07.20.61

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Pontiff Upholds Limited S£!cialization; Calls /orAidto Developing Nations [g]@~2f ~@tcru®[f ~~~~ Tr~1t~o JM~~g<t~8

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The ANCHOR

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope John in his long-heralded social encyclical said that limited socialization can benefit society and that rich countries have a duty to help the underdeveloped nations. Four new social problems confront modern man, the Pope said in his letter to the Catholic world. He said they must be solved in tenns of truth, justice and love. He listed these problems: The depressed state of agriculture in an increasingly industrial

An Anchor of the Soul, Sure lind fi'irm-ST. PAUl.

f~1I River, Mass.,' Thursday, July 20, 1961 V~1.

5, No. 30

.@ 1961 The Anchor

S4:~Pll~Ey~~

Second Clan Mail Privileges Autho;izJd at Fall River, Man.

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and technological world. The great difference between th~ underdeveloped nations and the technologicallY advanced. nations. . The World population increase and its relation to economic development. The lack. of mutual trust among nations. . The encyclical, Mater et Magistra, was written, the Pope said, because "W€ feel it Our duty to keep alive the. torch lighted by· Our great predecessors and to exhort all to draw from it inspiration and orientation in the search of a solution' to ,the social problems mo~ adapted to our times." The 20,000-word encyplical commemorates the 70th anniversary of the publication of Pope ·Leo Xill's great social encyClical, Rerum Novarum. The new encyclica'l is dated May 15. But its release to'the wc;>rld. was held up until July 14 so tha,t transla. Turn to Page Eighteen

C,oUe~e S~Mdelnt$ Aid lafullfclry F~~d

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BOSTON (NC)-Catholic college students by the hundreds gave up soft drinks, cigarettes, movie~ and other

Secular Press Praises Pope John's Enc.y·clicai

WASHINGTON (NC) - Pop~ John XXIII's social encyclical got outright praise in immediate comments made .by leading U.S. newspapers. The New York Times lauded it as a historical document that "presents a picture of the conflict in our time between is a very modern version of very the. crude materialism 'of old ideas. I,t is a charter of social communism and the h,umane conduct for Christians everyo spirit of all great and endur- where, and Pope John, sensing ing' faiths." The newspaper, which immediately printed the entire text, referred to the encyclical as "an attempt to apply the ethics .of Catholicism to a changing world." It· said further: ",As the Pope advocates economic jus tic e 'among citizens of the same political community,' so also he argues for· ju:;;tice among the na·tions. and for assistance from among the developed countries so that people. in less':favored lands 'may succeed in raising the!r standards of living.' He generously pays tribute to· those international organizations, individual states and private agen.cies whose 'rlchly fruitful works' have had their beneficial results in recent years" The Baltimore Sun said: "This

new stirrings throughout Chriso tendom, took care to address it not only to his folks but 1lo 'all Christians.' " The Sun asserted: "There ilJ the implacable hC'stility to tyranny, and especially to that modern form, communism, which presumes explicitly to extend ita authority to the things of the spirit. There is the insistence that the only acceptable bases for social organizations are 'truth, justice and love.''' The. New York Herald Tribe> une said Pope John's encyclical "supplements and carries forward the one issued by P.opo Leo" 70 years ago. The editorial said: "The biggest problem of modern times, says Pope John., is to help underdeveloped nao tions ·rise from their 'perman~ Turn to Page Fifteen

22,000 De~eg@tes to Attend Youth Convention Council

pleasures during Lent, contrib.uting $52,500 to the fund· for 1!1 , WASHINGTON (NC) - Some 22,000 delegates are' . DEDICATION CEREMONIES: Participating in the .Ii brary ·a,t the Catholic Fujen· expected at the sixth National Council of Catholic Youth . . opening dedication ceremony of St. Ann's Church, Uni~ersity in Formosa. convention in Buffalo, N.Y., Nov. 9 to 12. The convention Raynham, are left to right, Rev. William F. Morris, curate, Richard Cardinal Cushing, for teenagers and youno,' .adults will be preceded by the St. Mary's, Taunton; Bishop Connolly; Gerald McNally, Archbishop of Boston, appointed d' t· by the Vatican to direct ~ drive . second national convention genel"al contractor; Rev. Gerald T. Shovelton, curate, for building the university, said · C lree Ion of Archbishop John F f .t h e N atlOnal onference Dearden of Detr't E' o l' St. Mary's, Taunton; and Rev. Leo:T. Sullivan, administrator the ·library will be specifi"ed as l' . . Youth O I , plscopa f .· Ca,th OlClsm ·0 1ft Chairman of the NCWC Youth a memorial to American students. of St. Ann's. Serving Agencies, Nov. 8 Department. The five-week drive for the "The conventions," ~id MSgJ!. library fund was. conducted and 9. This was announced here by Schieder, "will bring together through the National Council of Catholic Youth and·the National Msgr. J~seph E. Schieder, direc- the top people of the Catholil!t Feder'ation of Catholic College tor of the Youth Department of Church in this country who arQ Students (NFCCS) which oper- . the NatioDlil Catholic Welfare experts in the field of youth . ATICAN CITY (NC) - The entry of young people ates in 192 colleges and univer- Conference, sponsor of the twin work." conventions. . The conference of Catholics m sities. 00'00 the adult world can be rendel'ed smooth if adults have , Cardinal· Cushing sa,id the liBoth meetings are under the youth-serving agencies is made accustomed them to responsibility, a· Vatican letter has b.rai·y fund alread·y has been sent· patronage· of-Bishop Joseph A. up of professional volunteer . Turn to Page Fifteen . Burke of Buffalo 'and under the adult personnel engaged in advised the 1961· Frencho Social Weeks. Th"e letter was sent youth work in dIoceses of thQ 1\)y Vatican Secretary of Uni,ted States. It inclUdes offiState Domenico Cardinal cials such as diocesan youth Tal'dini in the .name of Changes of assignment and new appointments announced -today· by the· Chancery directors and staff. personnel i1!lI Pope John. It was read at Office to be effective Tuesday, July 25, affect four priests of ·the Dioc~se. Rev. Edward , youth offices. 1lhe annl1al meeting held at The council of youth conven.Rheims on the theme, "The J.Mitchell, assistant at the Sacred Heart Church,. Taunton, is' temporarily assigned tion is divided into two sections. Entrance of Youth into the Adult the Sacred Heart Church, Fall River; Rev.·.Joseph P .. Delaney; who recently returned One is the Catholic Youth OrWorld." from studies in Rome, will Borges is transferred. froQl. Es- Anllrade, now at Our Lady of ganization (CYO) for teenagers . Cardinal Tardini noted that succeed Father Mitchell as pit·ito Santo Church, Fall River; the· Angels, whc will flIO to and the other is for young adults. !'repal'ing youth for its arrival in . to Our Lady of ,the Angels, also Espirito Santo: Both seotions of the youth adult society "presents difficult aSSJ~tant at the Taunton Fall River. Exchanging assignFather Borges, 'son of Manuel convention will begin on the problems for the present and the' ParJsh. Rev. Ernesto R. ment with him is Rev. Manuel Turn to Page Fifteen evening of Nov. 9 and close with! future." an afternoon Mass on Nov. 1·2." He said new generations must be given a good welcom~. Turn to Page Twelve

Let Youth Make Decisions,. Holy See. Advises ~Ide~s v

Bishop' Annou·nces Fou,·

Appo~ntments

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Legion of Mary Pianning Picnics· Lay Retreats

Doctrine Courses for Teen-Agers To Start in Fall

Forthcoming activities fO!' Legion of ;Mary members off the Fall River Diocese iNo elude a picnic f.rom 1 to t))

The program for paris1:l. Confraternity of Christian Doctrine classes for public high school boys and girls Illas been approved for the comling yeal' by Bishop Connolly, acO!:ording to announcement made by Rev. Joseph L. Powers, Dioco <USan CCD Director. The public high school reli~on course published. by thE! <.CeD of Chicago will continue _ be used in the Diocese, said TW'D to rawe Fifteen

FR. BORGES

FR.AND~ADir

Sunday.afternoon, Aug. 27, ~ OUi' Lady of the Lake Camp. A Legio.n of Mary retreat {(Xi' men will be held at Our LadS!' . of Good Counsel Retreat House, East Freetown, the weekend oil Oct. 6. Women win be accommodated the following weekend. Reservations may be made with the retreat chairman at 49 First street, Taunton or with Re-. 'mana ~ Pail8 Rfie£a


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THE ANCHO".-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 20, 1961

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Rev. Ernesto R. Borges, asmstant at 'Espit'ito Santo Churm, ra11 Riyer,to Our Lady of the Angels Church, Fall River,'as assistant. Rev. Manuel N. An'drade, assistai-n at Our Lady of the Angels Church, Fall River, to EspiritoSanto Church, Fall River, as assistant. . " Rev. Edward J. Mitchell, assiStant at the Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, temporarily assigned to the Sacred Heart Church, Fall River. Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, newly ordained, assigned as assistant to the Sacred Heart Churoh, Taunton. All assignments effective Tuesday, July 25.

Rites Tomorrow for Fr. Burgess ,

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Bishop ct Fall River

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.Fa'll 'River Na1tive Heads Montf.)rts A Fall River native, Very Rev. ,Roger M. Charest, S.M.M., is new United States 'Provincial of the

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Montfort Fathers, His appointment was announced at provin,Lake, N.J., a buSinessman who is cial headquarters. Ozone Park, ,on the Catholic Family: Life N. Y., and came from Very Rev. Committee in, St Catherine'sCorneliusM. Heiligers, 8.M.M., parish, Spr-ing Lake, and a lead- superior general of, the congreer in the Christian Family Move- gation. .' ' merit andCana Conferences. 'Fllther Charest' is' second ProMr. ~i!lg replaces Arlene Nincial of. the United"Stat.es., His ' Francis' as "moderator 'of, the predecessor' was Very Rev. "twice-weekly radio" program·" 'Frank A.' 'Setzer.S.M.M", who wh'ch, 'has the ,coop~ration of:, :was: Provincial ,from 1948" when the United' C0II!ml,mity" fungs.. , :the prQvince was, es~bli.$,hed. and Councils of America and the' The new' provincial was editor National' Social W~!fare As- 'of Queen 6f All Heavts'Magasembly. _ zine, pJ.lblished .by the Mont'LargestMaii Response fort Fathers and also dire,etor of lFR~DAy:-:-St. Lawrence,of BrinThe program, ,which NBC saY'S Montfort" PUblic~tigns" Bay disi, Confessor, and' Doctor of S hoI' e, N. Y. He trave~ed the Church. III Class.' White. has an estimated listening llUMass Proper..; Gloria; ·Second ,. dience of more than 37 million' throughout the c~untry leeturmg Collect St. Praxedis, Virgin; is the winner of the Peabod; and gi:ving, retreats as ~a:tional ,Award and eight other citatioIll!l.' mOd~rator of confratermbes of no Creed; Common Preface. Mr. King is president of the "M~ry" Q~ee~ of All Hearts. He SATURDAY-St. Mary Magda- Quaker ,City 'Grocery" CO. of" ..Wll1 relInquish these posts to lene, PenHent. III Class. White. Philadelphia, representing 800 tak~ "up residellce at Provincial Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; retail rood stores, and a membe!' Headquarters~ Ozone Park. Common Preface. 'of the Archbishop's Committee Born'.in 1916, the son of AlSUNDAY,.-IX' 'Sunday Alter of the, laity in Philadelphia. phonse, and the late :B-lanche Pentecost. II Class.' ,'Green. In a recent debate with M1'S.' Charest ,of 530 South A'lmond Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Eleanor Roosevelt, concerning Street, Fall River, Fa,ther Charest Preface of Trinity. "Lost Values in Family. Life," has fou~ sisters 'and three MONDAY-Mass of previous Mr. King drew the largest mail brothers. He attended St. Anne's Sunday. 'IV Clasi:'. Green. Mass response any guest on this pro- parochial school in Fall River, gram has ever had. going, from t~ere to Montfort Proper; Gloriaj,Cteedj Preface of TrinIty,'..' , Family Prays Together· ;Preparatory Seminary, Bay He' was 'called' backagaii1 for' Shore. . . TUESDAY-St. 'James, AposUe. other, programs and then was ' He professed fI~st v.o'ws' III II, Class. Red. Mass Proper; asked to replace Miss Francis 1936 ~nd .was ordamed 1Il 1942. Gloria; Second Collect~. . ...,' . He Will dIrect some 60 Montfort h ' M t C d whIle she IS m Europe makmg F th . th U '. d St· Th C hri s toper, ar .yr; ree; a movie. The program is heard a ers I~' e. m~e_ . a ..es. e Preface, of Apostles. over 314 NBC radi,o' Stations,~ngregationIS prm~anly ?r~anWEDNESDAY _ St. Anne, Sundays and Mondays. IZed ,to preach' parIsh m~lssIon8 Mother of the Blessed Virgin Henry King's qualifications and ,stresses. truE:, devotion. f:IO, Mary. II Class. White., Mass for appearing on 'a program such ,Mary acco~dmg to :the teachmgs Proper; Gloria;. no' Creed; 'as ~'Family Living '61", include of St; LoUIS de Montfort, CQmmon. Preface. ,. th bet,'ng"" the' and I fatbel' of 10 boys~,o" 0, am 43 e' 'rHURSDAY-,-Mass"of.. previous.. ,',' ree gIl'S, "'. ;" ..... " S,u,nd'ay. IV Class. Green. Mass The oldest Will be,. 16 10 ,OcBrown's Pavilion, Sconticut , . 'tober the young st Road; Fairhaven, \vill be' Proper;" No "Gloria; Second' I" " e IS one year '.' Neck' e f th J ' " \. l' Collect St: ~antaleon, Martyr;.- 0 d. " sc ne 0 e annua parlsI.l'c amno Creed; Common Preface. He hlls.a .semJe ofurg~~ ~ ,bake of Mt. Carmel parisTn, New· about spIrltual ,values In the": Bedford, Sun day, Aug. 27. ~--_"",-"",_----_",,~'" home. He says his whore family~tephen Macedo js,',c:1i~;ir'man, "'of '17, in<;~uding his wife's par- aided by a large committee. ents, prays together. Seven of "n.....---~----',FORTY HOURS his, ~ns serve as aitar boys ill, .:' CORREiA S(~r.:;.gs' their parish churcll. One daughU~ DEVOTION tel' ,sings in the church'choir~ ON'''' STOP, '" July ~3--St:' Pius oX, 'South' lLtelli1~@&-o".@~ [D)e~~~~~ SIHOPPING ~,~N1TIEI~ Yarmou'th. ' ~ _ JI St;· Stephen' Dodgeville.' . The following"filmsare"to 'be ,. I) Television ~ lFurnitu1'0 added to the lists: ' I) 'Appli~,n,ces "~ Groce.lry, July 3~St, Francis of Assisi, Unobjectionable" for' generaol New Bedford. Holy Redeeme,r,' Chatham.' Capsule;, 1104 Allen. St., :New 'Queen of the Pirates; Secret of WYman '7-9354 August '~. ' George; , WeslMonte Cristo. , port :Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven :~t.Theresa" South Attle<,' ' ,i, boro. anniversary dates of priests ':1 w~ servecl the Fall Blvel'~t Mai~MJnceSuppli~ A~g.1S-St., .Theresa, "New " DioCese- SIDCltdts fOl'mation In ,i' 'SWEEPERS _ sOA.'S·,. New. Bedford. 19M' with the' intention that Our Lad) of Vidory, the faithla1 wiD give tile. a DISINFECTANTS,' Centerville. pD~erfaI ftIIleIIIbJ:'luIee.' " ME EXTIIilGUtsiiElII St. Joseph. ':Voodtl B:~

NEW YORK (NC) - A prominent Catholic layman, whose ap. - pearances on the, NBC radio network program, "Family Living '61": drew record mail respOnse, has- :been named moderator of the, show. ' At the . age of 40, he is the ilather- of 13 children, se:ven of whom are altar ,boys and one of , whom :sings 'in the parish choir. He, is Henry B. King of Spring

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,OTTAWA (NC) -Archbishop'. :' l4 T Lem...ux, '0.P., of Otta - " wa, has been·named an assistant, "ot "the" P,ontifical ..riu;one .pY P' T h ",Ope, ,..0 n XX~I1. ,.J,'he ,hc)Dor ~' has b~e'n ,pop.ferrec!., ~ll, J;,ecogni- " tion ,of the 25th anniversary 0«." ,the' Arc:hbishop's" co,'nsepration:: '.

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VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Circumstances or .those of a geroJohn has urged Catholics 'to eral' order have not permitte4 'bring "a direct influence ,«t lasting results everywhere." Christian thought on motion pic,. 'He.continued: "We are not uotureproduction itseU." ' a w a ' r e o f , the evils and erroR The Pope's exhortation c~:i'nie lir hi have unfortunateJ;in a .letter to Archbish()p Martin, ,troubled' OUl' times and wh~ J. O'Connor, rector .~f ,Ro~e'8, bav.e" had , a negative influe~ North American College" and', also on the motion picture,an., , president of the PontificaICom-" The~o1iten produce incentlvetl, "mission ,for Motion Pictures, to bad morals and vice, especial-> .Radio lind Television. Pop~ Jo\1n ly for youth, and sometimes thef' .. asked Archbishop O'Connor to constitute real and proper snaretl strengthen the eHorts of Cath- for holy religious values, whoso olics to bring Christian' infludestruction leads to undermining ence irito the movies. the very foundations of society." , The letter coinmemorated the He observed that despite thC ' 25th anniversary of Pope Pius .. fascination' of the movies there' , Xl's en~Ycl~cal. "Vigilanti Cura," , , seems tq ~e a salutary te~dency the Church s first formal recog.:. "of. youth to turn more to sports ni-fionof the latent 'powers for aJfd not' spend too much of thew good and evil in motion'pictures. 'time in theaters. He also rePope John acknowledged what marked't\1at certain good effecto has been accomplished in the have been noted where it haD past 2~ years by nat!onal.and in- 'been possible to foundstudq ternatlOnal CatholIc c I n e m a groups on movies, office~, but said: "Often special Addressing Archbishop O'Con;.. nor/directly, he said: "We exho»t you, venerable brother, to use every suitable mea n s tie strengthen the eHorts of all 0_ Very Rev. Thomas M. Ron- beloved sons who are engaged deau, O.P., provincial of the in bringJng, the positive contriDominican Order, in Canada, bution of Christian values to h will be celebrant of a Solemn art of 'movie-making and tie High Mass of Requiem in SS. check decadent shows that . . Peter and 'Paul Church, Lewis- insid,ious to good morals ..... ton,' Me., tomorrow morning for Very Rev. Raymond M. Burgess, O,P., prior of the Dominican Monastery in that city. NEW YORK (NC)-An,ameB6Father Burgess died ia tbe' , ment. broadening New Yolk' rectory of his church Tuesday. 'City's Fair Housing Practicee He was prior at St., Anne's, Fall Law, 'i d b M 'D~_ t Fwa&W s gne y ayor AI"""" , River, from October, ,,1945 ,to" er ".. agner. ' August, 1,95, h 1 ;when ,e was . '" 'it now s ta n d s, th e 1aw pN-' ' . to M iAs' assigned.. , ,ontrea ". : . .' " hibBtil "discrimination in 95 PEW " Anabv~ of Grand,F.alls, Ntw "cent,of:all private hou .' g' 1M " Brunswick, C_.1Da~a" ~ather' BuJ;'~, ,"cit . sm In '..... , gess was oraained I~ 193~ ~ol- " y... ,. , ' ,,' low~!'1g studies.at tp.E!,Colleg~ ;,9'1., In'~SIg~ing the amend~ent to, ~: St. Anne de la Pooatiere ,in th~ laW; 'Mayor !Vagner said It Quebec.',,' " . ,:would' ';now 'become "amue!l'" , , ' 'stronger" weapon in our cit..,.. A~ard CC'ntimiing bat~e against. bi'a~· , V"I' , He_noted that smce the city e.t' 'acted' its law in 1958 "sevea 0 'states, inclUding our' own,'baft PITTSBURGH (NC)-A priest' followed 'our leaeL" ' , was among 21 persons awarded, bronze medals fOI 'heroism' b-y, ." ,the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission. .....,:.! Fat he r Andre McGinle,p. M.S$S.T., of Silver Spring, Md., "was honored 'for his eHorts,' , " tit ,R MMES M£ TM'~ . while a semin9rian, to rescue 12-' 'OF litE "IGH QUALI'TY year-old Rodney D. ,McKnigb4 ,I, " PltESCRIPTIOH SERVICE from drowning at a Washington, , D. C., pool last ~ugust' ' McKnight was electrocuted when he touched one of the bot- . tom drains of the pool, which ' GIVES 'VOU. through mischancc had become , energized. A guard seeing the" , youth's body lying 011 the bottOm . of the pool dove in to rescue him, but he ,too was electrocuted. Father McGinley, a member ~f the Missionary ,Servants ~ the Mos,t Holy Trinity,"has been serving ona missionary asSign,.. ment at ~ort Gibson, ,Miss.

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Holy Office Issues Warning On U$~ of PsychoancaJ~ysis

Ttif ANCHORThurs., July 20,

epinions are being published and spread regarding the sins tllCurred by violation of the . lIheth Commandment (Thou Shah not commit adultery) and oogarding the imputability. of human actions, the Sacred Con!Jregation of the Holy Office establishes the following norms k public knowledge: . Traditional Teaching "'t. Bishops, presidents of factitties of theology, rectors of qeminaries and schools for Religious must require that those w;hose duty it is to teach moral iWleology and similar discipHnes' oomply exactly with the tradiilliorial teaching of the Church (}Canon 129)." . Cation 129 provides that clerGns must not neglect the study cf the sacred sciences and that I!2l their studies they must always follow the sound doctrines handed 'down by the Fathers of tlla Church and commonly acoopted by the Church. They must also avoid profane novelMes of expression and what it! wcongly- called scientific. . 'JI)he document COntinued·: Bans Prac~ice "'ll. Ecclesiastical censors must . .' great caution in censoring ..d passing judgment on book'; aOd publications which deal with die sixth Pl'CC~t of the Deoa:Iogue. .: "'3. Clerics and Religious 81'8 lllM'bidden to practice psychoan~6is accoi'di~g tq the'norms of "non 139, paragraph .~o. . Canon 139 provides that cleriC8 ...st· avoid affairs:' which, alf;tIough not unbecoming in them~es, are foreign 'to the'clerical .~. Without special permission f:IaeF may not practice medicine surgery 01.' accept certain publie offices. 'l'be document eoueluded:' . Permission of Ordhiar,. ""l. The opini()n of those wbo -nsider that a prior psychoan8d¥tical examination is definitely fteCessary before receiving Holy ttrders must be disapproved..

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WASHINGTON (NC)-An ed'Olorial which appeared' in the &tholic Star Herald, Camden, N. J.. diocesan newspaper, bas been' r:eprinted in the Congresaional ·Record. The editorial critfoizes newspapel' handling of alleged ·corruption in the Philadelphia city government. It was lltIaced·· in·the Record by· Rep. W,Uliam J. Gl.eetl, Jr., of Penn..lwnia.- .. ···· .

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"Parcel post packages" from Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, Perry Como, Governor Volpe and other no· tables will be among items a'uctioned Tuesday through Saturday nights of next \\"eek at what is expected to be the largest family bazaar in the history of .St. Francis Xavier Church, .Acushnet. The event will open at 6 nightly. Proceeds will benefit the new schQol fund. Rev. Alexis C. Wygers, SS.CC., pastor, is honorary chairman and the arrangements.' committee is headed by Henry Turcotte, aided by members of parish organizations. . Nightly featUl'cs include ao. "all you can eat" hot dog sale from '~ to 7· the opening night follQw(l(f by a square dilriee. exh'ibi~ion: Attendance pdzes,wiU be given nightly and other attractions· will inchidean art demon6tration Wednesday. night,' square dancing arid 'accordion :p'layii,g Thursday and 'Il talent' show'F.riday. .." . -Na~:ve Portug~ese. dancers' will perform Saturday I;light and 'tbe-:ew:ill also be an auction. Re':' . fFeshll)ents will' feature Portuguese alld' American speeialties. . Also on the program· will be kiddies rides, skill games and other boohts.

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ABu,mnus fiies Suit Against Ull1loversity WASHINGTON (NC) A $250,000 suit' has been filed' in District Court against Georgetown University officials by an alumnus who says' he' was injured' permanently during a student hazing at the universi,ty in 1956. . Richard' F. Heimbuch, who gl"Qduated from the university ia 1960, says he suffered a fradured leg during the hazing incident and is so disabled now that he is unable to enter the dental . j)rofession as he bad

Chicken Bcirbecue' Fall Rivei' Council, Knights of Columbus, wiH hold a· ~ily dlicken barbecue Sunday, Aug. 2'f' at Cathedral Camp. Ticket chairman is Michael'. F; Cusick, CIOuneil ,treasurer.

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P R AG:uli: .(NC) -:- Prague; Th~ 'shrine- isiocated on, the. Czechoslovakia, today is sealed' grounds of St. . Wencesla.us. .behind the Iron' Curtain and' church. Among its features is a with it the famed statue of the statue of the Infant of Prague; T .. "· " . ' ......... -,.~. for centuriell .' standing on ~ globe with Prague,. a focal point of Catholic devo- Czechoslovakia, marked on one side and Prague, Okla., on the But here in Oklahoma, in the other. heartland of the United States,' In the past 10 years thousands a second Infant of Prague shrine' have visited the shrine and is 'carrying on the tradition of' thousands more have mailed the original. petitions to be placed at the N ext Sunday" Oklahom~ shrine altar. Knights of CQlumbus and Catholic Daughters of America will join in ,a pilgrimage marking the 10th anniversary .of the National Shrille of the Infant Jesus of Prague. . Now Hidden Father S. H. Kleman, shl'ine director, recalled the circum-' stances surrounding' its' beginning. He noted -that in recent years the Infant of Prague' statue' lFamous for our Prime "has been hidden behind the Iron Curtain." . :Aged Ch~~cocd.· Br~iled 'The shrine· here. estab.Steaks - also' RoaSt lisQed, he said, "to continue this much needed devotion in our Beef - Sea' F~ . present day of w()rldunrest."

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ing prayer in public schools ia constitutional. ' The Court of. Appeals, in a 5 to 2 decision, upheld' recitation of the prayer as recommended in 1951 by the State Board of Regents, the highest educational authority. . The prayer, over which there has been more than two years of legal battle, reads: "Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence upon Thee and we beg Thy blessings upon us, our parents, . our teachers and our country." Use of the prayer in pu.blic schools had been challenged by the' New York Civil Liberties Union in a suit brought in behalf of five residents of the Herricks School District of Nas~au County. _ The plaintiffs charged that publicly suported facilities, such as public schools, may not be used, for prayer and other religious devoiions. They charged violation of Church-State separation. In one of the three majoriJty opinions written for the case, Chief Judge Charles S. Desmond said the prayer is not religious education, nor is it "the practice of or establishment of religion in any reasonable meaning of tho.se phrases." · Associate Judge Oharles W• Froessel said' th~t calling th0 pray~r unconstitutional would be· "to stretch the so,:called separation of Church and Stalle dOCtrine beyoild reasOn...· · !n. a dissent, Associate Justioe :M:ttrviiJ. R. Dye caned the prayer "a form of state-sponsored. religious education."-He said its use . overstepped, ."a· clearly defined. line. of demarcatioo betweea. Church and State."

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NEW'COADJUTOR: Bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of' Bridgeport, Co~., has been named Titula.r Archbishop of Nicopolis ad Nestum and ~oadjutor with right of sucOOssion to A.rchbishop Fran~s P. Keough Baltimore, . M~ NC PhotG'" . :." " 1',

PRIEST'S· BLESSING: Rev. Joseph Delaney blesses: . members of his family following his' First Soiemn MaSs in . th~ S~credHeart Church,~~U River. ·Kneeling,. left to right: his mother, his .sister, Sister Ann Joseph, ·S.U.S.C., and his father.' .

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Archbishop Ask. Bolivia to Protect Canadian Priests

Lizz~~ B~rden Didn't Do It, Says. 'Unto~d S~@Lfr6- AMfffJB~r

LA PAZ (NC) - Archbishop Abel Antezana y Rojas of La Paz has called! on the Bolivian governme~

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Perhaps the most celebrated murder case in American history, and certainly the most fascinating murder mystery and a fixed item of American folklore, is the double slaying of Andrew J. Borden· and bis wife Apby. They were butchered with an ax in figure of morbid interest, their Fall River home on the thought to have cheated-the law, hot and sultry morning of and since her death the legend Aug. 4, 1892. On June 5 of has ballooned_ the following year Lizzie Borden, Andrew's daughter and Abby's stepdaughter, went on trial in Massachusetts Superior Court at New Bedford . for the double slaying. Thirteen days later the j u r y brought in a verdict of not g u i I t y. Offi'cially the case has remained unsolved. But the general suppositiun has always been that Lizzie Borden got away with murder, and most crime specialists who have' written on the Borden case support this view. In book after book ~he late Edmund Pear~n hammered out what was meant to be incontrovertible proof that Lizzie did the bloody deed. Plays, novels,' ballets have been based on the case, and invariably they represent Lizzie as guilty. Argues llnnocence Now comes anew book on this inexhaustibly fascinating', if • grisly, subject. Called Lizzi.e Borden (Simon & Shuster. $4.50), and subtitled "The Untold Story," it is the work of Edward D. Radin who for yeHs has been a writer on crime, especially' murder. Mr. Radin tells us that he was long an admi.rer of Pearson's work and took it for granted that Pearson had dealt fairly with the case. But some time ago he undertook an independent study of the matter and reached . the firm conclusion that Lizzie did not perpetrate crime. His book presents the arguments for her innocence. Two Daughta'lll He sets l!le scene and delineates ~e drama tis pe!'SOnae. Andrew Borden was a poor man who rose to riches by dint of saving and investing shrewdly. Even after attaining wealth, he livecJ. modestly, if not meanly. He loved making money,bated spending it, By his firm wife he had two daughters, Emma and Lizzie, and when left a widower he remarried simply to get a housekeeper who did not have to be paid. This menage of four not the happiest in the world, but no more was it rent by dissension. Double Muroer Borden was 70, and Lizzie was 32, in that fateful Summer of 1892. 'The morning of Aug. 4 found five persons in and about the house, Emm.a was away visiting friends. Borden was at hand as were Abby, Lizzie, Bridget Sulliv.an,the maid ·ofaill work, and a man named Morse who was staying' with tIM! Bordens. While Borden was out on bUBiness and Morse was calling em relatives, Mrs. Borden was 1dlled in the second floor guest room. An hour and a hal! later, as Borden, unaware of his wife's demise, . rested before midday dinner in the downstairs sitting room, he was killed. Soon after the murders were noised abroad, causing a frenzy of ·excitement in the city, -suspicion of Lizzie sprang up. She was never to ,be .rid of it, eVeD though acquitted in court. Until her death in .1927 she was a

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For Latin America MADRID (NC,l - Eighteen new Spanish pries,ts destined to work in Latin America· have been ordained here by Benjamin Cardinal de Arriba y Castro, Archbishop of Tarragona.Eaeh new priest will work for a year in his own diocese in Spain before going to Latin America.

The Real Lizzie Mr. Radin dug out records to which no one had previously had access, or-which no one, at least, had thoroughly sifted. Their substance he marsh&ls / succinctly and cqgently . One of his first concerns is to show that the real Lizzie did not at all CQrrespond to the mythical monster. She was not a !:>ig woman, but small, indeed slight.. She was ,not dour, but :friendly and humorous. She was deeply religious, generously served the sick and gave away money to the needy. And, far from being at odds with her father, she wal> on excellent terms with him. . . The chief responsibility for attributing the murders to her Mr. Radin lays to a local newspaper, a new one fighting for circulation and resorting to sensationalism in order to attract readers. Refutes Pearson Mr. Radin proceeds to show that the jury had no choice but to reach the finding it did. He goes carefully through the trial, and it be:c.Qrrles clear that the prosecution failed ifismally in its earnest effort to pin the murders on Lizzie. " Quite legitimately, the defense counsel torpedoed some of the testimony calculat5d to tell most heavily against th(:' accused. This .reader, for one, has been per:'" suaded by Mr. ,Radin's argumEmtaUon. Once a' devotee of Pearson's work" Mr. Radin now rips it to shreds. He cites numerous omissions and suppressions in Pearson's supposed reprOduction of testimony at the trial., It is obvious that PearsOn did ' not hesitate to cut olltkey. phra~ .and passages to ignore others, to alter arbitrarily and to twist out of its true sense what carne from the lips of witnesses. ~rson, once reputed the foremost authority on American murder cases,and a dispassionate analyst, has his reputation destl'oyed in these pages. 'Who Did?'

But if Lizzie did not kiH her father and stepmother,Wibo did? Mr. Radin considers the possibilities. Could Emma have .secretly returned, dispatched the pair, then hurried back to her hosts? Could Morse, the guest in the -Borden household, have been lying about his movements on the day of the murder? . Could B.t:idget Sullivan have CQntrived the killing of her employers? Mr. Radin believes that he has spotted the culprit and red tes his reasons in detail. His view will not be hinted at here lest the, suspense. inherent in this painstaking and authoritative work be impaired. Unlikely to Stop One wonders; however,whether t!l.e deeply ingrain'ed popular notioll of Lizzie Borden as a sort of Yankee fiendwm be reversed. For generations ehildren and tihe:H' elders as well, have recited this bit- of doggerel: "Lizzie Borden took an axe And gave bel- mother forty whacks;' . . When she saw whet she had done ' She gave her fether forty-one:" They 'are not likely to stop now.

Michael' C. Austin Inc. 'FUNERA1SnVICIE . !,"COUNTY ST. . NEW BIEDFORD, MASS.

RED PROPAGANDA CONFISCATED: At the International Airport in Miami, a large supply of Red propaganda in the form of newspapers and magazines from communistcontrolled Cuba arrives. The shipment consigned to' New York was seized bY'wstoms officials, who declared th~t a new law prohibits the shipment and distribution of ·it. NC Photo.

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BURLINGTON fNC) ,- Catholic theologians regard the ecumenical movement in Protestant circles as a' "manifestation of the Christian spirit," a Catholic liturgist ,said here. F th F d 'cit R M M a ~ns~lta~~ the' p~nt::i Commission 1m Liturgy for the .cal .. . k' at ~umem eouneu, spea 109 Trinity College's liturg'y. week program here said: "It i.ndicates how anxious Protestants are to fulfm'the will of God that they should be one and CQme closer in charity and affection."

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CHICAGO' (NC) - T h pee thousand parochial school eh-ildren are attending 24 Summer reading centers here run by Catholic Charities as part of the Chicago Archdiocesan Reading Service, which works to improve the reading skiUs of 250,000 retarded readers or non-English' speakers a year.

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Two ~ Another speaker, Bishop Robert F. Joyce of Burlington, emphasized the importance <n. the laity in. Christian worship. He said: "When we talk about the public, we are talking chiefly about the leity, and when we talk abo.ut the Cburch we are also talking chiefly about the laity."

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He warned-tha't "there are~tw(l) meanings of the- word ecumenical," citing the' general o~ as a universal movement of the church, specifically related t<J the idea of unity, while Roman Catholics "think of ecumenical a~ a ge.neral 01" ~iversal coonc!1 of blsb~ cardlOals. and patrlarchs, meeting to consuier mattel' f fa'th" .

to assure the safety of six Calr;oo adian missioners whom the CQm,.; munists want expelled from tho country. The Archbishop also issued 0 pastoral letter warning. agaimo the Red threat and urging Catholics to combat communism. ~ pointed out that the Reds near/;?' succeeded in their effort la~ June to' overthrow this Soutlh American nation's government. The communists demanded th~. the Canadian priests-all Oblates of Mary Immaculate-bo expelled because they are "anm,.: labor" imd foreigners. The Red demand grew out crf1 an attack by' striking leftist Um\: miners on the Catholic Pius XIX. radio station in the mining towlIlI: of Siglo Veinte, about' 200 mikll south of here in the Andes. 'Unjust :Attacks' ' According to the communi~' the' six priests joined Catho~ miners who went to the statio:a to repel the attack after hearing it described while it was happening in a broadcast by io director, Father Jocelyn Grenie::J" O.H.!., of Victoriaville, Que. Because a number of lefti~ were hurt in the attack, the Red:J· claim, the priests are guilty ~ "unjust attacks on noble Um workers." Also hurt in th(:' 'attack ~ero· more than a dozen Catholice;,; three of whom were, seriously, wounded. A Sister was amc>n<3' the injured. The leftist attack on the ~ tion, built by ,Father Greni6!i", himself three years ago wi~: material sent from Canada biThis father, was the second m recent weeks. An earlier attack: in June was also beaten off .... Catholic miners.

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Decency Official Urges S!!Ipport Of Goed Fi~ms WASHINGTON (NC) s h 0 U I d support good movies at the box office 88 a means of increasing the ~atholics

number of such films, III National Legion of Decency official de.mred here. . Mrs. James F. Looram of New 'Y'OI"k urged Catholicfl to be "'more positive" in their approach to motion pictures. She '·also called on Catholics to cultivate their critical tastes by '!l'eading worthwhile booka on ·~!ms. ,

Mrs. Looram is chairman of , (he motion picture department

· I'Jf the International Federation of Catholic Alumnae, the Legion fIJi Decency's official reviewing agency. She was in Washington fur a screening of the 20th Oentul'y-Fox film "Francis of .Assisi" held for several hundred llWns attending Summer session) a1 the Catholic University of .&nerica. . She said in an interview that ~ encourage a positive approach toward movies, the legion has, iilnce 1958, recommended Cath· oiic family patronage of "more · h n a dozen" films which it regards as artistically superior as well as having sound moral · V<llues. Among these are "The ·rna of the Sixth Happiness," ""Illie Last Ang,ry Man," "Ben· Mur" and several Walt Disney ·~tures.

Diooussrolll Clllloo l1t1r8. Looram sees reason for \ Iboth optimism and pessimism regarding today's movie audiences. "I understand the public I3Upported Fred Zinnemann's fine film, 'The Nun's Story,' " she flllrid. "But there have been severol othel'S recently that did not draw the audiences they deserved-'The Diary of Anne I'rank,' 'Sunrise at Campobello' IJDd 'The Sundowners.'''

One important way in which 8atholics are improving their critical tastes ls by organizing fUm discussion clubs, she said. She cited such clubs at Georgetown and Notre Dame Universitfes, at Mundelein College and in 4be Newark archdiocese. Mrs. Looram also said that there are several excellent books dealing with motion pictures that can help Catholics to view films more intelligently. She zecommended "The Image Industries" by Father William Lynch, S.J., Edward Fischer's ~e Screen Arts" and "Movies, Morals and Art" by Father Gard!nec and Frank Getlein.

Ko~I%@*{F ~lmD'ft«!lM~t A kickoff banquet for the parIsh building fund will be held by Casimir Church, New Bedford, Sunday, Juiy 30 at Polish-American Veterans Hall. Parish children will present musical enteriIIlinment at the banquet, 'accord· ing to Joseph S. Ponichtera, general chairman.

AWARD WINNER: Carol Bernard, daughter of Mr. . and Mrs. Henri Bernard, 183 Collette Street, New Bed15ord, is recipient of a scholarship to Sacred Hearts A~emy, Fairhaven. A graduate of St. Kilian's ilI'ammar school, soo is aloo a Senior Girl Scout and holoo the Marian AwMd.

Two LaSalette PrrietJts Prom([)te Work of· God At ·ll.o~e~ ~~ Philippine Mi~$.ions Marion Unsworth "Missionaries feel strongly tha't the Northern part of the Western Hemisphere, the United States and Canada, has an obligation to save the world, materially and spiritually. The people here have go mw'h; and God has preserved them for some purpose." This was the opinion of Rev. Fral1l:ois Bourgeois, a LaSalette missioner from' North Attleboro who is home OR vacation following m 0 r ethan five years work in the Philippine Islands. .. T h Q B)t

PhiH.ppine people have so little, n.o electricity, poor communica~

tiOIl8. Since there are few brid-' ges, when the rivers flood, we simply can'·t get across to the other villages and towns." Father Bour~eois is visiting his pa,rents, Mr. and Mrs. Aure1e J. Bourgeois of 4 Franklin Ave., North Attleboro, and his twin brother, Arthur, also a LaSalette Father, who teaches Church history at the congregation's Attleboro Seminary. Included among his family and relatives on hand to greet him were some 16 nie<:es and nephews, some of whQm he had never seen. Sacred ll1e~rt School 'lIhe brothers attended Sacred Rea,rt School in North Attleboro, then Al"thur went to LaSalette Prep, Enfield, N.H. while Francois attended North AtUe-· borQ High School and followed his twin a year later. They then entered the LaSallette novitiate ~t Brewster, then mudied philosophy and theology &t the Attleboro Seminary. On May 22, 1954, the Bourgeois twins were ordained, then finished their pastoral yeat' in theolQgy at Attleboro. From that time on, their paths ~lit, Francois being assigned to the Philippines and Arthur to teach at Enfield. ~ After a year, Arthur had three years of parish work at Richardsville, New Brunswick, one yeat' as assistant master' of novices at Center Harbor, N.H., and since then bas been stationed at Aottleboro. After one- year O!f tratning at SantiagQ Isabella, Philippines, F'ather Fl'anoois was named director of a higbschool of 400 studen ts, and parish priest at San Moatao; a city with a population of. abolllt 25,000, approXJimately 16,000 of whom are Cathol~s.

Both Musicians "The' people are eJctremely friendly, and the children are especially fond of· musk," said the missioner. This is fortunate for childtl'en and pastor, since both Father . Francois and Father Arthur have played and sung as far back as they can remember. "I think my father taught us to sing before we could talk," Father Arthur, the violinist in , the family, added. Father Frank who plays the clarinet, has be;come known in tbe Philippines as the Singing Padre. "One of the greatest meallS of getting to the students Ls through m~sic, since the Filipinos are naturally very rhythmic," he said. To this end, ·he has formed a 10o-voice glee club and a 60piece drum and bugle col'pll. Wants Instruments While he ita home, Father hank hopes to speak to many groups and persons interested ia helping the missions and in whll't missiQnem at'e accomplJishmg. Chief among items he hopes 110 colloot are musical instruments. "We can teacb the .children 110 pJ.ayo almost any kind of instrument, and we can do a lot CJf, good through musk. We've brought mor0 bacll: to theM_ through that" than through sel'~ mons." So far he has colleoted a flew, but hopes to get a lot more. He asks anyone baving any· instnlmenl:s, band or majorette unirorms, boots or batons that he is willing to oo-te 110 contact the sem inary. Teach Ccms*ruetton Another project, in addition ta music, taken oven by Fath~ Frank, is that of providing bools ",to teach the F.iIlipinos how ta build solid homes which wdtl not be b10wn down bI.r ty.pb;aons GIld high. winds." T.he seal'cll fm .iMo» jlw au.

TWIN MISSIONAIIUES: Rev. Arthur A. Bourgeois, left, and his twin, Rev. Francois Bourgeois, both Missionaries of LaSalette, keep the home and mission fires burning. Father Arthur teaches at LaSarette Seminary, Attleboro, while his twin brother is assigned to the Philippine Islands. students will also include c0stume jewelry, bobby pins aoo curlers, mirrors, Summer and Fall clothing, school supplies. "Anything imported iG taxed 100 per cent, before any margin is added for. profit. That's why these things are such flreasurell 1io the people." , In their work in <the Philippines, the LaSalette Fathers concentrate on youth. "In the United States," Fathel' Arthur explained, "we can depend a great deal on parents to train chilqren, see that they get to Mass a'nd the sacraments and· receive instruction. In the Pbilippines, without priests, or with very few priests, the older people have become indifferent so we work thrQughhig.h school age children." It Worlls "It works too," his brothel" ·added. "LaSalette Fathel'S have been there since 1948, and our first graduates are now being married in the Church, bringing their children to be baptized amd attending the sacraments." In a·climate which'would send most of us seeking the cool breezes of the ocean,.95 to 100 in the shade most of the yee;r, Father Frank takes charge of the school, the San Matao church and 32 villages which are part of the parish. Up until one year agQ, he worked alone, but since tha,t time Rev. Jose Nacu, t,hefirst Filipine LaSalette missionary, bas tak0R over the village visits. In the villages there ~ eate<:hists who come once a ~ek for instructions at the town parish, then return and condl.llCt lessons between the priest's visits. Want Native Clergy There are also three FiHpinQ nuns, one of whom teaches ootechism' in the school, the otherfl going to the villagell, The gQVernmentallows one ond one-'balf hours of school time each week ~r religious instruction, and each village bas its own public school, and a small balJliPtoo

churCh.

"Our great WQ!'k now is to rorm a na,tive clergy," Father Frank . continued. "We have sfarted a minor seminary in Santiago, Isabella, whero thel'e are now 17 seminarians. They do ·llheil" bi~ school and college

work there. then come to Attleboro fOr philosophy and theology. ''There are six studying now in the States; one has been ordained, Father Nacu, and another will be ordained in the Philippines in August. Thus a native clergy. will be built up, which Is as it should be." Nuns A"rnet Novrees The three nuns belong to the Francisoan ApostoLic 'Sisters, an order established to assist the priests in their work and seven Filipino girls are now novices. The school takes in between 30 and 40 non-baptized students each year. When Father Frank returns in the late Fall, he will have two sChools to run in Roxas, north of his last post, and will have to start all over.· There are no nuns there, so his first proje<:t will be to build a convent so that he can get them. Fond of Amerk2nas "Our work is a tittle ea,sier than in· some places," Father P'rank continued, "since the Communists haven't infiltrated much yet. They are working on it espe<:iaUy in the colleges, taking the usual line C1f aU the money in the bands of a few, which is the case in the Islands. "They can't believe that an American could be poor. FilipinOG are fond of Americans, their way of life, clothes, music and go forth. American soldiers made a, tremendous impression on them during the wail". In faC't, without our habit, they call U\S 'Joe'!"BrQm now t.o late Fall tibe Singing Padre will be making home mission appeals and giving illustrated lectures. "In the outlying ai'eas, not one school is self-supporting, altbough we try 110 charge tuition. All we have done has been through donations from the States." An hour-long film in color caned "Unless They Be Sent," ·has just been completed by the mi,ssionaries and F'3iU1er will be showing it to any interested groups, in addition to slides. Anyone interested in learning of the work of the LaSalette Fathers in the Philippines 9hould contact the Mission Procurator, Rev. Albert Fredette, M.S., La&tlette Missions, Attleboro. .

THE ANCHORThurs., July 20, 1961

5

Priv(lJ\l'~ Schools In ItG~}f Operate Wit~cLGt Aid ROME (NC) Italy's non-state schools save the government $80 million and educate 580,000 students a year without. receiving any compensation from the state. More than !ro per cent of these schools are conducted by Catholic Religious and are paid for by Italian Catholic parents. Like Catholics in the United States, Italian Catholic parents are finding it increasingly difficult to meet the growing expenses of these schools. And like their American coreligionists, they look to the government for aid. Beyond these points, however, there are major differences ~_ tween the two situations. llleHgious TeachelrS While the U. S. Catholic school system is primarily a system of parochial schools, almost all of the Catholic schools in Italy are operated dire<:Uy by religious orders and congregations. Few are directly attached to parishes. . Total enrollment in non-State Italian schools is estimated by government figures at 583,474 for the scholastic year of 190061. This is approximately 8.7 per cent of Italy's 6,158,208 students enrolled in elementary, middle and advanced schools. The greatest difference between the two situations is, however, that in Italy there is no real or fancied constitutional wall of separation between Church and State, Religion of State Catholicism is the religion of ~e State. Priests and Religious teach religion one hour a week in lftate-operated schools and receive Zl smaH salary fOl' their work. Opponents oi giving aid to non-state Italian schools-and there are many-note that the Italian constitution provides in Article 330: "Private groups or persons have the right to institute ~hools and institutions of education wi-thout expense to the state." They insist tbe last phrase of the provision cleltrly provides that anyone whe wishes may open a school but that they do not have any right to state funds. Catholic educational spokesmen, on the contrary, point out that the Italian constit.ution does not in any way forbid direct aid to non-state schools. At best, they argue, ~t leaves the maHer open to debate and amendment:

"7he FamiRy That Prays loge,her Stays Together" no:

FIRST NATIONAL BANK A«lebofr~Soutb Attiebol'o

Seekonk

HATHAWAY OIL (0. IN(. INDUSTRIAL OilS HEAlING OILS

llMIl(EN OIL BURNERS

Sales & Service 50l COUNTY ST. NEW SC:OfORD WY 3-1'751


.' .,..Oiocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 20, 1961

6

Urges Liturgists To. Emphasize lIteal Pre$enCe

Russicm Roulette

On Words Pity the poor citizen who thinks he· has ,within his, grasp the supreme tool of knowledge when he knows how to read. For he is doomed to be upset 'and dis~ppointed. . So cleverly - or incorrectly - are words being us~, that he must carry around several mental caps, prepared t() whisk them on and off depending on what he happentl W be reading at the moment..' , He reads .a plea for funds for a· cure to some crippling , disease -. and he must know that the words only indicate in a faint way the full s"tor,y·of tragedy that lies beneath. He reads an advertisement and he must switch mental . gears and realize that any. resemblance between the words and the fact are quite likely to be purely COIncidental. He grows .indignant along with the' editorial indicting modern culture for its breakdown in morals' and decency. And he must be prepared to turn to the movie page. of that same newspaper and see w·hat has been seEm as fit to print · by the same hand that 'gave approval, to the indictment.: Yes, knowing how to read is only the beginning of . education. For the mind must be equipped to interpret, to catch all the nuances and connotations, to see what is beneath the surface and to ·see .that words can 'cloak as well'as reveal. Naive is he who begins with the assumption , that words are vehicles to 'convey the truth. At times they' 'dO this -:- no cynic woul(( SQ far as' to 'disciaim, this' ·altogether. But they ~re' use~ 1;() ,cr~at~' an atmosppere, tc lIell - ,worthily ~ ot~er\vi~-. a product, to movero action, to. make money:" , .; . " . " .Words have been ~ebased, and this ia undoubtedly·the ·.most serious accusation that the advertising industry stands charged with. So extravagant have claims been, so Cfhnou.Q. h thE WEEk. With. thE. Chu.n.ck '::,"]. irresponsible are promises, so unrealistic are prOduct· . 1 1 " · promotions 'that th~ general public is g.rowing wOrd-wea.~ By REV; ROBEItT w. lHoADA, Cath,olic 1[JIIliver-~ and is beginning to assume much of the. same critical and --;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;,;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; disbelieving attitude in. reading the ads as t he Madisoll '" Avenue type had in composing t h e m . ' 'l'ODAY-St: Jerome ',Emjl~an, a sense, for the city--'-to bless it, The advertising moguls are realizing this at long last. .conf~ssor•.Thls, y.reek IS faIrly to express its worship, to make it . . . burstmg WIth gIants OlE com pas- conscious; of 'God's judgment. They are worrIed about crackdowns for mIsrepresentatIons ,sion. Both Epistle and. Gospel And the life of the Christian and about the whole atmosphere of scornful disbelief of reiterate that command which ,community precisely as worshipwhich they are becoming more ,acutely aware. ',!B sO difficult for .me~l ~ ~beY. ing community-its vigor, intenIt is about time they read their own ads andtheR ~kecil That command whIch IS dIfflcu~t sity and' strength- i~ the life th I' I . h?' . for us even to grasp, because it that it must share with the city eJ!lSe ves - s thIS trut . bnplies that our posse:;SiOrui ar~ if it would fulfil its funetioo. not 01;H'. own in. any ultimate MONDAY-Mass as on SDBsense. . . . Clay. jf .th~templ.e does ,not th~ .. , That perfection means a prac- . with., l.i,f.e., ,it.' is not . s,u.rpr,ising . ' 'For venality,- in its" ,-uost crass form; nothing bea1J8 . tical communism far more . . . . . that the. city should ignore it. If the give-awaY or something-for-nothing shows that' aN iJWeepingthllO anytlh.iilg the ,~tempiecheapensIts' 'Y'itnesil .,tiil holding .teievisiQIi..'iife: . . ... •.... " "',.' ·MarxistSh.ave yet thoiJght of H;' by an obstina<te preference for It ·takes 'a strong stom.ac.h to, wa,teh w.it.h equa·.niinU-o..: II hard 'lesSon fOr Christians who : the 'peripb.era,l ~nd '·the. .... non-.. . ',"3 :iwlve fallen 'hito "the slovenlY the greedy sighs, the.nervous calculation.s, tM,.n . aked ire ,. . . ' ,eSsential, th~ city, ~ven,~,I',len;k .' .. . . babit of e<iuat~rig ttieba~tlt;'~ ,accidentally heats something ,the in. the faces of thec~mtes.taritsM they openlY-:,covef and. .., t.wee~·. t~~, Cbureh a!1~~' athe.~~ .Church· says will take it to 'be jockey·for.;.PQs8esSion o{.ful-coatsor'bOOt8()i-''-other Obj~ ','with the, battle 'between rlval . :gibberi,s~. If~ th.e t~mple"redueetl ef-Ju~ury. : ','",:; " .\ ". ..,. " . " ',~~nomic . and ~li,ticll;ll 'syS):e~~., -its ,most sacred' hour to .the for':' . 'And the host of the' show encourages .the '~' f'A·TOMORROW..;....:8t. Lawl'enee ,m.ali~ fuifilJ!lent of aci.u1y.,~. , eov.etousnes.s 'ashe goe.s,:'hi.tO· delirious desci-ip·tions'()f,· the . et1 Brindisi, - Confe880I~, Doctor.· .city_ is. bound. to suffer..Beca... The Gospel of love n~:lds teach-" one'cann~t give what"o~e ~ .articles and whips ,bothparliciparit~ 'and audience' ,i~t.> ers as well as activists and prac'- not have. The liturgical revival ,.nervous·frenzy over,the.poss~ssi()Ds'that"are.,beinggiv.m titioners. And o.ti.rag~~ particu- ,is attempting to insure tha4:we. away. larlY needs to betatightwhat . Ca~olics . have llOqle}hing" m ord- that we m<>v ...... I'n gl'·· , ,T}:ie actual' drooling ,is-=.'in 'most~~a ·":'-inel'Cif.· love is. It is an imper90na1 age. " ~t;' ~ ~~ ..-r~· · absent. But not much .else' is concealed.' . '~: Its in~tituti()l]~, i~ methods and . . TUESDAY-St,'James, ~ . . . 'techmques, even Its goals· hav~ " tie. Part of" what w.e give in-' And. this, in its way,: is as harmful to the vieWiBg' 10.8, large ~x~ent been deperson- . "volvesih~wiHingness to appear audience as the bloodshed and ',sadism type of program 1M) lllized. ThIS IS not aU bad~ but, at tiines to be "fools" for Christ recently decried. For a premium is put upon desire ,aM' it does .mean t~at th,~ greate~ (Epistle), to be what Cardinal Posses'sions;.' And such a' program undoubtedly pandeI'8 1lt> o.f the vIrtues wrll hav,~ a hardef' Suhard in' his magnificent pastime than ~sual. . torals called "signs of contradic- . , the cult of the materialistic. , S.uch an Impersonal world. h.as tion." B'u't we can"t accept thl'S "th th t' I . . Cli N o one, 0 f course, can say Wl rna ' ema lca precISIon 8. rlg~t to e~pect. of tin:: rlS- GOspel blessing if we really are that such a program at such and such a moment prooucel! tia~ mstructIon m ~h~ ~rt of fools-only if we are mistakenly effects deleterious to such and such number of persons. lovmg. For the Chr,lstIan. s be- branded as such. The scandal of in a' perso?al God, .m the the Protestant or unbeliever as And J'llSt because such statI·s·tI·CS cannot' be "OII'ven,' the lief person of Chnst and, m. the he observes our worship should assumption is made that no harm is done. But it· if:! this human person makes hIm reIa- be a source of shame rather creeping kind of effect that is .dangerous, this impression tively u',llikely to red~ce man, than of pride. that is given and taken over-·a period of time, this influence to the pomt where lov,~ IS mean- . that insinuates ever so slowly and ever so truly. . iilgless.' - WJEDNE~lllA,Y St. Anne, Mother of the Blessed Virgin Such programs do little credit to television or their SATURDAY":"St. Mary Mag- . Mary. Woman's talent for ,consponsors. It can be admitted that some small article as a' dalen, 'Penitent. Love is not only servation appears in both Epistle the chief mark of the Christian and Gospel of today's Mass. The P rize m,ight heighten the entertainment value of a show, J'f I e. It'IS a Is0 e ff ec t'Ive f or th e male'principle of invention must might add a note of harmless competition. But to put forgiveness of sin" III the (;os- '.be balanced by the female prinimpressive price tags' on.. articles and to .metaphorically pel, Jesus says that .Mary cI'ple of.nu,rtu.re. ·The Church ~ ~ ' Magb d e1en "s sms WI'II be f OJrglven " t" t fl' th . t th emother is a Church which proth tt t th sca er ese 0 e peasan s, o· mg em m o e cause she has loved'mucli. "Love arena and allow persons to lose a certain amount of integrity covers a m:ultitude of sfns," This ,tee.ts, safeguards, conserves. We in the raw'pursuit of them, well, this is indeed desire under might be understood as a kind oseetherthia'sr'c'ains ohfehrerwlol,rfeSh.ip as in the li$hts of the televisil>n cain~ras. And it:i~ not a plea.<l6nt of bargain if we did not reali~ -,' But to ,I,>e whole, to be CODlsight to behold. . . . that love, join\ng us t,.) God and . plete,' the Chur~h must.' bring

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ST. LOUIS (NC) - :r.a. urgista were advised thew "must never confuse • fence with the garden" by S :fIormer president of the NatiONQ I:.iturgical Conference here. Msgr. Martin B. Hel1r~ pastor of Holy Cross parish h~ spoke out against liturgists \l\lMl pay more attention to extemeilll than to the Real Presence CIlI Christ, at a litrugical ins~ at Webster College in neariJr? Webster Groves. .' The Monsignor said the ..... called compendiums o~ 'liturer-' which confine liturgy towM4l di'rections of "when to make Cl small bow or a large one" betil8r eould be named "expend-ium~ since they can be dispensed qu1te easily. "The great mistake made _ some, years ago, was that thew only moved on the perip~ and never got to the Real Pr~ . enee inside," Msgr. Hellrie~ said. As a consequ'ence, he ad~ lit'urgy.· itself received a b81lI name, ' ""Moving of Holy Spirit "Rubrics aren't life," he .... cl-ared. "We must never confU8ll the fence with the garden~ -

wa

liturgical movement is a lif~ JnOV&o ment toward the verY ~ . Christ. And it does not mcmI) from externals-fr<>m the 0UliJ,., side. "The more I appreciate b Holy Eucharist, the more I appreciate the sacraments. ''!bIl more I appreciate the holy w.oR.l .• of God, the more I apprecI the purpose of the sacramentalll. The liturgical, movement • really the moving of the ~ Spirit in, the Church." ' The' Monsignor,whe hIIIE written several books on tIiIJ litUrgy. 'and ~s associate ,edit.1lr of' Worship magazine, which _ de,voted. to. 'the .liturgica.1 m... -:- •..,... ment, said preoccupations wHIB .externals has affected nlaDr7 'people's ~ttiiudeS tOwardB SMirl

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The Monsignor advised maI!Ilo ing use of meaningful sacrameo.: tals as well as the sacramen:t:& Holy water fonts and crucifilHilll should be given more often DIl dd' t h ...... we mg presen s, e sa_ "Never make light of the sae... mentaIs," he cautioned. 'Pfij'

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LAHORE (NC) _ A mil~ . dollar project to rehabilitate tl\9"'>

~~~eanv~~e~~dinhe~:stb:~~=

Dominique Pire, O.P., winner .. the 1958 Nobel Peace Prize. Spread over a period of JhIIl years, the project will embraell 'four villages in the ChittagODl!l district of East PakiStan. . . . program is aimed at' i~uci.atl .il> our fellowmEm as it does, iti _ from', .." L.. villagers to solve. r · sto'reroo'm '.ne·w thl·...... ...... . the their. ~ basically incompatibl~! with the ,as w,ell as." old. Inventi,on..,',must. ., ' lems 'on a self.:help basis 81) • ,, . pride 'andself.:sufficiency; isO:,: , " ~~~n(le:c')nservation. Anp tM not to need any outsi,de ~!eil ~nd f~Plar~ten4~ss,' \Yilich : city, the geCUlar world, which fOr 'after the ~OjecthaS ,been ..... 16 ,.ue a.l Sin; . eeillturies has been. inventillrliirt ' " ~N I NT, III SUNDAlr AFTEIil .a, marvelQus Pace. ,c~~d1)'t ~ '. "P~~~h~ !»ire ~nned :ttte~ PENTECOST. Catholi~~ whom-e' .-le~ 'abOut a Chu~h;a~9"a, Wqr~ . eet after he wftnesged ha.. , , ' . -', c content ',with a state· of affairs : ~ip'whk:h ~~~ bei~~ wrought by the first,eye'.OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER T,HE DIOCESE"OF FAtlRIVEI . in which,Sunday wol'llhip is''less ,.tt) tbe,~. ,,' ' " "~; Which struck East PakistaJi . . . . ' . , .. . ' .", . .. ., -. . than ,3 genuine religious' experi.,: ..: ~ Th" L. .:..- ' : ,; . ,l&8t ~October; , T~ee " othl!!!' ' . . ,fublished weekly by The CathCllic Press,Of;.the DiQCe... of;Fafl AiV«. : ence for ~the children.' ciI. GOd ' .. ,. . an S:.· atno 1Ca,.. 'elonesheve since, Caused . . . . ~ ",' 410", Highland, Avenue .,." .?:. , , ' .. , 'W'ould·'doweH,to rer~!6d·todaY'8 . ;- BERI:.IH (N€)..,....The preeideDt· .. mendoua demage'iIt' 'the' ...... Fall River, Mass;-.' , OSborne '5-7154;, " . -. Gospet'c, It is rich ,in meaninJJll, Qf the.German ,Evangelical .(lAI- - . ,..' . . .. " '. Pl:J8l,ISH,E.R. ',-", . . . ,: .... ",' .~ , ',. but at the, least' it poiints out·te, t1leran)i' Church· Conference, ,JR. ' AiJ 11 tiNt step, ·Fatbel' PiN . . . . .' , us the relationshiplx~tween the ; Reinhold, von ·Thadden-Trieg- : eent .. two specialistS 'to mahe . . Most Rev: James' L Connolly" D.O.; PhD. city and the temple, the secular .. laft, '. visited Julius Cardinal on-'the-spot study 'of, the . . . . GENERAL MANAGER ASST.- GENERAI:MANAGEk and the sacred. " 'Doeplner, Bishop of Berlin, ·iIl . 'A:ftef' the experts' repOl't . . . Rev. Daniel F. Shelloo, M.A: Rev~ John P;-OriscoU Th~ are·not two unrelated advluice, ,of ·t·he· Protestant been ana1¥zecI, Father Pire . . . " :sph~res. The' temple is in the':· group'sassembiy' here,,,tlo t'hank . himself return at the head.,. MANAGING EDITOR·· city as the ,Incarnati'on was jfl - Berlints ',Catholks for:~ team Of experts to UD<iertalie . . . Hugh J. Gold" . ~ woold. The' temp1l~ ~ist8.'ill iileir homes to ~bet;. . i1ebabilitaUoD work. '

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Guam Islancl~~ Honor MemOry Of P~iest-Hero . AGANA (NC) -:- Guam · remembered Father Jesu8 Baz a Duenas, thejsi d'lI outstanding hero-martYr' of

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St. Patri&Parish, Fall Ri~, Beginning· I'n·'Factory, N 'S OW' erves 1400 Families

TtiE ANCHORThurs., July 20, 1961

7

Predicts Failure For Castro Effort To Form Church

By Marion Unsworth . .' In 1883, while Fan River was stilJ part the Providenee Diocese,' and part of the city was in the state of Rhode Island, BIshop Hendriken established a new parish, St. MIAMI (NC) - A Cuban Patrick's,' from old. St. Mary's parish. Rev. John Kelly was named first pastor and MasS refugee priest predicted hero was .~~lebrated in a building behind the site of the present church known as the ''broom factory". Later this building ~that any .attempt by. the was moved to Vale Street and . Castro regIme to orgamze a wasF used as a synagogue.. Daltional church in Cuba will - meet with failure: ather, Kelly served as . Father Armando Jiminez"

of

World War II, o~ the 17th iUWversary of his death. , . . ,Hundreds from aU parlsof ,fhc island made a pilgrimage to St. .Joseph's church in lparajan. where Bishop Apollinaris l3aumgartner, O.F.M. Cap.,. Vicar pastor for 12 years, during which who was ordained.in Havana 1!§ Apostolic of Guam, presid~ at ti.Qie he made plans for apermayears ago, said one top reason a special Solemn Memorial MlISIl nent church, but it was not until why the Red-rigged regime will foi" the priest-hero.' the year he left, 1885, that the fail in an attempt to form 11 During the Japanese occupa- corners~ne'was laid and. ths scllismatic church is "they will €ion of Guam in World War.n, church erected. not have any clergy." the boyish looking priest· .was Rev. Thomas P. Grace Was hiD There are only three priests taken prisoner. He was accused successor, and by the time he m Cuba in sympathy with tho ~f .hiding a U. S. Navy' o~icer had served two years, the n""';"h Castro regime, Father Jiminen and also of withholding infor": had grown enough to warrant El said. He named Fa-ther Germaill mation about the movements of curate, Rev. G. W. Brown, 'WHO Lenee, already under suspen£merican troops. arrived in 1887. . . sion in the Havana archdiocese, Tortured, Beheaded, ,. During' his pastorate, Fathei" who heads the newly organized Father Duenas was subjected Gra~e' was: responsible for the . Christian Radical Advance; Fr• .' _ta tortures by the Japanese, put building' of a rectory. Included Guillermo Sardinas, a military ,~adfastly refused to 4llk tQ :his on the, parish prcpel'lty at. that ehaplain, and Father Ignacio .~ptors. On July 12, 194.4, Fll~her ti.m.e .was. the church with-'the Blann, O.F.M., who directed tho ,J)uenas paid with his life for ,his rectory· next· door' and !Ioly' · now suppressed Franciscan pubo iLoyalty to the U.S.-he Wl's.pe- Name Hall; acroSli the street runu.catfon, La Qulneera. . headed by the Japanese. ning in' back of the property, 'Milltla Guard Churches Shbrtly after hisdeath,.Amer- which was later used as a prelean forces took Guam and sev- primary school. ' Father Jiminez was pastor of eraI naval officers who' had been Third Pastor · Santa Ana chUTch at Gl1anabo befriended by the priest emerged By the time that the third Beach, outside of Havana. Ho from their hiding places· in pastor was appointed, Rev. said "it is impossible now" to , Michael Cooke, in 1890, two curII vein freedom in' Cuba. ~ves. In urging his people to a·ttend ates as well as the pastor were Churches are .guarded constmlUy the memorial service for Father necessary to take care of th~ inby the Castro militia, priests aNI Duenas, Bishop Baumgartner creasing Catholic population: of heckled while they offer· .MaSill . I asserted: the area. or attempt to preach sermOl1& "Father Duenas was an outMany curates served under ·The militiamen keep a record :'manding Guamanian p r i est Father Cooke during his long of tho~ who attend devotion b7 , whose courage and true' patri- pastorate of 24 years. They inmaking records of their aut9 otism serve as a reminder' to '<;ludEXl' Revs.' J. F. Haney, M. J. license plates when they ,driWl to church, he declared. . fJhe present generation to fight' O'Reilly, John E. Brady, J: E. fcyr their freedom lest they lose Doran, T:P. Sweeney, J. H. OfAll native Cuban priestsha~ · . it; and to walk the way' of Tobin, J. Fitzgerald, Joseph · been asked to support the Castro <l!emocracy les~ they forfeit it. Griffin, E. J.' Fahey, P. A..' communist government," FathCi' Present Dangei"" :Cronan, R. J. Calnen; and EdJiminez said. "Most of them aNI «Never has the' free world mund J.Ward, later to become leaving Cuba." been closer to danger than at this sixth pastor ~f .St. Patrick's. Father Jiminez, who was j~ moment Communism honors' its .' It was durmg thE' pastorate of prisoned for four days after .ST•. PATRICK'S 'CHURCH, FALL RIVER martyrs' and takes great enthu- . Father Cooke that St. Patri~k's the invasion abtempt, estimated 'siasm for their form of life each . School was erected. The eIght by Bishop Ca~idy, was added . ducted the. school, but fntbe there are about.50 priests oa time their memory is kept. ·Can- grade school, staffed 1>Y Sisters .tQ. the paristl,. 'whE!re the pastor' early 1950's the DominIcan Sis- ·the island. He said Bishop C~~ «hose who love freedom be less' of .Mercy, now has an enl"QIlmeni wa~ nO,w.asSil!ted by tbr~' cUr- ters. came to take charge of tt. RIu Angles and six Cuban priem. enthusiastic about the·lives·' of .of some 6~:pupiIs. ates. '.' . ,operation. .were ousted from the Diocese 01 Cbeir martyrs or llfford to let " Jamell E.: Cass~, who In 1941; p~rt of St. Patri~'1 . , ' PreseD& Curates Camaguey some weeks ago,bal Cbetr enthusiasm turn from was named MOlllugnor lB. 1912, . wa~ .cu:t ,off. and was add~. te .: ' . In the past. ten years the Revs. . now have been permitted to, retdeals· to mere bacchanall:in.,~n- .. ~~:c:~s ~ b;~~:n~~:o~a::"St. ~1JI~.l':lIfISh,. Fath~rM~rl~rty .. ,fQbn Delany,.Gerald ShoveltoD, turn ~ ~he city of Cama~ The six 'priests ate the",Onl)Joyment? " . . . . ", . , . . wJlS '.assIs.teti»y t~e. Ref~. :1,~hn John P. Cronin, Robert S. Ku' ....When the day comes ·that'the ,St. ,.Patrick'.s,: fourth pastor., in H. McCann, Wilbam DOlan.. zynskri and Kenneth J. Delano clergy in .the entire ·province,' ~ . :'6ee world is lessdevoted"to ,.• Augu~of,1!;},t3. " . ' . , . , ' ,,~~rose·Bowen.JohniBoyd,·"'haw'ilssisted'Msgr. Ward. ThO' ·said.' · principles of its way 'oiliving . '" Whl1e, .. ,~here, he .to~ doWll .Will~am, Galvin, John.O,Keef.e, ._ last three· are' stiU stati~-';"... _~' · itI8n are those who are'from'the" Jloly ",Name HaU. WhICh had .. Edwm Loew·andLeo Curry.' the Fall Ri . h. vo"'U . . . .Opposition, the free' world will . bee~ c~nver:ted i.nto ~ hospital A fewmollltlhs after ',Father' . ver pans ,. 'be'iIi a sorry plight and in"the dUI:mg:tlte..flu,ePI,deI~l1c.of1918'MoriartY 'died in' 1951; Bishop The Church has a Women's · the very grave danger o{'losing" and buI1t.St. Johns D.a y Nursery. 'Cassidy also' died' and Bishop Guild which recently celebrated : What it claims to ·cherish. on. the. Slade,. Street SIde. A con- 'Connolly'appointed Msgr. 'Ward its 25th anniversary, Ho,ly Name BUSINESS AND Memorial Schools vent, pIa.nned to match.the archi.· to se rv'" .. tho',past or··a . t· 'St. : SbCie'W,' C.Y.O., Confraternity of "t·t .. ' f' h. e 'as"SIX . DUPlICATUNG MACHINES "'Father Duenas was a gOod ec ure 0 c .l-'rch and school, . ·Patr·iC k' M g Wd . that Christian Doctrine, Boy Scouts. 'priest-and he was. at the same 'wa~ erect~d':next to the rectory, .time h~' r:n~~at:~ ~:dn~~dee- ·;Knights of the Altar, Children 5eclond' and Morgan . . 'time:, a 'good patriot. He "knew .' fa.cm g Sla~e, Str~t.. . "'orat~ the whole parish plant. ! .an,d Adults Ghoir and St.ViQfALL RIVER . ". ·what it meant to suffer for the Monsignor's Assistants, A ' ·'~'·b .ild' h " \..'"",__ ' .cent de Pal,11 Society;. ApP'r9xl~ hId d t if' Ass' t" gM"' . C 'd .' ne.. u 109 as ~ Jriately 1400 families memWY 2-0682 OS 9-6712 eause h' e I:V~ a~. b\safc: I.~ Revs I~InE C sgr. J assl Ji~ereadded, a: corivent for the sistern "bers' of the parish. E. J. McGINN, Prop. e~enh "IS e or IS e Ie In'l T h ' " T' °lrr, amFes : a~, who staff the Day Nursery. OriI\Igt. . oma~ ayor, rancls...· ginally HoI Ghost Sisters conToday not far from the spot Maloney, Edward J. Gorman, ' . y where the priest-hero was be- George A.' Meade, Raymond headed there stands the Father Considine, and James J. Gerrard, 0 Y A Delicious ~ , Duenas Memorial High School who left St. Patrick's in 1932 to The Associate Ji'amily of the Treat ~ and Junior ~ollege. The school, become chancellor of the Diocese Holy Cross Fathers will hold its Plumbing - Heating planned by Bishop Baumgartner, and now serves. as Auxiliary annual 'fa~ Saturday, July' 29 Over 35 Yean was opened shortly after the Bishop. at the Holy Cross Mission House, of Satisfied Service . end of World War II. When Msgr. Cassidy was ap- Tucker Road, North Dartmouth. pointed Auxiliary' Bishop iA 806 NO. MAIN .STREET 1930, Rev. ~dward J. Moriarty FaU River OS 5-7491 became the next pastor at . St. FOl: Patrick's. He was to remain SHEET METAL SYDNEY (NC) Despite there untii his' death in 1951. rain, blustering winds an(i WinJ. TESER,· Prop., During that time Rose Hawter cold, 1,500 pilgrims of all thorne Caneer' Home, established RESIDENTIAL' ages spent one whole night· in INDUSTRIAL prayer in the mother church of COMMERCIAL' Australia, St. Mary's Cathedral 253 Cedar St. N&w BedfOrct here., . ,3-3222 ' . OrganiZed by laymen, -the Vigil · . 'Wall attended by Norman Cardinal'Gilroy, Archbishop ofSyd- . .Est. 1891 • llley. The pilgrims fucluded 'AU- . . .Supp' 'Me) JGallOO.· " ; .. ' tralians, Chinese, Italians, Him- . . . garians, ahd Indonesians.' ,; :. ' 2343' PUrchase' Str~ NOH! TOO sMAIl. .l~te ... The 'pilgrims, some of Wbbm :".'.~~' ~ : .. Ask-for Them t~: · traveled ·£tom" Ule :far ":norttl . . ·W¥,,6-,5661:. . ...•.. . ...... ,." ... 4"··S11ence tt 'behind the . ~ ADd '.' ~--~ - - - - - - - . . . . .' · 'biahlboo' curtains. 'and' tile· ' . , .". "'.<".> ' .:.... 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D"of .J {'Schedule' Mystery' 'Ride .': . I Hyacinth Circle, New Bed'fotC Daughters of Isabella, wHl hoWl a mystery ride Tuesday, JuIy 26.' Reservations should be made br tomorrow wit h Mrs.' LtH:W Bernardo, chairman, who aD. noimces that transportation wffi be available from the front 0lI! the post office at 6:30 Tuesdal1 night. . The unit will hold initiatic4n ,c.eremonies at Holy Name Halll Tuesday, Sept. 26. Mrs. Josepln Botelho, membershipcommitteG chairman, is in charge of lW'rangements. Miss Mary Baron" ,Portland, Me., national D cd ][ , treasurer, will attend the even.4. Hyacinth Grandmothers, II subdivision of the circle, Wlifii, 'h.old an outing at Lakeville.

. By Alice Bough Cahill Whefl. you get bored with things and f-eel your rOOIM .en't "working right,H it's a good idea to trY a new furniture arrangement but you won't gain anything by' switching furniture' around simply for the sake of change. Ask yourself, "does the present ing; we 'have Scout meetings·and &rrangement thwart family each child gets a birthday pat:ty and lots of people come. W~ ~tivity; is it impossible to should -have more cnairs. ~ry on an intimate conver-

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Second wes Refreshment ..,... oation the way furniture is placed; to' pass through the room Mother serves her card club OIl bl'idge tables, but we kids like does one have to sit on the floor around the 00 stumble· over television set. We wish we had' III table or otlots more big pillows that we toman, or get could put on ~ floor. ~ugM in a Next was listed Conve!'SQdangling lemp tion~he older folks sometimes Nuns Attribute ProteetiOlQ <!lOrd?" Joike to chat and I notice they alF st, :klt!s loSt. Agatha Devotion· ways grab the easy chairs and' ooncentrate OIl BUFFALO (NC) - For yeaN pull them up near the sofe. Our iI'living r 0 o'm > the Sisters of Merey who staff chairs : ar~ too scattered· al"OWld Tohis ill the . AT CATHOLIC INJ>IAN CONGRESS: Among the many Kenmore Mercy Hospital in subthe house. IPOOm in which . . .Indians who attended the 70th annual Catholic Sioux Indian urban Kenmore have offered 1\ . V 0 u enteI1tain.. Lasbly ~ tee~ 1isteCl and when you, Reading and Studying-the chi}';' Congress, held at St. F'rancis Indian Mission, S.D., were am daily ~rayer .~ St. ~gath1l fOl' '· I d'· . . t d ~~ I . . S· protection agamst rlre, st.oImIJ lhaven!,t compall(Y the man-of- dren .study in their rooms and Amerlcan n Ian prIes an. a group' IJ'I.. ndu~n lstera. and other hazards. ' ~e-house probablt' bas a Pet each' of us has a desk and stron« In the photo are Sisteir Therese, from Standing Rock Res-'; Now the nuns are convineetl dlair· there. chair. in our rOom. and we like A very .satisfector.y wey· to that.. Dad reeds in an easy cha.ir ervation, South Dakota, now an Oblate of the Blessed 'that devotion paid dividends. A ehange yowr present armnge- by a lamp, but Mom hunts Sacrament; Sister Katherine, S.D.S., from Siaseton Reserva- -tornado cut a swath. of destrucment is doing preliminary around foc a plaee whe!'-e theI'e . tion South Dakota now stationed at Milwaukee' and Father tion. thro~gh this s;ection.. TOO , .' . . '. '. hOSPItal, m the mIdst of the Shifting and moving on a paper is good' light. plan with paper cutouts (cush .Now suppose you bad to c0m- John Brown, S.J., from the Blackfoot ReservatIon, Montana, damaged area was virtually tiDplanning kits are available). bine all. these activities in one now a ,missionary to Crow Indians 'in Montana. NC Photo,· scathed. Sist~r Mary Mectilde, administrator, reported theI'El. . You'll be surprised and de- room; you'd want -to switch your' were only a few broken win.lighted how such a method will furniture around to cope with dOWS, no casualties. . III e 1 p you switch furniture them. Ail of the activities listed llIround, leaving open space offer possibilities as "centers (Yf The devotion to St.' Agat\itl around entrances and drawing interest" ro.r your 'home, or one . continues at the hospital. ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS (NC) had been thinking about enter- . eonversation glrOUlpS close, to- . room. A center of interest con.. ':'-Thirty nuns from County ing the> religious life," Sister lether. sists of a furniture grouping tha,t is dominant because 04. its Kerry" Ireland, are members of Marie recalled.. "I said yes, I'd Catholics Operate Mosl Don't Isolate Bad intrJnsic'importance. the Sisters of St. Joseph oj' New- been thinking about it. She said: Church Credit Unions Putting Dad's chair in the COll"I,lrk, who 'haVe their motherhouse 'I knew it. Have you written MADISON (NC)-Catholic ~ Iller by a good reading lamp does Combine Facilities here in New Jersey. This is the your letter yet?' I said no,' lg-anizlitions have formed m!>Si ilIOt mean that he is to be isoIt's wIse to combine ~aciHtkls, result ot a one-woman apostol- hadn't. She said: "Well, sit down of the 1,200 credit unions which lated, for his easy chair oan be .for .activities. F~ insta~e,a' 'ate conducted on the "Ould Sod" now and write it.' I did." serve members of religi~ pulled closer to the sofa. You ~admg cente~ of mterest ~ay ¥ 'by Catherine Quinlan. ' . Paradoxes in Careers groups, operating 887 uniollG. might like your· Sofa 'in front oi ltenlteg~~ted Wltth of the. l'8 ~,aRth'd· The Quinlan and Lynch fam- . Miss Quinlan recruited two t er"",,,, e i'l' ,'" . This was reported here by 1iIe . ,ete fireplace, placing a long, eVlSlon cen e r l n 11 . ' ·ted · _~ det' . les are we replesen among. other members of the Lynch narrow table for reading lamp Size <n. your room Credit Union National Associeermmmg, the ,30. . , .' . the number of cen'ters you have. ... . . . family for the Newark Josephlte tion. I,t said figures compiled t . 4N1d magazines behind it. · . t ua 11. Y MISS Qumlanb has twoh SIsters. nuns-Sister Patricia Aidan ' adI s youI' d mmg;woea BC . h' ' . of ... its 1961 Credit Uuion Yearbook There's just' one difficulty you com -. ministrator part of your living room?' Care:' , ,W o. ar~ s~em perhl,. . t E' M of St. James Hospi- show that more than six per cent might run into with this Qi',. -'" ~ ·d· ··d . mumty- Ister Ilomena ary, tal Newark who was Elizabeth of the 20,293 U. S. credit unioae UI. a lVl & d" f H IN' '. ,', ,rangement.·aJ:ld that is a plug f u· f"I arrangeme",.. boo·k h ' I ' .. 1 . 'ed' . ..a mmlstrator . 0 . 0 y arne Lynch and Sister Antonius s'tU"; were formed_for religious groupe. s eves; a·' ouver H' 1 T k N J d '. ., for the lamp. The best and 10 a,'t· b e · :&. osplta , eanec, .., an dent nurse at Holy Name Hospit 1 ion, OF may .a wrOu6...... S' te E'l .. of '.' . In addi,tion to the Catholic8' eafest· thing is to plug the lemp ,par iron holder for books and plal1ltll ~s r ~ een, supenor an as- ,tal, Teaneck, N. J., who viae 887, Protestant organizationtl JIllt'o a floor socket. -can give it a feeling of being. plrancy m Ireland. , Deborah Lynch. . operate 331 credit unions and After suggesting to a family set apart. We suggest that seat :ears .have been~evoled by The Lynch girls recall para· that they should consider just covel'S repea.t the pattern' Of' the :1\/l:1ss ~umlan to talkmg up the doxes in their careers as nuns. Jewish groups have formed ~ the association said. bow their house was used and , wha,t 'were the family's possi- 'draperies you use in this ares, Jo~p~Ite nuns of Ne~ark, sho~- Sister Marie 'de Pazz!, who has .&s w~llas in the liV'ingrOom~ ing ~Ictures of theIr W·l>rk In charge of 200 children 'at the ble needs, a teenager came up . Children's Congress .~\ .. '. 'hosPItals, orphanages and ischookl Rockleigh· institution said' "I ·'il· "find c h ' You with this list: angmg POSItion ~ anyone· interested 1 h " . to MADRID (NC)-The Catho.,.. a ~ays. t ought I. d. be ~ nurse. . Entertainment-Mom and Dad of furniture will give any room llecaHs DeclSioe' SaId,. SIster P~t~lcla A~d7.n, the lic Committee for Children • have .£riends drop ill: in the even- . iii new purpose' and a new l()()k; Sister Marie de Pazzi, Supe- HOSPItal admIll1stra~~r.. I was 'preparing for the first National rior of St. Joseph's" Village, att~acted to ,orphans. SIster An- Congress for the Children «l Rockleigh, N. J., who wail Cath- tomus,.•~h~ student nurse, ob- Spain, which will be held in 'the erine Lynch back in Kerry, told ~rved. I never th?u~ht of.nur:,", Spring of 1962. It will deal witD of her own "decision" to enter mg but I was the mflrmanan 1ft the physical, educational and ... CLAYTON (NC)-The mOBt founded' for the service of the the sisternood after a mee.ting every convent where I served. to ligious needs <if children. Beglected work of mercy is poor. We were established ex- with Catherine Quinlan. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• teaching' about the works 01. pressly. to do the works of mercy. , "One day she asked nl'e if ! mercy, an official of the Sister And in our day the greatest, the 'Formaotlon Conference said' h~e most n~d, aoo until now the Fairhaven Frolic: in Missouri. . most· neglected work cd 'mercy' . Selection of a Queen. of .the Sister Msl'f Emit, conference ·is teaching about the '.works ext· Week 'will feature a .iF,~ast· 'n' eommunity consultant, visited mercy..: ' , , Frolic" to be held Monday >ins~iotutions .in. the St. Loui~area. ' "WeSisteH ,haft alwaYfl' luHi,through Saturday, J\tly 2·. to 29, >. She spq~e before 490 Sisters 01. eompas~i~n: .What a longer 'traIn,;" 'at St:' Joseph's Church" Fair~ , .51.. Joseph of Carond~let. ing period Could do woUld:. be haven. A chicken supper, Penny .1.: ' . "Wilen.. you . look at the needI .to make. it art; ii,tforR\8d .~mpa8:': f!8Ie, '~uction, mUEic' and other el'the world's'poor, the' conc.lu- . siQn"""'8 " compaSsion fOr ':"i~ . ent~rtainment '·wi.ll ··lie .amo..g .' .,! ali.?fl seems ..inevita,ble th!lt ~hitl· w.~r14'~;~· bailed. eM.. a~'-~~~~t,features of the event.' TIH~ Queen , , wI !I.1?e a cent~ry o~ CO~UDlsm ~!1O'Y~ed~ 01. :tbell' eondl~lon;, .. will. receive many mercllahdilie "': ':.~ ·,we;'do not, ftr~ m~ke It· a'~ ,Il~:.an exact,'knowledge o~ what prlzeti '; and wilit>e: .elected" ~ .. · tury ?f c,~paSB1on, ,she sai:d-. . '~!-'l<t;:~d should. ge done for vote of. ~he::parish.i9ners. R.olai:Mi t . , .~ .: . . Founded for· Seryl«!ll ~~. .~ 0 Surprenant is geiJ.eral chairman . . , ~ .. ." .' .. .. , ' :.': ': '. :.1.. · . ,"More' than ~ial. justice. III .~:t.: 'I' . h'•. -. \0&1' '. .. ' .-...', aided ~.: Lucien; ·Briere. . .;xmO an Ip u;lnner,,· .",' . -.· lileeded. CompassIOn III perhaps · the specific contribution God,· Mis!! I)iane. Bernier,. this.yeel's. ..' . . wants from Sister-teachers. So valedictorian M .. St., .Ant!lop~!s E., A, WARING ICO~ many of our· communities weN High' SChool, ~'Bedford, has . . '," . . .. " been' awarded a scholarschip' by - "HI' SECOND Sf.; FAli. ItVB ·Marian Week DevotioM the Aux~lail'e de Ie p"'~~bre ~. DistributOf's for Commerce of the CIty, In..' add'l.;; 'N~ .... . 'J . A". t ·Stockbr'ldge . Shrl'ne .tiOI1 'to a grant she has 'already "E T FLOOR ancJ STOCKBRIDGE (NC) - The received from l'Union st. Jean VACUUM MACHINES "" eighth annual Marian W~1i: of. Baptiste. d'Amerique. She'will fiRE EXVINGUISHEI~5 special ·devotions to .the Blessed attend Bridgewa-ter.'· Stat~ COl....'_ ftRL' __; '.. . . Mother will be held Aug. 20 to ~. .. rnv'" ~... 7-,91. 27' at the Shrine of the Mercy oi God on· the. grounds of the Postpone.·.Whist .- . · Marian Fathers' monastery here. . .Jf whiSt ,to benefit tile 'eYo Of! .The first day's 'service ",ill inJ~seph's, p.arish, Fall :River, .• elude cor<mations 6f'. the :Pilgrun ,St.. originally scheduled.'for ~hur8­ Virgin Statue. Msgr. William day, J,uly 2'1 has been posti>'oned ~ McGrath, who has accompanied the statue on its AmeriCan tour, to a la~et: .~ ~h. wiH ~ will preach the opening ·sermon. annouDeed. \Each evening of the week Elect Superioi Gen~r~ there will be a cand'lelight ·proBUftMH. · NEW ORLEANS (N t) cession of clergy imd laity ac<Q)~ 71·~M3 -: ... 36£5 No~m mONT !;V~-EIET companying. the' statue .to various Mother M: Dol~~es Delahoussays shrines on the monastery was elected Superior General of . NlEW 1&IEIDIrO~~ . ~ . grounds, Father Joseph Scannell, the Congregation of the Sisters C.SS,R., will preach the nightly- of Mount Carmel at the motherIrcaJ~~ ~D"SU' ~ <e~ll'Ile<dlU'caJ~ ~(OJ\UJ<OIU'iS sermons. .. house here. iii"

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By Mary Tinley Daly

Vacation Camp

"Mary, Mary, quite contrary, how does your gardell grow?" If I'm the Mary go addressed, the answer is "Wild. that's how!" Weeds are overtaking grass, both are inching into flower beda, and animalli:fe seems to be conquering alL It started out SO beautifully: We dug, rolled, covered, but the Head of the Hoose and I we didn't for one moment fool sitting in front of the fire- our fine feathered friends. W. place last February, cosily didn't get flowers from our ef*lanning seed cata!ogue.i. "Li&teo to this," he read: 'A brilliant ..-ray of bloom from early Spring u n t i l late Fall' and all you have to do is plant a length of doth!" "Velvety Green' This, I found: "Flowers t hat will make you the envy of the neighborhood," -still further, "A velvety green 'lawn tha t will make your neighbors ask you how you did it." Goodness knows, we have no ambitions slanted toward being the envy of the neighborhood. AU we ask is that the neighbors don·t call the police. However, last February our imaginatwllS were stirred. u they are ,anu.ally, and WE' put in a fat erder to that plaDt and teed eompany. 1.'be package came Oft an in.-clinately warm day in ApriL "'I'ilH." we, told ourselve. cockIbr, "is going to be an earl,. Spring. We can plant the whole . .1 and be done with it!~' The ground was kind of stiff _ we got an inch or so dowll, but hot water handled that pr()bIem. The Head of the House did 4ile digging while I administered bot water. With ground loos~ up, even artificially, it was • pleasure to be out gardening -'way ahead of the neighbors, ~, as I recall, looked at us askance. Envy, just plain old ....een monster . . . "Thank God for a garden," I sang blissfully and tunelesSly, lleti;ing out small plants with tIllpreme faith that the weather was "settled." "All in!" pronounced the Head Of the House after we had dug several scores of holes, setting the plants in with decreasingly tender loving care. "All in is right!" I agreed, 4I')'ing to straighten a stiff back. ~ singing "be it ever so small," wishing it were still smaller' Came that "last freeze" after the stretch of warm weather and the dear little plants in their ioF cubicles made a sad picture 86 half of them dropped and gave up the ghost. And so we waited for a few weeks before rolling out the green carpet the one that "even a child could plant" and that would make us the "envy of the neighborhood" snob appeal! All we had to do, the instnletions Said, was dig up a portion of the 18wll, Jay the carpet, cover lightly -wi~ ~il.

fol'tl, not many at any rate, but for a short time with our expensive bird seed we had the "most glorious array" of bir<M outside of the zoo. At this stage, roses are the only thing blooming in thit blooming garden of ours. And it's getting hot and hotter! Weeding becomes difficult, neighborhood rabbits, so cute on Easter Sunday, have a penchant for eating roots, vegetables, everything but the weeds. There is little to show for last February's dream. The "velvety green lawn" is M it always has been: kind of weedy but, kept short by the Head of the House and, some long-suffering boy friends of the girls, it will pass. After all, who but a horticulturist knows tbe difference between short weeds and short grass? Or ItO we tell ourselves. Now, as the never-green thUmb becomes browner, the author of this column il content with flower boxes on tbe side' porch - house plants put out for the Summer. It's too hot to worry! Does this sound like one who hates gardeIlB and nature? One woo kicks dogs and beats babies? Pushes old ladies off curbstones? Honestly, we do love gardens --QthE;r peoples' gardens!

Canadian Sisters Plan First U. S. Convent WORCESTER (NC)-A Canadian sisterhood will establish its first convent in the United States here. At the invitation of Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of Worcester, the Sisters of Our Lady of Good Counsel have purchased a home to serve as a convent for student· Sisters of the community's Mbarara, Uganda, Africa, branch. Five members of the community will open the convent. The sisterhood was founded a.t Chicoutimi, Que.. in 1894 by Bishop Michel Thomas Labrecque and Mother Mary of Good Counsel (Francoise Simard). The community primarily is a teaching sisterhood and staffs some 75 schools in Quebec province. It has about 700 mem-

GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME: At his Hokkaido, Japan Mission, Maryknoll Father Donald J. Vittengl and his young students enjoy an old-fashioned watermelon-eating contest. Although the Catholic Church ia making slow progress in Japan, missioners report that their youth work is paying off. NC Photo.

College Sets Up French Quarter To Aid Nuns' Study of Language LOS ANGELES (NC)-Mount SL Mary's CollegE' has opened a French quarter, complete with black coffee and croissants for breakfast and its own daily newspaper, Le Mont Par Jour. The unofficial "mayor" of the college's "left bank" is Sister Eloise There'se who has an ear for French and an eye for academic sparkle.

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Our Lady of Assumption Church, Osterville, will hold an all-day auction beginning at 10:30 Monday morning, Aug. T on theehurch grounds. Richard A.' Bourne, Hyannis, will be. ~neer and women fJi the . WhOOf)tl! 'iJariSb. will be in charge of re-.: 9taftds.· CQntributions League Aiel W~fA ' ,lresllMent . . . be left.in the parish hall .. Released from Prison' aOll· .pr9ceeds frlHtl 'the day will" <nTAWA (NC)-Tae Catholie .beftefit a fund fW improvemem. ,., Women's LeagUe of Canada' ha.· to' clittrch and aroundtt. Il8t lIP a three-member cOllllllitflee to start an aid progra", for women released from prison. Bishop Francis J. Klein. of Saskatoon, sask., CWL direct0l", and Margueri>te M Burns of Haltfax, N. S., CWL ,president, -anDOUnced formation of the cOmlDittee. ' The committee w,iH. set up a. program to. integrate {{)rmer' women prisonerJi1. into, ,society' "ctlully, to helP titem aotam employment and' good, lodgings,' IIIld to befriend them by asswirig 8tem. of a warm welcome ill Iaomes of CWL membeN.

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A gas-powered hom e Cooking system is not only silent and economical, it is, beautifully automatic as well. Modernize your way of life with a gas air condi· tioning unit. See your Gas compony today.

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&lebrating ttaek patro_ member. 0( tbe Ladies 01 Me. Anne, Sacred Heat"t parish, Worth Attleboro. win receive BeN, Communion in the morlliD« -.d attend a mother~hildreR picnic at 10. The latter event .. in charge of Mrs. Emil TORfireault and RolanQ 'l'ondreatHt.

Enters Convent Miss Muriel Lebeau, daughtet" of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Lebeau, 21 Maitland Street, Fairhaven, entered the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts and of Perpetual Adoration a,t Fairhaven this month.

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Mrs. David W. Boland is general chairman. Miss Winifred Laughlin will chair the committee for the Taunton area and the Fall River area will be in charge of Mrs. Joseph C. Giblin. Grand prize will be a round trip to Europe for two, via jet. Co-chairmen of the committee making arrangements for this trip are Joseph H. Feitelberg, Somerset, and William MacLean... 1'aunton.

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The Sixth Annual Holy UniOll Field Day and Bazaar will be held Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 16 and 17 at St. James Convent, Nanaquak:et Road, Tiver-

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Sister Eloise Therese took: care of that from the very beginning. She requested each applicant for the college's French institute to promise at registration to speak nothing but Freneh during the session. ·Sister Eloise Therese has been ~ France three tImes and realIzed the benefit of bei~g in .a tot.a,l French atrr.osphere If one IS to learn that language. This she has created at the college. Even functional matters are C<lvered. She has assorted French signs in the French quarter. Among them: "Essuyez vos pieds, s'i{ vous plait." ("Wipe '70 u r fu«,

The temporary exp~triates in the French quarter. are a band of 21 Sisters from various parts of the nation, al! teachers of ,:rench. Their Summer duty for SiX weeks here is simply to see, hear, speak, pray and th.i.nk French.

LOS ANGELES (NC)-Sixteen families with a total of 80 children rented az; entire camp here and found the cost averaged $90 per family fot a week in the mounta~omplete with eabin, meals and recreation. It was active, restful, peaceful. lively, relaxing and bracing, the campers reported They plan to do it again next year. All the campers are members of the Christian Family Movement. The 16 families rented Camp Sedar Glen near San Diego. Dormitory cabins, one to a family, were $13.50 each. There were enough bunks for even the largest brood. Meals were 40 cents for tots, ·65 cents for older children and adults. They were served in the camp dining room. Facilities included a fenced swimming pool, with guard, ball courts and diam{)nds and trails f{)r hiking. Mass was 12 mil)utes away in the town of Julian. Mothers took turns conducting activities for the pre-schooler&. Every night there was a Hifamily rosary.

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Appt\W. Schools',

C..... Catholics

Planned Course On Com,munism

Forced to Live Without Priests

ALTOONA (NC) - TlHt Catholic Edueational A~80­ eiation of Pennsylvania hafJ approved a plan to sponsor a

NEWARK (NC) - CubMl Catholics now are beginning to find out what life without a priest is like, according to

THE ANCHOR...... Thurs., July 20, 1961

Newspa per Ca lis . IPeace Meeting Red Maneuver l

VATICAN CITY (NC) The Vatican City d a i I y newspaper has branded last month's All-Christian Peace

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ENCYCLICAL OF POPE JOHN XXIII IS THIRD IN GREAT TRILOGY: The teachings of the Catholic Church on social problems is brought up-to-date and projected against present-day conditiions in a great Encyclical Letter "Mater et Magistra" (Mother and Teacher) just issued by His Holiness Pope John XXIII. It is the third i~ a trilogy of great encyclicals dealing with this subject. NC Photo.

Comparison of Three Papal Social Encyclicals upholding the second. "So long as socializatic>n confines its activity within the limts of the moral order... it helps to promote ... truly personal charaeteristics." -Declared that "every effOl't must be made" to provide that the rich accumulate only "a just share" of the profits, and that "an ample sufficiency be supplied to the workingman." -Held that "fruitful and la9ting" peace is impossible if the differences betwE'en people's social and economic oonditions are too great.

-Assel"ted that "the worker must be paid a wage sufficient to support him and his family." -Declared it "an intolerable abuse, and to be abolished at all Underdeveleped Nations cost, for mothers on account of -Called for broad internathe father's low wage to be tional cooperatiop to help the forced to engage in gainful occuunderdeveloped nations overpation outside the home ..." come their "permanent state of -Fostered international cooppoverty, of misery or of hunger" eration: "Since the various na-"perhaps the major problem" tions largely depend on one of today. another in economic matters and -Asserted that in some counneed one another's help, they tries the people are for~ed "te> should strive with a united purundergo inhuman privations in pose and effort to promote by ~rder to increase the output of. wisely conceived pacts and insti- the nationa'l economy at a rate tutions a prosperous and happy of acceleration which goes beinternational cooperation in eco- yond the limits permitted bf' DOrnic life." justice and humanity." JUM Sttare ef Profits -Saw man's God-given geniUfl MAT E It E T MAGISTRAfor adapting nature's "inexhaus(Mother and Teacher), by Pope tible resources" as the solution John XXIII, dated May 15, 1961: to problems stemming from cur-Drew a sharp distinction be- rent world population growth, tween socialism and socializa- rejected artificial birth control, The new encyclical of Pope sterilization and abortion as «On, condemning the first and immoral.

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Tulsa Priest Joins Lay Volunteer Staff. CHICAGO (NC)-Father Joh. J. Sullivan ol Oklahoma CityTulsa diocese has been named a fulltime staff member of the new Extension Volunteers program. He will havoe headquartet'fl in Chicago. The volunteers program, conducted by the Catholic Church Extension Society, seeks to enlist laymen to serve for a year or more in mission areas in this country. His appointment hM been announced by Albert. Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chicago and chancellor of the Extension Society, and Archbishop William D. O'Brien, president. He has been released tG the society· by Bishop Victor Reed of. Oklahoma City-Tulsa. Father Sullivan has been active in organizing a lay missionary program in the Oklahoma Ci~ Tulsa diocese.

K of C Clambake McMahon Council, New Bedford Knights of Columbus, win hold a clambake at 1 Sunday afternoon, July 30 at Brown'. Pavilion, Sconticut Neck, Fairhaven, under chairmanship Off George Lemieux. A sports program will fc>llow the bake.

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ehurches now have only one Mass on Sundays, while other churches have none. Priests are holding conferences with members 01. the laity, instructing them in how to carryon without the services of a priest. Another source said'-f~o~od~~sh~o~r~­ tages continue to plague the country. Some canned meat is coming to Cuba from Russia, but most Cubans would rather g.o hungry.

Young Workers Hold Third Africe Meeting LOME (NC) The Young Christian Workers organization has urged African governments to recognize the educational value of youth movements and to give them moral and material support. At its third African meeting here the YCW also adopted a motion acclaiming the independence 01. new African states and noted the important role played by youth groups in acbiev... ing independence. Youth movements, delegates stated,should not be under the control of governments 01' political parties. It called for cooperation among various youth movements through national youth councils.

New Head of Mexican Publishing Firm Studying in U.S. NEWARK (NC) - A Mexican priest suddenly thrust into the publishing world is spending the Summer months at the Advocate, newspaper of the Newark archdiocese, to learn some of the ground rules. Fr. Wilfredo GUinea, S.J., of Mexico City, recently was named director of Buena Prensa (the Good Press) there. As director, the 37-year-old Jesuit will be responsible for the publication of a weekly newspaper, several monthly magazines, books, pamphlets and devotional items. The crucial nature of the job he will undertake on his return to Mexico City stems from the fact that only fivt per cent of Mexico's Catholics are in Catholic schools, with the other 95 per cent being educated ia schools maintained by a government with socialist leanings. JIM MasteI"sDe,ree Father Guinea's superiors had been grooming him for a job with the publishing house which has 35 employes. They had sent him to New York University's Institute of Book PUblishing, where he received a master's degree on June 7. He earned the degree in one year after a quick (foUl' months) course in English

at Georgetown Univer-eity, Washington, D. C. Indicating how welt he leMned

his lessons, he was one of two NYU students inducted into Alpha Kappa Delta, a national honor society in sociology. Father Guinea's ascendancy te the top post at Buena Prensa was hastened by the death two months ago of its founder, Father Jose A. Romero, S.J. Calm After Storm Buena Prensa was born, Father relates, "during the hard days of the Mexican revolution." Father Romero, he said, "started printing clandestine Catholic propaganda against the anti-religious movement, and since then Buena Prensa grew always with his combative spirit." Now, Father Guinea says, there is a kind of calm after the revolutionary storm. "The Church is allowed to do almost anything now," he said. "It is a kind of tolerance. The law is written against the Church, the priest may not wear clerical dress, no religious processions through the streets are allowed, and the Church may mairutain schools only under the surveillance of the state. "But the churches are open and the government has come to a realization that it would be almost impossible to stop the Church," he added.

Cardinal Cushing Chides Parents BOSTON (NC)-Out-of-school children were given a one-word piece of advice by Richard Cardinal Cushing: "Behave!" The Archbishop of Boston, writing in the Boston Pilot, archdiocesan newspaper, also chided parents "who think only of the physical and material wellbeing" of their children. He blamed such parents for not giving their children a sense of discipline and for not fostering respect for "obedience and its allied virtues." Cardinal Cushing criticized the Summer vacation behavior ~f children who ride bicycles recklessly, flo u t playground safety rules and misbehave in church and in movie theaters. "Can parents wh<l think only of the physical and material well-being of their children expect them to behave properly?" he asked.. "The answer is, emphatically no!"

New Bedford Parish Plans Annual Bazaar The annual Holy Name, New Bedford, parish bazaar is plannec1 for Wednesday through Satu..... day, July 26 to 29. Joseph Harrington, chairman, announces that it will be held on the School grounds, County and Linden St.reets, and that features will include children'. rides, a Saturday matinee and nightly attendance prizes. New Women's Guild officeN inclUde Mrs. William J. Carter Jr., president; Mrs. A I b e I' Frates, vice president; Mi. Ii'rances McCarthy, secretar~ Mrs. Joseph Powe:t;S, treasure.. Meetings will resume in Septem,. ber.

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"the Magna Charta upon which all Christian activity in the social field ought to be based." -Reiterated thai true socialism is utterly foreign to Christian truth, as its concept of life is material rather than spiritual. -Condemned individualistic capitaHsm and unrestrained monopoly for crushing the mass of mankind with hardships and difficulties." Sufficient Wages

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John XXIII was drawn up to commemorate anniversaries ()f two major papal documents dealing with the social order. Here are main points of the three: RERUM NOV ARUM (On the Condition of the Working Classes), issued by Pope Le<o XIII on May 15, 1891: -Proclaimed the priority of man and his family over the State. -Condemned not only Marxist communism and socialism., but also monopoly capitalism and industrial slavery. Socialism. was labeled a violation of man's natural right to own property. -Asserted that every worker has a right to a living wage. -Held that workers have a right to form unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and U) strike for just cause. Protect Workers -Said that the State has a special duty to care for and protect the workers, and that thfl law should step in to right in~ justices and settle strikes detri-. mental to the common good. -Called for social insurance provisions so as to g,ive effective: aid "not only in cases of accident. .but also in sickness, old age, and distress." QUADRAGESIMO ANN 0 (On Reconstructing the Social. Order), issued by Pope Pius XII on May 15, 1931: -Upheld Rerum Nover\Jm ae

become the first American te hold a high posi,tion in this"nursing order. Brother Patrick Ragan, now serving the balance of a threeyear term as superior of the order's St. John of God House here, was elected fourth assistant superior general at the order's general chapter held ia Montabaur, Germany. The 42 - year - old Brother joined the Brothers of Mercy in 1942. Prior to that he worked for five years in the men's clothing and haberdashery store owned by his father in Seneca Falla, N.Y. Brother Patrick said of his election: "Where before, all the heads and assistant heads of the society were either German or' Dutch, the election of a nativeborn American shows the importance placed by the order in it. American province." The Brothers of Mercy were founded in Germany in 1856 and first came to Buffalo in 192'J. There are now about 400 members of the order in the wor14 63 of them in the North American province. Brother GabinU8 of the Netherlands is the order'. superiol' general.

DIGNITY OF LABOR: "The Dignity ()f Labor" is the title of this mural by Maurice Denis, depicting Christ talking to the workers. It was presented to the International Labor Organization in Geneva, Switzerland by the International Federation ()f Christian Trade Unions. NC Photo.

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BUFFALO (NC) A man who gave up a career as a haberdasher to joia the Brothers of Mercy has

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Brothers Elect First American To High Post

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Newsmen Meet CAEN (NC) Archbishott 10seph Martin of Rouen told 50 Catholic newsmen from France and Germany that Catholic journalists have a special duty to foster international cooperation. The Archhishop was addressing the fourth GermanFrance Conference of Catholie Journalists here in France.

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information which filtered here through the Red security screen of Castroland detailing that more than 30,000 persons assisted at the last Mass one priest was permitted to offer before being forced .out 0If a province to Havana. The priest was stationed in a heavily populated area. Now there are no priests in the area. There, too, reside a young couple who planned to be married and leave Cuba, but illness in the girl's family prevented thei~ departure. ·When the militia escorted the priest to the railroad station, thousands lined the streets as he passed.. In the crowd were this young couple and several other couples. As the priest passed them, the couples joined hands and the pciest; 'witnessed their marriages.

1"hurs., July 20, 1961

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Meeting in Prague a communist maneuver to divide Christians. The editorial in L'Osservatore Romano was signed by assistant editor Federico Alessandrini. It was described by the Vatican press office as "authoritative," which generally means that its aubstantial elements originated with the Secretariat of State. The Vatican City daily reported that some 700 delegates, all non-Catholic Christians, attended the conference. They eame, it said, from Czechoslo"akia, East and West Germany, Russia, Hungary, Rumania, France, Switzerland, Japan and Africa. There were also about 40 delegates from the United States. Attacks Church Taking its cue from MetropolItan Nicodemus of Moscow, said L'Osservatore, the conference .degenerated into .a public attack against the Catholic Church. The charges leveled against the Church were summariZed in the final· rseolution of the conference, which L'Osservatore quoted from the Paris newspaper Le Monde: "An important number of our Christian brothers of the Roman Church who, like ourselves, aspire to peace and strive to remove the catastrophes of the eold war and open war, are bound down by conflicts of conacience which the practical attitUdes of many of their ecclesiastical heads have imposed upon them. "The administrative circles of the 'Vatican' Church encourage the spirit of the cold war. While atating this we must not cease to pray for our Catholic brothers. May God protect them in His love and lead them to recognize His will and to obey also the eommandment ol love and q/, peace..••"

program on communism in Catholic schools and colleges in the '-ate. This was repor\ed by Msgr. Francis A. McNelis, president of the association and superintendent of Catholic schools in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese. He said the program is an effort "to focus attention on the evils and dangers of communism to the human individual as a person, to the freedom of American citizens and to the inviolability of a Christian spirit of life in accord with unchanging moral principles." Msgr. McNelis said the association's executlve board had approved an c>utline for an anticommunism program which each of the eight Sees in the state will adopt for their own ·schools. Details on the participation of each school sYstem, he said, are unavailable at this date, but will be reported at a CEAP meeting in September.

1'I1f ANCHOR·

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)se of Fall River-Thurs. July 20, 1961

'Until We Save SOU's, W. Save Nothing'-

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: Ex~~,'~,~iw~s(~~ ~ ~'u "'Position '" On 'LongO Engagements

Godlove You By Most Rev. Fultmt J. 8beetl. D.D. What did Our Lord mean when He said to the Pharisees: "Woe to 7'011. bee~use 7'011 will award to Goo hu tithe. though it be of mint or dill or cummin, and have forgotten the weightier commandments of the law, JUAIee, mere)" and honor." .

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J. Ass't Socioto?,'J' Prof.-St. Louis UniversitT

"Is it true that the Church disencourages long ..!:ngagements? Lorraine and I started keeping company in high school but can't plan on marriage until we finish college. How long is it permissable to go steady before getting married, especially in the general principles that apply in eue of college students who such situations. can't get married very Your problem is one that many 8OOn?" The Church does not college students now. face. In a take any absolute. formal stand on length of courtship or encagementJ Jack, though there • r e clear - cut moral norms regulating all premarital relationships. The functions of dating, courtship, and engagement, that is, of the various steps in the aocial process normally leading to marriage, vary from society to society and are subject to change even within the s~ social system. Hence when religious leaders state their position on any current premarital practice, their .and is based on the aplllieation. ef general moral principles to • specific social situation. If a given practice or its S0CW agnificance undergoes change. the new situation must be reappraised in terms of the relevant moral ]irinciples that pertain to it. In practice ttlk means that roeligious leaders may sometimes take a different stand on a given practice, not because they dis~ concerning moral principles but because they may take • differ~nt view of the facts in file case. Mean Different Thiug'lI You are also well aware, Jack, Chat such common terms as keeping company, going steady, or being engaged may mean different things to different people. For example, keeping company may be a more or less casual affair or may involve a serious oommitment. Going steady may imply no more than a mutual agreement not to date others when participating in social affairs or an inseparable "togetherness" at IIChool and almost every evening. An engagement may be recarded as a serious, quasi-contract with marriage definitely jn view or an implicitly temporary, romantic pledge-if we can trust their statements, most girls who have attended college claim that they experienced· several "engagements" before marrying. Apparently some; girls proceed to select a husband about the way they shop. They make tl'i:eir first selection with, thereservation, "unless we see something better." Apply Genet'al PriIIeipI. In order to give a definite aftlIWer to your qUe8l;iOR OOfleef'nio« bow long it is permissible fiG to ," .teady· pefore .marrying, therefOre, I would hllYe to know what "going steady" bas meant ill ;'our case, how long it wiU be before you finish scboel (JI' eafi rea!l&nably plan to marry, and., what your past ~xperieflt.'e as a' oouple has been. Since I do not have tbi.. information, I can only point Glut the

technically advanced society 8Uch as our own, preparation for life requires long years of formal training. Although you reached puberty 'around the age of 13 or 14, and apparently started dating shortly after, you will not be ready to marry for some time yet. In a sense. you and Lorraine are the victims of a set of premarital customs or practices that ignores both the facts of life and the demands of the social system. Like primItives in a pre-industrial society, you have followed customs calculated to lead to marriage shortly after puberty, though you mu~t wait several years, at least. before you are prepared to assume the responsibilities of marriage. Restrain Emotions Obviously, there's IIOmething quite wrong with tne system, ·but this doesn't 1IOlve your present problems! What should y~ do? In the first place keep clearly in mind thM neither "going steady" <>1' "being engaged" gives you any sexual privileges. Don't try to deceive yourselves by arguing that you are "practically" married, or that your situation is impossible, Further, since you have been going steadY for some time now, you should know what steps are necessary to keep your emotions and feelings under adequate control. You must bE' sincere and honest with yourselves in this regard. At your age, if you are normal and in love, you will probably have to plan your dates carefully in order to avoid undue stress and tension. This may involve some limitation on the number of dates, going on double dates or with a group, and avoid "parking" or spending prolonged periods alone with each other. Unless you use common sense in regulatmg the conditions under which you see each other and in controlling your mutual displays of affection, you may indeed find your situation "impoBsible." Prayer, Self-Denial Finally, you must have recourse to spiritual aids, Prayer, frequent reception of the sacraments, making plans for the future, greater application to your studies, and so on, will all prove helpful if you are sincere. Remember', succelilidul Cllristien marriage calls for lit good. deal of self-denial and IIeIf-con,. trot If YOUI' love does not 1eA4 1'- to practice lIheae virtu... _ , it is Dot s1roDc ellO'qh''', Ii¥e you happtnMi ift m.Tta8e.

Scotlonc1 Govern....t Aids Catholic Schook

HARTFORD (NC)-In precIominantl1' Protestant Scotland the government not only builds Catholic schools but pays the teachers, furnishes supplies and provides transportation for the Engl~nd's pupils. Father Chrllrtopber McAllister M Bannockburn, who iii visiting PRESTON (NC) About ~O,OOO Catholics of northwest the United States, said that the England attended an open-air, expenses of hia parish elemenHigh Mass in hQI;Or of the 40' tary school, which enrolls 360 . Martyrs of England and \'fales children, are tak~n eare of, by' whoS€ caLIse of eanonizatioohas the Sta~e under the provisiofli M been taken up .by the Holy See. the Scottisla Ed ucattoaal Act OIl lefMl. Bishop Thomas Flynn Q/. Latloaster off2red the Masl in ?resBannockburn, the paMor' said, ton stadium. ,Seven. OIl the 48 tau some 1,300 Catholie& ia a total population Gf 8,000. He said Martyrs came from the reci_ 01. Preston. Catholics and nen-Catholic5 "get along fine," and there is ItO bigThe l"I':1ss was part of lit nationwide day of prayer for the two otry in the little mining towll. miracles which the Holy See is His school u staffed by Catholic requiring for the joint canonlay teachers who are approved izatiofl 0f all 40 victims of the by the State educational authori:aeformc.,~on in England. ties and the local bishop..

CatholiCs Honor.40 Martyrs

The primitive law of Moses directed that a tenth M the income mould be given to the service of God in Hi. Temple, such as the prodUCts of com, oil and wine. But the Pharisees who gave excassive <Pbtentioo t6 tiny little de~ils extended 1he obligation to the smallest of garden herbs, 8Uch as the mint and the rue. What Our Lord finds fault with i. the substitution of the lifltle duties for the higher ones:

FATHEIt

BOUCHARD, O.M.L

South Attleboro Priest to Rome Rev. Lucien Bouchard, O.M.I.. expelled this year from Communist-held territory in Laos, will leave for Rome next Thursday for a five month period of "second novitiate," which follows five years of active ministry for members of his congregation. He will be stationed at the Oblates of Mar~ Immaculate mQtherhQ~ in Rome and following the novitiate he will retum to a part of Laos still open to missionaries. Father Bouchard, a ruttive ~ South Attleboro, notes that there are 40 Oblate priests still werking· in Laos. Twelve others are held under house arrest by Communist troop~. The missionary haa three sisters. One sistet, Sister Marie Lucienne, of the Sisters of st. Chretiertne, visited South Attleboro last week to see her brother. She is a teacher Itationed in Rumford, Me.

Advice to Youth Continued from Page One "They must be uffered first of all a home capable of receiving them as fast as th(' family circle expands. They must be given also a framework of life which is physically sound and JlH)raU,. educational." Next they must be given all educati<>n proportionate wit h their capacity. Jobs "in great numbers" must be created for them as they complete theif' education. Chief DifficuUT Cardinal Tardini pointed out, however, that the principal difficulty does not reside in demographic or economic questions, but in the fact that different generations live side by side. To tell the truth, there hac a)ways been an inevitable tension between generations. Youth looks toward the future whereas adults often remain attac~ .. the past. It is BOt wprisinc, ..ere-.... that 1Jhis pllenome_ shouW occur more acutel, ia CNit" tua-. w,her1 childrea g«.w .. a ..,. differeDt worW k _ tbM .. ,~ich their f.atbetw we.e ~. .. ''Tbouda tDe YO\lUl ol to4Iir 1IWl~ .eN. .. be i ~ impatient, ~ , read:T .. eriticize everYtlUng IlAd one, . it nonetheiess nour!"" deep within i_if a sirQllC deliN to act I'r~1)', afllli it ailpir.. toward a just renewal. It is animated by a generous urge .. work and make sacrific811. Weakened Enthaei_ "Though experience has matured the wisdom and prudence of adults on the ope hand, is, there not reallOn to wonder IOmetime. w1lether the .etQaclH and disappoin~ments of life ba_ llOt impaired tileit' oou,r~ _ . weakened ~ ertthWlia_ . . action?" . Cardinti . ~ poiDW . . filat parent. are better attl.e " other. to understand itleir' ell&dren and therefore to prepue them to develop 110uncl ~ and to make decislona. "Is not in f.act the wtHlie aM; 01. the educator' to help the adoleecent reach the age 01. DlanhGell and form hi. personality 1>7" • progreS&tve control 01. Ilim~

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Our Lord warns that we may be doill&' the little without doinC' the great, fumbliu around with things we like instead of being concerned with the judgment and the charit,. of God. Our Lord would JHM; have us a8 little reformers, going up and down the world, seeing where we can patch ult its broken walls and repaIr its broken I'la88. Until we save souls, we save nothing. Until we rel'enerate bearts, all of our little external programs amount to naught. Our Blessed Lord said: "I stand at the door and knock." He knocks because He cannot begin on the outside. Ruin is not external. He must start inside of the heart of the house and work from the eenter out to the circumference.

How many Ca,tholics are· wasting their money on the rue and

*te mint, giving generously to fringe movements, to spiritual Iide shOWl, while offering only 27c a year to the Holy Father tQ help convert the two billion pagalUl of the world? We W'OITy about a trivial politician being a fellow traveler oJ. Communism, and yet 'Woe do nothing to bring the Eucharist and Redemption to the 01. the Africans and the Aaia-tiesia oed«' to atOp the onrush Oil. the Arwti-Christ. .

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Unte. a soul is .ve., . . .ing is laved. The sa-Ivati_ 01 IIOIlls II tile btuiae.. et tile HolT Father's Societ, for the Propal'atio». et the Faith. Gin toe him wlto has can of all the Misai_s. As _ . .. your heart is e.llveried to the Love of God, it will be iaverted to TIle Soeiet)" fOC' tile Propagation of the Faith.

GOD LOVE YOU to A,M,C. for $Z5 "When I retiTed I promised. to send you $25 each year for the Missions. This is the first check in fulfillment of that vow." . . . to H,L. for $35 "In thanksgiving to God and His Blessed Mother for the healthful relief granted to my father." . . . to Anonymous for $10 "May this small donatioll be used to help someone in the mission lands become a priest."

We'd like to take 1'011 to Europe - via the WORLDMISSION ltOSARY! The white decade of this multicolored rosary represents the European mission field, where the HoI,. Father is searching for his lost sheep. By praying the WOltLDMlSSION ROSARY 7'0. will help bring them back to the nock. Send 1'011I' request effering of $% for this rosary b ' - d b,. BisIMp SheeR.

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Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Most Rev, Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society 1M the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue. New York 1, N. Y .. or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV, RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE. 366 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

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SAINT ANN'S· of Raynham

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This eclifice 01, C~/onial architecture is another miles,tone in DiocesGIfJ progress" the faithful 01 Raynham, our hearties.t congratu/atio",s.' , We fIJI. honored to have' participated M' tile ""stluetion of this' hecruf:ifuO chulc&' .

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THE ANCHOR.:..Oiocese of Fan River-Thurs. July 26, 1961

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F,c; Lat~~American People By Most Rev. Robe~J. Dwyer, D.D.

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, Bishop of Reno

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". The original paga~was a country bumpkin. 13ack in the, · 4th century of our. ~ra,. '.VhEH~. ChristJanity trfumphed and' ,overthrew the gods' of. the Roman pantheon,' it' was the rural districts of Italy which held out longest" ~ stubborn . world with which 1hey loyalty to the dying' poly- . ordered theism. In obscure villages ,were, for the most part; out of .., , lost in the hills, on farms sympathy, with their poverty miles away from the imper- . resulting' from the wholesale .fal cities, the countryfolk,' .the confiscation of their traditional pagani, worshiped stiH the fa- means of suppollt, and with their , miliar spirits of doleful lack of manpower, dOOlil hearth and field something to exonerate them : and poured out from tbe charge of blank indifthe immemorial ference to the situation. ~ libations in the Reading over the painful hissacred groves. tory of those times, one longs C h r i s t ian _ for the emergenee of some of -ity was the cult those great missionaries of thQ of the cities; past, another st. Martin of many centuries Tours, another Padre Eusebio "were to pass Kino, who might have leaped' ..< before it would, into t~~ breach and filled t~~., . ~come the reyawning vacuum. But somehow \ llgion of the .: "the unpetus. ~as la"eking" .'.-\. • 'countryside. A,nd then{' are ' .' Great Mission P!'Ogn,m . WELCOMES RICLIEF LEADERS: 'KingHussem' of "many parts of the world:whei'e '. Of recent years of coUrse the . Jordan :welcomes ~lgr~Stephen J~" Kelleher' and Msgro; -,' ,:"ithiS cond~tion again -obtaina..... ' problem has bee~ reco~ hi· , JohnF.McCarthy at..t heJordanian royal palaCe in Amman. . In some areas of rural P:~. .aU ita hideoUs. dimensions and Field Director :of the :Pontifical ;Mis.sion for Palestine,' .:IlKsl gr . • . -!or example, paganism has' re- heroic efforts are being made to' JU t daimed its own, not perhaps as recapture the soul of rural Latin Kelleher is conductin'lr Msgr. McCarthy and other Catholic • cult of the dead gods but as America.. Under the supervisiQll Relief· Services officials on a tour of Cathclic activities for· . IQ . vast and impenetrable re~ of the -Holy See a great iniSsion- .the needy in the Middle East. NCPhoto. giousindifferentism, a S01,lr dis-·. aryprogram has been initiated, ,~te for the Church and all sbo enlisting all available resources;· .~.. R.. h.. '''£' 0 lJ," represents. . .. .' .... in funds and personnel,tO,.bring . a[f~G.1r<cU1 A~$<elflt~ ~1f\l[f~SdcrHi'U . .:rhe sentimental picture'of a 'the Church back to the :P~ns. ftn61 D. n. «:!s;Rne . ~evout peasantry as opposed to ,. But the effects of a Century >:iI v 02J trlI.li9w.J 1J'llII . . tile godless city-f~1k is by no and a haIfof neglect not DUBLIN (NC) - Despite over theirexistell.C0. . means accurate in 'our day. Cer- erased in' a year or a decade. In. 40 years o~ co~un!st SUPpl"~S"The Bolshevl-s:t rulers during . ,t,ainlY there .are ru:aI .regio~ many 'areas of the countryside sion,.~~ splrl.tuality ?f. ~ the· past 44 "years did'their best ~here the faIth retams Its .grlP Catholicism is not merely' dor- RUSSIan I:I~PIe. IS not bemg de- to try 1IO destroy ChristianitY in' In' strength, but there are others mant, it is just about dead. All .,stroYe4. acc9.rdll~g. to al~~dinal Russia ' - this momentoUs ideal,· ~~er~ even. the me~oryof.reli- . that remains is a tincture, the , who w~ born..m what: lB. ~ .. on whiCh the whole life Of the I-lP~ IS extmct. ThIS pOse!!: ,one ,thinnest of veneers, while the the SoVIet Umon. people was' built - 'bUt they ~: :the most dlfficult propl~m9 ad't,iality is a revived pagaiiism. " Gregorio Pietro XV Glll'dJnal . have failed Christianity is . Still ~e.'Church has to deal wittb. in Piease' God, this 20th century . Agagianian, -Armenian Rite PM- . B livinifforoe amOng the. Rua- . · ~ }imes. . missionary enterprise sue- ' riarch of CUicia, said tha't CI1ri8- '8laD. people... ·' . ., , , :. :.. ' Latin Amerhla Today ceed ,in replimting the faith but,· tianity was the· mainfoundatiOD ' iq!t'is partiCUlarlY. &eutein con- it hil$ its\vorIt cut out fIot on which the·. civilizal;ion of. ,~~y IAv.- .; ~porary Latin A~er~ca. T~e '.. ' ': Vacuum ill ~,c Eastern· Europe was bu:ilt;: aD4 Card!1na1 Agagianian. saidtbat 'tV:as;' under the regIme of S~anA . .'. i stan ill'" Int >" that itcanoot.,be destro,,~,·· -"'a Diaterialistic. false ·doctrine suc4; as ·Marxism can never- be- " Ish.:.and Portuguese colonialism. _ prmw; n e e ... ~~e.n.lJ1ighty Elfforts were.made,r~h~ noW' 18 Cuba Pf l~:~V~ ..,~,,~~·Sl.~:e« . come a·,substitute.for religioD." .,;evilhgelize· .~. ,co!lntr'yS),de{ :.~lUIOIJ.,peotry .. Pf.lelkth~:l1lrgl~Jll~J'0edrlty, ~ co~mw,ust .. 'I7i'llI!' ~:~ Atanother.PQkJt; hesakk· ,.:. ~"fam6us::Laws"of, the·'Iridies.,:.';.;,ar~hc~un,.:, q,:s~p. ~,~~~~ u-. I lD ~ :cow:Sf! ~ ali .JJJ~., .'"Tbe ·RUssian .. ~ .'INVESTED IN'" .. . tm>~ulgated by t,he •.:~pani~ ...~~t~,~, ~ d-:-Chrlstian~. It .~ ~!~ whi,le ~~'''lI<Stbe ....__ . ---"•. ....;.:,.o'""';,_~ ~ . " CATHOlic. 'CHURCH ..... ~wn, bound the l~nd6wriefs... :,·-Jj ·a"litt~ fooh~f~ ua:.~:"take.;Iegateof·.I:0pe~o,hil ~:,l~1J#t'. :a";""~ _,.~4~ ,-t·.. ., ANo)fOSPtrAf :iO..Di:. ~e'.imc.omendero!l,to provide for comfort In a statIstic wh~"teU.~leb~!i~"9~. the 1~..~~ . ~ ~skJ. aDd ~ .. · ttiespiritual instruction of .their ". us. that ,they are ~ ~ ,Of .the 4.eath Of St. Patrlcl1;~ ' . ' .unbued with .sp1l"~t-,. In Units· of $500 '01' MoN ii\ib"eetsto build and maintain "CatholicB: , .. ' 'cl'" ,.,. -. . . . ''''''.. , . ..,..... , ..,. '.' R~still' lies,crwihec:VaDd 1a ,.....}. '. h h .. d h'.".;., So tliey are but the blUrit fact Asked whether conununlsm. bl~mg beneath Bb );,MH-- ' INSSI0n c urc es. an c 'apels, ". bad 'succeeded in conquering the b .. . -... .. "i"'""t . " 8ridt. to support the misSlditary Is. that they know. noth.ing . of soul of the Ru· "'1 th .ut ~he splrFtuality of the R~ . MlDneapolls, . Minnesota . '';''rie~ts and catechists. their faith and have no,..J:lleans P f :t"f thO SSSI~.ned·'.PC~I)~, - ' SIan.. people '. is- pot"being. de... ,. :. f t· i 'g ·t F g .... T re ec 0 e acr on,grega- stroyed." , . 'WaDed inf~Uaa' ·.:;;·~,there were'instances.o/here ~n'P~~ lC~ hI. b or en6r.t.10t~S tionfor:the ,Propagation·.. of~. . .... ,.: write to . n ~i: laws were ignored, :'theJ:'e 'llye. urf7 datoS teeh ~t-.J"i nthel- Faith '~pli~" "No.- decisiv~' 1r-~*;r::;~;;:;;P~-.=;r::;·~· ~';;::';i;'~"~ CHARLES A~ MURPHY' .....ie ·more· where l·t w'a' s"ob- a con Ine e Cl:les.; '~'~I" H'" ·'··'La· 'd" ... ; . BA;gi~te~ed.'Rep~e~D&a':';'; ~';t;ed with reasonable fidelity. ·rural. apostolate has ~pi~ not .'. --- ,~.eAp;:. I.~ ,: ,. "'~";:', . - ." :. 145 Pond Street I(was a forced system, of course, functIoned .-;' .:Re.'cm..' FaMIl .:: .'.;: ~. -. -.. ·hatUring·· . "-'. '., Winchester, Ma-. ~~. therefore obnoxious to our U we wonder_ why a:- natioa "For 'centuries, the wbc:lIe'.... .'·G.as.ligl.::.··t . R· O·.'.:0"'m .. ".', •. PA 9-2696' il4mdards of religious freedom, presu~ablr Catholic shOul(i fallered: life' 'of' tIle grea,ttllass'gf n b~t at least the peons' gained the so. easl~ lOto the hand.! ~?f lU1 'the Russian' peOple rested '0Ii' 8lD' [deal /!or Communion Break· c;etholic faith and the means 01. adventurer like Castro,., why ever-present: fact !......;. deE'p' relifasts~ Organization Banquets --'_··__·---'---·1 I1v.iilg i t . . '. ev:n the ~resent thre~t. of his . gloW! faith; This Christian faith 386' Acushnet Ave~.·: A~. ..._ ....._---:-.. . System Swept Awa,. . alhance With Commumsm. dO&! permeated every phase 01. ·the . New Bedford ,.Th~ revolutions. of the' 19th . not ·arouse ~he. peop}e to ~cUon., life of the Russian people." It . City ..... ~untury ~rought a drasti<: chlm,ge ... the answer. IS. Immediate: .Castro WaB essential .reality hl their. WYman 2·1703 In: all thIS. The encomienda sys-. f?und. a -vacuum and pr~mptly daily life and work. The Ru.. tern was 'swept away, its g~od. filled It. sians clung to ,this great fact af .' features along with its evil.. Will6ther . Latin American There was no longer any.inSiS:- nations ·follow suit? To that anl~l teoce on the part of government guished .query the response will for the' landowners to provide not' be given only by economic ··.nc~ for the spiritual wants of the asilistanceor by mutual defense rural workers... : .. pacts. It muSt also come tbe Doubtless, _ had the Chlll'Clh decision as to the ~'lI souL . CI herself possessed in those areaa .. e' •. eansers. 'G. Gi the meani;l and th~ energy to AlJ'cl:lbi~hop VClJgnozaf.. M'li'R~NfSTRE!J" BEDFORD continue the work, much might . T De d icahl. College .:. have been saved. But the tragic '0 . TAUNTON,' MASS:. , MASSACHUSETTS, fact is·.that the Latin American SEA,TTLE (NC) -Archbishop Tel. VAridyke 2;.c)6:n" Church commanded neither; tho,' Jj:giqio Yagnozzi, Apostolic' Del. " ,'.... ,: ..' .',,: support 'of the successipn, 19oV- ~ .,ega~~ ~ the. VQi'ted States, to-' ; '"",, , :. ,. ernnients nor the missionary morrow will dedicate Providenoo ~RE"~ enterprise reqii'ired. H~igqtsCbllege,a new Sister . i , "'M" "~.& ·"iIJ ~" It concimtriltecl "'ruit·· eher~e&'" Forma'tion: center liear h e t ' e . ' It had':o.il"tlie cLties. It could de» Tq.e,prelate. ~ .dedicate fU ' . ". Ir. '-~ nothing 'to prever.t the' 'grad'Wal college' 'at' pirie 'Lake, W~··, "~tipticM'eafieclI".' de-Christ~anlzation of the COWlo- af~r ..l1,~ r~turns.from Alaska. . delivered' ,. ..'. ~ ' ; ' . :'.: '.. ..'. '.' • ..' . 'I" ..::: ~side..' " ','.'.,.:'.; :a:ey;'ciftr~!tiUyma~iD.ghis ~ ~ .HEAI)QUA8'rERS·.;C~:"· ., Impetus' Lacking Vl.!>~~, _~p i d~.o,ceS;es. ~ere and in' . .. . . ..... .... '...... ~ ..... It is 'e"asy~enot.Jgh·:fot··:Us:'16'·' .Waslil'n·gt6ri·,Stat~:~· .• ,,···,.,.;DlETmC !SUPPLIES,."""". ....,~. Cl'itici:ie~l¥> blame' the'hierarchy' .,. ',...Archb1~~oR,:Vag.~0~i .will re-. ::' . 600,~~=: ~~'~'~489 ·w ,!': ~O:·~·' .:IIf·,h: and clergy of'bygonedays"'for turn toth'e'Apostolic'Delegation' . ··,~rw····,,·,·, . " : ' " ·":"r·.I~. ,1<0: ;.,.8 T .~IM·E. TO. BUY·'· blindness' and· inertia. A closer\.,w~Was.~~n,~.to~,.:p.. E".onsattir~ay.·:' " ... rc...,,;,;'.'.• .. ' j.....,'....._ ....';",;.... "_ .•_"_........ "_ ' ";' ·F:·':I"·~E·· . '··'F'.'..iR-·· 0:""":'; ...;.... ,•. r·.··', ,.... :,.~ .. Qcquaintance.'witli" theirprC!J).:,I' , 1 ,.. ';-." \" •... ' •.• :... II" •. L I"'I1II ' ' U 1"'IIII·'·TU1tI,'"AT .lems, their confusioB·.·.inadia.,-..., • • • • • • • " . . . . . . ' "fj" ......, ':.ad· . '" ....... ", , . . . . . . . . . . : " , .,

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DE ANCHOR-Diocese offot~ River-Thurs. July 20, 196'

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OFFICIALS ME~T: Grand knights and financial secretaries of Knights of Columbus. Councils throughout the Diocese meet at a dinner in Fa]] River honoring Joseph E. Boothroyd, state deputy of the organiza·tion. Left, seated. left to right~ Charles Souza, 'grand kriight, Taunton; Peter P. Mullen" grand knight, North Attleboro; Alfred Lewis,' grand knight, Westport; standing, Alvaro Sousa; deputy grand knight, North

Bishop

Connofi~y

Continued from Page One R. Borges and Maria da LUll Borges was born in St. Michael, Azores and studied for the priesthood at the seminary in Angra Azores. Ordained in 1937, he was assigned in December, 1946 to St. Michael's Church, Fall River. Following his service at St. Michael!s, he has been ail; Espirito Santo until the present time. Father Andrade Father Andrade: son of Manuel Andrade and .Maria H. de Medeiros Andrade is a na.tive of Taunton. He studied at st. Mary's Seminary and also in .the Azores and was· ordained in 19411 by Bishop Connolly. I. His assignments have includeG St. Anthony of Padua,Fall River, from 1949 to 1955 and Our' .Lady of Mot. Carmel, New Bedford, from 1955 to 1958 He has been stationed Our Lady··of Angekl since 1958. . '.. Father, MiteheR " . . Rev. Edward J. Mitchell, sonOlf Mr. and Mrs. William E. Mitchell, attended Msgr. Prevost· High School, St. Charies College and St. Mary's Seminary ill. the United States and the NOrt1l American College in ROfrWI:. '

Announces

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He was ordained in December, 1956 and since July, 1957 has

. Legion of Mary. Continued from lI'age One William McMahon at Cathedral Camp, East Freetown. . Auxiliary Legionaries are invited to join active members fen the retreats. At the monthly meeting of the Diocesan Curia, visitations were announced to' be made to praesidia of St. Joseph's parish, Fall Ri:ver and St. Joseph's, Fah>haven. New· officers of praesidia iaelude Mary Keating, vice president ·St.James p8rish. unit, New' Bedford; Betty ·Amaral,· secretary,- .anct Ca·therine Con:nelly, treasufer;fol' st: josePh's unit, Fail Riv~r;'and G:erma'ine' · Gautlli~r, .' Sej:f:etary. ·.for' 'St· AnJ1e's unit, il1so FaU ·Rivei-: .: :. "Next Cuda meeting is set M .SundaY,·.A,ug. IS at. st. Vincentlfl Home, FaIl Rivet'. '

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Continued from Page One Father Powers. This includes study of Christian living for freshmen; Christian .worship for \ sophomores; Christian belief for juniors and Christian action fu,r neniors. For supplementary use 0 weekly magazine-type texl!;, "hitime," is alsO available. , CCD classes .are planned to begin the week after the opening of public high schools im September. They will conclude the week before high schoo!g close in Jmne.

DAVEN'PORT (NC) - Nefllt.. · led high in the mountairui eeet of Mexico City is H~yacocotl8, 11 village in need af spiritua:I, economic and agricultural help. The Papal Volunteel's :for Latin America program of the Davenport diocese hopes to make that aid available. Fathel' Louis M. Colonnese, diocesan Papal Volunteer representative, announced that the Diocese of Tulancingo, which includes :tIuayacocotla, will be the special area of. concentration for the Daveilport program. He also announced that tbQ first volunteer from the diocese, 23-year-old 'Hawaiian-born 'Laureta AndaY'a, will leave iIa la1e August for Huayacocotla. There she will teach bookkeepfng and secretariill skills necoosary fur the operation Olf a oredit union, and cooperative. Future voluntee1'6 will incNOe 11 credit union advisor anct 80m agricultural specialist trained 1le help the community back OIl ~

been assigned tQ the Taunton parish. His degrees include Bachelor of Sacred Theology and Licentiate of Sacred Theol-' ogy, both earned at the North American College. Since Sept. 1959, Fat her Mitchell has taught Religion at Coyle High School, Taunton. Father Jl)elane~ Father Delaney, son of M:r.. and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney, Sacred Head parish Fall River, was ordained last December in Rome. He attended Sacred Heart elementary school, Coyle High School and' Cardinal O'Connell Seminary, Boston. . From 1954 to 1957 he studied · at the Theological College of ,catholic University,' Washing:" · ton, D. C.,: andfr~ 1957 until this year· was at. the ,North :J:\mel'ican . College, . Ro.me.· He holds A.B. andM·.A. degrees frOm CatholiC< :University arid' &I · Bachelor' of Sacred Theology de:' · ifree Gregori.an Univer8i~ Rome.

from.

'. "If a simple canning fectollY be started, and goods marketed together. in Mexico . City, ,the~ .would be money fOr . wells'that would bring water for . irrigation, sanitatiGn and 'cattleraising. This would mean a whole' revolution in their way of life."

. could

Secular PlJ'ess

Continued from Il"age One sta1e of poverty, misery· and hunger' without violating their national and political rights. Attaching political ties to aid for underdeveloped countries is merely another form of colonialimn. "Action must be taken 'in many lands and entire conti.oems' where workers are paid 5 I wages 'which condemn them Continued from Page One and their families tu subhuman to the headquarters of the Sociconditions of life.' (Here again ety for the Propagation of the was the concern for workers exFaith in Rome. pressed oro. yeatlS ago by Pope The university will ~ti~ , Leo.)" . the work which was performed . The Chicagg Dailf' Ne_ said · by Fujen University ill Peking ~tbe encyclical takes the posi..; before it' was siezed by the Com.- t e e t . ' . .. . tion that the econoinic problems munists. Rector of the Formose lIeN CMl...... ~ n' of OW' dar' ca~ be solved' ~ tOe universi·ty, is Archbishop' . ~. " '. . . .. u __ .., __ ~ d t· ' F~ ColOfl.ReSe iJlv~~ app....,............ emec1'8 lC EQIlYu Phi, eldled Areh~ fIi ~. Ot. HuayaeoCotla at· ~ : i68lism.,!..' , '. Mankins. " banci Ga' • two-1NeIt 1riP til> . '!Pope John," ·tfte newspaper c l\4exioo· iR mi~-'June.; ~. :OOB:".l9tated. ,!it!,ev.idently.pleading.for . ". ,'. 8Ulted at thM tune WIth BiehOil ··the .. lrimoSt . possible: economic' EnYoy~ ... : Ad8lbePtlO Almeida Ot. Tuiaiicintte ··~.for,.• the·individual, with . VATICAN CITY '(NC)-~ .. Feth« Oolonneee'lJound B\IflP- . the admonition· that tbe ·social .Tdbn has Neelveci '.e ~ .. llOOeOt.I& Ja need· 01. eeoA- ,8YBtem. muat in8lU.t"e.1hlt' ftODe icl *ials Of. Dr.' An4lonio . de· Fa.." . omNl 'Ilftd agrieuliural allsiAaDee. . ~:" - - .,,_ .. BeW ~ugueee.AnMl•• One· ~amp1e 01.. the lack ~ ~, ,'. ," ~ ill caltillg ,~. a ';1aiJtin£ (be Holy . see. ' . _:IopmeRtj be sap, • the~' . peeee, 1be. Pope establishes e Amba88lldol' de ..... .... .... »nc 01. ODe at abe ...,........ )mlcQcel. 118 ,well ae a Moral bassador '. Bradl from 'l86C1. CP8f). .. . .. < , , ba8i6 _.. aSllistanoe br' the )959 and ambassacklr to· ~ . "E~ tMnilr..u. fIod fNaI ;. wealthF nations 1J8 tile poor from 1958 .. I M 1 . . : M e OWl! tHes," he said; "b"· eioee . «mes," the '~ily' News said. Jlt The Pope expl'el!llled everyoae. alfoeacb'. hall fruit, It 'I;ldded that' the Pope envisioJlfJ· -.1 wWt :fw ~ toRn ei. JNlIkl ~ oa. the· staHs. Their· "'tI sense· of moral obligatiOZl l'eIigious ao4 eWf1 pl'osped" OOvetl't ~ anr ~ til which does' oot' stOp at· netional

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Ital'ianUniversity pmans to' Open Medical School

THE At':-=:: .. ~Thurs., July 20, 196'

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freed/om ITtide:n Reveal Truth

ROME (NC) - A 25. year-old dream wiD. be rea~ ized this autumn when' . Italy's only Catholic univers-

NEW' YORK (!NrC) - A southern Jesuit 'sociologist haited the Freedom Rider .movement for uncovering some of the truth aOOUlt. attitudes on race in the South. . Father Albert S. Foley, .S.l.• ooid the Freedom Riders had :put an end to several Souther.a inuaionsand false tra.ditions. Father Foley, professoJ; of sociology at Spring Hill OoUege, Mobile, Ala., addressed some 100 people at a meeting of the newly fonned BronX ·chapter o-f the Catholic Interracial Council. He said the Freedom Riders ·lllad laid bare far aUto see "the bitter and die-hard reSistance" of Alabama officialst0 the Qrderly processes of law enforceOlent and to 'Court decisions. Mob Activities At the same time, he said, the (Freedom Rides disclosea 'how willing these officials were "to 'cancourage ahd promote the law!less and subversive activities of -,~ , Cerrorist mobs, in order to nullifEy the efforts of American Negro citizens to secure equality bel !hire the law and infue enjoyment' of the privileges of American citizenship." Father Foley said the ridero 'also revealed "the glaring dis"' erepancy between the legend of Southern hospitality for visitors and the stark fact that some Southerners, notably the members of the violent .mobs,. are savagely in:hospitableto other American citizens, regardless of ~eir high rank 01' clergy status." The Jesuit priest, who is chairman of the Alabama Advisory 'Committee for the U. S.Oivil Rights Commission and president of Alabama's Council on Human Relations, said he .had "Dobbing but the highe6l; admira-tiion" for the non-violent courageoi. the . J!reedom Riders. Negative A8pecta But he cautioned against expecting too much from their ef~. Amo~.tMn~a«Ye ~­

peets of the movement he oitecl

were:

;, The possibillit¥ that the rides were simply lillIl isolated and '1:1,0coordinated effort 1lhat- w(Mlild mot be followed up. - The fact that souther-n ,Negroes would have to continue to live in· an atmosphere of violence' ai'ter the riders leave the .area. , The danger that race relationS :m the South might be made i worse, with .embittered Negroes erutering the racist "Black Muslim" type Qf movement. The possibility that it might become increasingly difficult for the reasoned approach to prevaiL. Finally, the danger that ref~. v.ised sectionalism will cause the S1>uth to line uo against the Freedom Rider movemelil,t as being of Northern inspirauQll.

.lPassioniists Building. New Retreat 'House NORTH PALM BEACH .(NC) -Construction has started 'here 6n Our Lady of Florida rnonasrery and retreat house of the Passionist FatheI'8 The $1,500jOOO.plant, loea'ted on a 31 acre tract on Lake Worth,' will include a public chapel, accommodations for 60retreatants imd a monastery for 24 priests.' It will be the 12th monastery in the Passionists' eastern Provinee. The Passionists have' 25 monastel'ies throughout the country. Father Kilian McGowan, 'C.'P.j ooperior, 'said the buildings will be ready fOl' occupanq in March, 1962. They were designed 'by Brother Cajetan BaUInal'll1, O.F.M. The chief designer is Paul Damaz, who came to the U.S. to work on : the United Nations building.

illy opens a medical school aOO hospital in Roine. Registrations are already being taken by the new medical faculty of the Catholic Univa-sity of the Sacred Heart of Milan.. This fulfills the wish of Pope Pius XI woo donated land ill Rome's Monte Mario district in 1934 for .a Catholie medical school. The medical school woo promoted over the years by the university's founder. Franciscan Father Agostino' Gemelli, who died in July, 1959. The school has been granted privileges equal ' to those of other medical faculties in Italy. Offers Sebola~ The university wil:l admit, under special terIlWl, students who cannot afford the costs of education and scholarship students from the Afro-Asian countries. Scholarships for the latter will include transportation from their countries and the costs of living in Italy for six years. Boarding facilities f(H the new center include 300 rooms, pllMl : reading and recreation rooms and an auditorium seating 300.

Sdelftllt@ GD'tm~!t

FOOD F,OR PEACE BOOSTERS: A .California :rancher, Coleman Foley, and his family, have been honored ,by President Kennedy for their. pledge of 200 tons of wheat to the President's Food for Peace program. Seated atop a grain pile are rancher Foley, his wife Catherine, and children, top to bottom, Nora, Pat, Peggy, Coleen, Mary, Tommy, Catherine, Coleman, Jr., and Barbara. Another 80110 Peter. missing from photo, is attending school in Galway. NC Photo. ," ' .'

Educator Says Boys of T oda', Are Like Fathers with peroons NEW YORK' (NC)-Boys . almost everv instance when steN· flo today' are pretty much like their dads when they were boys, say'S Father Arthur V. Shea, S.J., who for 36 years has been it disciplinarian in Jesuit . prep schools. . "A little more' inclJined to argue, perhaps," said Fr. S:!le~ of today's crop of boys, "but otherwise pretty much the same." Thousands of "old grads" of Fordham Preparatory school remember Father Shea as' the gruff but friendly priest who conducted the "jug," a venerable Fordham institution' designed for minor disciplinary infl'aetnons. . Points to lI'&renl:s Father Shea' first came 00 Fordham Prep in 1920. He left in 1924 to continue his studies for the priesthood, put in two yeaN ail prefect of discipline at st. Joseph's High School, Philadelphia, returned 1:0 Fordham ill 1931 and has DeeR there ever' since. Father Shea ham little sym. pathy with people wilo say that today's youngsters are worse than those of past generationS. "Young people are just as goo4 or bad as the people resPQnsible for. raising them," be said. "m

PILGRIM

REAL ESTATE Sales & Rentals West Harwicll 1K>UTE 241 Harwich 4-14 Harwich 3-67

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" )"Cung people become deliulIUeI,lt, one ,or. both of the par_,ta isB down on the job." 'Ex,peet Much ~ Contrasting <l:oday's boY11 with those of other years, Fathel~ Shea noted that the latest fledglings . are "spoiled with ea4lertaiD-" ment." '"Yourigsterstoday have E:'II'erything done for them," he said. "When I started here oo~ were happy if you gave them Q b&t and ball or put up a· basketbaU net for them. Now they Et1tpefJt much more." ,Another "modern d~r~ ment" he had less pati~, wi~ is the tendency of. today'll l"1Mln&-

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Ileformatory Festi.af LORTON (NC) - The sixth annual jazz festival for i,nmates . of Lorton Ref.armatoryhere in Virginia was :sponsored ,~ the :CatholicChaplains for the District of Coiumbi:l Department of Corrections. Singer Ella Fit7.gerald was the feature aUrae'lion. .

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Xavler University has been awarded :. a $7,460 grant from the National Science Foundation 00 conduot a science institute for secondary school teachers. Sister Mary Veronica, profe8SOl" of. physics at Xavier and director of the institute, said it will be open to 25 secondely school

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Brazilian Prelate Welcomes First Papal Volunteer$

of Fall River-:-Thurs. July 20, 196'1

1P©i. ,t'i>.~r~ . : ;Q)~ TlJ'lWtDl, JM~fro~®u love

Con~ ,.~d from Page One seems that men, especially those. tieins in v::rlous languages could entrusted with greater respOnsi.BELEM (NC) - Archbe given out simultaneously. bility; show themselves unable The encyclical is divided into to understand one ·another. bishop Alberto Ramos of four parts. The first part reviews "The ro()t of such inability is Belem do Para has greeted teachings of Rei-urn Novarum n()t to be sought in scientific, the first teams of U.S. Papal and of suBsequent documents ()n technical or economic reasons, Volunteers to arrive in Latia similar subjects issued· by Popes but in the absence of mutual America to serve 8-b lay missi()DPius XI and XII. Part Tw() is an trust.. ers. .' explanation, and development of ·Disregard Moral Order The volunteers, the Archthe teachings of Rerum Novarum. The Pope traced this· lack of bishop said, prl:!senf Latin AmerPam Three spells out the f()ur trust to the fact that not all men icans with a very different pi~ major new aspects of· social life . recognize the .moral order-."an· ture. of North Americans from and the Church's teaching. order which is transcendent, 'uni- ' the one often painted here. 'Natural Tendency' versaI, absolute, equal and bind"These people come from Underlining the teachings of ing on all." He said they, thereNOl'th America," he said. "We Iilis predecessors, Pope John re- fore "faH to meet and understand he.ar a great deal about the mateaffirmed the right of, private each other fully and openly in rialistic minded people who live pr()perty. He spoke of the evils the light of one and the same .. . . J!lere. Today we see another side @f excessive governmental jnter- law of justice admitted and adTOWERS OFF AITH: Scheduled for compleHon inmid:- of this. picture. They are sacriference in social and econ()mic hered t() by alL" , ficing themselves to help us, life, but at the same time The Pope then declared: "Mu1962 is this modernistic 17-spire inter-faith chapel at the which should in turn' be an exwarned that public authorities tual ·trust among men 'and da- . U. S. Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colo~ The $3.4ample for our people here." may not remain inactive in pro-··. 1:ions .cannot begin 'nor increase million chapel is formed by four triangles on each side and Turning to the lay missioners, llIloting the public good. except' by the. recognition and joined at the top, the spires covered with aluminum. dil the Archbishop said: "The Holy The encyclical discussed' at . respect of the morfll order." This Father has asked you to come !length the phenomenon of "80- can only be established he said, the upper level the Protestant chapel will seat 900' and on . ' South America to help us. We cialization." It is at the same' in the recognition of the exist- the terr~ce level,. the Catholic chapel will seat 500, and to welcome you, and bestow upon time, the Pope said, "an effect ence of God. the JewIsh ~hapel, 100. NC. Photo. you our blessing." and a cause of growing interven-· Teach Church Doctrine The eight volunteers, all from tion_ of the public authorities in In the final sectio'n of the en' Kansas, are an advance group. to even the most crr.cial matters." cyclical, Pope John labeled as O'i), ~@ BITi)@ ~ !P'[],@D~~~ ~@1@~fry prepare the way for a medical l>ope. John labeled socializa- "the most fundamental modern program requested by Archillion the result of man's natural error" that of considering the (g~W ~~ «:~@~~ OITi) ~[f@~@frudl .' bishop Ramos ·of the Kansas tendency ... to join together t<> religious demands of the human' ~ attain objectives which are be- soul "an expression of feeling DUBLIN (NC) - Julius Card- Dublin 'Patrician congress will bishops last year. They will y()nd the capacity and means at or of fantasy" which should 'be inal Doepfner, Bishop of lBerlin remain as a model of how such work in conjunctiaon with the the disposal of single. individ- "eliminated as an anachronism who was recently named Arch- a congress ought to be organ- Precious Blood Si:::ters and the Redemptorist Fathers. l:1als." . and an obstade t<> human prog- bishop of Munich, has ,called ized." The Pope held that socializa- ress." Ireland "an ideal Catholic com, munity." . ~on brings many advantages: To remedy this situation, the "It; makes possible, in fact, the Pope called on the Catholics of Bishop Doepfner, while here aatisfaction of many personal the world to teach and preach for Dublin's celebrations of the 1:'ES, WE'RE LOOKING ]FOR PEOPLE TO WORK WITH US rights, especially those called the Church's social doctrine. 1,500th anniversary of St. Pat•• but, first, answer these three questions: . 0C()nomic-social,sllch as, for ex- "We feel, urged to exhort that rick's death, remarked in an inYes No (lOlple, the right to the indispen- suoh teaching be extendoo by terview with N.C.W.C. that he Are' you a Catholic?' 0 1!I8ob1e means of human main- regular systematic courses in was struc~. by the close ties Are you mission-minclell? D D 0enance, to· health service6,·. to Catholic schools of every kind, bindipg the Irish bishops, p.riests· Will you work' ai home mstruction at a ·higher level, b9 .especially· in seminarieS.'! . and laymen. . .. 0 0 , wiihout pay? . ~ m()re' thorough formation,. to ': Pope John stresse4.that in .."The greatest possi~le spiri"Yes" to all three quesUons't You're 1 . housing, to w()rk, to. suitable. 'aOci~1 education. ass<>ciations and .' tU!i asset I!eland possesses in. the'persoD we're ·Iookinr. for! And, .~re, to recreation:" . organizations £he"lay'- 'apost()l- our. troubled world' is, I' think, belie.veme; your' help is' needed! Sou" , . .. , ' "I . . . , ' t' t'·l . .' that the work.ing' .class has re:.. Just RemulieraliOll . 'ate' pay, an' imp'or a"r9 e, es'-\ are· not woil' by'..preachinc· alone. .' . . . , .. mained faithful to the Church " ., They're"~ wOli "liy ..reachinl', pi... 'IN:te Pontiff asserted that '.'re- pecially those that have, as,their . 'il(~' said. . . ,. .' '.. . , . _neration for, work, J·ustas it . specifie :objective ·the Chl'istian-. . prayers, arid sacrifice. That'. what "This is the one'· thing' th81··t MllDot be left entirely to the iaw izatiort of the'. economic arid s<>:- , · Tht Hoi- FIIIhtr's MUsiotr AiJ Y01l.'0 . be expected to d_to sa, at elf the market,: .. neither can it. Ciai sectors· .of the. '~,~PQral . would' strike any 'churchman . ,!Y .•....' ,.. '. I~ast ope prayer'l! dllJ for 'oUr Priests, be fixed' arbitrarily··,'it' 'must· order." Urging .aU' to Ul()()k,···frOm the , continent,who··visitS . for Iht Orimltt/ Chllrr/, Broth'ers and Sisterl overseas, aDd to lrela'nd." .. tMtber be determined aeoording judge; ad" the Pope declared.. . . . make a daily sacrifice (go without dessert; ,ffW iRRanee, II eia'•. '. justice and equity." ·.'that the task of action i'bel()ngs Cardinal Doepfner paidtribarette, the uncharitable word.) . ... ute to' the orgahization o:f· the . T~e benefits, to ~ou?, The. spiritual benefits are incalculable. .. Pope. Johnha·iled t~e issuing ". particularly .to 'Our ".. . ..sons, , the Dublin, PatTici.a.n con·gress. .·c· You'll'be remembered in the 15,000 Masses offered eaeb year \If 'Rerum . Novarum as a mill'or ·lany." . . . . "We Germans have ofte.n been' by the. priests whom you are helping: in the Masses offered by historic Hierarchy',of .Values . .pr;lised for>. our·.ability all or-' . , document enunci8Jting Pope .John, Cardinal Spellman, aod all our Bishops and Priests. 4he Church;s socia~ teaching: He 'T·he Roman Pontiff, warnoo;· .. . . rJiKa it was an acti-<>n "not with:' h()wever, that Catholics .must beganizers~. But I"must say' the You'll be able to gain, toO, a Plenary Indulgence on the day you enroll, on 53 other daYfi during the ~ar and at the moment of IlUt hazard.~' on their guard ,to preserve an death. lie said some believed "thQl; active' awareness "of' a hiet. Happiness is a mental attitude and .The offering we ask you to make for the missions is almost Church, face to face wUh the .archy of values as ·theY carry ,one rna¥' be as happy in a cotta(:~ as insignificant-less than 2_ a week for. your own annual memberoocial question, should c()nfine on their temporaJaffairs and ,in a mansion. . ship, about 10¢ a week if yOU enroll your family. herself to preaching resignation ,seek their immediate ends." You will help ns1.Thank you. And we thank God that you are 410 the poor and to exhorting the . P()pe John made '·a general with us!" . If".tcii t() generosity." But. said 'plea for the observance of SunREYNOILDS·DEWJUi Pope John, "Leo, XIII did not.·· day as a day of rest. Deploring . William & Second Sts,. bellitate to procla.im -and defend laxity in this matte~, he said: NAME ..•••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• the, rights of the worker." I "In the name of God and for New Bedford WY 6-SU4 - .. "'Most Difficult Problem' the material and· spiritual interA.DDRES~ ", ~ ':.' :• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Speaking of relations between ·ests of men, We call upon aU. QOOnomically advanced countries public authorities; employers and . CnTY , ZONE .. ,. STATE . end those stiH' in the process of w()l'kers, to observe the precepts ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP 0 nNDIVlIDUAL ($1) 0 FAMILY ($5) ATIIl.IEBORO'S development, he said this is of 'God and His Church, and We PERPETUAl" 0 lINDIVIDUAL ($20) 0 " ($100) . leading Garden CentEII' probably "the most diffictilt remind each one of his grave 9I"qblem of the modern world." resp()nsibilities' b€fore God. and "CUSS BOX" . He stated: "The solidarity S()Ciety." , Dear Monsigrtor: 1Wo.wb,ich binds ali men and makeS ·.The Pope stressed that ·CathoWhen I asked a priest how to stop cursing, he told me to flne 'Utem members of the same fam- lies must work ·and live in the· myself 10_ every time..The money. has been collecting in • tiD .South Main. &' Wail·Sts. iiV imposes on political cOm"; world.. "We· should' ·hot create box on my bureau (my wHeeaUs itiny "cuss box.") Here are Ru.inities enjoying abundance' Of . an artificial oppositi()~betweel\' t~e proceeds. for the! missions. By the· way, don't expect this material goods (the obligati()rt) the perfection of-one's own being much .the next time I write. The "flne" . system·, wor~' CAl 2~234 OOt:to remairi·indifferent to those' and. one's persoflsl, aotive 'pres....... • BLAN}{E.TS FOR BEDOUINS . Political commur;ities. whose'· anee in the. world." . '.We have·no/.hing like them· in this countl'y.....,.tbe BedouiD8. we '~i~ens suffer from' poverty, 'Mysti~1 BOdr . mean. The Bt-Q'i>lIins(p,ronounced "bed·oo-ins") are tent-dwellen mtllery and, hunger, and. wh().. He related thi~ t6 the' d<>ctdne In East ;1)1'dail. Men, 'women' and youngsters, they move fro. lack even the elementary rights .' of the ·Mystica'l Bad'y of Christ. place to~:iace· with the seMona. trying to find I'ra911 for their elf the human ·person." Noti'ng ,that 'ail .are. called to .haggy sh~ep anel camels, and trying themselves. to keep warm. '1'he Pope noted there are life'. by Christ;, the'; P()pe' .said, Last winter- thousands of Bedouins nearly froze to death because QlHIhtries which produce con- . "when ',one carries on one.'9. they dilJn't bave blankets. We don't want that to happen again. sluner goods, especially farm . proper activIty, even·if.it be' of Sci we're countiDg' 011 you .•' .' We've promised to giVe 15,008 ~ducts in excess, while .in. temporal natuJ,:e,.. in. uQion: wit~ blankets, come: .October, to need, BedoulllfJ, the blankets #her countries large segments Je~us .tl:leDivine, Redee.mer, cost $2 each. We haven't the mone, now, frankly, biK we know '" the population suffer from every .work becomes a cantin.. CHARLES F; VARGAS; rou won't say No.' You won!t silt No because YOU wouldn't let ~sery and hunger: "Justice'and uation of His wo'rk and..redemp" 254 ROCKDALE AVENut! • ~eggar sit' ~', your sidewalk· in the' cold., Please send uti $8 humanity demand that the for':" tive. power." ..,. 'right now, and marki*" "Bedouins." We'H ,.. .. It thanks ,. NIW BEDPOID, MASS. ~ come to the aid of the latter. . The encycli@al. closedwitb a ,~_, that lome Bedouin will 'net fl'eelle. ' , I ~ destroy or to squander gOods ROte of hope: " .. . fha~ other. people need in order: ~'Our .era' .is· peri'et,rated '. and . .... "YOUR WILL, A WAr· ' 41& live is to offend ·against· jug-' sh()tth,()ugh by' 'ra4icai' err()rs; , "Where there'. will; there's a'wayn-we heard this from the Sister in grammar school when we were struggling with ariNtUce and humanity." it. is torn and upset by deep dismeUe. We're struggling with problems now, too-the problema He added that destructi()n of orders.. Nevertheless' 'it 'is also of educatiJig .• native clergy. building chapels and churches Qiurplus goods cannot be excused an era in whi<;I1immeriSe ~poSsi-' . · .. and iI hundred ,other things, ,T·hat's why we suggest you o.n: the grounds of economic harm. bilities for goOd 'are opened to· 41& ,Ii certain part<>l the popula- the Church. . . . ' not overlo'ok the ·mlsslons when you make your ·will. Whatever tfoR. you l~ave, whether large or small; wiU solve many problems, .. ': . ."We •desire ~tnat 'the Divine .~speclally if' y.ov. Ipecit,y "To be used where it's. needed most." . World CooperatiOil ' . Redeemer of meh; 'who has beOnr legal title: cATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSO~ncerning the problem of c~ for us God-given wiSdom.. CIATION. '. , ~pera'tion on a world scale, the and justice ,and. sanctification' I ..... "1t1~keJ" .J-n...~N ~.4 1P0P,e said that the impOrtim'j;' and redemption' (I eOI'. i, 30)• ." nNW{w,,,,1f, ~fnI~., ~blems of today, present .:,-nay reign ~fl triumph,glori()us '"]1' tr-o!-!bles of "supranational' and throughout the ages, in all and . . '.. . . S..SO. , oft~n worldwide dimensions." It· over all; We' decide 'that human . fRANCIS CAIDINAL SPElLMAN, ".~ ill~ecause of this that "undersociety be restored t<>' order ~l!9" 1. II;" 'Nat'l Seely, . ~p.ding and' cooperation are so . (that)"aH-nations may firml;' Send all c_aalMttoaa hi: . necessary." . enjoy prosperity, happiness and O~iL ItATHOLIC 'NEAR lEAST WELFARE ASSoCIATION .At the same··,ti.me, he ~¢ "lit. p.eace;" ...... ~~ _

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N.V@ Rookme~ W!)~ $~M~~~®fl; At N,w Bedford ScrIJ\?urdtQJ)f By Jacli Kineavy The New York Yankee Rookie team, coachOO by veteran N.Y. scout Art Dede, will take the field against Suburban CYO, heague leaders on successive days this weekend. Tomorrow the Rookies will make their third annual appearance at HaIlSOIl Memorial best ol the New Bedford and Field whePe they aft sched- Somerset e I u b l'J combining uled to meet the Somerset against the elite of flhe three A.C. in a 5:15 P.M. exhibi- t~amlJ representing Fall River. In each of the past two yeanl tion contest. On Saturday the New Yorkers will move <m tlc this game has drawn thousands of fans to South Park. The 1961 New Bedford tilt promises to be eveIl> bigger and an engageand better. Both clubs are rement with Perplete with college stars. Tony fection Oil, Lacerda of New Bedford will be Suburban's deat the County helm, assisted by fending chamJoe Brackett of New Bedford pions and curand Ted Morgan of Somerset. rent league Gino DiNucci of Holy Rosary leaders. will skipper the City stars with Prior to the the assistance of Fran .Regan, Somerset til t lAS and St. Mary's Len Alves. there will be Mayor John Arruda of Fall throwing, baseRiver will toss out the first ball running and home run hitting contests end The game will be lltaged under the winners will be presented the auspices of the CYO, Rev. with their awards at a dinner Walter A. Sullivan, Diocesan following the game. The affair Director. One week from Wedis under the chairmanship of nesday, Aug. 2, the Intermediate John A. Carreiro who is being CYO All-Stars representing the assisted by Gerald De Co~ and Northern and Southern Divisions Joseph Lewis. The latter, an area will clash under the light at scout for the Houston Colts, will, South Park. John Kenyon of St. together with other major lea~~ Patrick will manage the Southrepresentative present, partIcI- ern Division; his coaches will be pate in the selection of the Ed Owens, St. Patrick and Tom game's'Most Valuable Player. Howarth, SS. Peter and Paul. Manager Mel Douthwright ie Andre Jusseaume, Notre Dame, expected to go with his ace Jim will skipper the Northern Stars, Bridgeman in .an all out effort assisted 'by Abe White, 'Sacred to wrest victory No. 1 from the Heart and Joe Medeiros, St. talented schoolboys most of . JOseph. whom hail from the NYG me~oRe~ I[nnaiion politan area. Th~re are no hold~ We"'ve heard' of, burning gasoovers on the Rookie team and the 'li~e to city .lip;iiifiekJ. playing youngsters. though too old" for surfaces but the Cincinnati Redu Legion baU, ll~ in t~. main . ~~ploYed a rlQvel device·to elimJune graduates of thei:r resp~ ..inate outfield"·n'i.oisture last Suntive schools. They. will wear U1.e. day...,The R~ds' iJiariagement Yankee uriiforms, their only con- hired a helicopter to hover two nection .with Pl'9f~sio~alism. . feet off the ground for an hour . . •• 1 Chase,,' before. tlie .Cu bs' g'arne: The The addition of PaU1 ll'eCently discharged from Army· dowJ;1draft from the whirly-bird service, has bolstered the Som- proved .effective eno~gh .to pererset infield appreciably. A mit the game to .be play.ed. This standout .at Somerset High for is one baseball inyention, .then, four years, Chase will start at which the Reds may validly shortstop. His keystone partDe!' claim.. will be. Bob' Souza, newly ap- .. The' .American Leaguers who pointed asSistant baseball coach were skeptical about the Aeolian at Somerset· High. Thus .will be currents in· Candlestick Stadium revived the double play com- are now believers. So strong bioation that carried Somerset were the drafts late in :the game to a State title ift 1957. Douth- that both Stu Millei' 'and Hoyt wright, Bridgeman, outfieldel' Wilhelm lost their balance on Harry Ward and pitchers Lou the mound as they addreSS2d the Habib and Dick Botelho were all hitters. Mu,te evidence of' the key players on t~ fw:nous wind's velocity was the flapping squad. flannels of the players. Lt was The man respcmsible f{)r bring- said that Wilhelm couldn't get lng the Rookies to this area is to the dressing room fast enough genial Bob Danis. the director after the game to brush the sand of the Somerset A.C.'s baseban ctl Candlestick from his teeth. program. One would have to go a long way to find an individual ., Otis Air Base who exudes eilthusiasm' for the. . Summer plans of Otis. Ali national pastime ill the same Force Base Catholic Women's degree as MT. Danis. In addttioD Guild include attendance at to his activities with the A.C., "Flower' Drum Song" Friday, Bob also .pilots the. Somerset .Aug·. 4 at Melody Tent,· Hyannis. .Junior .American Legion team.. An outdoor Mass followed by a Although· he would' be the first ;picnic· -will ,be held CJt10 this to deny it, the youth of Somer-, Sunday morning. New president set owe him a debt of gratitude of the unit in Mt:a John O'Don'for his selfless ef:fort.$· in their ,hell; aided. :by Mrs: Anthony Her'nandez,:';vlrie presid~rif.and Mrs. behalf on the·ballfield. Edward "Slattery; secretary: . "AIi~Star ~ ,

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$~tro~naO"~[}uo~ l?U!i)ld! M€21kes ~lJ'@gress Sponsors of the Father Johlll. 3. Sullivan Scholarship FUlll<\ . honoring t..be memory of the Im.e pastOr .of Holy Rosary Ch~ . Fall 'River, announce that CODtvibutions to date total $1~ with goal of $5000 to bS'

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Offering may be brought «II' mailed to 45 Purehase St~ Fall River. Members of the fund comm~ tee are issuing periodic bull<:> tins featuring reminiscences ~ Father Sullivan, under the geiJ>o era!" title "Down Memory Lam with the Piccolini Shepherd." 'The latest notes: "Father Sulh-\" van encouraged the boys and lLEGJION OF MElRJI'll' FOR ClHIAl?lLAJIN: At the Vicenza girls of the parish in all thei:? activity and training. (Italy) Military Post, U.S. Army Chaplain (Lt. Col.) JohJi religious "Devotion to the Sacred Heart B. Rettagliata, right, receives congratulations from Maj. on nine consecutive First Fd.. Gen. Eugene F. Cardwell, after the Commanding General days; consisting of attendance ~ of the Southern European Task Force (SETAF) had pinned Mass and reception of Holy Communion, was his favorite on him the Legion of Merit award. The ceremony took place project. during a retirement parade jn honor of Monsignor Ret. Honor Roll tagliata. NC Photo. "A large picture of the SscreCl Heart was placed in the rear «I the church and when a child h~ completed nine Fridays, his nanw was placed on the honor roll posted beside the picture. Fathe:t' COLOGNE (NC) oroy rat-hers in Muenster and opened Sullivan personally checked the CDristian love can overcome a new bOuse of. the Medicel children's attendance. Red efforts in the world's de- Mission Institute of Wuerzburg. "Some youngsters had as manw vewping nations, the head of Children Contribute 86 Rive gold stars, denoting ~ the Church's missions said her~; 1M the. Muenster observanee. tendance foll" 45 consecutive FiM Gregorio Pietro XV Cardinal it was anounced that 1,668,859 Fridays. Today many of ,them. Agagianian, Prefect of the Sac- Catholic children throughout the now pareDitB of their own 'p~ red 'Congregation for the Prop- . world contributed more than a colini,' 'still earry on this nn=.·' agation of the Faith, Spoke on : million dol:lars to this year's col- . gious ,trSlining." the missions at the state'-oper- . lection for· the Pontifical Society .; ated Cologne' University' at the' . of the .Holy Childhood. U.S. chil. Renamed Head invitation of j,ts Cath{)lic stu-" dr~n contributed most, followed· NIAGARA FALLS (NC)-=:> dents...· by th{)se o! Germany. The ~hole Father "Vincent T. sworeta; . Tiie. ',Cardinal spok~.on bis·. amou~t Wll~ ~ u~ .excl~SIV~IY.'C.M:,: flU been reappointed ~' :. -ba'. k t T~ 1 d .f{)r children 5 mstitutions In .mlS- 'BUjperIOll' and president of Nia';-' . , t: 0 R ome "'-. J.!&om,pe~n ," siOO!. areas . U. . .. waY . ... wher~ he served as Papal Legate . .. . . . arn DIVersity for a three-year to D'u:bli~'s Patrician Year ob- 'A In..hls. addr.~ hePeCe!rdi1'lal "tei'm. ,~e.· h?S be:en super-ior all" serv.ances. While in Germany he ~~gIaD1a!1 ~ . . the urnvell'S1ty smce 1955 l!.!l(\ 50th anThe miSSIOns must not be represident sinc:e 1957. I 't~ k" p art'111. the " a.so, . . "garded as the ChurCh'S frontier mve~y celeb~atlOn .o( t~e .In-territory . . • Long before the .,. ternahonal Institute. of ~ISSI~:- breakdown of colODialism .t'he ogy at Mu;enster UmveJ;Slty" la~d. Church' was tmining nat i v •.... the cornerstone of a new reSI- '. '_n<_ nd I-t.... _ • •• ",. . .. . " ... d ts prl......... a Paint. and Wallpapet' dence for Afncan .. q.U en . ntrleS .. """"'....116 m mll;SlOn

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"must take home • • • the cononly by Christian future be assured, Parishioners of Our Lady of Angels Church. Fall River, will whereas communism is combinobserve their pa,tronal"feast the ing with nationalism to sPread weekend· of Aug. 11.' Festivities" new.unfreedom and injustice." will include a Friday night block dance, a Portuguese supper and band concen Saturday nigbt and n wgh Mass at 11 Sunday morning, followed at 2 by a procession, auction and food sale. Gener'al chairman is John Souza. . , Over 33 Years Experience

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