07.18.63

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.The

ANCHOR

Aft AneAOf' of tAe .!oW, hrt aM ~T. PAUL

Fall River, Mass., Thursday, July 18, 1963

Vol. 7, No. 30 ©

1963 The Anchor

PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year

North Dighton Parish

Plans Golden Jubilee

BLESSING OF CAPE CHURCH: Bishop Connolly blesses the exterior of the new Our Lady of the Cape Church; Brewster, with Rev. Joseph A. Nolin, M.S. pastor, as deacon, and Joseph Lowther a~ altar boy.

Pennsylvania Public Schools

Offer Religion As Subject

. The Most Reverend Bishop will preside at a Solemn· ?!fass of Thanksgiving at 5 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 8 at St. Joseph's Church, North Dighton. The event will'mark the 60th anniversary of the founding of the parish. The Bishop's Chaplains will be Rev. Fran­ parish, Taunton. A house Oil tis McCarthy, pastor of St. Lincoln Avenue, ever since PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Religion will be studied as an academi« subject in some Patrick's Church, Somerset; known as "the Church House," and Very Rev. Thomas was u~d for services until 1913, Pennsylvania· public schools this Fall, but there will be no· religious exercises' in the.. Walsh, pastor of St. John's when the Catholic population schools. This policy was outlined by Charles H. Boehn, state superintendent of publie Church, Attleboro, both former' had grown sufficiently to war­ instruction, who said the academic study of religion would be included in two new pro­ rant the erection of St. Joseph's. pastors of St. Joseph's. grams - one a humanities Under the guidance of, Father Rev. Leo M. Curry, present pastor, will celebrate the Mass, DeMello, as first pastor, the program called "Universal, assisted by Rev. Edwin Loew as "Church House" was sold and Issues in Human Life" and deacon and Rev. Lester L. Hull preparations made for the build­ the other considering reli­

es subdeacon. Rev. James Lyona

will be master of ceremonies. Seated in the sanctuary will be Rev. Emmanuel Souza De­ Mello. first pastor of St. Joseph's end Rev. William Dolan, also a former pastor. Rev. William O'­ Connell, assistant at St. Law­ rence Church, New Bedford, and first priest ordained from St. ,Joseph's, will preach. A dinner will follow the ?,fass, • 6:30. Rev. Donald McInnis, C.P., former North Dighton resi­ dent, will speak, as will Bishop Connolly. :Before' St. Joseph's parish was erected, North Dighton Catho­ Me. were served by ~acred Heart

Serra Charters 21 New Clubs In One Year , SAN FRANCISCO (NC) _ Twenty-one new Serra dubs were chartered last year and 60 more are in the process of formation, Fred J. Wagner, outgoing president of Serra International,' bas re­ ported. ''Our position is basically ~und-the condition is pleasing, if not completely satisfying," he aid, noting that complete satis­ faction would be the realization of the ideals of the Serra move­ ment throughout the world. .Serra International now has 10,300 members in 11 different countries, and four of the 21 new ehapters were chartered outside of the U.S., he said. "Our work in South America progressed slowly - perhaps too slowly - but, we believe, very efficiently," he said. A chapter 'was formed in Santiago, Chile, ,and one in Bogota, Colombia, he said, and past experience had demon­ strated the advantages of pru­ dent selection of members who would fulfill the obligations of • Serrano Requiring members to be really active actually streng­ thened the clubs, he said, de­ ~ite a drop in membership. "Emphasis on the spiritual is elemental if Serra is to continue to grow and prosper," he told the more than 1,000 gathered following a Solemn Pontifical Mass celebrated by Archbishop lose ph T. McGucken of San Francisco.

ing of a church. Meanwhile Mass was celebrated on weekdays and holydays in the rectory, while Sunday services were held in area halls. Father DeMello also served th.e people of South Dighton be­ fore that area had its own par­ ish of St. Peter's. Present par": ish boundaries take· in North Dighton and parts' of Dighton, Taunton and Rehoboth. Rev. John E. de Valles suc­ ceeded Father DeMello as pas­ tor in 1917, but left after a 'few months to· serve in the armed forces. His successor, Rev. Simon A. O'Rourke, also left for the same reason. He too served St. Joseph's but a few months. . The next pastor, Rev. John Doyle, served four years, until 1921. Following him and remain­ ing a't St. Joseph's 10 years was Rev. Thomas Trainor. He formu. lated plans for a perman~nt church and directed a fund­ raising drive for its erection. In 1932, the depths of the depresTurn to Page Nineteen

gion as a social institution 'and called "Introduction to Social Studies." The U.S. Supreme Court in a June 17 decision ruled out Bible reading and recitation of the Lord's Prayer in public schools on the grounds that such exer­ cises in schools are an uncon­ stitutional establishment of reli­ gion. The decision applied specifically to public schools in Pennsylvania and Maryland. Boehm said the aim of the two new programs will be to inculcate "moral and ethical values" in students. He said the programs will be introduced in a limited number of high schools. He said academic teaching' about 'religion in public schools is justified on the basis of the Supreme Court's June 17 deci­ sion, which contained a passage stating: "It might well be said that one's education is not complete without a study of comparative 'Turn to Page Nineteen

Cardinal Spellman Brands Discrimination 'Outrage'

NEW YQRK (NC) - Francis Cardinal Spellman told a Harlem audience that racial discrimination is an outrage and that the nation must have civil rights legislation. The Archbishop of New York, who got enthusiastic applause from an audience of about priest who had been active ia 500 at a civic ceremony,· civic· movements in the neigh­ added,· however, that legis­ borhood. The project, named for Msgr. lation is not the complete answer to race prejudice. "We need civil rights measures enacted into law; but we also need the attitudes of justice and charity to be applied by every p.erson in our society to the con­ crete proplems of hQusing, em­ ployment and education. ,"This is the challenge which 1963 has set, squarely before us and it must at all costs be faced and solved," he said. Cardinal Spellman participated with city officials in the dedi­ cation of a pubIc housing pro­ ject, named in honor of a white

Says Supreme Court Cannot Outlaw God 'They Are Only Men and God Is God' SAN FRANCISCO (NC) ­ James Francis Cardinal McIn. tyre asserted here that the U.S. Supreme Court in its controver­ sial rulings banning prayer and Bible reading in the nation's public schools attempted the im­ possible - to "separate truth from the spirit of truth." "God cannot be outlawed even by the Supreme Court. They are only men and God is God," the Archbishop of Los Angeles told the closing session of the 21st Serra International convention. Cardinal McIntyre said the Bible story of Christ's discussion with the Samaritan women at Jacob's well illustrated the prin_ ciple that "you cannot separate truth from the spirit of truth." "The U.S. Supreme Court has attempted to do this very thing," the Cardinal said. "Therein lies the obvious fallacy in the recent decisions regarding the recita­ tion of the Lord's Prayer and the reading of the Bible in pUb­ lic schools and the earlier decis­ ion in the case of the State of New York. You cannot separate truth from the spirit of truth." The court's decisions are not

based on actually enacted law, but on "psychological interpre-

HEADS SERRANS: Mat­ thew H. McCloskey, III, of Philadelphia is the new pres­ ident of the organization founded in 1938 to foster and assist in the education of young men for the priest­ hood. NC Photo.

tations of a pragmatic and secu­ larist philosophy applied to a changing. social concept," he continued. "One might venture to say that the court unduly expanded itself and therefore required 80,000 words to forbid the ack­ nowledgment of the existance of God in public schools," Card­ inal McIntyre said. "It would seem that the real issue is the relation between Church and State - to use the expression common in our time. It is not a good expression, nor an accurate one. The relationship between these two aspects of human life is better described as the relationship b,etween gov­ ernment and religion." The Cardinal said the expres­ sion "wall of sparation between Church and State" has been mis­ appropriated and continues in use despite refutation by emi­ nent scholars. The nation's founding 'fa,thers were well informed on the question of Church and State, he said, and "were quite sensitive to the haz­ ards to peace that arose from Turn to Page Twelve

Cornelius J. Drew, who died last year, consists of two 21-story buildings. It is a state-aided, $9.5 Turn to Page Eighteen

Holy Name Sets National Meet For August 21 Holy Name Society members will hold a national convention Wednesday through Sunday, Aug. 21 through 25, in Buffalo. Theme will be "The Holy Name Man and Apostolic Action." Representatives from the Fall River Diocese will be led by Rev. Henry R. Canuel, pastor of Sacred Heart Parish, New Bed­ ford, .and Diocesan Director of the Holy Name Society. Father Canuel notes that the convention "provides an' oppor­ tunity for the Catholic layman of North America to study, dis­ cuss, plan and carry back to his 'parish and Diocese more efTurn to Page Twelve

Vine'entians Meet At Camp Sunday Plans for ,the annual retreat for Ozanam Sunday will be discussed at the general meet­ ing of Fall River Particular Council, St. Vincent de Paul So­ ciety, to be held at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon at the camp in Westport. Members have been urged to attend and have been invited to bring their families with them to enjoy the camp's facilities. The Feast of St. Vincent de Paul will be observed tomorrow. Members have been requested to attend Mass and receive Holy 'Communion in their parish church either on the feast day or within the octave. A plenary indulgence may be gained by those who comply with this rule of the societ)'. an~


2

THE ANCHOR-Di~ese of Fait River-Thurs. July 18, 1963

Illinois Wome,n'. Club C,hanges Race Policy

Ottawa Prelate Ordains Seminary Classmate; War Delays Vocation OTTAWA (NC) - Twenty 'years after, he had completed his theological studies, John Patrick Heffernan has been ordained to the priesthood by one of his fonner classmates, Auriliary Bishop J.R. Windle of Ottawa. Both were members of the class of 1943 at t~ Grand Semi­ nary in Montreal. Ten of their "h d' classmates a ttended L: e or Ina­ ti on.. Father . Heffernan. had co~pleted hiS theologI~al stu~les when he fel~ t?at hiS vocatIOn was to remam m the world. ~e then entered the Royal CanadIan Air Force and at the end of the war returned to Montreal where he worked with the Franciscans. In his spare time he gave special Latin classea for stu-

Vermont Bill Bans­

Employment Bias

MONTPELIER (NC) - The Vermont House of Representa­ tives has passed a bill outlawing discrimination in employment practices in this state. Two years ago the legislators rejected a bill for the same pur­ pose which was sponsored by Rep. Philip Hoff of Burlington, who is now Governor of Ver­ mont. The bill provides a $500 pen­ alty for an employer who is con v ic ted of discriminating against a job seeker because of race, color, religion, sex or na­ tional origin. An amendment to the bill eliminates age as a con­ sideration and guarantees equal pay for equal work for men and women. The measure now goes to the state Senate.

Prelate's Statement In Cornerstone MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - A statement by Archbishop Leo Binz of 51. Paul, together with about a dozen others by adminis­ native heads of churches, was sealed into the cornerstone of the' Minnesota Protestant center here. , The statements referred to the ecumenical symbolism of the $1.5 million center, which will house a dozen denominations. Father Thomas Meagher, execu_ tive director of the Minneapolis Catholic Welfare association, represented Archbishop Binz at the cornerstone - laying cere-, monies.

-Necrology JULY 19

Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, 2nd Bishop of Fall River, 1907­ 1934. JULY 23

Rev. George B. McNamee, Paa­ tor, Holy Name, Fall River.

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

July 21-St. Pius X, Sou t h Yarmouth _ St. Stephen, Dodgeville. July 28-81. Francis of Assisi, New Bedford. Holy Redeemer, Chatham. July 28-8t. Francis of Assisi, New' Bedford. Holy Redeemer, qhatham. Aug. 4-St. George, Westport.

Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven.

St. Theresa, So. Attleboro.

July 28-St. Francis of Assisi, New Bedford. Holy Redeemer, Chatham. Aug. 4-.8t. George, Westport. Sacred .Hearts, Fairhaven. St. Theresa, So. Attleboro. Aug. l1-St. Theresa, New Bedford. Our Lady of Victory, Centerville. St. Joseph, Woods Hole. THE ARCHOR

second Class Postage Paid It FIJI Rlver, MISS, Published every Thursday It 410 Highland Avenue Fall Rive, Mas., by the Catholic Press oJ the Diocese of. Fill River. SubscriptiOll price by Nil. PQ$tpald .... per year.

CHICAGO (NC) - The TIlinois Club for Catholie Women, which was picketed by Catholics because of ita

dents for the priestho~ who were weak in that SUbJect.. All the years, h~wev;r, he remamed in touch WIth hIS classmates of the Grand Seminar;r. Last Fall he decIded to seek ordination to the priesthood and he spent th~ past ~ear at the , Gra;nd Semmary m Ottawa takmg a refresher course in theology. ~'fft . t s a tt en d e d hi s ,~ y- t wo pries 01' It , nat ion in S1. Patrick's Church, Ottawa, where Bishop Windle is the pastor. Twenty­ five of the priests came from Montreal for the ceremony.

Parochial Students To Get Bus Rides HOPATCONG (NC) The Board of Education in this New Jersey community has agreed to transport some 90 9tudents to Catholic high and grammar schools starting in September. High school students will be given a full ride to Our Lady of the Lake Regional High School in nearby Sparta. Last year these 9tudents were transported to Sparta High and had to make their way to Our Lady of tl)e Lake on their own. Arrangements for the bus service were made by the board after receiving a request from a committee of parents of paro­ chial school children.

NON·CATHOLIC CLERGY AT RETREAT: Forty clergymen of different denominations attended the secon.d 2.nnual Retreat for Christian Clergymen held at the JeSUIt retreat house at Faulkner, Md..Bishop G. Connare of Greens­ burg Pa. retreat master, chats with Rev. C. Leslie GlelJn, who for years was pastor of St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square, Washington, D.C., known as the "Church of the Presidents." NC Photo.

20

Hails Catholic Retreat Episcopal Clergyman Relates Personal Reactions at Jesuit Center . By Rev. C. Leslie Glenn N.C.W.C. News Service

I

had the privilege of at­ the Second Annual Re­ treat for Christian clergymen held in July at Loyola-on-Poto­ mac Retreat House in Faulkner, Md. I accepted an impersonal SAIGON (NC) -- A newly Ir.,imeograplied invitation 'to built preparatory seminary for Protestant clergymen because boys of Chinese families was the leader of the retreat was a, blessed in Phu-Lam, on Saigon's Jesuit theologian whose books I outskirts, by Archbishop Paul admired and whom I wanted to Nguyen van Binh, of Saigon. h4ear. Thirty Chinese boys are al­ Then plans changed and he ready living in the building. For could not come, but' I decided to the present they attend classes attend anyway because the peo­ in the Intitution Ste. Therese, ple on the telephone were so conducted by priests of the Paris Foreign Missions. A Chinese cordial and I welcome every priest, Father Charles Chang, chance to improve Roman Cath­ from North China has charge of olic-Protestant relations. I have been on retreats all my the seminary. lEe in Protestant, churches and A Chinese-Vietnamese parO­ chial center, 'with j1 public chap. th.e Y.M.C.A. beginning with the el, adjoining the seminary was fi:rst I was dragged to. I had blessed at the same time. \ n(~ver been on a Jesuit retreat, and I knew they were masters at 1t and that their retreats were gr'owing in numbers and useful­ FRIDAY-St. Vincent de Paul, ness. So curiosity was the second Confessor. III Class. White. motive after ecumenicity. 'IMass Proper; Gloria; no The pp,ysical setting of Loyo­ Creed; Common Preface. la-<ln-Potomac is perfect. It is a SATURDAY-St. Jerome Aemil. magnificent site commanding a ian, Confessor. III Class. ' w:lde view of the river, with White. Mass Proper; Gloria; spacious grounds, completely \ Second Collect St. Margaret, isolated. When you go to your Virgin and Martyr; no Creed; room and close the door, you Common Preface. dEm't have to come out except SUNDAY-VII Sunday After to eat or take a shower. Pentecost. II Class. Green. Somehow this is deep psy­ Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; chological wisdom for a world Preface of Trinity. that is too much with us. You MONDAY-St. Mary Magdalene, don't get away from it all with Penitent. III Class. White. the usual four men in a room in . Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; double-decker cots. The key to Common Preface. re:;t is isolation. TUESDAY - St. Apollinaris, Complete silence was kept .t Bishop and Martyr. lIT Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second' Collect 51. Liborius, Bishop and Confessor; no Creed; Common Preface. cmCAGO (NC) - The "press' of racial' tensions" throughout WEDNESDAY-Mass of previ­ ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. th,e country has caused cancela­ Mass Proper; No Gloria; Sec­ tic,n of the convention of the , ond Collect St. Christina, N~ltional Catholic Conference for Virgin and Martyr; no Creed; Interracial Justice which was Common Preface. scheduled to be held in Pitts­ THURSDAY-St. James, Apos­ burgh from Aug. 15 to 18. tie: II Class. Red. Mass Proper; Instead of the convention Gloria; Second Collect St. there will be a special meeting Christopher, Martyr: Creed; of the presidents, chaplains and Preface of Apostles. national board members of the country's 57 Catholic Interracial Councils here on Saturday, July The following films are to be 27 to evaluate the role of the NCCIJ in the current racial added to the lists in their re­ crisis. spective classifications: Unobjectionable for General Patronage - Raiders of. Leyte AnLEBORO'S

Gulf; 'tarzan's Three Challenges. Leading Garden Cent...

Unobjectionable for Adults and AdOlescents - My Name Is Ivan. Objectionable in Part for All - Rampage (Objection: Sug­ South Main & Wan Sts. gestive dialogue and low moral tone. This classification is ap­ , plicable only to prints shown in CA 2-0234 U.S.A.). t(~nding

Blesses Seminary

For Chinese Boys

Mass Ordo

Conference Calls Sipecial Meeting

Legion of Decency

CONLON 6­

DONNELLY

ATTLEBORO

Loyola from beginning to end, which is a relief from confer­ ences and discussion groups. The director of the house, Father James Martin, S.J., was magni­ ficent in explanations of proce­ dure and'general background of retreats. His wide experience and strong leadership almost shocked us at the start with the simple truth that God Himself might be found in these h~urs. Moved by TeachiDl' The Bishop of Greensburg, Pa., the Most Rev. William 'G. Connare, was retreat master. His meditations were surprisingly elementary and therefore (to me) surprisingly helpful. It was good to rest back on tirst and last things. The 40 clergy~n attending were from man" denominations and widely scat­ tered cities. All were moved by the teaching of this church leader. In'these days when chUrch unity is on the hearts of C' an C h r i s t ian s, one great" steP toward it is to understand the devotional practices of each other's churches: This retreat was Homan Catholic in tone and teaehing and liturgy, but the Protestant clergy were made to. feel at home. Drawing apart in this particu­ lar discipline tor a few days to be closer to God is a secret of Roman Catholic strength and love, and it did Protestants good to be permitted to share in' it.

racial policy, has opened itll doors to qualified members re­ gardless of race. The club's president, MrL Frank J. Lewis, said in a state­ ·ment: "It is not our desire te exclude from our company an,. worthy, responsible, well-inten­ ded person • • • We open our doors to welcome without re­ striction any woman who caD and has the desire to serve i. this good cause (of charity) with us." Her statement was read over television by her son, Edward Dean Lewis. Right to Decide Members of the Chicago Cath­ olic Interracial Council, studentll and nuns picketed the 40-year­ old club because of its refusal to admit Negroes as members. Mrs. Lewis said in a state­ ment issued after the picketin, began: "We, as a private club, have every right to decide who shall be our members and onI" through this method can we con­ tinue to raise the funds to cal'lT on our program of welfare." John A. McDermott, executive director of the Chicago Catholic Interracial Council, had immed­ iately referred to the club's re­ fusal to admit "outstanding Ne­ gro women" to membership • "immoral and unChristian." Concern for Misery In her latest statement, Mrs. Lewis also said: "Our charity has been for all. Our club is for all who are willfng and able to work with us. We are more than willing-we are eager-to take into our company all women of good will who share our con­ cern for human misery and who ltave the substance and the free time to help us alleviate suffer­ ing and hardships as best we may." 'McDermott welcomed Mn. Lewis's statement. "We are delighted at the wll­ lingness of Mrs. Lewis to chan~ her mind in regard to this mat­ ter and to admit Negro Catholle women to the club," he, said. ''This is in the best tradition (If the many good works of the 'Lewis family." ,.

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1


THE ANCHOR­

Senator Pfa ises

, rhurs.• ,July 18. 1963

Prelate's Stand On Medicare'

Aver Population Explosion Fears Are ,Inflated

WASHINGTON (NC) Sen. Harrison A. Williams, Jr., of New Jersey has lauded the stand taken by a priest and a Cat hoI i c newspaper

against remarks made by the

president of the American Medi­

cal Association.

AMA president Edward Annis stated recently that an editorial in the Catholic Star Herald, newspaper of the Camden dio­ eese, in regard to the medicare program of health care through social security was "typical of the distortion of the' C~tholic press." He also said that the writing of Msgr. George G. Higgins, di­ rector of the Social Action De­ partment" Nat i 0, n a 1 Catholic Welfare Conference, reflects the thinking of la'bor leaders and 'their efforts to dominate Ameri­ ean medicine. In reference to the 'charge by Dr. Annis, who is a Catholic, Msgr. Higgins had stated: "Some .tements you' just smile at when people have made up their minds." Sense of Responsibility '!"he Catholic Star Herald as­ serted that Dr. Annis, "more than any other individual in America," was blocking the medical care'that could come to the aged "if medicare becomes

Jaw."

,

Sen. Williams said: KI believe the views of the Catholic Star Herald and Magr. Higgins re­ flect one of the greatest virtues Of the Church ~ a well d,evel-; oped sense of social responsi­ '"lity. The perspectives of the 'press and of Msgr. Higgins are as deep as those of Dr. Annis .-e shallow." The Senator's remarks, an edi­ torial and story in the Catholic Star Herald, and comment by Msgr. Higgins were inserted in a.e Congressional Record.

Questions Motive Of Churchmen 'WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen. 'ftlomas J. Dodd of Connecticut bas expressed doubt that the motive in visits to this country of ,Eastern Orthodox church­ men from Iron Cul1ain countries ~ entirely spiritual." ' , He said in a statement: "There .. strong reason for believing that these visits are designed to extend the influence and control tit the 'mother churches' in the e'ommunist bloc countries over the Orthodox Church organiza­ tions and communities in this eountry." Dodd said he is asking the Senate internal security sub­ eommittee, of which he is vice­ dlairman, to investigate the "in. ueasingly frequent visits" of these church delegations. "It can be taken for granted," be said, "that at least a small quota of our visitors have been eommunist secret police agents ill clerical garb."

Pontiff Visits Sta'te Government Building VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has visited the building which houses the civil govern. ment of Vatican City State. During his hour-long tour the Pope visited all its offices and even the drygoods store in the basement which is staffed by DUns. Before leaving, Pope Paul VI iPoke to the personnel of the office in the building's chapel. Be expressed his gratitude for their work between Pope John's death and his own election. He 1Irged them all to continue col­ laborating with him not only on • professional, but also on an apostolic level.

Swiss Catholics BERNE (NC) - About 46 per cent of the 5,500,000 people of Switzerland are Catholics, ac­ eording to new figures released by the Swiss government's sta­ tistical office here.

3

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)­ At a press conference,he~ four bishops agreed that cur­ rent fears of a "population explosion" have been inflated needlessly - 'and that birth con­ trol is no answer to the problem. "It's selfishness that' causing the problem," said Auxiliary Bishop Reginald J. Delargey of Auckland, New Zealand. , He emphasized that feeding, housing and educating the popu­ lation of t,he world todaY would be possible .with more equitable distribution of the world's goods. Bishop Francis P. Leipzig of Baker, Ore., said there are "miles and miles where we don't have anything" in Oregon. He 'suggested that the moving of population into cities made the proble)ll of overcrowding seem more extreme than it actually is. He agreed that increasing population presented problems, but stressed "we should have enough brains to solve it" with­ out breaking" the Command­ ments. 'We, Need ,People" Bishop, Dermot O'Flanagan of Juneau, Alaska, whose diocese stretches twice the len.cth of Italy, said he was strongly op­ posed to sending information, FORTY HOURS AT ST. MARY'S, SO. DARTMOUTH

about birth, control to other countries. He cOJ:Dmented that '"our own government is paying people not to grow food." Auxiliary Bishop Ramon, J. Lizardi of Caracas, Venezuela, said his country had some prob­ lems with increasing population, Every chu~h in the Fall River Diocese conducts the de,:otion o~ the }l'or~y .Ilours but "we need people." Justice and charity in the dis-" in the course of the year. Parishioners flock to services on th]~ occaSIOn, but It I.S pos­ tributionof goods, especially ia sible that many do not know the origin or history of the ?evotIon. To .remedy thIS, the such practical matters as agrar­ enthusiastic Religious Committee of the Holy Name SocIety at Sacred Heart Church, ian reform, helped alleviate the North Attleboro, has distri­ come' known as tbe Clementine ments of p~nance and the Holy problems, he said. buted a folder explaining the Instruction. Eucharist. devotion. This leaflet notes In the U.S. Confession may be made eight R. A. WILCOX CO.

that Forty Hours, as known Individual parishes in the days prior to the day of the visit, OFFICE FURNITURE

today, began in Milan, Italy United States h"eld Forty Hours on the da~ itself, or on one of Ia Steck fer 1....II.te Den"•., about the year '1537. However, Devotion from the earliest days, the followmg seven days. Holy even before this a form of 40 but it was first introduced on a Communion may be received on • DESKS • CHAIRS hour devotion was known, asso­ Diocesan basis in 1853 by Ven. the previous day, the day itself, FILING CABINETS ciated with the 40 hours Our John Neumann, C.SS.R., Bishop or one one of the following seven • FIRE FILES • SAFES Lord's body was' entombed. of Philadelphia. days. FOLDING TABLES These early devotions included TodaY, authorities note, "the A 'partial indulgence of 15 AND CHAIRS prayer before the B'lessed Sacra­ Devotion of the Forty Hours years may be gained for each ment exposed and took place holds a pre-eminent place in the visit to the Blessed Sacrament R. A. WILCOX CO. during the l;st days of Holy prayer life of every parish and prayer for the Pope's inten­ 22 BEDFORD ST. Week at the Holy Sepulchre. throughout the United States. tions during the Forty Hours. FALL RIVER 5·783. The Code of Canon Law indi­ Confession and Communion are In Milan ' cates that this Devotion is to be not required. held in all churches and ora­ Also during the days of the In 1527 the Forty Hours Devo­ "Ev.ryone stamps his 0_ devotion, the altars of the church tion was first preached in Milan, tories throughout the world." Of course the purposes of the where it is being held are "priv­ and in 1529 it is recorded that a value on himseH.Dominican, Father Thomas of devotion have broadened since iledged." This means that a Nieto, urged popular attendance the days when it was intended plenary indulgence is applied to as a thanksgiving by the people any departed soul for whom at such services. of Milan. Now it is a general Mass is said at one of the altars. In 1537, Father Joseph of Fer­ prayer for peace, evidenced in mo, a Capuchin friar, outlined a particular by the Mass for Peace Diocesan c h u r c h e s where plan for Forty Hours almost as celebrated on the second day of Forty Hours is being held in the it exists today, in the course of the devotion. near future include St. Pius .x, Lenten sermons in the Milan Other intentions include that South Yarmouth and S1. Ste­ cathedral. of making reparation for one's phen, Dodgeville, where it will own sins and those of others and start this Sunday; and S1. The historical impetus for in­ troduction of the devotion at this of thanking God for material Francis of Assisi, New Bedford and Holy Redeemer, Chatham, time was a war with France. The and spiritual blessings. where it begins Sunday, July 28. Milanese fea'red that their ter­ Special Ceremonietl ritory would be devastated and The first day of Forty Hours Father Joseph persuaded them sees a Mass in honor of the that the Forty Hours Devotion, Blessed Sacrament, followed by continued from church to church a procession with the Host, throughout the Diocese, was the chanting of the Litany of the WOMAN CAPABLE OF only hope of averting disaster. Saints and exposition for the CARING FOR INVALID The people pledged to carry day. On the second day a Mass for on the Forty Hours for a year. LIVE IN

Hardly had the year begun when peace is offered and the Blessed a truce ended the war. In Sacrament is again exposed. Call after 6:00 P.M.-Collect

The third day concludes the thanksgiving, the Milanese de­ BUZZARDS BAY 759-3959

devotion with another Mass in termined to carryon the devo­ tion in perpetuity, and the Hoi,. honor of the Blessed Sacrament, a second chanting of the Litany See was petitioned to attach in­ dulgences to it that might be of the Saints and procession and, $1.00 still open. _ occou" finally, Benediction. gained by those participating. Parishes normally post a sche­ A Brief of Pope Paul III dated March 28, 1539 is the first papal dule of hours of adoration to en­ The OIL COMPANY

sure that the Blessed Sacrament pronouncement concerning the will have worshippers at all Forty Hours, St. Philip Neri in­ times. Visits are richly indul­ troduced the devotion to Rome genced. A plenary indulgence in the mid-sixteenth century, may be gained each day Fall River Savings Bank and Pope Clement VIII made it of the devotion for a mandatory for the city in 1592. visit to the Blessed Sacra­ 141 NO. MAIN Pope Clement' XI issued a sec­ ment, recitation of five Our South Sea 5ts• ond Brief on the devotion in Fathers, five Hail Marys and FALL RIVER Hyannis T.I. HY 81 1705. It was revised by Pope five Glorias for the Pope's inten­ Clement XII in 1731 and has be­ tions, and reception of the sacra­

Forty Hours Devotion Rooted Deep in"History, Held Ann,!,ally in Every Diocesan Church

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THE ANCHOR­ niur.:., JU'I 18, 1963

Name Observ'ers To Conference In Montreal

Urg'es Catholics Recognize Rights Of Negroes

ROME (NC) - Three priests active in promoting Church renewal in North America are among five

RIC HMO N D (NC) Bishop John J. Russell told his people in a pastoral read in all churches in the Rich­

named official Catholic ob­ servers to attend the forth­ coming Faith and Order Con­ ference of the World - Council of Churches in Montreal. The Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity appointed the official Catholic participant'S for the July 12 to 26 meeting of Protestant and Orthodox theo­ logians. The priests from North America are Father Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B" of St. John's Abbey, Colle~eville, Minn., edi­ tor of the liturgical monthly, Worship; Father Gregory Baum, O.S.A., of Toronto, editor of the new Paulist-sponsored periodi­ eal, Ecumenical Studies; and Father George A. Tavard, A.A., of Mount Mercy College, Pitts­ burgh. Fathers Tavard and Baum , are consultants to the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. Urges Prayers The other two are France'. Bernard Lambert and Father Jan C. Groot of Warmond, the Netherlands, the Dutch 'Hier­ archy's representative for ecu­ menical matters..

mond diocese that "a Catholic cannot fail to recognize the rights of the Negro people." The Bishop of Richmond em­ phasized that the Gospel, papal teachings and the 1958 statement of the U. S. Hierarchy has "made clear our duty in the matter of race relations." "It is true that in the Diocese of Richmond for years our churches, schools and religious societies have been integrated, but now the time has come when our Negro brethren are seeking their full rights as citizens," the Bishop said. The Bishop called upon his people to recite daily the Act of Love-Hand mean it, to intensify and make real our love of neigh­ bor for the love of God." He urged his people to work, with those of other faiths in the cause of racial justice. Rights of Others "No one can deny that with rights also go duties and re­ sponsibilities and that the Ne­ groes, as any minority group seeking its lawful rights, have the obligation of respecting the lawful rights of others," the Bis­ hop said. , That. bein~ understood, a Catholic cannot fail to recognize the right of the Negro peopl-e to secure. proper housing, equal op­ portunity for work, full partici­ pation in educational facilities, both public and private, and the right to equal accommodation both on public property and within those enterprises licen­ sed and protected by the state for the service of the general public."

Notre Dome Tra;ning 62 for Peace Corps NOTRE DAME (NC) - It's no 4O-hour week for 62 Peace Corps members training for a two-year tour of duty in more r.emote sections of Chile iPs more like a 62-hour week at the Uni­ .,ersity of Notre Dame here. The trainees range in ap,e from 18' to 39. They are now in the third week of training and still lace an additional month of training in Puerto Rico. The tlaily routine includes a five­ hour drill in Spanish .and two hours of calisthenics. Then there's a series of classes in American studies, health educa­ tion, plus the customs .and atti­ tudes of the Chilean people. In Chile they will replace 45 Peace Corps members, many of whom are University of Notre Dame graduates who are com­ pleting a two-year hitch. Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., university president, was instru­ mental in est a b lis h i n g the Chilean Peace Corps project.

Newman Federation Names S"eokers LAFAYETTE (NC)-A col­ lege president and a magazine editor will be am'ong featured speakers at the Natiomll New­ man Club Federation Conven­ tion here in Louisiana starting Monday, Aug. 26. Theme of the weeklong' con­ vention will be "Newman Apos­ t()late, Incarnation in the Uni­ versity." Joseph Meng. president of Hunter College, New York, will be keynote speaker. James O'Gara, editor of Com­ monweal magazine, will be prin­ cipal speaker at the concluding banquet. Other speakers will include Bishop Maurice Schexnayde'r and Auxiliary Bishop Warren L. Boudreaux of Lafayette; James Oliver, dean of the grad­ uate school at the University .. £ Southwestern Louisi:lIla. :lOd Judge Edmund Reggie, Crowley,

La.

NEW 1,OOK: Effective Tuesday,· 1,000 Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi, with mothel'­ house in Milwaukee, will changE~ their religious habits, At left, old garb; at right, ~ attire. The community serves Cardinal Cushing Educational Clinic, Boston; St. Coletta School, Braintree; ~~nd St. Colet~~ School, Hanover,

Considers

First Four Grades

CINCINNATI (NC) - Schools' ing program in the area ~f the of the archdiocese face a finan­ archdiocese and would add '$111 million in operating ex-pense ~ cial crisis that may mak-e it nec­ essary to drop th-e first four the area's taxpayers. grades, Bishop Paul ]0'. Leibold "][f anyone has a better ans­ has declared. wer in view of the .actual facts Chairman of the An:bdiecesan as they exist today, "-'ft would School Board, Bishop Leibold , like to hear it," he -said. Bishop Liebold went on ,to said the crisis also may 'mean no construction of new s('I1·")1s point out that "state aid would or additions 'until tlM~ teachcl"ll helIl -and would save the tax­ Payers a great deal ef money." are actually named and ade­ He added that "it is our convic­ quately compensated." tion that a legal -sOlution can be He estimated that .jf the arch­ diocese called a baIt to school found for .any -constitutional construction it would requir.e problems that may exist." the state-operated school 'System to undertake a $25 million ooild-

child in a Catholic school." "The principle at the me­ ment," he continued, "is ~ every parish to do what~"er it can with the physical m.eans available." As a result, be said, "we have big festivals, raffles, tithing parish drives, ana .all other things pastors wQ\Jld f'a­ ther not have to do - ~st to keep operating." . But for the future, be 'Said, 'we frankly foresee a new prin­ ciple-an across-the-board t!1It­ back, determined on a diocesaa or at least an area wide scale iR Forty years ago, he said, the relation to the religious teachers principle was, "Every Catholic available." Dropping the first four -grades, he added, would make from 400 to 500 more Sisters available fur teaching in' the upper grad-ell. He explained that th-e lower grades were indicated for the possible cutback because "it ill

"The untouchables are the out­ cast.;;, the centuries-old result of easier to get young children tel

to religious vacation

the caste system," he' said. come "Though officially there is no schools and an effective pl'O­

long-er a caste system in India, .gram can be presented for them

there." it slill exists. There isa sim­

ilar situation in this country, I

think."

Missionary Contrast:s America's 'Abundance With India's Need CAMDEN (NC)-Calories are a common denominator of hard­ ship in India and the United States: "The Americans are bur­ dened with too many and the Indians with too few." This 'capsule summary was given by Father Francis M. Schlooz, S.D.B., Dutch-born priest who has spent 28 years

as a missionary in India. Father Schlooz, ending a visit to the U. S., said in an inter­ view here that 95 per cent of his parishioners in the south India Diocese of Vello.re belong to the so-called "untouchable" caste.

Editor Found Guilty Of Slandering Pope MADRAS (NC) ~- Madras Magistrate A.J. Arnold has found the editor of the athe:st, news­ paper Nasthikan guilty of slan­ dering the late Pope John XXIII and gave him a $60 fine or four months in jail. The Madras government sued the editor for publishing a story which it said was slanderous and grossly insuiting to the Cathulic religion. The Catholic Association of

Madras had asked the India government to take the action.

-

A.nong his people, men re­ ceive 20 cents for a day's work and women 12 cents - "when there i5 work." Children are paid 20 cents a week for tending cat­ tle. Contrasting life in the United States with life in India, the missionary priest conclu-ded that Americans, too, have their eross

. to bear: ­ "God has' shown so much kind­ ness to the United States the people must have a hard time

trying to show their gratitude."

-- - t

t Have You Had An

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Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, Catholic Archbishop of Mon­ treal, appealed to his people last January not to be indifferent to the coming Protestant-Orthodox meeting, but to pray for divine guidance for it. He instructed bis .archdiocesan Ecumenical Commission ~ give all assistance P9SSible to the World Coundl of Churches in connectiQfl witil the July meeting,

Asks People to Act Against Racial Bias SACRAMENTO (NC) - Go.,. Edmund G. Brown has asked Californians to make a "pledge of conscience that in our OWA cities and state we shall no longer tolerate" racial discrimi­ nation. He referred to the ift­ alienable rights granted citizeM through the Declaration of In­ d~ndence.

""Today, millions of our eiti­ zens are !ttill striving ~toward that goal. They are not treated equally in schools. They are not treated equally in employment. They are not treated equa]]y ia pub I ic places," he said. The Governor asked Calilor­ Rians·to pledge that they will 'ne longer tolerate those acts &f in­ justice against others which di­ vide our people and which de­ grade our nation."

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THE 'ANCHOR-

Prelate Praises British Catholic School System

Thurs., July 1B. 1963

Looks to Council For Distribution Of Resources

LONDON (NC)-The E'll­ glish Bishops' education ex':' pert praised England's Cath­ alic school system and said that a Catholic institute for bigher studies has been planned, Bishop George A. Beck, A.A., of Salford, chairman of the Cath­ olic Education Council, aired his views in an interview with a reporter from the London Cath­ olic Herald. When asked about plans for a C:atholic university, Bishop Beck said that a start would have been made next Fall on the pro­ posed institute for higher studies but for the death last January of William Cardinal Godfrey, Arch­ bishop of Westminster. But the eventual opening of the institute is "certainly going io happen,' he said. Strength of Church When asked if he thought there should be a change in the Church's efforts in education, Bishop Beck defended the pre­ ~nt Catholic primary and sec­ ondary school system. "My ewn belief." he .said, "ia "at our system of having Cath­ olic children taught by Catholic teachers in Catholic schools ia the great strength of the Church in this country. "I am convinced that it is tile right thing to do - to offer .• tborougb grounding in the Fai. to every Catholic child, what­ ever use he mayor may 84M make of it afterwards."

Diocesan Nurses Plan Open House The sixth Annual Open House wiU be held on Saturday at the

5

PORTLAND (NC) A m iss ion a r y priest from Africa said here in Oregon he hopes the Second Vatican

IT'S SO-O-O-O BIG: Sister Claire Marie, S. M. I. C., on h(')me leave from Texas teaching assignment, describes Lone Star State to Dale Leary, Claire Brousseau and Da.vid Leary. Dale and Dave belong t-o St. Joseph's parish, Fait River; Claire, Sister's R-iece and name9ake, came from Newcastle, Del. to see her.

Si.ster Claire Mari£ Visits Family, Describes Life in New Diocese of San Angelo Looking blissfully eool despite Summer's heat in her blue and white habit, Sister Claire Marie, S.M.I.C. has been a visitor to Fall River for the- past two weeks. She is now attending an institute for principals, supervisors and administrators at Boston Col­ lege, then she'll pay a quiek visit to her community's novitiate and motherhoUl~e in PaterS6R, N.J. After that, it's superior at St. Jean Baptiste lIpealdng. area. They are opening back to Texas for the trans­ Convent in Fall River. a mission in Bolivia next year, planted Fall Riverite. She~s Sister is It pioneer at the Texas said- Sister Claire Marie. Already stati&ned at St. Ann's School achool, having been asai.gned active is a foundation in South­

Summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. McCabe, 23 Pilgrim. ia Midland, where she has. taught Terrace, Rexhame Beach, Marsh­ :for 11 years, and where she'll be field, Mass. for members an. principal come September. friends of the Fall River Dio­ As principal she'll have under 06Saft Council of Catholic Nurses. her direction 775 young Texana Games, swimming and refresh­ in a 16 room ,school. ''There are ~ts will be enjoyed and a . two classes for each grade," she barbeque will be served at 5:00 explains, "one taught by a Sis­ P.M. ter, one by a lay teacher." Proceeds will benefit the Mary Children al.ternate, having a Sis­ 1:. McCabe Nursing Scholarship ter <me year, a lay person the Fund. ned. Reservations may be made by A member of the Mtssionary eontacting any member of the Sisters ()f the Immaculate Con­ Catholic Nurses Guild. ception for 16 years, Sister is the daughter of Mrs. Josephine Just, 11 Fielden Street, Fall River. She grew up in St. Jean Baptiste parish, but the family now resides in Notre Dame. LIMA (NC) - Thirteen mi8­ alonary priests have finishe4 a Lots of Company Jour-month course in cultural During Sister's Fall River stay studies and in the Spanish and a married sister from Delaware Quechua languages at a traininc joined the family reunion, bring_ center here in Peru. ing her children for their aunt's The class, the first to use the inspection. Specially glad to see center's new 32-booth language Sister was little Claire Brous­ laboratory, brings to 75 the seau, her namesake. Ilumber of foreign' missioners Another of whom Sister Claire trained at Cruzpatambo School Marie saw a lot was an aunt, for Missioners, located 15 miles Sister Lucie, S.S.J. of the Sisters JIOutheast of Lima in sunn,. of St. Joseph. Sister Lucie 11 Lurin valley. Most of the graduates are from Che Society of St. James the Apostle whose founder, Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, sponsored the buildinc SANTO DOMINGO (NC) - A of the school and donated. the French priest has been murdered language laboratory. 1ft Caracel, a village on the northern· coast of Haiti, ac­ cording to reports reaching here. The priest, named Le ~ao and aceQ about 50, was killed with a machete in his second floor BURAS (NC) - For the see­ end time window panes of the ·Dedr()~m, the reports said. Inf6l"­ rectory of Our Lady of Good mat~ on the incident Is iD­ oomplete becawethe regime Harbor Church here were shat­ g&vermneftt of President F~ tered by shotgun fire. cots Duvalier tightly restrict. It is believed two persons fired ahots since two kinds of shet OORlIlWnicatiOftI, It was noted were found. Sixteen panes. 0( here. The mayor and village police glass were broken, but no one was hurt. The other shooting chief 91. Caraco1 and two other men have been arrested for eccured on Nov. 13, 1962. Our Lady of Good Hatbor complicity ill the murder, ae­ .chool in Buras was the first c<H'ding to information reachinC here, and have reportedly C!ln­ Catholic school in the Archdio­ fessed to the murder. cese of New Orleans to be inte­ crated last Fall. Several stu­ dents appeared the first few days of school but the school w. St. Anthony of the Desert then boycotted. The school dOO1'll parish, Fall River, will hold U. were opened daily the reat of . 33l'd annual picnic at the pariab • e school year but no stuclerU center, QuequeehaJt Street, SUD­ .howed up after the firat few dav, Aug. 4. Richard P. Rashed claya. .. ill oharje 01. ~

13 Priests Complete Language Training

.Hold Civic Officials For Priest's Death

Shotgun Fire Rakes

Rectory Windows

Parish Picnic

there since its opening, with. the exception of two years taken off ~ study Spanish at Marillac College, st. Louis, Mo. . She's. enthusiastic about her assignment, about the Lone Star State in general, and about her brand:.rtew Diocese in p~ular. It's the Diocese of San Angelo, separated only in 1961 from the Diocese of Amarillo. "It's considered missionary terrHory," she said, relating, for example, that Knigbts of Co­ lumbus have for a project the picking up of scattered Spanish children for Sunday Mass and a following. catechism lesson. Youth group members cooper­ ate by serving the children breakfast, and after Mass, break_ failt and catechism the Knightll transport the children home again. The Missionary Sisters are right at home in this Spanish-

Missionaries Return To Massacre Scene KONGOLO (NC) - The Kon­ gOlo diocese, which was deserted by most of its people after the 1962 maSllllcre of 21 Holy Ghost missionaries, is awaiting the ar­ rival of four priests who will bring the total here to eight. Both missioners and the local pop- u 1 a t ion left this north Katanga- region after the New Year's Dey killing of 20 priests and ODe Brother by Congolese JIOldiers. One missioner returned .June 12, 19~, but he bad to leave because of fresh outbreaka of yiolence. The people of Kongolo have started to come back. Three missioners returned at the end of February, 1963, and a young Congoleae priest of the Kongolo diocese joined them shortly

weill; Africa. Franciscan Joy "People in Fall River looked twice when they saw my habit," said Sister. The striking garb is white with a sky-blue scap­ ular and· black veil. Because the Sisters are affiliated with the Franciscan Order, they wear the distinctive cord of St. Francis and, when not traveling, sandals. "But a Franciscan priest told us," said Sister, "that we should_ n't' say 'I'm a Franciscan-look at my cord and sandals,' but I'm a Franciscan-look· at the joy on my face;'" ~ Sister Claire Marie's, it's visible.

Council will provide for "a more equitable distribution of both manpower and resources within the ChUl'ch than there is today." Describing the labors of the White Fathers missionaries of Africa and his own mission in Igogwe, Tanganyika, Father J. Owen Granville, W.F., said: "We hope we will no longer be a sort of tolerated branch within the ChUl'ch, who have to hold out our hands and beg, but that everywhere there will be con­ cern for the Church as a whole, in its weakest and in its growing members." Father Granville said there were two White Fathers priests at his Igogwe mission, to work am 0 n g 60,000 Wanya Kyisa tribespeople. A neighboring mis­ sian- has three priests for 125,000 people. The Fathers have the eqivalent of 43- cents a day for livinA' ·expenses. He said work of 3",000 White Fathers in 54 diocese in Africa is bringing half a million new memBers to the Church eaeh year. In some areas, the AfriCR population is as high. as 85 per cent Catholic, he said.

Junior Foresters Junior Foresters of Our Lady of Fatim-a Court, Fall River, will attend a Red Sox baseball game Saturday, July 27 at Fenway Park, Boston. Reservations must be made by tomorrow. .

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 18, 1963

S1. Vincent de Paul

. World Important To Church

Demonstrations . When the Supreme Court of the United States .called for ·'all deliberate speed" in bringing about the end of segregation of the races, the country' was given time to ef­ fect this in an orderly and evenly-paced manner. What happened actually was that in all too many parts of the country the reaction was either token inte­ gration, a subterfuge at best, or an ignoring of the decision or open opposition to it. The fruit of such short-sighted: stands is now being harvested in the unrest that seizes the soul of the Negro and others, and in the determination. that these have that the law of the land be observed and be observed now. It is all well and good for men to counsel the Negroto eaution and prudence and patrence. Would that these voices had also counselled "all deliberate speed" in the years that have been wasted! But the Negro sees that his cause will be noticed and the Supreme Court decision effected only by a dramatization of the si,tuation, 'by a confrontation of the issues - either anarchy or compliance with the law. '. To be sure, the demonstrations :now going on should be without violence. The common good. must always be eonsidered. Good ends must not be attained with evil means. But the Negro shows, in these demonstrations, that he has a weary heart and a determined mind. He believes that the decency and justice to which he is entitled by the law of G<>d and man are worth speaking out for and demonstrating for and going to .jail for. And in this he is not wrong!

MONTREAL (NC) - A: Rome official of the world­ wide sea apostolate stressed here t hat the seafariDfr world is an important commu­ nity in the Church and cannot be served by gestures of sporadie . sympathy, superficial attentioa and uncoordinated pas tor.... work. Msgr. F,rans Lambrechts, exe­ cutive secretary of the InteJll­ mrtional General Secretariat 01 the Apostleshi·p of the Sea ill Rome, told the joint conven­ tion of the National Apostleshitp of the Sea in Canada and the National Catholic Apostleship of the Sea Conference - U.S.A., that sailors form a minoriQ ~verywhere.

PATRON OF CHARITY

Clarity and Charity It is a happy sign that the dialogut'! between Catholics and non-Catholics that was so encouraged under Pope John continues. Indeed, there is a wind in the world whose direc­ tion cannot be changed. And this is toward more contact by Catholic leaders with those of other faiths. Thus, the Holy See is sending two representatives­ a Bishop and a Dominican Father -:.- to attend the festi­ vities connected with the golden jubilee as a Bishop of the Orthodox Patriarch Alexis of Russia. And The Holy See is likewise sending observers to the Commission of Faith and Order of the World Council of Churches meeting this week and next in Montreal. Three hundred of the world's leading Protestant and Orthodox theologians representing two hundred denominations and from eighty nations will attend the meeting. The presence of Catholic observers will let these men know that they are the concern of the Catholic Church aDd the Holy F'ather. And while the Church must ever be true to truth and unable to compromise doctrine, she also shows herself anxious to emphasize the things that unite and willing to listen and to speak to those not of the Catholic Faith with clarity of expression and charity of tone.

Avers· Maritime

TODAY-st. Camillus of LelIi,l, Confessor. "That you should

ness but also by our total human p·articipation in the sacrificial meal-body and soul, word and deed, we are collected and ori­ ented to God through the holy community. Everything that can­ not be presented here for bless­ ing must be excluded from the Christian life.

Sailors, he said "come from • parish, their families live in K, they go back to it from time to time to spend their time ashore in it; and, at the end of their career as a sailor they will agaiB take their place in the parish. "For the sailor," he ad~ "collaboration bet wee n the Apostleship of the Sea and the diocese is necessary." Msgr. Lambrechts added that the Apostleship of the Sea must find its place in the overaU pastoral work directed by the bishop. Lay Aposolate He said that another conditioJl for the success of the apostolate of the sea is that· it should be carried on by priests and laymen together. He called for m.. creasing the strength of the lay apostolate in the· mar i t i JJHl world. Msgr. Lambrechts said that • diocese has so many problems that the minority of sailors hardly comes into the picture. Real pastoral work suited to seafaring people, he said, "Call only be done in ports wheN full-time chaplains, or better still, teams of priests can devote themselves en t ire I y to the Apostleship of the Sea."

go and bear fruit," Our Lord instructs us in today's Gospel. And this fruit is described in both F:irst Reading and Gospel as love, that virtu~ of which the Eucharistic Banquet is itself a sign. The pattern of Christ's life can be discerned in our lives chiefly by our love.' MONDAY-St. Mary Ma&'daTranslated in the Introit and lent, Penitent. Repentance in the Communion hymns and in the liturgy becomes an instrument Collect as care and responsibil- of Christ for the sake of this ity for the "lowly and poor," the wholeness. The very sins by "dying," "the least of my breth. which we have forfeited our in­ rEm," the Eucharist's message to . tegrity and scattered our aim be­ "life" is quite clear. come, through their confession in worship, an occasion of grace TOMORROW-St. Vincent de and of strengthened direction. P;il.ol, Confessor. One of the few "He to whom .Iittle is forgiven, examples of successful hagio- loves little" (Gospel). We dare graphy (literary or pictorial not sin in order to love more. 'lives of the saints") in modern But we can become more cons­ The recent meeting between Pope Paul and. U Thant, times-apart from the TV trib- cious of our sin, our helplessness, NORTH CONWAY (NC) _ S~etary-General of the United Nations, has interesting utes to Pope John XXIII-was our need of God's forgiveness. Richard Cardinal Cushing, Arch­ the film 'Monsieur Vincent," a implications. P(~rfect illustration of powerful TUESDAY - st. ApoJlinarbt, bishop of Boston, was elected .. Far from being a courtesy call only - which, of course, l(we transforming a life. Bishop, Martyr. The Church's a three-year term on the boaN it also was - the meeting indicated the high place given to "Whatever house you enter ministry is an instrument of GOO of directors ()f the North COlt­ the person of the Pope by the United Nations in the rela­ (1Jospel) you are to say "peace." . for this healing and whole-mak­ way Foundation, an interfaittl organization for education _ tionships among nations. The Pope; in the view of this Vincent entered the houses of the ing work of the liturgy. To ~ a alcoholism. poor, Pope John the houses of bisl)op, priest or deQcon in the world-encircling group, is not merely a personage of dignity pdsoners, the sick, men of other Church is to be a servant (Gos­ Cardinal Cushing was in Rome worthy of respect but is looked upon as an efficacious faiths, communists-always for pel). Humility in these offices for the coronation of Pope Pall! partner in the task of bringing about world peace and justice tlle purpose of announcing, "The is the message of the First Read­ VI, but sent Msgr. George Kefi' kingdom of God is at hand for ing also. And the hymns of Gra­ as his personal representative te and prosperity. ' . dual, Off~rtory, Communion, the ninth annual conference United Nations officials seem to realize the - in the 3")U," emphasize God's action and grace here. best sense - political importance of. the Holy Father in SATURDAY-St. Jerome Em" behind the action and gifts· of Episcopal Bishop Charles ~. the world, the influence for good he can and does have. llian, Confessor. An emphasis on ·the human minister. Hall of New Hampshire .... Stalin's cynical discountering of the Pope with the question, p;~actical love is never absent . WEDNESDAY - Mass as OB elected president of the Foun­ "How many divisions does he have?" no longer receives b'om the liturgy, but seems es­ Sunday. Psalm 46, the Entrance dation. evident this week. To­ nods of agreement, not even from the Communists them­ pecially Hymn, acclaims God as "sover­ d;ilY we are of the ChriStian fra­ selves. tE,rnity celebrate a brother who ign. ruler over all the earth," Everest Team Found The Holy Father's words of praise for the 'United d,evoted his life to underprivi­ From its first words, then, this Mass. calls for the making over Nations have given that organization a great boost. It is IE,ged children. The First Read­ of our lives in one piece, for the Religious Articles WASHINGTON (NC)-Mem­ a strange fact that some American Catholics still continue ing instructs us in the profourid will to harmanize every thought spiritual meaning of such simple bers of the American MouDt to look at the UN with jaundiced eyes. Why this is so, is manifestations every word, every act with God's of human brO­ Expedition who clim~ hard to determine. It may be that being second or third therhood as the sharing of food 'covenant of love. "Make us do Everest the lofty peak in May found • generation Americans themselves, they feel the obligation and shelter and clothing. "De. what is right," we ask in tbe typewriter ribbon box coa­ prayer after Communion. Make to exhibit a super-patriotism that makes them view the spite not your own flesh." taining "a rosary, a.crucifix an4 us whole (holy).

a Pope John Medal," Normail UN as a threat or rival to America. SEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER

C. Dyhrenfurth of Santa Monica, At any rate, the Pope's words, following the same P~NTECOS'l'. Both lessons today Urge Clergy Take

Calif., expedition leader, told • pattern of praise as that given by Pope John and Pope Pius communicate the importance of National Press Club audience XII, should allay their fears and cause them to support the wholeness, integrity, 'total com- . Anti-Bias Action here. mitment. The First Reading asks ­ UN as it is and with the noble aims it strives to pursue. Dyhrenfurth sa i d "Father . the Christian community to beMINNEAPOLIS (NC) -'- More sUr itself and to make sure that . than 4,500 Minnesota clergymen Moran, an American Jesuit,­ the new principle of life We . received an open letter signed had given the box to membellt have in Christ Jesus is indeed by 20 religious leaders urging of an Indian expedition who at­ tempted the climb in 1962. Th4ll1 the principle, the source and them to take action against "dis­ orienta.tion, for our lives and for crimination on the basis of race." carried the religious articles • the whole l i f e . . . The letter's signers included a height of 28,200 feet, but dill Jesus gives us the same mes- . representatives of the Catholic, not take them to the top. sage in the Gospel parable. This . Orthodox, .Jewish and practi­ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVEI ill one of the graces of our pub- . cally all the major. Protestant • 5,000 Boys Sing Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River lic worship, especially Sunda,. . Chtircbe~. Among them was Mass--it makes us whole again. CatQolic Auxiliary Bishop Leon­ MADRID (NC) - The nma . 410 Highland Avenue Our lives, our energies, our d,e-. ard P. Cowley of St. Paul. . congress of the· International Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 siires tend to scatter, to fan out Each sfgner agreed to meil the Federation of Choirboys was cD­ PUBLISHER in a multitude of directions. statement to the clergymen of maxed here when 5,000 you~ We gather around tQe altar his religious body, together with sters from 13 countries, . m. Most Rev. James L Connolly. D.O•• PhD. to be again made whole, made . suggestions for implementing' its eluding the U.S. and Canada. GENERAL MANAGER ASST.: GENERAL MANAGER integral (as a community, yes-recommendations. The le·tt e r sang at a Mass offered in the Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll but as individuals too), not only said· that the "the present racial Sports Palace here by Archbisa.. MANAGING EDITOR by our. acknowledgement of sin . crisiS" fa "not limited' to the op Antonio Riberi, ApostoDt Hugh J. Golden and our acceptance of forgive- South.~ Nuncio to Spain.

Pope Paul and U Thailt

@rheANCHOR

Cardinal Elected Foundation H·ead


pares noon meal for homecoming teachers. Community has one house itt Fall River Diocese, but operates some 50 v'aried institutions in other parts of the United States.

BUSY SISTERS: Left, Sistezo M. Florencia of the Franciscan Sisters of. St. Joseph helps eighth grade student over tough spot at Holy Cross Ichool, Fall River. Right, Sister Germaine, dietitian for community pre-

Prelate Asserts Individual Is Key To Race Accord PITTSBURG (NC) - The racial crisis must be met in terms of the individual per­ IOn, Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh declared at a Mass in St. Paul's cathedral here. "In the social teaching of the Holy Catholic Church, the em­ phasis is squarely on the in­ dividual," he said, "not on na­ tionality, race, class 'or organi­ otion. In the specific problem of so-called 'lnter-racial' rela­ tions the individual is the key to the solution at both en~ of the question. "'The tensions will not be ~lved until the individual rileS above the prejudices of hiS' group and acquires personally an atti­ tude like to the'mind of that Goci ~ho is no respecter of persons; this means, on the other .enli, that each person must be .teen as an individual, accepted. on his own i n d i v i d u a 1 merits Hlcl judged without reference to hia pigmentation or ancell:ry,SpirUMJ Perfeetiell To help establish a moral and therefore truly humane racial attitude, Bishop Wright urged GO. Catholics a three-f<>ld personal program: private and public prayer; rigorous examination at conscience ill matten 01. infer­ ,tecial and social justice, as ric­ orous as that one gives to other areas af one's moral life; and eareful study of the social teachings of the Church. per­ tinently' presented in the encyc­ licals of all the modern popes, not~bly Pius XI, .Pius XII and lohn XXIII. He commented that this goal of individual response to the ~ial crisis is necessary "not merely out of a spirit of civil justice to others,' INt for our own moral intecrity and spiri­ :L111il perfection.-

Conference Center ST.LOUIS (NC) ,c St. L9u,is tTniversity has announced plans fOr' a $750,000 center for spiri­ tUal 'l'etre'ats and educational eonferences to be built on an: eO-acre site in St. Louis County. 'r.he building will. be named' Fordyce House in honor of the. late Mrs. 'Samuel, W. FordJ'ce, longtime benefactor of the Jeaull " university. 0

0

Franciscan Sisters of St. 10sephStaff Polish Parish School in Fall River

Laud Archbishop For Leadership

WASHlNGTON (NC) - The model leadership of Raul Card­ The year 1922 is memorable in the annals of the Franciscan Sisters of St. Joseph inal. Silva Enriquez, Archbishop who staff Holy Cross School in Fall River and also teach Confraternity classes at Holy of Santiago, Chile, was lauded: Rosary parish in Taunton. It was the date of their arrival in the Diocese. The Sisters at when the prelate was feted at a luncheon in the U.S. Capitol first had to use improvised quarters for classrooms and convent, but in 1927 '8 residence here. was purchased for a Convent, , The Chilean Cardinal was the ' f d 11' Fudzinskl, O.F.M. Conv. and of Assisi,· the Franc.iscan Sisters an d th elr ormer we mg Mother Colette' Hilbert. Under of St. Joseph glean n° harvest of . guest of Washington's Archbish­ w:as transformed into a suit- their guidance, the community souls for Christ Crucified in 37 op Patrick A. O'Boyle during hi. able rectory, Two years later. spread to Buffalo, N.Y., where schools, three pigh schools, one stay in the nation's capital. He college, two hospitals, one nurs­ visited the headquarters of the the Polish parish purchased a the first motherhouse was estab­ ing school, a school of medical National Catholic Welfare Con­ former public school building to lished. technology, a school' for X-ray ference here. Many Activities accommodate the increased num­ ber of pupils. The leadership of Cardinal Since that time the ambitious technology, two homes for: the aging, one home for the chronic­ In recent years, improvements endeavors of its members have ally 11l and one convalescent Silva was lauded at the Capitol luncheon by Sen. Hubert lL an4 renovation have made the seen the erection and expansion home. Humphrey of Minnesota. , interior of the building cozier of. a new motherhouse in Ham­ The Fall River convent is the burg, N.Y. "In Chile, Cardinal Silva hu ~ JlJ.ore conducive to· study. From the five young nuns who only house of the community in taken the lead in implementint: Pr~ent enrollment in the eight­ started out in 1897 as a timid this Diocese, and five Sisters live the Social philosophy expressed crade ~hool is 120 pupils. band, the community has come there, with Sister Albertine as The Franciscan oommunity was to number over 500 members. superior and principal of Holy in the late Pope John's encyli­ eal5 Mater et Magistra and Pae- , fou.ftded in the United States in Anned with the poverty and Cross School. Four Sistel'$ are em. in Terris,n the Senator said, 18WF by the late Rev. HyacintA simplicity of the"little poor maa active as teachers, while Silter "'It is this kind of leadership Germaine, dietitian, keeps the which must be repeated." home fires burning. Any young woma.n, says Sis­ ter Albertine, whc. has the de­ sire to glorify God, sanctify her­ lelf and spend her life for the Hilversum in 1155 to be re­ GRONINGEN (NC) - A for­ salvation and sanctificatioa of mer Presbyterian minister who ceived into the Catholic Church. others and is interested in teach­ Is married and the father of Mrs. Loos'became a Catholic the ing, nursing or domestic work three Children wili be ordained same year. may write to Reverend :Mother a Cftholie priest bJ' Bishop Doctor of Theology , NIW IIDfOU M. Leona, Immaculate (:()ncep­ Petrus ,... Nierman of Groningen. On joining the Catholic won CODvent, 5286 South Park A spokesman for the Bishop Church, Loos attended the theo­ Avenue, Hamburg, New Yock. INDUSTRIAL OilS

Mid that Pope John XXIU logical 8Chool of the Catholic shortly bef6're his deathautho-­ University of Nijmegen. He was' Over 33 Yean Exper,ence HEATING OILS

r.ized. the ordination of Jacobous awarded 'his doctorate in thea­ Loos, 55-year-old resident of 10'" in 1961, and haS been a SUBURBAN

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man to be ordained a Latin Rite Mr. and Mrs. Loos are the GAS APPUANCES

priest in the Netheriands. parents of a daughter who is Sa'•• & Servic..­ 4 Show Rooms to serve yo.

While Loos' ordination will be married and two sons, one a law Hyannis. Folmoutl'

the first ef i18 kind' in the Btudent at the University .f 501 COUNTY ST. ~96 E. Mo.. It.

L Moin St. Groningen and the . other an Netherlands, it is not unpre­ ... 1-0616 11:1 1-1560 cedented. Since World War II, agronomy major 'at the Agricul-' NEW BEDFORD O....ons P..-iItcete_ tural University ol Wageningen. a.bout a half dozen former Luth­ loute' 158 . eran .ministers have been or­ Bishop Nierman's .spokesman WY 3-1751 . 515 !15 COmM.rcial St. said that the time and place for dained in Germany and re­ Harwich - 14M malned ·m.arried. I..ooSorliina~ion had DOt yet .,6ne ,of the fir~t ordained was been: let. He said also-'that tile :Bishop had not determined what Father Rudolf 'Goethe, a colla­ te"ra! descendent 'of~he p~t, who 85lIfgnment he would live Loos became a priest in 1951; AfQr­ as a priest. mer Lutheran mmister itt Den­

mark, Father' biav Roerdam .,'

BEFOR~' YOU Bbrtrievie, was. orda,ined Cath:­ BUY - TRY oIlc prIest in Copenhagen ,in 1960, ' and 'his wife had a place of honor at the ordination. Loos became a minister in the Dutch Reformed Church in 1933 OLDSMOBILE and. was e.tigaged ~ pastoral ViQ('k sUccessiVely at Olidega, . Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault Arnhem, Workum and Hilver­ UHION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN I'l IlJddle StNet. ·'auu.ven sum. He resigned as vicar in Ie

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8

.THEANCHOR:...Dioc.I. of Fan River--Thun. July 18,'1963

Permits Evening Nuptial Masses

"

Cookbook Contribution Results

In Weight· Gain for Columnist

\

. By Mary Tinley Daly

.

"Of the marking of many books there is no end, and study there weariness for the flesh." (Eccle­ .. l$iastes 12: 12) "Many books," perhaps, as the Bible says, • cause "weariness f6r the flesh" - but certainly not a book in whicn one is vitally in­ submit a '''favorite recipe.­ terested. Far down the list to Puffed up with pride, we re­ 'from the Good Book,' and read the letter: ''Will you please earthy as oatmeal, is the up­ submit .•."

m much

is

eoming book in which the auth. We did our homework, study­ or of this column is particularly ing recipes, going back to nota­ tions made of originals-:-'way interested. You've guessed it ­ back to Aunt Lu's "Steamed Hal­ • cookbook! Probably every homemaker is ibut" served with lemon-butter fascinated by cookbooks, and sauce (one of the tastiest dishes :most have made . ever, served at our wedding re­ .I1earsal dinner years ago). This Cheir own in a entailed trussing a huge piece haphazard fas­ of halibut in cheesecloth, steam­ hion from rec­ ing, it, making the sauce. ' Ipes c Ii p p e d (via 'bobby Geared for 25 people, we had pins) .from to throw into rever~ the "mul­ AWARD PRESENTATION: Miss Susan Sweeney, 'Dewspapers, ' tiplying of loaves and fishes" seated, receives the Eagle of the Cross Award from Rev. and get that recipe down. We magazines, recl divided and divided, but still John J. Hayes, chaplain' of the Hyacinth Circle, Daughters pes written on ate halibut far ooys. the backs of en­ of Isabella, New Bedford. Standing, left to right: Mrs. 'velopes, ete. Thtm, we sought out other le­ Robert J. Reitz, supreme chairman of the Daughters of traded with rel­ · vorites:. "Bishop Whiffle," lus­ I8abella~ Pittsburg,· and Miss Natalie L. Ferreira, New '.Uves and cious '!lOncoction of beaten eggs, :friends. sugar, .dates, nuts--'to be served Bedford, director. Matter of fact, we've been 1ft as a cookie confection or a des­ the amateur league for a long sert. AlSo, a lovely new,version time. Our heterogeneous assort­ of brownies, rich and chewey. ment of recipes, marked with PE '. Try-Outs, (pretty expensive), TD (too dif­ Another favorite we trotted New Jersey Nun Working for Two Weeks ':ficlllt), and CNCH (cinch) are, out in the trying-out process was 8tuffed into orthodox cookbooks the Welsh rarebit, long favored Of f . In fice, 0 Congressman that consume a goodly, share C1.f ' by the Head of the House. Made pantry space at our house. Be­ of cheese and beer-smooth as WASHINGTON (NC) 8i program' in Washington, .nid ..­ , - s­ ocr ~ ... fore every "special" occasion, cream, . unstringy because it's made on the basis of cream ter' Mary Richard Malone of basic purpose is to give the we go over the lot, usually set­ sauce with beer instead of milk. 'Englewood, N.J., is learning selected teachers an insight into tling for one' of ,the same-old­ things we've served over and (Served over five crackers each politics firsthand by working for governmental operation to help time-five, I don't know why, two weeks in the office of Rep. them in their .teaching duties. over again. Sister Mary Richard, a faculty "We always look forward to but it's traditional)' and with Dominick V. Daniels of New r member at St. Cecilia's High )'Our scalloped potatoes, Mary, paprika 'sprinkled over the top.' . Jersey. Reasonably enough, according She is one of 17 New Jersey School in Englewood, conducted a guest said recently. Well, he to the cookbook committee, rec­ high school teachers of social by the Sisters of Charity, was didn't have very far to look for­ ipes had to be accurate to the studies selected to work in the notified while here that she has ward-there they were again! nation's capital for two weeks been appointed as principal of Now, for the first time in an nth. So the old favorites, the ones under a special fellowship pro­ Sacred Heart Academy in Ho­ andistinguished career in the we "could make with our eyes gram. The program is financed boke!)., N.J. eulinary arts, we have been ask­ closed" had to have every in­ by the New Jersey Society of Sister Mary Richard is doing ed to submit a recipe for a pub­ lished cookbook. No guarantee, gredient measured and noted. Washington and administered by secretarial work and research mind yeu, ·that ours would be For the sake of the cookbook, the Eagleton Institute of Poli­ 'work in the office of Rep. included, and. we were well we re-assessed these pet recipes ' tics at Rutgers University, New" Daniels. She is 'also attending BruDlWick, N.J. meetings and BeJDinars dealing .ware that hundreds of otheri analyzing' them in the cold sci­ !had received a like invitation. measurements. During the process, of course, Ne,vertheless, here wes' a chance entific we had actual products Of sw:h . , scientific experiments. MoM of this homework wae done 'on "off-time," apan from regular meals: The Head of the House was most cooperative. Sister Genevieve, SUSC, wal Never before had he been asked , pest C1.f honor at a reception for to serve as taster and found it a family and friends Sunday aft­ · role he thoroug·hly enjoYed. Sad ernoon in Sacred Hearts Acad­ to Say, we both did, Stepping emy auditorium, Fall River, to gingerly on the' scales, I note mark her Golden Jubilee as a ,that my eontribution to the Sister of the Holy Union of the forthcoming cookbook los not 'Sacred Hearts. only in pen and ink, it Ie ill Born in St. Patrick's Parish, avoidupoill, about five pounds of Pall River, Sister' entered the · same. Holy Union Novitiate in Fall "Wearineu 101' the flesh?" River on June 4, 1913 and re­ Right! ' eeived the Habit the following year. After professing first vows Central Village Bazaar, ehe taught in schools in Massa­ ehusetts and Rhode Island. For Planning coinmittee for • , 1he past eight years she has been , bazaar to be spOnsored by St. teaching first grade at St. Fran­ ,John the Baptist Ladies Guild, eis de Sales School, Patchogue, Central .Village, will meet at ' . ' i Long Island. ' . Tuesday night, July 23 at the ' Guests at the reception inclu­ , home of Mrs. Emily Barkiewicz, lied MOllt .Rev. James,J. Gerrard, Drift Road; This will be the D.D., auxiliary bishop of the dio­ committee's last meeting, before priests and r~ligious. tile bazaar, announced to be held · from . 11 ,o~clock on" Saturday morning, Aug. 1~ at the church hall. .

Politics Firsthand

PUEBLO (NC)-Bishop Chu­ les A. Buswell has granted per­ mission for offering Nuptial Masses in the evening under ~ tain condiions. The permission is extended • all parishes of the diocese, su}). ject to the discretion of the pas­ tor. The Bishop listed four other tlJ)ecial conditions which must be met, for evening Nuptial Mass. 1) The Mass is to be permitted for the good of a notable part of the faithful, and not simply for the convenience of individual families. 2) Evening wedding Masses are not to be permitted on Sun­ days or holy days of obligatioa. Invite Participation 3) A commentator must be present to invite the participa­ tion of the faithful both for the marriage rite and for the Nup­ tial Mass. 4) The faithful must be en­ eouraged to receive Holy Com­ munion at the evening Nuptial Mass. Pueblo becomes the fourth diocese in this area to permit evening Nuptial Masses. The others are: Dallas-Fort Worth, Tex.; Springfield-Cape Girar­ deau, Mo.; and Oklahoma Ci1.7 Tulsa. . Last month 4Pisbop Bllsweli extended to the entire diocese . permission for funeral Masses ia the evenings. The evening fun­ erals had undergone a, fom-­ month trial period in one pu.

ish.

Fairhaven Alumnae In the planning stages ia • style show planned for Tuesday, Sept. 17 by alumnae of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven.

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Women, Fall .River,:tl7ill lJPOn­ , BOr a public J!lystery ride Setur­ day, July 20. Mrs: Alexander Vezina and :Mrs. Donald Damln-· ~e are chairmen. ReserVations may be- made with them or 1h8ir eommittee memben.

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,Understanding of Ownership'

Important' Lesson for Child

THE ~NCI:iOR"7':' Thurs.. July 18, 1963

By Father 'Ya1ter W. Imbiorski Dear Father: We have a family of five. Within the last month our seven-year-old boy took a bag of gumdrops from the dime atore, and our five-year-old came home with a gun he had .tolen from the home of a playmate. By and large they and learning. Here, parents have to try to learn the causes. are good kids, b ut h ow d0 we Stealing might be the out­ kelp them and the younger growth of the fact that his

Ci'li I Rights

9

Women Discuss WASHINGTON (NC) -- Of· ficials of the National Council of Catholic Women were among the 400 women who attended a conference with President Ken­ nedy on the nation's civil right. problems. Heading the NCCW group was Mrs. Joseph McCarthy of San Francisco, president of the federation of 10 million Catholic women. President Ken ned y invited leaders of several women's or­ ganizations to participate in the meeting held in the East Room of the V'Thite House. The con­ ference discussed what "special role" women and WlIl11en s or­ ganizations can play in civil rights problems.

children to learn honesty? friends have more pocket money Phillip and can buy and do things that Dear Phillip: he cannot. An adjustment in his The young child rarely has allowance, or providing him any understanding of property with ways to earn a little .. ownership. He knows there spending money may solve the are certain things he is not sup- problem. posed to touch, like the pointed Other children steal to have ;t~ 8Cissors or the light socket. money to treat their friends, to Beyond that, flowers are for impress them, and, in fact, buy f~ pleking, whetlier they ~ in his their friendship. In this manner ONLY COMPANY: Surrounded by five recently emptied own back yard, or a neighbor'l they can show off and feel im­ prden, ~r the public park. And portant: beds, a Hong Kong orphan' girl happily shares her play New Bedford Women ~ns are tor playing, whether it In such a case the question crib with an American baby doll- her only companion. September plans for New' Bed­ be the one he got for Christmas comes up: Why does Joey need Happier still are the five orphaned Chinese girls, aged two ford Catholic Woman'. Club in­ lbat is pretty well broken, or to feel important? Does he have the shining black one at Johnny's feelings of inadequacy and fear? to six, who left for ·homes of their adoptive parents. NC clude the' annual charity, ball , Friday night, Sept. 27, at New Photo. ' bouse which he can have 10 No amount of increased al­ Bedford Country Club; and • much fun with. lowance or added possessions , Fall tea Sunday, Sept. 29 at the It's a good idea, repeatedly and ' will solve the root problem here. organization's clubhouse, 399 ealmly to tell children not '10 Increase AtientioD County Street. Mrs. Richard H. take things that belong to anIn this case you must try to Parsons is ball chai.muin, and other, but there is no point in find the source of his unhappi­ . Alaska, ,Supreme, Court Uphol~5 City's Right Miss Dorothy Ann Curry, club punishing or sc:oldin'g until he ness and build up his confidence presidept, heads those making learns what "belonging" m~ns, and feelings of self worth. May­ To Lease Hospital to Sisters arrangements for the tea. or until he develops"a feeling of be he is, having trouble with JUNEAU (NC) - The Alaska ,tlle city of Ketchikan and ihe ownership for his, own posses- schoolwork and cannot keep up Supreme' Court has upheld the Sisters of .St. Joseph of Newark 81.ons. with the class. When he misses one of,his tOYI Perhaps he feels that brother right of the city of Ketchikan tiled a brief with the state ,and feels a, sense of loss, he be- or' sister' is a favorite 'and he is ,to lease its new hospital, to the ' Supreme Court stating that the "SPECIAL MILK gins to under$nd the meaning being ignored. 'Maybe Dad has Sisters of St. Joseph of Newark. p1#'POse of the lease is to aid From Our Own' The right had been challenged' the city to, pMvide hospital func­ of mine. He knows he wants to been especially busy, or Mom 're.t.d Herd"

tet it back. . has been ill and nobody has in a brief filed by O.M. Lien of tions.' • , The city of Ketchikan built Occasion for I.eamlne taken the trouble to talk to him. Ketchikan. Lien said the lease Acushnot, Mall. WY 1-4457

When Susie's doll is mislaid, 'Recognition, especially from , WtlS unconstitutional because the the hospital with local, state, and • Special Milk hospital would be conducted by Federal funds, then agreed to or someone has walked off 'with" his parents, provides him with • Homogenized Vlt. D Milk part of her bead collection, the success experiences that he oca religious group contrary to let t,he Sisters operate it for 10 • Butt.rmilk feeling of upset that she experi- needs naturally. Just an increase his beliefs," and he would be years ,at a yearly rental of one dollar. Under the lease, the Sis­ • Tropicana Orange JuIce .nces is the beginning of under- of attention, affection, some compelled "to lJUpport a reli­ ters operate and maintain the • Coffo. and Choc. MIlle _anding why Susie is troubled shared recreation or useful work gious establishment." h09Pit~1 facilities at their own when things are taken from her might make the habit of stealing • f!gga - Butter In January, 1963, attorneys for expense. drellllel', or Dad 11 displeased taper off and be forgotten. when Susie ''finds'' • quarter OR Normal Experienee bis desk. Jif the stealing gets more ~ When a young child takes OWl as the child gets older ano .,meone else's property, he doe. common sense approaches don't it chiefly out of ignorance. Hia curb it, a talk with a good coun­ IIllstake is an important occa- Belor or child psychologist is in­ 81on, not for reproach or punish- ' dicated. ment, but for learning.' 'Many boys and girls go One way.to hurry the process ,thrOugh.' phase 01. stealing for II to give each ChIld some thing the sheer excitement and thrill or IIOme place that Is his own _ of getting away with something be it a private drawer, or lIIPace - drugstores, dime stores and ill • chest, or jU8t his very own fruit stanw. are usually their book or toy. He can be led to un- targeta. To snatch a comb or toy clerstand that sharing these' pos_ and run like mad for cover has lIeSSions in • good idea, but that pleasing elements of danger and they are clearly his to keep or rebellion. Here a' little plain. 4lillPOl'Ie of. talk and some quick retribution Needs Assurance wlU probably hurry this phase to a close. At age five, six, or seven, the J'inally, don't panic; pilferina child begins to distinguish right is 'another normal cliildhood ex­ and wrong. Whenever stealing perience that parents must live Incidents come up, his parent. through. . lIhould properly show disap­ proval and possibly even impose Osterville Tea .->me punishment. He needs the Our Lady of the Assumption usurance that his parents be­ Guild, Osterville, will entertain lieve he will learn to do right. members of Our Lady of Vic­ Such incidents ,are mistakes, perhaps sins, but they ate, t.ry Guild, Centerville, at a tea passing acts. He mould not be from 3 to 5 Wednesday after­ put beyond the pale and made noon, July 24 at High Ground to feel he is doomed to become Golf Club, Cotuit. • public enemy. The object taken must alway. Mystery Ride be returned to its owner, quietlY. Hyacinth Circle, New Bedford matter-of-factly. without great ' dramatics, long apoiogies or ' Daughters of Isabella, will hold tears. If it is easier for the child a mystery ride Tuesday, July '23, to have Mom go along to the leaving from the New Bedford neighbor or school or store, this post office at 6:30 that evening. might be very wise. Thus the Mrs. Lucy Bernardo is chairman. ehild learns that he cannot take, .. keep, what belongs to others., His mother's wlllingnes9 to go along with him to return the article assures him that he is'' .Plumbing - Heating, IItlll among those who are good and lovable. Over 35 Yocirs 'of' Satisfliad Service LeamC. . . . Should acb of stealing or pil..,,, .-:. 106' NO. MAIN STREET !erin, recur repeatedly in an .•• ~ ,"i .,. • Pall Ilivo,,.,,, ,,OS' S-r497, ' older child, then it is no longer lust a problem of growing up

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'0 ' THE ANCHOR-Dioce,se of Fall River-Thurs,. July 18, 1963

,,Refuse Comment

On Ad Charging

Bias in Vietnam

Paper Cites 'Necessity' of Clergy

Participation in Demonstrations

BALTIMORE (NC) - Should clergymen take part in civil rights demonstrations? In 'certain cases it may even be necessary for them to do so, the newspaper of the Baltimore archdiocese asserts in examining the question in the light of clergy participation in demon­ strations against the segregation policy of Gwynn Oak Amuse­ ment Park. Sixteen priests took part. in two recent mixed, interfaith demonstrations against the racial policy of the park, located in suburban Woodlawn. Two of the priests were arrested. The archdiocesan newspaper, the Catholic Review, aSks in an

editorial: "Should not white

clergymen reinforce the efforts of the Negro clel"gy to keep the civil rights movement within a religious, nonviolent context?" The paper says there is a "type of density" which "justifies and even necessitates the preseI1ce of

WASHINGTON (NC)­ The State Department has

refused to comment on a charge by 12 non-Catholic

is happening throughout this

country and throughout the

world."

It states that "the Gwynn Oak , incidents * * * have for the first

time brought actively into the

, arena of protest the united moral

force of white religious leaders."

"By their action at Gwynn Oak," ,the paper says, "these clergymen were asking thou­ sands of their fellow religionists what they were doing out of the civil rights fight '" '" '" When

more Catholic laymen take their

place in the forefront of the

, movement for civil rights, the

clergy will feel more easy about

'sticking to the pulpit,' "

reli-gious leaders that there is a

lack of religious freedom in

South Vietnam.

The clergymen have bought newspaper ads that include a photo of the Buddhist priest Quang Duc after he set himself on fire in a Saigon street and burned ' to death. A (",n';l)n

under the photo says: "He died

to protest South Vietnam's l'e­

ligious persecution of Buddhists

(70 per cent of the population)."

In the ad, the clergymen, calling themselves the Ministers'

Vietnam <:ommittee, also say:

'~We protest our country's aid to

those' who' denied him (the

' priest)' religious free-

PRAYED FOR RACIAL PEACE: A prayer that :Quddhist dom." Americans "may now at last 'have the courage to' meet the The ad quotes from an edi­

SEA',fTLE (NS) - Seattle's challenge of this crucial hour," the racial issue, was uttered torial in the June 17 edition of

,Arch!:>ishop Thomas A. Connolly by' a Negro Catholic priest at a session of the U.S. House the N.Y. Times,which stated: "A

bas charged that religious groups of Representatives. Father Harold R. Perry, S.V.D., center, : majority of Sou~h Vietnam's

"have been timid and all too clergymen in civil rights demon- often ineffective" in efforts to is rector of St. Augustine's Seminary-of the Society of the people are Buddhists, yet the ruling oligarchy, dominated by

atrations." combat racial injustice. Divine Word at Bay St; Louis, Miss. At left is Congress­ members of the Roman Catholic

Wake lJp Lait~, "If Negroes today are articu- man John W. McCormack of Mass., House Speaker, and at ,Ngo familY,has, discriminated !OWe refer,'~ the editorial con- late and even aggressive about riJ~ht the Rev. Bernard Braskamp, chaplain of the House. ,~gainst Bud d his t s in man~ tinues, "to the unwillingness ,of ,their' grievances, who can hon. IIlpheres," ' NG Photo. ' " many white Americans to face, estly blame them?" the Arch­ State Department press officer

up to, their obligations in ,this , bishop asked in an open letter Richard I. Phillips said he could

mat~~r, and to wake up to what addreSsed to all citizens of Senot co~men't on the religioull

attle. ,issue in South Vietnam "since it

, " is a ~risitive' internal, problem." The 'prelate said the centeriliry " '. On' anoth~rp6int, he said: "On " of the 'EmahCipation Proclama. ~o ~e9roes . tion -finds' "our' natmnand: all the basis of our observations iD

V,ietnam thrbughout many year.,

'our p~plea~ ,the crosSroads,of, ': ,Ai,dsCau~~' it il!l 'ouropirilcm President Ngo . " ,compulsory segregation of the ~ Justice and peaceful settlemfmt.~ , Dinh"Di'eiriia widcly respected

riETROI'r(NG)7~ Hung~r,: ,races arid the opposiilg demand STEUBENVILLE ( N C) ­ Ian religious-politicallead~said, ,for 'social and raciai justice.n He B ish 0 p John King Mussio "Each day' we refuse justice, in' that country.tt

here'that Jo'seph Cardinal Mi~d-, added: "No region of our lend warned here that persons who we give to these extremists an In: I a newsSt-ory filed from

szenty should remairi;,inJJupg~rl . is' immune from strife and'di. equivocate on the granting, of argument'for their methods," be , Saigon, N.C.W.C; News Service sYmbol of, hope for the vision resulting from this prob- equal rights to Negroes are continued. "The moderates have correspondent Father Patrick eventual freedom of Jhe Red- . lem." ' , aiding the cause of extremists. no argument with the great O'Connor, stated that "Buddhist.­ enslaved nation. , "PrejUdice, discrimination and "Until the Negro receives mass of Negroes when we,insult . in, Vietnam have made consider­

Msgr. Bela varta, who served segregation are in absolute con. equal rights as a man and as an their reasonable demands 'by able progress since· the pr~sent

as vice-president of Hungary be- flict with the Word of God and , Anlerican citizen, we will have making promises and advocating government came ,to po'wer," and

fore the communists took over are inherently immoral and sin­ no civil peace nor have we any patient waiting .•• such progress "could not have,

that country, noted that nego- ful," Archbishop Connolly said. right to expect it," the Bis}lop • "To those who say that the , happened in a climate of per­

, tiations have been going on be- ' "Direct ,steps taken by religious of Steubenville said in a pastoral Negro is not prepared for'equal tlecution or repression," tween the Vatican and the Hun- groupS to combat racial injus­ letter that was distributed to all rights we can only reply the garian communist government tice have been timid and all too news media of the Ohio Valley. obvious, he can never be' pre­ for the release of Cardinal Mind- often ineffective. In particular,' "The Negro has a right to fight pared until we give him the op­ .IN szenty. racial problems have been vir. for what is his under God and portunity to so prepare himself.

"If he leaves Hungary, the tually ignored' in the' sermons the laws 6f our country," Bishop He wants his preparation as .an IT'S

hopes of the people for their heard' in American churches 'and Mussio' stated. "This shOUld be equal among equals. This is his

liberation will detoriorate fur- , synagogues with only a handful done legally and under due right."

ther than they already have," of r'eligious leaders venturing' pre,cesses of law. ,This the Negro

"Let's stop playing politics said Msgr. Varga., to take' up such'questions frankly wants to do. aut it is up to us with ,our moral duty," he urged. He reported tha,t the Red gQv- from the pulpit." to :;ee that the law is recognized "Let's stop making this question ernment's campaign against the by all and that it is enforced a plaything for private gain or Church in Hungary is "system­ without, the influence of bias personal advantage * * * The

"AII.R/CA'. MOU QlJAtin atically continuing" and that and prejydice." , Negro is going to get,his rights,

,FUND."'UL COURTS only five per cent of the priests of this I.,have no doubt. It should' ."••Oltr.llor..... "':::' $~p' PlaY~PolitlC8 in ~e' predominantly catholic ,lMi done in the American way, by" . . . eountry have joined,' the ,ranks - 104 air-conditioned rooms truly dedicated Americans. It ~rQ1ing ,that, ".t}lere are viole~t , _ J i1wlmmln. pools of' the so-called "peace' priests" , NAIROB1,(NC) .- Dedication ex(:esses on both sides in this , should' be done by us in 'the ex­ - FREE, aelf-~;klnl for 500 car•• collaborating With' the com­ of the new ca.thedral here by , struggle for the Negro"s rights," ercise of that great virtue of jus_ Church & MISS Information munist Laurian Cardinal Rugamhwa, the Bishop added: "The white' tice which is its own reward," Bishop of Bukoba, Tanganyika, sup,remacists on the one side, marked the centennial of mis­ the Black Muslims on the other THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTS sionary work in East Africa by are buzzards waiting to pounce ANI" ,OF PERPETUAL ADORATION the Holy Ghost Fathers. on those who give up hope for invite lenerOlll '_III IIdies .. lola tIIelll '" leadlnl a lIeelllr It was in June, 1863, that two relilious life of love, adoration, and r.paration. In that sp\i'ifJ BRAINTREE (N C) - After Holy Ghost p r i est s and two ,the Sisters devote lIIelr tim. I' III. education ., ,out~, retrlll, worll, allll dOlllestlc II8tles. ' , eerving 17 months in the Peace Brothers landed at Zanzibar. UI~ge for further information, appl, .. Corps in Bolivia, James Mc­ Five YE;ars later they set up the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts; Fairhaven, Mass.

Tighe, 23, came home to study firllt Catholic mission on the East for the priesthood.

African mainland sinee the'exWASHINGTON (NC) - The

One of four children of Mr. pulsion of the Portuguese in National Federation of Catholic

and Mrs. Hugh McTighe, of this 1698. College ,Students, representing

town, McTighe said: "I' have Holy Ghost missiol1ers came some 150' Catholic colleges, has been accepted by the Maryknoll into Kenya from this original asked its members to write let­

Fathers and have dedicated my ,station" at Bagamoyo, Tangan- ters to congressmen urging sup-, ~!!!!~ ~ ~ .

life to God and His Blessed yika; in 1892. ' port for the administration'. FREE/KIT .... .. 11I11 fir FREE SlY.. • Mother. I want to be a priest."

The Archdiocese of Nairobi civil rights legislation. \.tI"{E~S \ .,_H ..... 1M lIetIII. II .tartllll • The graduate of' Catholic was formed out of the Zanzibar President John F. Kennedy'.

schools in Weynouth ~nd Boston Vicariate Apostolic in 1953. Us civil rights bill has been mtro­

said he reached the decision head is Archbishop John Mc..; duced in both branches of Con.

after witnessing the pitiful Carthy, C.S.Sp., who assisted gress. In a memorandum aeDt

plight, sPiritually and physi­ Car din a I Rugambwa. at the from its ~tional office here to

cally, of the poor in Bolivia. cathedral dedication Masa. ' ,all members, the NFCCS said it

While there he organized the "calll make its support of equal

first medical unit with the aid rights concrete by a simple but • CIIJ .; of five public health nurses. .tzeable letter writing cam­ M •••••••••••••••••••••••••• pallm."

P Condones

re I ate N,egroes' Actions

:·WantsAction Now

Ca,pt-Ive C'a rdlenaI : Symbol of Hope

'Hedgi.,g on Granting Rig,ht.s ,', : of Extremists'

u' a

MIAMI

BEACH

Mark Centennial In "Eo'stAfrica ~

Leaves Peace Corps To Become Priest

Students Back I R ' B II Civi ' ights i

SAVE-BY-MAIL

•••••••••••••••••••••••••• c...,..

~

Heads Child Center WASHINGTON (NC) - Dr. David A. S1. Martin has beel) named director, of the Catholic University of America's Child Center for the treatment of emo­ tional problems of children, suc­

ceeding the late Father Albert J. van der Veldt, O.F.M. A graduate of the University of Tennessee medical school, Dr. St. Martin was trained in psychiatry at Georgetown University Hos­ pital and Children's Hospital her~.

.

Plans to Restore Boyhood Church,

BOSTON (NC) Richard Cardinal Cushing disclosed here he has undertaken a project to fulfili one of the la.te Pope John XXIII's most cherished wishes-­ restoration of the Pontiff's boy­ hood church in Bergamo, Itaiy. "I have quietly collected

enough money to begin the nec­ essary reconstruction," Cardinal Cushing related. The project will involve "rebuilding the entire front of the church and other sections thereof which ~ust be replaced," he added.

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Prelate Urges Laymen to Bring·

Love of Christ Into Marketplace

AMARILLO (NC)-An arch. bishop asserted here that lay. men, who are "soldiers of the cross," must bring the "truth and grace and love of Christ into the marketplace where bishops and priests cannot go." Archbishop Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio, Tex., called for an all-out effort on the part of the laity in his sermon at the enthronement of the Most Rev. Lawrence M. De Falco as the fifth Bishop of Amarillo. "In our time religion is under heavy attack from ·the powers of darkness," Archbishop Lucey said. "False philosophies, such as materialism, atheism, com­ munism and secularism, loJ.ave clouded the minds of men. De­ basing immoralities have be­ guiled the hearts of men. Apathy; lethargy and ignorance of eter­ nal truths are a devitalizing ele­ ment in ancient Christian coun­ tries. • Fight Good Fight "A rather' general abandon-' ment of God stalks through the nations and the influence of the Church has been dang~rously

THE ANCHORThurs., July 18.,1963

Stresses Pope's Warm Feeling For Poland

dissipated," the Archbishop continued. "Bishops and· priests alone cannot meet this challenge and .the battle is goin~ against them. All of those who have been bap­ ·tized and confirmed must re­ member that tt.ey are soldiers.of Christ and under the banner of . the cross they must fight the good fight for the things of God." ,

BERLIN (NC) - Stefan

Cardinal Wyszynski has told

the Catholics of Poland that

Pope Paul VI bears toward

Pope Paul Greets 1000 Newsmen VATICAN His Holiness praised the coverage of

CITY (NC) ­ Pope Paul 'VI press for its Pope John's

death and the conclave, and told newsmen he will do all he can to help them cover and under­ stand the coming second session of the ei:umeneial council, sche­ duled to ppen on September 29~ The Pope greeted members of the presll as "colleagues and friends" when he received about 1,000 newsmen in audience, and he recalled that his father, Giorgio Montini, was a journalist. and that this made him feel a speci,al affinity to those in the audience.. The Pope also gently chided those newsmen ·who gave themJERUSALEM (NC)-An' selves to too many flights of POPE PAUL'S COAT-OF.AR~S: At the base are' six especially warm messag~ of . 'fancy, inaccuracies and untimely: 8tyli~ed small 'mountains (in Italian they "montini") l thankS and eongratulatiOi)8' 'comments while writing of the • .• h . conclave which elei:ted him. He in silver with .three fleurs de lis. in silver on a crimson· on hIS elecbo~ to t•..,e papacy, made hi$ point while, at the field. Thecoat-of-arms is .the same:a.S the Pope had as a was sent froJ?1 here t? ~ope Paul ,same time, avoiding the. impres­ _ cardinal' with the exception of his motto, "in nomine VI 1:;>;,: Il JeWIsh ph!SIClan ",hose 5ion of being censorious,pre­ Popes do not carry mottoes' on their sllieldS. ·NC fam I1)" the. Pop~ .helped to ~ye , fering. to stress the positive good domini".' photo. . '. ".: : , .. ,. :~.,:;' : : ~ .

from: . a~t,i7~nutic . persecQ,tlon ,in the·stories·\liritten~.. : almost 25 years ago. .; . Dr... Aharon Mendes, now . an . Israeli citizen, came' her~fr.om. . Rome where he had been a !Chool friend of Pope Pius XI, director of a Red Cross hospital and a physician at the Pontifical Roman Theological Seminary. ATLANTIC CITY (NC) - A _ ment of moral principle," the the Seeond Vatican Council were Catholic theologian said at a Jesuit theoll;)gian said, "they' wil'ling to adopt such a state­ When it became known in 1939 ment, Father Weigel added, but that the Mendes family was. meeting of a Jewish group here . (the Arabs) would see 1ft it a "it was not. intJ.:oduced because political intention." that .he does not expect the about to be sent toa concenua­ the Arab states would under':' Second Vatican Council to adopt tion camp, the doctor's friends He stated that Augustin Car­ stand it as backing Ull Israel arid dinal Bea, S.J., president of the therefore e hid i n g and re­ at the Vatican advised him to a statement condemning anti­ seek refuge in a Latin American Semitism.. Vatican' Secretariat for Pro­ ' .. buffing the Arab states." country where they promised to moting Christian Unity, had Father Gustave Welgel,S.J., .Hopegfm Action find him a position. He refused shown "goodwill in the' enti.re the offer, however, saying he theologiilri at Woodstock College, matter" concerning a statement Father Weigel said be be­ wanted to go to Palestine where said such a statement was pre-· Condemning anti-Semitism. lieves that when the council pared for the council's first ses­ he owned property. He said the statement was Fathers reconvene on Sept. 29 sion . last· Fall but never pre­ they. wquld again "rather avoid Pope Intervenes sented.' He said at the meeting· drafted by Abbot Leo Rudloff, the issue than face it." But the British authorities who of the' National Community Re­ O.S.B., of the Dormition Abbey Lewis Weinstein of Boston, governed the area at that time lations Council that it was not in Jerusalem, Isr,ael,. and by ehairman of the National Com­ refused t{) granttbe doctor an presented because it might be Msgr. John.; Oesterreicher; direc­ entry certificate, llayi!1g there construed by the Arab states as tor of the Institute of Judaeo ..... ..munity. Rei a· t ion s Advisory was no proof tP.at ~. oWne(1 indicative of a pro-Israel atti- . Christian Studies at Seton Hall Council, expressed the hope that "Father Weigel's tentative pre­ property there. . .·UniversitY, .sOuth 'Omnge, N.j. tude.! ' . diction will be contradicted by The . certificate '; was ., ii~ail:r , M~$t' of 'the bishopS present at positive action' from· the ecu­ HAlthough .this we~ •. stateobtained by the intervention of menical council." Pope Pius XII through the ef­ forts of Msgr. Giovanni Battista Montini, then a high official of the Papal Secretariat ot State For Personal Inventory

and now Pope Paul. and Renewal

Shortly before his election, NEW YORK (NC) "The Make A Week-End

Pope Paul defended Pius XII against accusations that the late Christian Brother and the Lay Retreat at the

Pontiff shares the· blame .for Avosto~atej, will be the general ; Holy Cross Fathers

nazi Germany's murder of over theme for the annual three-day" six million Jews because he did conference' here of the Christian Retreat House

not intercede directly on their Brothers Education Association. Rte, 138, No. Easton, Mass.

behalf. Brother Azarias Raphael, as­ Following the successful ef­ Men· Women - Couples

sociation president, will preside forts of Pius XII and Msgr. Mon­ at the meeting, to be held next Tel. 238-6863

tini, the Mendes family was able week at La Salle Military Aca­ : Write: .Fr. Kelly, csc, Dir•.

to escape confinement in a con- . demy, Oakdale, Long· Island. centration camp and settle in what is now Israel.

Jewish Physician Grateful to Pop'e .

are

~

~..

Predicts·;Counci·I·····Fathers :to '. Avoid·' Issue, Doubts' Adoptio~ of' A nti-Semitism JStciteme~t

Poland the same warm feelings of the fate Pope John XXIII. The Cardinal Primate of Po­

land wrote of Pope Paul's close

ties with Poland in a letter from

Rome to his people shortly after

the papal election. He told them

that the first greeting the new

Pope said to him after the elec­

tion was in Polish: "Niech zyje

Polska" (Long live Poland).

The Cardinal in his letter re­ called that in 1923, as plain Fr. Giovanni Battista Montini, the Pope worked at -the Warsaw nunciature at the· side of the Nuncio, who later became Lor. enzo Cardinal Lauri, and the present Carlo Cardinal Chiarlo. When he was assigned to the' central administration of the Church in Rome, .the Primate continued, Msgr. Montini minis­ . tered to the spiritual needs of residents of the Polish home op­ erated by the Polish Ursuline. and the Polish institute. Ma~ at Shrine . . The future Pope was concern­ ed with Polish' matters both while he served in the Papal Secretariat of State and as Arch­ - bishop of Milan, .according to Cardinal Wyszynski. "This is bo~ne· out by letteits which he of,ten. sent to W<lrsaw," he said. "In that respect, Pope Paul' VI wilf therefore continue to nourish the feelings for Po­ land' held by Pope. John· XXIIi ­ of great memory." The prelate said, that after Cardinal Montinf became Pope, he asked that' a Hail Mary be· said for him at Poland's national ­ Marian shrine at Czestochowa. _ But Cardinal Wyszynski assured him that Mass would be offered' there daily for the intention of his pontificate.

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Pope Paul Prefers. 'Paulo' in Spanish

• THE "FRIENDLY" CAPE COP FIVE •

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope PaUl VI has stated that in offi­ cial Vatican documents in the Spanish .language he will' be o known as Paulo, the ancient Spanish form of the name Paul. Msgr. Sotero Sanz Villalba of the Spanish section of the Papal Secretariat of State disclosed that he had asked the Pope whether he preferred Paulo or a Z the modern form, Pablo, and IU that the Pope had replied his .02 choice of the old form. ~ He said the Pope said that Spanish-speaking people could use whatever form they like, but that he preferred Paulo for of­ fieial documents and Spanish­ language broadcasts over Vati­

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THE ANCHOR~OiQcese of fall River-Th",rs. Julyl$, 1?63

Through· Acts· of Self.~nial·

God Love· You

Elliott's First:. Novel Tells Story of Battle for Boy

By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.· It is not often that we think ., Che' ".shameful'" lIIdferlDp .f Our Lord, but Scripture sPeaks of Him that wu: "Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the origin and ·crOWJl 01 aU Faith, Who to win His prize of blessedness endured tile Cross and made light of Its shame, Jesus Who now dta _ the right of God's throne." Pari of this shame was twice being stripped of His p.rments. Be Who clothed the lilies' of the field bad not wberewith to elQ~ Himself; He Who clothed the lepel'll with new skin appeared _ the Cross, in the language of Isaias, as "a leper": He Who made coats of skins for Adam and Eve when they were naked In tile Garden was then stripped of Hia .eamless robe.

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Summer Locke Elliott, best known as a writer of thoughtful and literate television dramas (do you remember when there were such 1) has produced his first novel, Care­ ful He Might Hear You (Harper and Row. $4.95). It co~e~ to us festooned with him quantities of fine clothes the lauds of other writers. and toys, sending him to a school · .Thus, Harper Lee, speaks of and providing him lessons (in -its many delights/' Paddy music and riding, for example)

Chayefsky says, "It is one of which . would be beyond the the few' novels I have read in means of Lila and George. The child, however, is deeply years that gave And y~t how difficult we find It .to strip ourselve. of the attached to the Baines couple, me the sensa­ . least of our luxuries, to wound ourselvf!s for the lIllke al Christ never warms up to Vanessa, and tion of rea I and the spread of His Church. Only through simply endUTes, with ill grace, value." 'And such acts of self-denial will the spiritual the intervals with her. She is Tad Mosel life grow within. us, for no .one ever rises striet and demanding, seeking to avers, "It has make him over into a little FIRST AMERiCAN: First from one level of life to a higher level wit, suspense,

some kind of death to that which · gentleman. 'She is cold and mas­ strikingly the­

American to hold the posi­ without is below. Every morinng 'of life. mWlt put terful. Her home (Ettie's really. .trical scenes,

but Ettie is hers) is empty and ·ti,on, Father Cyprian Berens, us on a fresh battlefield; every evening must

and the feeling.

O.F.M., of Cincinnati, Ohio, see the ltun let on some vanquished lust or

. cheerless, for all its luxury. · of, adventure, As Vanessa, with excellent hl~ been appointed general . .slain desire.

.the sense of an­ and expensive counsel to do her administrator of finance for other time, an­ Won't you strip 70urself of Just a

bidding, presses forward toward the world-wide Franciscan other place and cigarette or a coke or a cand7 bar a da7

Its fascinating yet oddly familiar complete custody of P .s., bit­ Order. NC Photo. to bring the Gospel to the world's anbe­

ter conflict erupts. And it in­ people." . Hevers, who, If placed in sinll'le file, would

Well, we shall not dispute the volves not merely the present, circle the .earth thlrt7 times? By offering

contention that concerns another but also, and principally, the '~:;od . up the sacrifice of. not enJo7ln&' them and 1ime and another place. The time past. seneUn&' ihe equivalent of that dail7 act 01 denial to the Hol7 Ancient Score Continued from Page One is the early 1930's, and·the 'place Father's awn Society for the PropagaUou of the FaUIl,7ou . . We learn that it was Vanessa di:~utes among denominational 'is Mr. Elliott's native Australia. bebuyinJ'. sulphone for. & . leper In Africa. a home for an .tUba The chief characters are the SCot who first knew Logan Marriott, re1igions." orphan, SODlething to eat for 'a child In Oceania. We ·k»ok forward Jisters and the' son of one of Sinden's husband and P.S.'s ''These were evident among father. He had been passionately mimy of the colonies'as attempt.l ...hearlng from 70U,- and lIIO do the7!·· these. The child's mother, Sin­ ._--'. ·den, was a writer who' died attracted to her, and she to him. wt!re made to legislate the be­ ., tQung, in childbirth.' She had But she' was too calculating for liefs apartic~lar group or GOD LOVE YOU to MiSs M~S. fOT $25 ''This represents the "saId that her offspring'would'be his taste, and too artificial. He seetl/ as the state religion," the ~ce of a Persian cat. We 9btaineci nice frefi alley cat instead · had' thrown her over, contemp­ called P.S. - "a postcript \0 Cardinal. detailed.· "This•. then, and are much' happier for having helped the Missions" ••• to tuously. my ridicul9US life.~' ga ve meaning to the phrase wall Mrs. RL. for $355 '1'Thil! money is given 'in the spirit of charity' Vanessa survived, of' course, of separation; namely, the avoid­ Few Advantai:'es that you may aid the poor souls. in the Mission•. I also beg God and went on to attain the status that He will bring my family back to' the Faith." ••• to Mrs. P.S:, no~ ~, is bei~g. bro~ght and the possessions, as 'well as ance of making any denomina­ H.T. for $20 "I saved this offering by buying cheaper clothes and liP by his aunt Lila. Bain~s, the e min e n t respectability, tional ~reed obligatory as a 'con­ · whose husband George is. a whiclt she particularly prized. diti"on of citizenship, and the not eating rich desSerts and other. sweets.' It was originally. a opposition to the establishment Lenten practice, but I decided to do so on a permanent basis for trades union official and hoids But the old wound of her rejec­ a fair job. They live in a run­ · tion remained and rankled, made of any state religion." God's poor." •• • to V.R. for $21 "Maid service once a week would 'fhe Cardinal said the cases have cost me $21. How I tackle these jobs with more love. anel down area, and can give the the more painful by Sinden's cO:rlsidered. by the court had boy few advantages except that capture of the man who got offer them - and my savings - for the love of God." • •• to G.D. thl!ir bases in the interpretation and C.D. for $3.20 "We put on a 'rock hunt' to collect for the fill. being loved, wanted, and af­ away from her. Revenge and re­ of history and knowledge cal MiltSions. We wish it were more but not DtaD7 children eame.. fectionately eared for. compense have something to do philospohy and meaning of re­ Two other aunts, unmarried, with her quest of p.s. ligion. He added:. "I have not live elsewhere in the city. One Solve 70U Kift problema with .0Ull LADY 0 ... TELEVISION But there is more to it than .. Vere, a raffish character, good that. She has an ancient .score read that the members of the . .wes DOW available In two slzes..The ll~lnch ftnre 01 MadGIIIIA court have been blessed witll aatured and generous but .as and Child, constructed of unbreakable white plastic with &,01•• to . settle with Lila. The two extraordinary training or quali­ loUd in speech and garish in were, .in girlhood,. fiercely at colored cross and halos, reminds us tJaa.t as MaI'7 Py~ Ute DtYIne 1t clress as she is unconventional 'odds as' to being favorites with fications in these subjects. Word .. the world, ... television project. the humaa wOl'4. A I­ Emphasized Freedom .. 1ft conduct. The other is Agnes, iDcla m.odeJ with b1aek auctlon-cu" 1Jase Is Neal f . De ta their parents. A battle had gone l!le. said the nation's founden ; '1be . head of a dwindling . sect au.tomobiles. SeDd 70ur Jlelluesl and an. offerlnl' eI $I (U..hda) on through the. early years, and · in the Declaration of Itidepen­ · which pei'iodical1)' sets a date ... 'I (4-iDcb) to The Soclet7 far· tile· Propac'MI_ ., the F.... although neither could be' said de'rlce and the Constitution Paid for the end of the world; Agnes .61 FlfUa Avenue, Hew York 1. New York. to have been an absolute victor, .. generally thought to ~ VanesSa remorselessly .eek. to ·re',erenee to the existence cal ~od. and emphasized th¢ tree­ eracked, but occasionally she pay out her sister. dO:1Il of religion. He added: .~ eomes ,out with an ineislve 00­ TheaVleal SeeDe. I .. ' Cut oat ..... eohmul. IJiD 7.........ftee .. It . . . . .U . . . · did not exclude religion;' they lel'Vation. . . P.S., then, is no more than· a did not forbid religion; they did . . Kost FRI_ J.Sheen, Natlen&l Dlrecter ., tile· 8oc1elr Subtle, .utbl~ pawn. ·He is that in his own per­ '-tile Pro....aUon ., the· FaItb, *61 Finll· A'teilae. New YOIIt Crackling excitement bursts IOn, as his elden mO'V'e him here Jiol forbid the recitation' of the 1. N. Y.. 01' 70ur Dtoceaa Dlreetor. aT.' KEY, ItAYMOND or. tIoI'th in: these drab livelt when and .th~re, seek to wrest him one Lord's Prayer; they did not for­ CONSIDINE, 368 'Nortli Milia Skeet, Fall River, l!lIuL bid the reading of the Bible. Ia · ..ord comes that still another trom the other, use him for dark sister, Vanessa, is on her way purposes of which the7' are 'Public. They acknowledged the natural law as the law of ~ •• from her home in England. · hardly aware themselves. A 'AMILY TIIAT

"The founding fathers made Vanessa, the best lookin! of He is a pawn, too, in a game no attempt to disclaim religion,· IAR·B-Q CHICKENS

the daughters of an Anglican · tMt is all about his dead mother cleric and his strongminded wife, · and her places in the lives of thE! Cardinal said. "They: fostered and. promoted liberty of its ex­ had been given, in childhood, to various people. p"~ssio'n but they rejected the • j it . rich cousin, Ettie BUlt, who, · He comes to an identity of his PARMS herself childless and lonely, own at last, but it is only after domination of anyone interpre­ tation of the teachings of God. ~. WulalDPMt lh.., ralrbanll llOuld afford the youngster op­ a .eries of crises which are in-. .lut off portunities unavailable .at home. "geniously· arranged and slickly They did D()t declare reverence For years, Vanessa enjoyed " b r I) ugh t off. The theatrical · for' . 'religion unconstitutional; . WY "-8111

· 'the' existence of the spoiled 'lCenes of which .Mr. lrfosel ye1; they did Cirawup the COn­ Wa--=b lOr ~

·sti1;ution which the court 'is now · darling of a wealthy and· gener­ · tpeaks are there and· J~esounding, .M4 Ceunty· It.. interpreting in a contrary man­ While out foI' • Driy•.

· ous relative. and one finda a IUl'pr!se.in :the ; nel~. . .Ne\,!, ~ S\op ai thlaDe1JlhUuJ ..SPot

· There is speculation as to why eventual winner of the struggle 'The Supreme Court· has fail· . .Vanessa, with Ettie in tow, ilJ without quarter which is' waged ed to recognize this distinction. '1lOW' rEiturning, and some' ap­ throughout the book. ''It :nas confused the fundamental prehension. . On arrival, she YOUIS TO LOVE AND TO GIVEI

Touch 01 Freslmess acknowledgement of JiatilraI're­ p.~Qv.ell to be: sophisticated, j ex­ ~pite some Freudian trap­ .... lie ., • DAUOHTII Of n. PAUL ...". Go.

ligious truths with individual quisitely dressed, utterly re­ pings, this is unmistakably an _fe, ••d FYe .....h lr.!'owIMp o"tI I.". .,

moved from her stay-at-home old-fashioned ru;tvel. As such, it 'anei group interpretation and the 0- tit .."i•• ill • MiIti.. whicll iI... the

··kindred. It soon became plain · is ;j~. and :colorf~l. StiJl, an attempt to make the individual ....... Iolli.. MatiaII ·PI. . . . . . . nt.· .. Itrl".

interpretation compulsory rat­ that she is as selfish, subtle, 'and 'air of. eontrivlllli:e hangs ml)stily • Wortl .. -t. .verywher., IaoIoUl yaVII" · her than voluntary," be said. ruthless. as a cat, apd that her over it. ''''21 !hit _Iqw

' . objective is to get control of P.S. ' lilli, wrftlt Ie:

One is always c~nscious of the IIYERIND MOTHII· SUPHIOt .. ,

Bitier Confiid ' author's maqipulations, and the DAUOHTIII Of It,· PAUl ..

. ~p.e has 'le$al . ti~e to p~rtial characterl1 do. not, take on a life ... IT. PAUl'S 'AVI. 10STON II, MASS.

Continued from Page ODe eustody 'of the child, this having distinctively their own. Some of been achieved in a complicated the lesser performers, like Vere, fedive- means of serving ..... process which we do not have Agnes, Mrs. Grindel, and Winnie faith." .J)anel discussions will concern space for detailing heft!. She be:' Grindel' have greater--substance · gips by having him with ber for and vigor than those who .are .. Internal functioning and lmPr(jv­ ementof Holy Name units"and :i a weekend each fort-night, then featured more prominently.. .' r.n.......ReacIi·..n l HA.RD "COAl .' ;Nj~~;''''' ". i1~~ As for P.S., he is all but a . members efforta to effeet the :: extends his stays with her. ' '·HEW INOlAND COKE ~"'" ~ :i Manifestly s1'!.e can do milch' ·,cipher untll the climax, butthis'Church's miSsion in· th~world. .: l for him, taking hJm' out ·Of • is: a deliberate: ~ngement:on . - In· their. entirety, sessions wUl ·c ;DI;DION, :(),IL . ainlat more enligbtened and ef- . , " grubby' environment' into' oRe' the author's part. . ,4-He.... OtI..lurnw ~ . ; , '. 'rhe writing· Is' competent on. fectiveHoly Name societies, !~ antiseptic.· and elegant, IlviDI ..... , '. . . ._. ~ ' the whole. Periodically it has a Ubf~tter instruments to translllte CIMI..... Ir. . . .·.. ~< • . , ~ :, Lose Permit~. touch of freshness, as, for ex-' intD action the intentions of the .... 'c..I -' ~ ,~

· ample, when we are told that Church as made known 1lhrough .' CHICAGO (HC) - ' Ma70t "Vanessa was staring into the· the, Vatican Council" It,iC;bard J. Daley has announced distance. as though she had deHoly Name men are invited

revocation' of the permits of 25' tected' something incorrect about to bring their famUies to tbe

:: newsstand operatQl's who wete' the horizon." But there ;u'e ;collventio~, noted J'athe~ Can-." " 1oqnd.. guil~ of selling. -obscene .. clicltes, .t()9, ,as ~ a reference ~ 'uel, Special activities ..............., ,....... WI ..." .. ;: ' ••'zilie£ "tired. cwshioDa OR the ~.'. Mel fG&' wiv. aocl cbiJd&'ea. .

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Two Upcoming #M-ounties' Plan Year of Many Exciting :Events )It. St. Mary's Academy in Fall "River will have two bouncy officers -next year in Cecilia Polka, sodality prefect, and Joanne Bailey, student council president. Booth girls are excited at the prospect of heading these two outstanding activities and look forward' Last year students concen­ to fruitful terms in office. trated on ca1echetical works, and Auburn - haired J 0 ann e, the form of next year's aposto­ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. late will be determined in part

Great Boob

Both' girls are active in,many extra-curricular activities in ad­ dition to the glee club. One favo­ rite organization with them .. the Junior Great Books Club, a group active ao far in only two high schools 01 the Diocese. The junior program is mod­ elled on the famous Great Books Discussion Program, but selec­ tions are geared to high IIChool lJtudents. , Joanne, brown -eyes flashing, eaUs the program "terrific." "It helps a person to learn a lot," she confides. "It forces you to read serious stuff and before 70U know it, it's enjoyable!" Cecilia, too, likes the program and feels it's d'one much to give her a better appreciation 01. the rewards of reading. Two elassics enjoyed by the girls during the past year have been "The Brothers Karamazov" and ''Doctor Fauatwr."Their reading doesn't stop with such titles, however.' Both . enjoy a wide variety of bOoks, with Cecilia leaning •• p e cia 11 y towards biographies, .wblle the perennial love Bto17; eapturee Joanne', attention. Bu7 Year' Ahead eome September, ,much ., Cecilia'. time wID be spent ClI'­ ganizing a e 11 v it Ie '. for· the Mount's Sodality of the lmmacu­ Jete Heart of :Mary. -The orgam­ zation'. aim is pro due i III ""leaders for Christ." By its rule of life, day, of recollection, and­ yearly retreats, It .eeks to pre­ pare membel'l to do ,their pan ill 1M ~ ~.--. ._-

13, •

Asserts Rulings

Favor Private

School Aid

As ,They Assume Leadership

Edward Bailey of Portsmouth, has attended the Mount since her freshman year, previously attending Porstmouth pub 1 i c 8Chools. " Blue-eyed Cecilia Is a mem­ ber of Holy Cross parish in Fall River and attended the parochial grammar school. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Polka. '. Favorite Subjects Both Mo un tie s ,are strong rooters for the academiy and are 01. the opinion that there's just DO other place to go to school. French and chemistry are Cecilia's favorite subjects. She likes French because it presents a challenge and this lass likes the idea of meeting a challenge more than half way. With chem­ istry, the approach is differant. She likes it because it's fun ­ and science in g~neral is high among her interests. Joanne, too, gets excited about chemistry, since she too likes science. Math is her aecoild' favorite subject. Her real love, however, is music, and after graduation from the Mount this young lady hopes to enroll in the Eastman School 01 Music at the University of Rochester. "I decided on this particular school of music," says Joanne, "because it is connected with an outstanding university. Not only can I study music_ as a major, but it's possible to study other subjects as well." Music's also a favorite with Cecilia and she hopes to enroll at Catholic University in Wash­ ington, D.C., after her final year, at the Mount. She, too, will major in music and plans to teach after graduation from col­ lege. Both girls are putting their musical abilities to good use here and now. Cecilia's a mem­ ber of the liturgical choir at the Mount and sings at all high Masses at the school as well as at many solemn ceremonies in nearby St. Mary's Cathedral. She belongs to Fall River's Junior Music Club. Joanne playa violin jn the school orchestra.

AN~HOR-,

rhurs., July 18, 1963

DETROIT (NC) - Recent Church-State rulings by the U.S. Supre~e Court support the constitutionality of Fed­

eral aid to church _ related schools, a Catholic laY leader said here.. Francis J. Coomes, executive director of the Michigan Catholic Conference, said the court's rulings in three recent cases "set forth the principle that there Is no violation of the First Amend­ ment if' a statute primarily is in­ tended to carry out 'a valid secu­ lar public purpose." Sports Too "We contend that Federal aid Sports' is a big interest in the . that assists the secular educ-a­ lives of these two Mounties. tion of children attending state­ Joanne likes basketball, but appr0¥d nonpublic schools • • • otherwise her interests are iii in' complete harmony with centered on individual activi-­ , the First Amendment. This con­ ties, such as sailing. Cecilia tention is based on the criterion pursues the role of a rugged in- ­ in the cases' just referred 10," ,­ dividualist in her enjoyment of : Coomes said. walking and· bicycle riding. He discussed the. SuPreme These two young examples, of .-' Court's June 17 rulings barring Catholic pigh IlChool education . devotional' Bible reading and are aware of the need for more ­ recitation. of the Lord's Prayer of the same. .: fro~ publl,c schools and up.. ''Catholic education" states holding a Seventh Day Adven­ Joanne," is necessary. It gives a . 'CECILIA POLKA d JOANNE BAILEY tist ,woman's :.right to receive person character and a better ,an

state unemployment compensa­ understanding of right educational films. All m e . . " nism." Program includes aJlOP­ tion even though she refused on wrong. . must prepare a project for en.. ganized course of study prepared conscientious grounds to accept And from Ceciba we be8l" ,trance iri the school science fair by the Cardinal Mindszenty available Saturday work. "Cathol,ic education is im~r- sponsored by the club, and: Foundation, as well as the op­ BasIc Problem tanto It s necessary to be an lD- , hopefully, for. exhibition at re­ portuiUty of' hearing tapes of formed Catholic" to meet the ,gional fairs. U.N proceedings;' OCcasionally . Coomes said the "basic' prob­ needs of today. , Debating grows in popularity guest .speakers address members. lem" in the current debate over Homework, however, ~ an ~n- : annually as more and more of Church-8tate affairs in the popula~ part of educatIon Wlt~'. the Diocesan high schools enter Chrlstia.n Womanhood United States is "the preserva­ y With extra-curricular activi­ ?oth girls! though t?e ad~lt 'the Narragansett Interscholastic tion of religious liberty." its necessI~. Joanne s . reason­ ,Debate League and various out­ ties, the academic program, and ''There should be no economic ably receptIve to math or che~- side tournaments. For girls who everything else undertaken' at penalty for exercising freedom istry homework, but Cecl~ia prefer public speaking to de­ Mt. St. Mary Academy, the Sis­ of religion," he said. . would be happy to dispense WIth bate, this too is emphasized by ters of Mercy, who staff this "Parents who choose to exer­ it altogether. . the Mount Debating Society. largest girls' high school in the Joanne has no defi~lte Sum­ High point of the organization's Diocese have but one aim in cise freedom of choice in edu­ mer plans, but is hopmg for a year is the National Catholic view - that of leading their cation by sending their children to a nonpublic school, which p~rt tim~ job, the rest of her Forensic League Tournament, students towards C h r i • t I a a meets etandards of the state. lels~re tIme being reserved for held at various places in the womanhood. .Joanne and Cecilia will be should not be required, as in the aailIng and swimming. eountry, to which quaiifying part of this continuing effort 'jn seventh Day Adventist case, to Yearbook Plan. schools may send participants. regard receiving a public wel­ the IChool year tA) come. Cecilia will spend at least one The Journalism Club produces fare benefit - like Federal aid week in New York attending the the sehool paper, "Mercian," at to education - as the price fOl' Summer School of Catholie frequent intervals, directed by 76 High Schoolers freedom of religion," he said. Action to be held the week of junior and senior staffs, an I••••••••••••••••• In College Classes August 12 to 17. editor in chief and co-editors. LOS ANGELES (NC)-Four She may also try to dream up A Pro:"American Club, origi. a few ideas for Mercycrest, the - nated by Jacqueline Letendre, 11 Catholic colleges in this area are conducting a program of Sum. Mount yearbook. She will serve . "devoted to awaking an aware­ mer studies for advancement Of on the year,book committee next DeSS of the dangers of Commu­ '18 gifted high school senior•• year. The high schoolers are studJ'­ With these two vivacious' at 0 ic c 00 s et Ing at Loyola University, lm­ young ladies at the helm of INC. .tudent activities, the Mount Fun_ds for Science maculate-Heart, Marymount and Mount St. Mary's colleges.' The should be an especially active WASHINGTON (NC)-Forty­ ,project, called the Cooperative place next school year. Colleges Advanced aeven Catholic institutions are Catholic Wbat'a GolDe On tamong 397 public and priva·te ,'placement Program, is headed The Mount Fi'ench Club meets eolleges and universities givell by Msgr. Joseph Sharpe, arch­ WHOLESALE & RETAIL ,. bi-weekly, and concentrates on $7.6 million in Federal funds to _ diocesan superintendent 01. high providing girls with background stTengthell their, 8Cience activ- _ schools and colleges. , SHUCKED' ,CLAMS ·The 76. students specifically material on hEmch language . !ties. STEAMERS & FRIERS ,The Catholie University '01. were recommended by their own and civilization. Slides and film. -, . ' are supplemented with annual : ;America was granted $28,689, principals. They are in the top J' visits to Boston museums 'and _ the largest amount given a Cath- _10 per cent of ·their classes and French restaurants. French lan­ - olic' institution. Three other _ have a grade average of B' OJ' : DELIVERIES WITHIN . guage playlets are often pre­ _Catholic schools received more . better. : A' 75 MILE AREA = , - than $20,000. They are: Notre aented. Girls, like Joanne and CecUia, _Dame University, $26,174; Ford­ fOr Restaurants Institutio'"

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30 THIRD STo, FALL RIVER yince OIl Wednesday, Aug. ,. ........... y•• AUC/...•. . . . . .

OSborne ~5693.~ . .."". .. famn,!_ The property, bas a· %a-room,

Aid Pet,Ot,Oon' ,School , tully furnished house and two W. ins. Acceptance' , • t be r buildings. ,Remodeling ;....ork already has· been started.

, MAITLAND (He) More "Some 80 8Cminarians ..ill, be

tI)an 7,000 slgnamre. have beea housed when the novitiate opena:

obtained in two week. in a .

eoncerted effort to win state aid ~----------r.

.for-private schools In the Hunter WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE Valley area of New South Wale. AND -, aate; The 8P0n89r ing Federatloll Oif , i 50 '11 _..1 - - ­ INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES. Committees for Christian Ed~ ....cr pt M CO.- .... ' .... cation has reported that its pet!­ and deliv.r.ct ' tion iI winning ac!Ceptance be- ' HEADQUARTERS POI

• GENERAL TIRES ' . DELCO BAnERilS, ' ,DIETETIC SUPPLIES

• cause· it -is. regarded as a move . • PERFECT CiRCLE. RINGS , to eorrect injustice against 600 Cottag. St. WY. 4-7...,9

'All IIVII - NIW IEDPORD' ...·HYANWIS - NIWPOIT . parent. and not .. a political ....

'by Cecilia and her officers. Both Cecilia and Joanne are members of the Latin Club. They sometimes find it difficult, how-' ever, to give accurate transla­ tions of writings in the' group's Clfficial magazine, "Auxilium Latinum!" To Latin Club' mem­ bership Joanne also adds be­ longing to the French Club. .

and:

B&S

FISHERIES of FALL RIVER

C h I S h· I G

CLAMS

-

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'HOLY lAME CONVEITIO.

-

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LAIIVIERE'S

PhGrmacy

JftMW'eatMmp&,;

....

led"""

WM. T. MANNING '(0.


THE··ANCHOI-Dioce.. of Fall liver-Thurs. July '8,"'63' ,

Votes to Continue Renting Schools

:Prayer Decision Reveals Public Education Mess By Most Rev. RobeJ.'t J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno

"John Marshall has made his deeision, now let him enforce it!" President Andrew Jackson was mad, mad clean' through. The sovereign State of ~rgia had maqe up its mind to get rid of those pesky critters, the Cherokes Indians, whose only title to cation. The laws of the several the choice lands they still .tates, almost uniformly, pro­ Occupied was that they were hibit the diversion of tax moneys the original inhabitants, long for the maintenance of any but antedating the old Spanish mis­

sionaries who had come'to con­

vert them and

General Ogle­

thorpe's se­

lected jail-birds

who had done

their b est to

• x tOe r m i ­

nate them. But

it so happened

~ hat a mis­

guided Feder­

al administra­

tio n, If 0 me

7 ear s before,

had entered into a treaty with

these same Cherokees, guaran­

teeing them undisturbed posses­

.ion of their acres, so long as

they remained peaceable allies

ef the United States.

It was not that the Indians had broken the treaty, it was only' that the Georgians coveted their lands and were determined to flet them. The Indians, simple _vages, appealed to the Su­ preme Court of the United States, still presided over by aging Chief Justice John Mar­ 8hall. Delivering the Court's verdiet, Marshall made it clear that a I'ederal treaty must stand above the will of an individual state, DO matter how sovereign. Then ~ was that the exasperated Jackson spoke his mind: let John Marshall enfol'<:e his fool ded­ Mon. Georgia Set Pattern !f was a dangerous thing to eay, subversive in the exact 8ense. If the decisions of the Su­ preme Court were to have no yalidity beyond the paper they were written on, or if the Execu­ live were to refuse to honor the decisions of the tribunal, then the American experiment of • hecks and balances, of equal justice under law, was at an end. Fortunately, Jackson was in the habit of speaking in haste end repenting at leisure. Not that the Cherokees benefited much by his change of heart. Georgia had already taken mat­ ters in hand and had set a pat­ tern which was to characterize ~ur Indian relations for genera­ tions to come, which was to disPossess them, drive them ever further West, or settle them on the least desirable land as a "reservation". The Court might define the law, but enforcement was in the bands of the land-grabbers. Capitulation to Seeularlam There is a temptation today, in the wake' of the Supreme Court's decisions on the use of prayer.' and of Bible reading in the state-supported schools, to repeat Andrew Jackson's angry riposte. A great many Amerieans are mad, mad clean through. They regard the prohibition Of any form of religious expression in these schools as a formal capitulation to militant secularism. And there is no question but that such a charge can be

the public schools, and in those FATHER BOTELHO schools prohibit any form of religious tea~hing or function. It has become a commonplace In the interpretation of .the First J~zores Amendment to declare it prohi­ bitive of any religious expres­ sion in the field of public edu­ Most Rev. Manuel Afonso cation, though it is always Carvalho, Bishop of the Azores, puzzling why the prohibition C{~lebrated a pontifical Mass of should stop there. . Requiem yesterday morning in Mister Dooley once opined S.anto Christo Church, Fan that the Supreme Court alwllYs follows the "iliction returns"; if River, for Rev. Antonio d'Oli­ the truth is not quite so blatant Vt~ira Botelho, one of his priests, who died Sunday at St. Anne's it is at leam evident that the Hospital. Court is extremely sensitive to Father Botelho had been the American mind. v!!sitlng relatives here. Bishop Effectiveness of Symbol These decisions, as a matter of Carvalho, also 'visiting in the eold fact, are nothing more than United States, was on Cape Cod a legal definition of American when informed of the priest'. d~~ath.. secularism. They are even a re­ duction of the proposition to its Officers of the Mass were Rt. ultimate absurdity, wherefore it Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, is. a little difficult to understand archpriest; Rev. Mariano Men-­ why eo many who heretofore d.)nca, deacon; Rev. Adriano have regarded the situation with !tl:endonca, subdeacon. contentment are 80 suddenly Rev. Luclano Pereira, book arouse to wrath and stricken bl~arer; Rev. Agostinho Pacheco, with horror. candle bearer; Rev. Ernesto This is a tribute to the effec­ Borges, gremiale bearer; Rev. tiveness of a symbol. It has not Edward Oliveira, mitre bearer; been considered good form to Rev. Manuel Andrade, thurifer; .speak of the American public Rev. George Amaral and Rev. schools, as "godless", put now Antonio Paiva, acolytes. it has been made quite clear that Interment was in St. John" that is precisely what theY are. Cemetery, New Bedford. The Court has done no more Priest 35 Years than to make this officiaL Father Botelho son of the late First Trophy It takes symbolic statements lacintho and the late Maria da like these to wake us up to the Conceicao (Amaral) Botelho, awful mess we have made of was born on Christmas Day, public education in the United 1000. He completed his studies States, where ~ecularism has for the priesthood in Terceira and was ordained Jan. 26, 1928. taken over in default of an ef­ fective will on the part of the A native of Santo Antonio, forces of religion to act in con­ Capellas, St. Michael, he was ceti for the preservation of the allSistant pastor at Santo Antonio Judaeo-Christian faith. Church. Survivors Include a brother, Because we have allowed our­ lJelves to be persuaded that only Agostinho d'Oliveira Botelho of secular education is worthy of 6:~ Barrett Street, Fall River; a public support it has followed sister, Miss Maria Jose d'Oli­ inevitably that the definition of v,eira, who came here with him, secularism should become pro­ and a niece. gressively narrower"and sharper. Office· of the Dead .... Secularism cannot rest untU It el1:anted Tuesday afternoon _ has infected the entire' body Santo Christo Church following politic. The educational victory tJ'ansferral of the bod7 from is only the first of its trophies. Ute rectory. Grea.te.t Service But it is precisely such dect­ '-rotestant Council .ions as those lately given which open the way for a total recon­ ()pposes Bus Rides sideration of' the American edu­ HARRISBURG (NC) - The eational philosophy. What rea­ son ~ there. why secularism Pen n • y I van i a Council of should be .anctioned as the Churches, which represents Protestant denominations with a American cr~d, and what justi­ u,tal membership of three mU­ fication is there for the exclu­ sion of religious education from lion in this state. has attacked a public support on the 801. b tIl which would provide tax­ paid school bus rides for paro­ ground that it is not secular? . There faces the nation, at this chial and other private llehool moment, the plain necessity of pupils. The attack was made In a a thorough revision of some of her favorite prepossessions and l(~tter signed by Rev. J. Charles McKirachan, chairman of the prejudices. So that it may well be, In the council's social relations divi­ light of this neceltSity, that the aion. "If the Commonwealth cannot Supreme Court, quite obliquely, will have rendered to religion aUord money to improve the in America the greatest service public schools then it certainly in our national history. We have can't afford funds for strength­ ~bstantiated. . the decision, now what are we eJling .the private school lIP­ tEmi," the letter said. , Yet to chide the Court for its' going to do abOut itT rulings or to tell Chief Justice Warren to go enforce them him­ self, is actually to place the onus on the wrong shoulders. Mind of People

Sa"ings Bank life Insurance , America, for a long time now,

Ree" Estate LoaM has quite deliberately fostered

the secularization of public «Iu-

Chl'illmas and Vacation Clubs

Bishop

Sings' Requiem

l'

Checlc These .BGrnlcing Services

•• •

Plan Whist "

"A whist party will be spon­ 80red . at 8 Wednesday night, July 31 by officers of the' Holy Name Society, St. Elizabeth'. Church, Fall River. John Oli­ veira is chairman.

BURLINGTON (NC) ..,... This eommittee, complained that the Massachusetts town's selectmen practice violated the Massachu. and members of the school com- setts Constitution. The selectmen mittee rejected a protest by the and school committee took 10 Civil Liberties Union of Massa. "minutes to decide tbe issue and chusetts and voted to continue Shea said they are prepared to the practice of renting public defend their action in the couru school facilities to religioWl de. if necessaC7. nominations for services. Charles F. Shea, selectmen Longest Bridge chairman, said the growth of the town's population caused a shori­ OPORTO (Ne) - A new age of facilities for the religious bridge across the Douro River groups. The board will continue here in Portugal, the longest to rent schoolS' to Catholics, reinforced concrete arch strue­ Presbyterians and Fellowship tUTe in Europe, was blessed by Baptists for services. Bishop Florentino de Andrade Howard S. Whiteside, chair­ e Silva, Apostolic Administra­ man of the CLU Chureh-State tor of Oporto.

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Forequarter Chops and Pieces for Stewing

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California - luscious Bunches 01

Grapes fiery Red Ripe -

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SHOWS La

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FuI 01 Flavor

Watermel'ons

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Pineapple Orange, pineapple Pearl P"enuppla Apricot

Juice Drinks Del Monte t~- 35e ~OR" GARDEN - Regular or pink

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Grape Juice 3 t.:s ;;~d:-L-4 Frozen

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.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fan River-Thurs·, July 18, 1963

15

Our Lady of· the Cape East Brewster, .Mass.

We are honored to have had a part in the Planning, Construction, and Furnishing of this newly ,dedicated church GENERAL.CONTRACTOR

J. PARKE O'CONNOR, J R. HERITAGE HOMES

BOX 117 • • SOUTH DENNIS, MASS;

CROWELL CONSTRUCTION CO.

SULLiVAN'S F. A. FOREST CO.

ROUTE 134 SOUTH DENNIS,· MASS.

428 MAIN ST.

• Road Construction • Parking Areas • Shore Protection ELECTRICAL WORK BY.

PAUL A La ·BRECQU·E BOX 265, EAST BREWSTER

HYANNIS 206 SOUTH MAIN ST. FALL RIVER, MASS.

COMPLETE ALl'AR APPOINTMENTS WOOD CARVINGS STATIONS OF THE CROSS

ARCHITECT

EARLE L KEMPTON, A.I.A.

Telephone 196-3514

HEATING AND PLUMBING

ARTHUR

~

BARONOUSKY

PEWS BY

DICK BROTHERS

LONG POND ROAD

DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF CHURCH GOODS

SOUTH BREWSTER

116 DEWEY ST., WORCESTER 10, MASS•

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . ., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0••••••••••••••••••••••••••••4

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,

4


16

THE ANC'- - "':ocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 18, 1963

Deplore~

Realtors' Position On Racial Discrimination By Msgr: George G. Higgins

Director, NCWC Social Action Depl!-rtment

The National Association of Real Estate Boards, repre­ lenting 74,000 individual real estate agents and 1,455 local boards, recently adopted a major policy statement on government moves to bar racial discrimination in the sale and rental of housing. En­ .

titled the "Property Owner's Catholic real estate agents­ and there must be thousands of Bill of Rights," the state­ them who beiong to NAREB­ ment was adopted last month· ought to take time out, between

If

by the NAREB's Board of Di­ rectors at its annual meeting in Chicago. It is NAREB's "solemn belief" that the individual property ·ewner must be allowed, under law, to retain ten s p e c i fie rights, w hie h ,for present pur­ poses, can be reduced to two: (1) The right to own and enjoy property tlCCording to his ewn dictates; (2) The right .. occupy and dispose ef prop­ edy without government inter. terence in accordance with the "'otates of his own conscience." Right to DiscriminMe To call a spade a spade, tIlia means that, in NAREB's opinion., pt'Qperty owners should have the legal right to discriminate again­ • Negroes. The loss of this right, MAREB maintains, "diminishel personal freedom and creates a apl'ingboard for further erosian ei liberty." In a related policy statement the NAREB Board of Director. restated its traditional pGsition Cbat if a property owner objects tit selling ·to a Negro, it isn't up tit the realtor to try to change IUs mind. "Realtors," the group said, -may properly oppose any at­ tempt by force of law to with­ draw from property owners the right freely to determine with whom they will deal with re­ apect to their property, irrespec­ tive of the reason therefore * * .. Owner's Right Earlier this year NAREB de­ clared that it is permissible for • realtor to make a sale to a. Negro or a member of any ather minority in a. white 'neighbor­ hood. This view was repeated in the latter of the two policy 8tatements referred to above. The statement went on to de­ tltare, however, that realtors, as agents of the property owners, "'have no right or responsibility to determine thE'! racial, creedal, er ethnic c~mposition of any area or neghborhood." A property owner, the state­ ment insisted, should have the right to specify any terms for Gte sale which he sees fit, and. the realtor, as his agent, has the duty to adhere faithfully ta these terms. Church Teachin: The philosophy (if you can eall it that) which underlies these two statements of. policy by the National Association of Real Estate Boards is almost II e8ricature of 19th -Century lai­ asez-faire individualism. The fact that such an impor­ umt organization still officiall, wbscribes to this philosophy an4 is still appealing to it M a jus­ tification for racial discrimhl­ ation in the field of housinl ia II\OSt disheartening. Flat Rejection It means, among other tbings, that the social teaching of the churches has had practically no influence in the real' estate pra­ fession.

Summer Fest1val St. Stanislaus Church, FaU River, will hold its second an­ nual Summer festival Sunday, JUly 28 at Urban's Grove, Tiv. erton. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Gromada are general chairman and treasurer respectively. Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski is honorary ohairman and will conduct a oar blessing cerelIl()ny at the event.

sales, to compare NAREB's re· cent policy statements on prop~ erty rights with what the social encyclicals of the Popes have to say on this subject. • They will find that the en­ cyclicals flatly reject the notion that anyone has the right to "occupy and dispose of property without governmental interfer­ ence in accordance with the dic­ tates of his conscience." If a property owner's badly formed conscience tells him that he can discriminate against Ne. groes in the sale or rental of. his property, then Catholic so­ cial teaching would say that the government has the right and may even have the duty • intervene, in defense of the Ne­ gro's right to decent housing, by enacting an "open occupancy" law. . Amoral Positlea Incidentally, II number of Catholic bishops and other lead­ ing spokesmen have already called for the enactment of such legislation in their own com. munities, and many ought 110 follow suit instead of taking refuge in the completely amoral position that they have "no right or responsibility to determine the racial, creedal, or ethnic composition of any area or nei­ ghborhood." That's a lot of doubletalk. Real estate agents are not ex­ pected to determine the compo­ sition of neighborhoods. On the other hand, they. are expected to use their influence to pro­ mote the cause of interracial jt/stice in their own profession. To shrink this responsibility ill the name of professional ethic. comes close to being hypocrit­ ical.

CONSECRATION OF NATIONAL SHRINE BELLS: Archbishop Partick A. O'Boyle Washington, blesses one of the 56 bells composing the carillon to be installed in the Knights' Tower of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. The ancient ceremony of the consecration of the bells is a more solemn ceremcmy than 1)lessing, and sets the bells apart for sacred use. NC Photo. 0(

BIIF ROAS1S ~.; 79: SWISS S1lAI 99 SWORDFISH .::" La 3CJC FACI RUMP ~::':T La85 If BACK of RUMP:: La1.09 ~ FRAIIIFOR1S ;~~:~ ~K~ 99 La

ROA5T La

C

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City Planning Expert On CU Faculty WORCESTER (NC) An

authority in the city planning

and urban renewal fields has

been appointed to a newly cre­

ated post in the schOOl of en­

gineering and architecture at the

Catholic University of America

in Washington.

Father Robert G. Howes 6f

Rutland, Mass., representative

for community relations-of Bish­

op Bernard J. Flanagan of Wor­

cester, will take over his new

post in September.

He explained that he will teach graduate school courses in city and regional planning; plan_ ning methodology; urban renew­ al and its legal implications, anll . st/burbia, while surveying the current curriculum in the field of "urban dynamicS:" Father Howes said such courses are uo. usual today ininstitutiGns al higher learning. He will also be a mem bel' of the Institute f@r Metropolitan Studies in Washin. boo.

Labor Leaders Meet In Santo Domingo SANTO DOMINGO (NC) ­ Sixty labor leaders ·from three countries have taken part in a seminar here July 1 to 15 spon. sored by the Catholic-oriented Independent Confederation of Christian Trade Unions of the Dominican Republic. The confederation, founded Feb. 5, 1962 is now the Domin­ ican Republic's largest labor 9T. .·ganization with 150 member trade unions. The confederation hasspGIl­ sored 30 trade union coursea ill tt.e past year and a half

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35

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Attorney General Says Free School Bus Rides Legal HARRISBURG (NC) ­ Pennsylvania'R attorney ~en­ eral has said tax-pail} school bus rides for parot'hial and

( I

other private school pupils would be constitutional. Atty. Gen. Walter E. Alessan. droni's opinion is based, in part, on the decision of the U. S. Supreme Court which ruled Bible reading and recitation of the Our Father in public schools is unconstitutional. Safety Is Factor The Supreme Court said the test is whethl'r an action violates the Church-State provisions of the First Amendment. It is nec­ essary to ask whether the "pur­ pose and primary effpct" is to advance or inhibit religion. Alessandroni believes schooi bus rides for ,parochial and other private school childr~'n have the "secular legislative purpose" of "getting them safely and ex­ peditiously to school." "This does not have a primary effect that either advances or inhibits religion," he empha­ si:lCd. The opinion advances the pos­ sibility of enactment of a bill backed by Catholic spokesmen to extend tax-paid bus services fA> all school pupils, regardless of the school they attend. Over Six Million Alessandroni, after giving his opinion to Gov. William W. Scranton, reported the governor "expressed sympathy" with the bill before the legislature, but the "cost must be considered be. 4,:lU1e tllis legislat',l" ,oo',;.oinn is so far along and the 1963 budget is practically set. The state Department of Pub­ lie Instruction estimates it will cost an additional $6,300,000 if all 600,000 parochial school pu­ pils in the state ride tax-paid ltuses.

Carmelite Fathers Reelect Provincial NIAGA RA FALLS (NC) Father Brendan Gilmore, O. Carm., has been reelected head 9f the Carmelite Fathers' D1na­ dian-American province ror a second three-year term. Father DeSales Snyder, O. Carm., of Chicago was elected Rf'W assistant provincial at a province chapter (convet1tion) here. He is former superior at .Foliet (Ill.) Cat h It I i c High School, and a former teacher at Mount Carmel High &h091, Chicago. The province includes mucll elf the U.S., and parts (If Canada,. Peru and Chile.

Aids Expansion WASffiNGTON (NC) - The Housing and Home Finance Agency has announced approval of a $220,687 federal advance for an urban renewal project in Mil­ waukee that will include use of cleared areas for expansion of Marquette University.

'Go Forth and Teach'.

Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Offers Laymen Opportunity to Fulfill Obligation By James M. Kelleher, M. Ed.

st. Joseph's Parish, Taunton If one were to contemplate the history of humanity, he mig-ht find certain fads a bit disturbing. For example, Man did not deserve to be created, nor did God need him in any way. Yet, in His infinite g'oodness, He called Man out of nothingness and made him exist. This in itRelf puts us forever in debt to the Creator, but it is only the be­ g-inning. In addition to exis­ objection that his family de­ parish already has an executive tence, God also g'ave the g'ift serves the little spare time he board and six b I' a n c h e s ­ of knowledge, freerlom from has, and that since charity be­ teachers, home-visitors, discus­ flickness and death, and the gins at home, he feels that it sion clubs, parent _ educators, greatest gift ever given - Di­ vine Life. Needless to say, Man had e a I' ned none of these. Adam and Eve wantonly threw away these treasures, and consequently we could not inherit the m. As a punish­ ment for original sin, God sub­ jected Man to ignorance, sick­ ness, death, and an inclination toward evil. Even though Man was allowed to retain his natural life and even his immortality, God deprived him of Divine Life. And thus the human race lived for many centuries, re­ duced to the natural level, but still endowed with an existence it had never merited. The most imposing and ex­ traordinary fact of all h.istory is that Christ gave us back the gift of Divine Life. After Man had ungratefully thrown aW;ly a share in God's Life, God the Son willingly became a man and let Himself be crucified so that we could again live Oft a lIuper­ natural level. No man, however object, can truthfully say that he is unfortu­ nate. On the contrary, all men should be filled with deep grati­ tude to God and a powerful de­ sire to follow Christ and do the comparatively easy things that He asks in return. If a man were to labor for Christ incessantly from now until the end of the world, he would still be infinitely in debt .to his Savior. Obligation to Teach The magnitude of what Christ did for us staggers the imaaina­ tion; consequently we owe"Him all' of our efforts and talents. But it would be a mistake to re­ gard our responsibilities as op­ tional or voluntary. To state the case frankly, it would seem that those who ,refuse ttl do their part of Christ's work on eartll will have to answer for thill omission. When Our Lord eom- . manded the apostles to "Go fortll and teach all n·ations," He did not mean only twelve men. He meant all of us. If one is at all disturbed by the implications of these facts then he will be encouraged ~ kno~ .that the Confrater..nity of Ch.n~han Doctrine is steadily gammg momentum in the Fall River Diocese. The Confraternity is the means through which every lay person can become truly apostoli~. Its members wor~ cooperatively to bring Chnst to people and bring peo­ ple to Christ. The writer of this article is unable to restrain a certain im­ pulse. At the risk of violating the standards of formal composi­ tion, I am going to address the remaining thoughts personally and informally to you - the in­ 'dividual reader. Frequently, when I ask some­ one to join C.C.D., he offers the

Korea Jesuit College Has New President

MOURNED:' Archbishop Gerald O'Hara, a native of Phildelphia and Apostolic Delegate to Great Britain, paRsed away Tuesday in London.

THf A!"""

SEOUL (NC) - Sogang Jesuit College, enrolling 420 students after three years' in operation, has chosen its second president, Father John P. Daly, S.J., of Animosa, Ohio. Father Daly, as head of the college's English department built a modern language labor~ atory using electronic tape re­ cording booths. He succeeds Father Kenneth Killoren, S.J.,

who has headed the college si nce its founding in April, 1960, by Wisconsin Province Jesuits.

',",~-

Thurs., J:.,.' 18, 1963

would be unfair for him to take on a new responsibility. Let me tell 'you about a man I met recently. For fifteen years he had tended dutifully to his job and his family, but ignored his apostolic" mission entirely. One day he was visited by a C.C.D. fisher who convinced him that the best example he could give his children would be to join C.C.D. and become a fisher himself. After resigning himself to the harmful effects that he thought this would have on his business and family life, he plunged headlong into C.C.D. work. To his amazement, he soon received a promotion in his com­ pany, and his family became noticeably happier and more harmonious. I think it was worthwhile to tell you this man's story be­ cause it illustrates the mysteri­ ous, yet logical, phenomenon which most C,C.D. members ex­ perience. A 1 m 0 s t invariably, people find that when they sac­ rifice their time for Christ, the mundane aspects of their lives have a way of taking care or" themselves. If this oounds un­ likely, try it and see. Influence Others If you are like most peeple, then you are reluctant W Jae­ come involved in anything which resembles selling. You cling to the securtty of letting others live as they please. As you sail inconspicuously across the lake of life, you are careful not to produce any ripples. You do not, in fact, want to have any influence on anybody outside of your own immediate family. But can you justify this, when, in your own parish, there are wull! that might go to Hell if you don't d<J something? Will you de nothing to counteract the per­ verted, malignant attitudes that your young people are exposed to? Will you complacently ignore the widespread materialism and hedonism which pervades the mentality of the modern world? Will you permit ignorance of divine things to perpetuate de­ linquency, crime, and even com­ munism? Consult Priest-Director Perhaps, by this time, you are mildly interested in joining C.C.D., but you are wondering just how to go about it. My answer is that it depends on what parish you are in. If your

Religious Superiors Reelect President ST. MEINRAD (NC)-Father James M. Darby, S.M., of Day­ ton, Ohio, Superior of the Cin­ cinnati Province of the Maria­

nists, was reelected president of the Conference of Major Reli­ gious Superiors of Mens' Insti­ tutes in the U.S.A. at its annual meeting at St. Meinrad arch­ abbey here in Indiana. Some 90 religious superiors from various sections of the na­ tion attended the meeting which had as its theme "Religious

Maturity in the Modern Aposto­ late." A dialogue Pontifical Mass offered by Archabbot Bonaven­ ture Knaebel, O.S.B., of the arch abbey, concluded the meet­ ing.

,•••• ' ••••••• T •••

~M-K Rpctourant featuring

helpers, and apostles of good will - then all you have to do is present yourself to the priest­ director or the board president and volunteer for whatever type of work you prefer. However, if your parish does not yet have the entire program, you should contact the pastor and tell him that you are willing to assist in setting up a complete unit. As you consider taking this step, remember that every suc­ cessful apostle gets his energy from spiritual fuel. He prays for the grace to remain zealous in spite of failures, and he receives Our Lord frequently because he knows that he cannot give to others what he does not have within himself. Also remember that there will be discouragement, problems, and misunderstandings. These will be your first indication that you are on the right traek. Christ tells us this frankly when He says, "If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me." (Luke 9:23) God does not pam per His best friends. Above all, remember to pray for the Confraternity of Chris­ tian Doctrine. The Confrater­ nity's spiritual bank of: p.rayers is its biggest asset. Pray a1s4l that the Holy Spirit will nonrish the seeds that are now being planted by C.C.D. and that this great age may someday be re­ membered as the time when the world began t<> 'acknowle€ l ge Jesus Christ.

Georgetown Honors Santiago Prelate WASHINGTON (NC) - Raul Cardinal Silva Henriquez, Arch. bishop of Santiago, Chile, was honored by Georgetown Univer­ sity for his outstanding contri­ butions to understanding among peoples of the Americas, Spain and the Hispanic World. The university gave the Cal'd­ inal its Axacan Memorial Award whieh commemorates the Axa: can settlement made by Span_ ianis in 1570 on the York River in Virginia. While working there among the Indians, five Jesuiia and three lay catechists were 'slain. Cardinal Silva Henriquez founded the National Conference of Catholic Charities in Chile in 1956. He is president of the In­ ternational Conference of Cath­ olic Charities and an initiator of Chile's land reform program.

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Maine Authority Orderrs Schools Drop ~lrayer GORHAM (NC)-Maine's top leg-al authority decreed the state's public schools must discontinue the current

practice of Bible reading and recitation of the Lord's Prayer. Atty. Gen. Frank E. Hancock issued a five-page opinion at a meeting of the state Board of E d u cat ion at Gorham state Teachers College here, holding that the 40-year-old law which required the Bible reading had been outlawed by the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision. Hancock also said that pamph­ lets .printed and distributed by the Department of Education. entitled "s u g g est e d Bible Rea din g s for Maine Public: Schools" must be discarded. He said the law and its application in the public school system waa "strictly mandatory" and bed been voided by the Supreme Court ruling. Released Time Continues The attorney general said the

Supreme Court decision does

not bar the study of the Bible

or those subjects in which hie­ tory of religion may be an in­ tegral part. . , He wrote: "It also would not permit the study and recitation in our schools of documents and books containing reference to God, flor would it prohibit the singing of religious hymns by students as long as the singing was not part of a regular reli­ gious exercise or program. Education Commissioner War­ ren G. Hill said the decision "at tJilis time" does not affect the eunent released time program now in effect for religious ia­ IItructioll of public school Bt»­ dents.

Spaniards Welcome Relic of St. Paul TARRAGONE (NC) - :Benj­ amin Cardinal de Arriba y Ca.­ b"o, Archbishop of Tarragona, anti Justice Minister Antonio It­ ~rmendi Banales led • delega­ tum which greeted the arrival here of a relic of th4! arm of at. Paul. . The relic was. brought here from Malta for the eelebratioD &f the Pauline jubilee year which marks the 19th centenary Of St. Paul's arrival in Spa... ' T,he relic will stay in Spein u.. til Jan. 25, 1964, when the Paul­ ine year closes.

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18

Brands Discrimination Outrage

THE ANCHORThurs., July 18, 1963

Continued from Page 1 million project for 478 low-in­ come families. "Our Negro brother," said Cardinal Spellman, "wants more than a house in America. He wants a home in America. He wishes to feel at home here * ,.; • "Until his ,desires are fulfil­ ·led, none of us can be assured of the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our posterity." , Cardinal Spellman noted that in his annual Christmas trips to U. S. armed forces personnel overseas, "I have seen white and Negro soldiers serving our country, suffering the. same hardships and confronting the

Church in Chi.le Gives·New Hope To Farmers WASHINGTON (NG) The Cardinal Archbishop of Santiago, Chile, sqid here that his country's tradition­ ally depressed farm workers have taken on, new hope since the Catholic Church began its own l~nd reform project last year. , "The workers think that thlt way the Church is approaching the problem is the only realistic way and they have lost .their confidence in the communist ap­ proach," said Raul Cardinal Silva Henriquez, S.D.B., in an interview. But it is not only the workers in the predominantly agricul­ tural South' American nation who have gained heart from the pilot reform project. The 55-' year-old Cardinal said the new cooperative farm communities were so successful in their first year that' even the technicians who laid the groundwork for the project were surprised. . As , a result of this success, accordirigto the Cardinal, some , ofChile'slarge limdholders have stopped looking on the· Church project as quixotic and are now taking steps to follow its ex­ ample... Example to Coun!ry .The project had its origin two years ago, shortly .after Cardi­ nal Silva became Archbishop of Santiago. The Bishops unani­ mously decided to dispose of all diocesan-o~d farmlands for the benefit of the workers. ,The aim, the Cardinal .said, was "to translate the teaching of the Church into deed, and thus give an example to the whole country." The Santiago Archbishop said that the 'Church is not a large landholder. But it was decided that the two dioceses possessing the greatest, amount of land, Santiago and Talca, would 'be the first to dispose of it. Cardinal Silva and Bishop Manuel Lanain of Talea imme­ diately' engaged agricultural ex­ perts to study the soils and de­ termine the best land use. They put lawyers to work studying legal problems involved in title transfers, and they arranged for sociologists and farm experts to train leaders who would be able to pioneer in the coopera­ tive venture.

Interfaith Council To Fight Prejudice PITTSBURGH (NC)-A Pittsburgh Area Religion and Race Council has been formed here by leaders of the major faiths "to pit the moral power of religion against the evil of racial discrimination." Heading the council are Bish­ op John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, Rabbi Solomon B. Frehoff of Rodef Shalom Congregation, and the Rev. Harold R. AI-bert, presi­ dent of the area's (!Protestant) Council of Churches. One of the first objectives of the council will be to publicize the need for churches to lead the way towards racial justice by inserting non _ discriminatory ciauses in contracts for construc­ tion, repairs, purchasing of sup­ plies and for other transactions.

Students Building School in Mexico WASHINGTON (NC) - Six­ teen students from Georgetown University here are spending the Summer helping Indians in the town of Chapantongo in rural Mexico build a school. The students said in a state­ ment before leaving that the Mexicans "could build their own school, but * *. when Mexicans .. and Americans do it together, - they build a house of friendship and a school of international understanding." The students make up the Jesuit university's Lay Mission Group.

same hazards of war." Yet, he said, "some' American. who would die together today, will not eat together, will not travel together, will nQt live to­ gether." 'This is an outrage which an American cannot tolerate," he said. "Doors cannot continue to close in the faces of Ne~roes as they search for jobs, as they strive for membership in some unions, as they seek the chance for specialized job training. "Surely the spirit of justice and equality which lives in the very heart of our great nation will not permit these inequities to continue." .

Honors Memory of Heroic Priest

MOVE-IN-CEREMONY: Francis Cardinal Spellman presents a symbolic key to seven-year-old Joy Denise Fuller during dedication and first move-in ceremonies marking the opening of the Msgr. Cornelius J. Drew Houses in New York. Pietured with the Cardinal are: Mr. and Mrs. George Fuller; Steven Fuller, 5, and Joy. Dennise Fuller. NC Photo.

20th Centulry Apostle Maryknoller Uses Media to

Cammunications Japanese

NEW YORK (NC) - A 41. said. "We had to convince them year-old American priest has that we wanted to help the Japa­

become a large-scale publisher nese people."

and producer in Japan in a typi­ Five Million Listeners

cally 20th century version of the

The broadcasts have proved missionary apostolate. _ so popular that 'radio stations Father James F. Hyatt, M.M., throughout the country have re­ is the fqunder af the Good Shep­ duced their charges to get them. -herd Movement which employs More than five million people the ma'ss communications media hear the daily programs. to bring the Christian message "We don't preach' because the to the Japanese masses. ,. people don't know enough about Father Hyatt, who has served Chi'istianity," he said. "We in­ 14 yeats in Kyoto, Japan, said form. But the program does offer ill all interview that he hit on listeners correspondence courses the idea for the Good Shepherd in Catholicism. More than 40,000 Movement when be realized that· J·apanese have asked for them." the Church was failing to make In 1960 the Good Shepherd an . adequate impact on public . Movement went into the televi­ thought in Japan because it had sion business. The programs not penetrated the mass media. were discontinued last year io. Leaflets, Radio favol,' of movie-making. - ''The Good Shepherd Move­ The films, however, can be ment is simply the use of mass adapted to television use as well communications literature, as showings in theaters, schools, radio, television, films and Eng­ churches, hospitals, factories and llsh-language classes - to bring other places. home the teachings of Christi­ anity," explained the Maryknoll Conference to Study missionary. .

. Father Hyatt's first venture

was the publication of leaflets on Lay Spirituality WHEELING (NC) - A week­

Christian belief. The next step was radio. Nearly every family end Conference on Lay Spiri­

tuality will be held at Wheeling

in Japan has a radio. "We bad difficulty finding a College here in West Virginia' station that would accept our starting Friday, JUly 26. The conference will feature radio broadcast," Father Hyatt panel discussions of spiritual facing the American Organization Backs problems Catholic layman today. ' Par ti c i pan t s wiU include Prayer Amendment Father Henry Sattler, C.SS.R., BALTIMORE (NC) - Balti­ more City Solicitor Francis B. assistant director of the Family Burch has announced plans for Life Bureau, National Catholic formation of a new organization Welfare Conference; Fat her _ "C 0 n s tit uti 0 n a 1 Prayer Joseph Kerns, S.J., of the •. Amendment, Inc." - to work for Wheeling College- faculty and a member of· the Family Life a constitutional amendment per­ Bureau advisory board; and Mr. mitting "traditional and devo­ and Mrs. Joseph Bonsignore, tional exercises" in public life. Creation of the nonprofit or­ leaders in 1he Christian Family ganization was prompted by the Movement.

U.S. Supreme Court's June 17 ruling barring devotional Bible reading and recitation (Xf the Lord's Prayer in public schools.

Providence, Sending Priests to Brazil PROVIDENCE (N C ) - The Providence diocese will send priests to Brazil soon to aid the Church in a priest-short region of that country, Bishop Russell J. McVinney has announced. Plans call for two priest-vol­ unteers to be selected initially for what it is hoped will become a major diocesan project. The Providence priests will serve in the Prelature of San­ tarem which eovers 514,000 square miles in northern Brazil. The area's 169,000 Catholics are presently served by 36 priests.

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INARAJAN (NC) - Homage was taken prisoner byvthe Jap­ was paid to Father Jesus Baza imese during the World War II D\lenas, Guam's' outstanding occupation of Guam, accused of hero-martyr of World War II, on hiding a U. S. Navy officer 'and the 19th anniversary of his withholding information about death. .movements of American forces. Bishop Apollinaris W. Baum. Father Duenas was tortured gartner, O.F.M., Cap" Vicar Ap- ' ostolic of Guam, presided at the but refused to talk with his cap­ annual Memorial' Mass offered tors. The priest paid with his for the priest-hero by Father life for his loyalty to the U. S; Paul Toschik in st. Joseph's -he was beheaded by the Jap­ church here. Hundreds from all anese. Shortly - after his death, American forces retook Guam parts of Guam made a pilgrim­ and several U. S. officen who age here to honor Father Due­ nas' memory. Father Thomas had been befriended by the Camacho preached the sermon. ,priest emerged from hid·ing Boyjsh-Iooking, Father Duenas plaees in caves.

,lebanon: Remembering Pope John XXIII IN SIDON, a cU, of Lebanon once known to Christ, Christian.. IWd MOslems' together attended a memorial Mase on June' for the late beloved Pope John XXIU. City officials proclaimed a minute of silence in his honor aud cler" of the two faUhl were preltlnt at the service, demonstl'atinc dramatically the spirit of fraternal love Pope John 10 ardentIT desired • • • MOsleJDll aDd Christians. about equally divided JDllke up over '5 per cent of Lebanon'. 1.1 mlllion inhabitants. In the oUy of KOUNEI· TRAB, however, there are only 800 CathoUClII ••• Members of the Greek Melchite rite, they are so poor they may have had to make do with a rented room for Divine services. Often laok of l'OODl Pre­ , Tent. many from attendiq • • • Inspired, by their Blahop. tIley are tryin~ to buDd a modest parish ohuroh, 2'l feet Ion• .., 11 feet wide. But. IS mOll6 are day laboren and fami handa tile,. ean't ,ive enou,h money to oomplete the bUildinl ••• ".000 .. ..eded. Can you PYe a lot or a Uttle to help!

PENNIES FROM RIDGEWOOD "Dear Monsignor Ryan: lam interested in helping UM Mi,ssionl. 1 have been laving pennies with my mother'. and friend's help to try to educate a Sister. 1 am 9nclO5-' ing $4.08 until I can save more. Will you please send me the name of a Sister so we can get acquainted?" -K.' O'T. Ridlewood. X. Y. 10 year. old On the occasion 01 Pope John XXDI'. ooronation ·lWnlversarr. tlte then CARDINAL MONTINI eelebrded a Ma•• In the AlIi­ brosian Rite. The Cardinal of Milan Is the successor of st. A-. brose. Father and Doctor of the Church, who ori,lnated one ., the several rites,ln the Western Church ••• Our AuociaUoa has the care of those 18 countriea where Eastern RUes predom­ Inate: Iraq, Iran. Greece, Yugoslavia, Jordan, Palestine, Eupt. Ethiopia, India. Brltrea and others. Our task II to help the pries'" Sisters aud brothers of those areas who minister to the spiritual and material needs of their people. Your a year membenhlIJ helPIII support these mlssionariel, .. do your May Offerin... frequeutly their only souroe of daily auatenanee.

'1

Will man be on the moOD in six years? That target date II in doubt. But while scientific minds struggle to advance this project, other minds work toward a different goal, Yes. It takes just six years of study for a young man in mission land8 to complete his seminary studies. The Moon Shot may be far off but Ordination Day il certain-that ls, with your help todayl $2 a week will pay one seminarian's expenses, which are $100 • year ••• We have many names of worthy candidates: .TOS. STEPHEN MENACHERRY and JOSE FRANCIS, AKKARAKA­ RAN of Bangalore, India; also SISTER ASSISI and SISTER BELLERMIN of the Carmelltes in India. Education of t:JH IlQ8 costS $150 each year for two years.

.un

. ENJOYING YOUR VACATION NOW? A roOD PACKAGB Hut io PALESTINE REFUGEES will make that pleaunt feeliDa even pleasanter,knowlnc you have helped a family for. whol. month. It costs $10. Or yOU may send a BLANKET ClOlItin. , . . . a needy BEDOUIN under our oare. PLEASE REMEMBER US IN YOUR WILL. Our legal tltle file THE CATHOLIC' NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. You share in the graces of 13,000' priests as well .. those of maDF Bilters and Brothers. Dear Monsignor:

I enclose ,. , ... , of the $SOO it takes to train • Sister.

or $ ' ... of the $600 needed for the six years trainin.

of a semluariau. 1 will send'. . . . monthly; or , .•••••

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., July 11, 1963

Pennant for Boston Deemed

Improbable but not Remote

.19

Parishioners Set Norton Bazaar

By Jack KineaTY Mid July finds the Red Sox hanging in there having completed, at this writing, half of their current 14 game Western trip. Many of the horse-hide savants made no bones about the fact that this was the Sox' make or break portion of their schedule. The inference was clear: riots who launched their fourth of football on Tuesda7 they didn't expect Need1e­ season with a full scale workout at An­ nose's crew to come out of dover Academy. Coach Mike

A

second annual Mammoth

Bazaar and Beef Barbecue i! an­

nounced for Friday through Saturday, July 26 to 28, by St­ Mary's parish, Norton. Rev. Wil.. liam D. Thomson is honorary chairman and Joseph Mello is general chairman of the three­ day fiesta, which will feature a band concert Saturday night and Sunday from 1 until closing. Music will be by the Tauntoft City BC\nd, directed' by John Gonsalves. Friday night from 5 to 8 a chowder and clamcake supper will be served with Don­ ald Garrity as chairman. A children's program will be­ gin at 2 Saturday afternoon and include a doll carriage parade, a pet parade, a blueberry pie eating contest for boys and a spe­ cial event for girls. Other con~ tests will be held for various age groups, directed by Judson Stafford. Twenty booths at the bazaar will include foods, toys, hand­ crafts, games, appliance:;, jew~ elry and blankets. Pony rides • and carnival rides will also be on hand. The beef barbecue, supervised by Michael Murphy, will be ift continuous operation, featuring· steak for sandwiches, with Port­ uguese bread available for mak­ ing them. A livestock auction will be the headline attraction for Sunday afternoon. Lennie Silvia, auc­ tioneer, will take bids for sheep, cows, and other animals, small and large. Joseph Alves is grounds chair­ man for the annual event, to be held at St. Mary's Parish Cen­ ter on Route 123.

the badlands still in contention. Holovak and his staff actually Truth to tell they may not. But got the feel of things on Monday moving in to when they conducted a talent Kansas City on search at East Boston Stadium Tuesday, the for· some 35 grid aspirants. No Sox had posted Johnny Unitas was uncovered, a fine 5-2 re­ alas and alack, but they'll un­ cord against the doubtedly try against next year. combined op­ The Pats, by the way, have the position of Min­ strongestllquad in their young nesota and Los history at camp this year and Angeles. Pesky optimism is quite high. The ac­ will settle for a quisition of Bobby Walston, sec­ 9-5 swing ond highest scorer in the NFL which means he history, the return from service hopes the Sox of 1960 regulars Oscar Loftus will attain a favorable balance and George McGee and a for­ POPE PRAISES UN PEACE EFFORTS: Pope Paul in the three game set with the midable array of free agents and VI greets U.N. General Secretary, U Thant, during an Athletics concluding today and promising rookies lend force to the four game Chicago series to this optimism. Among the draft audience on July 11, and presents Mr. U Thant with a follow. . choices are end Art Graham of commemorative medal. NC Photo. The Sox will close out the Boston College and his Matignon month of July at home beginning High teammate Don McKinnon next Tuesday night when the who played a lot of center for Athletics are due in. Los An:. Dartmouth~ geles and Minnesota come next on the agenda and then it's Title Bout August and the stretch run. For the box i n g. devotees Anything can happen. The there's the 'Midsummer July Yanks, plagued by injuries to 22nd - next Monday night ­ CINCINNATI (NC) - Father people" but representatives of Mantle and Maris, have been heavyweight championship bout Alexander Nardi, F.S.C.J., back the U.S. seldom are heard from, getting tremendous clutch per­ at Las Vegas, Nevada, where in Ecuador, heads a street Father Nardi reported. formances from Berra and .Sonny Liston will make the first cleaning brigade, debates with "The United States sends Howard at the plate and have moved out to an easy 5th game defense of the title he won at communists at dock workers' much held to Ecuador," he said, Chicago. last September 25 meetings, and puts together a "but it doesn't talk to the· peo­ lead over the Sox. . against the man from whom he savory banana soup. These are ple of Ecuador enough. . They: The consensus: the Yanks' lifted the croWn, Floyd Patter­ sidelines for the Cleveland-born need to hear from this country ability to stabilize a comfortable son of New York. The bout was lead without the services of originally SCheduled for Miami priest, who is pastor of San about freedom and democracy." Jose Obrero (St. :toseph the both of the M-M tandem would He has become expert in pre­ .Beach in April but postponed Worker) church in Esmeralda!! paring banana . soup because seem to indicate that they'll run due to an injury to Liston and and director of CarItas for the away and hide on the rest of the bananas are the chief staple A whist party to be held at I

Es~eraldas province in Ecuador. food of Esmeraldas.

league when Mickey and Roger an apathetic gate. Saturday night, July 20 iJl

Noone seems to be making a Father Nardi, a member of the

return to duty. This may be true, "Families buy a whOle staUt of yet the Yanks have not gained serious brief for the quality of Sons of the Sacred· Heart bananas for a sucre (about a Blessed Sacrament parish hell,

(Verona Fathers) came here for nickel)," he said. "The principal Fall River, will aid the South

appreciably on the Sox since the match but at least the bout taking 6 out of 9 from Boston is significant in that it is only a visit to the U.S. provincial work for many of the men is African mission of Rev. Robert

in back to back weekend series the second time in forty years headquarters of the Verona loading bananas "aboard ships. sevigny, O.M.I., a Fall River

native.

in late June. And half of those that the heavyweight title was Fathers at Sacred Heart Semi­ Most of them average one day's games could easily have gone to seriously placed on the line in nary in nearby Forestville. work a week. a location west of Chicago. Lis­ Boston. The· streetcleaning group con­ ton ·is rated a 4-1 favorite on sists of' 12 men he organized Writen' CramP the basis of. his quick dispatch for the purpose of giving the Hous~s ONE STOP

No one, I think, truly dares to of the champion (2:06 1st round) people of Esmeraldas, a city of Believed unique hi the DiO­ SHOPPJNG CENTER

rate Boston a serious pennant .at·Chicago, The champ will also some 35,000, an example of cese, St. Joseph's' parish Fall eontender, possibly because he weigh in with a 40 pound ad­ deanliness. . • TeleviaioD. • FurnUuN . . River, has inaugurated a 'house has got cramps from having his vantage. " .."When' squad gathered up hunting service for pai·ishiorierll. • Appliance, • GrocerJ fingers crossed 10 long. Yet, the Early Wynn's 300th victory club b right up there, and with waa even "more anticlimactic the rubbish and garbage and Members of the parish are re­ ·114 AlleD 8i., New BeM.' the Yankees going into a lIel'ia than Robert Moses Groves" long begen to burn it, others started quested to notify the rectory WY....... '·9354

when they become' aware . of with . the free-swinging Twins. ago. Like .Grove, . Wynn plans to to join in," he reported. Only it could develop into a .look out . continue on, and so he should, time will tell whether the available rentals in their ~eigh­ example will be taken up borhoods, and the priests iii below situation. based upon what he has'shown throughout the city, however, turn advise those seeking living Talking about Boston u a this year in his one a week quarters. ~'This plan might help runnerup reminds us of the Pat- pitching role for Cleveland. We he .added. Where A in keeping good people in St. trust he'll fare better then the Nickel a Stalk Joseph's parish and making all Lanacoming Lefty who just GOOD Debating with communists Is con<:erned quite happy," say. couldn't get going after racking Rev. ~orge E. ~ullivan, pastor. necessary, he said. The commu­ up No. 300 and subsequently Continued from Page One went into retirement. At any nists "are always talking to the Means A Ilon, be it Doted, his successor, rate, Wynn has reached a mile­ Rt. Rev. John J. Shee. completed stone attained by only 12 pitch­ the building of the new church. ers in the history .of the game, Well.Known Priest a feat remarkable enough for Continued frOm. Page 1 . In his pastorate of 18 yean any tpan. rtHigion or the history of reli­ Ksgr. Shea became one of the PGA Title gion and· its relationship to the 94 TREMONT STREET best-known priests In the area,

anei' he was "synonymous with Teeing Off this afternooft In advan<:ement of civilization." TAUNTON, MASS. the growth of the parish in' quest of hiS first PGA champion­

T.1. VAndyke 2-0621 North Dighton." Ship, will b~ golfer's legendary

FoUowing' him, from 1949 to Arnold Palmer. The site is the AVILA (NC) - Some 60,000 1954 was Rev. William Dolan, Dallas Country Club and the women from all over Spain took ~I and next came Rev. Thomaa purse, yet to be determined, is - SERVING Walsh, who served from 1954 to expected to be in excess of the part in a dialogue Mass offered here by Bishop Santos Moro FINE ITALIAN FOOD record high $72,500 posted last 1956. Under Rev. Francis MeCarthy, year. Defending champion is Briz of Avila to mark the Tere- . j who was at St. Joseph's from diminutive Gary Player, the sian Year. The Teresian Year 1956 to 1962, the parish saw a only foreign competitor ever to commemorates the founding 400 RESTAURANT and LOUNGE change in its membership, due win the PGA. Hanging in the years ago of Avila's Convent of on Lake Sabbati~ St. Joseph by St. Teresa of to the removal of Mount Hope balance, al!Jo, are ten places on Avila with four novices, the be­ the Ryder Cup team which will I. 1094 Bay Street Open Evenings Finishing Company, employer of many parishioners, to the South. meet Great Britain's best in ginning of the Teresian Carme­ l TAUNTON VA 4-8754 Many parishioners followed the Atlanta, Georgia, Oc~ber 11-13. lite reform. enterprise to its new location and their homes were taken over . by young couples, predominantly Catholic. Now an estimated 80 per cent of the local population· 11 Catholic, and there is a large proportion of children. New at Father Curry became pastor We will now be open EVERY DAY

upon the transfer of Father Mc­ Carthy. He heads an active par­ including Monday 11 :30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.

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20

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. July 18, 1963

Hopes to Better Church Position In Hungary

Forced From Sudan, Broth'er Juan Pia ns Retu rn to Kenya,' Africa

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A Brother who was forced out of the Sudan is returning to an­ , other African country which he 'said 'accepts missionaries be­ cause it "realizes the necessity of education and technical aid." Brother Juan, S.C., will leave . New Orleans late in July to work at the Sacred Heart Broth­ ers foundation in Nkubu, Kenya. He first went to Africa in 1953 and worked in the Sudan until -. being forced out in -1956. _From 1956 to 1959 he worked with the Brothers at A1oko1um, Uganda. A native of New Orleans, he has taught since 1959 here and in Alexandria, La. The Brothers weren't bodily forced out of Sudan, Brother Juan said,. but the government "made it impossible to meet all of their requirements." Ea.ger to Learn Government officials said the Brothers could continue to teach provided they taught Islam as well, as Catholicism and pro­ vided they did 'their teaching in Arabic. The people of Uganda and Kenya are "aggressive in their eagerness to learn," Brother Juan. said. "They are very nationalistic .

and 'Uhuru' (freedom) is an obsession with them," he added. In these two nations, he said, the government "realizes the necessity of edUt~ation and tech­ nical aid, so the white popula­ tion and Religious aTe accepted."

, ROME ~NC)-The acting head of the Hungarian Bish­ ops' Conference said here he is very hppeful that negotia­ tions between his communist­ ruled nation and the Holy See can improve Chureh-State rela­ tions there.

Pope Paul Receives Hungarian Prelates

Bishop Endre Hamvas of Csimad spoke _in an interview published by the Rome news­ paper, n Tempo. He told the Rome daily' that his only reason for coming to Rome was to rep­ resent Hungarian Catholics at the coronation.

VATICAN CITY (NC -Pope Paul VI received in private aud­ ience two Hungarian, prelates who came here for his corona­ tion: Bishop Endre Hamvas of Csanad, the acting head of the Catholic hierarchy in Hungary; and Msgr. Pal Brezanoczy, Ap­ ostolic Administrator of the Archdiocese of Eger. The Pope also saw Franziskus Cardinal Koenig, Archbishop of Vienna; and Maronite Rite Pat­ riarch Paul Meouchi of Antioch who led a group of Maronite Rite bishops and laymen to Rome for the coronation.­

Knights to Meet BOSTON (NC)-The Knights of Lithuania will hold their 1963 national convention at the Hotel Bradford here starting Wednes­ day, Aug. 14.

He was asked about the pos­ sible success of interrupted negotiations between his govern­ ment and the Holy See regarding Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty, Pri­ mate of Hungary - now living in .asylum at the U.S. legation in Budapest - and better con­ ditions for the Church in Hun­ gary.

VISITOR FROM ROME: Rev. Wladyslaw Rubin, left. rector of the Polish Pontifical College Rome recalls Senii- . nary day,s in Beirut with his class~ate Rev. Adalbert '. .. . . '.. .. Szklanny, nght, assIstant at St. PatrIck s Church, F~ll River.

He answered that he is "opt!­ mistic about the possibility of reopening negotiations and of their positive results." He added that "on the part of the Hun. garian government there is good

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