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..::.---,--~~ NEW, HIGH SCHOOL "DEDICATION: The Most Reverend/Bishop blessed the cornerstone of the new high school for ~rls( in Taunton on Friday. Left picture, the Bishop blesses corn,erstone assisted by Very Rev. Patrick H. Hurley and Rev. William Dolan. Center picture, the )3ishop speaks over radio at the event significant in ,the educational life of Taunton and the Diocese. Right picture, the Bishop and Mother

119 Booklets Contain Projects' for -Council

The ANCHOR A.n AnclOt" of the Soul.

, VATICAN CITY (NC) - A blueprint of what the Second Vatican Coundl will do is contained in 119 booklets now being send to the bishops of the world. By a conser~ vative estimate these booklets with their 2,060 pages represent a highly concentrated distillation of the work of over 1,000 men who, in the three years of preparatory work for the council, put in more . . . Commission by the than 20000 man-hours of effort. Th~se fIgures, whIch Preparatory 10 preparatory commissions and are exclUSIve of the work of ,

8ft,., 11M rinn-8T. PA.UL

Fall River, Mass., Thur,sday, July 19, 1962

Vol. 6, No. 30 .

PRICE tOe

1!l62 The Anchors4.oo ,ll..b_...;' .-;..

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Mary William,· S.U.S.C., Provincial of the Sisters of the Holy Union of th~ Sacred Hearts who will staff the school, inspect the cornerstone inscription, which is from Virgil's "Georgics" and reads: Felix qui potuit rerum· cognoscere causas. (Happy was that man who could learn the causes of things.) The Sisters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts have been in Tau~ton since 1890.

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tioly See Insists, on Latin As Language of, Church

Ordinary Announces Transfers Mos,t Rev; Bishop James L. Connolly has approved reassignment of four members of the Congregation of· the

full-time employees, should con- the two preparatory secretariats. vince any observer that the After the Central Commissions council has not been prepared reviewed them and they were , given the approval of Pope John, hurriedly. Instead, no previous' council has been more thor- they became the agenda for the forthcoming council. oughly prepared. The agenda will not 'be a rigid . These booklets represent the program for the council Fathers. "schemes" or the, projects which Not al~ matters in the text will were submitted to the Central Turn to Page Fourteen

Reports Rise in Catholic ·'Newspaper Circulation

WASHINGTON' (NO)-The Holy See insists on wide \l;raining in Latin because the Church must have on~ lailguage in which it can talk to all~ its people, 'ArchbIshop Dino Staffa, secretary of the Sacred Congregatiqn of Se~i. 'n'aries and Universities, told Slve . trammg " f Lt'; I 0 a 10 R't I e semsome ,300 educators a t the; inarians in Latin. The decree Cat hoI i e University of' was a followup 'to ~ February America here. The Archbish- apostolic constitution of Pope

Sacred Hearts and one Mission'ary of Our Lady of LaSaiette af. .fecting Diocesan parishes. ,'" TUrn to Page Eighteen

op spoke in Latin. 'The congregation which Archbishop Staffa serves issued ,in June a lengthy series of direct' es calling for more inten-

~eprese!'tatives tion of the Catholic Press Directory, published by the Catlioiic Press Association here, reveal that, this substantial in. NEW YORK (NC) ~ A crease in Catholic newspaper circulation was offset by a loss council of Jewish Orthodox in Catholic magazine circula-: rabbis has opposed any secution and resulted in a decline in lar "representations on be~ total U.S. Catholic publication . half of the retigious Je'wish circulation' of less than one per community" at the Second Vaticent-0.6 per cent. can Council in October. The grand total U.S. Catholic The Rabbinical Council' of press circulation is listed as 26,America resolved at its conven· 953,511, compared with the previous year's total of 27,133,481. tion here that such representa. As' of January 1, 1962, there tions "may jeopardize and imwere 130 Catholic newspapers, pair the improvement of Chrislisted'in the Directory, the same tian-Jewish relations." Rabbis Abraham AvRutick, fig)l,eas last year; and 118 Catholic magazines accepting president, and Israel Miller, advertising, plus 253 U.S. Cath- first vice president of the counolic magazines not accepting ad- cil, praised the "sincere efforts vertising-a total listing of 371 of Pope John XXIII, who had directed that references to PROTECTOR: A m let 0 Catliolic ,magazines in the U.S. 'perfidious Jews' be eliminated Altogether, the new Catholic Cardinal Cicognani has been Press Directory lists 545 Catho- from the Holy Week liturgy." appointed Cardinal Protec- , lic newspapers and magazines in The two leaders maintained, tor of the Institute of the the United States and Canada, however, that it would be imReligious Sisters of Mercy of one fewer than, the previous proper for· Jews to participate . in a council that was purely rethe Union, according to a year. ligious in nature and concerned 'Circulation of weekly dioceletter received from the san newspapers increased by 7.8 primarily with Christian docHoly See by Mother' Mary pt:. cent from 3,913,093 last year trines. Interfaith cooperation Regina Cunningham,R.S.M., to 4,217,364 as of the beginning can be strengthened through other channels, they said. . Mother General. of 1962.

Joh.n, "enti~led "Veter?m, ~apienba, .wh!ch held up Lat10 as the prmclpal tongue of the Church. . , Archbls~op Staffa, who came IV to the Umted States for the recent Serra International convention in Philadelphia;" said that "my message is to express the mind of the Holy Father for the restoration and promotion of Latin language." , From the Church's earliest days, he continued, Latin has Members of the Society of been "a bond of great value for St. Vincent de Paul are ob- the Catholic Church, a protecserving the saint's feast day 'tion for Christian truth and the today by attending Mass and instrument for the proper perreceiving Holy Communion in formance of our sacred rites." their pari~h Churches. "Today," he said, "opponents Fall River particular council of the use of Latin desire to see will hold a general meeting in it destroyed; hence, its propoconnection with the feast at 3 nents feel that, without further Sunday afternoon, July 22 at st. delay, every means should be Vincent de Paul Camp. It is used to· restore it to its pristine noted that a plenary indulgence state. "This must be done for the' may be gained by members complying with the rule of the proper preparation for studen,ts society regarding the celebra- for the priesthood, as well as fo! the preservation of our culture." tion of this patronal feast. "True," the prelate said, "the Members are invited to bring families to the camp for the Church first used the Gi'eek general meeting, at Which plans language and each individual for the annual retreat, Ozanam nation received the faith in its Sunday and other matters will own tongue. ~ut the Church in· Turn to Page Eighteen be discussed.

Council Members Observe ' Feast Of St. Vincent

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NEW YORK (NC) - Circulation of Catholic newspapers in the U.S. increased by 5.5 . per cent' during 1961 to a new record high of· 5,305,212, while circulation of Catholic magazines in this country at the beginning of 1962 totaled 21,648,299, a decline oJ; 2.2 per cent from the previous year. Figures released in the 1962-63 edi-

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At Council

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Relig ious Orders Follow Bishops' Lead in Chile

THE ANCHOR-Di.ocese of , Fall River-Thurs., July. 19, '1962 . . - .. .

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Co.uncils 'Milestones' 'In Church History

SANTIAGO (NC) - The Chilean Hierarchy's plan fOf' distributing, all diocesaDowned farmlands to tenant

CINCINNATI (NC}--Ciricinnati's Archbishop .Karl J.' Alter predicted that the Second, Vati~an ··Council will be "a milestone'~ in the history I of the Church. The prelate said that "in -the broad sweep of its interests, the council that opens Oct. 11 will be is expected to be' "a concentramore closely parallel to the tion of attention on the interior Council' of Trent than any spiritual life of the Church.'" Unity-No "immediate results'" other." (The 19th council

farmers has proved contagioutl. .Many religious, congregatioBfl are following suit. They .~aYe approached Raul Cardinal Silva Henriquez, S.D.B., Archbishop of Santiago,' to ask help ia dividing their oWn farms among the families who have been working them. The coordinator of the Alliance. for Progress, Te9doro . Moscoso, has publicly praised the Chilean Bishops for their wqrk in planning land reform. He has also agreed to begin . study with a committee appointed by Cardinal Silva on possibilities of granting a 2()..· year loan to aid the land-di9tribution project. Meanwhile, in every diocese in Chile special committees are at work drawing up plans to parcel ou·t to tenant farmers whatever land the diocese owna. The land distribution has already begun. About 12 miles south of this capital city, tl rich dairy-farming and truckgardening estate belonging to the Diocese of Talca has beoo turned over to the people who have been wQrking on it. The 455-acre estate produces a good income from farming and alse has large sandpits which are commercially exploited. This is belieVed to be the first instance in Cliile where land has been given over to the workers. .

met at Trent, Italy, from 1545 toward Christian_unity are foreseen, but "the council will unto 1563.) A member of the Central Pre- doubtedly take a, very. definite. paratory Commission engaged in step forward preparing the way planning the ·forthcoming ecu- for "reunion in God's good time."· menical council, the Archbishop . Aftermath- "There must' be indicated during an· interview cultivated a readiness and genthat' the Council "will review erosity of mind to accept decievery phase of ChUrch life-doc- sions of the' council with full trine, liturgy, law, missions, faith and obedience." Word of ilJaution training of the clergy, sacra"Every council of the Church ments, revision .of lit!1rgical .has been a milestqpe in the hisbooks." tory of the Church," Archbishop Interrnption POssible . Other highlights of the inter-. Alter declared, "and this 'particular council will certainly be view: !PAPAL HANDSHAKE: Pope John welcomes Philip\ Changes - "We can look for of the same character. "I would put in a word of cau- pines President Diosdado Macapagalto, the Vatican during more local' government of the Church on the national level and tiqn," the Archbishop said, ''Dot a private audience at the papal residence. NC Photo.' less dependence of the bishops to expect any dramatic or worldon Rome in matters of local sig- shaking results. Let us say, for nificance.".· . instance, with respect to ,reunion ~~cWffi~~i<e@~ DH.!T~ct Duration-The 'initial' session of the Christian world that the . ·may be interrupted Dec. 8, and council will take a very definite . resumed after Easter, "but no step forward in creating a better . one can possibly know how long climate, but no one who is inWill TV via communications France and Britain to the U. S.' formed and knows the' difficul- satellites give you a front-row The A T & T Spokesman, who the sessions. may last." Emphasis-No "doctrinal cri- ties that stand m the way would seat at the ecumenical council wished his name withheld, said: "It will·be between two and three sis" faces' the Church, but there expect any immediate results." opening)n Rome on Oct. 11? It seems very unlikely that the years before live TV via comAmerican public win be able to munications satellites will be ~f~ic@$ . yiew any lengthy portion of the completed for the average TV Second Vatican Council, 'but it viewer's use, and therefore at is ver~ possible that wi~in three least that long before wide covM~~s Oirdo _ ...: . years It may see extenSiVe cov- erage of such an event as the ROME (NC) - The Pope has same tIme the Lateran Palace, erage of such major Church ecumenical council is feasible." indicated that he plans' to unite once the home of the popes', is events on TV: He stressed that the field of FRIDAY-5t. Jerome Aemilian, Confessor. III Class. White. . all administrative offices of the lar?ely empty and offers ample This assessment was' given in communications via sateilite is Mass ?roper; Gloria; Second Diocese of Rome under the roof .offlce s p a c e . . . merely in the experimental state Washington by a spokesman for Collect St. Margaret, Virgin of the ancient Lateran Palace. ' Pop,e JO.hn, In a reference to . the American Telephone and and much has to be accomplished and ,Martyr; no Creed; ComPope John noted that St. Jhhn Rome s 1 m ~ e. n ~.e postwar Telegraph Company, w h i c h on both the scientific and adminmon Preface. Lateran is hailed as the' first g row t ~, saId. istrative levels before global T~day the placed the Telstar communicacathedral of the' world and, that Lateran I~ no longer. s~tuated o.n tions satellite in orbit. Although TV becomeS a smooth-working SATURDAY - St. Lawrence of Brindisi, Confessor and Doctor Rome is the first diocese of the the outskll'ts of. t~e CIty,. but IS he did not say that. some portion reality. of the Church. III Class. White. world. 'He' called it opportune surrounded by It. '. 'of the' council might be' carried Mass "'roper; Gloria; Second now if all diocesan administralive on TV, spokesmen for the Collect St. Praxedis, Virgin; tive offices are ."centralized three major TV networks did no Creed; Common Preface. around one point of immediate not rule out such a possibility. ·SUNDAY-VI Sunday After and ready contact,as aroUnd a The 17.0-pound TelStar made Pentecost. II Class. Green. single fireside." WASHINGTON (NC) - An it possible' for a TV picture of Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; At present the offices, of the archbishop from the" Church's DAVENPORT' (NC)-KniJihts . the American flag to be transPreface of Trinity. ' Diocese of Rome/are scattered central . administrative staff iB throughout the city. At the of Columbus of the Davenport' mitted from Andover, Maine, Ro~e, Italy, ,said he is pleased MONDAY-St. Apollinaris, Bishdiocese have collected $20,000 across the Atlantic Ocean to op-and Martyr. III Class. Red. for the Papal Volunteer program France and Great Britain. The with the cooperation .e xisting Mass Proper; Gloria; Second between the clergy and laitY in following day, Telstar transmit-· 'New M.agaz. ine" of the diocese. Collect St. Liborius, Bishop the U.S. . '" ". ,. Bishop Ralph L. Hayes .of ted TV pictures' from both and Confessor; no Creed; Archbishop Dino Staffa;' sec- . NEW YORK (NC)-A new Davenport said he'was "very Common Preface. retary of the Sacred Coogrega':'. TUESDAY -.Mass· of pre,vioUtJ 'monthly magazine, Eucharist, . pleased" with the campaign and .tion of Seminaries and Univer--' ·will replace The Sentinel of the praised the 'work of the knights Sunday. IV Class. Green.' ·Mass sities, made this observation' . Blessed Sacrament,· published in publicizing the Papal VolunProper; No Gloria; Second during a C9urtesy ,visit to the here since 1898 by the Blessed teer movement. . Collect St. Christina,. Virgin Sacrament Fathers. Father John '. Twenty-four, K. of C. Councils . MILWAUKEE (NC) _ Sue- headquarters here of. the Naand Martyr; no Creed; Comtholic Gartner, $.S.S.. is editor of the are working in the program. A ceSsful .union of the Ortbodox' tional. Cli Welfare: Conmon Preface. new magazine,' which will pub- special gifts drive, completely Church with the Cat hoi ic'" ference. . ' '. ~DNESDA Y-St; James, Aposlish its first number in Septem- separate, is under the direction Church can result only if Ortho- .; IJ:l _a bri.ef speech, Arch~i~op tle. n Class. Red. Mass ProPer; her. of Johnny Lujack, former Notre dox pastors are first rendered Staffa expressecl "sin~ere grlitiGloria; Second Collect· SL tU.de" for.haviQ.g had' the oppor-· Dame All - America football Christopher, Martyr; Creedo favorable to sueb a move, a 'to ; "experience the cotunity player; now Davenport auto- priest said here. Preface of Apostles. Necrology mobile dealer.' .' .If this work at the pastoral' operation. between the clergy. THURSDA Y~St. Anne, Mother level is' not done 'f~t; "tbeIfthe .and laity in this ~ountry.'~ . of t}'1e Ble~ Virgin Mal'7• .JULy ~ , The Archbishop also· .said: n Class. White. Mass Proper; Rev. George B. McNamee, 1938, Legion of .Decency lriot Orthodox Church at large will,... "Th,ere is' n~ d()ubt in my,. mind '. «;;loria; no Creed; Commoa be favorably inclined tow-; , Pastor, Holy. Name, Fall River. The following films are' to ".' ht be about . Preface. .... ard any unl'ty that mIg f'th the Ch impetus and . .progress .. ,JtJLy IS added to the lists in their ftspeC_ achieved at the summit."· said, 0,. e. _. ~~h l!:.ere, , and this is . F th Ed d E F' SJ ,·bound to mcrease more.. and Rev. Michael J. Cooke, 1913, tive clilSsifications: a er war . InD,..., as- more amon th Ie i this Unobjectionable for general' sociate profes~r ~ theology ·at great natio~." e peop .. o. Pastor, St. Pa~ick, Fall River.' patronage: ThreeHundred Spar- Marquette Uruvel'Slty. . tans; The WHd Westerners. He said "there can· be no I---------~-~-~ Unobjectionable for adults and doubt" tnat "if and when the FORTY HOURS . adolescents: Sword of the Con- union of th.e Catholic and O~o- <.> queror. dox Churches takes place, it' will DEVOTION' Objectionable in' part for all:" begin at the top." . Chapman 'Report (pseu'do-scien"But how far down through . July 22-5t. Pius X, ~. Yartific'SurVey of female sexual be_ . the ranks' will it penetrate?" mouth havior; of questionable value); he asked. "Will it ,mclude the St. Stephen, Dodgeville. INVESTED IN 94 TREMONT STREET .. Gypsy (rationalization of mor- 'Metropolitans?'WiU all the pasCATHOLIC CHURCH July 29-SlF~ancis of AssiSi, . TAUNTON, MASS. ally questionable occupation); tors go along with the patriAND, HOSPITAL BONDS New Bedford. Shoot' the Piano Player (amoral, .archs? And will the faithful at Tel. VAndyke 2-0621 . In -Units of $500 or M~re , Holy Redeemer, Chatham pessimistic, vulgar and sUggeslarge join in such.a movement?"., . . tive); The Tartars (suggestive). 'Father Finn' said that "the Aug. 5--St. George, Westport. .pastOr . • . ·is the man a60ve . Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven .arlnneap~1is, Mlnneso&a W,hite·s 'FarmDairy Anglic'ftn in C ssock volent all whOtoward must t>e rendered beneSt. Theresa, ·South . AtY unification of the for de~iled information tlebOro. '. "SPECIAL MILK write to Ate'a th 0 rIces~lng IBI· Churches before the. summit 'talks can produce. the desired Our OMi C,! Aug. 12-St. Theresa, New CHARLES A. MURPHY COVENTRY (NC). When result." . , . Bedford. Tested Herd" .. , Registered Represen~tl"e Archbishop Francis,J. Grimshaw . Our Lady of Victory, 146 Pond Street of Birmingham blessed the new Acushnet, Mai.. WY ~-4417 Centerville. . Winchester. Ma-. Church of St. John Vianney here, ,ustrlClln r Ina.hons st. Joseph, Woods ·Bole. PA8-1696 •. Special Milk the local Anglican vicar attended VIENNA (NC)-This year 25 wearing' cassock and surplice. per cent .more priests are sched• Homogenized Vlt. 0 MI.. 'rBS iLNCBOB Parishioners of St. John Vian- uled to be ordained in Austria • Buttermilk 8eeoJid ClaD P.. ~.",,,a.id at· rau Shl.... ney describe the vicar, the Rev. than were ordained'in 1961. A' • Troplcana Orange 11I-. Plllt1labM WVJ ~ at &Ill .. A. Rowland Smith,· as a "g<)Od total of 116 diocesan and 34 ReRi8bIaAlI A..eue I'ab ItiftJ ....... biP • Coffee. and Choc. Milk tIM c.tIlolIe Preu ~. "- OIoc_ of neighbor" to the parish, wbiep. !igious priests will be ordained • Eggs - Butter ~ FaU Ill.... f;&.otSubol~riDi_ • price biP -u. was created three years aea. in the near future.

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_ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thyrs., July 19, 1962

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BON VOYAGE: Innumerable relatives, and friends bid bon voyage to members of the second Diocesan Pilgrimage to Europe. Top left: Joseph Feitelberg, left, and James F. Mooney, third left, bid farewell to Rev. C. W. Sullivan, S.J. of Boston, second left, and Bishop Connolly. Lower left: Margaret Sullivan, Mary Dwyer and Anna Malene, seated, receive the well wishes of the standees, left to right; Margaret Dwyer, Mrs. Martin McDonald, Mrs. Bernard Sullivan and Mona Shea. Right photo: Mary Ellen, Tansey' and Jimmy Tansey ready to leave the ship that will bring their uncle, Very Rev. Arthur W. Tansey, to the shrines of Europ p

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L. Early Fathers Made Country Dependent LOS ANGELES (NC) Before ever writing a Decbration '0 f Independence, America's founding fathers

Celebrezze Is' 17th Catholic in Cabinet ~ASHINGTON (NC)-When Anthony C.Celebrezze, Mayor of Cleveland, takes over the post of Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, he will become the 17th Catholic among some 470 who h~l.Ve serv~din presidential cabinets. A look at the record shows these other interesting. facts: Only nine of the 35 presidents of the United States have had Catholics in their offi, more than Qne cabinet post, York. and Frank C. Walker of cial familjes. TheY-are Presi- Roger B. Taney as Attorney Pennsylvania; former Attorney's dents, Jackson, McKinley, General and Secretary of the General J. Howard McGrath: of Pierc~" Buchanap, The~dore Treasury;' and Charles J.Bona- 'Rhode Island and James P. Mc-

made a declaratioll of dependence upon God, a priest said Rooseve\t; Franklin D., Roose- parte as Sec'retary of the Navy Granery of ~'ennsylvania and here. and Attorney' General. former Secretary" of ·Labor This declaration of depend- ~lt; ,Truman, .Eisell~ower an!! Three Catholic members of James P. Mitchell of New JerKennedy. ' ence, said Father Ower. Quigley, . . , 130' y~ar~ since the first 'presidential cabinets la'ter re- sey. C.M., in a sermon in St. ·Vi- . it ceived "~ppointments to the' U.S. Catholi~:w.as appointed ~o' serve. In addition to' the 17 Catholics biana's ca,thedral, is found in a as .cabinet meJPbe~.,The:cab- Supreme Court, Roger B. 'raney, who were. nominated and actual~solution adopted July: 12, 1775, who served as Chief Justice for ly . served in U.:;;. presidential. inet mambel' was Roget .Brooke by the second Continental ConTaney,' of Maryland,. Attorne~ '28 years;, iS36-1864; and Justices cabinets, three others embraced gress. General, 18'3,1-1833, and, Secre- Joseph' McKenna of California, Catholicism after leaving their The resolution asks: - • (i898-1925) 'and Frank Murphy cabinet posts.' They were Sen. -"That these colonies may be tary .of th~ Treasury, 1833-1834, Michigan, (1940-1949). ever under the care and 'protec- u~~er Presi'dent, Andrew 'JackThomas Ewing of Ohio, SecreOnlr ~ive Catholic members tion of a kind Providence and , son. tary of the Treasury urider PreThere were nQ Catholics in of' previo'us cabinets are living sident W. H. Harrison in 1841. be prospered in all their interpresidential cabiriets during a, today:' former Postmasters Genand, Secretary of the Interior ests"; era'" James .A. 'Farley, 'of New under President Z. Taylor, 1849-"That the divine, blessing 37-year period' between 1860 ,to ' 50; Luke E, Wright of Tennessee, may descend and rest on' all 1897, and the 24-y~ar period be-":" civil rulers and upon the rep- tween 1909 to 1933. Since that Secretary o~ War under both President Theodore Roosevelt, resentatives of the people in Year Catholics }lave been named their several assemblies and to the cabinets' of Presidents 1908:.09, and President William READING (NC) -Douai Ab,Franklin D, Roosevelt, Harry,S. oonventions"; bey, a Benedictine monastery H. Taft, 1909-10; and Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico, Secretary -"That virtue and true re- Truman, Dwight Do' Eisenhower and secondary school founded ligion may revive and flourish and John F. Ken~e.dY. 'near "here in 1903, will be rebuilt of the Interior under President Warren G. Harding, 1921-23. throughout OUr limd"; Four With Truman completely to meet its new _"And that America may A rceord number of four At least one Catholic is known needs: soon behold a gracious interpo- Catholics served' in the cabinet 'The community traces its ori- to' have refused a Cabinet nomisition of heaven for the redress of President Truman; President gj,ns indirectly to an English nation. He was former Congressof her many grievances . . ." Franklin D. Roosevelt had three, Benedictine community which man Frank Hunt Hurd of It was upon this foundation, although he had actually nomitook refuge in the French town Toledo', Ohio, (1840-96) who was said Father Quigley, that the nated a fourth, Sen. Thomas J. of Douai during the Elizabethan -a Catholic convert at the time. cornerstone of American freeWalsh of Montana, who died in persecutions, and worked closely He was offered the post of Atdom was laid on July 4, 1776. 1933 before he could take ofwith the university which had torney General by President fice as Attorney General. Grover Cleveland. been founded in that town as a Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, 'President Ken ned y, first sort of Oxford-in-exile. Eisenhower and Kennedy each The Benedictines of that com- Catholic President of the United named two Catholics to their munity returned to England in S tat e s, has nominated two DA VENPORT (NC) - Bishop cabinets, and Presidents Jack1818, giving the monastery and Catholics to his cabinet, which Ralph L. Hayes of Davenport has son, McKinley, Pie rc e and school over to th~ community com p I' i s e s the administrasummoned the faithful of his Buchanan named one each. of St. Edmund, which had for- tive heads of the ten Federal diocese to a Crusade of Prayer Longest service of a Catholic ,merly been located in Paris. departments. They are his brofor the success of the ecumenical member of a presidential cabiThese new Benedictine tenants ther, Robert F. Kennedy, named council. " net was that of James A. Farat Douai carried on a school Attorney General in 1961, and' "These prayers should be ley of New York, who served as the're until forced out of France the new HEW appointee, Celeoffered during Mass, while pre- Postmaster General from 1933 to by an anticlerical government brezze. Th,is department was pal'jng for the reception of the 1940 under the second Roosein 1903. They returned to Eng- established in 1953 and Celesacraments and at all times of velt. land and settled at Woolhamp- brezze will be the fifth person private and public devotions," to head ,it.. Two Catholics have served in ton, near here.

Vincentian Seminary Has New' President NIAGARA FALLS (NC) Father Joseph T. Cahill, C.M., has been appointed president and superior at St. Joseph's College, minor seminary of the Vincentian Fathers at Princeton, N.J.

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Declines to End Bible Reading In Schools

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 19,1962 .

Advises Wife· Ta.ke Strong Stand Agai'nst Selfish'ness ..

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Father John L.Thomas, S.J.

Asst. Sociology

Prof.~t.LoDis

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"Shouldn't a husband talk over .plans with his wife first before including others? We've· been married almost a year. I'm 26 ; he's 31. I've just 1earne4 that he~s invited _ his parents 'and sister to go with us 'on vacation. Shouldn't

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Judging from your deScription me fIrst? On SImIlar occa- of the ,problem, Josephine, it sions I've asked him to tal,k seems likely that your husband's things over' with me 'first, difficulties stem from 'sevellal but he just blows up and I have sources. He apparentl~ assumes to give in. How should a wife that as head of the family ~e.has h .n die this the right to make all deCISIons problem?'" Wit~lOUt co~sulting his wife. Although you Smce thIS patter!1 was more probably fee 1 or less common among some that your probnati?n~l ?roup~, he ma~ onl.y . lem is unique, be Imltatmg hIS father 10 th~s Josephine regard. On the other hand,hls you' v e des~ one-sided approach may. also cribe(1 .a rather result from thoughtless selfcommon source centeredness or over-attachment of ten s ion in to his family. e :, r I y marriMust Have Conv.iction, ages. Strangely How do you handle the sltuaenough one of tion? Well, Josephine, it won't the most difficult lessons that be easy, since he has managed y~ung couples must l~arn is that 'to get by with. it .for some. time. marriage mea n s· , partnership. Hence yo.ur fIrst step wI~1 be .They may. readily acknowledge. to tell hll~ calmly . but firmly that marriage makes them "two _tha~ ?,ou ~Il1 not abIde by such in one," but' they're less likely. decI.s1Ons m ~he future. . to agree on who is to be the Elt~er he flr~t. consults you. 10 "one." Of course this is the rna kIn g deCISIons concernmg wrong way to state the problem, ~atters related to.!our .mutu~l for. unity in marriage, since it mt~r:sts, or you WIll reJect hIS involves two equal human per- deCISions. sons must result in a "we," not . Second, if he "blows up," as - a ·"~ne."· . he has done in the past, you . ., must show him that 'you. mean Practical ImplIcatIons b ' b Y's ta n d'mg f'Irm. Th'IS . . usmess There are seYE;ra~ re~so.ns why . implies that you. have thought eouples may fmd It dIf~ICUl~ to ,the problem through 'carefully adjust to th~ practical Im~hca- and are ·firmly convinced, that tions of marital partnershIp. In you must take this posi.tion if th~ first place they may .not your marriage is to work. agree on- what these practical 'W 't H' 0 f implications are. . al .Im ~. . 'T''le roles of husband and wife. In other words, don t ,thre~ten 'I d f' ed I'n our to, take a stand, or don t taKe a are no t c;: Iear y e m h hI . ty.V ' y ar10US na t'10 nal groups' stand,. unless you are t oroug h t soCIe 'II t ' lements of convmced that, come w a may, S ' .mg . t I r e aln some e . their traditional views, while YOTuh~rel gOt . tOt ~ee It t~rough. recent changes in the status of IS as ,~om IS very Impor, h llenge all a tanto It w1l1 . do no good to women s h arp I y c . threaten, protest, or make a · f' 't' . pas t d e 1m IOns, .f tId t Americans .may still feel that sce~et 1. you are no 't~eso vet l()l a man should be head of his ma~n am your POSI IOn a a family, yet there is little agree- cos s. ment concerning what this f!:ence you must be prep~red means in ractice.. to face ~ome. temporary un.p t pleasantness, but you must Walt ,Convenient Arrangemen him out. Another source of difficulty Future. at Stake ,stems from the fact that up unOnce he learns that his favtil marriage men and women are orite technique of "blowing up" acc~s.tomed .to ,?la.n. and make no longer works, he may be dec~slOns prImarily- m t~rms of. ready to give the problem some theIr own n.eeds and d!!slres. serious 'thought. If you know a Many, find it difficult to shift good counsellor, this is the time the focus of their concern f~om to go to him as a couple. Should themselves to a couple-centered this prove impossible; start out basis. They continue 'to think by clarifying the real source 'of and act as if their trip to the your disagreements. altar was a solo and their new I think you will find that the partnership merely a convenien,t mere attempt to define your dif-' arrangement to satisfy their ference will prove highly beneperJ50nal needs. , ficial. If he has belm ignoring Such thoughtless self - cen- your rights out of mere thought_ teredness is characteristic of lessness or selfishness such disadolescence but unfortunately, cussion may open his 'eyes: If he all too many partners never de- rejects your rights on principle" velop beyond this stage. he will learn from your firm In-law Influence ' stand that he must redefine the A further source of 'difficulty situ·ation. . in early marriage may be the Abo~e all, be convi?ced' that influence of in-laws. Marriage' you w1l1 succeed only If you are necessarily involves a weaning f~rm. It may be difficult for a process in which the partners ·tlme b~t remember, your whole must learn to shift their pr~mary . future' IS at stake. o loyalties and emotional. attachments' from their famiiies of Oblates in Canada origin to ·the new unit they are in the process of initiating. ame 'Provincial 'Some husbands and wives conOTTAWA (NC)':"-F~'ther GertinU'e to orient' their lives around aId Cousineau, O.M,I., pastor of their respective famil~es instead Canadia~ Martyrs parish here, of'making their .partnership the has been named Provincial of S~. focal point around which all Peter's Province of. the Oblates other relationships must re- of Mary Immaculate in Canada. volve. He succeeds Father L. K. Poupore, who· has headed the Oblates' English-language province Chides Court for the past six years. The provWASHINGTON (NC) - Vice- ince includes St. Patrick's ColPresident Lyndon B. Johnson, lege here, parishes in a number speaking at a luncheon in con- of dioceses, and its members are, nection with the baseball All- active in Indian education, mis.. Star game, noted the pligl1t of sions and retreats. Coadjutor Archbishop Anthe Washington Senators, mired in last ;;>lace in the American thonyJordan, O.M.I., of EdmonLeague. Johnson said: "I am ton, Alta., Bishop Fergus 0'among those who have prayed Grady\ O.M.I., Vicar Apostolic for the Washington' Senators- of Prince Rupert, and' some 275 priests, scholaStics and Brothel'll if the Supreme Court. doesn't are members of the prov.ini:e. mind."

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NEWARK (NC) N~ Jersey's Gov. Richard J. Hughes has rejected a . demand by the New Jersey chapter' cif the American Civil Liberties Union to" end religious .practice In the state public schools. Hughes; attending the annual GovernOr's Conference in Hershey, Pa., held a presS~onfer:' ence at which be said: "We are going to keep this practice until the Supreme Court says ,we can't." . Emil J. Oxfeld, ACLU chapter president, threatened court action if the Governor did not halt the practice. The Governor said the state wIn go to court to protect the practice and pointed out it already has withstood a court test. "Of Sacred Origin' The ACLU has received some "25 or 30" complaints in the wake of the U. S. Supreme Court decision June 25 in the New York State public school prayer case, it said. The complaints are being stUdied, Oxfeld said, and those "which raise the issues most squarely" will be selected for court tests. The New Jersey ·law requires · recitation of five verses from the Old Testament in publie schools each day. It permits, but does not require, recitation of the Lord' prayer and bans other religious observances. The law NEW MARONITE MISSAL was 'upheld by the New'trersey Supre'me Court in 1950. The U.S. Supreme Court dec~ned to 'consider an appeal from that .de- cisi9n., . .Gov. Hugl1es pointed ,out that Chor-Bishop JEid offers a "pop- 'in the New York case, the p' 'er .ular, coricre,te and illustrated was formulated and recommenform" of the Mass, concentrating, ded by the State Board of Regents. He added: ~'New Jersey'. upon highligbts of service and prayer is of sacred origin." text.. Texts are reproduced in Arabic and Aramaic,together.with a Bomb ~rrDest's· Room "clear, literal translation" into English. Explanatory notes of a Capi'tal Congo doctrinal lmd liturgical character LEOPOLDVILLE (NC) - A accompany the text proper. home-made bomb was hurled Phonetic versions of, many into the bedroom of a local pasprayers are also given. tor. The manual is suitable for use . 'The priest, FatlJ.er Robert at Mass by those wishing a Brisbois, C.I.C.M., was not inclearer understanding of the jured. But the bomb blew the Maronite lit~rgy. · wall of his room out and caused other material· damage. Included is a letter from CarF:or safety's sake. Father dinai CouSsa, pro-prefect of the Brisbois left the' parish house Sacred' Orip.ntal Congregation in Rome, The Cardinal writes: "I at St. Christoph.er's parish. should like to express the wish Nuns of the parish have a160 that this pUblication, .which rec': · moved away temporaril,Y. ommends itself so well by its aCcuracy and orlgimility, may have the . uccess that it deserves by means of a wid~ diffusion among the faithful who will thus be able to sense the warmth of their Liturgy and of the tradition of their forefathers."

CHOR-BisHOP EID WITH

New, ~an~al by C'hor-Bishop Eid Explains Maronite Litur~y to All '.'The Maronite Catholic Mass,'" just published by Chor-Bishop J.oseph Eid, pastor of St. An:thony of the Desert Church, Fall River, is a contribution to the understanding of the Oriental rites of the Catholic Ch~rch. The occasion of its llUblication; notes the Chor-Bishop, is 'an religious tributEt to the Faith of our people, on the occasion of the dedication of Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Seminary, Washington, D. C., by His BeatitJ.lde, Paul Peter Meouchi, Maronite Patriarch of Antioch' and the whole ·East." MaronUe Problems In a preface, the author says t hat Maronite Catholics, ·although supported by the Holy See, may be' absorbed into other rites because of their small number, the foreign character of . their 'liturgy and the language problem. To' 'lssist in a greater understanding of the.Maronite liturgy,

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Prelate Warns of Forces Trying to Defeat Chu,rch

THE ANCHORThurs., July 19, 1962

Ed ucator Urges Honest Appraisal Of Automation

CHARLESTON (NC)-A prelate 'here coupled a caution hgainst "certain forces" trying to "defeat the Church by dividing her people" with a lament over the U. S. Supreme Court ban of an official prayer in New York State public schools. "In the criti"The recent Supreme Court cal issues that confront de~ision has deeply disturbed today our Church and our those Americans who hold that nation, indeed our common our nation has been; and by right humanity, it is time for humble prayer and .christian confidence," Archbishop Paul J. 'Hallinan of Atlanta, Ga., asserted at the enthronement of Most Rev. Francis Frederick Reh as the ninth Bishop of Charleston in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist here. Francis Cardinal ,Spellman, Archbishop of New York, enthroned the 51-year-old Bishop who was consecrated in New York City on June 29. Some 15 archbishops and bishops, hundreds of clergy, Religious and laity witnessed the solemn,· colorful ceremonies. Trust Bishops, Priests Archbishop Hallinan chose as his text a quotation from the last sermon of the Most Rev. John England, first Bishop of Charleston, delivered in 1842-"Be with your people, be of them, win them to God-Guide, govern and Instruct them." The Charleston diocese today has "developed beyond the dreams of her first leader," Archbishop Hallinan said. "Four dioceses now mark the apostolic map" that Bishop England "covered on foot and on horseback," he added. ' "Here is a laity, seasOned and mature, already well-versed in that responsible cooperation with the clergy, called for by our modern popes," the Archbishop said. "They work with, their bishops and priests because they trust them." Understand Justice, Courage "There are, it is true," Archbishop Hallinan cautioned, "certain fOI'ces in the South as hi the North which do not understand this. In the face of. social changes and moral issues, 'the,se forces are trying to defeat the Church by dividing her people. "Regardless of what you may read," he continUed, ''the Catholic people of this diocese are DOt torn by a divided loyalty, between their Church and the past. They know what full justice mean~ven more sigDifieantly, they know what 'fun cOurage can do.

France DecoII'ates College' Founder MONll'REAL (NC) -. Father Amable Lemoine, a fOWlder of College StanISlas, which is directed by Diocesan priests from France, h3$ been decorated by 1.tle French government as an Officer of the Legion of. Honor, military. Father Lemoine, a former captain in the French air foree, has been' active i,n 'education in CanlIda for more than 20 years. The presentation 'was made on behalf of France's President Charles de Gaulle by Boyer de SainteSuzanne, Consul General of, France in Montreal. , Jean Marie Gauvreau, director ,of the Institut des Arts Appliques, said that while the'decoration was' a military one Father Lemoine also had'merited tribute for his peacetime work in edueation and other fields.

Says Statue of Saint Violates Separation NORFOLK (NC) - Norfolk City Council will study a businessman's request that a statue of St. Francis Assisi be removed from the city-owned botanical garden on the grounds that its presence violates Church-State separation. Mayor W. Fred Duckwol'th assured Eugene Sawyer, operator of a local driving school, that the council would take up Sawyer's complaint. The $6,000 statue of' St. Fran,. ds was donated in May to the garden by the Marion Crosby Garden Club.

ought to be conscious of its duties to God," the Archbishop said. Rights of Majorities "These Americans are as aware of the delicacy of the problem of religious pluralism as those who applauc" the new decision," the Archbishop continued. "They wish to protect the rights of non-religious' minorities, but they are equally concerned to protect the rights of religious majorities. "They do not intend to permit the First Amendment of the Constitution to be violated by the official establishment of a state-protected religion, that of secular humanism," Archbishop Hallinan said. ' "These Americans today ask what 'else ~an be expected" if this exclusion of so-called 'government-written prayer' is followed by other decisions - the contents of which have already been proposed by Justice (William 0.) Douglas - casting out' every vestige of religion, ceremonial and patriotic references to God, tax-exemption of religious organizations, eveh the GI Bill of Rights, from American public life."'

Reports Increase In Smut Cases WASHINGTON (rolC) - Alltime record highs in mail obscenity investigations, arrests and convictions were recorded by the Post Office Department during the fiscal year 1962, which ended June 30; PostrriasterGeneral J. Ed'ward Day indicated ,he did not expect the vigorous law enforcement vVorkto be hampered by the U.S; Supreme Court decision handed down June 25 in the Manual El1terprises case. Day said<not one ~ase handled by the, department during the 1962 fiscal year was processed til rough the administrative procedure of which 'the Supreme Court was critical in its decision. He said the' court's ruHng iii the Manual Enterprises involved ad~nistrative action taken on April 28, 1960 "under the previous Administration." AI'tests' in mail' 'obscenity cases in<;reased 32 per cent and convictions 33 per cent over the' previous fiScal year, D'ay reported. "More obscenity investigations were c~nducted by' the department during the fiscal year 1962 than in any year in postal history," Day 'said. He added that convictions' 'were obtained in 98,8 per cent of all ,cases brought to trial.

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Expect Cano,nization Of Blessed Peter VATICAN' CITY (NC) -The Sacred Congregation of Rites held. a general meeting in the presence of Pope John to approve miracles worked through the intercession of Blessed Peter Julian Eymard, 19th-century French priest who founded the Congregation of the Priests of the' Blessed Sacrament. The general meetirig was one of the last steps prior to canonization. In the case of St. Martin de Porres, the final vote on the necessary miracles took place last March 20. He was solemnly canonized on May 6. At the same meeting in which they pressed the Eymard ,canonization toward conclusion, the cardinals of the Congregation of Rites voted on the heroic nature of the virtues of Father Luigi Palazzolo, who founded the Institute of the Little Poor Sisters at Bergamo, in northern Italy, in 1869. '

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WASHINGTON (NC)There should be less double' talk about automation and more d ire c t information about what it can do; an expert on industrial relations asserted here. "Too much pablum has been forc~-fed, too much double talk has been poured at the man whose approach to problems is direct, 'orthright, aggressive," sa; - Father Dennis J. Comey, 'S.J., director of the Institute of Industrial Relations at St. Joseph's College, Philadelphia. The Jesuit priest said at a conference on social ethics and automation, held at Georgetown University, that "there is needed a factual, honest, accurate account of automation, what it is, what it can do, in a language geared to the man who moves his lips to read," "Tell the man in clear terms," continued Father Comey, "that his 'job, even his type of job, has been deadened, Forthright honesty will spark an accommodatIng determination. Then tests will be more revealing and retraining may effectively remedy a badly diagnosed misery." Chides Employers He also urged that "automating' industrialists cultivate economic patience." "The mood is current," he \ stated, "that any investment SOUTHERN SCOUTS: Rev. Joseph L. Hart, S.S.E., must show prompt dividend, that Buzzards Bay native, with B,oy Scouts Wayne Bru, left, profit be maintained at a conand Walter P~ters at Our'Lady of Lourdes Church, Mobile, sistently growing pace. Starting Ala., where boys received Ad Altare Dei award. Father from such an expressed premise prices are jolted upward, tax· Hart, an Edmundite, is n(}w pursuing graduate work at relief is sought, depreciation alCatholic UniverSIty. ' lowances ate demanded as the price of development and expansion. "Too readily employees are laid off, furloughed, discharged, , as a cost-cutting device: Little wonder th,at job hunters scoff at Rev. Joseph L. Hart, 8.S.E., was pleasant, moved into the the exhortation to adopt a longson of 'Mrs. Catherine Hart, of sacristy of the church. From 1956 to 1959 Father Hart, range measurement, when emBuzzards Bay, and the late C. then pastor of St. Catherine's ployers fix their sights no furJoseph Hart, who is - a World War II Navy veteran, probably Mission in Elizabeth City, N. C., ther than the next payday." worked ,.mong the Negro people feels he is 'now a full-fiedged there. His territory covered nine missiollary veteran as well. Fr. counties. Hart was ordained to tne priestNEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loy"Bigger than Rhode Island, r hood sev'en years ago, and has ola University of the South here think," is the way ,Father himspent almost all of the time self described it. (Incidentaliy, has received a grant of $13,600 since then working in the souththe National Science ern mission~ of the United States. according to 1960 figures, North from The young Edmundite priest Carolina is slightly leSS than one foundation ,fo:'" an' in~service institute fo~ high school teachers per cent Catholic.) first be~n his, missionary travels in August, 1955, when he Since 1959 and until just re- of science and mathematics. was aSsigned to a missionary cently, Father Hart had been as- Sept. 15,-1962 to May 18, 1963. training program in the Raleigh, sisting the Edmundite Pastor Of N. C., Diocese, under the Bishop Our Lady of Lourdes parish in R. A. WILCOX CO. of that d~ocese, Vincent S. Mobile, Ala. But his missionary Waters. activity was, temporfll"ily at OFfiCE FURNITURE Here 1!'ather cared for mis- least, interrupted when he was • lleoell rOl' hamedi.'" Oe.liyeJY SIODS in Boone' and ~lowing assigned not long ago to higher • DESKS • CHAIRS Rock and did trailer chapel work studies at the Catholic UniverFILING CABINETS. in the SUmmer. -versity of America in WashingA feature of his Summer min- ton, D.C. • FIRE FILES • SAFES istry, unusual to "Yankee" Cath_ Edmundite Fathers and BrothFOLDING TABLES olics, was the holding of Catholic ers. are active in education", par_ AND CHAIRS "revivals" for the benefit of in- ish, and missionary work. This terested non-Catholics in the year they are observing the area. This Father did with the quarter-century mark in the 22 BEDFORD ST. help of' Edmundite seminarians southern missions of the United FAll RIVER 5-7838 ass~gned 1;., the missions during States. their Summer b rea k from studies. Motel Missionary While at Boone, Father Hart lived In a motel room in the ,Winter and, when the weather Earn our new, higher

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Voice of ,'the 'Founders

THE ANCHOR--:Diocese ofFall River-Thurs., July 1,9, .- ... ; ' ",' . '. . . 1962 .

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It is not often that a group of in(li~iduals has to plead tob~ allowed to spend money. Indeed, such a 'statement ':A ,FIRM"" could cause wonder if it were not immediately e~plairied. But this is the situation that is confronting Catholics REt/ANtE m. an ever-increasing degree, and this in the field social ," '. , welfare. " The age is one that has seen more and mor~;,g~vern­ mental programs alopg the lines ,of soci,al welfare;, ~me, of these, most of these, have been necessary, involving as they have large segments of t,he citiz;enry and operating on scale that only government; committed to' the general welfare, has 1;>~en able to handle, both financially and administratively. But there is the' concomitant danger that all of social welfare with all, its ramifications will be looked upon as government's business and taken over by governmental interests as their exclusive province. ' To this possibility, Catholics object vehemently. The Secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Charities said recently that Catholics must show the value they place on the traditional domain of private charitable operations. Catholics must indicate in no uncertain terms that they place a high value on personal responsibility for sqcial welfare. "If millions and millions of Catholics will demonstrate that they hold dearly the privilege of aiding their ileighbors in time of need, this right will never become extinct, neither will it' be over-ridden by some governmental program." , , ' 0 To Catholics, the right and privilege of helping those erhnolA.~h WEEk Chunch in need is not simply a duty owed by the more fortunate to the less fortunate of the world; it is not simply the By REV. ROBERT W~ HOVDA, Catholic University proper use of material means by the "haves" towards, the "hav~-nots." It is a living out of the works of mercy and TODAy-st. Vincent de Paul, . , S I X T H SUNDAY AFTER a means of sanctification for the giver. ' Someone has said All too often the recipients of aid are looked upon Confessor. Nor does the' theme PENTECOST. that the Church 'bega'n to deCline change today-perhaps because as the beneficiaries. Actually, the greit beneficiary in love is the' Gospel. With Camil- when her real estate holdings any work' of charity is the one who gives, for he is blessed lus it was the sick, with Vincent ,expanded beyond one corner of by both God arid man' for his action. it was the, poor. And always it a cave in Bethlehem. It is not '

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a gift of self, a personal apostola,te, a g~nuine answer to the challenge of the "Ite, missa est." , " ,For the Christian, the relief of human need' is not a matter of chooshlg between the institutional helps of society and government, on ,the one hand and personal help and aid on the other. Both must be marshaled to meet tremendous needs., But when the hitter, the Personal eoniinitment; is missing, the for-' ,mer eiiil' become ~ld' and, bureaucratic, and inhuman.

Disservice By Mothers

In any discussion of family problems nnd the alarming increase in divorce rates, both in this country and abroad, .. the factor of working mothers keeps' cropping up~ , The learned and dynamic Bishop of Salford in'England added his v.oice 'once again to the debate in' urging legislation to, keep mothers out of the labor force: ' , Bishop Beck urged Catholics'in today's affluent society to set the standard of austerity and self-denial to coUnter the lack'of r¢Straint that currently characterizes marital attitudes. If· Ca:tholic mothers whose work was not needed 'for the support' of their families were to withdraw from their jobs, they would give to society a striking example'of ' , right values-:-honi~s'over ho'u~, affection over finan~E!s, TOMORROW -:- St. jerome concern for the spiritual rehitionshipg ,over material ~ ~miUaD, Confess~r. "Despise not ~ , your 'own fleSh,'" is ' the ,#rst sessions. reading's, meSsage from the The working mother is aU too often motivated more ' prophetIsaias~ God is"not teach"; by a shrinking from' her true vocation of full-time, wife' ingus· to reverence our own and mother than a need' for her support for the family•. , ,~,dies tn this ~ssa'ge,. but to She is afraid to commit' herself one ,hundred per ,c,erit to, .' 'feer.eXI~rtehne' ci're suc>fufrerm .f~g~IOW, ' men, ,to , . ' , • >' ,",', s as our,own. her role as home-maker.'She IS more at home In the wQrld'· For they are "our flesh." , she lived in as a ,single person-the office, the ,shop,. the, ' Today's saiilt!1nd example of business world, th~n in tnenew worl~ sh~ ,l:I~' accept~~ <;:hristian love, committed" his marriage. And she never gives herself the opportunIty, 'to 'hf~ W the care of >~ban~oned find out the 'happine.ss that this ne'Y .worldholds. out.tO ~~:l~~:~. ~~:e~::~tc t~:~~~~ her. She ups the famIly standard of hvmg by her fmanclal izations sometimes fail that the role, and then struggles to keep working ,to hold fast to Christian must defend others, the-often-unnecessary luxuries that her, working has the weak, the oppressed, that we turned into family necessities. " " fa~l ,on our collective face as Th ' k' th . ·th h . th' 1 witnesses when our only defense , e wor mg mo er VIes WI er spouse m" e r()Je is ,for our own interests and oui' of family provider-casting herself into a more aggres- institutio~al concerns. sive'role than her nature is suited to, and making her spouse feel his own inadequacy in the' role his nature is meant SATURDAY - St. Lawrence Brundisi, Confessor, Doc tor. to .fulfill. ' And the working mother takes away from the labor Teachers are as necessary as the apostles of action we have been pool a position that a man could be or would be doing if she celebrating this week. The imwere in the home. portant thing for the Christian It is too idealistic to hope that this situation is even to' remember is that if the proper going to change radically, but the ideal must be stre~sed Christian action is sacrificial love', the proper ·Christian· teachand held up for emulation. And the mother who works 'ing is sacrificial , love also. when it is not absolutely pecessary should be reminded of , ~he disservice she is doing to marriage, to her spouse, to Overseas Vincentians 'her family" to, herself, to the community. "

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QFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE' DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue ' Fall River, Mass. . OSborne '5-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. John P. Driscoll' Re.... Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden

SYDNEY (NC)-Conferences of the Socie,ty of St. Vincent de Paul in New South Wales have "adopted" 40 society conferences in India and Pakistan and are giving members there financial assistance to care :fur the poor in those lands. Besides this help, the 'society in Australia 'assists its, counterpart in Fiji, will finance the cost of travel for 200 Japanese members who will, attend a meeting of the society in Tokyo in August, and will bear the cost of printing in Chinese 1,000 copies of the society's manual for Chinese-speaking' members in Hong Kong.

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(;oming ,.Vat.ican· Co'~ncil By Rev.Wm. F.

Hogon,C.S.~

, -=--" Stonehill P~fessor

17th General Council

The' Council of Constance had provided for thes~ tematic convocation of ge.. eral councils at stated intefloo

vals; the Council' of Basie (Basel), Switzerland in 1431 was the second one ,provided forbyConstance, since the first one did not materialize. ,Pope Eugenius IV' appointed Cardinal Cesarini as his legate and presi,dent of the c 0 u n c i 1 ; three cardinals, 19 bishops and 29 abbots attended, along witlh over 300 ecclesiastical scholarS and proxies for absent bishopS. In view of the small number of episcopal members ,the Po~ 'ordered the dissolution of tl1e council; another reason for this order was the fact that Po~ Eugenius was planning to caD. 'another council in Italy to meet with the Greeks to discuss re'union between the East an4 West. Immediately there was rebeltrue. But there is' a grain' of lion at Basle; the Pope was reptruth in it of, which we must be rimanded by the council and the aware: the truth that it is not council members wrongly a&enough for the Church to grow serted the supremacy of the in size, for more of us to be 'council over the ,papacy.. worshiping ~ound this altar Eugenius IV eventually issued Sunday after Sun<lay. a bull continuing the council,; ' ,There is an ~ward, spiri,tual the attendance' at which, 'had growth in the Church and ill risen to 500 members. This cou.... her members which is of even cil managed' to reach an agreegz'eater importance. Today's Mass ment, to all external appea»celebrates the chief sacramimtal ancesj withtheHussite~ inDoaids to this gro;Wth. The G9Sp~1 hemiato the effect ' that, the:,: presents uswitli: ';i proplietie could rebeive Holy CommUlliOia si~, of ~e :~tl(iha~~st,' the b~~~ ,under both 'speci~ for' acceptiDi Sacrament. And .the first read1o.g , ; Catholic doctrine. " t~a~he~ ~~y; our. bapt!.s~~l. ,1ni:- ' C~uncil in ltal' ,,~, ,trabon actually makes us paf'ti.:.. " ., Y, cipar\ts iii 'death 'and resur~ Pope Eugenius issued an order rection 'of Jesus Chri'st. ,,>', 'transferring tl~e ',Council fr~ , ... ;. BasJe to F.e~rari, Italy in SepMO,NDAY -.,; St. Apollina,;,L.,.' t~~J;ler 1437;,but, the major~.~ of the' coun'cil 'members ,w'ouY Bishop; Marlyr. Both Scripture not obey and, coil4enIDing and readings oftoday's Mass indicate 'deposing the Pope, tl'1ey Fe-' clearly our Lord's 'concern' that mained in Switzerland. ' l . thE! structure He had giveri' iO' . His community (bishops as min':' The Emperor' John VIII crI isters) and the, authority whicb Paleologus so'tight, aid from the such special witnesses 'bOre West against the 'furks who should never be ,redti~ed' to the were threatening ~ kingdom level of human power and of Constantinople and at· the human pride. same, time sought reunion with The' true minister of Christ is' Rome, realizing that no aid servant to God's people and h,is 'W9 ul d, be forthcoming withOut great virtue is humility. He reunion. , models himself after his Master, The Pope wanted the council "a pattern to the' flock" (first in Italy and the Emperor, the, reading), not after the lords and Patriarch, Joseph ~I, of Consta~ the power of this world. . tinople and a large'contingent of Greek bishops and archbishopS , ! arrived in Italy in the early pari TUESDAY-Mass as 0111 'Sun- of 1438, despite the efforts of day. "How will anyone be able the' council of Basle to woo them to 'satisfy these with bread, here there. in a desert?" (G:ospel) In this In the meantime the rebellious desert where matter looms large group at Basle elected an antiand is uneasily yoked to spirit, it Pope, Felix V, thus causing the took One from eternity to find last schism in the history of the bread to feed us. , Church in matters such as this. It took the Son of God to plant Reunion Problem in this desert a sacrament that At Ferrari sessions were heM nourishes wayfarers. A sacrament that not' only poipts out, prior to the arrival of the Greeks not only shows' us, but ,'actually to decide upon procedure. The identifies us, makes us one"with,. members of the council were Him who is the Way, the' Truth, divided into three groups: ~ cardinals and bishops, 2) relithe Life. gious superiors, and 3) doctors WEDNESDAY - St. James. of the universities and lesser Church dignitaries. The agreeApostle. There is contradiction, as the mother of the sons' of ment of all these groups would 'Zebedee discovered (Gospel), , be ,required for any decision. Considerable delays prevented between worship and the seeking of human, power. Because the , the beginning of the proceedings ,Church is a worshiping com- at Ferrar~ because the emperor munity, ' the offices 'within her wanted 'representatives of the organizatiQri' are offices of serv- western kings to' attend; ~ ice and of worship. The profes- these representatives of the sional climber may have his vir_ western kings did Itot come and tues and his uses elsewhere, but the cost of prolonging these de, in the Church he, like the rest lays was expensive. Finally the doctrinal diffel'of us, confronts God and the only wind that is important is not the ,ences which separated them wind in his sails but the breath from the Latins were discussed Turn to Page Seven m the Spirit.

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THE ANCHORPastor 'of 'Our Ltidyof Mount 'Carm~l Parish ,Thurs., . July 19, 1962 "', Contirtued from Page Six.' 0 J ~ A·' p'. · N · .' In such a way that the Greeks Among llrest ct,,Lve " . rwsts. lU atlon , would state their objections" to Stress Dc nger " the ,teachings of the Latins, ; r o d ' By Avis. C. Roberts

"Vatican Council

' the latter would then reply. ,: The Patriarch Joseph II was too ill to attend the sessions, but the Greek emperor personally h attended.. B~ssarian,wasthe Arc:: inbishop of Nicaea, active promoting reunion, but M~rk Eugenicus, Archbishop of Ephe_ sus, tried hard to thwart it. Differences Ironed Out The council was moved to Florence in January, 1439 when the city of Florence offered to rell' eve the Pope of his financial burden of supporting the 700 Greeks at the council at Floren~~e Gre.eks by this time wanted tc return home, but the emperor successfully persuaded 1hem to remain in. Italy. Debates continued over the Filioque and papal supremacy. Bessarion. .' urged the easterners to accept these points and finally on June third they agreed. Minor differences were then ironed out: Latins and Greeks agreed that both leavened and unlea vened bread could be val-

idly consecrated at Mass. The doctrine of purgatory was accepted by the Greeks' as well as the truth that souls do not wait· \lntil the end of the world to enJ'oy eternal happiness .or

Of Distorting Prayer Ru~ilrng.

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For 55 years the Rt: Rev. Msgr. Antonio P. Viei.ra has been shepherd of the flock at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, New Bedford. T~e pastor is 96 and is the oldest priest in the Fall River Diocese. He opserved the 73d anniversary of his ordination last October and 'IS'. among the oldest" active, priests in the nation. It has been under the prelate's' guiding spirit . through the years that the. ---.,,,-...- ---.?f'~'-·'·-·"'-'··--·'_· parish school, New Bedford's first Portuguese para-

COLUMBUS (NC) - Officers of the Ohio Knights of Columbus warned that the recent Supreme Court deci-

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chial school, and the ot~er spiritual and physical aspects of the parish have thrived. ' The churth was founded in 1903 to relieve the pressure of increasing numbers of parishioners attendin:.: St. John th~ Baptist Church. Rev. Joseph Nunes was the 'first pastor of the

septs. It is a rectangular building, with a simple, rounded apse capped with a .semi-dome. The ornamentation is an adaptation suffereternal damnation. of the Byzantine-Romanesque, Ratifies Reunions , which strongly suggests the The Emperor John VIII died beautiful interior of St. John the on June 10 'and it almost ap- . 'B~ptist Church." peared that the attempts at reLovely Interior' union would collapse. But· on July 6, 1439 a decree of reunion The lovely interior of the was- promulgated at a Solemn church' is highlighted by a blue Papal Mass in the' cathedral of ceiling over the sanctuary Florence. The decree mentioned sparked' .by stars and paintings the Filoque, the matt~r and form of angels. Carved angels decorate of the H<lly Eucharist; purgatory the ceiling and pillars of other snd papal supremacy. Th~ parts of the church. Greeks then departed for home. The beige side walls are inter" The councll then proceeded spersed with brightly painted to ratify reunions. which Pope and gilded Stations of the Cross. Eugenius had been able to bring . The- statuary is outstanding and about with a group of Armenians stained glass windows are bright. who had foliowed Nestorius A. smaller chapel in the baptistry . and with a group of Monophy- is dedicated to Our Lady of the 'sites from Egypt who had 'sur- Rosary., vived in that heresy of 10 cenAssistants to Monsignor Vieira turies before. . are Rev. Luiz·G. Mendonca and Union with the' Church, . in '·Rev. Luciano M. Pereira. Syria and with a group from "Father Nunes· was succeeded Cypress was' also effected. At.. in· December 1907 by Monsignor "tempts ~o biing Russia back iQto Vieira, who earlier had been a t&e fold of Christ were made, curate at St.' John the Baptist. but the overtures were rejected 'He came to New Bedford in 1903. ','and a national church' was 'set _.. ' 'Construction of Otir Lady of 'up there. Anti:-Pope Felix V was "Mount Carmel School in 1940 condemned by the council .to-, and, 1941 fulfilled 'a lifelong gether with his followers at '" dream of Monsighor Vieira. It is Basle. . 'the' first' Portuguese parochial Charges Force Used school to be established in the Ort Feb. 24, 1442 the council -;United States; It provideschilwas' moved from Florence to ','·dren of Portuguese- extraction Rome where it gradually came with education . in Portuguese to an end. We have no evidence and in Catholic dOctrine as well of the date when this council, as prescribed English courses. which had held sessions in four In honor of the 50th anniverdifferent places, closed. sary of the paFish in 1953 ManThe reunion aecomplished in signor Vieira supervised a num1439 did not last very long. ber of improvements to the Granted that it was never for- edifice. A new red carpet was mally rejected by the Greek placed in the sanctuary. New emperor o.r the prelates, in actual lantern-type lights suspended practise the majority did not _ from arches of the nave and new observe the reunion, partly due , flooring enhance the gleaming' to the 'Jad spirit of Mark Eugen- elegance of the interior. A new icus, Archbishop of Ephesus. oak reredos was placed in the He claimed that the Greeks sanctuary. ' were forced into signing the de-. In 1941 the auditorium-gymcree of reunion under pain of . nasium of the new school was starvation and persuaded many _ opened. When Monsignor Vieira who had signed at Florence to was honored for 35 years in the tepudiate their signatures. The decree was publicly promulgated in Constantinople at .BI~ssing of Trtlldc.$ the insistence of Pope Nicholas ENFIELD (NC)-The seventh V in an attempt to 'prevent an- annual Blessing of Trucks has ' other rupture of the union, but 'been' held at the Shrine of Our even that was to no avail, f9 r 'Lady of LaSalette here. Father dislike of the Latins ,had deep Maurice Viens, M.S., shrine' diroots in the people. \ rector, explained the unusual Suffers Blo-,v , Teligious service for both CathWhen Constantinople was be- olics and non-Catholics was inIng besieged by the Turks, the stituted for the safety and proPope could offer no help because iection' of truck drivers on the a crusade he had sent previously L hig~ways. at great expense had suffered _ defeat. This did not help the situation and those who were allowed anti-Pope Felix V to opposed to union with Rome abdicate and become a cardinal, capitalized, on it. Finally in 1484 removing .all penalties against hini and his followers. . a synod in Constantinople formally rejected the union made With this dissolution, the antiat the Council of Florence. papal conciliar movement, which As regards the schismatic had 'maintained the supremacy group at Basle, they were even- of a' ,g~neral council over the tually dissolved by the negotia- pope,' suffered a severe blow. tions of Pope Nicholas V, Next week: The 19th Ecumen.. successor of Eugenius IV. He icalCouncil.

sion against an official prayer in public schools. may be used "to force God completely out of public education." The officials, representing some 64,000 K. of C. members in Ohio, said in a statement that the court's ruling 'was not against prayer in general in public schools, but against "a prayer composed by the state and recommended for use in public schools." The statement then stressed: "A, grave danger exists that the decision may be misinterpreted and used to attempt to force God completely out of ,public edueation!' , Confuses Issue The statement said further that .the Supreme Court is confusing the issue of separation of Church and State with the "new found theory" of separation of state ,. and' religion. "The separation of Church and State is. desirable," the statement continued. "The separation of religion and state is impossible ... The acknowledgement by ml;ln of a Superior Being, God, is not establishment of religion in violation of the First Amendmen." The K. of C. officials warned that the Supreme Court should be hesitant in adopting secularism' as the ruling philosophy of the U. S., and added that the "mere mention of God should not cause jurists or educators to panic."

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church, whose cornerstone was laid July 4, 1903. Dedication was July 16, 1904 and the first Mass was celebrated on that daY in the completed basement unit of the church. ' I The intertor of Mount Carme III one of the most beautiful in the city. At the time the church d . opened a historian describe It as "the old Roman basilica. There is a wide 'nave and broad aisles but no crossing 'or tran-

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OUR 'LADY OF MOUNT .CAMEL:,G~URCH .~

" Mount, Carmel· pastorate ,in December. 1942, he donated ·all .of a personal gift of $3,500 from ·his parishioners to help pay the ,debt· on the school which had cost $210,000. Oilly Instrumen~ The schooi' was completely paid f,or less than a year later. . But the .pastor .declined credit _for· that accOmplishment as he does for construction of a beautiful convent for the Sisters of St. Dorothy, who teach in the SchpDI--;--a project completed .in 1953. f" . The pastor has declined to accept personal acclaim and every 'celebratioo in his honor he has managed to-turn into a church and parish celebration. He said olice in an interview, "I am only an instrument here. I have been fortunate ~o have had good parishioners who. have followed my poor efforts. Everything that has been accomplished was done not by me but by them." Born in Feterira d'Achada on ,May 18, 1866, he began' his studies for the priesthood at 14 at the Seminary of Angra. He was ordained eight years later on September 16, 1888, and served pastorates af'the Church, of Nossa Senhorra da Grace in Fayal da Terra, St. Michael, and later, the, Church of Nossa Senhorra Mae de Deus in Provocao, St.Michael, before coming to New Bedford. The pastor's elevation to the rank of monsignor came in 1937. He was made a d?mestic

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prelate to .tn~"PopeDec. 9, 1936. The 'Portuguese Government · conferred upon him the order ,of' ·Commander' of' Christ' in' 1938. .

Stili Acti\'e Monsignor Vieira still sings every. Solemn High Mass' in his church. He leads. the recitation of the Rosary every nlght in the church chapel; walks to St. Luke's Hospital to visit the sick · and even answers sick calls when no assistant is in the rectory. About 3,000 families and 8,000 parishioners make up Mount Carmel parish. There are 430 children iIi the eight-grade school taught 'by the Sisters of St. Dorothy.' About 600 public schoof children attend Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes which are taught by the nuns and additional lay teachers. Active organizations include the Holy Name Society, St. Vin· cent de PiwI,' Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts and CYO.

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PATERSON (NC)-The speakers' bureau of the Paterson Diocesan Holy Name Federation is preparing an educational program . on the Federal aid to schools issue at the request' of Bishop James A. McNulty o:f Paterson. Purpose of the program wm be to prepare Catholics to discuss aid'to education with DOD<> Catholtc neighbors and co-work.. ers. Four panel discussion te&m1J are being organized and will be availa1;Jle for parish meetings in the Fall. '

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,THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 19,1962

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Diocesan- ' Nurses Set Open' House,

ceD Off~rs

Many Parent Aids For Home, Re~BggOn TeachBng .

, The fifth Annual Open House' for the benefit of the Mary Eo McCabe N u r sin g Scholarship Fund will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Francis P .. McCabe, Field St., Rexhame Beach, Marshfield, Saturpay, under the sponsorship of The Fall River Diocesan Council of Catholic Nur~es. There will be swimming, games and a barbeque at 6 o'clock. Members serving on the Scholarship Committee are: Mrs. Gertrude Davis, Fall River; Miss Alice LeBlanc, ,New Bedford; Miss Winifred McKeon, Taunton; Mrs. Collotta Robin': son, httleboro; ~nd Mrs. MalW M~Cabe, chairman.

By Mary Tinley DaBy The Supreme Court's recent ruling against the "official" prayer recited in New York state public schools has, , aroused comment from all s~des. People' are for or against it, but almost everybddy feels strongly. Will the banning of the "official" prayer speaking' o~ this subject, sai<r. mean there is to be no recog"The Confraternity must deepnition in the public -schools en and expand its efforts to of dependence on a Supreme teach religion in the home to Being? In our opinion, it looks as though this might come to pass. We s h'o 'u 1 d like to quote

those six and one-half million Catholi~ students in the public schools of America who are'now or soon will be utterly bereft of the last vestige of religion in their schools." , part of the, disHe cited the fact that three' senting opinion Mission Movement Has of Justice Stewand one-half million Catholic , art, Potter: ' ' children, in public schools are ,150 Workers Qversea's', "With all ,renow attending Confraternity LOV,J:LAND (NC)-:The Grafll" BPect, I think youth schools of religion though. all laywomen's' apostolic move:" the court l\as out the 'country. Another 'nearly ment, will have more" than' 150 misapplied, a three million' are getting no for'members at work in Asia, Mriea mal religious instruction;' and Latin America by Sept. 15; great constitu"This is where the' Confratertional princi' , . The ~atest three membm pIe. I caI'!-not nio/ 'must' Intensify its 'pareptgiven overseas assignments are see how, an 'official religion' IS educator program," Father Co}:., Marie Fenol of Bethlehem, Pa., h lins said. "It also must 'augment established by 1etting those vir 0 its adult discussion clubs so' that who will leave Saturday for want to say a prayer say it. Semarang, Indonesia; and Kate On'the contrary, I think that to the parents will become the NEW SUPERIOR: Very Rev. William Condon SRCC., Cusack of BrQoklyn, N. -Y., and deny the wish ,of these school teachers of religion for 'their children to join in reciting this own children in their ' own left, Provincial ,of the Sacred Hearts Fathers in the United . Kay Kryvanick of Rahway, N. 3'0 who will leave on SaturdaJJ. homes.'" ' States,congratulates Rev. Al~ert Evans, SS.CC. on his Sept. 1, for Brazil. prayer is 'to deny them the opH I tol liaf t· ' portunity of sharing in 'the ' ep ~rma IOD • appointment by the Congregation's Superior General to be , The three women received iritual heritage of our nation.'" The. Confra~ermty of ChrIstian P ' s , . Doctrme, active throughout the , new'superior of St.,Joseph's Monastery, Fairhaven. their lay. missiona.ry training at The President, one of the first country and with national headthe Grail Center for Overseas Service, Br~klyn, and at Grail asked for comment, urged that quarters at 1312 Massachusetts Movement headquarters here ilm 'religion be taught in the home Ave" N.W. in Washington is Ohio. and in churches., equipped to 'help, parents beA return to the old time re- come ,better, teachers of religion. ~n, ligion? This is the' ,ideal, of' The CCD manual, available at CASTELGANDOLFO(NC)- of wood. The pine was sold to , Development Grant course. the national office, gives a great When Pope John travels to his boat builders. To replace the GREENSBURG (NC) - The Religiou~ly-inclined 'families, deal of h~lpful information as Summer home here 'in the Alban be ,they Protestant, Ca,tholic or to the settmg ,up of pa;en~-~du­ Hills "outstde Rome he will ,fallen trees, 3,000 young trees Richard King Mellon Foundation Jewish, have always, in theory cator p~pg~a~s, orgamzatIon;. of scarcely recognize major parts have 1?een planted including 50 has contributed $100,000 to Seton conifers in advanced growth. Hilll College for construction of and practice; maintained that adult dlSCUSSI?n clubs, and JUst of the villa's famous gardens. Other repairs necessitated by '8 new science ,building. Msgr. the home is the' most ,p'erfect about everythmg else necessary, Workmen have just completed the cyclone include rebuilding of ' William G. Ryan, president of and most competent, setting for to, help those, interested in religious training of children. furthermgknowledge of the restoration of the upper gardens, part of the park's boundary wall, the women's college here illl , , . Catholic 'religion. which were heavily damaged replac~ment of the St. Anthony Pennsylvania, said the grant is However,. we must be reahstie. With leaflets on teaching rell- last Winter when a cyclone up- gates, Which were blown off by payable over a two-year period. ' the, storm, and replacement 'of :in. our society t~e!e, ~re many, giOD geared to the age ofchil- rooted more than 290 trees over sOme of the large glass window:ll ' ,~,Fi~~"''''r-.~...~.......R'I h0n;tell where ,r~liglon .IS on the dren, from infancy on, parent~ 100 years old. pe:lphery of livmg. It. IS a. vague, singly or . in. groups, have COD;", of the ~eneral 'audience halL ,,/ : BEFORE rOU Among the trees uprooted was t~ll~g, . g?6d for chl!dr~n be- crete "guidelines.'" , the' famous' oak which spread:its' Spanish Prelate' dpens BU~ - TRY cause It 'helps keep em out of Teaching religion in' the home mischi~t ,good, for .t~e elderly is not,'~, meJ,'e pious ,mouthing 'shade :over the work iable of ~!la~se It,,softens ~he Ills of ad-= ofa ,clich~. It is a ,God-given 'Pope Pius XII. While it isw':' Ho-nle for Women yancmg y~ars. ,Gomg to, chur~h duty, and· privilege of ,Catholie ,PoSsible to ,estimate the cost' of MADiuD:' (Ne) '-:-Ar~hbishop , the' damage, the cost of :replacing ~w, and then, is a statussYl11bo1 ,parents.' " ,', ..,. Luis Alonso Munoyerro, Military I ,OLDSMOBILE the trees is put at $3,25(L ' of a "respectable" family.., ' " ,,', Vicar, ,of, Spain's armed forc;:es, ,:,' Ttu~pi'es~nt aspect of the inaugurated the new 25-rooin , Oldsm9bile"Peug'ot-Renault And how 'will complete, secuPler!s ,dens is quite differerit from a Villa Teresita here, which aims 8'1 Middle' Stree&" Fairbaven larization of- the public schools Nurses Covri'dl • . " • year ago. The Pius'XII Walk,' at "redeeming wome!'! ledastr~y, , affect Catholics? InternahonalMeet.mg ,where the bra'nches' of the an- so ;:Is t~ restore them to society For children going to Catholic 'WASHINGTON (Ncf,,:,::Rep... cierit 'tre'esformed a natural , , 8Chools and "living, in ;practichlg ,resentatives frOm' 5'1 cOuntries' ',tunnel wbich admitted no' sun- and to God." The villa is car~d for by mem_ Catholic families, the effect will NO JOB TOO BIG expectec;! f4l' ,'atterid' 'the ' light, is now a sunny" paved , bers of a women's secular insti, ,Dot be ~uite so direct. , seventh world' congresS' 'of' the ,'avenue. The pavi~g was added tUte: Of about 100 women who NONE TOO 'SMALL However, 'as' we all know, all Interluitional Council of 'Catha- ' to conceal the damage caused by have liVed in the organlzatio'n's .' Catholic children do not come in lic Nurses iii Bueru)s' Aires, ,the' storm. four' homes, half have since been this category. starting Sunday, Sept: 2. ' The 'faUen trees produced tontl married. Seven are now cloisRev. Joseph B. Collins, S.S., Voting delegates from'the, U,S, tered nuns. ' I professor at the Catholic lJniver- at 'the congreSs will" be Mrs. ' , , PRaNTERS sity of America' and, director of Marie Costcllo,president of the Judge Dismisses Suit Serve in Per", the National Center of the Con- Nat~onal 'Council ,Qf Catholic:' Again~t Nuns' Hospital MINNEAPOLIS, (NC) - Twe Main OHice and Plan' fraternity of Christian ~octrine, Nurses; Anne V. Houck" ex~cu- , ' . , tive secretary, andnene ~ng-- - KETCHIKAN (NC~ - A sutt Sisters' of St. Joseph ftom st. LOWELL, MASS. don, assistant" executivesecre-, which sought to' prevent the Mary's Hospital will leave in September to serve at the 1,000Telephone Lowell Catholic Women Ask , tary:. ' Alaskan city of Ketchikan from Theme Of the cOngress "building 'and leasing a new hos- bed military hospital in Lima, GL 8-6333 and GL 7-7500 ' Clemency for Youth be "Techniques and the' Human 'pital to the Sisters of St, Joseph Peru. Sisters Rita Clare, admin_ istrator of the hospital, and ATLANTA (NC)-A Catholic Person." 'Aritonio Cardinal Cag- of Newark has been dismisSed 'Auxiliary Plants women's organization. has ap- gi :mo', Archbishop 'of, ~uenosby Superior Court J~dge Walter Jeanne Teresa; director, of- its nUrsing service, are' re~ponding BOSTON pealed for clemency' for a 16- . AireS,' will open the congress. . Walsn.' to a' request for trained Ameryear-old Negro youth under OCEANPORT, N. J. ' . Judge Walsh cited a number ican personnel made by Archsentence of death. of cases in sUpport of his disPAWTUCKET, R.... bishop Romolo Carboni, AposTo Help Girls mis'sal of a resident's s'uit, which tolic Nuncio to Peru. The, Atlanta Archdiocesan HANOVER (NC)-A collec- had charged that the lease arCouncil of Catholic Women took , ' 0 THE ~6IFRIENDLYBI CAPE COD FIVE • the action, in a resolution tion will be taken at this year's rarigement was unconstitutional adopted by its board of directors. Catholic Convention. (Katho- because the Sisters would pracThe resolution, directed to Gov. likentag), to be held here in Ger- , tiee "a sectarian medical code" , ' ' S. Ernest Vandiver of Georgia, many next month, to provide' a upon all patients. urged clemency jor Preston home-lilte hostel with the proper , The new hospi~l is expected Cobb, Jr., 16, who has been religious atmosphere for "foreign to' be ready for operation early lIIB sentenced to death for murder girls and women employed in' next year' and the Sisters haye' -~ Germany. There are about 75,000 purchased adjacent property on Cl of a farmer last year. foreign women working in thiS which to build quarters and The resolutio'n also asked the Country. other facilities for themselves. Governor to take steps to insure that all future court proceedings -involving minors be conducted Membe~s ~'rad IFroell'B<dIs tion. ' ,

Storm Necessitates Major Changes Gardens at Castelgandolfo'

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Junior Daughters A workshop Saturday, Sept. 15 in Boston will initiate an accelerated program of extension ,for the Junior Catholic Daughters of America, it was announced at the national conventi()n of the senior organization, held in Denver. Workshops, institutes and field work will be included in the n~w program.

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Impo'rtant to Build Good Sleep Ha~its in Earliest Infancy

THE ANCHORThurs.,. July 19, 1962

Women's Council Wins Award

Br

Audrey P~lm Riker The mechanics of sleep are still pretty much a mystery, but it is no mystery that children, like adults, need long periods of ,..min,terrupted rest. Next to eating, parents are probably most concemed abo'ut building' good sleep habits' in their children. sence brings reality 'and comWhen you start in infancy fort. , with gentle, consistent rou-Sometimes a toddlet or even tines tailored to your baby's an old,er child who has slept

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in."·vidual needs, you lay a foun- angelically for yea r s goes dation for continuing healthy through periods of w;akefulness and undisturbed when he roams about the house sleep. Changes or tries to slip into bed with and alterations his parents. At 3 o'clock it is in sleeping patinfinitely easier to let him crawl terns are comin with you, but .it is always 1I10n throughbetter, :dndly and firmly, to out childhood. escort him back to his own bed: For ,example, . Sit with him briefly but, make • baby who has it clear he is'~ sleep in his own ,I e p t soundly bed. since his sec. Not Ii .Punlshment ond month of -From infancy each child life . ,may sqdneeds his own bunk or bed. denly and via" Many children must share a l.ently object to an unfamiliar, room with brothers or sisters bal'··sitter. Toward ·the end of but after early infancy parents the first year of babies, and children should sleep in , WELCQME, RELEASE: Celebrating the release of usually go through a stagewhen . separate rooms. Contrary to a 463 patients from the Buluba Leper Camp in Uganda, East strange faces, frighten them. The common, adult opinion, children sensible thing' is to eliminate do not always sleep soundly. Africa, were many distinguished guests including Bantu 1Il1familiar' baby sitters until this Half ove~heard an.d misunder- Chjeftain Henry Muloki; Mother Alcantara, superior of fleeting period passes. Also: stood grown-up nOIses and talk the. camp; and Mother Benedict, superior general of the , can be deeply disturbing to a FranCiscan Missionary Sisters of Africa, who operate the -Avoid f~ed and unchanging young child. ' ' aotions of how many hours sleep, -OOn;t use bed as punishment ~ission., NC Photo. ,our child, should have. Actual- or as a convenience for parents ly, many standard' recommen- . who want· to sleep late.. Let dations are exaggerated., Some· your children get up and play. aewborns, for example, ap-Sleep disturbances may 'be parentlY thrive on as little as the first sign of family stress. 10 or 12 hours sleep in 24. •Children going through toilet HONG KONG- (NC) ~ The untn adopted by 'Mr. and Mrs. Although the majority of t ~ a i n in g, . hospitalization or entire Chinese population of an Cox. Julia was adopted through eb11dren under six do sleep the moving, often sleep poorly, cry American city, Jefferson City, the Catholic Com mit tee for clock around, there is no rule out.or wa~n frequently. Any Mo., 'is comprised of a four-and- Refugees-National Catholic WelChat says evel'7' preschool child. perSIstent. sleep upset like re-, a-half-year-old girl from liang fare Conference. Deeds 12 hourS sleep. Older current nlghmares, sleepwalking Kong. "All 32,000 citizens of Jefferchildren too, though, need a reg- or night terrors needs profesShe is Cheung Wai' Kuen, son C.lt?, consider.the~selves her alar bedtime. They can read or sional attention. Baten to the radio while they Before you suspe,ct an emo- baptized Julia, and ildopted a unoffICIal g~ardlans, .~eported lle1ax and grow sleepy. tional problem, check ~ith your year ago by Mr. and Mrs. James' Bishop Marling to the Slsters of doctor. 'Physical irregularities Cox of Jefferson City. "The St. Paul de Chartre~, w~o have Night W'aklnc such 'as obstructed breathing Coxes also have folir youngsters served Ho~g Kong s ,sIck and of their own:.· orphaned slDce. 185~. . . -Night waking is common in passages or the common but Bishop Marhng l'S admlDlSharmleSs' .childhood malady of babies nnd young children. pinworms also .cause disturbed She is why the first call made tering Confirmation to members' Prompt attention won't spoil ,sleep. Never' give a child seda- in Hong Kong by Bishop Joseph . of the Air Force and giving days :J'O\1l' child. Real1Sure him ill his )ives without your doctor's per- M.lVIarling, C.PP.~., of Jef.£er- of recollection for priests. His own bed; pat' him, bilk'to him, :mission: . ,. . ' _ ,'.!lOn.'CitY was at St. Paul's Hos- first ,stop ·was· Japan; £rom here cover him with a favorite blan- : . ' p i t a l w h e r E ! Julia,' orpha~edat his' ,voyage' takes him' to the ket. Unless he seems deeply up, Permit' ,,' 'one ~onth,lived fort~ yeari! PhilippiDes~ _ don't pick him up.'or rock ':Backs ~ bim. This kind' of attention is : ' 80 rewarding that even' young' babies will continue to wake :, BATON ROUGE (NC)-The" and detna"d nightly repeat p'er- . Louisiana Senate voted 34-0' to " formances from. exhausted par- ask: Congress' and the sO states' to back Ii constitutional amendents. , ment . 'to detehJune whether Sieep disturbances t\e most ,"public pra;-er shall be penn1t... : ' eommon among firsth1bies, :ted in the pUblic schoolS."' probably becau!le new}. ents " TwO" groups" 'of' Protestant',' fear that every grunt or s, affle 'church women are condUcting a ' needs rocking and prolonged at- telephone ~paign asking citi- ' tention. zens to write to tl1eir CongressIf your older chiid cries out men in support of a constitutionfJ'ol,l1 bad dreams, go to him, al amendment which woUld perwake 'him, and reassure him mit "voluntary prayers" in pubthat he was dreaming. Your pre- lic sch~ols. The'· organizations are the United Church Women' .of New Orleans and "Women fOr ,Christ." .As'~ign Ca~adian Nuns

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Prelate Visits Hong Kong Hospital, First Home of Chinese Orphan

Moves to

Publi~ S~hool Pr~yer"

To', Missions in ' Peru

LONDoN (NC)-Four Ursuline nuns and lour Sisters of St. .lo$eph hav'! been 'assigned t9 mi$sion posts .lit the Diocese of Cbiclayo in inland Pei1J. Thc 'lUllS will leave Ontario ill OctOber and travel to Lima. Peru, where they will take., training course before going to' Chiclayo. The sisterhoodS made . (he aSsignments in response to a request for .missioners from' Bishop John C. Cody of London, who toured Peru last February. The Dioceses of LOnd~n and St. John's, Newfoundland, 'ha~ been entrusted with sending missionaries to the Chiclayo diocese. Two priests from London IlDd two from St. John's currentIF are working In Monsefu in the Peruvian diocese.

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WASIDNGTON (NC) - The National Council of Catholic Women has been granted an award of merit by the Women's National Safety Conference. Alice C. Mills; director of the Nat ion a 1 Safety Council women's department, said the award was based on the excellent program which NCCW conducts in the field of accident prevention. Presentation of the award will be made to Mrs. Arthur L. Zepf. NCCW president, during the 31st national NCCW convention in Detroit in November. Two NCCW affiliates also have been honored by the Safety Conference. Awards of Merit will be presented to the Youngstown '(Qhio) Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and to the Ville Platte (La.) Deanery Council of Catholic' Women. The awards are part Of the' safety group's first Citations Award program which is designed to recognize women's and . parents' organizations for worlt in home, public and traffie safety. Its objectives are to achieve sa fer communities through better coordinated organizational effort; to improve goals, emphasis and effectiveness of accident prevention activities by volunteer organizations; and to en~ wom~ to ~ttend safety workshops, institutes and seminars.

Nuns to Open Normal School in Australia CANBERRA (NC) -Domini-

can Sisters will open a religious teachers' training college here in the suburb of Watson - the first teachers' college in the fedoeral district. Two-year courses of training 'for Sisters of aU diocesan orders who will staff Catholic kindergarten and primary schools will commence early in 1963. The house of studies will pr0.vide living accommodatioD8 fgr 80 Dominican puns and 20 plaeea . for· Sisters of other co~ tion&'

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Boston O.blates 'Assist Brot.her Mark Jubilee

THE .ANCHOR-

Thurs., July 19, 1962

Catho~ics in Ohio

BO~TON

Promote Federal A.-d... t.o Schoo'ls'

(NC)-The four Coppens brothers,· three of whom are Oblate' of. Mary· Immaculate priests" had

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· . CLEVELAND . (NC)~' Catholics in. Ohio have put on 'public display their' cas~' for the constitutionaliW··~f.·

reunion here for the first ti11lG in nearly a decade at the cele-: bration of 25 years in the. priesthood by Father Leo J. federal aid to' independent Coppens, O.M,I., who is staschools. tioned at Sacred Heart church Public meetings on· Federal in nearby Lowell. aid were held in four Ohio dio. Father 'William ·B. Coppens, ceses. .They' were sponsored by O.M.L, came all· the way from the Lay Department, Ohio C.athSouth Africa for the reunion.' olic Welfare Conference, and· by He has been a missioner in lay organizations in each dioAfrica fOl 27 years and curren~ cese. ly is assigned to a Catholic The 'meetings were held in orphanage which houses 1,000 Dayton ...,.. for the Archdiocese Zulu children a~ 'Natal, Republic of Cincinnati - and in the see of South Africa. He served as III cities of the Cleveland, Toledo chaplain with the South African and Steubenville dioceses. Total Army during World War II. attendance was about 4,000. Father Charles J. Coppens, 0. The series was aimed at proM.L, came here from Indianviding information to influence apolis, Ind., where he is a public opinion. No group action, Veterans Administration chapsuch ·as petitions or resolutions, lain. Also on hand were Raywas sought. mond V. Coppen's of Weymouth, Mail Jrnvitations . . Mass., and Mrs. Albert Powers, A separate series of five meetARCHBliSHOPS MEET: In keeping with the current movement toward religious who resides here. Father Leo. Ings, sponsored by the Youngs- under:;;tanding, Archbishop John Shahovskoy of the Russian Orthodox Church in San- . Coppens offered. his jubilee Mass town diocese in Youngstown, Francisco called upon Archbishop J oseph T~ McGu~ken of San Francisco. Shown above. in ,St. Peter's church here. Canton, Warren, Ashtabula and in the Catholic prelate's office are, left to right, Protopriest. Roman Sturmer, dean of assisted by his two priestRavenna, were directed chiefly ' . hb' h MG k brothers. at Catholics, but efforts were the Russian Drthodox Holy Trinity Cathedral,· San FrancIsco; Arc IS op c uc en; There used to be four Coppens made to attract non-Catholic to Archbishop John; and Father Andrei Urusov, S.J., direct()r of the Catholic-Russian Cenbrothers in the pri.esthood. Fr. the others. tel' in San Francisco '-and a priest of the Byzantine-Slavonic Rite of.the Catholic Church~ Francis X. Coppens wa~ killed Besides advance publicity in NC, Photo. " '. in 1951 while serving as a chap.. daily and diocesan newspap~rs, .lainwiih the U. S. Army in thousands of invitations were' Korea. mailed to ministers and to Cath..... All the Coppens brothers at-.. olicand non-Catholic political, I~O' tended Boston .college High·' educational; .civi~; an4.. labor; . ' '. ':'. " ." . School and Canisius College,. . ~ leaders.I·'At least ·.a· few repre-f. LIMA. (NC')-="'A: '·.sandy· field :"that·,·sprang up .within ho~s' Oft' . The' eight' ~'~olre . Dame' men.J· " .' ." .~ sentativesfroineach' category that is the' plilyground-,for... the, C.hristmas Eve, 1~54, whe~ 4~OOO. ~eglln thei~ ~~~~k b~ gettin~:in,were in every audience: . ",;. youngsters.;of the','commuriity "desperate lpeople> of the LIma to a 'distrIbution bne'·to ·dole. ,.: , . , ..... -'.. , . " , Three·';,experiS'..,.on .:Catholic called the· City of' God . is, also. ... slums moved south en masse and· ,outmi~kand'rolls: to mOJ:e·than,·. '.~ schoolsan~ consti~utional' law'." a· practice'are~,th~s:sUl11mer'foi' . .took ,squatters' .. rigbts on. ·the. 600.chil9-ren/Whoca!De e.l\chAay., l LA 'CROssE (NC)''::'''': The or:": ·were speai{ers ·for .th~. ser~es. --:'. .'one. pad: .~' ,the'· V~iversity. of bleak. desert land. . .to· ge~ ·br~l;Ikfast the! cOl,lldn,o.t.:, dination of five priests climaxed: 'two. of them appearing at'·eacb· Notte' bilme~s,varsit'y. footban get at home. Later, f<?ur of.t~e a- week' of ceremonie§ sur:,-. meeting. team. stude~ts' took posts in the climc rounding the dedicatiori of the: it' is the place wllere Brian' OS. of ChIld Jesus parish. new Cathedral, ()f st. Joseph the ~ ··' Boulac, 6 foot, 4 inch senior end, The Notre .Damers' will ·.also Workman 'here in Wisconsin. U catches footballs thrown at him get a chance to work with the. Bishop John P. Treacy of La by ·seven of his Notre Dame MIAMI (NC) _ Cubans were 185 boys in the "Chid'ad de Crosse offi~iated at the ordinaclassmates. This happens, how- warned against forming a unity Ninos," Lima's Boysiown. They tion before some 1,500 persons. NEW YORK (NC)-Televl- ever, only in spar'e moments .be- of,an "e,tclusively negative char- will meet with students from' After the Mass, Bishop Treacy· sion has become firmly estab- cause the 'light U. S. collegians acter~' by an exiled prelate here. Lima's universities and also wit:n urged parents to consider more. lished in educatio_n during its are here on a serious project. members of Catholic men's or- seriously the~r responsibility to' . t'IOns h ere. .some ' 0 f th e i r ch'l out, ' Auxiliary Bishop Eduardp gamza Th ey vo1unt eered to hel p first decade of use and should gIve 1 dren to . th L'lmaarea Boia Masvidal of Havana, inter- . ' "further define and sharpen," its anyw h e.re In ',e Share Information . the wor k 0 f t h e priesthood and here, advised: "We must ' . 1" l'f H 'd th th ey' could a dv a.nce the viewed h influence in the next 10 years, were' not unite ourselves solely' to . "When we leave in August," re 19lOUS . 1 ~'. e .sal e cura priest said here. Church's mission progress. strive against something-but to declared chairmah Thomas ScM. re?t ordmabon .class, -. two. Father John M. Culkin, s.J., "otir group hopes ,~' demon- strive for something." ereth, "we want to bring hoine prIests. wer«=: Ordal?ed earlier consultant on educational televi-' strate by this trip," explains Fr. ". what 'we ·have··cOme·.to under-" ~as the sma.nest in years, at a . sionfor the National Catholic Laurence' M..:rphy, M.M., of ~olitical. ·unity.in the face of stand' about Llitin American' hme .when dlOcesa~ burdens are Education Association, toid del- Notre Dame, who is supervising. ,Fidel;Castro:s commU~is~icre-.,. CatpoliCism~nd efforts'to"al-' gr.OWing and w?e~ other cou~· gime in Cuba be based on I eVla ··te th'" f th" eg ates to a Fordham University the project, "that young .p~ople.,.· . 'must . . 1 '. e suff"ermg o e poor.-','. trIes ,. :need U.S.'.•prIests ,'.;. . .conference on ;ETVthat t'elevi;, in the United States are genu- some mmlmum prmclp es 10 vi" '11' h ", th 'm . at' . sion' has given a "poweJ:'ful. inely interested in and want to whichali'cubans~f"good will" •.e'wl·s ro.:~' ~I ();m ... ~o~. . .~. ,.... .. ork :with people of ,other can,'concurand 'which canserV'e ,', WIth stU?ents· at ~Uf unl,:crs.It.y,..' W iinpetu·s.·.. to renewed.research .....ons.",..... , as the. cO,ri1motl"<ie,i'lo,'nllnator," aswell·:a~.W'itiJ. J)e0I>~e1P::our_; .,' .~,It on the nature:of'-learning 'itself." .. . ',:' ' B' ho" B' sid'" C9mmumbes and '·parlshes. W e ' : " " · "Conttary to expectatio~;" b~ .. . Serve Food; IS - P oza a ' . ' '::':, will-:"speak at other colleges," ;'.! declared, "the'introduc1Jori of'" .,Thestuder,its hav~ been 38,-. The prelate,bamsheg from .'; ' : :.. ':: .. ,' """""';; .. television has not contributed to. sigfled to. the "Ciudad de Dios" Cuba' last year by, Castro,sug~' . T~ey. bel()ng to 11 .campulj ~-: . , ' .,,'. ' ·the·passivitYof the student b~t . ·--..the'City of GOd~a ~mmunitt geSted such minimum .principle's • ga~lza,tIo~ .called . the '..CouncIL . U ,,: · 'A' rather stimulated a whole wave' as: a spiritual ." a~d . Chri!!tian' for .~nte:natl(~nalLay Apo.s~olate. Uftftft of expe'rimentation on 'ma~ing eoncept.of life; desire for B"" Th~lr 'fmancla,l b,a(:kE;!rs'mclude the student more responsible 'for truly fr~ country .. where" the ,.. , ~e.No!!e Dame Monogram qul?.... 'b,is own learning." '.' y'~r Godgiven rights to eyery' nian'" rel~~~eJ.1tsof'l~ !!tudTel1ltddor~8d'" Famo~s for~urPrime nI group~ ~IJ. x:espected, and a.' desire for a 0 eo .. an, Effe~~ Collaboration'PHILADELPH1A (NG) ---' The., a country i in· which ,true soCiah ,. New' ,,"ork' CIty, ~ Chicago.- .Aged Charco.al Broiled. The Jesuit priest observed that Board of Rabbis of Greater Phil... · justice will prevail.. . Ser.~a ~lub :and Bishop' John J.~ Hin many, Cities the ETV station adelphia c<>m.mendedthe U.S, For Cubans of the future WrIght ofPltts_b~rgh. Tw? oth~r Steak~ - also Roast has provided the firstopportun_ Supreme ',9ourt for its decis~on Bishop B 0 z a ,recommended .", Notr~ Dame. ~~~s are. nc;>w. )n.~. .Beef ;. 'Sea Food ity for close and continuous col- :barring the' state B()a:rd Of"Re- , ''religious education as basic and.' MeXICO on a SImIlar aSSIgnment.. laboration between educators in 'gents' prayer. 'from New ·York~s ;indispensable." . public schools. , . , pu'blic and private education...· Dancing Every Saturday "The question is no longer "We view the, decision as A FAMILY TIIEAT : Nite to the Music of whether ETV is cciming,"he con- placin~dheresponsibility;for' the BA,R.;~.Q CHICKE~S !Henry Cottrell and his cluded. "It is here. The questioJi inculcation of religion' squarely o"I.~c Orchestra . now is: 'Are you coming?'" where it belongs - upon the Individual parent and the reMADRID,' (NC) - , Enrique ligious body with which he is Cardinal Phi y Denielhastold' FARMS Planning A' Wedding; Shower, Ian. identified," the board's, state- men of Spanish Catholic Action. 141 'Washington St., Fairhaven ..... orMeetin8-C~n OU~ Bonq..., ment said.' their work is imperative since Just ·off. Route, 6 D.~rtm~t ford~tall.. AD Porti•• , "The courl has' done the COUll- without it the Church would be ~ _ Expert A.~ntion-Coil · MADISON (NC) .:.... The wi~. tty and religious liberty-a great restricted to the 'sacristy. . wy. '7-9336 consin . Supreme , Court .h~ :service in summoning' us back A Christian' cO.nc.erned .o.nly 'watch for Si,ns MAYFAiR 4-9881-4-9979 , . ,_ .' ... r '... struck· down as unconstitutional' . to· 'first; principle's, .nainely .,;;... with his, own individual' 'affairll ,while 'out f~r '8 'I)rive.· a law·providing .. for iinrlted .that in'. the, American system . is' notwortlly of the'name, be Stop at this Delightful Spot ~. "1 Crandall Rd. Tiverton, R.I. 'transportation' of, private schocii religious' ·education is not the declared. ' '. 'p~pils on tax-paid school buses. province" of' 'governinent;" it ... The court's 4-2 decision added.' againstt~e. law,' which was , t < » ' . , go into:' effect' July 1,. affects' . . , so~e 52,000, P r i v.!l t e . schgol,' Cc)'"go~ese

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Avers Atheistic

Thurs., July 19, 1962

Minority' Rules School Policies

TribtU'D@1 U'o Rule

THE ANCHOR-

11

On Rhod® Island]' Decency lists

LEVELLAND (N C ) The "infinitesimal minority of atheists" seem to be dictating the policies of the

WASHINGTON (NC) The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to rule on whether a , state . decency commission

nation's public schools, a btshop' observed here. , Addressing an audience at the pedication of" St. Michael's school 'and cdnvent here ~ Texas, Bishop Johl1 L. Morkovsky of Amarillo urged Catholic parents to "continue your interest in the schools which you support with your taxes" as well as in parish schools. "It is very significant that we are dedicating this school so soon after the Supreme Court decision which has focused our attention on the difficult problem of transmitting our religious heritage in the tax-supported schools," B ish 0 p Morkovsky said. Continue Interest "At the present stage the infinitesimal minority of atheists seem to be able to dictate what sort of heritage can be taught in the schools," he continued. "This is a problem from which we must not run away. "I exhort you even while you send your children to the parish school to continue your interest. in the schools which you support with your taxes. By building a parish school you have shown more interest in education than any other tax payers, and you can contribl,lte accord" ingly to the solu'tion of problema' of the tax-supported schools."' ,

'may distribute li~s of publications deemed objectionable for youths. . This practice of the Rhode Island, Commission: to Encourage Morality in' Youth has been challenged by four national paperback book publishers: Bantam Books, the Del Publishing Company, Pocket.Books and the New American Library. The high court, made no comment beyond a brief announcement that it would rule on the case. It took this action on the last day of its 1961-62 term. Thus the case will not be argued and decided until' the court resumes work next· Fall. The paperback book publishers argued that the distribution by the Rhode Island commission of lists of publications it considers objectionable for youth violates constitutional guarantees of freedom of the press.

'Bill ReqMili'es Courts Open Wii'~ Prayer

,WASHINGTON (NC) - The \ U. S. Supr.eme Court will open eac" of its serosions with prayer if ltep. Howard. H.. Baker of TennE:ss,ee has his. way.. , , GOLDEN. ~~d' :Mrs~Joseph F. O'Donnell "of J~hn's Parish, .At- . . He told the House that he ab-' tleboro, : celebrate :golden.·wedding anniversary ,with help ,of Rev; Joseph O'Donnell,' horred . the court's decision in the,' New York, ,public s~hoola eurate at St.' Paul's" Churchi Tauuton, and Mother Lumina, ·O;S.F. 9£ St. Joseph's Hog-' prayer He . s~tid: "1 believe pital, Providence, 'who wastheu- 1rtaid' of honor. Little Robeit O'Donnell;' far right, ·is. With ,allcase., "my heart that the 'SuFAULKNER (HC) - Eigh- . mUch impressed., " . ' ' preme Court· of the United teen Protestant clergy and lay-' States will be greatly helped by men had high praise for a Cath.. praying at the opening of every olic retreat they 'attended at session, and they might of their Loyola Retreat House here in own motion reverse their deMary.land. cision." The "Retreat for Fellow JERUSALEM (NC) - A ·He- in order to counteract their stories' which are published In Baker called for support of his Christians" was. conducted by brew University lecturer and' a influence. the papers, and which allege that Father Gustave Weigel, S.J.,- leading rabbi have tangled over "Is the inference that it is only Jewish children are being b,ill (H.R. 12345) which requires that all Federal' courts including professor of theology at Wood- widespread charges that Ghris- worthwhile saving young people 'bought' from indigent or unthe U. S. 'Supreme Court open stock College. It was originally tian missioners are weaning from juvenile ,delinquency if happy pareI\ts. each session with "prayer to planned for Protestant laymen Israeli children away from their there is competition from the "Dr. Zwi Werblowsky, in his only, but 11 ministers were ac- Jewish heritage. Christians?" capacity as honorary secretary Almighty God." commodated because of, the The sharpest exchange cen-' .Rabbi Torn replied: "Of course of the Inter-Faith Committee, large number of Protestant terlXl around propaganda .by ,the we don't limit ourselves to touch. investigates' every single alleOur Friendly clergy who expressed the wish rabbi's ' organization accusing such areas. You have only to gation of this kind,' and accordto attend a three-day retreat Christian child-care institutions. look at' the list of .places where ingto him he has never found Heads - up Service here ,beginning Monday, Aug. of 'hoiding Jewish chiidrenfor we have our youth center's. one which has any real sub- . ,.Opens' The Door 13 for Christian clergymen. 'sOmethi?g ~kin to ,ranSom, " 'Bo!'tor Stodesi . ' stance." ' One of the men biking part in Z bl s,~. F k ,', " , . . . ' ..... , Greater Motoring the recent retreat said: "A' re])1';' ~i We, 0w: ......" " ran "But ~et ~s_ be -~alistic. HeJ,'e, " . '" ,,~.' , Pleasure, ;,' For You! tr~at of this type will prov~de; ,~I1'-:bor~ .lectw:~" ,on: ~oml?ara". ," in ¥usrara, a slum, (quarter!>L, :.New P.resldent the opel).-minded Protestant ~~ tive: re~l~ons;'taen:lk~hasIthze~:,th;rt;: Jerusalem),tllere four mif:!-:-:' QUEBEC' (N C)' _ Fa t 11 er' . , he ,was not ,at c mg_ e, con-.,' ~'ons' at work' Notre Dame the .', ". ' a logical exphination of those Btructive . ' . , work <oL..' , M" . "H' b. . Jacques SWItzerland has· uvne '1' or, I sraeIi .' ... Fi ' ,'ish the ' . ' Haas'of , ,'. things concerning Cath9licisril outh b Keren Yaldenu Rabbi .' ~, , . ' ISSI~~" ", ~ rew -,' ~n elected ,preSIdent of the' In- ' al y Torn's " y organIZ8 . . ,: ti'.·o-n 1' Kofs- . ·"rn'ational "atholic OrganI'za'-" wh ich he has felt for centuries . ,Eli -Evanp'eUc - "~ . 'h . SQcIety, " ' "and, .,.. o.c:: ' "have been withheld intentionally ., ' -," . ,', - ".-" ',man~', We ave. tp, ,co~pete, W,Ith - Uon' on' Ra<iio and Television. from him." , ~e,:"enYalde!1u, (O~, ~~~.s" th~ to attract the children. So ' , S t r - ' Lordship Fund) :was .founded in ,1953 ,to"" we:haveto build an impressive - . . ensure' that -every' Je~ish child ,.: building like ·this to match what _. - - - -....- - - - - - - One minister remarked. that in Israel hav~ a ~orougl1.1y Je~7, ' theY,oUer'the c,hildren.. "such gatherings may ev¢ni~ally ish E:ducation.' It ,,<operates ,29 ', .' ." ', " .' enable us to discover our true ,you~ centers: in varioUl] -Israeli . 'We consI.der that we are gIV: identity as brothers in. Cbrist." CI't"les and can'I 'es on mg. ,preventive here. · a vigorous _. . trea,tment , , ' OIL CHANGE AND Another minister said that ; publicity campaign: ,Rabbi ',forn, .Dr. Werblowsky is hOD9rai"y , lUBRICATE WITH Father Weigel "rooted the medi~' is a member otKeren Yaldenu'il secretary of the Inter-Faith ta~ions in, that which is com- : executive board.. ' Committee" which, acts asa UAMALlE" mon to all Christians - the,. " " clearing, house for complaints on ' LQrdship of Christ." Youth Centers, intergroup relations. iDenominations represented at The debate betweerithe 'two The Jerusalem' Post Weekly Southeastern Massachuse"s' th~ retreat included Methodists, ,men took the form 'of an intersaid:, "The Christian institutions Lcirgest Independent. Chain Ailglo-Catholics, Baptists, Lu-' view with Dr. Werblowsky and 'a constantly complain to the Intertherans and Episcopalians. reply from Rabbi Torn. Both Faith Committee about 'horror 594 Pleasant Street were pub~ished in'the Jerusalem Fall River We Give Gold Bond Stamps' Weekly. Offer Alternate Site Post Dr. Werblowsky said: "Youth Alumni .Convention centers are a' solutiQn for the DAVENPORT' (NC)-The NaFor New Campus social evils thre#ening ou~ RAMSEY (NC) - Seton Han yoUng 'People in lh~ slw.ns ...But tional Alumni Federation of stuUniversity, rebuffed for more it is most significant that Keren dents ofth~ Sisters of CharitY of .: than a year in an attempt to es.- Yaldenu stresses in its publicity , the Blessed Vh'gfn Mary 'will tablish a branch in Saddle River, , that'it builds its youth centers in bold: its 'goldeo"jul?ilee conven:" . in iowa 'starting'Thurs- , ... : . .. has been invited to build on-a tOO vicinity of the miSsion and' tton.hepe day, Aug."9~- ' , " ' " , "_ ' portion of a OO-acre,tract here _Why S.uy ~ We$upp'Y, iIi,New Jersey. ,The tract, borders on Upper ,Veterans, AdvOc~te' COMPLETE Saddle River, another exclusive' ~:DEBROSSE , R E N T A L WORK 'UNIFORMS Bergen County, community, and Prayer Am~ndment

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lies about 30 miles froin the main 'NEWARK (NC) "",""The New seton ;Hall campus in South JerSey DepartmeJit;'. Catholi~ Orange; War VetP,rans,h~s called on New ,Ranisey's offer to Seton Han Jersey members of Congress to was made through Mayor PaUl , support F. proposed, co~stitution... R. Huot, who sees it, as' a way al amendment to' sanction reci. out of another zoning ,contro- tation of prayers' in· public versy. The area he is proposing schools. to Seton Hall has been Zoned for The statement, issued, after a an industrial park but this h~ special meeting of state officers, met opposition from Upper Sad- ' said the ruling "disregarded the dle River. Two Ramsey council- intent of the legislators who DieD lained. Hum in '~ ofteE.' wafted th4l Fir~ ~endm.ent."

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.God Lo:ve You I

12

O ne in a Million

Dwighfr Tayl~r Writes Racy Memc~[( @f Fabulous Father

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By 'Most Rev~ Fulton J. Sheen"D. D~ . .

I

Our modem world has become a clutter and. clatter of el'Owds. ThiS column is addns8ed toa crowd, namely, tbeCritholies of tbe United states. But it also appeals tor crowds, nameI,., uie more tban 200,000 missionaries hi AfrIca and' Asia, where one-balf tbe population ot the earth is jostled together.

By Rt., Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Dwight Taylor, a writer for movies and .for magazines, ha~, in Blood-and-Thunder (Atheneum. $4.50), put togeth~r a .racy, rowdy, affectionate, and frequently hilarious memoir of his father, Charles A. Taylor, a fabulous showman of 'the early tw~ntieth cen- 'but 1n .the theatre. He became a tury. Laurette Tayh>r, '."ho producer and a plaYWJ:'ight.. rose to uIiforgettable greatHis plays were melodramas,ness at the close of her,long hence the title of the book. The

The problem in dealing. with crowds' in reaching the Individual within them, such as the individual American Catholic, that he· may deny himself daily for the sake' of the Church throughout the world; or the individual Asiatic or African, that he may listen to the Gospel.

Queen of ~he 'Highway, Escape .Our Blessed Lord Himself was crushed from the Harem, Stolen by and jammed la teeming and turbulent, -Gypsies, these' were a few· of. crowds, as· when Peter said to Him: "The his innumerable and ineffable multitudes are heriuning Thee la and creations. Each had a sup'e ra~rowding upon Thee." The' original Greek ,bundance of pl.ot, endl.ess, intri,.. . seems to suggest that Our Blessed Lord cate; and incredible in compliwas almost held a prisoner by those cation. A San Francisco 'paPer, re,: HEADS SUPERIORS: Fr'. . crowds. it was at. that momeQt. that Our Divine Lora showed how valueleSs are vi~wingone of them in. 1905, . James M. Darby, S.M~, supe:. crl,lwds'in' comparison with a single human said, "To attempt to tell the rior of the Cincinnati probeilig,' He singled out a woman 'wh~ plot 'would require no . less .than vince of the Society of MarY had reached.' for' a tassle that hung from HiS: robe. So too must 425 pages . . . A special edition every mdividu&l stretch out bis hand'and toucb Our Lord for has bee Ii would be needed were one to, .(l\1ariani~ts), himself, if he would know all 01 the Divine 'energles that. run oot call Bloodtell just how it came about that elected president of tije Confrom. His Life' into ours. The erowd must fade away, and for a and-~hunder a: the American Army, the Russian ference of ,Major Superiors luminous moment there in~ rem8ln onl,.· &wOo-the soul and biography. It is' / and the Japanese, not to. speak ., too casual and unchronological " . ,. of 'Men which includes the Our Lord. to merit such. a designation. of the Turkish girls in the last superiors of all major male Rather, it is a series of impres- act, came to be mixed up in the " religious orderS in the U.S. .Thllt is what our. missionaries must ev~ntually- do--indJ,lce dODS a set of sketches,with a stage story." , . NCPhoto., everyone to touch the hem of the garment of God. That is What certain amount of repetition and , , ~~ .La1ll'eUe.. we have tQ .do, .we' Directors of. the Holy Father's o\vn Society considerable variimce as to qual- . It was lD this sort l?f thing that ' for' the Propagation of the Faitn. It does no good to' tell yo.u in ' . Laurette Taylor first appeared. lty. general that the Holy Father asks that he be ''first and principally But Charles Taylor captures S~e was hardly mQre ~ a· ai~ed." The Vicar of Christ dOes not· receive alms until' each of anc1 retains the reader's asg~l when Taylor. met ilJld maryou is· ~uched by this column, in cooperation with the grace of tonished interest: To.say that be rled her, and she became tbe , . God, and respon~ daily to his appeal. was colorful would .be ail exl~ading lady. in . his wild and treme Understatement. woolly productions. . . TW CI Umstances To one of this reviewer's age, Th~re .wiD be millions who will not lncllvlduallze' them. 0 re. . the book brings back vividly' a OUR LA.DY OF ANQ-ELS,. selves by responding' to this appeal Of the Hol,.-Father. But to We .are well lOto the book vanished era in' the' theatre. FALL RIVER ; the few Who' do, 'Onr Lord will tum ',and sa,.:. "Somebod.y has when we learn that Taylor was "There was never a dull maRev.·Anthony M .. Gomes, J)8.lf-' toUched Me. I can tell that ~wer bUg'one out frOm Me." Yoe brought up on a farm,.far from ment," says the author. "Play- .tor, presented awards at :'Re-. lila,. be one in nJillioD, but' YOg will' ~ one'iD a million With the ,atmosphere in which he .was goers did not sft in gloomY re- cognition Night" for the parish the blessing Of' or" ' to spend most Of ~ adult hfe. signation, as :they do today, Council of Catholic Youth to Acc0t:ding to his son, Taylor murmuring abo lit shopping spiritual, cultural,soclal and got into show business'as t1,1e replans or what they' will do after athletic committee members, and GOD LOVE YOU to M.C.B.' for $50 "When I retired from my ,suit of the combination of two the show. The plan was much Schoiarship awards to Carolyn job, my fellow workers presented me with '$50. I want the Miscircumstances. Thefir~. w:as too noisy for that. An orchestra Rego and Dennis Velozo, recent sioDs to have it." ••• to J.E.L. for $10''1 promised 1 woWd that he was surrept1ti.0usly an lDtegral part of theatre- graduates of- D u r f·e e High send $10 to the Missions if I received a diplo~il. I certainly never reading a life of ,P. T. ,Barnum. going in those days' and kept School. ' wo\lld have. gotten it, without the he~p of the Holy Spirit." ••• And t~e .second was that, while things moving at, a fip,e ,pace:... ' Pins were presented to out- to R. and E. for $50 "~l~ accep.t this offering ~part of ·our·. se occuple~, he heardhlsfat1.'er . Candy butchers' woul~ come going officers President Paul wedd~ .mOlley in thanksgivi.~g.for oUr happiness. Now th!'! ~or. ~e ,runntng out of the house down the aisles, .Shouting their" Fernandes,. Vice-President Cara- of ~ world may sbare.~ur material :blessings." " ~d shouting,' "S.top~h~" wind- wares at the top' of their voice's." IYn Rego, Treasurer Antone r: : mill! ~top the wmdmll1. ' .. Certainly' it was a far less . Furtado, Secretl;lrY' Joan. Melaf!.;': .. MISSION cOmbines the best features .ot all "other 'magazines: , It ~as' ~he ~oc!ll. custom to sophisticated era'th'im the ·pre.; son and Corresponding Secre-. stories, , pictUres, statistiCs' and 'detaOs, 'human interest.; Take stop the wmdmlll when anyone sent; and less critical. But one's . tary Judith FerIlandell, and two: an interest in the sUffering huinaDttJ'ot .the maslon' world and· ill th!,! househol~. died; his acceptance anderijo'ynient'ol'the' adult advisOrs Mrs.: Hilda' Fer-' sen~. your sacrifices' along With a request to be put on tbe 1Il0th~ had been~g; ergo he .fare may have been conditioned andes, Manuel IIilario, Miss Mary: mal~,"listof this bi-inonthb': publkation. knew she hadexplred. So he by the lack of opportunitY to Correira, Miss ROSalina Magano, <leclded to run aware ' ml,lke comparisons. . Mrs. Hilda Neves:-Charles Souza,: : Cut· ou.tthfs eOlwriil, pin your 'sacrifice 'to it a~d I~lllil 'If io the 'In Railroad Work For' example, I can remember Dick Melanson and Manu8J. Sil-, He got a job as candy butcher being enthralled;' w~':· 'after'via; also to Editor Antone Fur- Most 'Rei> .Fulton i Sheen, Nattqnai I?irec~ of the Society for the Propagation ~ the Faith; 366 Fifth' Avenue, N~w. York 1, N. Y., ~ a' train. When the .train week, by the efforts of ,a stock tado and reporters for the or your Diocesan Director,' RT. 'REV, 'RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE . reached Chicago, he heard of, 'company. Tome, the plays' were gels' ' Herald. :' the World's Fair in pro~ magic, and tOe players DiagiThe outing for children; who~ 368.No~MamStreet,Fall River, Mass. there, ~nd he joined up, briefly, cians. But then I w.8S introduc~d have received certificates, for with a'man who had a troupe Of' to the theatre ill ·Newyork. I good .attendance. at catechism: ".YOIlRS TO toVEAND TOGlvEl .. trained rats. One of them (the saw 8 few plays on .Broadway; classes will be held next ·Mon-· die life 'of.' DAUOHTEROF n. PAUL love God rats, . that is) shot off ,a minia-. Returning to, the· local 'stock day. Junior Choir members and: . . . . and ..... ' to lOuis laiowtectge·. . loft of ture cannon, and another waved company, I was thoroughly dis-, altar· boys have been invited. God by aWving Him ia a Missl_ which UMS ,the as Anierican flag. ' . enchanted. SACRED HEART, PresS, RadiO.' Motioa 'Pictures 'and . tV. to bring lis Word' 'to . . . ~,.. ZeaIoVl JOV!l8 Insofar as I can discern any Fortunes Decline NPRTR ATTLEBORO giJh, 14-U.,..,. iDIoretted .... tWa val. . _.sequenCe in' the scattered acStill, there is bittersWeet Summer CYO activities, with: 'ADOStOtate .II!OY __ 10: ccn;nt, it appears. that. Taylor pleasure in participating in the Paul Guertin as chairman, in-' . REVERE.... MOTHER SUPERloa then r.eturned to ?=,ailroadmg, ~)Ut author's evocation of an elude a' car-wash Saturday, July: ,":. '. 'DAUGHTERS Of n. PAUL seriously, beginnmg by learnmg immeasurably remote. He has 28; outing to West Island Sun- '. 10 Sr. PAUL'S AVE. ~OST~N •• ~Ss. the Mors: code.. He was ,in- a faculty of remembering de- . day, July 29;.8 hop iD the church:. hall Tuesday, Aug. 7, and car-: structe.d lD it .by a crippled finitive if not very sigDificant newsboy whom. he p!"id for ~e details.' , .".' .,' wash Saturday, Aug. 18. For. example, there is his ref- . A meeting to fOrm a Yotmg" lessons by p~hing hun . hom~ 10 his wheelchaIr. . " . _ erence to the fact that in those : Adult Organization was ache-: F~om preoc~pabon. wlth, days ''1\fr. Hershey enclo,sed a' duled for last mghtln the pariSh . Savings Bank ..... laura... clottm~ and dashing, whale as- postcard in' the package (of 'hall with all single 'adults be-: ' leal' Estcite· LoaM . siduou.sly chewing. . tobacco to chocolate) showing a """'up of tween 18 and 30 in the Attleboro . ... ~ area mvited.' . al h e got into Jersey, COwtl munChing • IDak e I t prof e5Slon., . conChristmaS and Vacation Clube I>ther phases of railroad work. tentedly in a field with his lac- ST. .lOA.N OF ABC. J ins Cir . the . , ORLEAN'S , o CUll tory lD background." . The Women's Guild will spoaSftings Accou.... Thus, he became· a brakeman As times changed, and tastes, f . . sal ' 1_.. OR the .southern Pacific, and, OD Charles' Taylor's, fortunes, al- lOr' a ood e Sunday mornuq; I Convenieftt Locatfo... at· .the .comer House OIl tbe oiierun, discovered .that the ways precarious, declined sharp- church grounds. train on which he was working 1y. There was the divorce from ST . included a flatcar,· to wh-ich an Laurette, and after that all man- NEW' • HYACINTH'S, BEDFORD elephant was chained. The ele- ner o.f reverses. Audiences' were The home 'of Mrs. Dora Lapilant was part of a circus being no longer interested in his pro- ' France, 235 Hawthorn stieet, transported from one playing ductions. New Bedford, will be, the scene. date to another.' Showman to End of an outdoor card 'party, opeD. At night, the l1()vi~ br~ He planned to get into the in- . to 'the public, at 2 Wednesday :nan rerouted. the tra~ ta~lDg cipient motion picture business, afternoon, July 25. Proc:eedi wiR . ~t 25 miles down a branch line, but his expt,ctatioris eame to benefit the chu.reh BDcI doOr 1Il.o~der to show ·the ~lephant to nothing. He nulrrled agilin, prizes and refreshments Wiitbe; a g!.rl. in. whom ~. w~s in~- rented a dilapidilted house on offered. In caSe of rain the event . ~d .. Thls detour mfurlated ~e an abandoned plantation 011 the ··win take place in the parish' propn~tor ,of the---...circus,. ,but eastern shore of Maryland, and hall, 171-Rivet Street. Taylor persuad~d,him to give ,there he was, from time' to time, ST. MA.RGA.BET, a show in the gtrl s town. visited by his son. . BUZZARDS BAY The v-enture, was S? successful A showman to the end, _ A penny sale. win be held at that the propnetor hued Ta,.~r, Charles Taylor, just bE!fOre hiS 1:30 tonight at St. Margaret". whom he suddenly saw. as bril- death,. undertOOk to instrUct a Church; Buzzards Bay. Proceeds .' Uant, away from the railroad. street corner vendor in the art Of wiD. benefit youth" activities of Producer, Playrlght gathering and holding Crowd. ihe parish, including CYO, ~ But 'Taylor's name, fame, and The book about him will prob- and. Girl Scouts, Brownies arid, what fOrtune he ever achieved, ably command a crowd 01. Cubs. Sponsoring organizatioA .. . ........df.... ' were I10t made under canvas. reader&. .. $L lIIIlu'&~~~aq ~ _

career,

w,hen she' acted the leading role in Tennessee Williams' The Glass Menagerie, was f . t Taylor's 1 r S wife and .the author's mother. She figures in the bOok iDa sporadic and second~ry way onl~e' c 0 u I d

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Catholic Agency Resettles 20,000 Cuban Re'fugees

'!UF ANCHOR':""D1ocese of Faft

River-Thurs., July 19, 1962

13

MIAMI (NC) - Almost 20,000 Cuban refugees have been ll'esettled throughout the United States in lLatin America and Europe by Catholic Relief Services-National Catholic Welfare Conference. According to Hugh McLoone, director ,of the CRS-NCWC office, 43 employees are now en_ gaged in interviewing refugees and arranging for transportation to other areas. As of June 29 the Catholic agency has resettled' 19,584 of the exiles. o the r agencies, including Church World Services (Prot. estant), United HIAS (Jewiish), and the International" Rescue Committee," have relocated tl total of 12,441 persons. 'Fr.eedom Tower' " The world-wide relief agency V ICE· CAMERLENGO: of U. S. Catholics is now located in new headquarters here at Bis- Archbishop Lui g i Centoz, cayne Blvd. and N. E. Sixth 79-year-old Apostolic Nuncio Street. The tall building, which . to Cuba, has been recalled to formerly was the home of the Miami Daily News and has been Rome by Pope John and a Miami landmark since· 1925, named Vice - Camerlengo, has been renamed "Freedom number two man in the Tower." Apostolic Camara, which is It also contains offices of other" in charge of the temporal welfare agencies engaged in 'rer:ettlement of Cuban refugees, goods and rights of the Holy the U. S. Employment Service, See. NC Photo. nnd administrative offices of the . Cuban Refugee Emergency Cen..

... Missioner. Sees of Hope Austria, Holy See Signs NEW YORK (NC)-AMaryknoll missioner has reported ~ign "School Pact signs of hope for an increase in ~.

VATICAN CITY (NC) - The native Latin American priests" in lIl!oly See .and Austria have the past seven years, but he said sign"ed a pact concerning Catho- the priest-shortage is still critlic schools in Austria. . ical. The convention was signed in Father Paul F. D'Arey, M,M., Austria by Archbishop Opllio Rossi, Apostolic Nuncio to Aus- said that since 1955 seminaries tria, and by Austrian Foreign have increased froJ:ll 260 t~. 325; Minister Bruno Kreisky 'and seminarians from .6,125 to 24,000 Austrian Minister of Education and ordinations from 650 to 800 y~arly. . Heinrich Drimmel. .' The director of education of 9nly the bare report of the Gigning was made here. But the the. Maryknoll Fathers said that IOOnvention is expected to bring 100 major seminariEls have 7,000 l?elief to Austria's 380 ChUrch students and it is estimated that schools, many of which have there are about "3,000 novices in been on the brink of finanCial' religious orders of priests. li'uin. Fath~ D'Arcy spoke to Ford- " They have been limping along ham University's 12th annual without" the financial aid called Institute of Religious and Sacerilor by Austria's 1933 concordat dotal Vocations, attended by with the Holy See. about 1,200 Catholics, both reliThe Austrian Socialist party, gious and lay. which hall governed the nation Father D'Arey said that alGince WorlcJ War II in coalition though there are signs of "great with the Catholic-oriented Peo..; hope and encouragement," the pIes party, long opposed imple- shortage is still ci'itlcal and at mentation of the concordat on best will be so for many years. The grounds that it was con"At present," he noted, "only cluded by the pre-war chancel- half as many priests are ordained lor of Austria, Engebert Doll- every year as are forced by illfuss. The Socialists maintained ness, old ag~ or other d"uties to that Dollfuss' government was ·leirve the pastoral ministry.". illegal. But in 1958 the two parties agreed to regard the collcorllat Urges Nuns Develop as binding.

Missionary Spirit

GETS ROME POST: Fr. Francis A. Ganes, spiritual d ire c tor at Immaculate Heart of l\iary seminary in Winona, Minn., has been appointed to the same post at the North American College in Rome. NC Photo.

NOTRE DAME (NC) - Students will not develop Q true Catholic spirit unless they develop a "missionary spirit," two speakers told somf 500 teaching nuns at a conference here. This counsel was given by Father HenryJ. Klocker, secretary of the Catholic Students Mission Crusade, and J. Paul Spaeth, CSMC activities director. They spoke at a conference at St. Mary's Coll~e on "The Theology of the Missionary Apostolate." "A correctly oriented CSMC program," Father Klocker said, "seeks to effect for students a . consciousness of intimate union with Christ and all his members in His Mystical Body-with em-' "phasis' on the" impelling 'necessity for ... the Church to grow and establish itself in every part of the world as the vital principal for the whole of human society.

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PARIS .fNC)~Tlte Cardinals ot· France: have urged all Frenchnien,to "bury their 'quarrels iii. order, 'to devote

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EL PASO (NC)-The'Revisb 'ago, it is felt the publication, is Catolica, 87-year-old Spanish no longer needed, Father Lange language magazine published said. here by the New Orleans ryro-' The press under· the name vince of the S~iety of Jesus, ' Imprenta del R~o Grande was will cease operations in Sep- founded in Albuquerque; by the ' tember. I' ", Jesuits in 1872 'to supply reliFather E.V. Lange, S.J., pro- gious books' and text books for vincial, disclosed that the de- public schools in the New Mexieision to suspend operati9ns was, co territory. ., , due to the fact that the maga-When 'the raging'Rio Grande zine _had .fulfilled the original threatened to destroy the: press purpose of its founding, which,' in '1874, it was· moved to Las was to meet the needs of Spanish Vegas" N,M. In 1917' it was speaking Catholics in the mis- move to its' present location insionary territories' of New EI Paso. Mexico,. West Texas, Southern . Th" Revista has the format of Colorado and Arizona. ,a magazine and is ,published 'Since these areas have lost the. semimonthly, and with a circulmissionary character of 80 years' tion of' nearly 8,000;

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all their' energies' to -the service of the huinan person, of social" justice, : and of the emerging .- nations." The appeal was' issued at the concIusion of a 'meeting here of the permanent cominittee of the six Cardinals of France. It 'came less, than ,a month after the CardinalS had sent out' '''a joint m'essage of consolation, peace and hope to Frenchmen who are .. distressed by the Algerian dis,:..:...:~....:...>_~_---,_=.a. turbances;" This latest appeal, however, did not mention AlONE SOURCE AGENDA: One of the 12 major sources geria by name. . . The Cardinals also empha(9£ the 119 booklets being sent to all the Catholic bishops of . ' the world, outlining the work of the coming Second Vatican' sized 'that not every, group or bearing the name of , . Council, is the Th~ological Cqmmission, headed"by Alfredo' publication "Christian" or "Catholic" has Cardinal Ottaviani, which alone accounted for six projects" the right or the mandate to contained in 23 booklets. NC, Photo. speak for the Hierarchy. he belongs to a 'foreign mission They had' been expected to society or Ilo~.", ' , ' , , discuss, at their meeting, the 'Father Armand J. Conte, the B~Alklie'At!!!' Ocn&N1"n' question of clerical dress. But third member of. the group, said '<>/IV U, II. '"" ~ II ~ . 'no'statement on the subject was he thiriks that because of the Continued from, Page One all were further condensed. imniediately forthcoming. Most Holy Father's urgent pleas for necessarily be taken up. Others ' For, example, one prepartory priests in France wear the souhelp for ~~~~m~ric~'the,diO; might be added. body began with 2,000 pages as,. tane in the streets. cesan p~les.. as, .sort 0 When the Central Commission' ,the total result of the work of extend Its fIeld of operatIon and terminated its work on June 20, its members. Befor6. , this was' p' go out-into the missions:" ... "', it had' examined and decided submitted to the Central Com- ' ~Take Med.ical Supplies upon all the.work of the prepar- mission, the' material was re': The three ,priests will study atory commissions' and secreta- duced to 600 pages. ,By the time LONDON .(NC)-The London at the Lima language school for riats. Some of th'e projects were' it ,was' prepared to be sent to County Council has agreed to three. months before moving on disCarded; others were combined; the bishops, it was further re- maintain another 2,500 students to' Bolivia. . ' duced to a final 50 pages. in the state-supported Catholic Their preparations 'have City ~lighi' SiMi~aCi' .' 'Bya'process of study, eUmi- primary schools between now ,ranged from~e purchase ,of T H' C JJO 0 ' nation,'amendment and conden- and'1965. 0 special ,equip,ment at an Army 0' etmrll' oli'\l(QJn~n@[i'i) , sation, the Centrai Commission This will bring the. total en~ surplus store to conferences BUFFi\LO (NC)-City blight' ended with 67 projects contained rollment in Catholic primary 'with visiting missi6Iu~rY bishops' ,was characterized by. a bishop 'wi,thin the '119 booklets. 'There schools-those for children up and priests.. here as a "dangerous heart con- were 'sometimes many booklets to the age of 11-in the London They are taking medical sup- dition" which 'threatens the en- to a: single project. area to 32,500, or about 65 pei" plie~ with them-Father Cassidy tire community. <e IF' cent of the estimated number of is a former U.S. Az:my medic The "blessed 'dissatisfaction" ' . ~~fr ~@Ii'\lS~iC(j'Cllf!'nCI'\1 Catholic children baptized in the who served in the China-India- of foresighted citizens' which led PHILADELPffiA (NC)-Aux-, area this year. theater during World to' the redevelopment program iliary Bishop - designate Gerald Some new schools will have . War II-'-and' have steeled them- in Buffalo was' praised by Bishop Vincent McDevitt ofPhiladelphia to be built. The,Catholic authorselves for a diet which won't' Joseph' A. Burke of Buffalo; He will be consecrated Aug. 1 in the ities will have to foot the bil.1l .,v~ry. much from potatoes, rice said" decay and blight had set-, Cathedral of 85. Peter and Paul ,for this at' a cost of around and beans. , ' tIed a~ound the heart of Buffalo. . here; , " . - $1,400,000.

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'Like New Vocation( Says Pr;~st Leaving for Mis$ionin Bolivia PATERSON (NC) - Three PatersQn diocesan, priests told their reasons for' volunteering for service in Bolivia as th~y prepared to leave for language school in Lima, Peru. Fath'er John F. Heusser, who has been appointed superior of th h' h '11 t k 0 er e gr~uhP.w ICC WI . aBoeI' v. a pans 10 aranavI, IVla, said that when Bishop J~mes A. McNulty of' Paters0I,J;. issued ~is, plea for volunteers It was lIke' 'receiving a new vocation." Father Charles C. Cassidy said' "he volunteered because "every ,priest is a 'missionary, whether ,,'

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lItEANCHOI-Dioceae 01 foB River...,...Thurs., July 19, 1962

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VATICAN FIREMAN IS JACK-OF-ALL-TRADES: A member: of tlhe 17-man Vatican fire brigade combines the duties of a fi,reman with those of a nightw~tchman, plumber, electrician, elevator repairman and, stone-mason-to .name a few extracurricular duties. Besides standing guard behind the papal. throne at every publiefullction to repair~ng statuary and unplugging sewers; the Vatican fireman is trained to fight

First HQly Name Ra lIy in Korea Draws 2,000 SEOUL (NC) - Korea's first Holy Name raIl y bll'~)Ught a crowd of almost 2,000 GI's and army civilians

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Collier Field here. Archbishop Harold Henry of· KwaniQu . 0 f f.e red Pontifical Mass at the rally 'in the presence of Archbishop Paul M. Ro of Seoul,' two other bishops, and superiors of religiQus orders and missionary societies in Korea. Col. Dallas A. Pllliod, who oli'ganized the rally for soldiers of the Eighth Army', paid tribute, to all members of his staff who worked to make it a success. He pointed out that among them were Protestants, and Jews. U.S. Ambassador Sa'muel D. Berger and Mrs. Berger, who are DOt Catholics, attended the rally.

fires of every type, and at a moments notice. Seven men and a brigadier are constantly on call at the Vatican. At left, a group of firemen check the location of fire hydrants on a large map in the Vatican firehouse. A fireman and Vatican gendarme, center, make their twice-daily round of all Vatican buildings: At right, firemen check a statue for cracks in order to prevent the hazard of falling pieces. NC Photo.

Vatican Fire Departmen't Employs 17 Men

.Asserts All Men Called tQ Rebuild Christian World

VATICAN CITY (NC)-The man behind the papal throne ~s dressed in khaki dungarees.· He is the Vatican fireman. The ."vigile del fuoco", fire guard, as he is called, is stationed directly behind the Pope's throne at every function in St. Peter's Basilica. VATICAN CITY (NC) He H:l one of a eorps' ,of 17 men who combine the dutieS of firemen, nightwatchmen and Pope John has told Itali. electrical repairmen in VatiIf one elevator stops Opel'-' eould have resulted in irrepar-' President Antonio S e g')) j Can City. The Vatican'fire ating, the light beside ,itl1 nu m;. able loss, if ·it had not been . that all men are called' on ._ brigade as presently' c)tgan- ber g~s' on . and a' fireman' is ' brought under ronirpI, because ized dates only frQm. 1941, . dispatched to the rescue.' Some of the valuable art works and help rebuild a world based -

when a select group #0£ "y~ng years ago one of these calls 'was . men graduated, from Rome's to .. rescue Pope. Pius XII, who firemen's·trai~ingschooL.. was trapped in an·.elevator for There was another firemen's mOre than 15 minutes. . corps before them datin'g back Special' Duties '. .' tio the reign .of .Pope Pi\U1 IX . The duties of the V~tica~ fire. (1846-1878). They' ~ere .called, men can be divided into sPecial the ·~mpieri". ~ tpePlllnpers . and normal categories~ The -:-: and were .variously assigned special duties·; involve such to anything that had.to do .with things' as unplugging stopped uP water, including the· elevators drains in street gutters and which were theil water-driven. rooftops or checking old stone.The elevator operators in the work for cra~ks. Afte~ 5 p.m., Vatican are still considered un- when' tile ordmary mamtenance der the auJhority of the Vatican workers go off .duty, they are fire department. Their uniform also called on for emergency reis the same as the dress uniform. pairs in electrical and mechani~.~~~~ ~~~~ . The modern Vatican fireman Th~ir no~mal duty consists !D is trained to the ultimate in stan~mg f 1 ~ e w a.t c ~ and. m fighting fires of every kind I,md makmg a tw~ce-dal.1y .Jnsp.ecbon origin. His working uniform is of ~very office bUlldmg m the a suit of khaki dungarees, an V~~lcan. At ~~30, when every overseas cap and parachuter's of Ice o~her an ~ose of the boots Secretariat of State, IS closed for . the day, the first round begins. Complement A fireman takes a bundle of The total corps is made up of keys from a cupboard in the 14 firemen, two brigadiers and Vatican firehouse and, accoma commandant. Seven firemen panied by a Vatican gendarme, and a brigadier take 24..;hour makes the rounds. turn,s on duty, during which The inspection tour of the oftime they are said to be. in fice buildings takes two and a "barracks." This, means that. half ho_urs. Every door and they live a community life and every wall is checked from the are. constantly on the alert to cellars to the attics. The round answer any call at any hour. is repeated again at 10:30 p.m.

D~ring their time "in barracks" the firemen must keep within hearing distance of the telephone at all times.. There are two kinds of rings that the phone will make, but only a ·trained ear would notice the dif_ ference. One ring results from HEADS ALUMNI: James dialing 666 which is a normal office call to the fire departE. Armstrong, executive sec- ment. The· other is ·the ring for retary of the Notre Dame 444 which is the fire alarm. Alumni Association, is new Another alarm system inpresident of the American stalled in the fire department Alumni Council which rep- headquarters has nothing at all to do with fires. This is a board resents 1,059 colleges and with numbers from one to six, universities in the U oS., each number corresponding to Canada, and several foreign one of the six elevators in the countries. NC Photo. Vatican palaces.

24 How: Coverage Night and day, step by step, the whole life of the Vatican is watched by the fiI:emen. They must even enter those places which ,are nor-mally barred to any other layman, such as the rooms of the private archives. During the conclave for the election of the Pope, when all others are barred from entry, two firemen and an officer are among those within the conclave enclosure. The last· fire in the Vatican was in August, 1961 when, for some undetermined reason, fire broke out in an office of the Governor's building. This, as in almost any place in the Vatican,.

documents which are near by.

'Whenever there is a fire in St. Peter's Basilica during :l 'ceremony, the firemen· go about their work'quietly to avoid panic in the crowds gathered there. . '. A few years ago there was such a fire when, in the middle of a ceremony, a television camera cable above the Pope's throne caught. fire. Before that, when the long strings of chandeliers were being used in the basilica instead of the present indirect lighting, there was a short circuit in the wires which caused a fire high in the vaulting of the great church. On both occasions the firemen brought the fire under control before the people gathered knew that there was any danger. When there is any solemn ceremony s c h e d u 1 e d in St. Peter's the firemen's off-duty time is canceled. On such occasions, 12 of them are stationed at various points around the basilica and two are stationed behind the papal throne. They take their places beside the fire hydrants concealed at intervals throughout the basilica: Unknown to the majority of those who are awestruck by the beauty of the great church during such ceremonies, concealed behind the baroque magnificence of the Pope's throne, there are two fireplugs.

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the "eternal principles of Christian order." . President Segni was accord~ the full honors reserved for Catholic heads of state. The Pope told the President: . 'Great Undertaking' "All nations of 'the world, an honest and -open souls are invited to' cooperate. in the great undertaking .of building .not material weapons of destruction, but of fashioning the world in the light and constant brilliance of the eternal principles' Cllf Christian order,"

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16

THE ANCl-U)!Ll)iocese of Fait River-Thurs., July 19, ,1962

May Raise Compulsory Age MONTREAL (NC) - Youth Minister Paul Gerin-Lajoie believes the day is coming when Quebec province win raise the compulsory school attendance age to ,18. The' present Lesage Government raised the attendance age from 14 to 15 imd it will be raised again to 16 as soon as sufficie~t teachers and enough

Vandalism Is ManifestatiQn ,Of, Changi-ng Civilization By Most 'Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D. Bishop of Reno

'

"Not one major monument, has been erected, in Chicago's 423 city parks in the l~st 10 years~ And none is planned..' Nobody's putting', up any more mQnuments because the Park District can't control the vandalism ()r police them. Assume 'you trian statues to most of the offihave bronze on a monument. cers of the Union Army above They'll knock off a hand ()r the rank of 2nd Lieutenant, while Richmond, Virginia, not ~n arm and sell it. And what ':hey, don't steal they deface.' ,to be outdone"or suffer'the Lost

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They, throw ,tin" cans and debris III the pools around the statues. They never do that in Europe.Over there people ha ve reverence for monuments. In this country the public doesn't care." Thus far, venting his righteous wrath, Mr. Lief Olsen, m~mber of the Chicago committee on monuments and statues. Mr. Olsen, obviously, is contemplating a future of diminishing employment. But in this he is joined by 'practically all those who have to deal with the same general problem, anywhere in America, in great cities or in country villages, or out in the vastnesses of nature's wonderland. For there is no question but that we are lhdng in a t;tew age of vandalism. Inherited Reputation ,One wonders if the original Vandals were quite as bad -as they have been represented; Much of our prejudice against them steins from no less a perlIOn than St. Augustine of Hippo, 'who denounced them loudly as despoilers of the Empire and , enemies of civilization. But' it seems, actually, that the Vandals, once they were in pOssession, became fairly conserva.... tive. It was not until the Moslem conquest, several centuries later, that Proconsular Africa reverted to desert and its cities fell in ruins. But the name has stuck; the vandals and vandalism' of today may have little enough to do 'with a Central Asia tribe of the Great Migration, but they have inherited the unholy reputation. And they are doing all in their power to d~serve it. Private Dwellings Nor is it only a question of monuments ana statues in parks. It has, become the riskiest of hazards to, adorn any public building --:... and this includes places of worship-with any decoration within arm's reach. Indeed, then' is no restriction ~ public buildings, for private dwellings are by no means exempt. Who is, so foolhardy today as to set up a monument in his' own yard with ,any 'expectation that it will escaPe the vandals unscathed? Or who will trust a brass knocker on his own front d09r? . Mostly Equestrian The era from 1880 to' 1920 was the heyday of public monuments. Then it was that statues were, placed at every conceivable coign of vantage , and our parks were peopled with thousands of bronze inhabitants, so tempting now to the looters. ' Many of these siatueswere equestriar" and therefore represented a greatly enhanced expenditure, for a bronze' horse is a fairly ~xpensive ,item. ' Washington, D. C., has eques-

.,

BONNIE, THE PLAID LASSIe SAYS!

Cause to go by default, has about an equal population of Confederate worthies, mosUy' mounted on horseback. Monuments of Piet:r: Not many of these statues, alas, can be reckoned as works' of art. They are at best monuments of piety. General John' A. Logan, his bronze curls flying ,and hiB bronze horse prancing, is more of a menace to traffic than a darling of the Muses. But he represents something of America's past, her history and her gratitude for the service rendered her. It is not 'pleasant to see the marble base of the General's statue smeared with lipstick or yellow paint., Incidentally, paint responds reasonably well to paint-remov_ er, but there is no known remedy for lipstkk. A tribute to the lasting qualities of the product. For Destruction's Sake And not all public monuments of the great era were in dhbious COUNCIL fATHER: St. taste. Some, the work of artists as varied as Stanford White and Athanasius,B ish 0 p of Augustus St. Gaudens, were Alexandria who died il) 373, significant and bea~tiful. was the most renowned But your modern vandal ,is ,member of the first ecumenconcerned with neither taste nor pil<ty. It is even doubtful Wheth- ical council 'held at Nicea in er he is concerned with the price 325. NC Photo. of bronze at the junkyard. This is destruction for the sheer sake of' destruction, a, blind, 'unreasoning hatred of beauty or dig- , nity or sanctity. Juvenile Court judges, sitting TAIPEI, (NC)-While commuor. case&--the' rare 'oneS where nist troops reported to have the culprits are caught-can discover, no explimation for the been increaSed alt>ng the Red impulse. And as often as not, the Chinese coastal areas facing the offshore island, Of Quemoy and offending 'juveniles are from better-class homes, homes where newspapers speak of "tension reverence for' the sanctities is in the Formosa Straits," Father Bernard, Druetto, O.F.M., ~s not ignored. Nor are we permitted' the just coii:lpleted wor:k on a 30-bed luxury o~ supposing, as does Mr. hospital and is' ctmBtructing a second churcil. ~ Olsen, that this is purely an The bearded French priest; American phenomenon. It may missioner on the offshore ,bE! true that Europe, thuf! filr, sole suffers relatively less from this islands for the last eight years, scourge tiian the United States, has returned to Quemoy 'after flying here ,for supplies. , but there is abundant' evidence "Everything is usual on' 'to show that i~ is of fairiy fre-, Quenloy,'~ ,the veteran China quent occurrence in Great Britmissioner said. ain and is from unknown on ,- Used to Guns the Continent. We have been' Quemoyis always in a state' unable:to asCertain current staof high preparedness, and the tistics 'from Easter Island. people are_ used to the proximity It can be put down as a phase of that generous ca,tch-all, Ju- of Red gunS arid armies. In recent weeks foreigD corvenile Delinquency'- Or it 'can be attributed to the unseen rev- resPondentS have been' cOnve~g-" olution going on in the modern ing on Taipei to' cover a possible world, the revolution which is fresh outbreak of' hostilities' in the Formosa Straits. changing sOcietY-and civilizaFat h e'r Dr.:uetto, however,_ tion faster than any known instrument -or process can record. stated that he plans to have the. , St. At!gustine did not know 'blessing of the new' hospital when he was well off. and ch~rch in August.

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Gift to' College WEST DE PERE (NC) - A $25,000 gift from Mrs. Joseph M. Conway of 51. Petersburg, Fla" has been made to Sl, Norbert's College conducted by the Norbertine Fathers here in Wisconsin. Father Dennis M. Burke, O.Praem., college president, said the gift will be added to an earlier one of $75,000 from Mr. Con.. way, -? Green Bay industrialist, to pay for the new' college library.

classrooms are available to look after the increased attendance, the province official said. Gerin-Lajoie said that fot' a child to have a chance in the world of today he must have adequate education and the 'means to assure that education; therefore it nia:r be necessary to increase further the compulsory schOOl attendance age.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July. 19, 1962

17

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• EQUIPMENT-All types of athletic equipment are on the premises, along with boats for our water safety program. Also a fine arts and crafts program. • MEAL-Campers carry their own noontime lunch. They are provided with milk. In mid-afternoon they are provided with a beverage and cookies at no cost. • PROGRAM-CalTlpers engage in on types' of athletic events and visit the beach for water events. A field trip is arranged once a week.

Boating Athletics'

*

* Swimming Artcrafts

*

*

Hikes Private Beach

Bring Your Own lunch-Milk and Cookies Provided

Call OS .6-8943

Tuition $7.50' Per Week Tltis 'Message is Sponsored By Tlte Following Indiyiduals.; and Business Concerns in Greater Fall Riyer: Building Materials, Inc. Duro Finishing Corp. Enterprise Brewing Co. The Exterminator Co. Fall River Electric Light Co. FaU River Trust Co.

Globe Manufacturing Co. .Kormon Water Co.' MacKenzie & Wi.nslow, Inc. . Mason Furniture Showrooms Mooney & Co. Inc. Newport Finishing Co.

Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. Sherry Corp. Sobiloff Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO

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18'

Prescribes'Therapy of Kindness' In Treat!ng Mentally Disturbed

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Riv~r-ThlJrs., July 19, 1962,

New

~~@rrtl@mic Problem~

DemaU1d R~al Solutions By Msgr. George G.

Higgin~,

Director, ~CWC Social Action, Depart~ent within ~ecent weeks the economics profession States has been accused by competer.it obServers of living in ivory tower and of b~ing woefully out of touch with reality amf bereft ()f new ideas. One of ,

TWi~e

Of ,the' United

an

~ritics, Guimar ,Myrdal of Swed.en, ,is an internationally famous economist in his own right. The other-A.H. I , Raskin of the New York TImes ~: the dean of American labor reporters and a, very know-. ledge' ble student not only of la bor economics as such but of general economic , tr end sand practices in the United States. 'Mr. Myrdal eomplained' in the course of a recent pre s s conference, in Washington that American economists have been conspicuously inefficient in teaching the ABCs of economics to the American p e 0 pie. They hav:e b~en "brooding," he said, "and losmg themselves in abstract problems and empirical works of no real interest," Mr. Myrdal also 'paid his respects to American management for its lack of imagination and though he didn't say so to the press, he is known to be rather critical, too, of organized labor on substantially the same , grounds, . 'Barr~nness of Ideas' Mr. Raskin' also extended his criticism of American econo-, mists to include the leaders of Amer'ican industry and the leaders of organized labor. "The need for imaglnativ.e government leadership in CCQnomic matters," he wrote in the Jan. 21 issue of The Reporter, "is doubly great now because of the barrenness of ideas in management, labor, and the academiC community. The revolutionary progress in the physical sCiences has no parallel in the modernization, of our, economic institutions'.'" '

_ first in his o~eningaddress at We White House Conference on National Economic Goals and, more recently, in his commencement address at Yale University: ' Myth vs Reality, In both of these talks the President spoke about the dif'ference bet wee n economic "reality" and emphasized his own strong convidion that our AT COUNCIL: James C. economic problems are today' more complicated and more O'Neill of San Francisco will sophisticate!i than ever before in cover the, Vatican' Council, our history. ' for NCWC News Service "Most of us," he said at the and The Anchor. NC Photo. White House Conference, "are conditioned . . . to have a political viewpoint, ,Republican or Democratic .:....- liberal, conservative, moderate. The fact of the O!i'tl ~@rme' matter is that .most of the problems, or at least many of them WASHINGTON (N.) - The that we now face are~ technical next annual meeting of the problems, are administrative American Hierarchy will be held problems. in Rome, Italy, where the Cardi"There 'are very sophisticated' nals, Archbishops and Bishops of judgments which do not lend the United States will be taking themselves to the great sort .of part i~ the Second Vatican Council. ' 'passionate ,movements' which This was announced here by' have stirreq this country so the Administrative Board of the often in the past. Now they deal National Catholic Welfare Conwith questions whIch are beyond the comprehension of most ference following a vote on the matter. men, most governmental admin:" The annual general meeting is istrators, over, which experts usualiy held in November at the may differ.'. ~ ." Catholic University of America In his commenceinent address in this city. It had been 'anat Yale the President elaborated nounced earlier that the 1962 upon this point, meeting had been postponed unI~disPtmsable Role til January, ,1963, when it was If the President's analysis of expected that' the American our economic' problems is corprelates would be back in this rect ---.: if, in other words, our country during a recess period economic problems at the pres':. of the Vatican Council.' ent time are, for the most part, , Now dates have been' anvery' sophisticated and very nou'nced for the meeting in technical problems, it follows Rome, 'but th a sessions will be logically that academic econoheld at the North American Colmists have an absolutely indislege in the Eternal City. This is pensable role to play in solving the first time that a meeting of thein. ' the American Hierarchy will be They will not be able to play held outside the United States.. this role, effectively if they are as impractical ,and as unimaginative as Myrdal and Raskin have The fact that Myrdal and charged them with being. ' Continued from Page One Raskin are more "liberal" than That's a very' good reasol). for, "conservative" (horrible words; hoping that the Myrdal-Raskin sistson Latin because the admitt~dly~ .g~ves-added weight indictment of the profession will Church is an' independent and, ,to. theIr Crlt~CIS~ of the econo- prove to have been exaggerated. perfect ~iety and J:leeds a, mlcsprofesslOn. More ~ften t~aJl " The economists themselves of 'speCific language ~n which it', not.in ~he ,recent 'pa~t rt ,was .the . '~oul'se 'are the only' ones ' ~bo can communicate authentically' ' rath ,' conserva t·lves, , er · than the " c a n, prove this point and make with all its people." Log-ical, Precise liberals,. who, ~ere ~ont'to, .re- it · stick~ They ,can do so by Among Latin's advantages are, ':fer to' ~C?nOmlsts as Impractical' developing new ,aQd more, ef- ' ,acadeffilcraps. feCtivesolutions to' tne"sophisti- that it, is .iclear ,'and, unmistak'In any event, if Myrdal and 'cated economic problems', of,' abl~" in, forming theological, concepts ant, that it is "logical. 'Raskin" are 'even partially right 1962~ , about, the economists,' we ,are, All of us stand to gain if the and precise" in forming. faced with a rather serious 'prob- ,e con 0 m i s t scan 'succeed in minds o'f, students,; he said'.. He told the Catholic Univer- , lern, This is rio time for the pro- making, Mr. Myrdal 'and Mr. sity' audience; ma;"y 'Of, whom fession'al e con 0 mist s" to be, Raskin take' it all back~ were heads of study houses of brooding in an ivory; tower and religious communities related to to be' 'ittering away their time the university, that this congreand energy on abstract studies gation's new regulations "deContinued from' Page, One of no real urgency or importance. Presented by the Very Rev. mand ,competent teaching of Latin and its use in the eccleOn' the contrary, ,there has , William J. Condon; 55.CC., Pro- siastical sciences." probably never been a time in 'vincial, the following priests of "Professors who cannot comOUr national history when, we the Congregation of the 5;tcred ply' 'are gradually to, be reHearts have been, appointed: by had greater need for practical, ~laced," he 'commented. up-to-the-minute research in the Most Reverend Bishop to serve as' follows: the field of economics, - , Rev. John Sullivan, S5.CC., The reas'on for this was force- from Our Lady of Lourdes, fuliy stated on two retent oc-' Wellfleet, to St. Joseph, Fairea'sions by President Kennedy haven, as assistant; Rev. JereQUINH~N (NC)-Army doc,miah Casey, SS.CC., relieved as tors with U. S. troops in Vie~nam assistant at St. Anthony, Mattahave volunteered their services' poisett; Rev. Alan Nagle, SS.CC., at the Medical Mission Sisters' from St. Joseph, Fairh'aven to, Holy Family hospital here. St, Anthony, Mattapoisett, as Although here mainly to aid RABAUL (NC)'- When the assistant; Rev. Stephen Cor- wounded U. S. and Vietnamese Rev, Albert Chan, M.S,C,,, be-' deiro, SS.CC., to Our' Lady of troops, Army doctors are authorcomes a priest next Sa turday he Lourdes, Wellfleet, as assistant. ized to help Vietnamese civilians will be the third priest in a famThese appointments are effec- whenever possible. ily of 14, that also includes three tive Tuesday, Aug. 7. Two helicopter ambulances nuns. stationed 'here for emergency Presented by .the Very Rev. The two other priest-sons of Philip LeBI-anc, M,S., 'Provincial,' evacuation ,of wounded Amer82-year-old Chan Ai Chai, Rev. Fernand Langevin, M.S. ioans will also be available for has been appointed by the Bishtaking to the Army's Nha Trang Father Gabriel Chan, S,J" and Father Luke Charl, are some- op ,to serve as, assistant to the hospital any patients' the medical director of the Holy Family where in .Red China, So is one of pastor of Immaculil.te Concephospital thinks it necessary to the nuns, Mother ,Elizabeth tion Church, East Brewster, efiective Tl.!esday,,- Juiy 24. Chan. move for treatment.

Hierarchy's 1,962

DENVER (NC) -.: A veteran National Catholic Community 'Service official prescribed the "therapy of kindness" from a community as sometimes more effective than miracle drugs in treatment of mentally disturbed , persons. Philomena Kirwin director of 'NCCS programs in v'eteransAd'ministration hospitals through..: out the nation, said Americans have a' responsibility to hospitalized' veterans which "transcends ,

.Asks Public Schools , Continue Prayers

MONROE (NC) - The city council of ,this Louisiana community has adopted a resolution advocating continuation of redting prayers in public schools here. The resolution, introduced by Schools Supt. Van Odom, stated: "We encourage our teachers and administrators to contihue to invoke the blessing of Almighty God at the beginning of each school day upon their endeavor to educate our children spiritually.'"

Meeting,

L~tin

Language

the:

Priest Transfers

ERITREA: MOTHERS 'IN THE RAIN

"

A MOt'dER AT !VIAS:::; IN HOLiU, .,.'HhLA, ;:'&tU~U.:s IN THE RAIN, HER. ISABl:: TIED TO HER BACK. Why does she n,. stand outside? There is no room for '''J.7>S t " "J. her in the church ••• She wears no ·V "01' shoes, her clothes are rags. There are ~ ~. many hundreds like her ..• Dark and' ~I 0 fetid, the church is made of mudf"l ::) with dirt floor; windowless walls, a cfA roof of sod and thatch: It holds only -10 50 people, and Bogu has 1,200 Catholics • • . The, Catholics In Bogu once had a larger church. Durin& 'World War 11, however, it was com't'L U} " ,L..J. M" A:" pletely destroyed. The present church, UK nory ralTKr'S /S1101I nJU meant to be temporary, was thrown for fix Grimta/ (lJ1Irm up, hurriedly as soon as the War was over. Now It threatens to collapse ••• To build a new church will cost $5.200-not much for a church because the men In the parish wlll do the work themselves . . . That a new church Is needed is obrious SundaY morning. A Sunday rain finds men, women, and children hearing Mass in the open. UP to their ankles in mud. During the summer. besides, the women sometimes faint because of the humid heat . For our priest in Bogu to build 'a church without oW' help is absolutely impossible. His parish· loners earn only seven cents a day! ... Will you help us build this church? The $1 in your pocket Is, In Bagu, more than two weeks' pay!-Need we say how much your help is needed? ... With all of the laborfree-of-charge, we need pay only for the building materials. The roof will eost close ,to $1,000, the aUar $650, the sanctuary UOO. a Confessional $'75. Would yoU llke to give one 01 these in memoJoy 01 your family or a friend' •.• Please give somethl~g-$1, $5, $10, $25, $50-&s much as you ean afford. The Catholics In Bogu ean't do without 'your mission liaerUices. They win remember you, and ,pray for you, forever.

+

n.

MEMO TO ,NURSES Lepers In our hospitals in southern INDIA need food, clothing; m'edicafcare. You 'can help provlde'these things, regardless 'of where you' live;' by joining, Our DAMIEN LEPER CLUB, The ~ues are only $1 it month','a prayer a day."Send ,wi $1 and sa,' )'011 wal,lt to join. ','

-.---.........

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

WILL, YOU HELP THTS' SISTER?

.

SISTER SUZANNE, IN JERUSALEM, lieeds a sponsor. She ,wantl! to become a, LITTLE SISTER OF JESUS. Her two-year trainine 'costS '300 altogether4150 • year. '1!.50 a month, only $2.88 a week; We'd like to dn ·her help •.. Right now, III the' Neal' East mission world, there are 517 other Slsters-in-tralniDI', like Sister SUlIanne; They need financial aid .•'. To sponsor one ,01 ,them, simply fill in this form and mall It with YOUI' eontrlbution. The Sister you adopt will write you. You may write ,to her. ,For ,as long as she lives, she will be "your" Sister. She will pr. ,you, and you will merit Iii tbegood sbe does.' 'lJear Monsignon Enolosed Is $, • • • • • •• toward the $800 It tans to tram a Sister. '

'or

, I',i 98D~'

•••••

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.l'(ame •••••• ~ •••••• 0-

Americans Aid Sisters' Hospital in Vietnam

Third Son in Family To Become Priest

all our patriotic inter~sts." She' made a special plea for greater interest in; the welfar~ of mentally disturbed patients. Addressing the 29th biennial Catholic Daughters of America convention here Miss Kirwin outlined the' religious ,and general programs' conducted by the' 'NCCS in the 170 V~ hospitals throughout the country'. She emphasized ,that personal service is the keynote of these programs in the hospitals where NCCS groups work side-by-side with non-sectarian groups 'from various communities. "I would beg your assistance in this program for these mental patients-particularly for these veterans who have not had a visit from their family or friends for years, sometimes as long as 10 years," Miss Kirwin said. "They need' your visits, your encouragement and, above all, the indication of your interest anq your concern," she added. Miss Kirwin lauded the cooperation and assistance given by the CDA during the ,15 years of operation o'f the NCCS Va hospitals program.

0

.

Street •• ~' ••••••••• ; •••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••• 0 .•

Cit, .•••••••••. . Zone ..••.. State .••••••••••• ~ar

Monsignor:

~Enclosed find $50 to use as you wish. Since I found it, I don't deserve any credit for donating it. Hence. I wlll not give my l1ame..., (Savannah, Ga.).

~'l2ear Sst OlissionsJtJ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pres,lden' Mltr. Joseplt T. Ria, 'Nai'I Sec', SencI all

cOlll••• leatlo..

to:

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St.

New York

17;~.,Y.


THE ANCHORrhurs., July 19, 1962

Yankees at Full StrengthA.L. Honeymoon Over?

North<efltl Illinois

By Jaek Kineavy The honeymoon may be over in the American League. Plagued by injuries to key personnel and getting su}):.par performances from others, the Yankees stayed with the rest of the clubs to give the junior circuit its tightest pennant race w?thin memory. ity of the blmch after a woefully The opportumty to move out inept early season trial, the on the Yanks apparently has, pride of Ponca City, Oklahoma, gone by' the board. The re- was given II second life when

Newman Club <Is' Large$t on U.S. DE KALB (~C)-Largest Newman Club in the United States is at Northern Illinois University here. It has a paid membership of 1,051 students. Second largest with 1,000 , members is at the University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette, La" and the third largest, 800 members, is at Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa. The statistics were furnished by the National Newman Club Federation, Washington, D.C. About 50 per cent of the Catholic students attending the university here are members of the Newman Club. The total enrollment at the university is 7,500 'students. A new $400,000 Newman center was dedicated here in 1960. It has a chapel which seats 550, offices, student activities room, lounge-library, social hall and -< other facilities. Masses, daily confessions, seasonal devotions, inquiry, theology and philosophy courses are part of the club program.

turn of Mantle has touched off

Geiger was called to reserve, the cannonading of the M-boys' duty with his unit of the Ford ostensibly , Indiana National Guard. The rest has shaken off is history and Larrupin' Lou is the shoulder now solidly ensconced as the Red ailment which Sox' rightfielder. has limited his What wrought this remarkable efforts to an 8-5 transformation? Hard to say, record to date; but you may be sure. the basis is Arroyo is off largely psychological. A good the disabled list hitter in the minors, where hiS and is being record shows af' average consistcounted on to ently near or' above the .300 beef up the re- ' mark, Lou seemed unable to lief corps and grab the brass ring in the majors Howard' and until Geiger's departure. His Skowron have begun to hit with reputation as a streak hitter was authority after abnormally slow well-established in the minors; starts. his success in the majors has unThe Yanks will get Tony , doubtedly served to bolster his Kubek back from the Army Aug. confidence without which a 3 and it is a good bet that he'll hitter just isn't. go to the outfield. Rookie Tom Golf Notes Tresh has been doing a fine job at shOrt, afield and at bat, and The recent Mass. and I. nt would appear that Kubek's S~te ~ateur golf c.hamplOnlreorIentation might be much ShIp fInal~ ftsulted In rather \'i!asier and faster in left field, a unusual CIrcumstances. At the spot with which he is not un- picturesq1;1e Rho~e Island Counilamllhir. try Club In BarrI.ngton, 17-year- , Turn of Events old Bruce ¥orm, gave unde In the few days following the Ronnie Quinn a real .run for his All-Star game the Yanks split a money befo~e. droppIng a I-up Geries with surprising Los An- 3~ hole declSlon. Bo.th are naeeles then swept a four-game tives of Wes~ WarwIck.. It was setto from their "farm club" at ,the s';Co~d tItle for QUInn-he Kansas City. This turn of events won.H~ 56-who passed. up a widened the gap between the promIsmg career on the l1nks to defending champions and their go into law. nearest pursuers to a more comThe Mass. title pairing while fortable 3% games. not involving relatives did It was ~s m'argin that the match roommates Joe Carr and Yankees took into Tuesday Vin Obey who play out of the night's night at Fenway, the Wachusett Country Club circ'a first of a three game visit to be Worcester. The only close,aspect followed by four more in New, in the championship ,round was York next week. The Sox the friendship of the two contestbaven't met the league leaders ants as Carr easily vanquished Dince May 18 and their success his roomie 11 and 9 without so 'i71as limited to one victory in much as ,losing a hole enroute. four tries. Guidos of New Bedford have Western Trip a commanding four' game lead However, our heroes, re- going into the final month of turned from a most successful CYO Suburban League play. Western swing, went into ~ Manager Fred Ward's elub Yankee series only 8lh games wrested a 3-1 victory from'secoff the pace, despite their lowly and place Somerset on Mond'ay 8th place ranking and a sub par by dint of a last inning two-run Jr\'i!COrd. This is the best position, splurge. The league 'will Concomparatively, that the home elude its schedule by mid Augclub has been in since way back ust, then' embark on a' double in 1955. They have in all 11 elimination post season compegames with the Yankee's after', tition. today,'s .finale: Eleven. victories Manager 'Bob Danis has enwould wipe out that eIght game tered his' Som~rset club in the deficit. This is apt to prove just R. I. Amateur' Baseball Congress a mite more difficult than the Tourney. The Electric Boat of arithmetic involved, however. Groton, Conn. was Somerset's Whatever the outcome, the first round opponent in a Tuesrust will have flaked off the day night arclight encounter 'at Fenway turnstiles during the Cranston, Stadium. The ultiYankees' stay. The Bombers are mate destination of the Winner: pr~vi,ng as great a road a.ttracWichita, Kansas ana the Nationel. tion as ever and it is expected Tourney. . -; that once again they will attract , over two million fans in their rO(l.d appearances this year. They Veteran Gravedigger set a Cbavez Ravine record. of 53,000 last Friday night .and Gets' Papal BI~ss'ing posted a Kansas City' high of ST. PAUL (NC)-:"A miln wh9 34,000 in Sunday's double win has served this archdiocese for 50 years, even though he cannot over the A's. Psychological Basis hear or speak, has received a The Clinton chapter is tbe special papal biessing. latest in a series of .batting sagas Lawrence F. Ryan, 71, has which have captivated Red Sox been a gravedlgger at St. Mary's fandom. Relegated to the obscur- cemetery, Minneapoiis, since 1912. Ryan, who is able to communicatf' only through written Says Northerners notes or sign language, worked during Minnesota's influenza Oppose Integration CLEVELAND (NC) ~ Arch- epidemic of 1917 and 1918, when bishop Paul J. Hallinan of At- graves had to be dug quickly lanta said in an interview here with a pick and shovel. A letter' 'from Archbishop that the objections to racial inEgidio Vagnozzi, apostolic deltegration of Catholic schools in gate to the Y, S., informed Ryan his archdiocese have come from of the papal blessing. the North. The Archbishop also said he did not 'expect disturbances St. Francis, when Negro chUdren entered classrooms with whites for the Residence ' first time In Catholic" schools FOR YOUNG WOMEN next September. 196 Whipple St., Fall River Saying much favorable comment for the integration order Conduded by Franciscan had come from Southerners, the Missionaries of Mary prelate commented: "All of the Comforiable FurnJshed Rooms crank letters were from north With Meals inquire OS 3-2892 of *be Mason-DixOll11ne."

!to

,

19

CanadQ«:IIll\J$ COG~~{i'cw!l'e FARGO FLYER: Bishop Leo F. Dworshak of Fargo, N.D., relaxes after a 45-minute orientation flight in a T-33 jet trainer at the Grand Forks Air Force Base. Bishop Dworshak, who administered the sacrament of Confirmation at the oase, manned the plane's controls for part of the trip. At right is Capt. Walter L.- Hart" who flew the jet. NC Photo.

Former Navy Nurse, Radar Expert To Serve as Papal'VoluB1teers BOSTON (NC)-A former officer in the Navy nursing corps and a former .A,rmy radar expert have left here to work as Papal Volunteers in Latin America. Lt. Cmdr. Marie Knowles, 51, who had been attached to the Chelsea Naval Hospital, has resigned her commission to work among the sick in the shims of Peru. She will work in a district where 85,000 ,poor' Indians are

Stresses Laity Role In Christianization SOUTH ORANGE (NC) - '"It is the layman,' not· the priest, 'who will Christianize society," declared the keynote speaker of the six-week International Service Institute at Seton Hall University's campus here. Father ,Frederick McGuire, C.M,. executive secretary of the Mission Secretariat, which provides assistance to U.S. religious societies working in foreign missions, said that· "Christianization" of political, 'soCial and economic organization should precede attempts for mass CODversions. Father McGuire pointed out that the laity must take the'initiative in missionary work· be..; cause only 5,000 priests are ordained annually, whi~e more than 10,000 are needed.

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper Dupont Paint

~ • Q"t:.ta" .

served by only one doctor. James Martyn, 23, gave up his position as a radio and radar technician 'at Ft. Devens, Ayer. He will be a technical assistant at a radio station operated by Franciscans in Costa Rica. The two volunteers will receive four months' training in Spanish in Mexico City.

Miami

Cen~us

To

Adv~Iro~<e U~5U'y

MONTREAL (NC) - Sixteen Catholic theologians and professors of Sacred Scripture met with 24 theologians and professors of the Protestant and Greek Orthodox faiths here in another step towards improved Christian unity. The full-day meeting took place at the Montreal Diocesan College, an Anglican institutiOD for students'studying at McGill University theology school. The meeting was part of the ecumenical m 0 v e me n't annoUnced when Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of Montreal, set up a Catholic Diocesaiil Ecumenical Commission witll Father Irenee Beaubien, S.J., director of the Catholic Inquil!'1 Forum, as chairman.

SAVE MONEY ON

MIAMI (NC) -A census of Catholic Spanish-speaking persons' residing. in the Greater Miami area' has been. launched by the Diocese ot Miami' and will ~ontinue through' Sunday, Aug. 5. . .

YOUR OIL HEAD

P. J. DUFFY Funeral Home

254 ROCKDAlE AYENUI

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20 Peck 51.

CA 2-0193

PATRICKJ. DUFFY Funeral Dir. - E;nbeumer

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IoIqlJicktklJN".,

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HEATING OIL

New Bedford cor Middle St PARKING Rear 01 Store 422 Acusb. ~ve,

Michael C. Austin Inc. FUNERAL SERVICE 549,COUNTY ST.

NEW BEDFORD,. MASS.


20'

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 19, 1962 ,

-

A~Mmni

Maintain

Act~ve

Prevost

,Hig~

.'

,t9pic, furnishes opportu~fties ICTf' - ,a boy to read 'critically, think cle'arly,' and" discuss intel1igenUy~ The Biology Club enables its , members 'to 'delvEl'm9re deeply into the study of science by re'search and projects; it also' organizes "isits. tc places 6f scien" :tific interest., The serious work club members this past year / .resulted' iti the 'students winning half of the awards given at the 1962 Diocesan Science Fair. The yearbook "Pre'vost" 'and the weekly "Maple ,Leaf" permit the, journalism-minded students to develop their writing abilities. : ' " ,. ' Serving as library aide gives a student an occasion to acquaint himself with books to learn 'the workings of a library, and to assist his fellow-students and,the Brother-librarian. In interscholastic sports competition Prevost maintains both a basketball and a baseball tea~ In addition to these, there is a well-organized intramural sports program of football,' basketball and volle'y!?all. ' Fosters Vociations' Thirty former' stUdents lilrG I Brothers today. It is' fitting t@ MONSIGNOR, PREVOST HIGH SCHOOL, F ~LL RIVER: note, also, ~hat the Brothers 012 ,Ghristian Instruction hav'e ,been which vocation God is perhaps. constant and conscientioUs . in The 1962 graduation ceremony at Monsignor Prevost, calling them~ Bi-weekly meet- encouraging voCatioris to the ,High S~h601 was the 25th at, the F~ll River' SC~901 for ings, with an occasional guest priesthood.: In fact; nearly 2S boys,: but the history o,f Prev.ost dates back to June 8, speaker, help the boys keep "former students now priests 1925" when Monsignor Jean A. Prevost, pastor of Notre ,their minds on their future claim Prevost as their AlmQ Dame Parish, invited the is Brother Roland. states of life: ' , Mater. The Soqality, ,which meets Brothers 'of Christian InThe first graduating class was As'the,1962 graduation marked every Sunday morning and uses atruction to Fall River to that of 1938, with 24 seniors rethe silver jubilee of commencethe cell technique of improving' staff a school for' young- ceiving- diplomas. In 1949 Monmenis at Fall River's oilly Cath.. self,and of bringing the spirit of signor Alfred Bonneau, pastor Franco-Americans. Christ into its ,surroundings, , olie ,high school for young men, The Brothers of Christian In- , of Notre Dame, bought a former prepares the stUdents to - live , Prevost casts a retrospective struction were founded in 1817 public school across the street a thoroughly Christian life by a glance over the past quarter of from Prevost, thus allowing at Ploermel, France by, thl systematic daily program 'of a century of service and looks Ven'erable 'John de la Mennais. more students' to be accommospiritu;11 exercises to produce ahead with optimism to the nex.t. , Today world headquarters are dated. frequent contacts with Christ. on 'the Isle of Jersey, English Graduating classes now numCardincJl ProtectoU' Public Speaking' Channel, with the American ber in the fifties; yet there is not ,VATICAN CITY (NC)-Jameo The Eugenio Pacelli Chapter province center at Alfred, Me.' room enough to admit the many CardJnal McGuigan, Archbishol\ll of the National Honor ,Society is With about 2,300 professed Bro:' who apply. Of the graduating , of Toronto, has been named procomposed of those studimfs who thers, the order staffs schools in classes it is interesting to notetector of the Sisters of St. Elizhave been approved by their abeth of the Third Order Regu15 countries throughout the that over 50 per cent continue , teachers as having showing exworld. , on to high studies. ' ceptional school work and fiile' lar of St. Francis of Assisi, whose Monsignor Prevost's :untimely C. U. Affiliate S character. The Honor Society' is motherhouse is at Humboldt, death on Sept. 16, 1925, preCanada. Over the years" many imresponsible for the smooth func- ' vented his seeing his dream of a provements have beeJ;1 made. boys' school come to fru'ition, tioning of th~ intramural program at Prevost. but in September, 1927, 12 ,During the principalship of Brother Patrick, Prevost became teachers awaited the 370 students • - Debate 'enables the particiwho had enrolled at the school. . affiliated with the Catholic Unipants to acquire or - develop' T'he 'founder-principal, Brother versity of America ,in Washingability in public speaking. ' BROTHER AUGUSTUS, F.I.C. Louis, established a tradition of fon. To keep pace with the needs Abundant research, coupled with MAKES YOUR firm discipline during his six- of the times, a roomy physicsSUPERIOR ~ninteres~ in keeping up ,wi~h chemistry laboratory was estabCAR RUN BETTER year tenure. current comnierifs' on the debate lished. Recently, a fully-equip- This was accompiished with the '1933 Beginning At New Car o.a.... Father Damase Robe'rt, Mon- ped biOlogy laboratory was in- cooperation of the' Alurrtni Asso-' .and Service StatioM stalled, thanks to the, Alumni ciation. ' signor Prevost's successor, saw Everywhere ,Show A,p,preciatioD , the, need of establishing a high Association. The library, moved Where A small, inade'qute quarters, school as a complement to the from now contains 4,000 volumes., The sChool looks with ,pride elementary grades and courses GOOD 'Prevost,' being a parochial upon its Alumni Association. in secondary education were The uriflinching 'loyalty 'which \ started' in the Fall of 1933. ' school, is" ,administered by an this group' disphiys 'indicates in Brother Louis having"been ap- assistant of NO,tre Dame parish, Means A tangible way' the appreciation pointed provincial superior that ' Father Gerard Boisvert, who is ,a of former students for what the Summer, Brother Marcel re- also spiritual director of the' school has tried to instill into , placed hi~. Other principals school. As such, he per!odicta~ly them. ' ' since then have been Brother addresses the students in their 'Alix, Brother Boniface" Brother home rooms' for religion classes. By making available both high: _ NEW BIDFORD school and college scholai-"ships, Florian, Brother Patrick (now ' Brother Ro'land is a native of by ,assisting the' sports depart~ provincial ,superior), Brother Notre Dame parish. 'Since his 'ment financially,' and ' by , proINDUSTRIAL OILS Alexander, Brother', Thomas appointment .as principal last viding neeqedaudio.,.visual aids, (now president' of Walsh College September he has sought to the association contiinies to stand HEATING OILS in Ohio), Brother Dacian, equip Prevost with more,a'udio- as a credit to the school. Brother Alban and ," Brother visual aids, and a mobile laboBesides ,the regular classes, TIMKEN Ignatius. The present prindpal ratory for the freshman classes. Prevost offers a' number of op'portunities for the students t9 OIL BURNERS develop their talents and acquire a sense of initiative andrespon,MILL sibility. " Extracurricular' Activities 501 COUNTY ST. The VocationsCIubs are open to any students who wish to NEW; BEDFORD ,learn more' about the various Open Eve'nings' vocations open to them, and who WY 3-1751 would like aid in discovering to

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SCHOOL OFFICIALS: left to right: Rev. Gerard A. Boisvert, pnTl1, i nistrator; Rt. Rev. Alfred' J. E. Bonneau, pa$tor; Bl'1.> .der Roland, F.I.C., principal. ,

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