to· the the council, acting;. as. a council, cardinals alone in viewof' what. .in matters: or. faith" but to no. had happened before. other matters; Thus the papal WHOLESALE AUTOMOTtVE , Thus the coundli decided that confirmation. was: restricfedi in AND ENJOY 1ft addition to the· cardUIals;. six scope-it. did not; apply to> the deputies for each: of: the f4re' decision made when the: COlm\I.NDUSTRIAt. SUPPLIES FARM nations present would: vote~ the cil was: without at pope to, the candidate would need It ~ . ~eet that:..a council is superian . • GENERAL TIRES •. DELCO BA'FTERIES FRESH majority of the crordinals' vote to, the pope. • PERFECT elRel;E R1NGS' and a ~ majorit;r of tl'le 30 Ji'w:thertn01'e;.· many of. the MILK FAU RIVER - NEw BEDFORD. - HYANNIS - NEWPORT' deputies: of the nations. cardinalS: bad! pllotested'.. against. The voters then went into· such It. ·doctrine; SQ' the council'. conclave and proceeded! to elect. did: not really act as: a. c:ouncil DEUCIOUS Cardina1l Odo CoIonna three in· passmg this; Pope: Marin ex,., days later as. Pope Marlin V. pressly condemned this teadung Church. RefOl'm when he fOrbade, appeal's. from. The Pope and the c:1!JUnl:il. then the pope' to fufiur.e eoWlci1s in. took up the matter of ChlIEch a. l)ull published'· on March. 10; Qualify v Chekd reform. Seven decuees were ap-· 14IG. , . proved by the Pope concerning In! 1448: Pope Elugatius !V" TAUNTON financial questions and the .ap>- settled any ·con:fusion. which pointments to Church. offices. might have 11'esiIlted. about which VA 4-6984 Dispensations . w ere revoked cfecrees had been, co::rfirmed by' which had for mer 1 y 'been Pope Martin V,for' be eJtplicitly AnLEBORO granted allowing laymen to hold. confirmecl' only those decrees of CA 2-0292 . ecclesiastical offices without Constance which. dip not derobeing ordained.' gate from "the prerogative, Martin. V w.edged not to tithe. . dignity and pre-emfn(;!nce af the .. ,Succ~~sors to OAVIP OUi=~,;&~ .~'o'H, . the universal clergy except in Apostoli:: See~" . eases of absolute necessity and .Next week: The 17th General New Bedford Tel WY 6-8271 then onlJr with the wri~teA ~- CounciL
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'Pos.tpone' Fir~.t Trip to,Euro~e In Favor of ExpectedB,abies
For' Sem~norY
'nle Fathers Cld ~~ Hearts will hold, a Garden Partw on' Sunday afternoon fro;M 1 ~ 6 at the Seminary on Great Nedg Rd., Wareham. The proceeds will be used ~ educate the 80 seminarians d Queen of Peace Mission Sem4<o nary, Jefrey, N;. H. The ben&=> ficiaries themselves willi.: ,00 present Sunday to assist tllMil Fathers with the par.ty.. Directionalstgns' will ~ posted in order to assist all ilill 'reaching the Seminary which fJ© located near the' Cape COO Canal, four miles from Wareham center. ' . . Dinners will 'be served.i/o 'Q1lll who wish' make it a ~ ~ cOmplete rela?ta'tio,n. ,
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By Mary Tinley IDaly According to the late Bo,b Benchley, "1 haven't been 2broad in so long that I almost speak English without an accent." That's us at our house, Sir Robert! Mati,!;er of fact, the Head of the House and I had, in early Spring, an itch to take our fi~st trip abroad baby in this family, you're stuck together -:- it would have forev,er! After all, Mom,there's ,been my first altogether. nothing you cando.", "'Oh, to visit Ireland again,'" She's right, of cour~. ~d the X sighed nostalgically in early Head of the House'18 rIght." March as the first greenery beThese young pare~ts, our chil'd' nt l'n ' '«iren, demand nothmg ,of us, do eame eVl e t' . k 't yea r d no even as . 1 • ~ :;h~re every~ Nevertheless, there ia a natuftling is green!" ral concern. ;"Visit Ireland At the present time, four s g a in?' , the grand,babies are expected to arBead 0 f the i'ive !",ithin the next four months. House took, a 1'1104 'FInis Summer ' quick doubleIreland and her greenery, hei' take. "Why you expanded economy, are wonderhaven't been to fuI. We'd love to see it. We'd like " Ireland. sin~e especially' to see the homeland :?'Our ,gr;mdparwhence oUr forefathers came to ents left a hun" America, look up relatives, have dred years ago. And probably a glass of Irish whiskey with h would be a, miracle of genetics them and trace genealogy. if you could even r,emember the We'd love to visit Paris, Longreenery of the Old Sod." . don, Spain, and particularly take , All I ~n, say is that the im- a trip to Rome and With a longogination of the Iri~h h~s cer- range glass perhaps be lucky tainlapses in certam Ir~shmen enou~ to see the Holy ,Fa~her. ,of, today, and rn mention nc Not this Summer, though. Our llUlmes. thoughts, our nrayers, and OUf' 'll'lraveR !Folders attention are more concentrated Wi,th ' a \"maybe.,.this-is-the- on the future than the past. What ;year" sort of quasi-enthusiasm, if we do get only a .hospitalwe sent for travel folders, made- eye view of a tiny ,ne,,!,,-born? ~tative ioe-in-the-ocean apAnd an,opportu l1 ity to help with proaches to various group plans, the we of' small tots to give including that of the National their parents a few moments of Press Club. rest?,' "Mark'ie. and Ginny can take . Europe would be no fulD. tbhl eare of themselves here at :year., <1' , ' home," we told each other. "W~ So, leisurely, we peruse the can plan our work so, that we, travel sections, planning a va~uld be away a month, or maycation that will be within bounds be six weeks." . -bounds, that is, of getting We even sent :!'Or the Europe- borne in Q hurry if and when en Travel Commission's new needed. listing of "300"major attractions . We're stiH cI. the persuasiOllll available iJzl 21 countries cd that vacations' are as necessary Western Europe." to clear-functioning as are good With' 300 "majors" and any, food and adequate . sleep. . Twenty miles away, we find: . DUmber of minors, we ~uld, have ourselves a ball in Europe! "A- relaxing, soul-restoring area SO early Spring dissolved into with tennis, swimming, golf, 21 late Spring, into early Summer. wonderfully stocked library, and The would-be Europeal1 tour,ists ; a"wind-swept porch onwllich at our house had not yet put Uieir to read." , moiiey down on any set trip and So, this year: 1962, we go along 'wid not taken the vaccination . with George Ade: "The time to mots, had not acquired~p-to- enjoy a European trip is about date passports. three weeks after unpa~ing.so ' "If you really want to go back .' . . and 're-visit' that Emerald Isle," , Sistell's of Mell'cy IEted the Head of the ,House said with 'N S .' G n a twinkle in his Irish eyes of ew Upell'lOII' enerau biue "let's get the thing moving. NORTH PLAINFIELD (He') It's ~ slighUy more complicated - Mother Mary Patrick :was and expensive than ta,king a trip elected to a six-year. term lW to a neighboring town." Superior General of the TrenSo there it was, stra,ightl!lP ton province of the Sisters, of/. ,~ me. , ' Mercy a~ the community's moth"Well, there are the babies," erhouse here in New Jersey. She X hesitated, "the coming babieD succeeds Mother Mary Bertrand, " . who was elected first general . , • ':M~kie, listening around the councilor. corner, broke in., "If you~re going The provinee'· has some 650 to stick around for every grandmembers who conduct 21 college, two academies, eight high SChools Catholic Educators' See 'llDd 28elementaly schools' m the Trenton and Camden di~
Dange,rin Decision"
WASHINGTON (NC)-Amer!cans now must work to prevent the' Supreme Court's prayer qecison from beiqg used to force God completely' out of pUblic education, a national commIt,. tee of Catholic school superintendents has urged. 'The ten-member executive committee of the School Superintendents' Department of the National Catholic Educational, AssoCiation said it hopes that ..the strange decision" of, the high court will arouse the nation to consider the implications ~ schools which have no religion. . Although the court's decision technically may be confined W . prayers composed .by gover~ ment officials, it is' nevertheless "a further deterioration ,of -our American tradition," said ' the committee whose chairman is Father Richard Kleiber, school superintendent in the Green Bay, Wis., diocese and head, of the' NCEA superintendents' ~:
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Madeie~ COUNTRY IF'AIR: Friends of Presentation of Mary '. Honor' Sister , Novitiate make plans for Country Fair to be held from 10'1~ Washington l~day to 7:30 Saturday, July 14 on grounds of St. Anne's Hospital, , WASHINGTON (NC) -: EloJIw Fall River: From left, Mrs. Anthony R. Ruggiero; Mrs. Leo,:: ' Cross Sister M. Ma~eleva" ~ dore Salois' Miss Margaret Parker organization president·, tired college preSIdent ~ . . ' b th f 'h~ poetess, will be honored lllt III Mrs. Mary '. SIlVIa. Event wIll featu~ many 00 s, re res -. luncheon today in the U.S. c8pA., ments and assorted fancywork. ' "tal here. f
Sister Madeleva retired i'&cently from the presidency cdr St. Mary's College for women d: Notte Dame, Ind. She often bafJ recalled exchanging manuSCri~ '. ~ . ·verse with Joyce Kilmer, poetSmith 'College, who will serve convert who' was ,killed .ll!il III companion to the children. ' World War I, and trying to help Dr. Waldo H: Hans of Albu- the late' Tom Dooley, fmnecll querque, N.M., has departed "jungle doctor of Laos," wheJl\l with his wife and four children he was a NotJ;'e Dame student" .for Ogaja, Nigeria. He will serve torn between a career in mu. for at least two 'years as an or medicine. "'orthopedic surgeon at three Co-hosts at the luncheon wm ,leprosaria in the' settlement. . be Rep. John Brademas' of: hIP. Di'. Anthony M. Opisso, for- . diana, and James A. Eldridge, merly' of Columbia Falls, Mont., editor of the Carpenter, maga-has left for Nongoma, Zululand; zine of the carpenters' tmiO!l\, South Africa, where' he . has' While in Washington;, Sisteli' volunteered ' to work as a gen- Madeleva will give a lectuN eral practitioner in a Benedic- series at DunbartonCollep ~ the .Holy Cross.' ," tine hospital.
H'usband r ' Wife Team Departs Among Medica~' Missionaries NEW YORK' (NC) - Medical missionaries,. including Ii husband and wife team, have left for re~ote areas of Africa lllDd Mexico. The Catholic Medical Mission Board aimounced thil.t Drs. Herman and Eileen Edelberg left Northamp.ton, Mass., recently for central Mexico, where they will remain for seven weeks to provide_medical care for Tarascan . Indians in the town of San Juan Nuevo and surrounding areas. Accompanying the Edelbergs be '-heir four children and Karen Kellogg, III student at
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By Andrey Palm Riker "Timmie can't give up his afternoon nap," wailed his distrai.ight'mother. "I need it." Timmie is two and offering definite signs that he is through with naps forever. With a new baby in the' house and a day crowded ,with diapers and dishes, his mother is cues that encourage sleep. For fervently sincere when she example, wash your child's face protests that she needs Tim,. and hands, partially undress mie's nap. Even in the same him. darken. the room. Don't worry about noises that are ~inily, children differ strikingly in their desires for daytime familiar household or neighborrest. Some, like hood b a c k g r 0 un d; absolute Timmie, make" silence isn't essential to children's 'rest. ' aDlar11 strug@ Take objections to naps in gle for an un,stride. Most' two year oIds need interrupted 12' h 0 u r playing daytime test but many just don't feel right unless they make & day. Others sleep willingly token protest. They pop back up when you put them down, they each afternoon may even yowl a bit or climb Mtilthey start out of their cribs. lie h 0 0 1. Most Usually a firm, calm march ehildren, though, will back to bed gets your point across. Even, the most indignant up a I m 0 s t ' . daily well into their third year and resistant nappers have a l1£ they get parental direction way of giving up quickly. falling asleep. and waking refreshed _d encouragement. Regular daytime rest is bene- and sunny. Quiet Time ficia1- for preschoolers. It magi• Don't insist that three to· cally erases irritability and pro"des toddlers with a ballDJ' five year olds nap. The need for RCond wind, soothing to the lJleep decreases with age and eotire family. If you can help these children may actually outpour youngster' learn to take grow the necessity' for daytime time out toreIax and doze, he'll naps. ,Some toddlers taper 'off have a real advantage when he gradually and continue to sleep two or three dayS a' week. Il'Ows up. Even if your youngster doesn't Tou know your own child best sleep, you, can still provid~ a - his changing body rhytq,ms as rest period or a quiet time with well' as his individual capacity books and toys. These "tini~ tor rest. These suggestions may out" periods, are relaxing, and help YOU establish reasonable they often lead. to a nap. lIIeSt patterns. Naps are part of a child's total Help Them Best ,I e e p. requirement. If your • Allow' for' changes. AD youngster sleeps late into the Chrough childhood there are afternoon he isn't likely to transitional periods when old ~~lcome an early bedtime. . habits are disgarded for new. 'l'oward the end of the first year poungsters mll7 start the shift from two or more naps t9 a angle one in the late morning eM" early ilfternoon. Most, chilDETROIT (Ne) ~ Catholic dren sleep better after eating, high schools and colleges WCl'e (jO move lunch ahead or back to , urged here to work more closely &eCOlllmodate 11 iong comfort4b1,e ,together in advanced study progap. grams for gifted teenagers. • Take advantage of familiar . Sister Mary Einil, 'president oil M:i1'ygrove college, told a workshop on advanced placement Catholic Churc~es Led programs that' "we have a poIII Credit Services 'tentlal for cooperation which has MADISON (NC)-U.S. Ca,tbO-: .been largely wasted in the past, • churchefl led all others ,m but we need not continue to pass 1961 in sponsoring Credit uniolllJ lip opportunities." Advanced placement is a prothat offered, saving and lending .ervices to their congregatiolllJ. gram developed within the past according to figures released 10 yean in which Colleges give bere by the Credit Union Na- credit for work done at superior levels iii. high schools. It is now tional Association. by about 1,300 high Fnim statistics 'compiled for carried the 1962 Credit Union Year- schools and, 600 colleges,mostly book, the association noted that public schools. Promising Movement , there are 901 Catholic churches The workshop was under joint with par-ish credit unions, and another 113 credit unions serv- . llPonsorship of Marygrove and the College Entrance Examining members of Catholic fraternal and. veterans' organizations. ation Board Of Princetown, N.J., which certifies superior work for the program. Administrators and tea~hers from both Michigan's pubiic school and private, school 'systems attended, the workshop.,. '~his is one of the most prom" ~slng' mov:ements both in higher and i.Il secon,dary education' todaY." Sister Mary Emil said.
Lauds Advanced Study, Programs
on
Three $10,000 G'rants' , NEWARK (NC)-Three New JerSey Cathllic colleges for women . have received grants of' $10,Q~ each from the W. K.Kel:' logg Foundation. Caldwell College for Women, the, College 01., St. Elizabeth, Convent Station, and Goorgi~' Court College, Lakewood, are to,:use the grants llowprove libl'lll'Y servi~.
In Iron Lung
AT BERLIN FESTIVAL: American film star, James Stewart, is gr~eeted by Bishop Alfred, Bengsch of Berlin, at a reception given by the' German prelate _honoring delegates to the 12th annual, International Film Festival in . Berlin. '
Price Mean Nothing; It's the CoJor That's Important
$2.7 Million in loans To Non-Public Schools WASHINGTON (NC) -
The
U. S. Office of Education has ap-
proved $2.7 million in loaris 110 ' church-related and other private schools in the past four years for new equipment and minor remodeling. The loans' were made to elementary and' secondary 'schools under the 1958 National Defense Education Act to strengthen the teaching of science, mathematics and modern foreign languag_ es;
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CHOCOLATES
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Enrollment Top's 1,000 In Bolivian School
TR1NIDAD(NC)-More thal& 1,000 youngsters are now attend~ ing classes at Mother Setoll HorsepQw~r, School in this remote town aftel' nine years of effort here by l! group of United States nuns. The grade and high school hu GAS TON I A (NC) - Nuns ''The red?" she questioned. more' than 500 girls, taught by aren't' always concerned by III "For a nun?" price tag. . Then she spotted another. new the Sisters of Charity of St. , At Holy Angels Nursery; & car. ' Vincent De Paul of Emmitsburg, Md., who founded the school place for North' Carolina men'Our Lady's Color' tally maimed children, an auto"That's what I want," Sister Last April the Sisters turned mobile is essential. It doubles told the dealer. "It'll blue. Our over the boys' section of thel school. which ,has an enrollas an ambulance. Lady's color." . So when her automobile be''That,'' he replied. "costa ment of 500, to the La Salle gan to wear out". Sister Marie huridreds of dollars more. It' has ' Brothers. Patrice, hospital head, decided a larger' engine with more Two of the 11 Sisteys from Holy Angels needed a new one. horsepower." Emmitsburg, are nurses. T~ey She was advised by the Mother "But it's Our Lady's color.'" cOnduct a social center where 600 Superior of the Sisters of Mercy said Sister Patrice. "It'll what children are given a daily snack at Sacred Heart Convent to get I want." of milk and bread supplied contributions. Sister Patrice did., ~"Well-l-l," the dealer replied. through the Catholic Relief SerShe visited an automobile "Well-I-I. If ,it's what you want, ,vices-National Catholic Welfare dealer with her old- car and $800. ' you can have it!' COnference. They also cooperate He offered- a trade. Sister Pat~At the, same price?" Sister with local authoritieS'" in caring rice took a ride in a white con- asked. ' for the sick in the overcrowded. vertible with red upholstery. ,"At the same price," be said. Trinidad hospital. She returned., . '
Dorothy COX' AWARD: Stella: 'MacJGn.:. lay, a member of St.:' John'." Parish, Attleboro, will enter St. Elizabeth'. H 0 S pit a I School of Nursing, Brightoa, and be assisted by a partial eeholarship from the Att1&boro Area Catholic N~ Guild.
PORT ARTHUR (Ne) - Mm. Eleanor Ide, a recent convert to Catholicism, was confirmed while confined in an iron lung. Bishop Edward Q. JenningS! of Fort William officiated at the" ceremony in St. Joseph'!l Hospital here in Ontario. Mrs. Ide. contracted poliomy~ elitis in 195'l and since then haa been confined to an iron lung. She was received into the church and baptized bv Father M. Estok, S.J., hospital chaplain, on March 17, 1961. She became interested. in the Fai'.h through reading Catholic books. The Ide family moved to Port Arthur from Toronto in 1947, when her husband, Ronald, III non-Catholic, joined the staff o~ the Port Arthur Collegiate as & teacher of mathematics. They have three sons. Mrs. Ide has been taken tall St. Andrew's Church to assist at Mass and to receive Holy Communion. II: the hospital she receives Holy Communion daily and frequently assists at Maso.
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THE ANCHOR. Thurs., July 12,
i 962
"New Sudan·
Law' Aims at Halting
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Bishops'SpQnsor MisSDon Work flousing Project ' b A I ~ O '~NC)-A new, law J:or Migrants· .. likely to cripple all Christian
. mission' efforts has been . .passed in the neighboring , ,Sudan; scene ,of other antimissioD ' . actIvities in rec!,!nt years. . 'Observers here believe the
. WASHINGTON (NC) , The, Housing and Home FiDance Agency has announced' a grant· of $100;000 for a
low-cost home co~struction: pro':' ject for migratory workers tAat". will be sponsored by the Catholie Bishops Committee for the Spanish-speaking... ';" Housing administrator Robert C. ~neaver' said that the project will b.e carried out in Bexar County, . Texas, home base of BOme 12,000 migrant workers,·..· mostly 0:: Mexican descent. . The Bishops' com mitt e e, " wl).ich deals' with problems of. the Spanish:'speaking, consists of three archbishops and 19 bishops. Archbishop Robert E. Lucey' of Sail Antonio is chairman of the committee.. . Cooperating in the l).ousing project will be an auxiliary organization ~alled, Action for Community Development, Inc" composed of Catholic, Protestant and Jewish laymen. ONE·MAN REFUGEE CENTER: More than 56,000 refugees from Red China have Most of the Federal grant will arrive'd in the Portuguese territory of Macao since the first of the year. Thete to greet be used to help write dowJ' the them has been. Father Luis Ruiz, S.J;, at extreme right., At left,' escapees check into rents on the housing during the initial phase to keep them with- Fat~er' Ruiz's Casa Ricci headquarters. ~C' Photo. In the income of the workers.
~~~~~v:i~n~:~::~ied
Jesuit Missioner, Helps Macao, .Re,fu, ge.:e, s..
new Sudanese iaw, scheduled to, go into effect in December, aimll at making impossible any con-, versions to ChristianitY, . , It is regarded as~the latest step by th!,! Sudan's Moslem-dominated government to suppress Christian life in that northeast . African nation which won its independence in 1956. . . Christians Lose Jobs Since that time, Church schools have· been confiscated. No new missionaries have been allowed to enter the country, and some resident missioners have been expelled. Contacts between priests and people have been sharply restricted. . Parents seeking to have their children' baptized have had to get permission from the police a It e r obtaining applications signed by village chiefs. And 'government pressure has been ·put on chiefs to refuse to sigm baptismal applications. Opposition to the goveJ:nment's
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The out . In three phases: 1. Planmng and, .,... . .... ' '.' tians, who number about 470,000 Assistance tickets 'for clothing, shoes, bl~m- while the priest helps them re,-' in II total population of close to design of the com~unity, and of .,' MACAO' elltC) the ~omes to be bUI.lt; 2. a syste-::from. the Catholic women 0"£ the '·.kets,wash' .kits and. ten days' 'pair their' boats as living quart- I 12 ini,mon, including some eigbt ,mat~c. ~ff?rt to Improve ~heUnited States' is',helping the rations. Aid may alSo be forth,:" ers.S()me'sleep on the floor in mill(on Mos~ems. fa~l~les mcome~ through lob , Chur~h :here'to meet em,ergency coIning 'from the Chinese Nat-' their places of l:lmployment.·· Must Have License tral~l~g . and lob,' pl~ce~ent. needs of the,tide ofescapeel? ~nd , 'ionaiist' representative after a ,Finds Jobs' There are 5,000 Catho).ics in facIlities In the commumty, an~ ·.refug~es flowi.J)g.into·this·Pcirt:- security 'check,'inthe amount. Fr~ 'Ruiz has 'made arrange- the mainly Arabic-speaking 3.. ~apsfer of ho~es from rental. 'uguese territory oli ·the China of $3.50 per person. merits· with a Macao restaurant norther~' part o( the . country, to l;l<;,me ownersh,lp. . . ' . . coast~ , .' • ,... . "'HousIng the ai-dvals 'is getting to feed the refugees. For 13 cents ~ but)n the southern Sudan there The, depar~lllent _of ~OClOIC!gy.. . ch~'c~" for, ,$5',000 'from .th~', .tcf be a' problem: here'. Recently. a refugee can. ge.t up .to' seve.' are' some 300,000 . Catholics and at St.. Mar.y s U ..n.lverslty, San Natl'onal Councl'I' of Catholl·C. the . go'vern'men't open'ed "an old' bowls.·~ 'of r.ice,. pl,us fish, .meat. approximately , . three. million, , , Auto.mo, Will deSign the reco,rd.- ,Women was warmly w'elcom'ed , ' barra'cks where' 500 persons can . . . " or vegetables. After 10 days the:' ,pagans. The Moslem-run governkeepmg. and evaluate 'and pre- by Father .Luiz· Ruiz, S.J., him:- ' be -accommodated~ There are no ration goes 'downto a 7-cent. ment has been .try-ing to impose . p.are.·rep.orts on the d.emonstr.a- self. an e'xI'le from Chl'n'a who bAds' there so' F'r' 'RUI'Z bou'ght' '" ".' . meal that includes two bowls' of Islam on the south.. tion prole~t. . . . clothes; feeds, .houses, ·.provid~s 500 straw "Refugees are rice.' T.he meal total unde,rthis ' The new antinussion lawThe p.rolect., il!t.he fourth ap.- m'edl·cal. treatme'nt an'd, counsels allowed to stay 15 'to '3'0 days . . ' . . arrangement is now more 'than' officially called . ,..the., Missionary . proved under a .prC!gram auth- the thousands who flee' herein orized b! the ~ou~ing Act of ' small' l·u.n.'ks . or'by' swimming'" 160,000. '.' , Societies .'Act-provides that "no 196~, which provl.des for Fe~eral from the nlainland. ' Fr. Ruiz" employmen.t .s,ervice·. ~issionary' .society nor· any . . gra'?'ts to .pub,h~· orprI,:ate ~.farthis'Ye~ ~6,0()0.peop~ . .J ' . is, finding jobs for the refugees' m~~ber. therecif~.shall do bodIes to develo.~ new or. I.m- hav.e come, to Macao from Red . in b~il.dirig 'tradei> as': helpers" m~sSIOnary ~ct.· ~ the· Sudan . proved' means-,-'of provldmg 'China,'More)han'4,OOO,were e~ , SPRINGFiELli.'(NC) With .. ~ 'stores;as w<irk~rs 'paper, ·.wI,thout·a. bcen~ . granted by' bouses ~o~ low-mcome persons' capees who" arrived' . illegal~y,. an. appeal' for .prayers that ,"I 'noodle, 'kitchen utensil aria fire~" . the CouncII'of Mll1lsters.. an~famlbes'Since Jan. 1 ·each.of these es-' mIgh~ be a shepherd in the ·erac~e~·£actoz,ie$/,a~dom.e~tic~; :cap~eshasbee.ngre~ted by Fi;. trUest sense/,' the, Most Rev... ,as .rlcksha~ o~. pE:dl~ab,.drIyers , ~ss. I~ationa' RuiZ' at . his 'Casil RiccI head- ,Ignatius Jerome ~trecl.ter was . JWI~h:Fr: . ,~U,IZ Sup~IYlng., t~El. " '" ., quarters. Nearly 2,000' of the. " enthroned here as ·the·' second . ,vehlc~e), as. rattan, .,furmture, ,r", e·'Ch·apel·~·· 'refugees with~xit'perniiiShav~ 'spiritual head-of: the' Sprlng- well.ve~s;, ~nd as. small-s~ale . ,,' " ',' '. . merchants.' . alSo cQine to him for e~ergency . ,.field-Ca~' Girardeau ,dIOcese." ., ' : :. ~ '. , '.. " ... i.: WASHINGTON (N C) -'A 'help:. .' ',' \. . ' . Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arch-' T,~e':V. !;l,.Cq~suI~,te G~~eral's. COMPANY , , chapel to Our Mother of 'Per- ; . GiveS Clotliing' and :Food . l bish6p~'of St; 'Louis, officiated at:·\·R.~~u~~e.alll:i Mlgr.at,lon, V.I}lt.,has . ,petualHelp was d~dicated in the "As' soon 'as.·· e·sca.p·.~e,s· ,r~acli the enthr.onerrienl ceremony ·to-c:llver:, l;ibera~a~ls~ce,to '. t~ " Na~ional Shrine"of the i~macu- 'Macao they' '~re' taken,'t4)p'o.Ii.ce... ,day': "in:'" St,;:Agnes',:, "ca,th.,.e.dral;": refu,g~. p~o~ram ll.(.C<!~R.ic~i"., '.•~ildj~g M9te....ials .. ~t.. ' Conception, here by~ :He': ,: head·qliarte.rs .for.',re.g'istl'ation:~ Fr ... ; eight' days ~after'the;44"'year-old,- .o~ .,a.. s.\.Jppl!'!~e!l~!y basl!J'.;Th.e,,,,, demptorist priests, . thec/lapE:l'll Ruizis then.'n6tified of their ':BishOp was conseCrated ~~J,"lcan:" gran* ~ Fr. ~UI~ IS" .,llPQnsors. '. . . . .' '. arrival, no maotter'what the hour, Wichita, Kan. ' , liIm~~9 I,to .•2,000 ·Pel," month,.~ •. SPRIN~ st.,. 'AIRHAVEN: Bishop JameS .E..:McMan'u8, ,. '." .. . " ,the exPectation that he will get .WYman 3-2611 C.SS.R., of Ponce Puerto~ico, day or night For those who have . Th~ .chmax of the enthron~ . the rest of his necessary funds' 'I celebrated, Mass and Father swum from the mainland, ~iothes ment rlte~ame w.hen theCardl- from' his. own sources.'. ., M ' .. are brought from Casa Ricci· to, Dal presented Bishop Strecker . . 'osephanton, C.SS.R.,. deJ livered the' 'sermon, expressing ,the police st·ation. ' with his crozier, the symbol of ~~=-t=<:>CX=-=loC-=O=-t=-C:>CX=-=>e:-=o=-t=<=<X=-=X:loC-=oC-=-a J • hope. that the chapel, will be Fr. Ruiz gives the new arrivals .authority to govern the six:" > more than a sightseeing spot. year-old diocese which embraces . "This is not a place to stand Tea~hi.ng 39 counties in southern 'Missouri. ' ' " , and gape with guidebook, b u t · After' the' enthronement, Bishop, ~ to kneel and ,plead with, a Strecker offered a Solemn Pon.prayerbook," Father Manton , SEATTLE (NC) -.A return ·tificaIMass. " .aid. to Christian teaching "is the .Bi~hop Strecker spent all of' . The chapel features a mosaic only' power capable of meeting this near-20-year prie'sthood i n · ., ,. . reproduction of the 'Mother of the preseptcrisis effectiyely," the Wichita diocese and was Perpetual Help picture whose Auxiliary Bishop John J. Scan- serving as Chancellor when he original . is preserved in Sant' Ian of Honolulu said at Seattle was named last April 11 to· .., . Alfonso Church.in Rome. . Vniversity cOnlmencemerit exer_succeed 'Bishop 'Charles H. 5 '. 'Bea~tiful Orn~inent' cises. . ,, . ..Helmsing, who' had been 'trans. . The Bis,hop said: ."The Ch.urch ferred. to' the Kansas City-St. 'UNION :WHARF, FAIRHAVEN , believes that Christian. !'fo., dioceSe, as head of .1 == == c;l,c= =='==. == ==;== == == == == ==,== == == == == == == == == == == o. States and by .l~ity Cooperating is the sure, and safe guarantee e pIr1ngfield-~ape Girardeau' with them,' the chapel is .the first· of· true libe'rty and it ie: the ' , of four transept' chapels in· the guide to eternal salvation~'" ' .• shrIne. '... . '., " . Noting. that ...iC h ii ;'t ian Father .Manton,: directOr of. 'teaching . gave 'birth td the the weekly novena to thEl.... greJltest·. speculative' t~inking . J'lessed Mother 'underher tUle . ,and; the.most logical pl!ilosophy '. as Mother of perPetual lIelp at the world 'has ever kriown," .th~ , Bos~on's ~ission, Church, 'said'., l,\ishop urged, the' gra9.~ates "to. , C()MPLETE that; "the most beautlfuloina-, prove by action 'and by word the ' Jri~rit . iil the_DlOst" gorgeous .value of the ,wayof.life.which,· ·,iENt~~ UN.IFO~MS. temple of God is not marble .or has· been given to you:~'. ' ",: m6siiie, or gQld or JeWel,S; or:silk~.~ . ",,' ' '. '. '" "Thomas, F;:Monaghcn .j,~' Jr-, or; flowers, but a human being '.. " ".'. ' ·.AtioReclai~ ·Ind'ulfi.ial on! his. knees, humbly adoring 1'real"r. his i God and .. invoking God~8" Holy Mother." " . , '" .. '. I ,;' '.
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PHILADELPHIA ( N C) Father William F. MaIOneY,.S.J., a .:~ative of Philadelphia, has' been named' president of St. Jo~~ph's College hert!. .
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Educators Issue New Statement On Red Threat
THE ANCHORThurs., July 12, 1962
WASHINGTON (NC)'A new and forceful statement of the danger that commu": nism is to the world is part of a report which has become available here. The report, entitled' "Education for Freedom' and World Understanding," summarizes the deliberations of 140 U.S. educators who met here in March in a Conference on the Ideals of American Freedom and the International Dimensions of Education. It has been made public by the U.S. Office of Education, which invited the educators to meet here at their own expense. "The gravest immediate threat to freedom is the ruthless communist effort to impose a blueprint for the future upon a world which is in widespread revolt against the past," the report says iIi recognizing what it calls a "worldwide challenge." "The fearsome novelty in the present challenge," the statement continues, "is the attempt of the communist movem.ent to be the solo articulator and guide for worldwide change, and to impose ideological unity by means of military and' economic power and by, the innumerable techniques of subversion. ''Our times would be difficult without this threat; with it ~ey are perilous. The ability of tqe communists to identify themselves ,with the aspirations of unhappy peoples has been demonstrated more than once." Noting that the communists' conviction that "the course of history must conform' to -their' blueprint is a sPecial sort of danger," the educators say: Requires Best Efforts "We do not believe that the future is destined to be either totalitarian or free. The destiny of mankind will be controlled, not by those who pretend to read the laws of history, but by those who are willing to use their intelligence and,experience to work out a balanced reconciliation of the manifold interests of, men 'as individuals and as groups. "We have faith that freedom will prevail, but we must give meaning and substance to 'our fa~th by courageously dedicating our best efforts to the cause of freedom."
Governors. Favor Voluntary Prayer
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GermotJ1 !Bishops Urge lrij«:rrease In C~arity
COLOGNE (NC) - TlFe Catholics of, Germany have been urged by their Bishops. to step up their charitable ,work-in the field of personal service even more than with money. . The Bishops in a joint pastoral letter appealed especially for people to join religious orders engaged in welfare work. They said parents must not interfere when their children want to try religious vocations. The joint letter. was read in all the churches on the same day Germany's new juvenile welfare law went into effect. It was deHOUSE, FAIRHAVEN voted to this' law and the new social welfare law, which hall been in operation since June 1. "We realize with satisfaction," the Bishops said," that the charity work of the Church and her charity organizations are reProvincial House, admin~strative headquarters of the Congregation of the Sacred cognized in the new social laws, and that state boards are obliged Hearts of Jesus ,and Mary, IS now located at 11 Main Street, Fairhaven, following pur- to support, their indep'endence chase of the 13-roo~ house and three acres of land from Dr. Harold Woodcock. Bishop fully and yet to cooperate with ~onnolly, has sent hIS encouragement and good wishes to the Fathers in the new estabthem." Use Free Choice . . . lIshment. For the present am , B~lglUJ?l,unti11947. At ~at those in residence will be . ~he missionaries,however,-are Such cooperation has already 'V R m'lr C d tIme the Umted States ProvInce VISIted regularly by the mission been a fact in many places, the ery ev. .! I~m on on, ~as . established with the pro- superior. Father Condon recent- Bishops said. But they voiced SS.CC., ,provInCIal of the vmclal house located at 3 Adams· ly returned from Ireland where satisfaction that' under the new United States Province; Rev. Street, Fairhaven. the works of the Fathers and laws, consideration of the perAmbrose Forgit, SS/CC.~ secreA new Superior, Father Albert Brothers are making encourag- sonal preferences of those retary-treasurer Qf the enbre pro- Evans, sS.ce., now heads the ing progress. ceiving help is made obligatory ,vince, and Brother Seamus community' at Adams Street. in the whole field of social and Smyth, SS.CC., coadjutor Bro- Twelve priests will remain in Departure juvenile welfare work. ' ther 'from Ireland who will as- residen~e th,ere. The majority of Two .years ago he 'visited all "We ask you 'seriously and sist Father' Ambrose and over-' them are in ,charge of various the mIssion posts in Japan.' urgently, to make gOod use of see general maintenance of the works of the' Congregation. Also There are '27 Fathers of the ' the right of free choice accorded house· and pro~rty. ' in resid~nce are the priests in Sacred Hearts' assigned to im 'you by these laws," the Bishops, Father Provincial offered the charge of St. -Toseph's Parish. area; ,:"ith a total population of told their people. In this confirst Mass Friday' in a small ' The United States ~rovince 4 J?llihon.. Next month five more nection they cited the interesi chapel in the new location. The n~w numbers 235 Fathers, Bro- p;lests WIll, depart for the mill-' parents should have in seeing to house will be the center for thers and Seminarians. Com- SlOns. , it that their children in kinder. meetings of the' priests especial- munity houses, seminaries and In speaking of the location of garten are educated in a Catholy the Provincial Cou~cil 'which parishes are located in Massathe new Provincial House with lic spirit. ' meets every month.' ehusetts, New Hampshire' New the view out to the ocean, Father Old ,people need religious and 'Council Members' York, District of Col~mbia" Provincial- said: "I feel so much spiritual help as well as material Members of t h e i l O~o, Minnesota, and California. cl~~-·. here to .our good mission- aid, they said, and in a hospital councl are ' " arIes In the dIstant islands" He Very "Rl;lv, Eugene, Robitaille, Outside Country, to' " of 'his love '''or the . d ' a priest is as important as medSS CC . , .. I The P ' h i " sea an ,'. ., Vltce '~F'p~ovmCla and te ded rov~dnce as aoo ex· hoW-he enjoyed his many ocean ical aid. ,novlcema~er,1 Jl.lrhaven;Very :" n.", OUtSI e of the Un,ited, crosSings witho'ut seasickne6B Rev:, Henry GreightQn, SS.CC.,. Stat~s: In Ireland there are two despite several Storms. n~vI"e master, ,Wareham; Very ,establIshments in County Mona-, '. ' NO JOB TOO· BIO l\ol1\e years ago to ,Rev., Willia~ l'tf~ClEmahan 88. ,g~an., The .foreign 'm~ssions as- LeA ec., superior of Queen of, Peace, Signed to the, province are' '. " vre ok ~O days on a small NONE' TOO SMALL Mission Seminl'lI'Y', jaffrey, N.H., located in Ibaraki' and Yama- lIner: Upon arrIval, the Super.ior" and, Ve,ry Rev. Matthew Sulli_gata" Japan' and, the islands ofGen~~al, of :the ,CongregatIon. ,van,' SS.CC~; superior of Sacred ',Great and Little Abaco in the ::ro~gl~ s~ggested th~t he travel Hear;1$ Seminary, Washlngton..., Bahamas. Bishop Hagarty of the ,,'f aIr, ~n ,he future I~ orde~ to ~ The' front Part' of the house Bahamas is expected to visit the. :~~e.better use, of tll~e. S~nce PRINTERS will' ,be used as an office area·'n~w,provincial. house next' week f F Itth haseobeen all aIr travel , , ,where four' ~Cretaries.win a8- ,for discussions with Father.Con." or a ,er, nd~n. Main Office and Plant lsist wJth the world~;wide' ~rre- don ,concerning, 'the work, of,·.the· ,': World F1flitc ' LOWELL, MASS. : sponde!,,~, '~~ey 'aliio 'do,.f'SacredHear~ .. Missionaries at , ' He~i,sit~d th~' h~us~ of" ,variety,pf tyPI~g task~,·that are Abaco.,,~ .' ' ~e Provi~ce inclUding, the misTel~phon. Lowell • part of thIS admmifjtrative' The prmcipal ~esponslbility of , ~on areas and' the General GL 8-6333 and GL 7-7500 work. the Father Pro.vInclal is to care House in, Rome where he d Among these are the pub- :tor the administration of the a report of his' visits by fz;;.~n: Auxiliary Plante lishing. of a. ::ll~nthly newsletter P!ovi~ce, both spiritu~l and around tpe world and returning , which IS mal,lea to all the mem- tempoI:al, and to assure the to Fai:rhaven three months later BOSTON bers th~ou~hout the Province, ~gular observance of the rell- He stated that although he doe~ OCEANPORT, N. J. the typmg of ,tr~nslatioiIs of glous .li.f~. To carry out this re- not have time for the sea, he PAWTUCKET, R. I. m~n.y current hIstorical and sponslblhty he must visit the can now enjoy working close to Bplrltual works of the Fathers Fathers and .Brothers wherever _ lit when at home in Fairhaven. from the 10 other Provinces of they are aSSIgned at least once .r=:=::::r:::::c::::r::::::~==:::::I:::::=:C:=::C:::::;;;;~~~~;;;;~ the Congregation. each year with the exception of ~ U.S. ~rovince ~e; foreign missionaries who are Serving the Saver The first Sacred Hearts priests VISIted less frequently. in Fairhaven from' and Home Owner glUm In 1905. The provincial ad':' The Specialized Job of a Cooperative Bank ministration i'emained at Lou-
HERSHEY (~e) -, The nation's governors went on' record here as opPQsed to the U.S. Supreme Court's school' prayer decision and favoring Congressional action to soften it. ' The chief executives of the 50 states adopted a resolution asking Congress to adopt, a constitutional am e Ii dine n't -permitting ,voluntary prayer in public schools. They said the court's opinion had "created far-reaching misunderstanding as, to the nation's faith and depe'ndence' upon God." The governors expressed "regret" at the "implications" of the high court's recent decision: They said the "proposed constitutional amendment should make "clear and 'beyond 'challenge the acknowledgment by our nation and peOple of their faith in GOd." ' The resolution was, adopted with no negative votes. Nelson.Rockefeller of New York' abstained from the ,vote, saying he thoug~t the, ,Supre1i,ie' C,our,t'll decision should b.,( studied niore thoroughly before tbegov~ non took' a stand. . ' )';, , .
Sacred Hearts Congregation's Administrative Headquarters in New F ai;rhaven Location v:
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C,onsecration Set ROCKVILLE CENTRE: (NC) -,The consecration 'of the Most Rev. Vincent J. Baldwin as Titu:' lar Bishop of Bettcenna will take place in St. Agnes Catbedral here on Thursday, July 26. The prelate will serve as Auxiliary to Bishop Walter: Kellenberg 01. Bockville centl'e.
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THE ANC,HOP.-Dioc~se of Fall River-Thurs., July 12, 1962
A .Smcd8 Sacrifice for the
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,Vet~r~[{i)u Newc~mer"Wr~te
By Most Rev;
'Of Iri~~ Co~ntrj Peo'p~e iJy Rt.. Rev.
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John S.
The Missions never seem to 00 withou~ kiala aild difficulties. In one particulai' area in Africa, the goocll Sistell'fl had to make many sacrifices b build a hosPital, which they completed just In time for a typhoid epidemic. while the nw were buSy wying to curtalll tills outbreak,' the Communists' started a!ll active eam.palgm agai~ the hospital. They shut· of{l the hospital's water supply by destroyiilg the little cement but that protected Us well. Thellll they. broke ·the pipes'which led to the bosPital a mile awav. As a result, the precio1lltl treasure oll water Jr!III oN into the mlllld.
Kenn~dy
Two Irish .short story writers, one a veteran and the' other relatively a newcomer, have collections of their works published now~ The veteran. is 'Walter Macken, 'renown~ for his novels and his plays as well as his acting in. some of the latter both in Dublin it is sweet, and in a manner and in New York. His' new which strikes the reader as unbook is God Made Sunday likely. . (W£acmillan. $ 3 .. 9 5 ). The' On the other hand, ."The Big newcomer is' Brian Friel, not Fish"· comes to a conclusion unknoWn to r~aders of' the .New which, ambiguous on the surface. Y'o r k e r, the is precisely right in ·m .deeper (' S~gl1, and other sense. magazines feaLike Mr. Macken, Mr. Friel tUring superior is writing of Irish country peas h 0 r t fiction. pie. All are ou~ under the open' His first book sky; none is penned and. £rUBJ5 The, Saucer trated in the dingy and deof Larks (Dou- . pressing city. Like Mr. Macken, HEADS SERRA: .Fred. J. bleday. $3.95). too, he treats of islanders.. Wagner, insurance executive Mr. Macken storms, fishing, of small boys from Tiffin, Ohio, has been Iii a ',facile and and old men. elected president ,of Serra pI-olific creator lDelightfully Funny of fiction. He He can be explicit and .de- International, a Catholic lay has n eve r llghtfuIly funny. "Kelly's Hall" organization devoted to the. Written' anything which was is an .hilarious recital of the for- . increase of priestly vocaaninteresting . which limped. tune aDd misfortune which came Bis stories; long or short, have' to aged Clarence Parnell Kelly tions. NC Photo. always had fQrce and fluency; when, during a binge, he acBe is not the subtlest of artists, qulred the ·first gramophone Do more -does he run to melo-. ever seen or' heard in his part of elrama' or the commonplace. Ria Ireland. . . work is meaty, forthright, tinThis is a story which mount.; . . from one stage of comedy to an~: Friel 'is much less blunt.· other, each step being securely' au negotiated' and affording more Unusually discerning and inven. t "";'e he is intereSted in delicate robust amusement. . MRID'A E . (NO) . - M arX18 ,n , Reverse l\letbod Cuba's 'g'odless indootrinaIhadings arid suggestions. Ocytr st ~ . wi easiollally be writes something ......con a IS the piece th. tion of children is producing -A..'ch the amateur will find which the book is rounded off, ·.an alarming eff.ect on the .au "Stories on the Verandah;" Here . puzzling. "What is this all about? the method is quite ·the reverse minds and· . hearts of young What is he getting at?" such of that used in the saga of the . Catholics, according to a Cuball .,person may inquire. But Mr. gramophone. emigre here in Mexico. . Friel can do the traditionally _Three men are in the same Thent1mber of boys attending structured' sort of thing, too,.. ward of a' hospital for tuber- church dimInishes almost week- . aPd do it wen. cuw patients. They chaff arid Ii, this inforinant said. Cate<Flooded With FeeliDg banter during the long days and' chism classes are nearly de"God Made Sunday," the story - ted _ _ which Mr..Macken's pre- evenings. They are visited by ser . . _~ UVUI their nearest relatives:. two bv Yet adults are .going to churC4ll .;....t volume takes its title., !I.l J • . • b h said ---.. their wives, the third by hill' in Increasing num ers, e . really short novel, running to. withered awits. They are to be Their Faith seems all the 16 pages. It purports to pe what. released. on the day. stronger amid all the atheistic Gil - 'simple island' man; in mid-' .The final evening is spent in _ propaganda 'thtown at them 'bf' die age,writes as an account autobiog~aPhical talk \bythe, the government in newspapers, oi.- his life, at' the behest of a two marrted' men. 'They leave movies, over' radio and' teleSummer ·visitor. . in high spirits,. but the 1;pird vision, and illl lectures. Their '. A spell there is in this Itoi-y.. patient, seemingly the gayest af . spiritual life' has intensified • makes vivid, tangible an Iso- the .lot, is iii' ~espair. The t:tme amid all ·the official ·inodter7' lilted community of unsophis- ia the hospitaLhasbeen for him of the rites of religion; !lesaieL *ated folk who, having Un- a release from the lonelineslii to . New rraeUas memorially lived by what they' which he mtistnow return: .Mean.whil'e" the' regime' baa _uld take from .the· .sea, are . . eOwed into abilndoning itb,y . ' Death 01 IDusion changed its'. tacties in the strugr . Several of. Mr. Friel's stories . gIe Wl'th the Chur-"', he said. lerocious anddevasting storm. &;U 'This extended story, richly are concerned with the ~-' "It is' noticeable that the cern. '"o~'e-';;';-''''' is takin.. human and humorous,' l'epre- ·sistence l 'and 'painful death of U- m···_:.... ,~. ... '. UlllRaU .. .ents Mr. Macken at his best. It usion. In '''Among .the Ruins," . special care to avoid direct aDd iii flooded with feeling, yet foI' example. a young lDarded overt aggression," he said. never slips into sentimentality. man visits, with his wife and ,The aim of the'new stiategy two children, his DOW abandoned to ·give ·the 1m.pression that' Solo Stories and ruined £ami1y home.. ... What it means flo him 'can 'previous open ·conflicts with the A group of stories center in 11 . dlaraeternicknamed Solo. He .never be shared by these others,' Cburchwere' provoked by the • is the' parish priest of the vil- strangers to it. Yet he disceVersChureh,be asserted. - ' . !age of Gortshee and its en- .that the .cherished past is a Diir- . . "'This explains how during mons. His proper title is Father' age,thevisit n bleak mistake. Holy Week, difficulties were reSohn Henderson, Among the most poignant of ported only in Santiago de 188 "It was during the course of the stories is "My Father and Vegas: ~d ~ta Maria/ de! bisbrilliant footballing that the Sergeant," in which Q boy . Rl?S,arlo, he sa~d. ,John' Henderson had acquired tells of hi~ bewilderment and" Only 120 priests are left ~ tbe .name of Solo. Many people even' suffering because bis .C~ba~. care for the co~try a aWl r,emember those dashing, father .is· the. teacherln the' ~opulatlon..of well over SlX ~.,. unstoppable ·run.s .of 'his, ball to ' country ·school .which he .attends: . 11on, ~e noted.. He added thalt toe, ball-to hand, ball to ground, At home his :father is a good. ·the Dl9cese ~ Cam.aguay baa ball . in· the net almost before considerate father to him;. but only seven priests. .Th~re are you were aware .that :hehad in, school .he tl'eats the boy as ~ut 600,000 Catho11esm that started." be does any .other pupil,. in the . diocese. These stories are,:respectively,brusque and 'commanding waY - - - - - - - -.....- - -';010 'and the Nine .Irons,""Solo _ which has won:' the teacher the _d .the. Simpleton," . and "Solo lIObriquet"the Sergeant." and the Sinners." In each, Father ' Henderson -is caned upon to uSe .. his strength and agility, but ~he . LONDON (NC)-:"The Catholie' .by no means ,a mere muscle . population ef England and Wales' , man. . ·was 5,200;000' in 1959,. :Areb-... ' Unifer ~.Sk7 bishop GeraldP. O'Hara; the The other stories var.,·Jn Apostolic Delegate :in Great :for quality. ''The:Match Maiden;" .. Brctain, has stated.· . for example,. is ·dreamlike In mood and deno.uement. ,Where' R.;A. WILCOX CO. the issue ~could have 'been harsh, . ~. .
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This is just a tiny facet of the problelDD of the missionary WGr!d for which our'Catholic people are asked tIa make sacrifices. The Holy Father &as over 200,000 missionaries to support, ms well ,as 10,000 hospitals ilnd dispensaries and 80,000 schools. Last year the average per capita contribution of United States: Catholics to the Holy Father was only 27 cents! I 'wonder what the Sisters who took care of the African typhoid' patients and who had 'to carry 'water a mile' to their hospital would think. if th!'!y' knew' we only gave the Vicar of Christ the equivalent of a pack of cigarettes' for 'all the Mis. sions of the world.
Whv could you not organize a small' group-in yOWl' office orin your neighbOrhood - who would, sacrifice even' Ii penny lil da,. foil' the poor of tm; world? Send 1& to us at· the end of the month, and we win fOll'Ward It to the Hoi,. Father for the mission needs of Airtca, Asia, Latia America. Also, the nen time 70U: take a drink ·of wider, say'. pra~er for The . Soeieb' for the Propagation- of the Faith! . GOD LOVE YOU to M.M.S. for $10."In honor of my ordinatioll to· the subdeaconate for the of God's Holy ChUrch, I wish to help spread the Faith by. helping. the Missions." •.. to D.C. for $2 "I worke'd for this ~oney by cutting the lawn:" •.. to. Mrs. V.L.C. for $nJ.05 "The girls in the office exchange birthday eards, but thiD· month's celebr~t asked tha,t we donate tbeprice of cards to the Missions." . . . to Kate for $10. "I am. an eighteenyear-old working girl with DO one to spend my money on but myself. It hasn't made me very happy, IiO I would like you to use it for tht: alek: and hungry."
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We think the world of 7ou, our benefactors. But do you &hink of the world . • . of the thousands of Godless souls around the globe who aile your' brothers? By 'praying the multicolored WORLD~SION·ROSARY will be thinking of· the world: Africa,. ftpresented by green beads, the eolor of its forests: America, represented by a red decade, the eolor of its .first settlers: Europe, whose white beads befit Rome and tbe Doli "ather: Oceania, .l'epresented b,. blue b e . the color 01 its ocean: and Asia, whose' yellow beads 117mboUze morning light 01 the East. Send' your' request and an offering of $8 to The Society for the Propairation of the 'Faith, and TOU will receive this WORLDMlSSION blessed bl' BJshop SheeD.. . . . . BOS,ABY \
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Cut ()ut this 601umn, pin your sacrifice'to it and maD It to the Most Rev Fulton d.. Sheen, National' Director. of the Soc1e1:7 tOr the Propagation of the Faith, 388 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., 01' TOW' Dloee8alilDlrector. RT. REV. RAYMOND T•. cONsmnu 388 North ~B;!a Street,"all Rivez:, Mass.
YOURS ..... Ilh of
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HANOVER (NC)-A ,grou;p'of Catholic laymen here in Ger-· many has eollected clOse·.to $90,000 worth medicines and 8UPplies from Hanover p~lBns.Some.of .the supplies:are being set aside .for medical.care , for _ the forthcoming national catholic congress here, but most wiUbel' sent to underdeveloped oountl"ies.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFci~ River~Thurs" 'JulY, 12, J;962
The Pa'rish Parade "
SACRED HEART,' 'ST. ELlZABEm: NOR'DI ,ATl'LEBORO- ' FALL RIVER . Sister Gabriel~e Lu<;ie, S.U.S.C., ',l'hirteen' boys are' cl\aner ,Fifth annual parish fiesta is in , parochiai school special class members of Cub PaCk 125" l~d progress' and' will continue prinCipal is 'offering'a reading by Eugene Roussin.' through Saturday on the church ,clinic f;O~' 8 to 11 ~day ST. JOSEPH, 'grounds. Being featured today through Thursday, mornings of EALL RIVER is a home-baked food contest Bo~ Scouts will continue open to residents of greater' New thiS month and unti~ Friday;, 3. t'mgs thr ough ou t the S um' ly.... H 1 N' ' mee Bedford. Mrs. Carol, Ryan,' Bris- ,Aug. S un d ay, J 11 ...., 0 y ame mer' ' tol' County assistant home dem-, at!end. a J~io~ CYO ,members win onstrator, will j~dge entries of sbociety me?ibers, bread, rolls: muffins" cakes, pies, , all game 10 Bost~n. Thls will receive corporate Communion at cookies, bars and candy. They ?e a, father-son 0';ltmg and par- 8:15 Mass this Sunday morning, must be accompanied, by,recipes'. ISh Cub Scouts Wl~ ,~lso attend., along with the Scouts. Second in a series of three and should be brought to the Norman Ouellett~ IS 10 ch~rge of.... ~angements. . . 'whists will be held, tOnight at fair ,grounds between 3 'and 4 Josep~ Beaucha1?e Jr. he~ds 8 in the Brightman Street parish this afternoon. ' .... a c~mmlttee planmng a famIly hall. Proceeds will benefit' the An auction will be held at 8:30 out1~g a~d ,barbecue 15unday., senior CYO.athletic fund. tonight, Friday and Saturday Aug. 5.' , . evenings" also, on the grounds. ST• .JOHN BlU'TIS'lI', Pony rides will be available for ST; AUGltJSTn}TJE, CIENTRAL VILLAGIE children. . ViNEYARID HAYEN The Women's Guild will hold A n'n u a J.. Summer Fair is 'II. regular meeting at ,8 tonight llMMA\ClUILA'I1'IE ' {)ONClEmON. planned for Thursday through in the parish hall. A silent aucBRIEWS'I1'JER-DlEi\rNliS ' SatUrday, Aug 2 through' 4. ,/l t~on will be featured and memThe Holy Name 'Society 'will ,Chinese auction and food sale bers are requested to bring an hold a clambake at 2 Sunday are set for 'Friday, July 13 in article for it. The guild will sponsor a tur'afterrioon, 'July 15 ilt LaSalette the basement hall of the new Seminary Beach, Route 6A, East church, Mrs. Sarah Dugan is in key supper from 5:30 to 7:30 Satcharge of arrangements. Brewster.' ' urday night; July 14, also in the A religious vacation school halL The Women's Guild plans a will be held the weeks of July penny sale at 8 WednesdayHOLY NAME, night, July 18 in the hall of Our 23 and July 30 for parish chil- NEW BEDFORD dr~n 'from first to eig~th grade. . Lady Of the Cape' Church. Parishioners will hold their Dedication, ceremonies for the Articles may be-left at the church or will be, picked up on ' new church a're set for Sunday annual Church Fair Wednesday, July 25: through Saturday, July request to committee members, afternoon, JulY 15. 28, Entertainment will include a 'including Mrs., Da~iel Walker, ST. MARY, midway with rides, booths, and Mrs. Arthur Norri,s, Mrs. Arthur SOUTH DA,RTMOUTR many other attractions. , . . Keefe,' Mrs. ThOIJ:laS King. , A Fashion Flair is scheduled Site will be a newly-acquired 'from 4 to 6 Wednesday after- plot between' Highland and ST. l!OCB, DOODf July 18, at St. Mary's Hill- 'Mount Pleasant Streets. FALL lIUVER top Grounds, 783 Dartmouth Holy Name Society officers The Council of Catholic Women- Street. Under spoDsorship of the inc~ude Thomas W. Tighe, preswill bold, a fashion show Wed- Women's Guild, it ,'will be' in ident; James Fl,annigan, yicenesday', Sept. 12 at White's'res- charge of Mrs,' Joseph M.P'; 'president; Joseph· Marshall, taurant. Tickets are available Donaghy-. Cards, a style show treasurer; Franj:is Harding, secfrom Mrs. Ronald FortiD and ,and ,refreshments will be fea- retary. Th~ unit plans a inamtur~~ , Mrs. Claire Carbo~eau. moth auctia f~r ~e FaIL ST. MARY, ,FAIRHAV,EN
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will
III
MISSION HELPS BUN]) YOUNGSTERS: These blind youngsters, Palestine refugees in the Gaza strip"are l~rning to read Arabic in Braille. As carpenters, rugmakers, cane-' workers and basket weavers, they will someday be selfsupporting, through the efforts of the P()ntifical Mission for Pale&tine, whose headquarterS are in New York City. The Pontifical Mission now has a vocational training school for the blind under construction in Gaza. NC Photo.' ,
Pope John Elevates Texa,n to Hierarchy VATICAN CrI'Y(NC)-Father ed first Ordinary Of the newly indepeodent prelature in Hugo Gerbermann, M.M., ~ , created 196L . ' " " , Nada, Texas; Ordinary, of ~ Bishop' -' elect Gerbermann Independent prelature, of Huehuetemingo, Guatemala, has beeIl heads a' mountainous See larger named titular Bishop of 'Amat- than Delaware in, northern hus in Palestine by Pope ,John. Guatemala along the Mexican, The 49-year-old Bishop eleet border,- where 4" Mary'kiloIY was named' regional superior of missioners e~ for' about 250,Maryknoll miSsioners in Guate- 000 Cathollcs, pearly' aU of them ' mala in 1956 and he was appo~ Indiana.
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Penpals Meet at St. Thomas More. Continued from Page One pioneer members of Maryknoll. He has been in the community 46 years. Born in Fall Rjver in 1900, he was orphimed at· all early age and lived at St. Vin- c"lnt's Home from the age of seven until he was 16. He is the first priest from the. home and said his first Mass there in 1927. He recalled that Rev. George Sullivan, now pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Fan River, was his deacon and. ~at Msgr. Raymond Considine, now pastor of St. William's, also Fall River, was his subdeacon~ In succeeding years Msgr. Considine, as Diocesan Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, has maintained C los e contact with . Fa,ther Plunkett. North Easton In the United States since March, Father Plunkett expects . to return to Chile in September. He has been making headquarters at a sister-in-law's home in North Easton and has been mak_ ing flying -visits to -all parts of the country to nephews and nieces and to relatives of Maryknollers with whom he serves in Chile. Until August, however, he will be at St. Thomas More's assisting Rev. Joseph K. Welsh, pastor. -' 1 Father Plunkett's first assignment after ordination was to Korea, where he served. until 1942 and the outbreak of World War II. After a period as a prisoner of war, he was. repatriated and returned to the United States. After only two months he 'was reassigned' to Chile where he has been e."er since. A recent echo of his time in Korea came, said the missioner, when he received an ordination I
Plea for 'Release BUENOS AIRES (NC)-Juan Vazquez, president of the International Federation .of Catholic Youth, has cabled Cuban President Osvaldo Dortieos urging the prompt release of Mateo kver, president of Catholic Youth of. Cuba, who bas been Imprisoned in Havana sinee September, 1961 w,ithout tria! and without fOl'mal charges.
invitation from Rome. It came from a youth whom he had' baptized as a boy of 11. "He; w~ from' Nor,th Korea, and how he got out of the country and to Rome I cannot imagine," said the missioner: "i only hope' his family, -all of whom I baptized, - are safe." Father Plunkett's parish in Santiago, Chile, is the poorest in the city. It comprises 40,000 souls and _ is staffed by three priests imd 10 Sisters, all Mary_ knollers. "We have 900 children in grammar school and 80 in a new high school, now in its second year," recounted the missioner. Twenty lay teachers assist with the school. Parish work is heavy. An Chileans are 'at least nominal Catholics, said Father Plunkett, 'but many are non-practicing. With members of the Legion of Mary, he makes a nightly practice of going into the suburbs of Santiago to visit families, then to hold an outdoor service. In this way he has met many Chileans who previously had no contact with priests. Wondertul People "They are wonderful people," he declared. "Once they know you, they will do anything for you." , Both the Legion of Mary and . the Christian Family Moveme,nt are active in the parish and Father Plunkett' had special ·wo:t:ds. of praise 'for the family organization. "When you establish contact with a family, you can hope to direct them, for they are a settled group." "Americans have been wonderful, to Chile," said Father Plunkett. He cited prompt aid, given during the 1960 earthquakes and continuing assistance in the form of government surplus food, distributed through the Caritas organization. "We distribute food to 2000 families iii our parish twice weekly';' he noted. In Korea, Father Plunkett stal'ted a small orphanage. In Chile, his heart and hands are with his poverty-stricken people. ''My whole life is to help the poor." Thus he sums up his missionary career.
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THE ANCHn"
I) i ocese
of Fall River-thurs., July 1~, 1962
Expect Canonization Of Servite Priest major hurdle in the path of Blessed Anthony's canonizatiOll has been cleared. , Blessed Anthony was bom 011 April 16, 1819.' He 'was ordained a priest in the Order of Servant. of Mary, and served as Pastor of St. Andrew's Church at the The Pope's presence at the ,Tuscan port .and resort of ,discussion indicates that the., Viareggio for 45 years. He died miracles . have been judged in 1892, and was beatified OIl authentic and thus the last June 22, 1952.' VATJCAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has heard the Sacred Congregation of Rites discuss two miracles attributed to the intercession of Blessed Anthony PucCi, an Italian Servite priest who died in 1892.
- . Wort~~~~eR. ~!cie?~...J ~~···i
St. Anthony's Church - New. Bedford
There are a number of short -Words in our language that can be very troublesome. Take "if," for instance. If this tiny word should make a sudden appearance, our hopes . would be in danger of being dasheq to pi~ces. One such \ Here then is a most important simple word - so simple as to be deceptive--is "Amen." moment for the congregation. ' h t f The early Church's members did Th · l~ S .or. p~ayer ?r ~ not worrf)oo much about just prayer It IS-IS. a very sIgm- when Christ was actually pres-
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ficant expression of fervent ent on the 'altar. They knew that Christians . and. not a simple it was after the Consecration so formality. It is they waited in silence-or lisBROTHER PHIlLIP one of the small tened as the prayers were recited num ber 0f aloud and intelligibly-and then, Hebrew words once' all .was done, they' exw. hi c h h a v e claimed their prayer: Amen. Brother Philip Perreault of been borrowed A short description of the u n c han g e d Mass by St. Justin, Martyr (151 the Hospitaller Order of St. from Israel to A.D.) shows us this clearly: John of God 'has pronounced, be given an "As soon as the Common Prayers simple vows at the novitiate in Q d d e d a ':l d are ended (Introit to Offertory, 'Ojai, Calif. and, will pursue deeper meamng today) and' they (Christiims) further studies at the scholasby the new have saluted one another with a ticate in Brookline, Mass. • I s ra e 1-. the kisi?(Kiss of Peace, given before The former Rene H. PerC h u r '! h. The . Communion at a Solemn Mass' reault, Jr.; Brother Philip is the Catechism of. the Co~nc~l" of today), bread and wine 'and 'son of Mr. and Mrs. Perreault, Trent states wIth. devoho~. So water are brought to the' presi- 46 Buffinton Street, 'Fall River. frequently was thIS ~ord 10 th.e dent (priest), who . receiving He was graduated' fromSS. mouth of Our Sav~o:, that It them gives praise' to the Father Peter and Paul parochial school pleased. the Ho~y Spmt to l)ave of all things by the Son and the and from B. M. C. Durfee High it perpetuated 10 the Church of Holy Spirit and, makes a long School in 1960. He is a former God." thanksgiving (Canon, today) for Irieinber :of the CYO and of the Basic' Meanings all the blessings which He h'as Catholic Order of Foresters. · The Old Testament often used voucllsafed to bestow upon them, .'The Brothers of St. John of I this word to second another's. and when he has ended the. God are noW observing the 425th opinion; to show that a speaker prayers and the thanksgiving, anniversa,ry of their foundation adopts for his own,what .some- all the people that are present at Granada, Spain in 1537. The one has already stated. By the forthwith answex: with accla- order's activities are global, time of the New Testament, themation: 'Amen'." . covering .all countries of the word signified a confirm1!tion or Thus you too have tlie opp'or- world including missions in affirmation of the speaker's own tunity to sign, as it were, each Korea, Japan', Africa and Indo thought; to show that what was Mass; to give it your stamp .of China. Headquarters are in to be said was important. Finally, approval; to take your rightful Rome where the Brothers conthe years rounded it into a glori- 'place there before the altar. duct' the Vatican pharmacy and fied period: a solemn ending of Communion Amen serve as official infirmarians to a chapter or a doxology. Immediately after the fore- the Holy Father. In the synagogues, Amen was the peoples' answer to the mentioned Amen, the Commun_ prayer' said aloud by a represen- ion part of the Mass is begun. "-tive. Since this Jewish manner It is introduced by a short ex... hortation and' the Our Father. VATICAN CITY (NC)-The of prayer was-and still is-the Church's ordinary manner. of To end this part of the Mass, the Holy See has' set up a new community prayer, it was norChurch also had established an diocese in Mexico and named' lIlal ) that even the word be Amen. This time it was not re-' a graduate'of a U.S. seminary adopted by the Christians of the cited" by the community as a as its first bishop. Apostolic Age in their worship. whole but by each single indiHeading the Tehuacan diocese St.' Augustine was n()t quite vidual as he received the Blessed will, be Bishop-elect Rafael. eorrect when he translated Amen Eucharist. The priest would Ayala, who attended the MoD· 'y t f recite the prayer: "May the as "it' is true". e, as ar) as Body of Our Lord Jesus Christ ' tezuma Semina:i-y in New Mextranslations go, he was not too ico, established by the U. S. far from its general use. In the guard you to eternal life." The Bishops in 1935 to train Mexican' ' ' Christian would answer Amen. Middle Ages, an "Expositio M 15priests at a time when the 'Ille" (Explimation of the Mass) Take' time? Sure, but meaningChu.rch in Mexico was beine mentioned ,that "Amen is a rati- ful, too. pers~cuted.. :Other Uses fication by the people of what TerritorY of the new See W8II has been spoken, and it may be Other rites have continued the taken from the ArchdioceSes of ' interpreted in our language as above practices with even great- , Aritequera anel 'Puebla' de 1011 If the'y all said: 'May it be so er emphasisfuan our own. The Angeles. It isa suffrage 01. done as the priest has prayed.''' The M6Zarabic Rite has its peo- the latter archdiocese. Today-'s Use J}le answer Amen to every petiThere have been many tion of the OUr Father (like a .strange" translations of this litany). Amen appears some prayer in an a,ttempt to get at eight times in the Canon but it its deeper meaning. Various is recited silently by the priest groups !lave SUQstituted: "Yea, alone for' <>therwise it would yea!" "You said it." "You can utterly destroy the oneness. of say that again." "Verily, veI'ily" this most solemn of all prayers. , IAoY 8EAU1V &em "Right", etc. They all agree on Ordinarily, Christians termi- c.. 16 NO SECRET ICr AU.~ one thing: it is an important Ilate every prayer with this short I SIMPLY BUY ALL answer and "to be meant. . '. for'mula. It should not be III Amen appears veri often in simple: "There I am done," but 'MV COSlo\ETICS AT our Mass. Often it is terribly rather a heartfe1t, "Please, Lord, " plisunderstood. At the end of please." There is ample work the various orations, our re- for each one of us here beca.!Jse sponse is very important for it this is in a real sense the simseconds the priest's earnest plest prayer possible OUR prayer and it affords us the op- prayer. portunity to take a part in this , Note: With this article, we prayer ·andtherefore elevate our terminate oUr' review of dev~ own selves to tha~ perfection of. tional prayers. In the nex,t few active Christians. months we shall ,review the' This simple little prayer ther.e- prayers that the Church has fore: 1) shows that we are atcarefully chosen 'to include in tentive; 2) shows that we too her administration of'the Sacraoffer the Mass along with the ments. priest; 3) makes the Church's Next Ul'Aak: ~aptism: ~xor carefully worded pray~·rs our elsin (1) own. Consecration Amen ,This is, the most solemn use of this short prayer in our HtUl'gy. Through the centuries it has' been a symbol of the Church's defense that the Sacrifice of the Mass is a community -local and worldwide-:affair. Amen is never an introduction. Before, the preface, it is ,not meant to lead up to this solemn prayer but to show the end of the' Offertory. Before the Our Father: it does not introduce Our Lord's Prayer h..u t soleI:Unly ends· the Consecration.
Brother Philip, O.H. Pronounces Vows
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THE ANCHOR-piocese of Fan River-Thurs., July 12, 1962
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HELP OFFSET PRJ!ES'1I' SHORTAGE: To help offset the dangerous shortage of priests in Peru, a unique system of catechist schools has been founded by the Maryknoll Fathers with ,assistance from U.S. Bishops. The first school in Puno, Peru, has qualified more than 1,400 highland llimdi2.ns in less than six years. Father Thomas W. Verhoeven, M.M., right,
Vineyard Haven Church Blessing Continued from Page One Alco in the nautical tradition itJ 0 s1<lined glass window depicting St. Augustine at the seashol/'e pondering' the immensity e;'l God. 'roo window is in a side chapel wbich will be used for Winter Mosses and as a "crying room" !n Summer time. Separated by glaSl3 paneling from the main altar, it will be a well;ome haven f!:wl mothers with small children. A second side ch~pel is· a bap~Dtry and houses an 'electronic oIi"{tan and choir stalls. Its window depicts St. John the Baptist. Acoustics in the new church m'e "beyond belief," said Rev. Co:rnelius J. O'Neill, adminisb'ator. A special feature, dictated by liturgical recommendations that the laity participate more fully in ttte Mass, is a microphone in a front pew, to be used by lectors reading Epistle and ~spel to the congregation. Building Ii church on' an island presents problems unknown to mainland dwellers, noted Father O'Neill. All materials had to be transported to the Vineyard by ~, and architect, designers and suppliers of church goods ~d likewise to make the trip ~ St. Augustine by hoat or air. Ferries were fairly dependable but air trips were frequentny cancelled due to' weather conditions, said the administrator. Era is praying for fair skies on Sunday for the history-making dedication ceremones. Many have helped make the new St. Augustine's a re.ality, said Father O'Neill. First come parishioners, with prayers, contributions and special donations. Among the latter are William Hagarty, maker of the altar lectern, and Mrs. Manuel Campbell, mother of William Campbell, a seminarian studying for the Fall River Diocese. Mrs. Campbell has made a tabernacle veil and frontal for the altar in addition to a covering for the episcopal throne to be used Sunday. David Shields of Shields Associates, Quincy, is architect for the church. Contractor Is Leo P. DeSorcy and subcontractors include Manuel M. Maciel, Vineyard Haven, heating; Amaral Brothers, Oak Bluffs, plumbing; Michael Fontes Jr., Vineyard Haven, painting; Donald A. Berabe, EdgartoWn, electrical work; Willard Smith Co., Falmouth, D18Sonary. SanctuaIlY light and statues of Joseph the Worker a.nd Our Lady in the main church, also atations and altar furnishings
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COPENHAGEN (NC) "- St. Vincent clubs founded by Danish Catholics have raised funds to aid lepera ill Vietnam, India and AJrica.
for the Winter chapel were supplied by Sullivan's F. A. Forest Co., Fall River. Altars are from DaPrato Co. of Boston, and pews and sanctuary furnshings from 'Gothic Craft Co., Northboro. Staned glass is by Jean Jacques Duval, New York City. St. Augustine's was originally a mission of Sacred Heart Church, Oak Bluffs. In 1961 the golden jubilee of its founding as a mission was marked, but it was in 1957 it· was named a parish in its own right. . Permanent parish census· is about 800, but Summer Mass attendance is double that number. The new church· will seat 480, with side chapels each accommodating 50. A fully equipped auditorium beneath the chUrch will seat 500. Its facilities include a stage and kitchen. Confessionals at S1. Augustine's are fully modernized, with fans, signal lights and comfortable kneelers. Aiding Father O'Neill during the .Summer season is Rev. Joseph B. Ahearn, S.J., Latin professor at Boston College. He .will be at the island pa'rish for the third year this Summer. . Ground was broken for St. Augustine's June 15, 1961. This Sunday, one y~ar and one month later, the Diocese· will witness the dedication of its newest, and one of its most beautiful churches.
First Missionary NEW ULM (NC) - Bishop Alphonse Schladweiler of New Ulm has assigned Father Stanley Martinka to a mission post in Guatemala. He becomes the first priest from this Minnesota diocese to undertake mission work in Latin America.
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.of Monroe, Mich., who founded the 'catechist schools, has been named national director of the movement. At left, students open their day with prayer. Fr. Verhoeven believes that a cettain amount of recreation, center, should accompany studies. At right, the Maryknoll priest chats with Martin Sullasi at the gate to the school. NC Photo.
Ma,kes Giant Step To Major League
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Scotland's Discussions on Unity Most Valuable Since Reformation
SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Planl1 call for Bob Garibaldi, 20, GLASGOW (NC) -About 80 making the big step from the Catholic, -!\ngIican arid PresbySanta Clara U. campus to the terian clergymen .and laymen pitching mound for the San discussed the question of ChrisFrancisco Giants. . tian unity in what have been After the 6-foot-5, 205-pound ' called the· most significant inright - handed firebailer had formal religious talks in Scotbeen signed to a $150,000 bonus land sinc~ the Reformation. contract, Horace Stoneham, Attending talks, held at Notre Giants president, said: "Our . Dame Sisters' convent here, were scouts say we are not taking.any chances starting him right the Duke of Hamilton a,nd Branaway." Garibaldi, who was grad- don, former Lord High Commisuated in June, was vot~ the sioner of ·the General Assembly outstanding player at the NCAA of the Presbyterian State Church world series last month pitching of Scotland, accompanied by about 30 distinguished clergymen for Santa Clara. and laymen and women of his Garibaidi was the second church. Also attending were 10 Santa Clara player signed to a big league eontract this season. A few weeks ago shortstop Ernie Fazio, a junior at the Jesuit DUBLIN (NC) - The site of school, signed with the Houston the new U. S. embassy in Ireland Colts for a reported $75,000 to has been blessed by Auxiiiary $100,000.. Bishop Patrick Dunne of Dublin.
Blesses SOite
delegates of the Episcopal (Aftglican) Church of Scotland, ]M by Bishop Francis Hamiltoa Moncri~ff
of Glas~ow.
All were invited by Abbot Columban Mulcahy of the Cistercian Abbey of Nunraw, who joined the superiors of Scotland'l!l major Cath'olic religious orden and 15 leading Catholic laymen in sponsoring a lecture on the forthcoming ecumenical council by Father Gerard Corr, O.S.M., of London, who is Il member of one of the Prepara.fory Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. This .was followed by a disCussion period. Abbot· Mulcahy said afterwards that the unique conferenee was a move towards extinguishing the psychological differenees between Christian churches alii ~~e first step to a closer unity.
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'Says, C@M[(f(' [1)~(i$ionShow~ SeculauaD~M' i~ Native Face' , 'By Most
Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno
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,The logicians have a name' for it, the, Reductio ad , Absurdum, the reduciJ;lg of 'a proposition to its ultimate absurdity. It has to"do, of course, with faulty propositions, those' in which there is a basic flaw' or a hidden contradiCtion. So the ultimate abIt lias' been there; eminently, Burdity of the denial of God in the entrenched secularism of is the reductiori of all mean- American, public education. How ing and all being to sheer accurate was the clear-sighted
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Dying Dignity
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Local Language
SLADE'S, FERRY TRUST COMPA'NY,
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BALTIMORE (NC)-A bishop must .bear in 'mind the threat aid which would exclude an to Catholic school~ which would .but public schools,'~ the ~ch arise if ,Federal ed'ucational aid ,bishop, continued. 'were given to' imblic, sChools," '''Such, 'aid would not only 'only, Archbishop Laurence J. place a third burden on Catholic Shehan of Baltimore said here. parents who, even now, are The Archbishop preached, at.. forced to bear tlieir full share the consecration of the Most of the cost of public education 'Rev. Thomas A. Murphy as and are' burdened with the ex,Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore. pense of Catholic l!chools for Archbishop Egidio' Vagnozzi, their own children. Apostolic Delegate to the, U.S., "It wQuld also inevitably inwas the consecrator at the cere- crease the cost of all education, mony in the Cathedral of Mary and thus' would have the effect Our 'Queen; : of pricing parochial schools and ,Archbishop Shehan said that 'Catholic high' schools out 'of the in this country the bishop is educational picture." the' one chiefly responsible for Catholic education within his, 'jurisdiction, "and cannot afford' 5)®li''\?n~®lM®17il fP>~CUl101ln~@ to overlook the present problem' presented by the proposai of lL<Olf Aposto~oc Work Federal aid to education." RENSSELAER (NC)-Twenty-five servicemen, will discuss Sees Threat , "He must bear' in mind the , plans to train lay apostles in the threat to Catholic schools which armed fones as part of the Young Christian Workers' study is ,l;lound' to arise from' Federal week at St. _ Joseph's College here in Indiana. NatDOIl'llOJIChap~ain The servicemen plan to 0rLAS'VEGAS (NC)' - Father (Lt:'Col.) Morris Dummet of New ganize' groups to promote better Orleans was elected national use of leisure time, to combat chaplain of the Reserve Officers racial prejudice and to arouse Association 'at its annual con- , interest in the Second Vatican Council. vention here. '
chance in a ,mindless universe, spokesman of Christian educa":, tD the tale, told by the idiot tion Bishop 'John Lancaster 'W h i c h , someSpaiding, when, writing as early. b.ow,issupposed as the 1880's, he defined Amerito signify some- ' can public education as '~essenthing. tially secularist". 'The Supreme There have been efforts made -AT COUNCiL: Father Court of the' froin time to tiine to temper this 'Placid Jordan, O.S.B., forUnited States, judgment" both on the part of mer NBC war correspondent, In ruling that public school 'spokesmen and, is' one of three Americans ,the Reg e n t s' on the part of Catholic irenicists, Prayer is unby way mainly, of pointing out who win- cover the Vatican eon s t i t u .. the supposed fidelity of the sys- Council for NCWC News Service arid The Anchor. NC tional; is guilty, tern to the basic ideas of Chris,precisely, of, a tianity" ,or at least of the Photo. red u c t i 0 ad Judaeo-Christian tradition. absurdum. It has brought the, But it is more and more mani_ principle of secularis!ll down to fest that secula'rism must have its ultimate absurdity and reits complete sway, that any vealed it in its utter emptiness. foreign tincture must be purged, Continued from Page One Not that there is anything that the whole mass' may be.. "When .death is inevitable ~, ,wrong with the logic of the come leavened. when the dying process is beCourt in so deciding. Actually, Clarifies Issues yond doubt-the patient should it is difficult to see how it could 'But sometimes, too, happily, be allowed to die in ',dignity un':' have, ruled otherwise, given its' the reductjo ad absurdum acts encumbered by useless appara';' adherence t.o the major proposi": as a catalyst. It ~metimes 90 tus'," he continued. , tion of secularism and its fide- clarifies the issues, by present-' '''His family and friends should' lity to its various ~mplications: ing them in their extremist form, be in attendance at his bedside, But it is the prinCiple of secu- 'that only, the blind cann'o,t see not seated in 'some hospit.al al~ . a t fIt' larism which IS au an d their meaning.' ,~ " cove. His care should not,' howwhich fault is demonstrated in . So ,in' this intance. W~ canever, be left to attendants. His this decision for all the world' not avoid the impression that physician sho,uld be frequent , to see. ihe Supreme Court, unwillinglY attendance as long as the patient Must Ignore G 0 d perhaps and unwittingly, has is conscious or i,s likely to re-, The principle of secularism is done,more by its decision t9 admain so ..., 'the pr'oposition that separation of vance the cause 'of religious eduException" '. church'and'state means that the cation in the United States tQan "When ,it, is determined that lItate, necessarily, is non-reli-'the writing~ and sermons of a, the actual process of dying Qas thousand, Doctors, and Fathers o~ begun, restorative measures £pous, " " The state is not only con"; the Church: " ' 'should be discon.tInued becauSe ~rained from an establishment , More, suspect', that it has' they are unavailing. The exc'ep-' el religion but from ail interest promoted the possibility, of, it tion here would be the youthful, In religion. It must n'ot merely fair sharing. of Federal arid state previously healthy patient, for , av.oid the favoring of, one reli- funds' on the' part of private whom treatment must be vigor,gious 'body over any .other, but and religious s~hools more tha'n ously pursued up to the verY the, favoring of religion as such: any amount of scholarly argu- act of dying." In effect, it means that the mentation or political effort.: Dr. Cavanagh called on hiE; &tate must ignore God' because 'It has presented secularism' in' fellow Catholic' physicians ' 1lo to acknowledge Him in any way l'tS 'natl've face, and to' J'udge'"promote th d ea o.f 'B ene ' ', e'l would be tantamount to a reli-" from popul'ar reactl'on most mori,' a', ciignIfled, . . 1 t peasan gious establishment. Americans are frightened and a death, in the dying patient." ,Picture Becomes Clearer little disgusted. He added: ' , It is with evident reluctance, ',Possible Turning-Point "There is no need to prothat the Court has edged closer Now let the American Civil long the dying process, nor is and closer to definition of its L'b 1 er t'les' U· ilion ge t '10 a f ew ' there' any' mora·l or medl'cal J'us- ,-., secularism as a part of the cracks .about Christmas carols tification for doing so. Eutha-' American creed, but the picture' in the publie schools and we: nasia, in the sense of employing has been coming clearer when- will have won the battle by de-' dired measures to shorten life, ever the subject has been fault. ' is, never justified. Bene mori, in broached. Not that this is good. It would the sense of allowing the, pa"" It is interesting t{j, spe'culate ultimately do ,little for the,' tient to die' peaceably and ill en the possibilities a splrl "tual. i ' dl·gnl·ty, I'S al'ways J·ustl·f·l·ed." rigorous application latent of the in rea-. sa t va·Ion 0 f A merlca if religioll,seducation were supsoning b e h i n d the present ruling, ported, alongside a thoroug,hly The point is that many A.meri- secular system which' would educate for religious vacuity. Contin'ued from Page One cans are in fundamental agree- C It may be hoped that the, deciops 'share in the desire for Inent with the Court in regard sion will set all Americans to" flo the principle of secularism, thinking' through some funda- greater use of the vernacular in worship, they will work for it' but are somewhat dismayed mentals of religion and politics' at the ecumenical council. ' when the principle is applied in 'and' education. The reductio As for' the' structure' of the areas which they deem' incon- ad absurdum might then mark sequen tial. Mass itself, Father Hau~tmann' a turning-point in our history. said there is a ,widespread de- ' In other words, there are ,those who prefer to take their sire to revise and modernize it. The nonessential parts of the secularism with a faint flavoring StonehiU Grant Mass which grew out of antiof piety about, it to ease their NORTH EASTON (NC) consciences. ' quity, should be replaced by new' Stonehill College here has ,re- forms 'rooted in contemporary Yawning Abyss Separation of church and state ceived a grant of $7,800 from.the . life, he said. He added that this does 'not, of course, imply secu- Atomic Energy Commission ,for would help Catholics generally , ~rism as a matter of necessity.. the purchase of biological imd , to feel their religion as a preSecularism is simply the easier chemical equipment. The new sent-day experience. IReforms solution, the one which we have equipment will give students an will have to take into account taken in Arne ric a largely opportunity, to become 'familiar the requirements of each difthrough sheer intellectual' lazi- with techniques' involved in the ferent 'socia" or working, milieu, detection, measurement and use for the needs of each are difness. of radioactivity. ' ferent, the priest said. It is by no means the only solution, let alone the right solution. It has been much ~YOUR GROWING BANK" , easier for America to abjure an interest in religion than to faCe up to the troublesome business ' C)f coping with the facts of reliSOMERSET, MASS. /iious d iff ere n c e S, without running into favoritism or an $200.000 to $2,000,000 in 2 Years establishment. But it is, when the actual. Treat Yourself To Convenient Banking naked consequences of this abin juration are brought to the Somerset Shopping Area at the Bridge fore, as in the, present judgment, that we begin to see the MembElf" Federal Deposit Insurance, Corp. abyss 'yawning at our feet. :It A" Deposits Insured Up To $10,000 has been there all ,the time. ,
in
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R®$~onsib!e for' Catholic' E(hu::~\i'ic[fi) 'Wgi'hcn Jurisdiction
,Bish<6>ps
THE ANCHOR-Diocese oHall River-Thurs., July 12;1962
India:"1 Will Give My' People God"
, DURING ~:d£ SJ>..... uN O.N SlJl~.oA~ iN AMALAl'UltAM, SOUTHERN INDIA, OUR CATHOLICS SIT ON THE GROUND, ,,' st I'h Their miserable 'church' has no pews. ,,~.~ FATHER MUNGALI, our priest ~V d' there. has no pulpit. " • At Mass in ttl'1 ~. AMALAPURAM you're shocked bJ QJ 0 the, pOveny ~ou see. The 'church' .~ is. bamboo hut the si.z8 of your parCfA lor.' :You're impressed to see peas+ ... ants. all of them ill rags. devouU, worshipping God .• '. To build • decent church is, for these'people, out of ~he, question. They haven't enou/fh ,Tht Holy Fathtr'iMiJ!iOf/ Ail to eaL ID AMALAPURAM the avertht 'n..: • " rL . .....L age lite-expectancJ ill 21 years • . . II , fior vrim_ VJImD FATHER MUNGALI' discouraged T ' "With ever so mUe." hI! says, "we" co~ld do sO machl U onl, we had a little, help. we could make more conver&samong the low , caste Hindus. We could make our Catholics proud to be CathoJ.C8. We could do ,a ,better job at teaching' our children the eatechism!' , •• It's hard to Sill' No to a priest like FATHER' MUNGALI. "Give me a church," he says; "and I will give iny people GOd!' • • . Will the meD ill 'the parish build the ' ,ehurch themselves T The' foundatIoD, an empty' hole, Is already dug. 'The I;Ilen in the parish can't give money, but they give their, labor' free-of-charge. Without help. however. they caD' do no more .•• To buy the materials for a plain, clean, func.ional, church In AMALAPURAM, will cost altogether $3,500. To build a shed in which to teach the catechism will cost $360 more •.• Perhaps you'd like to build the' church or the cateehism,shed in memory of your family or your loved ones. If 50' write us now. We'll write FATHER MUNGALI Immediately and tell him what you have done . • . It's hard to say No to· FATHER MUNGALI. Will yOU help him aS,much as you can'/' Y,our $1, $5. $10. $25, $50" $100 gUt is what he needs right ~ow in AMALAPURAM. Please help him. He needs yoUr help to give his people God.
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• TWO GIFI'S IN ONE , OUR GIFT CARPS are att~active, artistic, personalizeci. They make it easy for you to say Thank You, Congratulations HilPPY Birthday, Best Wishes ... Simply select a gift from th~ following mission needs-and send us. with your donation, the name and address of the person you want to remember. We do all the rest. We send that ,person a' GIFT CARD promptly explaining what. in his naDle, or hers, you have done'. , : Two gifts in one? When you fuse our GIFT CARDS you (l) remember your frIends; and (2), help the missions immeasurably. •.. HERE ,ARE, SOME TWO-GIFTS-IN-ONE SUGGESTIONS: A SACRED ARTICLE FORA MISSION ,CHAPEL. Give, in som~one's name, VESTMENTS ($50), a MONSTRANCE ($40), CHALICE ($40). CIBORIUM ($40), TABERNACLE ($25), CRUCIFIX ($25), STATIONS OF THE CROSS ($25)'CENSER <$20), SANCTUARY LAMP ($15). ALTAR LINENS ($15), SANCTUARY BELL '($5). El FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH. It costs'only $10 a month for us to feed a family of PALESTINE REFUGEES. More than 1.4 million' of these refugees are ia camps in JORDAN, SYRIA, LEBANON, and GAZA. ':"WIlI you feed a famDy iD ~meone else's name? . o ENROLL YOUR FRIEND IN THIS MISSION AID s0CIETY. ' He (or she) 'will participate In the benefits of more t~an 15,000 Masses each year; s~are in the Masses of the Holy 'Father, Cardinal Spellman, and all the bishops and prlesta engaged, in thill work. He (or shel will be able to iain a Plenary Indulgence M times during the year, and at tho , moment 'of death. -The dues for one persoa are $1 for on. y~ar, $20 for life. The dues for a, family are $5 for one year. $100 for life. -Help your frIend, help the mIssIons. . BAVE YOU MADE :YOUR WILL T REMEMBER THE MISSIONS. -0ur legal title:' THB CATHOLIC NEU BAST' WELFARE ASSOCIATION. '
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~'l1ear'EastOlissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preslde"t MItr. Jos.,' ,~ 1;-' 'Nat' Sec', Send 011 _lIIaleatlolll to:
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CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARI ASSOCIATION 41t~ Lexlnnton Ave. at 46th St. New York 17;'N.":
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Theory of Expendability Tested in Rigney Case
Thurs., July 12, 1962 THE
19
ANCHO~-
Fai5'h©Hl®n Parish WQ~§ ~8ocesan
By Jaek Kineavy
GirOg;Q
The expendability of baseball managers has always been axiomatic, yet the enforced absence of the Angels' skipper, Bill Rigney, in the recent three game series with the Sox seems to point up his value to the lLos Angeles ball club. With Rigney eall- the Dodgers' l5-game winner ing the shots, the Angels found ~e American starS not at had a 10-1 seasonal edge all fonnidable. A clu.t<;h throw , . . by Earle Battey, naIling Cleover the Sox; WIthout hIm ,mente attempting to steal third
M~er:r
St. Joseph's Parish, Fairhaveil!, with 38 points· took top honoi'll in the girls' se~ond annual Dieeesan field day competition helell at Our Lady of the Lake camp under the direction of Father William McMahon. St. Theresa's, New Bedford, was second with 19 points anell they dropped three straight to on a hit and run that misfired, St. Michael, .l!'all RiveJ", third Boston. Some controversy debailed Pascual out of trouble with 15. veloped 0 v e r in the fourth. Individual honors were won the decision to It remained for the incompar_ by Jean Thiverge of St. Thestart the ailing able Stan Musial appearing in resa's and Sharon Amaral of St. ~Bo" Belir,sk,y his 19th All-Star classic to igJoseph's in the junior division. mFridaynight s nite the N.L. offense with a leadTop scorer in senior events Wall game. off pinch single to right in the ....... Kathy Medeiros, St. Joseph's The return sixth. Maury Wills, the Dodger First, secone and, third place match between speed merchant, was inserted to winners were as follows: Belinsky and run. And he did, stealing second .lTulI1iors ~ilsonhad been and counting on Groat's single Softball tllirow - Marjorie WIdely adverup the middle. Plourde, 55. Peter and Paul, Fan tised 11 n d a Alert Baserunning FIELD EVENTS WINNERS:' St. Joseph's parish team River; Patricia Smith and AnN crowd in exceliS Will fl furthel" demonstrated of 20,000 poured cunning and daring when he Fairhaveri, admire trophy held by Captain Judith Worden: M,aynard, both of Sacred Heart, through the turnstiles for the "conned" Colavito into attempt- Standing, left to right, are Kathleen Medeiros, Sharon Fall River. Broad jump-Sharon Amaral; eontest. It was reported that the ing to catch him swingiIig past Wordell, Claire Bergeron and Barbara LaRose. Jean Thiverge and Elaine Lafront office isl,lued the dictum second on a single to left, then montagne, both of St. Theresa's•.• to go with Belinsky who was shifted into high gear and beat 50-year dash~ean Thiverge, still bothered by a muscle pull the throw to third. This was '8 Sharon Amaral, Donna Costa. ~ined while working out, in key play in that Wills subse- . St. Joseph's ~he Yankee Stadium the previouit quently aeored the N.L.'1l insurContinued from Page- One' it with the beauty of heroic 75-yard dash-Ann Suneson, ~unday. nnce run on a short h~ist to l"ight co~ter between God' and hu- virtues. Manager Rigney allegedly had field. manity-to express Ourselves in "But there are also deal St. Joseph's, Fall -River; Mary 1zft Instructions to start Don 'Willie Mays again proved the human terms - has always been children who, forgetful of there Greves, St. Michael's, Fall River: Lee in view of Belinsky's condi- most colorful player on the" preceded by a more persuasive vocation and of' their election, Sandra Andrews, St. Joseph'" ~on and reports from the coast field. His catcb off Maris in the reminder to pray and to do mar this 'i n t e rio r heavenly • Fairhaven. lOp-yard dash-Mary Lennon, f':ld1eated that the coaching staff seventh was a gem and though 'penance." beauty within themselves and St.. Michael's, Fall River;' Judy oas pro~e to go along with the he bounced hard off a fence 'N 0 t i ng that Moses, the whose lives do not reflect' the Clark, St. Joseph's Fall River, young rIghthander. At the prestanchion, Willy rifled the ball Prophets and the Apostles all divine likeness of Jesus Christ." came conference, bowe'(er, genback into the infield to prevent emphallized the need for penAfter pointing' out that the Joan Medeiros, St. Michael'~ Fall River. "li."al manager Ha',ley ll~ppos~IY Billy Moran's tagging up and', ance, ,tlle ,encyclical declared: popes' of the past have recom~niors countermanded RIgney s instruc- going to second after the catch • S •. mended the' special practice of •• d' I eel pecif'IC p ra.c.lces Broad jump-Kathy Medeiros, ....ons an . InS st that Belinsky Mays wanted to play long ball ". . penance on the eve of ecumenitoo the mound in keeping with at the plate but his efforts be~t I~ the duty and ~eed of all cal councils, Pope John men- St. Joseph's, Fairhaven; 'Vivian cdvaneed notices. yond a long foul ball proved ChrIstIans to . do VIOlence. to tioned specific practices' that Lyonais, St. Theresa's, New Bed' -Bo" proved wild and ineffec_ unavailing. ' themselve~ eIther ..t~ drIve can be followed throughout the ford. Softball throw-Claire BergeUve and afte10 walking foUl' of Garagiola's description of 11 a~ay theIr own Splrltu~l ene- world. ron, St. Joseph's, Fairhave-n; thli! first five hitters he faced slider "a curve ball after taxes" ~ues to preserve theIr bapUrges Novenas he was ,limed for Ryne Duren. -priceless and his anecdote on t~smal Innocence, ·or to renew a First, he urged the world's Joan Fallon, 8t. Mary's, Fall Thus, the widely-advertised i'e- Gentile's, short stay with the' life of grace .that has. b;en lost bishops to institute a' 'solemn River; Nina Poyant, 81. Therematch went aWYy prematurely Dodgers:-he was at the plate by transgressIng the dlvme ~re novena of prayer to the Holy sa's, New Bedford. 50-yard dash-Kathy MedeiI,md Boston went on tQ win only 36 times not long enough cepts... Spirit that the council Fathers handily.' The onus wasn't, eqm_ to become 'a 'failure--ironically "The C.h,;,-rch, be!oved spouse may be showered with heavenly ros, Judith Wordell, Donna Monpletely on the front office, bow.- realistic. Gentile and !,.eon Wag- of the DIVIne SavIOur, has al- gifts and grace. He added that ty, all of St. Joseph's Fair:laven. 75-yard dash-Nina Poyant; ever., ner, two starters for the A. L. ways remained in itself holy and a plenary indulgence could be Sub 8 e que n t investigation began their major league careers immaculate by means of, the attached to this novena to be Margaret Baker, St. Mary's, New Wrned up the fact that Belip_ in the' senior circuit. Wagner Faith which enlightens it, of the gained by everyone taking part Bedford; Kathy Medeiros; m. Joseph's, Fairhaven. . sky had advised th~ Angels'came up with the Giants, was' sacraments which sanctify it, in it under the usual conditions. lOa-yard dash- Margarei trainer that he wa,s ready to go. traded to the Cardinals, then the laws which govern it and Moreover, the Pope said, it Rigney, if present, may. have back to the minors the many members who adorn will also be fitting to' organize' Baker, Joan Fallon, DonM Monty. altered his plan to go with Lee . in individual dioceses a propi": Judges were Miss Rosemary but, at any rate, it's good to tiatory penitential function. This Moore, Bishop Stang High; Mrs. Dqy will be a fervent invitation, know that the promotional as. Austin O'Toole, Mount St. MBJ'7 pects of the contest did not dicwhich will be accompanied by Academy; Miss Stacia Gateri&Miamitate the choice of Belinsky. WASHINGTON (NC) - The special series of sermons, to per~ , MIAMI (NC)-Labor Secre- form works of mercy and to wicz, New Bedfora, VocationoL All-Star Notes National Science Foundation has M"lSS Catherine O'Neil was nurlltl 't,arY Arthur J. Goldberg will be The second All-star game at given $146,662 in Federal funds practice penance by means of Wrigley Field, Chicago, can't to 26 Catholic colleges and ,uni- the principal speaker at a dinner which the faithful will seek to in attendance. help but be considered anticU- versities as part of a $3,'130,634 bere Thursday, Aug. 30, which propitiate Almighty God. and to will be part of the Diocese of . implore of Him a real renewai mactic after Tuesday's spectac- program to belp 302 colleges. ular clash at the new D. C. StaDUBLIN (NC)-Michacl CarTbe funds are given as out- Miami's second annual Labor of the Christian· spirit, which is dium. It bad everything: good right grants by the foundation Day' observance. one of the principal., objectives dinal Browne, O.P., hall beemI pitching,. solId defense, ,timely named protector of the Missklnto be used as the discretion of , The program announced by of the council.'" hi tting and daring baserunning. the recipients to help meet their Bisbop Coleman F. Carroll of Pope John then urged Catho- ary Sisters of St. Columban, TV fans were further treated to· needs in science. The foundation' Miami also includes a Solemn lics to participate in both ex- whose motherhouse is at Magthe witty, erudite comments of' is a quasi-governmental agency Pontifical Mass in downtown terior and interior penance. heramore in County Wicklcw. _ Joe Gnragiola who did We color supporting research' and devel- Gesu Church and two seminars oil the telecast. , at which Msgr. George G. ,Higopment in .the bame subjects. Jim Bunning's, three inning The largest single grant to a gins, director of the Sod!)l AcON CAPE C,OD shutout stint ran his total to Catholic institution was $17,QOO tion Department, National Cath_ e i g h t consecutive scoreless to the University'of Notre Dame. olic Welfare Conference,' wUl frames in All-Star competition. The only other Catholic institu- llreside. National, stat~ and local The Detroit righthander gave up tion Ix> get more than $10,000 labor and management leaden • waste pitch double Ix> the was Marquette University, Mil- .will participate. wrong field by. the Pirates' Rowaukee. which was given berto Clemente - the gam~s $11,220. leading hitter - then mowed down the Nationals effortlessly through the third. Don Drysdale wll$ equally effective. Aside from a triple by AMPLE PARKING Aparicio leading off in the third, ..,..". ... ,
Pope As ks·Penance Before Council
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Goldberg Labor Speaker at
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THE ~NCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,·Ju1t 12, 1962
Mount St. ·Ma ry· Develop'ls, Christian . Womanhood
....
EXTERIOR OF NEW ADDITION TO MOUNT ST. MARY ACADEMY '<Education at the Mount is a wonderful experience for . Motherhouse of the community, From the inception of the so-' and the ability to get along wit1';) • . located 'on the corner of Middle' dality, Bishop James J. Ger- each other. wonderful young ladies. I have found them, bright, en- and Second Streets. rard watched over and directed, Encourage Self-ExpressioD ll' ghtelled and full of life.'" That is the tribu.te of Rev. Paul ., C the spiritual formation of the . th On Sept, 3, 1946, Bishop as,"... . . Budding scientists enjoyed e McCarrick, assistant 'at St. Mary's Cathedral and spiritual sidy formally opened the acade- : students, Be s 1 ~ e s gl.vmg a .activities of the Vanguard - director for stu den t s at my 9Y celebrating the Holy monthly talk to ~he e,nhre stu- . Science Club and participatiollll in Providence ~r- Sacrifice of the Ma.ss in the con- 'd,en.t ~ody" h,e l,nstructed the in the .science fairs. This SumMount St. ·Mary Academy. Motherhouse rived in Fall River to open a. t kl " . . vEmt chapel. At the Communion, semors W1ce wee y. mer, two stude.nts are enjoying Wl'th a ,total of over 70 nuns parochial school for a small' breakfast that followed, the 60 It -was often he who noted the added challenge of working who are alumnae of its 13 number of pupils. On March 19 girls who comprised the first and encouraged the #rst tender with a sel,ect group of 61 girlD .
graduating classes, the Fall River secondary school is best 'known for the spiritual and cultural development of its 'students, ~ When Cat her i n e McAuley ,established a school in Baggot Street, Dublin, Ireland, to undertake the education .of children and give shelter 'toho~e-' less young girls, she had, rio intention of. founding a religious order, for from childhood. she bad been' prejudiced against the cloistered life'. " Order DevelopS Rapidly
the Academy opened but, such fre'shman class were welcomed. shoots of religious vocation. His 'and boys from all sections of was the demand ,for a Catholic ' In Jurie, 19~0, 54 of these girls . priestly' character enabled the New England at Brown Univer'ed~cation, that the .crainped received their diplomas at the -students to find in him a spiri- sity. . quarters in the tenement on the first graduation exercises. tual father and advisor. Mount. The school newspaper, yearcorner of Rodman and Fourth Open New Building, ~aint Mary's ,history 'would .·be book and debate club' offer Streets were quite inadequate. f 11 d _ mcomplete WIthout an allUSIOn , many opportunities to students In 1875, Father Edward MurAs year 0 owe year, in- . to his devoted service. . "desirous of mastering the art oil phy bought a private residence creased enrollment. showed the , . ',sell-expression, Though these on Second Street.. This .house ',necessity for expansion, In May, 'At the ground-breaking cere- activitIes aretime':'consuming. stands today and l'S ·st1'11. a con- 1959, ground was broken-for a monies in 19.59 Bishop C0!1nolly th' ff t' f" i ,eyo ven't, St, Anthony's, al'though l't new bUl·lding'. By September, had' averr.ed that "one' of the f er, th a sa III 'thymg 'ourexper119'1.._ enceor. ose WI J na WoG is no longer a conv,eni of, Mere,y. 1960" this building was re,ady great proofs of, the .va.lue of. the tenderi~ies, for occupancy and 1961 saw the school is in .the number of_ vocaWith added accom,modations, enrollment reach a new high- tions to the religious life among ,The FrenehClub provides the St, ' Catherine's· Academy' was over 500' students. ' the studeQts,~', Those who. were . students with an opportunity of ?pened in September" 1879,. a?d _ -The. new. building, besides . p,res~Ilt. i~ 'the fOJ,'milti,ve ,years d l' ni a t is in g French plays. '1~ w~s here tha~ the f1rs~ €atho- .~ furnishing' additional classroom . of th~ _ aca~,emy _~J1ow: t~at ,the viewing, slides and movies whiclll have hIgh - ludes the 'adm'l'nistra.64 gradua tel1 w}lo have. en~er~d ·explain. . the. c.ul.tural- life of ..... She. could 'd g not owth of envisioned, the new hc. . t't t dschool In Fa~ RIver was,.'space, '.1QC . ., . , , ._.' .,. , '.' , me rapI r . .,' ms 1 u e. . , ': . , tion 'offices, cafeteria, gym-;: the' ~~hg1!>'-'S ,~ife .,,!,~re ,l~ .. no . ,France, and,of traveling to"gllll-> order, the Sisters of Mercy, after. The h,lgh school was cIo~ ID . nasium . ;lUdito~ium 'and laOOra- 'small 'way,in!luen~ed. hy ,the" leries where French~. artist!e its fo~nding in 1831; nor, c~u1d. , 1890 because of' th~ many de-'.:t . "Th .. d ti g 'I Of' pile'gUy 'example' of our' V,icar , wor.ks.are .displayed.. ,she have fqreseen that w1thm a mands for Sisters from :the ' ~t;Ies, ,e gra u~ n ,c afss , ".'Geu'era.i:" '". ' . . , . th , . . h' f th d' 1961 swelled the ranks 0 .. ," ' . ', . Social Events' f cw yeaLS .l1'ke the apostles of' _ varIOUS pans es o· e IOcese " - to' 700 .. ... '. . old this small nucleus would be (then the Diocese of Providence,), alumnae ,over" ...:. -' :"'he:,su~e!,~. ~f the gra~uatCl'l _ .This year.. besi~es the annual! «attcred around the world. . -, " As Cathohc educators, the ad- '. 'in :tpe1r ,colleg~, w()rk or '10' the . junior and senior proms, .the But by 1843, only two years' Opens in 19.6 ministrators at ~e Mount ha.ve : business offi~e,.isP~oof·thattheu:::a~ad~·~y·spo.nsOr~ a Fall dance . . . 'after her untimely death, the For, the' next 50 years the set,' up a I?rogram of studIes ' ~c;ademy .. ;has -, eqmpped ; th~m ' an~ the most, pop~lar ~vent .~ :Sisters of Mercy had journeyed Sisters devoted themselves. to whI~h endeavors to develop the . W1tl,l, ~he;llltellectual persp'le,ulty tl1e social season _ the, Fatherto the new world and begun a the education of. youth in the pOwers .of the stu~ent 90 a~'to necessary., ~or· succ~ss: ' I?~ughter Dance. These activfoundation at ·Pittsburg. Thirty grammar grades. But in 1946, at ,"h~rmomz~ t~e thmgsof,. tl1~e ,Dr"Ja1l)~s Con,ant'in .his ,stUdy i~ies are designed not wholly for years later, in 1873, the.Sisters the irivitation of his excellency, ; and ~f etermty., .. ' ofthe American 'high ~hool re~ 'pleas~re- but. have' a ,definite of Mercy became' pioneers, in Bishop James - E. Cassid~; ·the :', Bishop Gerrard Innuenee . commended that '.every student purpose of teaching the '9t~dents that section of Massachusetts Sisters;_0t;lce again took on ~he Thro'u~hreligion' classes; re- have"a 'broad,'required ~cader?ic the. amenities 90 ~ece:S3arY',in which in,la~er :rears ,was' to. be- educa~on of youth on the high " treat; 'spiritual activities and as- backgr.,?und:. comJ?osed of mne theIr every-day SOCIal life. come the DIocese of Fall RIver. scl100l level.. . ' semblies' and above all through ',or. 10 .cours~. WIth homework, 'Much of the credit for the First in Fall River :For 't)1efirst 15 years this' the sodaiity, Mount St. Mary has One, of 'th~h'W~YS t~e ~ou~~ 'sUccess .of the Acadeniy goes 'to The following year, 1874, girls' academy was housed: in '. attempted to lead her studentS I ;:ek;: to ,do dIS IS ~y avmg Sister Mary .Carmela, principal three Sisters of Mercy from the what had originally' been the into' Christian w-omanhooa' d eSt ~etnk' ant'h ,sop 10more . SetU- . from 1946 to 1961, who directed ,, , " en s a e e same sub Je s. . and guided the in s"t i t uti 0 n Whether the student elects to ,'through its critical formative go''.on . ,to. ' college or enter the ' . an d' w h 0 '1 d'd 'much 'to . '. ,years busmess worl~, thIS academ!c stimulate its growth,' In her ,background' WIll better eqUIp 'k S' t d b' h f h k wor, IS er was encourage y er or er wor . a fine teaching staff, Extra-Curricular Well-Qualified Faculty Since all work and. no play can may Jack a dull boy-or Jill The present faculty numbenl a' dull girl _ extra-curricular 13 religious and five lay teachactivities are designed to com- ers, Eight of the religious plement the academic learning teachers hold masters degrees; . by providing for participation' the remaining five, who hold in social' events. bachelor degrees, are candidates· for the master degree, All five The glee club and orches.tra lay faculty m e m b e r shave are' two of th~ most popular ac- bachelor degrees and one is at ~ivities. Last year 90 girls joined present working toward her .the glee club and 57 became masters degree. members of the orchestra. Two faculty members have "Tulip Time", the first operetta been present at every graduaproduced by the glee club was tion-Sister Mary Rose and Sisan overwhelming· success,' . ter Mary Fidelis who are both. For the moreaothletic-minded, former principals of Holy Famibasketball, volleyball, 'and bowl.,. ly High School, New Bedford. GUIDE STUDENTS: Rev. Paul F. McCarrick, sodality moderator; Sister M. Dionysia, ing provided many hours of en_ .Through their yast educational which were also experience, they have contriR.S.M., principal; Sister Mary Julian, R.S.M'll -1951 Mount graquate and now a. teacher - joyment-hours intended to teach the student th~ buted much' toward the success of business subjects. . . . necessity of "give and take" of the academy.
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