Bishop Connony Issues Directive ..•
• In
Mass
Vernacular Impending
_
Bishop Connolly, in a pastoral directive issued this week to all priests Diocese, stated that "once you have in your hands a text, in the vernacular, Officially approved by the body of American Bishops, of Ritual and Missal, you are free to put it in use." . The Ordinary of the Diocese added, "You are even directed to 80 do. This counsel is given because of the likelihood of my being in Rome (the Third Session of Vatic-an Council II opens Sept. 14) when the new Ritual will appear." The Bishop's letter has been issued in conjunction with the news that the Catholic Church in the United States has moved another step toward the general use of English In parts of the Mass: The approved text for the Ordinary parts of the Mass pertaining to the people have now been made public. The text provides for English in most of the Liturgy of the Word the first part of the Mass, up to and including the Creed. The same is true for the Communion service. -, The text, approved by the National Conference of Bishops of the
m the
The CHOR Vol. 8, No. 30 ©
PRICE 10c $4.00 per Year
---------Fall River, Mass., Thursday, July 23, 1964 -
1964 The Anchor
-
Sisters of Mercy List School Appointments The Sisters of Mercy, Province of Providence, aI!nounce the followirigchanges and transfers affecting the Fall River Diocese: From Holy Name Convent, New Bedford: Sister Mary Michaelinda to Mt. St. Rita Convent, Cumberland. Sister James Marie to St. Patrick Convent, Fall River7 Grade Two. Sister Charles Marie to St. Zoseph Convent, New Bedford, Holy Family School, Grade
One.
United States at a meeting in Washington last April 2, were confirmed
by the Vatican Liturgy Commission on May 1. The purpose of these
actions was to begin implementing the ecumenical
council's Constitution on the Sacz.ed Liturgy,
which seeks to have -all the people -take part in the
Mass "not • • • -as .strangers or silent- spectators" but with understanding and active partiCipation. The Bishops' decrees and the Vatican confirmation of them were made public in' mid-May by Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York, ranking member of 'the full meeting of the' bishops in Washington in April. In one of their two decrees adopted on April 2, the U. S. Bishops stated that dates for official publi cations of the approved texts would be set "as soon as the time necessary for the preparation and distribu tion of the respective translations can be determined." The Bishops' liturgy commission in releasing the text stated that "permission to reprint it is freely given with the explicit understanding that the text will be set down in its entirety with no omissions or additions. Turn to Page Sixteen
Printers Prepare Missal
Supplements for Laity
DETROIT (NC)-The chairman of the U.S. Biahop4J' Commission on the Liturgical Apostolate s:aid here that missal publishers have already begun printing supplemeJ}ts containing the new English text of the people's parts of the Ordinary of the Mass. Archbishop John F. Dearden bishop has recommended, fol
FatherWallace Lieut-Colonel Rev. Francis X. Wallace, Dio cesan priest serving as a' ohap lain in the United States Army. has been promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. . Ordained in 1947, Father Wal lace's first and only assignment was as curate at Corpus Chris-ti Church, Sandwich. In 1950 he replaced his pastor, Rev. George E. Sullivan, now pastor of st. Joseph's Church, _ Fall River, as chaplain to the Cape Cod National Guard. Turn to Page Eighteen
of Detroit made the announce ment after meeing here with representatives of half a dozen firms engaged in publish ing hand missals. As the bishops' spokesman on programs for the coming use of English in the Mass, the arch-
lowing Rome's approval of the U. S. text, that without any change in the basic structure of the Mass "there is no need for replacement of existing popular missals." He said that "all that will be Turn to Page Twelve
Vatican Releases Regulations, Agenda for Third Session By Rev. John R. FoIster st. Anthony Church - New Bedford
In letters to the Bishops, the Secretary-General of the Vatican Council, Archbishop Pericle Felioi, announced the agenda--or orderly plan-the Fathers will follow in their discussions for the Third Session of the Council. It was also announced that c e r ta i 11 changes had been made ill the procedure so that the council business could be
Sister Marie William Grateful for Diocesan Aid Sent Africa through Propagation Office
From Mt. St. Mary HHer people did it! Her people did it!" That's the whisper that goes round when From Mt. St. Mary Convent, Sister Marie William, formerly of St. Anne's Hospital staff, Fall River, now a missionary Fall River: Sister Mary Domi tilla, to Our Lady of Lour.des nurse in Upper Volta, Africa, visits the bush country surrounding her hospital. What Convent, Taunton, Grade FIve. "her people"-an American medical team- did was to topple the measles mortality rate Sister Mary Faber to St. Pat among Upper Volta children Yalegdo Ouedraogo Hospital in rick Convent, Fall River, Prin from a staggering 75 per Upper - Volta's capital city of cipal, Grade Three. cent to one per cent. This Ouagadougou since June,. 1961. Sister Mary Donalda to Our The hospital, she explains, is Lady of Cincinnati College, Cin- was accomplished in one year through massive use of the government operated and she cinnati. . and the three other -French Sis Sister Mary Flora to St. Xavi. new measles vaccine. ters who work there are in effect er Convent, Providence. "The people are so grateful," government employees. Sister Mary Emeline to Our recounted Sister Marie William, It is named for the first and Lady of Mercy Convent, Attle on home leave from her mission only doctor the new country has boro Bishop Feehan - High ary post. "They all know the Scho'ol. . produced, whose career was cut
Americans did this for them." short at age 28 by an accident. Sister Mary Dionysia to Salve . Some families, she said, had lost
Begina College, Newport, Regis_ as many as five children to the There is one other hospital in trar. measles scourge and many chil the country, said Sister Marie Sister Mary Dosithea to St. dren who were not killed were William, but the one at which .Joseph Convent, New Bedford, incapacitated by complications she is stationed is the better Holy I!'amily School, Grade such as blindness and encepha equipped of the two. In addition Four. _ litis. By contrast, .she noted, there are numerous dispensaries Sister Mary Padraic to st. polio is not a serious health located in bush areas. Peter Convent, Warwick. problem in the African republic. When Sister arrived in Africa Sister Mary Huberta to St. No one knows why, since living in 1961 the hospital was not Mary Convent, Bay View. conditions are polio-breeding, ready for occupancy and tem From Mt. St. Rita Convent, just 'as no one knows why mea porary facilities were very ·eumberland, R. I.: Sister Marie sles 'should be so deadly to primitive. Families were allowed Bernarde to St. Joseph Convent, African youngsters. to live with patients and care New Bedford, Holy Family High .... ii. <i.····.>.;. f<lr their needs. Sister Marie William, daugh School. "Now we don't allow this,· ter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Sister Mary Austina to Mt. St. Lapointe, st. Louis de France aid Sister, "but we have a hut -~~~ TW'n to l'age FoW' _ SISTER MARJE WILLLUJ parish, Sw:anseilt baa been. at TW'1l 110 FageEighieen
.speeded up. The discussions in the counell hall will take place in the fol lowing order: 1. "De Ecclesia" (Coneerninr the Ohurch): amendments to the six chapters alTeady discussed in previous meetings will have to be accepted or rejected. Two completely new chapters will have to be openly discussed: (a) "The Eschatological Nature of our Vocation and our Union with the Church in Heaven," (b~ "The Blessed . Virgin Mary. Mother of God, in the Mystery - Turn to Page Eighteen
Pontiff Finishes First Encyclical VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has finished work on the first encyclical of- his reign. The document was written en. tirely by hand by the Pope ill Italian and has been given to Vatican Latinists for translation. An' unofficial but qualified source said publication of the encyclical can be expected when the translation is com· pleted. It was estimated that th~ . would be by July 31 or later. The subject and length of 1lbe Aoc:wnen~
were DOt revealed.
2
THE ANCHOR-Diocese ~f·-FcinRtver-Thurs.July 23, 196~'
.. Poverty Proble'm ,Most Striking' Challenge Today
Ask Parties 'Oppose Change In Policy on Red China
HOLLYWOOD (NC)-The idea that poverty is the fault of the poor is "unworthy" of a Christian, the secretary of
WASHINGTON (NC) - Republicans and Democrats are being asked to put planks in their respective 1964 plat forms vigorously opposing any concession to communist China. Both parties had planks of this nature in the 1956 and 1960 platforms. Spear Leaders Prominent heading this drive is the Leaders among the committee . Committee of One Million, members include former U. S. which has obtained the sig diplomats and State Department natures of 338 U. S. senators and representatives to a declaration opposing admission of Red China to the United Nations, and any diplomatic or trade relations between Washington and Peking. The committee, which is avowedly against admission Of communist China to the U. N., says "recently there has been renewed pressure from abroad and on the part of some Ameri can publications, organizations and individuals calling for dras tic changes" in the present American policy in this matter. This agitation, the committee says, is for ''various and sub stantial concessions 10 commu nist China."
-
officials, members of Congress high Army and Navy officer~ and persons prominent in civil ian life. The declaration, which well over half of all members of Con gress have already signed, op poses admission of the represen tatives of the Peking regime "into any body or agency of the United Nations," and says any trade between the U. S. and com munist China "would help an avowed enemy far more than it could possibly benefit our selves." It is also "opposed to permtt ting communist China to occu py any additional free territory by force or threat of force.
VISUAL AID: To illustrate an account of the tempta tion 01 Adam and Eve to a class in the north Georgia countl'J r , Father Frank Ruff, Glenmary Home Missioner, uses a six-foot fangless bullsnake. NC Photo.
Morally Unobiedionable for Everyone
Battle Hymn Brass Bottle Bridge on River Kwal Circus World Day Mars Invaided Dream Ma~er Drum Beat Fall of Roman Em,ire Gladiators Gold Rush .' Great Escape' Incredible Mr. limpet·
Ifs Mad Mad Mad World lillies of Field longest Day Modern Times Moonspinners, The Mouse on Moon Never Put it in Writing One Man's Way Papa's Delicate Condition Patsy, The Pepe Ready for the People
IMass Ordo
Romeo & Juliet Sampson & Slave Queel
Sergeants' 3 .
Summer Holiday When the Clock Strikes Who's Minding Store Wild & Wonderful Windjammer
Yank in Viet Nam, A You Have to Run Fast Young Swingers, The
Christian Brothers .Conference '
tbe National Conference of Cath 0& Charities said here. Much of the divided positioa on 1Ibe matter of racl3l equalIty ''bas been fed by the OODvictioB PreV'alent in some of our people that the poor are poor largely because 1hey have contributed to their own condition," said Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher of Wash ington, D.C. ''Let me plead with you," he urged delegates to the 30th bien nial national convention of the Caifholic Daughters of America "as Catholic leaders from across this nation, to examine that frame of mind and to reject it as unworthy of one whose relig ious motif has been based on the great commandments of the Law -namely, to love our neighbor atI ourselves and to serve hHJ interests equally with our own." Msgr. Gallagher called the combined problem of poverty and. unemployment "the most striking challenge which OUW generation must face." Generally, he said, the £actON that cause poverty have never under the control of the poor themselves. ''They are individuals whe tlu'ough no fault of their own, at least not by their own design, hiave' become' casualties in • . ~iety that moved faster and delved more deeply than most 'Of us could have prophesized .• .~f;!W years ago," he said. "The'f' . are the aged and the very yount who are depencrent because De 'ture' and time have made them
been
:mmAY-Mass of previous Sun Hold day. rv Class. Green. Mass
NEW YORK (NC)-The 25th Propel'; No Gloria or Creed;
Second Collect St. Christina, annual national conference of Virgin and Martyr; Common the Christian Brothers Educa tional Association was held here Pr(!face. at Manhattan College this week, SATURDAY-St. James, Apos with nearly 150 representatives tle. II Class. Red. Mass Proper; from the seven American prov Gloria; Second Collect SL inces of the Brothers attending. 110;" • C'hristopher, Martyr; Cre~; ,. 'The Catholic Charities official The 3,100 Christian -Brothers Preface of Apostles. _Unobiectionable for Adults, Adolescents in the United States instruct ··said Americans today are' "OIl :mNDAY-X Sunday After Pen Act I " Hamlet • Shock Treatment more than 85,0'00 boys and young ·trial for the effectiveness of 0l1I' tecost. II Class. Green. Mass men in nine colleges, 100 'h1gh . political philosophy of demoe Advance to Rear Horror of It All 633 Squadron
Pr~peI; Gloria; Second Collect Behold A Pale Horse ·1'd Rather Be Rith ' South Pacific
schools, 18elementaryscho'ols, racy, as well as upon the effect St. Anne, Mother of the four welfare schools, several no "iveness of our idenity as childres Black Zoo King of Sun . . Surf Party Blue Hawaii Lawrence of Arabia' Twenty Plus Two Bles.sed Virgin Mary; Creed; vitiates and retreat centers, .' of. God." Captain Newman, I4D Man From Galveston Twice Toll! Tales Pre~aCi~ of Trinity. Chalk Garnen Mary, Mary Unsinkable Molly Brown MONDAY-M ass of previous Children of Damned, Miracle Worker Voice of Hurricane Sunda~r. IV Class. Green. Mass Charade Muscle Beach Party Walk TIghtrope
Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Citizen Kane . . Point of Order - War. is Iiell . _
JULY-25 Second Collect St. Pa..ntaleon, Com~ Fly With Mt . Rin~ of Treason Weekend With lulu Rev. Michael J. Cooke, 1913, Martyr; Common Preface. ' Distant Trompet SanJuro. Wheeler Dealers Inc. ," . Pastor, St. Patrick, Fall River. Donovan's Reef . 7 Days in May World of Henry Orient 'J'UESDAY-SS. Nazarius an d .JULY, 29 Evil Eye Secret Door Young Doctors, The Celsus, Martyrs, Victor 1, FUNERAL SERVICE fort Dobbs""< Secret Invasioft Rev. Mathias McCabe, 1913, Pope ~.ndMartyr, and Inno 'Pastor, Sacred Heart, Fall River. cent I, Pope and Confessor. ~49 COUNTY STREET Morally Unobiectionable for Adults' Rev. Charles P. TraInor, S.S., . III CIs ss. Red. Mass Proper; 1947, st. Edward seminary, Be . Hypnotic Eye Prize .NEW .BEDFORD, 'MASS. All Nighfs Work Gloria; no Creed; Common . attle; WaShington. Term Of Trial loneliness of long America; -America PrefaCE!. .Becket· .• - ~ Thin Red Line Distance Runner ;. 'VrEDNESDAY-St. Martha, Vir_ .Mafioso" . Third Secret · Bedtime story gin. nt C13ss: White. Mass Thunder of Drums Bikini Beach . Mail Order Bride OIROURKE. Proper; Gloria; Sec()nd Collect Man's Favorite' Sport To eed. or Not to Bed Bye Bye Birdie . No. My Darling Daughter Town Without Pity SS. Felix and Companions, Cardinal Home Two Are Guilty Darby's Rangers . Operation Petticoat Funeral ROine
Marty.m; no Creed; Common West Side Story Paris When It Sizzles · Flight from Ashiya ·571 Second Street Preface. '. S50 Locust Street
Pillow Talk . Woman of Straw Fun in Acapulco' THURSDAY-Mass of previous F~II River, Mass. ., Global Affair . . Pink Panther Zulu Fall River. Mass.
Sunday, IV Class. Green. Mass Hud . OS 9-6072 ,.. OS 2-2391, Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Second Collect SS.. Abdon and MICHAEL J. M~HON" .: For Adults (With Iteservaiions) Rose E. SullIVan Sennen, . Martyrs; Common Lic~nsed' Funeral Director itlis . classification.. is' give~ to certain f i1ms, w~ic",. while not. morally offensive leffrey. E. Sullivan Preface, hi themselves,. feqm~e cautIOn and some analYSIS and explanatIOn as a protectioD
. ,Registered Embalmer . to tbe :unlnfonned against wrong interpretations and false conclusions.
Best 'Man' '_. Martin Luther This Sporting life FO~~TY HOURS Black Pke Me ,Organizer Tom Jones
Divorce! Italian Style . Pressure Point Under Yum Yum Tree
DEVOTION Cool World... '. • Servant . Victim
.FUNERAL HOME Dr. Strangelove Sky Above & Mud Below Visit, The
;ruly 26-':St. Francis of Assisl, 81h . . Strangers in the City Walk on Wild Side New Bedford 986 ,Plymouth Avenue Clrl With the Greerl Eyes Suddenly Last Summer Young & Willing Hol~' Redeemer, Chatham Aug. 2-St. ~rge, Westport . '- fall River, Mass. Morally Obiectionable in Part for Everyone -, Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven Black Sabbatll Kissin' Cousins Strangler St. 'j'hel'eSa, So. Attleboro TeL O~ 3-2272. Cleopatra Kitten. With A Whip Sunday in New Yorl! Aug. 9--St.. ~resa, New VA 4·5000 Comedy of Terrors l<J:ly '" Cage The Devil and the " Bedford. Conjugal Bed long Shi~ 10 Commandments Our Lady of Victory, l Curse of Living' Corpse Man in Middle Three Fables of love
Centerville. Female Jungle Masque of the Red Dllath Tiar.a Tahiti (Br J
4.for Texas. Night Must Fall Under Age ,A.ug. 16 Our Lady of . -Home Fnghtened City Psyche 59 Vice and Virtue Lourdes, Wellfleet. ,. FUNERAL HOME EST. 1870 From Russia With love Racing Fever Viva las Vegas SaCI'ed Heart, New Bed , _WClshington Square' GI Blues Shock Corridor. What A Way To Go 469 LOCUST STREET ford. · Honeymoon Hotel Small World of Sammy lee Where Boys Are NEW BEDFORD FAll RIVER, Mass. Horror of Party Be.h Soldier in the Rain Yesterday Today aad Reg. funeral Director and
THE MeHO' Mouse Is Not A Home Some Came Running Tomorrow 2-3381 ., Jessica SoleDdor in Grass IS8C011C1 Ciani Postage PaId at Fall 11_ Embalmer
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THE ANCHOR . Thurs., July 23, 1964
Bishop Swantrom Assign .Workers To Depots. . CRS . . . .'
Pastor Installs TV In British Church BALHAM (NC) -A closed circuit television system has been installed" in the parish church here to enable· parish ioners sitting in a side chapel to see what is happening at the main altar. The view from the' chapel is 'normally obscured by arches. . The pastor, Father Martin Bennett, bought the TV system from the British Broadcasting System for about $480.
'
. NEW YORK· (NC)-:-O!erseas . assignments have been given to eight men, the largest el'ass to finish the training course con dUded by C'3tholic Relief Ser-· v.ices-National Caitholic Welfare Conference. . Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of the relief agency maintained by U. S. Catholics, said the men will su pervise distribution of CRS sup plies in Pakistan, Togo, Da homey, El Salvador, Colombia, Senegal and Peru. The eight are: Thomas Cavan augh, Green Bay, Wis.; Stephen Hennessey, Yonkers, N. Y.; Serge King. Pittsburgh; James May rides, Sharon Hill, Pa.; Robert Moore, Philadelphia; Michael Schwab, Lansdowne, Pa.; Stan ley Urban,_ Ware, Mass.; ~nd David Zabinski, st. Cloud, Mmn.
Solemn Requiem
For Religious
.Bishop Connolly presided at a Solemn Requiem Mass yesterday morning in St. Mary's Cathedral fur Sister Mary Dympna, R.S.M. Rev. Walter A. Sullivan was eelebral1lt; Rev. John P. Dri$COll, deacon, and Rev. Paul F. McCar l"iock, sub-deacon: Sister Mary Dympna died Monday at MOUnt St. Mary Con vent after a long illness. Born &l Irelarid, She was the former Rose Conlan,: daughter of the late Peter and the late Ann (,McMahon) Conlan. She W9S professed Oft Aug. 13, 1910. In the course of her teacihing oareer she taught in St., Mary's North .A!btleboro; Holy 'Name, Lady of Mercy and Holy . Family schoois, ~ll in New Bed ford; St. Patrick's, SS. Peter &: Paul, St. Joseph's. sohools and Mount St. Mary Academy, all ill ~all River. . She is survived by a sister, Sister Mary Kevin, R.S.M. of St. .lames Convent, New Bedford, and a niece, Sister Macrina, O.P., of St. Helena's Hilh School, New York, N.Y.
Ooc
Former Governor Wins Labor Award . PITTSBURGH (NC) ...... David L. Lawrence, former P~mnsyl vania governor, has been named for the labor award sponsored annually by the diocese of Pitts burgh and labor groups of the
area. Lawrence, chairman of Pres ident Johnson's Committee Oft :Equal Opportunity in HOUsing, will be presented with the award by Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, following a Labor Day.Mass, Monday, Sept. 7, in the Civic Arena here. The award honors a person who has made significant -contributiolldl' to the cause of workers. Lawrence also is a former mayor I)f Pittsburgh. Over the years he has helped negotiate labor contracts and mediate mbor-management disputes. He was instrumental in passing the state's "little New Deal" legis lation.
Charity Helpers ALGIERS (NC) Several hundred young Catholics from various European countries will make their services available without pay to Algerian Catho lic ch.arities during the Summer vacation for work in hospitals and outpatient clinics. The proj ect will be directed by Arch bishop Leon Etienne Duval of ,Algiers.
3
GREATER
NEW BEDFORD'S
OVERSEAS RELIEF WORKERS: Seated, left to right: Stanley Urban, Bishop Swan strom, director, Sergo King, Robert King. Standing, left to right: Michael Schwab, David Zabinski, James Mayrides, Stephen Hennessey, Thomas Cavanaugh.
Design Epistles and Gospels for Clarity New Scripture Versions More Intelligible PORTLAND (NC) - Epistles and Gospels to be read in En glish, instead of Latin, in Masses when the new liturgy changes take effect in the United States will be from a "new, up-to-date translation de signed for i.ntelligibility," one of the translators said during an interview at Oregon's Maryhurst College. ' "There will be no 'Bible En glish' in it-no thou's or thee's," F'ather Raymond, E. Brown, S.S., said of the new version which will be used in the liturgy. Father Brown, professOr of New Testament at St. Mary's Semi nary in Baltimore, is a translator of the Gospel of St. John for the Confraternity of Christian Doc trine's New Testament transla 'tion. The translation is directly from the Greek and has 'not yet been published. ' "People will find it !luite dif ferent," Father Brown said. "For instance, in St. .rohn's Gos pel, when we have finished~ the long speeches of Our Lord will be set up in a form like poetry -in a solemn, poetic style of speech." .' , Conversational English .. He said the translators had tried to put the :t'lew Telltament into correct English, not collo quial but reflecting what the New Testament really, was.
Seek Ban on Hindu Political Parties
NEW DELHI (NC) -E~fol.'ts
are being made wit~in the. rul
ing Congress party to get u,l4'a
Hindu parties banned from the
political life of India.
Three of these parties; the Hindu Mahasabha, the Ram Rajya' Parishad and the Jan Sangh, are working to make
India an officially Hindu state.
They are vigorous opponents of all Christian missionary activi ties. ' The top-level committee of
the Congress party dealing with the problem has suggested a general ban on all parties pro moting what are called "com munal feelings." The committee
said that' such parties "lead to
the atomization of Indian soci
ety" and "will shake the very . foundations of our secular pol icy."
Conversational English will re flect the spoken Greek of the time the Scriptures were writ
ten.. Asked about a "common Bible" for Oatholics and Protes tants, Father Brown said a dif ficult problem was to arrive at a common version which every body would read. He pointed out that most Prot.est.ants still prefer to use the King James version of the Bible. . "If you mean by a 'common Bible' one that official groups, both Catholic and Protestant, could recognize, that's a possi bility," he said. "We could really almost recognize existing translations." He said the "period when the Bible was translated slantedly is over." K.eje!lt. Common Bible Father Brown rejected an idea that a "common Bible" could be arrived at by putting "Catholic
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"If you put changes in it, it is not a common Bible," he said. "We should be a-ble to translate scientifically to elimina'te that problem." He pointed out that there is exchange of informaUon be tween CatIWlic and Protestant.· scholars who are using -modern methods of Scripture study. "There is a kind of recognition that scieintific stUdies of the Scriptures do not belong to just one group," he .said. .
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. :July 23, 1964
Cardinal's Diary Disproves Rumor Of Opposition
Sisters of Mercy Assignments
Continued from Page One :Mary Convent, Fall River, Mt. St. Mary Academy. From Nazareth-on-the-Cape, Hyannis: Sister Mary Rosarii to Our Lady of Mercy Convent, Attleboro. From Our Lady of Mercy Convent, Attleboro: Sister Mary Frederica to Mt. St. Rita Con vent, Cumberland. Sister' Mary Timothea to St. Patrick Convent, Fall River, Grade Six. Sister Mary Lois to St. Cath erine Convent, Belize, British Honduras. Sister Mary Thomas Aquinas to St. Xavier Convent, Provi dence. From Our Lady of Mercy Convent, New Bedford: Sister Mary Kevin to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fa',1 River. Sister Mary .Edward to St. Joseph Convent, Fall River, Grade Three. Sister Mary J'eremiah to St. John Baptist Convent, New Bed ford, Principal, Grade Eight. From Our Lady of Mercy Convent, East ,Greenwich, R. I.: Sister Marianna to St. Mary Convent, North Attleboro, Grade Six. From St. Augustin Convent From St. Augustin Convent, Newport, R. I.: Sister Mary Mauricita to St. John Baptist Convent, New Bedford, Grade Five. Sister Mary Eucharista to St. John Baptist Convent, New Bed ford, Grade Seven. From St. Brendan Convent, Riverside, R. I.: Sister Miriam Josepb, to Our Lady of Mercy Convent, Attleboro, Bishop Fee han High School. From St. Edward Convent, Pawtucket,: Sister Walter Marie , to Holy Name Convent, New Bedford, Grade Six. From St. Franc:s Xavier Con vent, Providence: Sister Mary LaSalette to Our Lady of Mercy Convent, Attleboro, Bishop Fee han High School. . From St. James Convent, West Warwick: Sister Maria Joseph to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River; SS. Peter and Paul School" Grade Two. From St. Joh.n Baptist From St. John Baptist Con vent, New Bedford: Sister Marie Merici to Our Lady of Mercy Convent, Attleboro; St. John Evangelist School, Prin cipal and Grade Eight. Sister Marie Walter to Our Lady of Mercy Convent, Attle boro, Bishop Ji'eehan High School. Sister Mary Paschal to Our Lady of Mercy Convent, New Bedford, St. Mary School, Grade Four. Sister Mary Madeline to Mt. St. Mary Convent., Fall River, St. Louis School, Grade Three. Sister Mary Cla::-e Theresa to St. Joseph 'Convent, New Bed ford, Holy Family School, Grade Seven. From St. Joseph Convent, New Bedford: Sister Mary Mar garet to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River; SS. Peter and Paul School, Principal, Grade Two. Sister Mary Dunstan to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River. Sister Mary Leander to St. Mary Convent, Bay View, River side. Sister Mary Consilii to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall River,
Generous Alumni DENVER (NC)--Notre Dame University rece~veC:,a check for $5,000 from the America'n Alum ni Council as winner of a com petition for the most improved alumni giving program. A $2,000 third place award went to Manhattan College of New York. The awards were presented at the council's annual conference here Tuesday.
Mt. St. Mary Academy, Principal
Sister Mary Brian to Mt. St. VATICAN CITY (NC)-A Mary Convent, Fall River, Ca page of the late Domenico thedral School, Grade Three. Cardinal Tardini's diary pub Sister Mary Lucia to St. Kil lished in the Vatican City ian Convent, New Bedford, c:Jajly Osserv'atore Romano, ap Grade Six. parently lays to rest the oft-re Sister Mary Danella to St. peated rumor that the cardinal Patrick Convent, Fall River, was chagrined by Pope John's Grade One. idea of calling an ecumenical Sister Mary Laurita to St. council. Mary Convent, Bay View, River The enJtry under date of Jan. side. 20, 1959, reads: From St. Kilian "Important audience. Yeste'l' From St. Kilian Convent, New day afternoon His Holiness reo Bedford: Sister Mary Estella to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall £ected and meditated on the program of his pontificate. River, Cathedral School, Grade Eight. "He had three ideas: Roman Froon St. Mary Convent, Bay synod, ecumenical council, UI> View, Riverside: Sister Mary dating the Code of Canon Law. Edna to Our Lady of Mercy He wants to announce these Convent, Attleboro, Bishop Fee three points next Sunday to fue han High School. cardinals after. the ceremonies Sister Mary Ludivine to Mt. of St. Paul. St. Mary Convent, Fall River, "I say to the Holy Father (whe Mt. St.' Mary Academy. is questioning me) 'I like things Stster Mary Maris Stella to St. that are beautiful and new. Now Joseph Convent, New Bedford; these three points are very beau Holy Family High School. tiful and the manner of first Sister Mary Faith to Our Lady announcing them to the cardi of Mercy Convent, Attleboro; nals is new (but li~ked to ancient Bishop Feehan High School. ,- -'1 papal traditions) and is most Sister Mary Margaret Joseph opportune.' " to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Fall The Vatican City newspaper Si'ster Mary Emily'and Sister Mary Hilda River. published a line-cut of the entl7 From the House of Studies: in its issue dated July 16. Sist.er Michael Mary to St. Jo seph Convent, New Bedford, Holy Family High School. Sister Joseph Mary to St. Jo f) R.~·.M. seph Convent, Fall River, Grade VATICAN CITY (NC) -The Seven. lItaHan news agency, ANSA, has reported that Pope Paul VI plans From Sl Mary's. No Attleboro Sister Mary Emily Shanley, R.S.M. has been appointed to travel to the Italian city of From St. Mary Convent, North Orvieto on Tuesday, Aug. 11 to Aittleboro: Sister Mary Anselm president of Salve Regina College, Newport, by Mother Mary commemorate the seventh cen to St. Joseph Convent, New Helena MeNulty, R.S.M., Mother Provincial of the Sisters tennial of the feast of Corpus Bedford; Holy Family School, of :Mercy of the province of Providence. Sister Mary Emily Christi, a universal feast day. Grade Three. No official confirmation of the succeeds Sister Hilda Miley, Sister Mary Placide to Our R.S.M., who now becomes gree from Catholic Teachers' report was available from Vat Lady of Mercy Convent, Attle Ican sources but unofficially it 'd t 't f S 1 College, Providence, in 1942, boro, St. John Evangelist School, preS.1 en .emerl us 0 a ve Sister pursued Summer courses was said that the visit is almost Grade Six. a certainty. Regma. Smce August, 1961, at St. Pius X School of Litur From St. Matthew Convent, The cathedral of Orvieto SisUtr. Marry Emily has been gical Music, at Providence Col Cranston: Sister Mary Carolanne houses a relic of a blood-stained superIor and treasurer at the lege, Boston College, and Salve to Holy Name Convent, New Mass corporal, a piece of linen college. Regina. She received her A.B. Bedford, Grade Seven. en which the Host is placed, Sister waE born in Providence degree from Salve Regina in From St. Patrick Convent, which is said to have led Pope where she received her early 1951 and her A.M. degree from Fall River: Sister Mary Magda education, first at St. Patrick's Boston College in 1955. Sister, Urban IV to declare the feast of len to Mt. St. Mary Convent, Corpus Christi as a universal elementary school and later at has done advanced study in Fall River. feast in 1364. St. Xavier's Academy. Sister enlanguages at Xavier College, Sister Mary Cecile to St. Mary tered the novitiate at Mount St. Chicago, and at Laval Univer Convent, North Attleboro, Grade Rita., CumbErland, Sept. 8, 1934 sity, Canada. Three, Superior. and was professed at the novitiAt Tyler School, Providence, OTTAWA (NC)-Father Roger Sister Mary Frederice to St. ate on March 12, 1937. and at St. Xavier's Academy, Guindon, O.M.L, 43, has been Anthony Convent, West War Advanced Study Providence, Sister has held named rector of the University wick. After receiving her Ed.B. deteaching posts. In the three years of Ottawa. He has been dean of Sister Mary Immaculate to previous to her apointment as the university's faculty of theol Holy Name, Convent, New Bed ogy. superior at the College, Sister ford, Grade One. was superior at Mount St. Rita From St. Peter Convent, War Convent and teacher at Mother wick: Sister Mary Peter Francis of Mercy Novitiate. to St. Joseph Convent, Fall . DI:TROIT (NC)-A major dis To her new duties Sister River" Grade Three. tributor of paperback book·s here brings a rich cultural back From St. Theresa and a better literature group ground and some notable years From St. Teresa Convent, have joined forces to combat of administrative experience. Pawtucket: Sister Mary Geor newsstand sales of objectionable gine to Our Lady of Mercy Con_ reading matter by promoting vent, New Bedford, St. Mary wholesome reading. School, Grade Eight. ThEl Ludington News Company Sister Mary Magdala to Our cooperating with the Metropol Lady of Mercy Convent, Attle itan Detroit Council for Decent boro, Bishop Feehan High THOMAS F. MONAGHAN JR.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 23, 1964
Catholic Population of Britain Rises Despite Some Prejudice LONDON (NC)-The Catholic population is slowly growing larger in Great Britain despite some lingering traditional prej udice against Catholics. Unofficial tabulations show t'hat the number of Catholics has increased from four million in 1950 to 5.13 million in 1964. This growth, due to a higher birthrate, immigration and con versions, is substantially higher than. the growth rate of the entire nation. Catholic schools today have 100,000 pupils as opposed 00 518,000 in 1958. It is estimated dtat by 1974 there will be a 1.3 million Catholic children of school age, as against 6.5 million non-Catholic children. However, it is estimated that ihe percentage of Catholic school ehildren will drop from 63 per cent to 48 per cent during the same period because of a slack ening in immigration. One person in every five in the Liverpool archdiocese today is a Catholic. In some other places it is one in four. Some of these figures were given in a survey of Catholicism in Britain carried out by the
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Sunday Express, populaf' na tional newspaper. Some were given by the Catholic Herald. The present Catholic popula tion is split up into: 3,827,000 in England and Wales; 800,000 in Scotland; 500,000 in Northern Ireland. These figures are based on parish and diocesan returns and are conservative. Some experts suggest the real total of Cath olics may be as high as seven million out of a general popu lation of 52,673,221 in 1961. That, over the whole country, would be one Catholic in every seven or eight persons. The Sunday Express, investi gating prejudice against Catho lics, found none existed in in dustry. In fact some people thought because of the growing influence of the Catholic Church and the prestige given it by some prominent converts that .being a Catholic could actually help. The newspaper quoted Sir Richard Powell, director general of the Institute of Directors, as saying: "The fact of being a Catholic can be a plus rather than a minus."
Asserts Leaders Battle Religion. In Russia
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NEW YORK (NC)-More than 600 persons at a Sol emn Mass here marking the beginning of Captive Na
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Orthodox Rabbis Score Laymen For Involvement in Council FALLSBURGH (NC)-8evera! Orthodox Jewish Rabbis have criticized Jewish lay groups foIL" having involved themselves in a possible Vatican council state ment on anti-Semitism. Rabbi Abraham N. AvRutic:t, president of the Rabbinical Council of America, declared at the opening of that· group's an aual meeting that some. laymen are entangling themselves in Christian theology. Rabbi Israel Miller, incoming president of the organization, 198id the chief target of the criti cism is the American Jewish Committee, a human relation" agency, which has been in con tact with the Vatican's Secre tariat for Christian Unity con cerning a proposed schema on Christian-Jewish relations. Any council statement, saia Rabbi Miller, is "purely a Chris tian matter," and Jews should not implicate themselves in se curing its passage. He said Or thodox Jews are also unhappy that members of the AJC, in eluding its president, Morris B. Abram, met with Pope Paul VI en a Saturday, thus violating the .Jewish Sabbath, and were pho tographed without their skuU eaps. Follow Criticism Rabbi Israel Klavan, the eouncil's executive vice-presi 4.ent, charged that secular groups are involving themselves "in areas of theology in which they have no competence." Such actions, he said, "tend to blur the distinctive religious charac ter of each faith community." The statements here in New York followed by three days a «iticism raised by Leon I. Feuer, president of the Central Confer-
Religious Discussion In Soviet Press MUNCH (NC)-The commu Ilist press in the Soviet UniaR is Civing more space to "give-and
take discussion between reU Cious believers and nonbeliev ers," according to the infol'ma tion bulletin of Radio Liberty here in Germany. . The agency, under the Amer ican Committee :for Liberation, said that religious believers are now signing their letter defend ing their beliefs. It cited in par ticular letters published in Komsomolskaya Pravda, the Moscow organ of the communist you.th organization.
ence of American Rabbis, a Reform group, that some Amer ican Jews made an "obsequious appeal" to Pope Paul for passage of an anti-Semitism statement. While critical of the direct in_ V'Olvement of Jews in these mat ters, Rabbi Klavan said most Jews are pleased with the deci sion to remove the question of Christian-Jewish relations from the ~hema on Christian Unity and make it a separate declara tion. He said a statement on the Jews has no place in a declara tion otherwise concerned with Christian matters.
STAMPS BUILD CHAPEL: The chapel of·St. Jude Within-the-Walls has just been d~dicated at the New York state prison in Napanoch, N.Y. A three-year drive to collect 65,000 books of trading stamps, to pay its $150,000 cost, con tinues. Another 20,000 books are still needed. Father Mat thew J. Killion, the prison's Catholic chaplain, who began the drive, studies plan with Frederick Bentel, an architect who donated his services. NC Photo.
Catholic National Association Aids Education TV Efforts
NEW YORK (NC) - A new service to provide information, advice, and program materials to dioceses engaged in educa tional television efforts has been launched by the National Cath WASHINGTON (NC) - One olic Educational Association. hundred and fifty young leaders Among the functions of the from Central America will be new Committee on Television trained in development tech will be the formation and oper niques in New Orleans under an ation of a centrally located It Alliance for Progress contract brary of high-quality ETV films, signed between Loyol'll Univer according to Father John M. sity and the U. S. Agency for In Culkin, S.J., consultant on edu ternational Development. cational television to the NCEA. The agreement was signed In an interview Father CulkiR here by Assistant Secretary of linked the new ETV service to State Thomas C. Mann and the fact that a number of dio Father Andrew C. Smith, S.J., ceses have applied or will soon president of Loyola. Rep. Hale apply to the Federal Communi. Boggs of Louisiana was present cations Commission to partici at the signing ceremonies. pate in a new educational tele Under the agreement with vision facility. AID, the university's Inter "The dioceses are going to American Center will conduct a have something available to series of six training seminars them when they go' on so that :for young Central Americans. they won't have to put out eight The services of the National hours of programming a day Training Laboratories of the all by themselves," he said. National Education Associatiolll Fonns Central Library will also be utilized. To fill this need the NCEA committee is at work forming a central library of ETV films from such sources as the radie TV department of the Natlena! Council of Catholic Men, C9ffi LORAIN (NC) - A Catholic mercial ETV stations, and indi bishop has asked the City Coun vidual dioceses that have pro cil not to put a new road through duced their own films. a site of a new Catholic high Father Culkin predicted that school in ihis Ohio community. by September, 1965, as many as Auxiliary Bishop John P. 15 dioceses may have applied to Whealon of Cleveland said in a the FCC for authority to telecast letter that the 800-student school on channels made available bT proposed for the site will save the agency last September. The the city school system about· agency then opened up 31 chan $320,000 a year based on a $400 nels in the high frequency annual cost per pupil in public microwave band, above both the schools. VHF and UHF bands, and des The city wants to Cl1't a road ignated them the Instructional thrQugh the property purchased TV Service. by the Cleveland diocese for a One of the NCEA television school expected to be built with committee's major concerns at contributions from a planned the moment is to encourage 196a fund raisini drive more dioceses to appl¥ t,Q the
Loyola, U.S. Agency Sign Agreement
Opposes New Road Through School Site
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tions Week were told that com munist leaders were stepping up their efforts to suppress re ligion in the Soviet Union. Msgr. John Balkunas, pastor of Transfiguration church in Maspeth, N. Y., said in St. Patrick's cathedral here that "Khrushchev has, evidently, now decided that the task of exter minating religious faith is to be pushed to completion." While press reports speak of the "winds of change" in east ern Europe, he observed, "even a cursory glance at the religious situation is enough to see that at least in this essential area these winds are actually icy blasts of repressions" 'Choked to Death' "The communist regimes to day," he charged, "are aware of the weight of world opinion, prefer to use subtler means for repression, rather than the open terror of the Stalin days. Reli gion is to be slowly choked to death by an artificially fostered scarcity of faithful and clergy." The Mass was preceded by a procession, with many of the marchers dressed in the cos tumes of their native countries. All were members of the Assembly of Captive European Nations, a group representing Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslo vakia, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Rumania.
Alumni Dance
FCC
for use of these channels. Father Culkin noted that the channels are being made avail able to commercial firms as well as school districts and said it would not be long before they are "eaten up."
St. Anthony High School Alumni Association of New Bed ford will hold its second annual scholarship dance and buffet from 8 to 12 Saturday night, July 25 at Gaudette's PaviliolL The public is invited, according to announcement made by Ger ard Alves, chairman.
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TI:fE ANC;:HOR-~iocese of Fall ~iver-Thurs.Ju.ly 23, 1964
,Ellellsii. PAVU,
Harlem Tragedy
Victor Hugo once said that "there is no force like the power of an idea whose time has come." Time has indeed come for the idea of equality' of all men under God and before the law in these United States. The force of that idea, made explicit one hundred years REV. JAMES A. CLARK ago in the Emancipation Proclamation, and reinforced with Assistant Director' .' in recent weeks by the passing of the civil rights law, has Latin American Bureau, NCW( touched the consciences of millions of Americans and made them more aware th.an ever of the brotherhood of all men Sleeping Americanism and their inherent right" to be treated with dignity and respect. ' In the village of Santa The force of that idea has been shot through with Eulalia, high in the Guate truly Christian principles so that the Negro has given malan mountains, the peOple the example of patience and long-suffering and charity wear American-made and American-style clothing, The in the face of daily indignities heaped upon his person, by children especially have adopted those whose skin happens to be 'of a different shade. North American If would be a tragedy if the force, of the idea were wear and ways. ' to explode in uncontrolled directions, if Negroes were to As I stepped off the bus I was put aside their dignity and patience in an understandable fascinated to see but still regrettable and fatal burst of violence, and let ,these people loose upOn the community the pent-up fury of a hundred so high up and years of injustice. so far in the mountains a n, d Cool heads must prevail in New York, and responsible so geographi leaders must call for calm and order and mutual respect cally separated of all citizens for one another., , fro' m the And every person must be on his guard lest some in United States dividualaction trigger off forces that will terrorize a .city, ...._~.~--------------------..... ' imitating North break down the bridges of understanding so laboriously rn.. h h n .. ," " American customs. The contrast - I nnou.Cl t E -WE.£~ With. thE Chu.n.ch of a bowler hat and a pleated built between various groups, and let 'loose primative furies skirt, of a sombrero and a dap on all sides that feed upon, a.nd in turn cause to grow, [ hatred and mistrust and hostility. _ By Rl~V. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University ~n~i~,~~~;:~:~~if1:!~£
Beware of the Dog
TODAY,-St. ApoJlinaris, Bishthe salvation of humanity by his e'l, Martyr. Both lessons today rising again into glory',' can acFrom now on, animal owners either hav,eto be very tell us that there is a ministerial complish in each of us what sure of themselves or else must be prepared to take the office in the Church. The bishop Christ's redemption has accomh~ls an es,;ential function in the' pJished for the whole of manconsequences of ownership. A psych,iatrist in Philadlphia ,f~mily of God, among the Peo.., . kind. The publican in the Gospel has just come up with ,the information that family pets, pI of 'God. The Eucharist itself' is each of us. '' eSPec~ally dogs and cats, mirror the tensions 'of a disturbed reminds u;; of this every time we We must learn to ,cali him o)Vner and ,his family, an9 that the behavioral pattern of gather for its celebration, for it "Lord," and to call ,on him as these pets toward outsiders reflects the state of tensions is presided over by a bishop or ,si1'!ners, The humility, which his priest..representative. - both scripture lessons today r.ecof their masters. ' That is why we must be so ~mmend and' praise is the only , The psychiatrist s'aid that lie knew from the way the careful ne,t to ,let human pre- proper attitude of one who iefamily pet greeted him in the front yard what state the tension, pride and vanity ob- ceives the gift of the Father's scure these offices of love and love, family he was visiting was in. MONDAY~Massas on Sunday. If the dog was'irritable and anxious to bite, he would service obscure the fraternity , is OUl's by virtue of our H umI'l't ' the fertile :ground I y IS find the owner"inside in a nasty mood. If_the dog was shy which common baptismal covenant. t on 1Y' f oralth f' no but alSo for and hesitant, the master was likely to be a person fleeing 'fOMORROW - Mass as on fraternity. The First Reading from the world. Sunday. The salvation Christ ofreminds us that the Church is a So a,nima: owners had, better observe their pets care fers us is not a static thing but a community of brothers and sis-, fully to gain a deeper insight into themselves. What a dynamic presence of the Holy ters, that the diversity of gifts l;lhock for the!l1 to discover that their carefully-concealed Spirit' and the risen Savior in which we possess in no way (liwhich should be constantly minishes our solidarity in Christ neuroses were being publicly flaunted before the neighbors us, gaining depth and pervasiveness. and in his, Spirit. ,by the pet collie! 'Today's prayer over the offerThis is also one of the imporin~rs (Secret) expresses this' dytant lessons in the Council's namic quality of development in ' charter of worship reform-we thE~ Christ~life: "As often as this have to leaJ;n that distinctions of mEmorial of Christ's sacrifice is, functions and services in' the The. British Minister of Transport, surveying the celebratEid the ,work of our re- Church can be understood 'properly only by those who give wrecks thata'bright Summer weekend brings about on the , demption ill carried on." first impor,tanceto our baptismal highways of England, put the case succinctly when he said, SATURDAY-St. James, Apos covenant.' "Everybody on the roads should drive as if the other chap tle. What is said of the apostles , TUESDAY - St. NazariUfJ and in these scripture readings may , is a complete fooL" . Companions. Martyrs and saint_ The advice is v~lid for the United States-all the ;more be said of the Church as a whole. ly popes, such, as we commem It serves the human family, it so, considering the l)umber of cars and the many more "be'gets" (First Reading) new orate today, illustrate and make vivid for us in a special way the miles of roads; many, of which invite high speeds and take members o:f Christ" without any fact that such gifts as we possess a-chance attitudes. ' . .'" ', ' apparent human triumph or ap are for, the service of our Persons who would shrink from the mer,e suggestion plause or ]·eward. brothers. ' ' '1'0 want a Church established that they harbor mayhem in their. hearts drive with the ,The martyr's gift of heroic in ,human power, economic wild abandon of dodgem-fal) at an amusement park'. ' faith may ,bring' him death (and wealth, political influence, is to They should keep in mind the Briton's words-and even will sometUng at variance with glory, 'as both lessons teach us), place themselves hi the same category as their fellow Jesus' prom ises. It is also to will but it strengthens the faith I)f the whole community by iis something at variance with drivers. witness. And,the pope's office, JeslLls' promises. It is, also to as chief and central bishop, of wil:l sometl:,ing incapable of the the Christian fellowship, is alto ren,ewal and reform to which the gether a service to the disciples Spirit clear:,y calls it in our time. of Christ, ,a, servjce to fidelity, TENTH SUNDAY AFTER PEN WEDNESDAY - St. Martha, TECJOST. "Grace" 'means "gift." Virgin. Whatever the lesson in and Christianity is concerned -this Gospel about ' the relative with God's gifts--above all, , merist of business and coniemwith his greatest gift, his favor, plation, Martha's question is 'the OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER , . his loving :idndness, his mercy, : question of all of us who are im Published weekly by The Catholic Press ot the Diocese of Fall River his forgiver,ess. , patient with the variety of the We are Christians, because ,we : Spirit's gifts. 410 Highland Avenue . admit and confess that we stand : ' The moment our attention is Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5·7151
in need or this great gUt, and diverted' from ChriSt and' his PUBLISHER'
we believe that Jesus, who has misSIon to this or that aspect of Most Rev. James L. Con,:,olly, D.O., PhD.
takE~n our humanity into an his mission refleeted in our 'par e~rnal union with the Father, . ticular gifts--at the moment, we GENERAL MANAGER, ASST. GENERAL MANAGER , is the Christ, the saviour and are tempted to forget that no Rt. Rev. Danie~ F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll gift·,giver. ' , particular 'gifts can encompaSs MANAGING EDITOR
Only the Spirit, whom Jesus ',him and that a largeness :of Hugh J. Golden
sent when' he had accomplished heart and sympathy is indicated.
Complete Fools
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@rheANCHOR
North American is a sign' of the transition of these people, This' village in particular provides all evident example of the change occurring throughout most 4llf ,Latin America. Conquered first, by the con quistadores, the Indians, smug gled into their new waybf life ,habits from the old (a bowler h,at for their womenfolk),a.nd aCCepted ,some of the new $panish fashions (sombrero·s for their menfolk). Today these people are quietly and gently accepting :, new culture--this time they are being wI'III'ngly conquered by Nor ..... AmerI'can vI'ews, and values., Once again their dress betrays their acceptance of the new forms--white shirts and women's ' frilly dresses. Their radios play North American songs; the tele ' vision translates North American programs; the movies cOme from North Amer,ican companies; the Alliance for Progress makes them aware of North AmerJcaa ' forms and norms of government; tl)eir food is often marked, with "gift of the American peopl~" ' and they are eating foods that ,were unknown to them a, few 'Years ago. And so the trend grows S,tronger-although North Ameri,ca~s do not ~ourage it there is still a ,gentJe perva'ding acceptance of North America. life. ' In the field of rel-igion 'mis sionaries make a definite at te.mpt ,to adapt themselves to local ways. However it is inev it~ble, tha~ so many priests, brothers and' sisters who are itt 'Latin America from the United States will 'cariy with, them, albeit unwillin'gly, some North American methods. The visual aids they use (cate chisms, ~ilm strips, etc.) are from the States. Thus--in ~pite of their best effo~they intro,duce .some North American cuI 'ture in Latin America. We teaCh - our Papa} 'Volunteers to adapt - to batin Americtan life and not to try to ,tran'sfer a part 'of the U,nited States- to Latin Amer ica. Yet, even for'them in their thte:e short years, it is difficult , not to unconsCJ:ously franslate , their North American viewpoints to their Latin American neigh bors." . , Can you help in this cause: , not to make Latin America te
cOme like 'NoitO America-but
to help the people become closer ~ their faith. '
, Stages Concerts
.THE ANCHOR -
At Reformatory WASHINGTON (NC).-Along about this time of year '-Father Carl J. Breitfeller,O.P.. doubles as a theatrical impresario' in ad dition to his duties as Catholic chaplain at the nearby Lorton (Va.) Reformatory. He staged the ninth annual Jazz concert for inmates of the District of Columbia penal in stitution. It starred Ella Fitzger ald, Oscar Peterson and Charley Byrd, assisted by a number of other jazz artists. Father Breitfeller with the c0 operation of Donald Clemmer, head of the D. C. department of corrections, hit on the idea of the annual jazz festivals as a morale uplif,t. They have proven popular with ~ inmates and, it's a mat ter of record, none has walked GIlt on any of the concerts.
Religious Leaders For Fair Play In Voting =i LAKE CHARLES (NC) Catholic, Protestant and Jewish Leaders have asked Louisiana citizens to disre
PRAY FOR RACIAL PEACE: Promoting First Friday Holy Communion for racial peace in the United States, this auto-top billboard tours the metropolitan New Jersey New York area. Standing beside the vehicle is the driver, Alexander Zav·atsky, chairman of the Truth and Literature Committee for the past 20 years in the Passaic County Holy Name Federation. NC Photo. .
gard racial and religious consid erations when voting. A statement issued by the Cal casieu Parish (County) Ministe rial Association deplored the fact that "religious factions and ten sions" were· evident in their community. The statement was drafted by Father Charles Mallet, assistant pastor of the Church of the Im maculate Conception here, RabbI John Rosenblatt of Temple Sinal and Rev. C. W. Quaid, pastor' of Simpson Methodist Church.
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THE: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 23, 196.4,
Cope Cod Parish Bazaar, July 29
Says Using Telephone as Sales Medium Invasion of Privacy By Mary Tinley Daly Like a well-meaning but persistent mother-in-law, that mechanical brainchild of Mr. Alexander Graham Ben can !lOmetimes prove a supreme nuisance in the home. Here, we don't mean "wrong numbers," excus,able enough, particularly these days with seven With somewhat less finesse, to remember. Nor even late and less consumption of time, we evening calls from friends or have been approached by phone acquaintances who halt their to have our upholstery cleaned party to phone with a "How-ya' ooin', Honey? We just got to talking, about "ou and Jack and old times. :R e m P. m bel' ? Yes, sir, those were the times!" We are talking JlOW about use ef the telephone as a seHjng me diu m , tile invasion of privacy, and 1he poor taste ef some of these vendors ol. miscellany. Is this selling technique more prevahint in the Summer, Ol" ooes it just seem so? At any rate, scarcely a day passes that we are not called down from the attic, up from the b<lsement, in from the backyard, away from the dinner table to answer one of· these sugary voices (they are almost always' female, soft and soothing): "Good evening, Mrs. Dally!" When we hear this mispron~neiation, we sUspect she is rel:\ding from a list-probably the telephone book. Suspicion grows _ronger when we are a,ddressed as "Mrs. Tennsyon," since we live on Tennyson Street. "I'm Helen Evans" (or whatever) we hear', "How are you?" Then a pause. We wrack our brains to place the caller: A friend? Friend of a friend? Mother of one of our children's friends? Co-committee worker? Old classmate whose married JIlame escapes us? At this stage, bluff~ng, we spar for time, respoml "Good evening, Mrs. Evans," tell her we are fine" thank you, and wait. Devicus Pitch Straightforward sales pitch 8eldom come hurtling at once. We are buttered up with a coo ing, "How warm it is. this e;,e Iling," then the philosophIcal whimsy that "we really shouldn't eomplain, though, should we7" We should r..ot, we agree, al though we don't remember com plaining-at least not to Mrs. Evans. ' After a gentle pause: "I know, Mrs. Dally, that you want to Gre for your dear ones * * *?" First time this happened, we thought, heavens, heavens, one of ours has landed in the pokey, this gal wants us to raise bail. Openillig Wedge Now, we recognize it as open ing wedge to ~ll cemet~ry lots, til' in the mOrl! elegant phrase GI~gy, "to purchase a place of " J'epoSe."
Plan Cl:mvention,' Daughters of Isabella will hold a supreml~ convention 'be-' ginning Tuesday, Aug. 11 jJl Washington, D. C. Pre-conven tioh activities will include ,an executive meeting of _ the su preme board of directors Sun day, Aug. 9 and it pilgrimage to the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Monday, 'Aug. 10. Convention highlights will in elude a Parade of States; indi vidual State Dinners and a ban quet at which H::m. Oscar Ledes_ ma, Philippine Ambas~ador to the United States, will speak.
"while our men, are in your your neighborhood"; to have the roof inspected: to "just look at" beauty aids, encyclopedias, Bibles,wallpaper ,samples; to have our picture taken; our insurance policies "reviewed"; dents undented from our car._ - But "gimmick" calls we find even more maddening.' "Congratulations!" chirps the cheery viiice. "You, yes, you are the lucky winner!" Ever optimistic, our mind flashes though the dozens of MONASTERY GARDENER: Brother Meirad Wiget, chances we have taken _on cars, mink stoles, round-the-world . O.F.M., gardener for 59 years at Washington's popular pil cruises, etc.; the number of grimage spot, the Franciscan Monastery, cares for more times we have left our name at than BOO rose bushes in the Monastery garden. NC Photo. gas stations; slogans w,e have written; the "ten words or less" glorification of detergents, soft drinks. dog food-and the -two dollars we sent to the race track. Somebody must win, but ae Ftussian Woman Reports Seriously Sick yet"not we. No, we always come iB as Nun in Shanghai Prison lucky winner of a "free, abso HONG KONG (NC)-A large tions High Commissioner fur lutely free" dance 'lesson des tined to bring excitement and number of Obinese Catholics are Refugees. A 'f 0 r mer ballerina who glamour into 'our dull routine. being hEld in a pri.son in ShangAs awardee 'of nothing else, il1ai, among them is a nun who speaks English and Chinese as is seriously ill, according to a well as her native Russian, she Some day we may take our ab fingered a tiny enameled icon solutely free dance lesson and :refugee newly a'rrived here. Mrs. Eugenia Kalagina, 58- hanging from a rough cord if the promised metamorphosis around her neck and said: "I got does occur it will be reported in year-old Russian who is a memioer of the' Orthodox Church, through it all because my faith this column. Matter iii faci, during the day- ~;old the NCWC News Service gave me the strength til figbt time hourS,we really don't resent here (July 11) that she herself back." t,hese sales attempts too much. had spoken to the Sister in the She said she had been kept They are annoying, but we do ward of the prison hospital a wirth 13 other prisoners under ~:hort time ago. Mrs. Kalagina sympathize with the solicitors had spe.nt' 11 years under the room arrest in a political prison . who are perhaps trying to sup plement an inadequate income "protective care" of the Chinese that the Chinese communists re ferred to as a "homelike shelter." at so ,much a call. However, (:ommuni.st government in a poli cal prison in another part of when such calls. are longShangha i. She said that she en dragged-out, come during the Cake Sale, Outing dinner hour, in the evenings countere:'l a Ca4holic nun when A cake sale and outing are on ~ihe herself was sent to the hos and on the weekend,s, we do resent them. pital in the other prison for the Summer agenda of St. Mi chael's Catholic Women's Club, Daytime telephone solicitation treatment before being allowed Ocean Grove. The sale to be to leave Shanghai. for commercial purposes, in held in the church hall, will fol flicted on busy young mothers, Fled Soviet low all Masses Sunday morning, is, to our way of thinking, not Mrs. Kalagina, who had fled Aug. 9 and is under the dir'ec only distracting and frustrating, Bolshevik rule in the Soviet tion of Mrs. Matthew Miga and but actually harmful in many Union i'll 1923, was released Mrs. Harold Hodkinson. The an instances. A telephone is a pri from Ch ina through the efforts nual outing 'is set for Wednesday vate affair, installed for comfort night, Aug. 19 at Sandy's, Plain_ and convenience,' not an open (Ill the Office of the United Na- ville. Mrs. George Ferreira will door to all salesman. be in the church hall from 7 to Only way to stop this intru (:e'ntral Village Auction 8:30 Monday nig'ht, july 27 tG sion of privacy is to follow the The Women's Guild of St. accept reservations. example of those who request 'John &ptist Church, Central unlisted telephone numbers; Village, will sponsor a public who of their own volition open auction beginning at 10 Satur White"s Farm Dairy
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TV Vacation School
'MIDLAND (NC)' - Fo~ 1!le sec 0 n d consecutive Summer, Catholic nuns conducted a daily religious vacation -school via television iB this' so-called Bible Belt region <?f Texas. -. Victory Noll Missionary Sis ters presented a two-week series, of religious instruction classes for grade school students a,nd another two-week series for high school students. The half hour' programs were broadcast daily, Monday through Friday. A spokesman for the station estimated that the programs reached 8,000 to 10,000 people , each day. Fah letters were're., ceived from 15 cities and towns in the surrounding area. A nuns' spokesman said the programs were designed for both Catholics and non-Catholics emphasizing "the truths that unite us."
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The Women's Guild of St. Pius X Parish, So. Yarmouth, will conduct its annual bazaar Wed nesday, July 28, from '3 in tne afternoon to 9 in the evening. Members of the Guild, under the direction of Mrs. Frank Sheehy, have been working throughout the year at the Church, making articles for the affair. Other members worked at home during the past 12 months in order that 'home made' will be the trade-mark 0If the sale. Aprons, hand knit articles, Christmas and holiday decora tions, children's toyS and cloth ing, and religious goods will have their own' special tables. A white elephant and surprise package booth will occupy im portant spats at the fair. Home made pastry and breads may be boughf for home con sumption, while cookies and punch will be av,ailable at an_ other table. Margaret Griffin, publicity, chairman, emphasizes that all Summer visitors on the Cape are m()S1; welcome.
Visitation Nun Marks lOOth Birthday DUBUQUE (NC) - Sister "Bumble Bee," who more for mally is Sister Mary 'Francis de Sales of the Visitation nuns, cel elebrated her lOoth bi'rrhds; here in Iowa. She was honored by a visit from Archbishop James J. Byrne of Dubuque, who imparted it special blessing from Pope Paul VI. She has been known as Sister "Bumble Bee" among students 8't Visitation Convent and Acad emy for more than 40 years, ever sinee she stopped a grouP of children from harming iii bumble bee they had captured. She taught the children a,t that time that bees, as well as other creatures, have feelings, too-a !eSS{)n which took effect. She joined the Visitation community ill 1906 and has been a teacher and writer.
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By Johit J. Kane, Ph.D. . ''I am 17 years old and have been going steady with • boy for some time. His mind is always preoccupied with sex. This has been true of nearly all the boys with whom I ever went out. I know everything today is sex: movies, TV, book'S, etc., but I don't lee why boys hav.e to live an occasion of sin. Parking on Lovers' Lanes or other lonely with it. I'm getting wary of spots is dangerous. Entertaining going out with boys at all." a boy with no one else in the home or apartment is also tempt ing fate. Di"ive-in movies also go on this list as spots of poten quite right that tial problems. illoday "everyGoing SteacJ~ Gling is sex", or At ,1'7 you are going steady. • little, more While more girls marry at age realistically,sex 18 than at any other age, it still is dramatized seems young. If you are in a and emphasized position to marry within a year, out of aU pro and more importantly if the boy portion. But you is, there is no objection to going don't intend to steady, i.e., courtship as a prel float with the udeto marriage in the near tide, and I am future. ' ~in you can The long, exclusive ty,pe of find boys who will agree. ." association that is common with Let's begin with you because going steady causes problems. J'Ou can do something about 'W~n marriage looms only as a yourself. I will raise som.e distant and by no means distinct questions which only you can poSsibility, young people; be nTer. But if you do so honestlY, lieving they are really in love, you may be part of the way to begin to wonder how long they 801ving the problem. have to wait, and some don't. Dress, Behavior The result is a high rate of me Psychologically and physiO gitimacy, headaches and heart logically the sex drive isusuaUy aches. more readily aroused in the But none of this ~ said as an male than in the female. The excuse for the behavior of boys. pornography you see on news There is no sucl1 thing as the stands, sometimes in movies and double standard, i.e., the belief elsewhere, affects the male to that boys can engage in sexual ~ much higher degree ~ the misbehavior but it is wrong for feMale. , g i r l s to do so. The double standGirls sometim~s contribute to .ard is simply the lack of' any problem by the way, they . stand~d at all.' . dress and the way they behave. WhIle many warmnglt are A few years ago there was a ~:ven, to girls and they are c~it strong campaign 'for women "to ,lCIZed, for .n~edlessly arousmg dress modestly. Lit"fle seems to ~~le s~x: dTlves-as, I h~ve done be heard of it now, but it might ~t l~!rt equal eIDph~slS should well be revived. '" ~ placed on male attitudes. The bikini bathing Suit is de 'Look for Different Type signed to expose as much of fe Our moral code requires sex male anatomy as possible with~ uaf' restraint both before and out resulting in arrest. It Is hard during marriage. Premar.ital sex to think of it as modest. strap- relations are morally wrong for Jess evening gowns with 'low ~ girls and 'BOYS. The male who fronts and backs are not tailored allows' his' eyes and his imagi to dull the male sex di:'ive. Tiitbt nation to roam without control is abbreVIated' shorts worn by certainly as much to blame as some girls are more to create girls. who dresS' and behave Im male discomfort than female modestly. eomfort. Boys who purchase and read Roles to Follow pornographic literature, eMend So you can begin by asking sex arousing motion pictures, J'Ourself how modestly Y'O';l who talk constantly of sex, reach dress, Is your attire the type a.state of emotional excitement that invites every male to "'Hey., where restraint is difficult. They look me over"? ' have a moral obligation to avoid Girls can be quite littnctive such stimuli. Much more should without approximating a quasi- ~ made of this than ~. Iludist colony. Cbanri does not Fortunately, this is not true depend exclusively upon exag of all y.outh. If you yourself have geration of certain aspects of the been at fauJ.!t, Susan, then do :feminine form. The ~ial gr~ something about it. You will ebility to dance an4 ~nverse, find boys less sexually preoccu and such can make even the pied than in the past. U it is not only 'moderately good-looking your fault, then look for a dif ~rl attractive. ferent type of boy than you have Perhaps the tragedy of this so far'met. They do exist. You wh<>le business Is that the giil may have to look a bit harder ....ho has little else tries to rom;' than you might have 50 1'ear& pensate by placing, all her ~ ,ago. In one basket. sexual attractiv~ BeSS. Quite Obviously she wi~l Summer Outing attract the male eye; but also the The Summer outing of SS. Peter aDd Paul's Women's Club Fan River, Is set 'for Tuesday, Some girls must bear a lat'ge July 28 at the Millstone, North part, of the ~nsibility for II Attleboro. Memben are Ie decline in moral stand'ards. quel¢ed to, meet at the church Then there are eeitain obvious hall at 6:30 the evening of the lUles that aDY' 'girl should know ,28th to leave for North Attleboro ~d follow. A good rule of in a body. In charge of arrange tbwnb is not to place yourself in ments are Mrs. James Walmsley and Mrs. Gerald Dore.
WASHINGTON (NC)-Withia the shadow of the U. S. Capitol, seven nuns are teaching Sum~ mer school sessions of a public dool. The nuns are Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who are sta tioned at Notre Dame Academy. a few blocks away from the Walker-Jones public school. The nuns are aided by some 70 vol unteer college and high school students. . '. There Is no religion course on the program, which consists Of readings, ~cience, ereative dra mattos, art, music, physical cul ture, field trips and organizecl pmy. ' The classes are small, 15 or fewer students, but the progrlU,a is for the benefit of the 451 Negro children regularly en rolled at the school. Only a handful of the Summer school pupils are Catholics. The schOol is the outgrowth ~ assistance given to pupils of tbe school by students of the No~ Dame Academy last year. Tbe Catholic students pitched ill after school hours and helped.a group of 60 Walker-Jones pu~ who were haVing difficultietl with their studies. '
Please don't judge all boys,
Susan, by your present or past friends. You are
an
this
and
::::a~~~~. ::m~
Lawn Party JJoly Name Church, New' Bed,., ford, is conducting its annUal, lawn party through SaturdaY,' luly 25 with John P. Haning ton in charge of arrangements. Being held on the school groundS,' , County and Linden Streets, the event will feature ~ . amusement rides and nightly entertainment. Procee<M will benefit the ~ , ,
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Honor Cambridge Girl Catholic Daughters of America Choose
Outstanding Member
HOLLYWOOD-BYTHE-SEA (NC) - Patricia E. Gannon, a ibigh school student of Cam bridge, Mass., was honored here as fJhe Outstanding Junior Cath olk Daughter of America. She was presented with the Junior gold medal and a plaque by ~ishop William G. Connare of Greensburg, Fa., during the banquet of the Catholic Daugh ters of America national conven tion here.
Miss Gannon was selec<ted for the honor in a nationwi<re oom petition on the basis of her leadership qualities, record of service in the Junior Catholie Dau~ters and work in her oommWlity. She is a student at Arlington OMholie High School. She helped prepare an exceptional child for first Communion and has en gaged in volunteer work at Holy Ghost Hospital and at ClareDdon Hill Nursing Home in her c0m
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NEW YORK (NC)-The Ford Foundation has inaugurated. a new five-year, $7 million schol arship program for outstanding Negro bigh' sch-ool students. The program will begin' in October under operation of the National Merit Scholarship Corp. It will offer grants to 1,000 Negro high school senion at the rate of 200 a year.
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BROOKLYN (NC). - The Brooklyn diocese has announced a new salary scale for ley teachers in its 14 diocesan high schools. " Beginning Sept. 1 salaries wU1 range from $4,800 yearly for a first-year teacher with a -bach elor's degree to $9,000 for the holder of a doctorate after 14 years, with an extra $250 annu ally for a department head. The old scale ranged from $4,200 to $7,250. There are 200 lay teachers ill Brooklyn diocesan high schools, . almost one-third of the total fac ulty of 625. It is expected that the diocese's other 28 parish and community high schools will adopt the new salary scale thY year or next.
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ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. July 23, 196.4 .
I
, CATHEDRAL DAY CAMP MEANS CONTINUOUS ACTIVITY: Top photo, left: fundamentals of swimming form an important part of the daily s<.;hedu).e. Bottom photo: physical fitness program of thEl late Fresi:-
dent Kennedy becomes fun and not work at this day camp. Right photot Rino Aiardi; a seminarian instructor, shows the fine points of arehert· . to Kevin GagllQn of' Somerset.
Fi-Im wins
Educators Score P.apacy GuarCJnt~, 'of Unity of Bishops Japanese Catholic Award
Race Imbalance -Increase of ·Episcolpal Powers Adds to Pope's Powers .. BERLIN (NC) -A J~'Pane" .film, "She and He," received _ He conduded that changes in: . the award· of the International· In Schools . MUNICH (NC) - Reform of nleans to a,ttack the pope himself," the cardinal said. the structure and life of the Catholic Film Office (OCIC)'
the Roman curia and broadening· Cardinal Doepfner stressed qhurch - brQadening ,of the _ during the 14th International of the power of, bishops may seem to weaken' the power of· that the Becond Vatican Council· ..powers of bishops, the greater. Film Festival held here. The film pictures the disinter the Pope, but -in reality they will be s:ignificant for the view' weight of the regional bishops increase it, Julius Cardinal 0:£ the papacy in setting· the. . conferences and the reform .of . ested social work done by a p<:>pe's Power into relation with the curia-constitute only. an ap- . young married couple in citF' calling for correction of racial' Doepfner of Munioh and Freis the college of bishops. parent weakening, but in reaHtys!ums. imbalance in Massachusetts ing said here. ' "Whereas the pope was previ-· a genuine increase in the central· The cardinal spoke in Our schools. Lady's church on the first year ol1sly cOInpared with individual power of the pope. The statement, signed by 63 .Of Pope Paul vrs reign. bishops, the pope and the college .seminary faculty members, com ",Many' enorustations of histor "Seldom has the first year of of bishops will now be placed mended a report on the subject a pontificate been so high in more strongly alongside each - leal evolUition which previoosly made public re.cently by a spe deeds and events which are of other. This shows that tlie col~ . hindered the joyful view of the' eial advisory committee. le,ge of l?ishops possesses in the' Churoh wiil fall away," the ca!l" decisive significance for the de CEORCE M. MORTLE
.... Mastet Plamber 2930
"We call upon all citizens to velopment of the Ohurch," he same manner the highest author- . dinai said. "The quantity of' Over 35 :ears
acknowledge" the fact of racial said. He called the ecumenical it)r Qf the Church to teaoh infal- pOwer reserved fO!' the pope and libility and to lead to people' of' : codified in law is not the de imbalance and· its harmfulnes council's decree on liturgical te of Satisfied 'Service
God to thE' way. of salvation, just. ciding. factor in the service of "by uniting in the demand ~or .form a milestone in Ohurch his 806 NO. MAIN STREET
the rectification of this injus tory and said tha-t Pope P1lul's as tlhis authority resides in the _ strengthening whioh is the re Fall River .. OS 5-7497
pope alone, and will continue to . sponsibility of the successor of tice," they said. establishment of a secreta-nat' intact." Peter, but m,ther 'the effective be Seminaries represented by tbe for relations with non-Ohristian ness of papal leadership on the lleigners included St. John's churches proves tha·t ihe Church . Bishol~ and Pope Close way of the whole Church to Seminary, Weston College" the in seeking dialogue with all the '-'However the decision was salvation." Oblate Seminary and the Marist world's religions. made he~! that the college' of College-all Catholic-and the Curia Reform b~lhops and the pope are' not H a r v a r d University Divinity The cardinal noted that other independel~t authorities, but are S c h 00 I , Boston University, WASHINGTON (NC)-Popu Andover - Newton Theological "far-reaching' Manges.have been closely bound together. The pope announced such as reform of the is the head of the college of . lation of the U. S. likely will hit CITIES SERVICE
School and the Episcopal Theo bishops; ,wi:thout this head, it 200 million sometime in 1967 and curia," the Church's central ad DISTRIBUTORS
logical School. ministrative body. He cautioned cannot acc:>mplish anything." may pass 400 million by 2010" "'1'he papacy stands before us according to revised population critics of the curia, however, Gasoline
at the ti1ru~ of the Second Vati saying: projections of the U. S. Census can Council. as the foundation, Bur.eau. ,The population al ''When occasionally severe crit Fuel and Range
icism of the curia is expressed, SUppoN and guaranty of the ready has passed the 192 .million unity of the college of bishops." mark. FATIMA (NC)-Thousands of though it is justified in individ Portuguese fishermen took part ual cases, it is often based upon in the July pilgrimage to the a false evaluation of the situa OIL BURNERS tion." Shrine of Our Lady of F'atima. For prompt delivery
"The curia and the pope are Carrying nets, oars and models bound together in their essential & Day & Night Service
of boats, the fishermen marched nature. To draw Ii fundamental ~ the procession and were G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS IImong some 12,000 persons who distinction between the tw4l at received Communion. Rural Bottled Gas Service One man made the July pil grimage on foot from his home Families of Cub Scouts be-' 61 COHANNET ST. in southern France, a journey longing to St. Joseph's parish, TAUNTON . that took 59 day:;. Jean Claude, Fall River, will participate in from the village of St. Etienne, a family picnic at Camp Noquo"" AttJeboro - No. Attleboro
1115 WIILLIAM ST. . NEW BEDFORD, MASS. declared he made his pilgrimage choke Sunday afternoon; JulY. Taunton·
.21. . tor world peace.
BOSTON (NC)-Catholie and Protestant seminary ed~ . ueators in the Boston area, have joined in a statemenf
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'l'ttE ANCHOR-Dtocese of Fan RlYer-1hUN. July 21,"
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HAPPINESS IS SYNONYMOUS WITH OUR LADY OF THE LAKE: Left photo: Sister from Stang High, No. Dartmouth, supervises the handicraft class. Center photo: waiting for the return of the volley ball in a spirited game. Right photo: Nancy Ry·an of St.'Lawrence Parish, New
Pope Paul Says Christian Unity Sign of Times
Bedford, waterfront instructor, supervises the rowing instruction of Susan Baldwin, St. Mary, So. Dartmouth; Anne Oawley, St. James, New Bedford and Andrea Saunders, St. Lawrence, New Bedford. Nature study. square dancing and special events are also on the day's program. ~_o_a_D_a~o_n
Inaugurate First Boys' Town in Africa,
Plan To Build?
Holy Ghost Missioner Starts Vocational Program
See Us
MOSHI (NC) - One of the
boys work in the plantations,
About
ter's vege~~le garden. After lunen, which consists mainly &f U. S. surplus foods sent to Tan ganyika by Catholic Relief Ser_ vices - National Catholic Wel fare Conference, all start class Father Charles Giambrone,' work. For some, it is their first tional' Eucharistic Congress at C.S.Sp., was conCerned about, introduction to education. Wareham Leon; Spain. the young boys in the area who Under Father Giambrone's In a Spanish-language broad-. ,are poor, uneducated alid at, CY 5-3800 guidance, Boys' Town is grow east over Vatican Radio the Pope times orphaned. NORTH HOLLYWOOD (NC) said that "although this mystery "Many are too 'old to enter the -Ron Randa, who looks as if he ing. Soon it will have tools to of \UlifWation IB' above, all real:' regular schools, he' fOund. Most belongs on a Marine recruiting enable the youths to learn a ized in a sphere different from' cannot afford even a siinple poster, is .anxious, to hit the" trade, as well as receive an ed ueati,on. the purely temporal, neverthe school uniform.' Many . lack ,beach again. less it does not disregard the, proper food and sometimes' a , He's a veteran of three years' . Many of the boys arrived' human social aspect, but recog work as a Los Angeles Lay Mis dressed in rags. Now all have place to sleep.. , nizes it, cultivates and elevates Father Giambrone,' who was sion Helper' at Port Sudan on the school uniforms of 'which they it." without funds, based his project Red Sea where "I left a lot of are proud, especially those who ' The Pope said that the true on a widespread existing move things hanging." return to their villages on week Christian is aware of "that mys ment of "self-help." Home with his parents here ends. terious expectancy, that move . Extending the movement to on furlough Randa said some of many toward expreSsions of the area's youth; lie given.' the things 'he "left hanging" in':" unkm which is stirring in intel use of some empty government eluded a 4OO-volume librilry he CAPE COD'S
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"To live in Christ does not to support the project, but to' ese boys and the cour.ses he con ducts in English and history. mean to lock oneself in a glass leave them ample time to join house since the view of the classes at the center. world, in the light of the Gospel, Get 'U. S. AId. is always rich and profound and Each ~orning most of the encompasses a horizon which Interest Compounded and embraces' men and things and payable quarterly on our every situation which it can lead Notice Savings Plan back to the primitive ordering ATHENS (NC)-The Ortho design of God." , The Pope said that the prayer dox Church. of Greece has de Monday, August 3 for Christian unity which was cided not to send observers to offered at Leon congress should the third session of the Second 8:15 P.M. Vatiean Council. 'Ilhe ruling be understood not as an ideal of • SOUTH YARMOUTH Holy Synod of the State Church defense or of attack but as "a IHl fUNNllSIINTlRTAINlR IN THl \IORIO' • .-az... • DENNIS PORT vital truth which has perennial in 80 voting')eaffirmed the stand • HYANNIS -.alue."'The Pope then indicated it had taken conceming the :first' • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA various principles which should two sessions of the counciL guide effective action toward unity. "Let the mechanism' of the dialogue be developed, but let there be no deplorable weaken 3 Savings Plans
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. July 23, 1964
Race Question' Opportunil1'
To Practice 'Fairness
been"educ~Lted"
.-
into the stupid ity which is prejudice. Destroy Freedom , It' gets more and more diffi eult every day to put up with the silly cliches 90 popular with today's champions Of "their own political ego. "You can't under stand our part' of the coun try' • • ." "Our states have to be free • • ." Their pious use of the word "free'dom" is tantamount to blasphemy since, in reality, they destroy freedom. 'And just as, when a man acts like an ass, you have to treat him like one, 'so when a state oppresses instead of ruling, it must be dealt with accordingly. It is similarly difficult to keep one's complete respect for those who could do a great deal about the situation, but who either re main silent or are too timid in their approach to have much effect. Where churchmen refuse to .speak out when they could, they are not actirig as churCh';' men at all. Men of God are sup pased to act in God's place and therefore like God. And God is no coward. Pious Phrases It is particularly hard to keep ene's respect for politicians when, Pilate-like, all they seem to care about is their own polit teal advancement. It is hard to have anything but contempt. for a little man parroting pious phrases abou,t "rights" and "freedom" while he attempts to bar two of the citi Zens of his state from an edu eation, because these two are not as light-skinned as this little man. (Though they are consid erably bigger-in every way'-':;' than he.). 'It is hard, too, to respect a very prominent politician who eouldn't be bothered listening to the President's plea for civil rights because "I was planting flowers; I did not hear it." Supernatural Solutio. Nor is there any real solution _ any problem. ou1side of its , IlUpernaturaIllOlution. There are,
no lasting solution, because WI!
will have no motive for one.
.As long as we only tr~;
others nicely so that they will return the favor, instead of prac·· tieing the unselfish charity oj; Christ, all our "solutions" call,
only be stop-gaps.
The core of the whole matter' is that we are all members of Christ, that Christ died for all of us, and that all of us live in Christ - unless, of course, we reject Him. We all have the same destiny, to get to God for ever. More Chrfst-like It is going to go down to the everlasting glory Of the Amer ican Negro that, in general, he was a lot more Christ-like than his white oppressors' could, even under,stand, much less practice. Pictures go through your mind -the Negro girlpatienUy and quieUy sitting while a blond girl shows her white cUltural and spiritual superiority by pouring a' bottle of ketchup on her. And the high class white type who then, getting into the spirit of this cultural 'exchange, pulls ,an unprotesting Negro £tom his chair and proceeds to kick him in the head and ribs. One cannot help but muse 'that both sides he're will have their reward. At least it's doubtful if Christ is going to forget His own words, "What you ctid to one of these, the least of my brethren, you did to Me." A proud title this-"the least Of my breth ren." AppealS to Teen-agen You teen-agers are, as a class, the'most fair of people. You have the chance here to put your fairness into practice--naturally and supernaturally. Look on all men 'as your brothers--as they
are. Look on them, too, M mem bers of Christ, just as you are. And treat them as sueh, in your words, your attitude and your actions. There isn't one of you who has to sit still while someone cuts down your brothers. You don't have to stand idly by while your brothers are mistreated, as though it were a very funny shOw' and yOu were only a spec- . tator instead of a relative.
Changes in Liturgy Inyolye J"hree Steps
I
God Love You
1 '.
J~
i
:
t.
Sheen, D.D.
It is very difficult to convince anyone of the words of Oar Lord: "Give, and U will be given to you-" The counsel of the world is: "Keep It for yourself, and you will have It... Those who have followed the Lorc1's advice have always prospered spiritually. but those who hoard are not n ~ so fortunate. Recently this letter came to our attention:
ClIAffiMAN: Archbishop is the head of the U.S. Bishops' Commission on the Liturgical Apostolate.
DeaJ~den
Laymen's Missals Cc,ntinued from Page One is to have available the newly-approved Ordinary of the Mass." ' "Now," he declared, "publish ers of missals for the people have assured us that at first the text will be issued as a separate sup pleml~nt. as tbe liturgical com missi)n recommended, and later incorporated in the missals themselves." "This means that Catholics al ready owning missals and those now wishing to buy missals win have the new text of the Ordi nary' in ample time for the qate the U. S. bishops will set for the introd uction of English in the Mass." ' "The missal," the archbishop said, "is a useful and impodant instrument for bringing to the people an ,understanding of the Mass, especially in'this time of transition. The laity should have the prayers which the pr,iest says particularly those which the priest will be saying by 'himself.. nec~lSllry
Shr'ine Prepares For Holy Year SANTIAGO DE COMPOS TELA (NC)-The celebration of the H,)ly Year of the shrine ot St. Jatn~ to be held in 19M, is being intensively prepared for here in Spain. Sped.a! committees have been fonned to organize the year's re ligious ceremonies, the reception of the pilgrims who are expected to number 1.5 million, spiritual prePara'tion 'and publicity. Hope has' been expressed that Pope Paul VI will come to the shrine of St. James as one Of the thousands of pilgrims who have : been' e:>ming here from all paris of the world since the discovery of the Apostle's tomb in the ninth century. Sant:iago de Compostela, one of best; known shrine cities ill the, Catholic world, bu pI'e served its typical medieval u pecl w::th its nart9w streets and with it:; impressive Romanesque style cuthedral. . During the 1965 jubilee man)' JPeetii1l~s Will take place, includ ing , the' International Social Work Convention and' an Inter national ECClesiastical Stu d 'T Week. ..
PRETORIA (NC) -A three stage plan to bring about the ,langua~ cf¥ulges at Mass, pre pared by the South African Bishops' Conferenc~ hu DOW been approved in Rome. Hai's The first stage covers the CHARLES'rON (NC)-Bishop reading of the Epistle, and Gos Francis F. Reh of Charleston pel' in the local language. The said here that the new eivil second' includes the K;rrie, Glo-, rights law, provides a "legal ria, Creed, Sanctus-Benedictus" kamework within which all Our Father, Agnus Dei, Domine men can fulfill theirChristiari non sum dignus before the peo obligations o:l! justice and love.'!.' Rle's Communion and ~ rite of Bishop Ret~ said enactment of tha,t Communion. The third stage the law was "a significant step covers other approved' changes.
forward in our countrTs effort The South African bishops de
~ recognize the dignity and cided not to make the changes MONrREAL (NC)-'-The Most the rights of all of Qur citiZens." compulsory untIl the first SunRev. Adrien M. Cimichella, "The implementation of the day of Advent. But those ,con O.S.M., provincial of the Servite JleW law w~ll pr~nt a challenge' ," gr~ations' Ii it d' communities to the people, of the United, that, are ready for ,them, are al : Fathers' Canadian province, was States, but it' is my conviction lowed to go ahead as soon as the consecr!lted titular bishop of that men of good will f!!Very-' "approved texts, in English and Quiza! :Utd aux~y bishop 01. Montreal in a ceremony in h~ where will accept and obey it other local South AfrieaD lan toric N<ltre Dame church here. with honol: and dignity," he said. cuages, are available.
SO. Carolina, Prelate Rights Act
Extend the Faith to Others
By Most Rev. Fulton
By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J.
Wha-t with everyone and his relatives writing every
thing they know or profess to ~ow about the race question,
it might seem a little foolish for someone who writes speci.
fically for teen-agers to indulge in the same pastime.
Actually, it's not really fool
course, many thdngs to b4~ ish at all, because this race Of done in the natural order, but problem is everyone's re until we look' on each other 811
sponsibili.ty, one that no one members Of Christ, we will havc!
can overlook in conscience. Besides, teen-agers with their innate sense Of
honesty and
fairness', are often better equipped to solve the prob
lem - simply
and decisively and fairly than are many adults. The y haven't yet
,
MOI,freal Auxiliary
"Twenty-two years ago I promised the Lord that if He would provide work for me, I would give a tenth toward His work. Soon I had my first job. I earned eighteen dollars in six weeks. Glad ly ]; placed a donar in the offering, but how the df!!Vil tempted me not to part With the eighty cents, then with a quarter, and then to withhold a nickel. Fortunately, for ~e, the Lord reminded me to keep my promise, and I resolved to give; not eheerfully, I admit. God had kept His promise. so I had to do the same. "I have not since been tempted to with hold any of the Lord's portion. The Lord continues to open the windows of Heaven and pour out blessings. He has increased my earning abilities twenty times in twenty two years. 1, too, have mcreased my giving. mstead of one tenill, I am now giving three. tenths of my earnings. 'Ibere are many blessings in giving to the Lord, because: "Where your treaBure ... there is your heart alsD. to
To whom should you dve the Lord's portfon? This Is some.: thing you must decide for yourself, but always keep in mind the words, of th~ Vicar of Christ: "CharUy to the Propagation of the Faith exceeds all other charities as Heaven, earth and Eternity, time • • • .. In ~t4er words, the best way to remember' the Lord is to extend the Faith to others. The Society for the Pro pagation of the Faith is the Holy Father's own Society and al1 the mone~ that you give to his society goes directly to him. No distribution is made by any bishop, or any diocesan or nationai director. Only the, Vicar of Christ distributes your sacrificesw the many needy missions $hroughout the world that earry on the work of the, Lord.
GOD LOVE YOU to a lawyer for $1,000 "This check is nOt a contribution but a debt. It represents the fulfillment of a promise to deliver my £ull fee to the'Missions if I were successful in settle ing a law case. The case presented unsurmountable problems which
were unquestionably solved by the invocation of Divine Aid.~ •••' to P.S.C. for $50 "Please assept this for the HQlyFather'. Missions." " • toa 'waitreSs for $30.27 "My regular donation oi all my Tuesdq tipS £or the past three mODtba. '
We think the worlcl of yo, our benefaeton. But do )'ou think ef the world? The multicolored WORLDMISSION ROSARy're iirlnds you to lor each of the five continents where our misldoDarieS are strlvin# to win souls for ChriBt. Send your re tIuesi and an offel'in« of to The Society lor the Propacatio. 01 Gte Faith, 3U PiftJa Avenue, New York. New York 10001.
'pra"
,!
Cut out this CO\ipoD, pin your saerifice to It and mall It .. the Most ReY. Fulton ~. Sheen, National Director Of the Societ'T for the Propagation of the Faith, '366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N.Y., or y~.:Piocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 Ho~th MIliA Street, Fall Biver, Mass.
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Soys Interracial Justice Concern Of All Catholics
ANCHOR-:1.3 Richard Gelinas, Cynthia Dansereau, Students THE Thurs., July 23, 1964Minister Says At St. Anthony's, Boast Varied Interests
FRESNO (NC)-The cause of interracial justice and civil rights is more than the concern of so-called "liberal"
A young man of wried interests is Richard Gelinas, senior-to-be at St. AnthonyYs High, New Bedford. They include math, science; accordian playing, stamp and coin col lecting, bowling, model making and membership in a Franco-American War Veterans' drill team. This Summer, however, he'll devote much time to helping his father, an aluminum siding installer. And he's one' 7"""~c·'iS.""'7""""""'=-"-'-7-C;:"?"= teen-ager who doesn't like swimming, so the beaches won't beckon him as hard as
Catholics. It mUsf<ebe a concern of the entire Church, Matthew Ahmann, executive director of the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, said here in California. Speaking at the initial meeting of the Fresno Catholic Interra cial Council, Ahmann pointed f)ut that there are "conservative" priests and laymen who are seeking to promote interracial justice. Noting that Pope John XXIII taught in the encyclical Pacem in Terris those who have rights have the duty to grasp those rights, Ahmann said that the Negro people are seeking what is rightfully theirs, even though their campaign for rights has ~used some unrest. Responsible Leaders "The Irish people came to this' country and asked for their rights and they produced some. difficulties when they got kl Boston," he remarked. "Negroes have the right to de termine their own strategy," he said. "They are not seeking vio lence. The people listen 'very carefully to what responsible Negro leaders are saying' and al most all Negro leaders are very rEsponsible. The rest are grad »ally being laughed off." Ahmann told the group gath ered in the Fresno state College Newman Center that the passage cf the civil rights bill is only the first test of the commitment to . racial justice. He lauded the' ~ay Catholic, Protestant and Jewish people and organizations have become more -conscious of their ()bligations in the racial issue.
Retreat for Deaf In Sign Lqr-guage :BROOKLYN (NC)-A week long retreat in the sign language, a visit to the World's Fair and a <'-telephone conversation" were among the highlights of the 15th annual convention of the Inter national Catholic Deaf Associa tion here. Father Thomas F. Cribbin of :Brooklyn, association chaplain, said one of the reasons for the large turnout of 2,000 delegates was the difficulty of schedulirig satisfactory retreats for the small numbers of Catholic deaf in any given locality. Each day of the program opened with a well-attended Mass and a sign language ser mon on some phase of the con: vention theme, "To Live :for Christ." A high spot of the Interna tional Catholic Deaf Association Day at the fair 'was the visit to the Vati~an Pavilion, where the usual talks and explanations were give!). in sign language, and 1cl the Pieta, which the deaf ad mire in a silence sh3red with aU Other visitors. ~ For 30 ICDA, delegates woo had never before used a phone, a conversation with members 01. the National Association of the Deaf in Washington, D. C;, was II thrillil):g experience. A 'newly developed device of the Amer ican Telephone and Telegraph' Company enaple~ people to see each other via television from Clne city to another and is suited to sign language and lip reading.
Elected Abbot LISLE (NC)-Father _Daniel W. Kucera, O.S.B., president of St. Procopioo College. here' ill Illinois since 1959, has been ·elec.ted fifth abbot ~ St. PI'G eopiu.s Abbey'_
they do most youngsters. Richard, a member of- St.
Francis Xavier parish, Acushnet, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gelinas, He has a brother and sister, both students at St. An thony's grammar school. The family has just moved to Acush net and one of the big advan tages of the change, says Rich ard, is that they have a large garden. CYO Member Richard is active in St. An thony's panish CYO and plans to join the high school's debating team come Fall. He's going to spend spare time reading this Sumn:,ler, and he's already giving thought to his post-high school plans. He hopes to attend the new SMTI or Northeastern Uni... versity, and expects to major in engineering with a view towards entering the chemical or electri cal engineering field. . Both Richard and brunette, green-eyed Cynthia Dansereau, another member of St. Anthony's senior class, are National' Honor Society students. They keep that· way by devoting evening hours ot homework without fail. Cyn thia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Dansereaus of St. Jo seph's parish, New Bedford, claims five hours nightly at her studies, while Richard manages on somewhat less time; . And Cynthia, too, is another rare teen-ager who doesn't like the water, although she doesn't mind sand-sitting and watching other people get splashed. . The French language· is im-. portant to both teens.. Richard's family speaks it at home and one of Cynthia's two brothers ill Il French teacher, currently studying at the University of Michigan for his master's de-. gree on a fellowship grant. A sister is a student at Bostoft College School of Nursing, says Cynthia and her other brother is at Coyle High School-"be cause he likes their sports pro gram." Two other sisters are students at St. Joseph's parochial schooL Many Interests Cynthia, lik~ Richard, beiorigs to St. Anthony's parish CYO•. Her scholastic interests include Latin, America.n' history and sci ence and she's a member 01. the glee and scienc'e clubB. Her Summer will include babysitting her two younger sisters, ages six and 11, since her mother is employed as a secre tary at the New Bedford Chap ter of the Society for Retarded Children. :But there'll also be time to do volunteer work with heart attack Patients at a local hospital. Cynthia's future plans include attendance at Emmanuel College. She hopes 1G become social 0
w~k~.
a
CINCINNATI (NC)-The ology iTS as the root of the eivil rights problem, a Meth odist minister told more more than 400 high schools and college sodalists at Xavier Uni versity here. -
Speaking at the Summer p.ro gram, "Operation Christ," for l(jcal students sponsored by the Xavier Sodality, Rev. Samuel Wright, minister of Mount Zion Methodist church, declared:: "The solution to the . civil rights crisis and other human :rights problems depends upon the answer to the basic question; 'Wbat is the meaning and destiny of man.''' , . The answer· to that question, be added, will "determine ·the course of' Western civil-ization fur years to come." To overcome prejudice it- ill necessary to "be committed and dedicated to OUT faith" and to- be aware of "the dignity and' dest iny of manf' He called on tthe students to "gather all the factS about a situation before making 21 judgment" and to 'stand 'up and be counted as a d-isc·lple of Christ." .
St. Michael's College Gets 124-Acre Tract
. WINOOSKI ~ARK (NC)"::',A 24-acre tract with 14 buildings Cy.nthia Dansereau and Riehard GeJinMl at the former Ethan Allen Air <Force Base has been assigned:~ st.. Anth(my's newly - erected would be .glad to aHena St: An;.· St. Michael's College. The cOllege' grammar' school. Until 1940 the thony's but space is' at a pre has had temporary use of' the school remained on the primary miumnow. Highlig'hts of school property oorin~ the past' schoo) level, but in that year ~8 _fresh . equipment include the' seience year. men registered and began classes laboratory and the library, botb The General Services Adniin on tI;1e third floor of the school termed "second to none." . istration has announced·the building. Classical,' general oond com signment. of the property to the Interestingly, 1he curate ill' mercial courses are offered, tG V· S. Health, Education and Wel charge of the school at that time getber with four years of French fare Department for final trims-' fer to the college. . : was Msgr. Berube, the present or Latin and four years of math A., gymnasium, a eomputer pastor, and in organizing the ematics for college prep stu dents. high school he was implement center, apartments and storage ing the program. of the pastor buildings comprise most of the A reading. laboratory is avall at that time, ~ev. Vict~r :Masse. aible to students and has bene-' property. The college is' con Today the school's enrollment fited them both in comprehen ducted by the Society of -St. is about 250. More students sive reading and in improving Edmund priests. study skills. Extra-curricular
IIET1RED OR SEMI·RETlRED FORMER
activities include glee clUb, II BONN (NC) - Only a few creative writing club, a commer SALES EXECUTIVE daY'S after the conclusion of talks eia! club and a science club. A Tfle man I am seeking is probably near- llf between Vatican representatives French club is also very active, at retirement age who wishes to remain a.ctive in business either on a full or part having as its chief aim the pro and Hungarian government offi t"ne basis. He will act as Diocesan Ilep motion of French conversation. resentative for Fall River to lease beautiful eials~ seven priests were relow rental home-apartments for a retirement Somewhat unique is II Visual' city . moved forcibly from their posts In Tucson, Arizona that was sponsored in the Pees diocese and were· Aid Club, comprising boys who by the Christopher City Housing Development Corporation which is made up of the' mem are trained to operate all me taken to distant rural areas, ac bership of Tucson Council No. 1200 of the cording to the German Catholic chanical devices in the school. ~~~~hts of Columbus. High Earnings. Diilnl news agency, KNA. Thepries1s At the same time these young involved had spent many years sters are rendering service ro Write to C. Alfred McGinnis, lien. Mfr. in their parishes and there was the school and learning· skills C.ristopl!er City. 3401 North Colulli~ no aparent reason lor their ban that will benefit them· ir.l the - Boulevard: Tucson, Arizolla ) future. iShment, KNA reported.
as
Remoye Priests
J
. ,New Special Rate . 4 ' OJ To All Savers! - ~ftJ ? \Based on anticipated eornin~s ']I
.
Parish 8ehool .. St. Antb~ny's is. prim¢l)o • parish high school, one of only three in the Diocese, Holy Fam ily in New Bedford being anoth er and Prevost in Fall River the third. "Our primary purpose II ire
develop mature, prod\l(:tive and happy AmericanS fortified for life's battles and eventual saint hood." ThUll Msgr. Albert· Ber ube, pastor of St. Anthony's . Church, sume up the aims 01. hie school. The inetitutioo. Is staffed ~ the SiBten; 01. Holy Cross, who first came into the' pariBh 1ft 1896~ when' tbe7 ~ eha1'&e etC
Theology Root _ Of Race Crisis
.~
f
for the 6-month period, July} . hru Dec. 31, 1964. .
..
per annum
• •••••••••••••••••• S ........iii. .
•
IoHuS ACCOUNTS MAY . . -EARll ." JO
'5· . 1.%.'8
PI.....end fREE KIT te Seve-by-Melll
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14
THE
ANCHOR-pio~ese
of FaIlRi~er-Thurs. July 23, 1964
Summer Reading 'GuidancE'
For Labor-Histo'ry Buffs'
By Msgr. George G. Higgins One man's food is anot1}er man's poison, as the old
saying INes, and similarly, I suppose, one man's hobby
could be called another man's' irksome chore. One of this
writer's hobbies-which he 'oouldn't expect anyone else to
indulge in over a lazy Sum'
mer weekend if it didn't ap- the finest men I have ever been privileged to meet. peal to him-is keeping up, Would that John Brophy's
to the extent that time will autobiography had appeared in
-,'
permit. with new publications on the history M the Ameriean I abo r movement. For' some • n a c co u n t _ able reason, the eurrent publishing seas<ln has pro d u c e d a' bumper crop of full 1eng t h books on this rather offbeat subject. ']~wo of them are highly recommended to all of, our fellow labol'-history buffs, and while the third, wbi9h cio~rs a 3IDall slice of American f ....- Ma 'st Sabor hi ... ,..ory rom....., rxt point of view, is not exactly teeemmended, i.'t will have a certain fascination for 1hose with a particular interest in the subject of ~e Ohuroh and ~bor." . Orcanizec1 Labor ill B~storT '1'he first of 1hese three volwnes-Pl'ofessor Philip Taft's monumental Organized Labor in American History, published by Macmillan-will probably have the field all to itself, for some time to come, as the definitive one-volume history of the American labor movement. , , Professor- Taft, whO writes in ; the Commons or the so-called University . of Wisconsin trildi-, tion, has a distinctive point of, view of his own whiclt is very much to this writer's liking but, predictably, will be written off' as old-fashion'ed or ultf"ajOOnservative by some of the liberal intellectuals who are currently vying' with one another to see, who can berate 'the Ameriean labor movement most severely, 'Uta tor its a~leged lac'k 0 f lI)1 ncy, and moral fervor and its alleged, lack of crea·tive imag~a·tion. Taft views American trade unionimr., - favorably, OIl ttle, whole-~ a, pn,tgmatic ,movement which bas always attempted to remain apolitical. "The existence of the labor movement with its great concern for the individual work," he eays in his concluding summary,.. «tlas redu~ greatly the appeal, of colledivist doctrines among, labor. It has given the worker in the United states a mecIuinism for eliminating discrimination and injustice at the place of employment unmatched intbe world'" '" '" It is not without taults, but it has represented in the past as it does today U1e' on'iy agency in this society which ,can prevent the growth of Dcb90lutism in industry which inevitably spreads when poweris':tinrestrained.". . John Broph,. _ ,.~. The SE!cond volume referred to 8bove-the late' John Brophy's posthumous ,autobiograpliY,A Miner's Life-is now available in page proofs and will be- published within the near future 'b,. the University M Wi~onsifi Press, Madison, Wisconsin; Mr; Brophy, who died laSt 'year in' his middle seventies, was one of the great unsung heroes of the American labor movement. A stalwart leader in the United Mine Workers M America who broke with John L. Lewis and later rejoined him as one' of the founding fathers of the C.LO. and its first Director of Orgalnization, he was one of
print during his lifetime so tlil~t
he might have enjoyed, in h:is
own characteristically modelrt
USO HEAD: General Em way,' the favorable respon~:e
which it will undoubtedly elicit. mett "Rosy" O'Donnell, Jr., But better late than never. The highly decorated officer for
publication of A Miner's Lif,e, his combat exploits in World coming as it does, at a partictl W ~,r II and the Korean War, larly critical stage in the history of organized labor in the Unite'd and holder of two Distin guished Service Medals, is
States is a cause f.or great rE!joicing. . now president of the USO.
Selfless Idealism NC Photo. Hopefully, Brophy's spirit of eelfless idealism, his congenital openness to change, his hardheaded intellectual curisoity arld his contagious optimism will help to reinvigorate the Amelr~
ican labor movement in redl~SEAFORD (NC)-Ecumenism
fining its essential purpose arld its long range goals. is 'paying off in increased effect Is it too much to hope that It iveness for relief and social ser
will also give the general public YiOl~ agencies from 12 different
• more profound and more SYDl_ natioM working in Korea, the'
pathetic appreciation of labor's dir,'!Ctor of Catholic Relief Ser-
past accomplishments and a bet- vic<~_National Catholic Wel ter understanding of its present fal'l~ Conference 1n Korea report ' e d bere in New York.
. the economl,c,
and f u t ure r 0 Ie m social and political life of the CRS-NCWC is one of '70 agen-
United States? cie:; which have formed the Kor_
A Marxist Critique earl. Association of, Voluntary
T~ . last of' this Summer's Ag.mcies (KAVA),' said ~sgr.
crop of books on American labor George M. Carroll, M.M. F~d
history is Philip S. Fooer's The ed by Msgr. Carroll and a Meth.;;
Policies and Practices of the, odist missionary, KAVAcoorAmerican Federation of Labor, dinates the facilities, plans and
1900-1909 (International PU'Oprc,jects' of the various agencies.
lishers, New York). As indicated "KAVA is a working example above, I was particularly inter-, ' of in ecumenical effort that has
ested in Foner's chapter on "The greatly increased the effective
Chu~ch and Labor." . . n~s of once separated groups,"
1?s approach to th,is sUbJe.et- the veteran missionary, a native
which, by the way, 18 not glv,en of New York, said in an inter as much attentiQn as it deserves, view here. "Together the various
i~ the av~rage volume on lab?r grc,ups have far more authority
hIstOry ~ IS avowedly Marx:lst and influence ~n they have as
and ther_e~ore, ~ot unexpected;,!. ind ividual agencies."
very CrItIcal of ~o~h. C~thOJIC Feed Destitute
and Protestant actIVIties 10 the Msgr 'c 11 h ... 33 field of organized labor during '. ar~o . as spen. .
the first decade of this century. years 10 nu:-Sionary, work ~n "Had the theme Of social jus- Korea and WIll return there m
tice" Foner concludes "been September. The Maryknoll mis the' only one stressed' by the sioner ~as interned by the, Jap
C~lic and Protestant churches aMse 10 World War II and the course of American labor's driven out of the diocese of Peng
developmen:t' would have been Yang, where he was apostolic different., administrator, by North Korean Unfortunately, this theme was traops in 1950. subordinated 'to the task of pl'e~[,he monsignor said distribu-'
'venting organized labot fnml tion of relief supplies to the poor
adopting a militant program of is lhe main work ofCRS-NCWC
aetion, and, of fastening upOn it a - in Korea. "Noodle stations in the
conservative leadership which city of Seoul alone feed some would uphold the churches' doc9,000 destitute workers each trine of class,collaboration. And dar," he said. "Most of these all .in. name of combatting al'l~ human packhorses, men who
SOCialIsm." carry heavy goods on their backs , Church SUPpOrt 01 AFL for wages of 25 to 50 cente a "What had happened, in (~f- day." fect," Foner maintains, "is that the church had agreed to sup port the A. F. of L. leadership' DRY CLEANING as long as, it adhered to a C(lll~ and servative labor program. In E~X FUR ~TORAGE change, this leadership pro\'e!i to the church that its policies and activities merited, this"' S\IP ,port.'~ Professor Taft and a number of competent labor, historians 34-44 Cohcmnet Street have long since cha.llenged 'the Taunton VA 2-6161 validity M this familiar Marxist critique 'of the role' of the chu:~ch' -:==~~~~~~~==~ in the early days of, the: A: F .. of . 'L. For my own-Part, I )\"o'..I1d BEFORE YOU
merely -point· out that Foner- . BUY-TRY
':aU other 'Considerations asi,d!~ . makes·' the:-obvious mistake ,of; allimmiQg that anyone' who is opposed to, socialism and ·to ,the philosO"phy of the t:lass struggle OLDSMOBILE is, by definition, a reactii>ns~ry. The history of' the American Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renciult labor movement flatly contra 67 Middle Street, Fairhave.. dicts this assumptioo.
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.THE ANCHOR - . . ,
40 Non-Catholic· ' Clergy to Make Annual Retreat
Pontiff Leaves Vatican City For Summer
FAULKNER (NC)-More
than 40 non-Catholic clergy men, all that can be accom modated, have signed up for the third annual retreat for fel low Christian clergymen at the Jesuit Fathers' Loyola-on-Poto mac Retreat House here in Mary land. Father Avery Dulles, S.J. the ology professor at Woodstock College, will conduct the three day retreat starting Monday. He is the author of a number of ar ticles and books, including "A Testimonial to Grace" and "Apologetics and the Biblical Christ." Previous retreats for non-Cath olic clergymen have been con ducted at Loyola by the late Father Gustave Weigel,S. J., of Woodstock in 1962 and, last year by. Bishop William G. Con nare of Greensburg, Pa. Before this year's clergy re treat, 12 Anglican and Protestant laymen are joining Catholic lay men from St. John the Baptist parish, Springbrook, Md., in a three-day retreat starting. to morrow. Father DavidJ. ·Bow man, S.J., a professor of ecumen ism at the Catholic University of America, is conducting the lay men's retreat. Rare Opportunity. Several of the non-Catholic clergymen who will attend this year's retreat are repeaters. They include an Anglican from. Phila delphia, who will be making his third retreat at Loyola, and an Episcopalian from Michigan and a Lutheran theology professor from North 'Carolina, both ing for the second time. Father James A. Martin, S.J., director of Loyola-on-Potomac, described the ecumenical re treats as "a rare opportunity, while readily acknowledging the issues which divide us, to'share the many great truths which unite us."
com
Plans New Letter To Preiates WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep. Frank J.' Becker plans another letter to U. S. Catholic bishops asking their opinion on his pro posal to amend the Constitution and permit prayer i!1' public schools. The New York legislator sent a letter June 24 to all 229 bish ops, but a spokesman said replies' have been "rather slow in com ing" and a second letter will be sent as a follow~up. About 35 replies had been re ceived by July 9, the spokesman said, a number not sufficient in Becker's judgment to be released as indicative. of a trend in the bishops' thinking. Becker is the chief force. in the House behind an effort to permit voluntary prayer in pub lic schools and thus override the U. S. Supreme Court's 1962 and 1963 decisions which held that conducted religious exercises in public schools violate proper Church-State· separation. The House Judiciary Commit tee held. lengthy hearings on Becker's proposal and about 145 similar ones, but it has taken no action. Several Catholics testi fied, inclUding Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York, but all stressed they represented . only themselves and not the Catholic Church. Becker's letter to the hier archy was prompted, he 'said, by the disclosure by the Legal De partment of the National Catho- , lie Welfare Conference that it has adopted an· attitude of C8U- . tion and reserve toward the 80 ealled prayer amendments,
'1-5
Thurs., July 23, 1964
. CASTELGANDOLEO (NC). Pope Paul VI arrived here te take up residence at the papal Summer home in this. town in the Alban Hills about 16 miles from Rome. He was greeted on his arrival by Giuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo, Bishop 'of Albano and prefect of the Congregation of Seminaries and Universities; Alberto Cardi_ nal di Jorio of the Roman curia, and by other Vatican dignitaries and town officials. . Before leaving the Vatican, Pope 'Paul held his regular weekly general audience in St. Peter's basilica. On the way out· of Rome he stopped at two of the city'S churches. The first stop' was at St. Agatha's church in the Traste vere section of Rome: He vener ated the statue of Our Lady of . Carmel, patroness of that section. Trastevere was decorated for its annual festival, during which the statue is carried through the streets decorated with roses and other flowers, and greeted with firecrackers. . . After leaving St. Agatha's,. the . VATICAN TELEPHONE EXC.HANGE: Pope Paul VI, shortly b.efore leaving for his " Pope was driven to the al1cient church of Santa Maria in Tras Summer home at Castelgandolfo, hears the details of the working of the instruments from . tevere, titular church of Stefan the clerical and lay staff of Vatican City's telephone center. Count Enrice . Galea~zi and. Cardinal WyszynskI, primate of Alberto Cardinal di Jorio are on the Pontiff's right. NC Photo. :. Poland, where lie spoke briefly.
- ..
Party Propose~ Family Courts' LONDON :(NC)-The British· Labor party, it" it wins the gen eral election .here nex't October, may set up local "family courts" , to ta.ckle many cases now han dled by, ordinary police courts. This move is strongly recom mended in an official Labor p.arty report of crime by ,a com mittee headed by Lord Longford, a Catholic member of the House of Lords, upper house of parlia
ment.
Aim of such courts would be
to "treat the family as a whole" with family welfare as their major consideration. They would deal with most cases now taken up in ordinary juvenile courts, such as those of children needing care or protec tion or in trouble with the police, parental cruelty, diffi culties between husband and wife, unmarried mothers, ille gitimate children, adoptions, ·maintenance and delinquency.
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16
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. July 23, 19t;4
. . ·.·. ..
Provocative Observations On Federal Aid to Schools
r.'.
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By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy If a. book is entitled Federal Aid and Catholic Schooh, as is a new one edited by Daniel Callahan (Helicon $3.95), one might expect that it would deal with that subjed principally, if not exclusively. But no, Mr. Gallahan tells UIS in his introductory essay, function of the priest in the "We now believe that the Christian community." legal question is only one of The contention here seems to many, no doubt still of cen be that the school is an inordi tral importance but surroundeli by such a tangle of socia!., cUl tural, historical, and educational issues that it can no l.onger be considered in isol;;.tion." Hence the con tributors to this
nate drain not only on the pal' ish funds, but also on the intel' est and energy of the PilI' ish priest, that its support and rUIl. ning divert attention 'and effort from enterprises which would benefit all the parishioners in stead of a certain proportion clf them, and that the concept-not to mention the actuality--of the parish as a worshipping commu ~ymposium nity, the Body of Christ in min range over the iature, is lost sight of. whole field of Catholic This extreme view apart (an,:! education in the it certainly deserves consider~ United States, ation), the problem of finanCin~~, and nearly all of them have pro_ staffing, and properly conduct vocative observations to make. ing such schools remains. Som,~ In more than one essay we kind of public assistance would are reminded that the parochial a p pea I' imperative, althoug:l school system as we know it in. there are those who insist that this country is not sorr.cthing it is not necessary. Can i:t bl~ universal and immemoria: in the obtained? Church. Dean M, Kelley, voici~g one It is relatively new and aU but view widespread among Protes peculiar to America. It came into tants, is flatly against any form being as a result of Catholic or measure of direct aid. He children's exposure to Protestant holds that this would be assist·· indoctrination, during the nine ance to, a sort of subsidy of, :l teenth century, in schools nom church, and as such unconstitlll·· inally public but actually sec tional. tarian. And even when the pub He also believes that direct aid lic schools ceased to be actively sectarian, they retained, rigM would inevitably result in an down to our own day, a Protes essential change in the ver~' character of th£ Catholic school, tant ethos and atmosphere. making it in fact a public schoo1 Spectacular Growib hardly distinguishable from an)' The parochial school was re quired bJ' legislation of the other public school. He doel Third Plenary Council of Balti have a word to say in favor o'E more in 1884, hence the system making tuition payments de.· can be said to be but 80 years ductible on one's income tax. Perfectly Constitutional old. Its growth has been fairly Father Virgil Blu:m, on thE! apectacula::-. As Father Neil G. other hand, argues at somE! McCluske:)' points out, "At the length that public aid woullil turn of the century, there were not be aid to a religion as al 854,523 pup i I s in Catholic religion. "It is the by-product oj: schools, and by 1920 the number legislation enacted for a secular had more than doubled to 1.3 purpose-the education of chil·· . million. The current enrollment dren in secular subjects." He in Catholic schools is 5.5 million quotes Robert M. Hutchins ami: or 14 per cent of the nation's others in support of the opinio[ll total elementary and secondary that such aid would be perfectly school population." constitutional. Catholic numbers are, of "There is," he says, "Co * * como. eourse, markedly increasing, pelling legal authority to sustain. and we have continued with the the conclusion that the federal. presumption that parochial government can validly subsi-· schools will be multiplied or dize the education of church., expanded to meet this increase. related school children in secu·, There are some who are com ular subjects." And 'he regards: mitted to providing a place in a the denial of aid to such children parochial school for every Cath as a denial of freedom 'in educa olic child. Others call this im tion and of their rights of con· ·possible. And indeed the diffi-' science. culties in the way of continuing Shared Time even at the rate we have beel:l John G. Deedy, Jr. looks into going, are formidable. the matter of shared time-the Lists DifficuIUes Some of them are listed by program "whereby the private Monsignor O'Neil C. D'Amouc. oc parochial school pupil on the They include a teacher shortage, junior high or high school level the necessity of new and expen receives a portion of his educa sive equi»ment to assis~ in tion at his private or parochial coping with the growth 9f school and a portion at the pub lic school of his residency dis knowledge, I' i sin g s~ndards tl"ict." which have to be met, the dele He notes its benefits and p0 gation to the school of tasks once performed by other elements in tentialities, but does not regard it as a panacea, and warns eur society. Robert 'r. Francoeuc speaks against dangers which' he dis for those who maintain that the cerns in it-dangers to both pub whole question of parochia1 Ii<: and parochial schools. khools should be radically re In an appendix, we are told of studied. Pl!ople of this persua arrangements in England, Wales, sion feel the situation which jus Scotland, Italy, Canada,' West tified and demanded their insti Germany, Austria. In all these tution has greatly changed. countries, the child in the Assistance Imperative church school gets public bene But they go far beyond that fits, sometimes very substantial, paint to stress what the essayist and neither social conflict nor a calls "the price we pay, not in trespass by the church on the money but in warping the true province of the state has ensued. .concept of Catholic educatior., The Scots, surprisingly, do about the role of the Church as edu the best for such youngsters. eator of a:J. .Catholics. and the Good for. the &:otsl
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APPEAL: Msgr. Mark J. Hurley,. superintendent of schools of the Diocese of St()~kton, requests the GOP platform at the national con vention to extend Federal aid, if passed, to all school children. The platform was silent on the proposal. NC Phc-to.
SaHli"
BLOCK STYLI
Mass Vernacular Continued from Page One The text, approved by bhe National Conference of Bishops of tte United States at a meeting in Washington last April 2, was confirmed by the Vatican Lit urgy Commission on May 1. The purpose of these actions was to begitl implementing the ecu men:.cal council's Constitution on tlhe Sacred Liturgy, wh,ich seeks to have all the people take part in the Mass "not* * * as strangers or silent spectaters" but with understanding and ac tive participation. The Bishops' decree and the Vatic:an confirmation of them were made public in mid-Mill' by :~rancis Cardinal Spellman of New York, ranking member of the American hierarchy, who presided at the full meeting 9f the bishops in Washington in April. In one of their two decrees adopted on April 2, the U. S. Bishops stated that dates for of ficia:. publications of the ap prov,~ texts would be set "as soon as the time necessary for the preparation and distribution of the respective translations can :>e determined." The Bishops' liturgy commis sion in releasing the text stated that permission to reprint ill; is freely given with the explicit understanding that bhe text will be SE·t down in its entirety w-itb no omissions or additions what. soever and with the punctuation, including asterisks, precisely as found in this text." Th·e Bishops in their Apri,l ac tion approved not only transla tions foc the Ordinary but also for 1be variable parts Gf the Mass: such as the entrance praYE~rs, lellSODS and G9spel readings. 'I'hese Mass propers ace being published only in mis sals for altar use-not in popu lar hand missals--and it is ex pected to take several months before they' can be made avail able to parish priests. 'I'he text for the prayers of the Ordinary pertaining to bhe pe0 ple provides the English to be used in the Kyrie, Gloria, Creed, Sanci.us, Lord's Prayer, Agnus Dei, Communion of the faitlJ,ful and dismissal and blessing. Exeept in the Our Father for which the traditional Catho lic form in use in the United State,; is retained-the prayers are adapted to contemporary English and substitute the "you" form for the archaic "thou" and ""thee.' .
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Jesuit Missioner Wants Alaska Chapel Site for Consecration ANCHORAGE (NC) - They asked Father George T. Boileau, 5.J., where he wanted to be consecrated as coadjutor bishop of Fairbanks. With little hesi tancy the veteran Alaska mis sioner selected the chapel of the Copper Valley School on the outskirts of Glenallen, Alaska. Bishop-designate Boileau said he wanted to be consecrated "among the people I have lived with and with whom I will be associated in the future-in the land of my fellow missionaries 2nd religious co-workers." So Francis Cardinal Spellman will make the long trek from New York to the Far North country to serve as consecrator at the Friday, July 31 cere monies. The coconsecrators Bishop Francis D. Gleeson, S.J., of Fairbanks and Bishop Dermot O'Flanagan of Juneau, and the preacher, Auxiliary Bishop Thomas E. Gill of Seattle, also will journey hundreds of miles to the consecration site. 'Jewel in Wilderness' Nestled in a lush valley at the confluence of the Copper and Tazlina Rivers, the Copper Val ley School stands out like a jewel in the wilderness. It was opened in 1956--a monument to the labors of missionary Fathers John Buchanan, S.J., and Jam'es 5pils, S.J. With the help of fellow Jesuits lind scores of dedicated laymen, Fathers Buchanan and Spils con quered the Far North wilderness end erected the school which is a combination of seven wings with l: central rotunda. Accommodates 500 It has been called a "tribute te vision, sacrifice, scrounging lind surplus property all wrapped 11!l into an attractive and solid
Magazine Hails Rights Law VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Vatican City weekly magazine leas hailed passage of the civil ~:ights bill in the United States, cut warns that laws are not enough to form man. L'Osservatore della Domenica said that with the signing of the bill, "the noble battle begun by Kennedy is concluded. The young President who died early by deadly bullets, and he who BUcceeded him with faith and courage, inscribe their names in the history of the United States next to that of Abraham Lin coln. In fact, they have carried out their work with an inflex ible sense of justice." However, the article asked: "Is the battle truly won?" Sin gling out reports of violence from various parts of the South, and particularly Mississippi, it noted that President Johnson has wanted to take extreme action that would have grave repercus sions in the .South. Laws Not Enough ''Can he maintain this atti tude? The situation is worsening and many fear the worst." The article stated that now "is more than ever the hour for moral forces and above all the hour for Christians. "It is for them to remember and to remind (all) of the mes sage of love and brotherhood which is found in the Gospel. It is for them to live it and make it lived in S'Ocip.ty so that it re news itself according to the spir Jt of Christianily Laws, nc mat·· tflr how good the:r are, are not enour.l:. to form men."
S~minary
Rector
DETROIT (NC)-Father Mar shall L. Lochbiler, 5.J., 69, has been named rector of Colum biere College, Jesuit seminary at Clarkston, Mich. Father Loch biler, a native of this city, for merly was rector of the Uni versity of Detroit..
THE ANCHOR -
Figures Indicate Marriages Up, Births Down
edifice." The Sisters of St. Anne teach at the school-and also had a share in its building. The school chapel can ac commodate 500 persons. The ed ifice passed a supreme test of sturdiness in the Good Friday earthquake which shook Alaska. The building sustained a few cracks and some broken water pipes which were repaired speedily. In the wake of the quake the school served as a refuge for hundreds of people made homeless in devastted Valdez. With its 500-person cap,acity, the school chapel is the largest Catholic edifice in the Fairbanks diocese. For the July 31 cere monies, more than 40 archbish ops, bishops and other prelates, some 125 priests and Religious and an outpouring of the laity are expected. Some 33 of the bishop-designate's relatives have been invited. He had various choices of con secration siteS-'the cathedrals in Fairbanks, Juneau or even Seattle. But, as he said, he wanted it to -be "among the peo ple I have lived with and with whom I will be associated in the future."
WASHINGTON (NC) ::\farriages in the U.S. are in creasing in number but the birth rate is dropping, ac cording to our new figures re leased by the Public Health Service. For the 12-month period end ing in March there were 4,087,000 births, 49,000 fewer than in the previous year. During March it self, there were 337,000 births, the smallest total for any March since 1955 and 6,000 fewer than in M'arch, 1963. The birth rate has been f;Uling for more than tWG yeilrs.
RELIVE OLDEN DAYS: Olden days come back to life
Dr. Hanna Heads Medical School ST.LOUIS (NC'-Dr. Robert Hanna Felix, assistant surgeon general of the United States, has been appointed dean of St. Louis University school of medicine, Faiflher Paul' C. Reinert, S.J., university president announced. Dr. Felix, who has been asso ciated with the U.S. Public Health Service for 31 years, will assume the deanship about Oct. 1, succeeding Dr. G. O. Broun Sr., who has served since Janu ary, 1962. Dr. Felix, who also will serve as professor of psychiatry, has been director of the national in stitute of mental health at the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. Dr. Broun, who will observe his 40th anniversary on 1Jhe fac ulty of the St. Louis University School of Medkine in September, will resume his teaching and re search in the field of virology in the department of medicine.
Scores Khrushchev For Vatican Ties BONN (NC)-Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has been as sailed by the Albanian press fOT his "holy alliance between im perialists, revisionists and the Vatican," according to reports reaching Germany. An official communist news paper "Way of the Party" in Tirana,Albania, alleged that the new Soviet line has been based on the Pacem in Terris Encycli cal of Pope John XXIII. The newspaper declared 'it is improper for Khrushchev to send .messages and greetings to the Holy See, on the grounds that it glorifies the activities of the Vatican and holds out hopes to the Catholic Church in com munist nations.
at an old-fashioned parade. sponsored by St, Stanislaus parish, Fall River, as part of its 65th anniversary observ ance. Vintage fire engines, autos and tandem bicycles were in parade line-up.
IN. THE
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Rate Highest But the number of marriages in the 12-month period ending in March rose to 1,682,000, com pared with 1,579,000 in the pre vious year. The rate was the highest in four year - 8.9 in every 1,000 of population. During March there were 109,000 marriages, up 8,000 over March, 1963. The rate was 6.7 per 1,000, compared with 6.3 in March last year. Publk Health Service officialB 3aid they could not account for the fact that the birth rate is dropping at the same time the marriage rate is rising.
Religion for Russians Pion Distribution of Icon, New Magazine To Soviet Citizens . WASHINGTON (NC) A new magazine designed ·to bring contemporary religious and phil oso-phic writing from - the free world to Russia has begun pub lieation here under the title Icon. The pocket-sized magazine carries Russian and English ver sions of its articles on facing pages. Among the contributors to the first issue are Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York, Methodist Bishop Gerald Kennedy of Los Angeles and Dr. Carl F. H. Henry, editor of Christianity Today. Plans call for Icon to be dis tributed through all legally available channels to Soviet cit izens within and outside the Soviet Union. It is published by Icon, Inc. - International Com munication of Orthodox Nations _ nonprofit, nondenomina-tion al organization founded last year by a group interested in Russo-American affairs and headed by Msgr. Patrick J. Ryan executive vice president of the Catholic Digest magazine. To Clarify Principles Editor of the magazine is Alexander 5. Alexander, a nat ive of Russia who has served in the U.S. foreign service. Alexander said there are more than 50 million people in the
NO JOB TOO BIG
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Soviet Union who attend church or belong to a religious faith. He said. Icon is aimed at these people' "to help bolster their religious leanings and clarify for them the free world's reIigious and philosophic princi pIes."
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18
THE ANCHORThurs., ·July 23, 1964'
Attributes Sister's Miraculous .Cure
To Intercession of Uganda Martyrs
Third Session
.,
Continued from Page One of Christ and the Ohurch." 2. "The Pastoral Duties of Bishops": as in De Ecclesia, simple votes will be taken on proposed amendments of chap ters already discussed and the discussion CYf nine new chapters. 3. "Ecumenism": Amendments on the already discussed schema must be approved and two new declarations will be added after discussion: the first will speak of the Jews and the other with religious liberty. 4. Divine Revelation: Although this subject did come up for de bate before (in the 1st session) it will have to be completely discussed again. The first draft was rejected by the Fathers as was the second. This third draft is completely new; hence a first time approach again. Other Possibilities If there were still time in the Third Session, other schemata are to be treated. Many of these have been reduced to simple propositions and they are to be introduced for voting in the or der which the Moderators decide is suitable. Some of the topics might be: the Eastern Churches, On: the Lay Apostolate, the Church in the Modern World, The Missionary Activity of the Church, Religious, Priests, Sem inaries, Catholic Education,. The Sacrament of Matrimony, etc. New .Regulations Before speaking in the council hall, all Fathers will have to submit copies of th~r proposed talk five days before the debate on the particular subject begins.' This new regulation pertains to all Fathers--Cardinals included. Ii in the judgement of flhe Oardinal Moderators (4) the talks are repetitious,· the repeti tions will. be dropped. If many Flathers speak on the same sub ject in the same way, the Moder ators can gather those Fathers together and have them agree to name one or two to speak in tlhe name of all. After the announced speakers have addressed the council, if there is some Father who wants t.c. comment publicly, he may do 80 if he can find seventy' (70) e!lher Fath-ers who petition it along with him. The same con dition will be applied-concu·r renee of 70 others if one Faifiher wQnts to speak on a subject that bas already' been voted closed. No Father is permitted-witlh eMIt special permission--'to dis tribute sheE~ CYf paper, pamph lets or books of any kind either in the hall or in its vicinity. Any Bishop who pIans 110 apeak on the two new chapters of the schema "Concerning the Church" is to have copies of pl"Gposed talk at the Secretariat of the CouncU no later than Sept. 9 (the Third Session opens Sept. 14.) All of the above was passed by the Coordinating Commission of Cardinals at its meeting of June 26 and personally by Po.pe Paul shortly thereafter.
Lieut-Colonel Continued from Page One In 1951 the Cape Cod unit was activated and Father Wallace accompanied it to service in the Korean war. He followed this MSignmeIllt with tours of duty in Colorado Springs, in Germany, Fort Benning, Ga., and Hawaii. He is now in the second year of 8ft assignme,nt to Edgewood Ar Senal, Md. Now in the regular army, Fr. Wall'<lce, a native of New Bed Jord, was educated at st. An Selm's College, Manohester, N.H., and St. Mary's Seminary, Balti more. He was ordained by the late Bishop Cassidy in St. Mary's .Cathedral, Fall River, on May 31, 1947.
LOS ANGELES (NC)-Broth er Paul, W.F., of the White Fathers of Africa, is a man who has had a miracle Occur within his 'own family. He .speaks of it in matter of fact fashion-as matter of fact as a man can be whose own lifetime has been an age of mir acles. Brother Paul discussed it at the White Fathers headquar ters here shortly after the word came that Pope Paul VI would raise to sainthood on Oct. 18 the 22 Martyrs of Uganda. Brother Paul's sister was cured miraculously from bu bonic plague through the inter cession of the martyrs. The va lidity of her cure wa,s accepted on July 7 by the Congregation
of Rites in conjunction with the martyrs' cause. She lived for' 12 years after her cure. "I saw my sister only once in all the years, we were in Africa together," Brother Paul re counted. Her name was Sister Richildis and she was a member of the White Sisters of Africa, more formally known as the Mission ary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa. Brother Paul and hili. sister came from a family of 13 chil dren. Their father was a black smith in southern Germany. Four of the children became mISSIOnaries; two joined the White Sisters of Africa and two became Brothers.
JERUSP'I.EM: PEOPLE NOBODY WANTS
BROTHER OF CUREO: Bro';her Paul, WF., recalls the miraculous cure of his aister. NC Photo.
Grateful for Aid From DiC\cese Continued from Page One big sores on their bodies. They'd area not far away where the be' asleep 'at their desks by 10 families can stay." in the morning, because they Most of the relatives prepare were getting along on one meal food for the patients and bl'ing a day. it to the hospital three times a "Now they have the cornmeal day. As a result, the hospital and milk and it has made a tre kitchens provide only token mendous difference to their vi meals. "The patients are very tality and ability to study." good to each other," noted Sis Catholic Action ter. "If one has no family, his Sisler's hours at the govern neighbo.r's family' will cook for ment hospital are from 7 to noon two." and 3 to 5. "The rest of the time The hospital is ahead of many is for Catholic. Action." in this country. as far as equip She and the other Sisters visit ment and· facilities go, noted former patients and provip.e Sister. "The only problem comes help where needed. "Eventually wh~n something· breaks down. they :laY 'Why do you do this?' It's very hard to get technicians." and 'then we' can explain the Another aspect· is. advanced GosPE'1 message." over most American hospitals. "About five per cent of Upper Mothers are provided with beds Volta's population is Catholic," said Sister. . in the pediatric ward, and they stay with their children. "Often She expressed gratitude for the beds aren't used, though," aid SE'nt' her each Christmas by said Sister. Many patients prefer the Diocesan Society for the Propagation of the Faith and sleeping on the floor." said that other missionaries Pre-Operative Preparations have expressed amazement at Patients who are to undergo the close contact that exists be surgery are usually very appre hensive, said Sister. "We try to .. tween the Fall River Diocese and its missionaries. have them come into the hos "Lint year," she recounted, pital three or four days ahead of "the African Diocese was in the time. The other patients are their teachers. They explain red, so I.gave the Propagation hospital routine and those mone~r to the Bishop. He thought it wa;; a wonderful thing that who've already been operated on explain procedures. We find my I:>iocese was so concerned it a great help psychologically." for m·e." Sister Marie William lJaid that The hospital, said Sister, has 600 beds, but usually has about Upper Volta is among the more stable Afril;an republics but is 1,500 patients, "on the floor be tween beds and in the corridor. very :poor 'in natural resources. Attempts are being made'. at We put them everywhere." Although the slight, vivacious farming and cattle raising and an adive irrigation program is missionary has six months home under way. leave, she is returning to Africa Far from being jungle terri two months early. "I want to go bory, Upper Volta is dry and al into' the bush and learn the lan guage better. I've been too bUSy .most ':>arren of vegetation. "We to study.;' Although some 25 dia_ wish for trees," commented Sis ter, but added that a few bushes lects are spoken in. the Ouaga dougou area, the chief tongue is are about all the landscape of fers. Temperatures can reach Mores; .spoken by the Mossi 120 degrees in the shade and a tribe . She'll concentrate on daily siesta is a necessity. that. To Stay in Franoe As the only American Sister ift Sistl~r will leave Swansea the country, Sister lJaYS she rare Aug. 11, going to France to ly speaks English, "except when make a retreat at the mother I talk to the American Ambassa house of her community, the dor." She assists with supervi Dominican Sisters of the Pres sion of distribution of food shipments from Catholic Relief entation, then returning to· Services in this country and Africa. She has two brothers and three says reports of improvement in sisters all living in St. Louis de youngsters receiving foodstuffs France parish. Among them are amazing. they've presented her with 12 "Catholic Relief Services sends nephews and nieces, five of milk and cornmeal to schools and villages, and children come whom she saw for the first time on this trip home. Her next miles daily for their rations. Teachers said the children were home visit will come in three previously always tired 'and had ;veal'S.
r>. ~ISTER IN JERUSALEM COLLECTS PEOPLE NOBODY WANTS •.• Her name is SISTER BERNICE. Once you have met her, you cannot forget her .•• Her "family" cons,ists of deaf.mutes, cripples, orphans, and mental defec SISTER BERNICE loves tives. them all, with a love mothers under stand • • • Visit her in Jerusalem, and you're off "on a tour" throucb miles-lonl' corridors of her barracb "home." The youngs~ers come run ning, their arms beld high, askin. to be picked up. The youngsters . who can run, that Is. The crippled "rl" Hoi, 'Il,h",', M;II;o" Aid children lie in their ClOts, wishin.. lor ,h, 01'1,,,,11I Cb"r,h "ihey too could run • • • Day by day Sister Bernice'. family rets larger, It seems. "There are alway. people nobody wants," she says. "Younl' or old, we take them all, trustlnl' In God to help us." ••• Cheerful I!Dd down-to-eartb, SISTER BERNICE doesn't ask for anything. But you know .he's worried. There are food bUls every day, clothlnc bills, medical. bllls, not to mention the need for Dew equipment • • • She needs cots for the erippled children, .he tells you finally. -cots high off the floor so that the crippled children won't feel eut off from the WOrld about them. The cots will cost $50 eacla -$1,700 altogether. The 3. mattresses will cost $10 eae" .•• She needs help, too, ($1, $2, $5) to pay for food, clothlnc, melll eines ••• Will you I'ive SISTER BERNICE a hand? You'll be belpinl' te take eare of people nobody wants liathe Hoi,. Land.
3.
ANOTHER SISTER BERNICE? AMERICAN SISTERS OUTLIVE the average American woman by six years, according to a doctor in New Orlean•. Moreover, they are America', "hardest-working, best educated feminine group," he said ..• The same is true, we suspect, of our native Sisters overseas . . . We need thousands of native Sisters in our 18-country mission world to do what S\ster Bernice Ii doing in Jerusalem. To train them, we need your help. For about $12.50 a month ($~50 a year, $609 for the. over all two-year course) you. can "adopt" Sister' Antoine .Hoyek, fu Lebanon; or Sister Mary Thom... Regis, iu India. Simply write to ua now. .
WHAT ONEARlH ••• ? WHAT. ON EARTH DO WE DO? Speakln&, simply, we . . FOU to help the m.liSlolIS in 11 countries in which Catholics are .nIy a handfUl-INDIA, for Instance, IRAQ, IRAN, EGYPT, JORDAN, ERITREA. AI the "Holy Father's Missioa Aid for the Oriental Cha~ch" we help wherever tile Holy Father ..y. U'. 1leeded.
WHERE IT'S NEEDED
[] $1
-Dne day's support for a priest in INDIA
$a -Shoes for a bUnd boy in the GAZA STRIP $5 -Clothing for a deaf-mute boy in LEBANON 0$10 -Supports a seminarian for a month in IRAN ·0 $100-0ne year'. medical care for • leper in JORDAN
o o
MAKING A WILL? REMEMBER THE MISSIONS OVE& SEAS. OUR LEGAL TITLE I THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARB ASSOCIATION. Dear Monsignor Ryan I
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 23, 1964
.Boston'vs'New York Rookies
In Grid Season Inaugural
~~thol ic Agency Helps India's File Victims
By Jack Kineavy
Coach Mike Holovak will get an early appr3Jisal of the Patriots' rookie. crop tomorrow night at Manning Bowl, Lynn, when the Pats speedy neophytes take i>n their N.Y. Jets' counterparts in an 8 :30 arc1ight encounter. Starting for the Patriots will be a he's okay, however. No mention backfield made up of Manch of any bull pen assignment has Wheeler, fonner U of Maine .been made but we'll wager it quarterback, J. D. Garrett of isn't far off. Spahn's old side Grambling College and John Barrett .0£ Boston College and little Pete Pe dro of West T e xa s State. Pedro, a native of Lynn, gained national promi nence as a soph omore at West Texas when he led the nation in scoring and finished third in total ground gained. Hal f back Garrett and Barrett-easiIy eonfused, hey--are speedboys from 'way back. Garrett was Grambling's ace quartermiler and Barrett in his prep career at St. John's, Dan vers, was the area's 100 and 220 yard dash king. ·Holovak reportedly ~ high on some of the first talent who surely must have been advised. to report in top shape. The boys will have worked out for just about a week prior to taking the field tomorrow· night; Holovak, incidentally, now wears two hats in the .Patriots' organization. With the appointment of former general manager Ed McKeever to head up the Pats scouting system in the South and south east, Holovak will assume the G.M.'s duties without title. Checking· into the University of, Rhode Island yesterday were some 80· Pittsburgh Steeler as pirants, led· by coach ·Buddy Parker. The team will have two sessions daily both· of' which win be open to the publie. On Satur
day, Aug. 8, the Steelers will play an intra-squad game at Cranston stadium for'the bene fit 'of the URI SCholarship Fuhd. Tickets for general admission are priced at" $1.00 and $2.00. Named' journal' Honor Ron Boy for 1964 was Michael Fran:"
elf! ~icki w'hose- dad, you fast
approaching middle age' sports fans will recall,' did sOine pretty fancy ball carrYirig for the great Boston College teams of the Leahy era. Young Mike, an hon or student as well as a splendid three sports athlete, .will enroll at Brown University in tile Fall. It begins to appear that Father Time is beginning to .exercise
hiE; inexorable influence on the
flinging capacity of the Braves' great Warren Spahn. Manager
Bobby Bragan continues to start him but it can't go on much longer. Spahn Is now 6-10 on the season but his ERA has moved up to the 5.00 class and this tells • signifi<:ant ·tale. '
The; Stylish lefthander insiSts
Missi~n. Group
P!'clns Program in St. Paul
PATERSON (NC)-The Asso ciation for International Devel opment, a lay mission-sending society with headquarters here in New Jersey, plans for an ed ucational program in the St. Paul, Minn., archdiocese. The association alTanged with Archbishop Leo Binzo£ St. Paul to establish a committee to col laborate in planning programs with various archdiocesan' org a~ons, such as the Ohristian Family Movement and the Con fraternity of Christian Docti'ine. Campus programs already have been initiated. at fJhe College of St. Cather·ine for women and the College of st. Thomas for men there.
with the 1948 Braves, Johnny Sain, added years to his career by taking up relief chores. He, of course, was a good deal younger than Spahn is now. At any rate, if Warren is approach ing the end of the lim!, we trust his pride and good judgment will impel him to call it a day. Too many legendal"'J sports figures have stayed too long, causing shadows to be cast upon superlative careers. Not every one can go out as did Ted. Wil liams but it didn't take Stan Musial or Joe DiMaggio long to settle for the grandstand after one mediocre season. Perhaps Spahn has his sights on the 400 victory mark. If so, his chances appear illusory at the moment. Skowron Switch Moose Skowron, traded by Washington to Ohicago last week, could fiJld himself on the receiving end of a World Series check ftlr the third year in a row, each'from a different club. Skowron was with the Yankees in '62 and the Dodgers in '63. His performance in the Series was a vital .factor in LA.'s suc cess against the Yanks last year but his lacklustre seasonal effort induced the Dodgers to peddle him to Washington. Skowron's acquisition makea the White Sox not SO vulnerable to left-handed pitching of which th~Y've b.een seeing a good deal. 'n1e Moose has made his pres ence felt in the Sox lineup hit ting well o~er,490 in his. first few. games. Lopez tried to bol ster his offel)se in. the off-season by offering the Giants either Peters or Pizzaro for Cepeda.
The San Franciscans nixed the offer. It is the good senor's thesis that effective' pitchers aremOl'e easily come by '01" developed, as you' wlll, than are' consistent . long ball hitters; Lopez' . record bears thiS out both at Cleveland and Chicago where' the only in terruptions of the Yankees dom inance" of the AL scene have been effected in the last 15 years. Kaline to Sox? . In line .with this theory, for ·example,·.Lope:r; ,would concur in a Radatz. for K~ine swap.' Bun ning arid Colavito exited the Motor City camp last year and . rumor h,as it that Kaline.· is one block now. The change of en vironment benefited Bunning and Colavito and, no doubt,
lightened the Tiger payroll without depreCiating' the club's standing in . the league. Would Kaline ever' look great in Sox spangles!
. NEW YORK (NC)-The overseas relief agency of U. S. Catholics has provided food, clothing and other re
kick
COLUMBIAN SQUIRES FOUNDER: Supreme Knight John W. McDevitt accepts portrait of Brother Barnabas, F.S.C., founder of the Squires, from New England Regional Chief Squire Joseph Oavollaro. The organization is com posed ~f Catholic boys 13-18 years old.
Mountain Climbing Condemned By Vatican City Newspaper · v A-TICAN
CITY (Ne) - The Vatican City weekly, L'Osserva tore della Domenica, has said it is immoral to climb mountains just for the fun or glory of it. The llrticle commented on 1he dea·th of all 14 members of a mountain-"climbing team in an avalanche on Mont Blanc, France. It said that 100 people die eaeh year climbing in the Alps. Unjustified Moral Risks The weekly stated that moun tain climbing "is a sport that entails a continual victory over .oneself, a spiritual elevation." But, it went on, "all moral the ologians . . . rightly teach that even . these praiseworthy pur poses do not justify the fact that
'Write~s Conference 'WASHINGTON (NC)-Lead · ing 'authors and editors will ·~ak at the fifth annual writers' conference to be conducted ·starting Monday, Aug. 3 'at Georgetown. University here. Among those participating will Stewart Beach, fiction' editor of This Week magazine; Whit :Burnett, founder a·rid co-editOr of' Story magazine; 'author Pad 'raie Colum; author' and ediWr Anne Fremantle; and author and .critic Elizabeth Janey/ay.
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Verte Case "'But this could not be said of the recent tragedy of the Aguille Verte. The expedition bad all the guarantees tQat could be given .Qy a (mountain climbing) school,. the.gui!ieswere highly able, the w~ather. perfect. What's des cribed as One of the worst climbing disasters of all times occurred despite every precau tion taken against foreseeable dangers." L'Osservatore della Domenfca ,left'little doubt about its feelings on the matter. "Is it morally. ad ,missable," it asked, "for a sportsman· to endanger his· life just to reach a peak that's al ready reachable by cable car or "other technical means?"
O~dained at 70· '. MADRID (NC)-Father Pedi"o Alberola, a widower who ~ served as presiding judge of the Madrid juvenile court since 1939, was ordained a priest here at the age' of 70. One of Fa1Jher 'Alber ola's 14 grandchildren is a mem: ber of the SOCiety of Jesus: "
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one encounters moral risks f(1r oneself and :f>or others." "Veteran climbers believe that the large number of accidents is .due to imprudence of inexpert climbers and to the fact that 'even climbers of proven exper ience often undertake high-alti tude climbs while not in good physical condition," the paper said. .
ief supplies to more than 2,000 families in India made homeless as the result of fires touched off in factional fights among com munists. Reports from the diocese of Vilayawala said that 1,661 houses have been destroyed. by the fires during the last month, leaving 2,6~7 families homeless. Faction al fights among Communist party supporters, the reports said, led to touching off the fires. The village of Krishna Lanka it was stated, was Bet aflame on June 9 and 970 houses were des troyed in a matter of minutes. 'l1he fire created a wave of panie and led to a series of other fires is neighboring villages in retIj- . bution efforts. Lamia Azize, assistant pro gram director for CRS-NCWc. in Madras, who went to Vijaya wada to supervise distribution of relief supplies, reported: "Some of the families have left the vil lages, afraid of more reprisals (>the;r$ a,re now living outsi4e ch!l1'ooes or with friends 8l)d some in burned out areas. Mo. ere families· with many childreft whicm. complicates the situatiop,," In addttion to shipping the re lief supplies, CRS-NCWC head quarters here disclosed the agen cy is working with the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief· of the United Kingdom in a pl'aft to reconstruot houses in the
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19
REFRIGERATION APPLIANCES AIR. CONDI·TIONING 363 SECOND ST.
FALL RIVER, MASS~
Thurs., July 23, 1964
Catholic Reporter
New Publication
THE ANCHOR-
Opens Seminary For Africans
KANSAS CITY (NC) - The National Catholic Reporter, a new national weekly newspaper, will begin publication here in Missouri in the Fall, edited by laymen ·and published indepen dently of' formal Church affili ation.
PRETORIA (NC) -The new St.' Peter's Regional Seminary, where African students for the priesthood are trained, was opened b~7 the 'apostolic delega,te to South Africa, ~rchbishop : Joseph F. McGeough, a native of . New York.
'. . -.
Robert G. Hoyt, editor, and Michael J. Greene, managing ed tor of .the Catholic Reporter, newspaper' of the Kansas City St. Joseph diocese, will be editor and publisher; respectively, of the new publication.
Present for the occasion was : the master general ot" the Do , minicans, Father Aniceto Fer ,nandez, O.P. The seminary, - which was formerly at Donny : brook, Natal, has been moved to Hammanskraal near Pretoria. Feature of the modern-style buildings is the wigwam shaped chapel. This was opened by Archbishop Emmanuel 'Maba -thoana, O.M.!., of Maseru, Basu toland, first African to become a bishop in southern Africa.
AT RONCALLI NEWMAN CENTER: Stained glass windows over the entrance to the newly-erected Roncalli Newman Center that will serve the 500 ,Catholic students attend ng the La Crosse State College depict, left, Cardinal Newman while still an Anglican and a student at Oxford University; 4~enter, Pope John XXIII, after whom ,the center is named; and St. Thomas More as a young lawyer in England. The Wisconsin center cost learly $500,000. NC Photo..
Greene credited Bishop Char les H. Helmsing of Kansas City St. Joseph with: putting the new paper "well down the road to a successful beginning." The bi9hop, he said, offered the use of the diocesan news paper's staff and offices, thus making major 'publishing econ omies possible.
ALMEIDA BUS LINES special permit TOUR to thO. NEW YORK---
WORLD'S
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Board Coach in New Bedford at Almeida Bus Termin ai, Kempton, cor. Purchase Sts. in Fall River Cit Central St., in front of Central Lunch
ONE DilY
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3 Days at FIRST-CLASS HOTEL ••• Continental Breakfast each day
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$
INCLUDES
INCLUDES
Sail around the beautiful Island of Manhattan - Statue of Liberty, United Nations Building, panorama trip of the Hudson River, East River, and .the Harlem River, trip on the Monorail, Hawaiian Room, fire works, includes Fair admissions, tips and taxes.
Sail around the beautiful Island of Manhattan - statue of Liberty, . United Nations Building, .panorama trip of the Hudson River, East River, and the Harlem River, trip on the Monoral, Hawaiian Room, fire works, a trip to Broadway's most fa mous show - "TO BROADWAY WITH LOVE," includes Fair admis sions, tips and taxes.
THROUGH YOUR TRAVEL AGENT
No 1rickets Sold on Coach
IN fALL RIVER AREA CONTACT:
Fall River Travel Bureau, Inc. 29 No. Main",St.
OS 5-7408
Americana Travel Bureau 491 Division St.
OS 7-9331
IN NEW BEDfORD AREA CONTACT:
Francisco Oliveira Travel Agency 265 Rivet Street
IT
706 Eastern Avenue
OS 3-0882
Siss.»n Travel Bureau, Inc. 39 Main Road, Tiverton
MA4-8472
Guililerme M. Luiz & CO. Inc. 101 Rivet S'treet
TRAVEL AGENCY 993-2296
Connors Travel Bureau 1418 South Main St.
OS 3-0951
Tours & Travel 1078 County St., Somerset
OS 4-3504
lage Travel Bureau 434 Bay Street
OS 3-1551
Catholic Travel OHice 28 Bullock Street
993-2613
997-8081
994-2471
Pelletier Travel Service 1350 Acushnet Avenue
Farinha's Travel Agency
992-9321
Hodgson' Travel Service, Inc. 28 Uullock Street
'
Whitehead's Travel Service
993-261{ . 342 Acushnet Avenue
993-4122