08.08.63

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The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Aug. 8, 1963

Vol. 7, No. 33 ©

1963 The Anchor

PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year

Catholic Press' Reaches

New Circulation High

NEW YORK (NC)-Total circulation of 6119 Catholic periodicals listed in the 1963-64 Catholic Press Directory, official reference volume on the Catholic press in English­ 8peaking North America, reached an all-time high of 28,847,343 at the beginning circulation, from 22,­ of 1963. Figures in the new magazine 910,093 to 22,732,287. The largest directory show a circulation decrease occurred in the cate­ increase among newspapers gory of professional and business

~f 241,091, the largest part of this increase (215,920) being reflect­ ed in U. S. papers. Total news­ paper circulation in the U. S. is DOW 5,521,132, an increase of .lightly more than four per cent over the 1961 year-end figure contained in last year's directory. The North American total is

5,760,486.

The sizeable increase in news­ paper circulation was offset, however, by a slight decline in

magazines published in the U. S., which showed a decrease' in number from 57 to 47, and a drop in circulation from 552,814 to 371,802. A sizeable part of this decrease is explained, however, by the fact that several national and diocesan directories, former­ ly listed under the professional and business magazine heading, are now included in a separate directory listing. The new direcTurn to Page Eighteen

Liturgical Group Suggests Some Changes in Mass

PUEBLO (NC)-A liturgical group has recommended that Masses be offered entirely in English and that other .rastic changes in the liturgy be made. The 'recommenda­ tions of the Southwest Liturgical Conference, a newly formed organization with represent­ Permission be sought to omit atives from eight dioceses, the Last Gospel and to end the were reported in the South­ Mass with the "Ite, Missa est," em Colorado Reg i s t e r, preceded immediately by the Pueblo, Colorado diocesan news­ paper. The SLC met in Dallas, Tex., til June. Other recommendations made by the conference include: . The translation of the Mass toto the vernacular be dignified; beautifUl and capable of being IIUIlg.

The prayers. of the Canon at the Mass, now said silently, be recited aloud. ' Individual regions or prov. aces be empowered to choose • suitable vernacular text for tile Mass until an official text tor the U. S. is adopted. . Permission be sought for elim. Ination of the prayers at the foot of the altar and beginning the Mass with thp. Introit. The Epistle and Gospel be read facing the people in every Instance, regardless of the one reading them. Epistles and Gospels for Sun­ days and holy days not be re­ peated on an annual basis as at present, but extra passages be eelected so that a· three-year cycle be developed for the sake of. variety and greater coverage of the- Scripture. A solemn prayer of the faith­ ful for the Church, the needs at mankind and one's personal needs be added at the end of the Liturgy of the Word. The Offertory prayers and rites be simplified and clarified tic express the nature of the .rifts for the Sacrifice. The rites preparatory to Com­ munion, especially the breaking ~f the bread, be simplified and clarified. Communion under both spe. cles bE' extended to the lay. peo­ ple on speci~l occasiona.

Blessing. The practice of concelebration on occasions where there are gatherings of priests be ex­ tended.

Cars Seen Chief Factor

In Youth Delinquency

KANSAS CITY (NC)-Pat Finley sums up in one word the factor that contributes most to juvenile delinquency. The word is: "Cars." He's, the juvenile probation officer for Wyandotte County, Kan. His files bulge with reports and statistics that show better than 60 percent of the cases in juvenile court - independent of traffic violations - are directly or indirectly the re­ sult of automobiles. "Th~re is a direct ratio between automobiles in the hands of boys and their marks in school," Finley said. "About 50

per cent of the boys we handle

have dropped out of school.

1\I,'any of these boys were 'A' and

'B' students in grade and junior

high. Grade depreciation came

only after they started driving

their own car or one their par­

ent3 - too generously - made

available to them."

In his work, Finley handles

boys up to the age of 16, in

cases ranging from delinquency

and rr.iscreancy (comparable to

felony and misdemeanor in adult

law) to dependency and neglect.

He said: "There is no reason

for a dependency and neglect

case in any court. There is no

Turn to Page Eighteen

Feels American

Press Slanting

Vietnam Facts

MANCHESTER (NC)-A 'Bishop from the Far East says the Buddhist uprising in South Vietnam is being distorted by the communists to divide the country.

. Accounts in U. S. newspapers '

give a "slanted view" of the ac­ tual situation, said Bishop Peter

Carretto, S.D.B., Vicar Apostolic

of Rajaburi, Thailand, who is

visiting here in New Hampshire.

"I could not be more con­

vinced," he said, "that the com­

munist propagandf', machine has

been put to work to distort the

situation in the eyes of the

world.. I

"Because of help given to the Diem government by the United States, communism has suffered a setback in its attempt to stage a takeover in Vietnam. "Now they find themselves unable to divide 'the country through conventional methods, Turn to' Page Eighteen

BROTHER HAROLD L. QUALTERS, C.s.c.

Mansfield Man Leaves For Africa Assignment Brother Harold L. Qualters, C.S.C., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Qualters, Mansfield, will serve in St. Leo's Col­ lege, Fort Portal, Uganda, Africa, for the ne:1tt five years. A 1956 graduate of Coyle High School, Brother Qualter'. most recent assignment was disturbed boys in. Chester, N. T. that of teacher and counsel­ He will make stops in London, lor at Pope Pius X'II School Paris and Rome before reachinl for mentally and emotionally Africa. St. Leo's College ill

Urges Catholics To Join Civil Rights March CHICAGO (NC) - The National Catholic Confer­ encefor Interracial Justice has called for' large-scale Catholic ,participation in a mas­ sive' civil rights march on Washington on Wednesday. Aug. 28. The group also feels that Catho­ lics who do not back President Kennedy's civil rights legislative proposals are "failing to meet their obligations' as responsible citizens." Immediate steps are being taken to "marshal and organize" Catholic participation in the Aug. 28 civil rights march through local Catholic inter­ racial councils and other con­ tacts. The demonstration march in the nation's capital is, expected to come at or near the peak of congressional debate on the ad­ ministration's civil rights pro­ gram. Predictions have put the number of expected participant. at, upwards of 100,000. Dr. Robert Spike, director of the Commission on Religion and Race of the National Council, of Churches, the nation's largest Protestant and Orthodox federa­ tion, said his organization will take part in the AUi.28 demoA­ .tratiou.

equivalent to an American higll school and has an enrollment of 350 students. Brother HaroJ4 will teach English. , His father is principal of h Mansfield high school and the religious attended Mansfield public schools before enterinc Coyle High. Previous to hill Chester assignment, he studie. at St. Edward University, Austin, Texas, and taught at Our Lad,. of Mt. Carmel School, Bronx, N.Y. Brother Harold learned recen'­ lyabout his new post at St. Leo's that Fort Portal is 80m. 3,500 feet above sea level, witlt • comfortable 80 to 9O-degr~ year-round temperature despit. the fact that it lies only 50 milell north of the Equator. "The students are in somewhat of a belligerent state now b&­ cause of the unrest in the COUD­ try following independen~ which Uganda recently woa Turn to Page Eighteen

Feast of Assumption

AUGUST DEDICATION: This month's devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary has grown sinCe she appeared to the three children at Fatima, Portugal, DL 1917.. The title expresses the perfect purity of Mary.

Next Thursday, August IS. Is the Feast of the Assumptioa of the Blessed Virgin Mar,. and ts a holyday of obligation. The! feast commemorates the taking LIto heaven of Ma17. body a'lld soul, after her deatll.: Catholics, espeoially th08e In Summer resorts, should ao­ quaint themselves with the hours of Masses on that cia,. so that they may fulfill their dut,. of assistin~ at Mass. Most Churches will. have an eveninc Ma118 in addition to the mora­ In&' schedule. The cIa,. before the Feast .. 110 longer a daI' eI lui .....

.tlnence.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

Link... Salacious Matter, Teen

Sex Problems

Defender. of Priest Loses Post

On County's Governing Body

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A was formally excommunicated man who defended a priest ac­ by the Ch!ll'ch for his attempts eused of lying about a racial in­ to thwart Catholic school inte­ eident in nearby Belle Chasse gration in the New Orleans arch­ has been summarily dismissed . diocese. from his county'. governing He has charged that Father body. Frank Ecimovich, S.V.D., lied He is George Hero, III, who about an assault a 11 e g e d I Y stemming from a parent's protest was dismissed without explana­ over joint religious instruction tion from the PIa que min e I Par ish (county) commission for white and Negro children. Father Ecimovich charged a council and his post as chairman of the parish board of electrical parishioner, Henry Mackenroth, with assaulting him. He said the examiners. attack took place in the rectory The commission council's pre­ of Our Lady of Perpetual Help sident is Leander H. Perez, Sr., a local segregation leader who church at Belle Chasse on April 20. Shows Charity When the caSe came up for trial on June 26, the priest dropped the charges. He said Mackenroth had suffered enough from publicity and "Christian charity" had to be shown. NEW YORK (NC) - The Perez, however, .llccused the Board of Social Ministl"Y of priest of lying about the incident the Lutheran Church in and said the case was dropped because the charge couldn't be America, a panel of nine proven. clergymen, lawyers and teache1'l, After Perez' charge, Hero ap­ haa released a study report peared on a New Orleans tele­ which questiona the reasoning vision program as spokesman for behind the U. S. Supreme Court'. 100 members of the priest'. ban on Bible reading and prayet' parish who said they would ac­ in public schools. cept the priest's word because "The general ground relied of their "high esteem" for him. upon by the Supreme Court and Hero also ligned a letter on some of the broad proposition. behalf of the same group which stated by it are properly the appeared in a New Orleans daily eause of some concern," the re­ newspaper. port said. The report pointed out that the Supreme Court ban. religiou. aercises, yet permits political exercises which some people LONDON (NC)-The London elaim have a religious signifi­ eance. Public schoOl childreJi County Council has approved a multi-million dollar redevelop­ may recite the Pledge of Alle­ giance to the Flag and the Star ment project which will give this Spangled Banner, both of which city's Catholic cathedrai a dom­ inating setting on on'e of Lon­ contain the name of God. The report also stated· that don's most famous streets. Westminister cathedral is'now "'much is to· be said for permit­ hidden behind a block of tall ting a large degree of local au­ t.onomy, subject only to basic shops and offices on Victoria national limitations directed to Street, a street of pagentry insuring equal protection and which visiting heads of state protection of the fundamental travel en route from nearby Vic­ toria railway station to the Hous­ freedoms of the person." es of Parliament and Bucking­ ham Palace. The redevelopment project, which covers eight acres in the Westminister area, includes de­ LUXEMBOURG (NC) - The molition of the buildings which International Catholic Childhood have hemmed in the Byzantine­ style cathedral for more than .Bureau is organizing an inter­ national conference on the half a century. The Royal Fine theme "Christian Perspectives of Art Commission has endorsed Adoption" to take place here in the project. Noveinber. Participants will work in four committees which will study FRIDAY-Vigil of St. Lawrence, the development of legislation Martyr. III Class. Violet. Mass on adoption; requirements of Proper; No Gloria; Second natural law and Christian per­ Collect St. Roman, Martyr; no spectives; social problems of Creed; Common Preface. children depriVed of their nat­ SATURDAY St. Lawrence, ural family environment; and Martyr. II Class. :Red. Mass· educational problems raised by Proper; Gloria; no Creed; adoption. Common Preface. SUNDAY-X Sunday After Pen­ tecost. II Class. Green. Mast Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-St. Clare, Virgin. m Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Aug. n-5t. Thereea, !few Preface. Bedford. TUESDAY - Mass 01' previou. Our Lady of Victory, Sunday. IV Class. Green. MaSll Centerville. Proper; No Gloria; Second Col_ St. Joseph, Woods Hole. lect SS. Hippolytus and Cas­ sian, Martyrs; no Creed; Com­ Aug. 18 - 0 u r Lad y • f mon Preface. . Lourdes, Wellfleet. WEDNESDAY;-VigU of the As­ Our Lady of Grace, North sumption of the Blessed Vir­ . Westport.· gin Mary. II Class. Violet. Mass Sacred Heart, New Bed­ Proper; No Gloria; Second ford. Collect St. Eusebius, Confes­ lIOr; no Creed; Common Pref­ Aug. 25-St. Anthony of the ace. Desert, ~all River. THURSDAY-Assumption of the St. John the Baptist, Cen­ Blessed Virgin Mary. I Class. tral Village. White. Mass Prope.r; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Blessed Vir­ Sept. l-our Lady of the gin. Holy Day of Obligation. Assumption, New Bed­ ford. Our Lady of Mount 'Car­ mel, Seekonk. AUG.U Rev. Rap h a e I Marciniak, O.F.M., Conv., 1947, Pastor, Holy Cross, Fall River. 'HI MeHOI Second Class Postage Palll It Fill Illve'..! AUG. 15 MIlS. Published every Thursday It 41u Rev. Charles W. Cullen, 1928, Hllhlano ~venue Fill IIlver Mass, by tIte catholic Press Of the Olocll$e of Fall RIver. Founder, Holy Family, EaR SuIlscrlptlOll prll:e b, l1li11, postpakl $4" Taunton. HI' ,ear.

Lutheran Board Questions Ban On Prayer

London Cathedral

In New Setting

International Bureau To Study Adoptions

Mass Ordo

FORTY.H()URS

DEVOTION

Necrology

NEW YORK (NC)-Aca­ . demy of Medicine study hy noted an "interesting assa-' eiation" between sale of

NBW COADJUTOR AND AUXILIARY: Auxiliary Bishop Francis J. Furey, left, of Philadelphia has been n.amed Coadjutor Bishop with right of succession to Bishop Charles F. Buddy of San Diego. Msgr. Jerome J. Hastritch, right, Vicar General of the· Diocese of Madison, has been n,amed titular Bishop of Gurza and Auxiliary to Bishop . William P. O'Connor of Madison, Wis. NC Photo.

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Christian Duty Archbishop of Cincinnati Urges Faithful

Support Civil Rights Legislation

'CINCINNATI (NC) The Cincinnati has cal­ !eli it a Christian duty to sup­ the proposed civil rights legis­ la1:ion before Congress. .Archbishop Karl J. Alter said. "·we should urge favorable 8C­ tic,n on ·~e part of our repre­ sentative:; in enacting this legis­ lative program." .~ prominent member of the U. S. Hierarchy who has held several national posts in the Ch.urch, the prelate expressed hill views in a pastoral letter read in all churches of the arch­ diocese Sunday. lfle deplored the "grievous in­ jUf;tices" which Negroes suffer and said "the fact is that unless thE!re is 11 redress of grievance. now and not merely in the 1u- . ture, the cleavage between our citIzens and the resulting bitter- . neliS will continue to grow." Al~chbishop of

Divers Find Chalice St'olen 21 Years Ago SOUTH BEND (NC) - Two arEa skindivers exploring the depths of the St. Joseph river carne up with a chalice, ciborium and tabernacle stolen 21 years ago from St. Casimir's church here. 'fhe items were recovered by Go:rdon Lane of South Bend and Jim Smith of nearby Mishawaka. Th(~y wETe stolen from the church when it was under the pastorate of the late Father Cas­ imir Witucki. 'l'he chalice has the inscription "the Witucki family" on the underside of its base. The skin­ divers turned over their find to the presel:lt pastor of St. Casi­ mil'S, Father Bernard M. Nie-. miE,r, C.S.C., who said he would hav·e the .=halice refurbished.

I.egic.n of Decency '1he fonowing films are to be added to the lists in their re­ spe.=tive classifications: Unobjectionable for General Patronage-The Young aDd the Brave. Unobjectionable lor. ~ulta and AdolE,scents-Man With the X-nay Eyes. Unobjectionable for Adult.­ The V. I. P.'s.

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AUIBERTINE

salacious literature to mino~ and· an increase in illegitimaCJ' and venereal disease amon, them. The academy, in a report pre­ sented to State Senate Majority Leader Walter Mahoney, urge4 the state legislature to enact legislation in 1964 barring the sale of salacious literature • teenagers. While it offers no evidence fow a direct connection between the sale of salacious literature and increases in illegitimacy and venereal disease among minora, the report does hold that there is an "interesting association­ between these phenomena. It states positively that sal.. cious literature does no good to normal young people and dOM do "definite harm to disturbed teenagers." The report was prepared after several months' study by a groUIt of doctors who treat teenagers. The committee was headed ~ Dr. H. D. Kruse. LoD&,-Term Approach The report doe. not deal legal or moral questions relatin, to the sale of salacious literature but only with medical aspects CIC the problem. It notes that legislative actfoa Is not the onl,. solution to the problem, and says a long-tera approach is also needed, includ­ ing greater parental lnfluenee and better neighborhood envi­ ronments and improved recre.. tional facilities. The report suggests a parallel between legislation barriDl minors from buying liquor 01' viewing certain movies and leg­ islation forbidding the sale ., salacious literatuz:e to them.

The Archbishop, whose fenow bishop. elected him t.o six one­ year terms u chairman of the board of the National Catholie Welfare Conference, ·gave hla support to civil rights legisla­ tion during a recitation of reme­ dips he proposed to curb racial injustice. "The first remedy, one of prime importance," he said, "is the passage by Congress of a civil rights bill which will grant all citizens, irrespective of race and color, equal rights in voting, in admission to schools on ·all Np~ro

levels, in employment, in hoUl­ ing, public facilities and in rec­ TOLEDO (NC)-Recognizinl reation. and upholding the equal righta • It . is fully recognized that of Negroes is a Christian obliga­ equal social status necessarUy tion, Bishop George J. Rehrin, rests upon the full use of equal . of Toledo has told the people of opportunities, and ultimately his diocese. He has also asked upon equal qualifications. Our them to make amends for past Christian duty at present is to injustices suffered by Negroes. support in an articulate fashion "We must realize a race prob­ the proposed legislation which lem must be solved not on the is now before Congress...• basis of feeling," the Toledo prel­ ate said in a pastoral letter, ''but on the basis of sound reasoning. We must face the truth and we should not fear the conclusion. to which right reason will lead MILAN (NC)-The last ties of us. We have been commanded by the former Archbishop of Milan God tc love our fellowmen a. were ·severed here when two ourselves; we must accord to trucks left carrying more than every human being the treatment 300 pieces marked: "His Holi­ tc which we as human beinga ness, Vatican City." know we have a right; in thie The truckloads of cardboard matter we have 00 choice." boxes, trunks and wooden crates were the personal effects of Pope Paul VI sorted out by Monsignor Pasquale Macchi, the Pope's pri­ vate secretary, according to the Futter.' Dome

Pope's own instructions: 550 Locun s..

The greater part of the ,ship­ r.u alv. . . . . .

ment was made up of books. The other items included a crucifix, OS 2·2Jtl

a small iron bed, a prie-dieu and a small office cupboard contain­ Roae 1:. Sullivan

ing the personal correspondence I.flre., 1:. Sullivan

of the Pope.

Ohio Bishop Urges

Equality for

Pope's 'Belongings Moved from Milan

JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN

c. P. HARRINGTON FUNERAL HOME 986 Plymouth Avenue

Fan River, Mass.

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D. D. Sullivan & Sons

I:unf!ral Home

BROOKLAWN

FUNERAL HOME

PUNERAL HOME, INC.

Helen Aultertine .au,h

Owner aDd Dlreetor

46. LOCUST ITIIIT 'AU lIVER, MASS.

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Plight of Church In China Slowly Getting Worse ROME (NC)-The status ..r the Catholic Church in

Red China is getting worse. Travelers coming from Red

English Educator A.nlazed at Catholic School Relationship to A.merican Government

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 8, 1963

By Patricia McGowan

3

West· Harwich Parish Opens Campaign

A eourtly .I!illglish educator who has been visiting Fan River the past two weeks is politely astonished at the Church-State relationship that exists in the United States with Door-to-door, person.:co· regard to Catholic education. American Catholics share his astonishment, if not his cour­ person fund-raising for th'e tesy with regard to the situation. In England, Catholic schools are maintained and teachers' . rebuilding of Holy Trinity salaries paid by the govern­ Chur~h, West Harwich, de­ ment, explained James B. stroyed by fire last March, will begin Sunday, Aug. 11. Ashworth, cousin of Rev. At a meeting of the rebuilding Arthur Tansey; rector of St.

China speak of a general hard-. ening of communist opposition, according to Fides, a news serv­ ice issued here by the Sacred Congregation for the Propaga­ tion of the Faith. Fides speaks of a two-fold si­ Mary's Cathedral. He and his lence: Christians of the free world know almost nothing wife are the guests of Thomas Tansey, another cousin, of Holy about the Church in China and Chinese Catholics are absolutely Name parish, Fall River. Mr. Ashworth explained the ignorant of religious events in . situation in a paper on English the world outside. Catholic education: "Before the As far as is known, no news­ paper mentioned the Ecumenical famous Education Act of 1902, all Catholic schools had to be Council of Pope John's encycli­ cal on peace, Patem in Terris, or built, maintained in every re­ the awarding of the Balzan peace spect - including payment of prize to Pope John XXIII, the teachers' salaries - almost en­ tirely by the subscriptions of agency's report said. Catholics. There was a compar­ Check Churchgoers atively small capitation grant The death of Pope John and per' annum dependent on the the election of His Holiness Government Inspector's Report Pope Paul VI were mentioned in on the secular efficiency of the a few lines. school. Those were days of gr.eat Private letters to Bishops and hardship and of. great personal priests giving information about sacrifice on the part of each and the council· have brought no re­ every parish priest and each and sponse. every Catholic parent. (Parents The Church is still living but had to pay the rates and taxes public practice of religion varies as well as paying additionally greatly in different parts of Red for their own Catholic schools.)" China, Fides said. In rural dis­ Those "days of great hardship tricts where churches have been converted to other uses, there is and of great personal sacrifice" hardly any public practice. In are still with American Catho­ some places, the faithful think lics, Mr. Ashworth discovered that they can receive the sacra· with surprise. He was also per­ ments from "patriotic priests" turbed at hearing of the Su­ without fault, while in others preme Court decision banning prayer in public schools. "What they do not. In some places, government will be the result of this in a officials posted at church doors few genera.tions," he queried. Mr. Ashworth said that a reli­ take down the 'names of those who enter and keep a close gious instruction period is pro­ check on sermons, the report vided in English county schools, equivalent of American public said. schools. "It is non-denomina­ Priests in Prison tronal, however ," he explained, In Shanghai, Fides said, "pa­ "in other words, a kind of low­ triotic priests," who are a mi­ est common den0minator - the nority, are in charge of the Religion of Nobody taught. by eburches, which are generally Allybody." deserted by Christians. The Three Sons other priests are in prison, or in "camps for reform by labor" or The white-haired educator just missing. Priests held ~n toured New York City with Mr. work camps are forced to per­ and Mrs. Tansey before arriving !arm the most menial tasks. in Fall River. 'Next on the agen­ Newspapers constantly harp da for him and his wife is an on "class struggle" and the need important trip to Hamilton, to eliminate "bad elements," the· Ontario, where a son, Edward, is report said. anesthetist at General Hospital. A movement known as "Tsi­ There are three grandsons wait­ fan," although not aimed direct­ ing to be admired, two of whom ly at Catholics, has caused the the senior Ashworths have arrest of many Catholic laymen never seen. and several Religious. There are two otheJ; sons, both scientists. Francis is with the British Atomic Authority in London and Peter is a geophysi­ cist with plans to accompany th~ next British expedition to the Members o! the faculty of Antarctic. Bishop Cassidy High School re­ Mr. Ashworth retired in 1957 turn this week from. their Sum­ from headmastership Of St. John mer activities on the campuses Vianney Second'ary Technical of various colleges. . Sister John Mathilda and Sis­ ter Eugenia Marie pursued grad­ uate studies at Catholic Univer­ sity in Washington: D.C., the former in science, the latter in The Parish Golden Jubilee French. At Boston College Sis­ committee of St. Joseph's ter Paule Agnes continued work Church, No. Dighton is empha­ toward a Master's degree 'in En­ sizing two phases of the celebra­ glish, and at Rivier College Sis­ tion at the prese·nt writing. ter Margaret Eugene followed An appeal has been sent out eourses for her degree in Busi­ for the contacting of all charter ness Education. Mrs. Dorothea McGovern is a members of the parish and mem­ bers of the program committee, member of the Biological Insti­ under the chairmanship of Rich_ tute in session for the next two ard Martin, are completing the weeks at Wellesley College. work on the souvenir booklet. Sister John Eiizabeth attended William Bleau is general • week's Institute for Adminis­ chairman of the event and Mrs. trators at Boston College. Over .James Williams is serving as ZOO educators from all parts of co-chail·man. the United States participated in

the program of lectures and dis­

eussions developing the theme "Excellence in Education." Among school principals from

tbis Diocese attending an insti­ tute for administrators at Boston Proceeds from a clamboil in College were Sister Marie Jo­ St. Roch's parish hall, Fall seph, S.S.J., principal of st. Jo­ River, from 6 to 8 Saturday, Aug. seph's School, New Bedford and I'7, will be used to augment Sister Marie Celine, S.S.J., prin_ the building fund. Leonel Lavoie cipal of St. Jean Baptiste School,

and Roland Robillard are co­ also New Bedford. More than ehairmen of the affair, which is 300 educators attended sessions, open to the public. Mrs. Claire which were addressed by leading Carbonneau i6 ticket chairman. professionals in teaching field.

Teachers Pursue Higher Studies

No. Dighton Parish Nears Jubilee Day

fund committee. Rev. Finbarr McAloon, SS.CG., pastor, said that he had received ·some fairly large subscriptions and that one of the side altars for the new church has been donated. "However," he added, "while the fund continues to grow, it is a long way from $300,000, the amount needed. Now is the time to reach out to .all the visitors, tourists, vacationers, Summer and all year round residents who have not yet had the chance to give." Father McAloon noted that all within the parish boundaries, and even those geographically outside, realize the gap left in the parish by the loss of the church. He feels they will wel­ come the chance to have part in the rebuilding project and ac­ cept the necessity for fund-rail'­ ing in a generous' spirit. Complete Cost LeRoy W. Long, general chair. man of the committee, pointed out that the total amount of $300,000 will include the furnish­ ings of the completed church, a fact sometimes overlooked: Ev­ erything will be needed, 'he stressed, from the main altar. to wax tapers, including confes­ sionals, windows, pews-all the innumerable things important by sheer necessity. A great number of these items are still available as memorials, he said, and volunteer collectors will be able to suggest them as they make their rounds begin­ ning Sunday and continuing throughout August. It is hoped, concluded Mr. Long, that a backlog of pledges and contributions will be on JAMES B. ASHWORTH hand when construction of the new church begins next month. School in BlackpooI, Lancashire. recognized by the award of the

He organized the 'school ill 1934 Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal.

under Diocesan sponsorship and "It was the only time in my life at the titne of his retirement en_ I couldn't talk!" he said. SUSSEX (NC) - Prisoners in rollment was nearly 500 boys. The Ashworth's ·short stay in The school is Catholic, with an the United States has impressed several British jails have worked together to furnish a new 80­ entirely lay faculty, a quite un­ them deeply, most of all with usual arrangement in England, the friendliness of the ~people. seat Catholic chapel at Lewes prison here. Altar linens were sa:d Mr. Ashworth. Impressive in another way was· made by women prisoners at their first sight of New York London's Holloway jail. Since retirement, Mr. Ash­ worth has served as part time skyscrapers. Mr. Ashworth re­ lecturer at Blackpool Technical corded his reaction: "To' me College, usually conducting those magnificent structures of mathematics courses. He is by New York point to the skies as "Half the truth inspirations to the high and

n~ means overloaded with lei­ is often a great lie." noble ideals of a great nation. I

sure time, however. He is presi­ dent of his parish conference did not see them as blatant ex­

amples of a materialist philos­

of the St. Vincent de Paul Soci­ ety and very active in affairs of ophy exhibiting itself in archi­

the Blackpool and Fylde Society tectural arrogance.

for the Blind. "You are a wonderful people

Of the latter interest, he says, . capable of even more wonderful

"I was blinded for eight weeks achievemen*s and the greal:est of

as the result of a World War I all will be that of achieving the

injury and it left me with the Peace 'of Christ in the Reign of

desire to do whatever I could Christ."

for the sightless."

In 1957 Mr. Ashworth's years of service to the Church were

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Parish Picnic The Women's Guild and Men's Club of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, will co-sponsor a family picnic at the Boys Club Camp, Assonet from noon till sunset Sunday, Sept. 1. Games, swimming and other sports, and special awards are on the pro­ gram. Cars will be blessed at 4o'clock.

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4

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

Permit Catholics to Take Part In Traditional Chinese Rites

Predicts Council Will Help Vast Mission Territories MANILA (NC) - The ectlmenical council will un· doubtedly bring untold benefits to the vast mission terri­ tories of Asia and the Pacific, Rufino Cardinal Santos, Archbishop of Manila, said here. He added that laymen will play a major role in for the benison of light." bringing these ben e f'i t s gered He added that the council will about. Cardinal Santos spoke unquestionably consider the cre­ in an interview given to the ation of new ecclesiastical juris­ N.C.W.C. News Service. Asked why he thinks the courcil will aid the missions, he answered: "Because the council is de­ voting considerable attention to the expansion, promotion and maintenance of the missions. The bishops of the council will give impetus and stress to all con­ structive programs for the spread of the word of God in all these countries that long have hun-

Churchmen Favor Test Ba n Treaty CHICAGO (NC)-U.S. Senate ratification· of the nuclear test ban· treaty has been ur~ed in a Iltatement issued by Chicago religious leaders. Statement included Msgr. Daniel M. Cantwell, chaplain for the Catholic Council on Working Life and Father Gerard S. Grant, 5.J., of Loyola University here. "This treaty, as President Kennedy has pointed out, may signal an historic point in the eold war," the statement said. "In addition, it will eliminate the mounting dangers of radio­ active fallout; inhibit the spread of nuclear weapons to other na­ tions, and may form the basis for new confidence-building and tension-reducing measures that will eventually lead to the end ef the suicidal nuclear arms face."

Pope Notes Opening Of Radio Chilena VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul Vi marked the opening of a Catholic radio station in Chile with a messao;e to Raul Cardinal Henriquez, S.D.B., Archbishop of Sandiago. The Pope said that Radio Chil­ ena will be an instrument for "imrichin~ the reli.,!ious and so­ cial life of the Catholic Chilean people." "The light on the mountain, the Word of God, which runs through the valleys and over the mountains glorifying the Creator is the bread of daily culture and a school of education. These are the magnificent ideals which can attract all those Who' devote their energies, time and generosity to the apostolate of the communi­ cations media."

Observers Attend Lutheran Meeting HELSINKI (NC)-Father John Witte, S.J., of the Gregorian Uni­ versity in Rome and Father P. :Blaeser, M.S.C., of Paderborn, Germany, are representing the Holy See at the fourth assembly here of the Lutheran World Fed­ eration. The federation had invited the Holy See to send observers to the two-week meeting. On the a.!:1enda is a discussion ef relations with the Catholic world. Presiding officer at the meeting is Rev. Franklin C. Fry of New York, president of the United Lutheran Church in America.

Institute for Deaf Starts Fund Drive ST. LOUIS (NC)-St. Joseph Institute for the Deaf here has launched a drive to raise $200,­ 000 for a new building program. Aft additional $300,000 will come from Federal Hill-Burton funds 'and available institute funds. The first school for the deaf west of the Mississippi, the St. Joseph Institute was founded in 1837 by Sisters of St. Joseph. Today it has 70 day students and 90 boarders from 29 states and Canada.

dictions in mission areas, discuss ways of helping them financially and deal with the problem of how to convert their peoples ef­ fectively and permanently. He said that the council is deeply aware of the shortage of missionaries. That is probably one of the reasons why, he con­ tinued, there has been some dis­ cussion in the council of the pos­ sibility of ordaining specially trained laymen as deacons to help in the missions. Lay Apostles Cardinal Santos said he is also convinced that devoted and de­ dicated lay apostles, inspired by the teachings of the council, will be able to bring the missions closer to the Holy See. He stated: "Fired with a new zest and a true sense of mission, the laity will be inspired to participate more actively and extensively in theapostolate of the hierarcl1y. "Specifically, the laity will in­ creasingly find its place not only in the doctrinal field but also in the administration of the Church and in the coordination of missionary activities, which must reach the farthest nooks and CQrners of the world."

Urges Stronger Talk From Pulpit On Race Bias KANSAS CITY (NC) The day for roundabout al­ lusions from the pulpit te the evils of racism is pa-st, a priest said here in urging more effort by Catholic clergy to com­ bat racial discrimination. "Racism is the greatest domes­ tic moral evil we have,but it receives little attention from the pulpit," Msgr. Cantwell, chaplain of the Catholic Interracial Coun­ cil of Chicago, told a special clergy conference on race. He said "the day is past when priests can give a sermon on the broad outlines of charity and leave the people to draw their own conclusions." The meeting was part of a program initiated by Bishop Charles H. Helmsing of Kansas City-St. Joseph to engage the full resources of the diocese in the movement for racial justice. Shock Treatment The Bishop told the more than 100 priests at the meeting that "it sometimes takes the shock treatment to make us realize what a horror it is for a man to be judged by the color of h.js skin." He urged the priests to act with conviction in bringing to their parishioners a sense of re­ sponsibility for effecting lIOCial change. Msgr. Cantwell advised the prh.,ts not to "miss the ftlOod ~ the 1963 racial crisis," which he described as forcing kadeFs "to think big." "* * * The important thiag l~r us is to adequately assess the mood," he said. "It gives us the chance to get rid of the greatest social evil of our day. Despite whatever pain it costs, we must take advantage of tbe oppor­ tunity and join the Negro com­ munity in a positiv~ desil'~ for freedom for all."

eARDINAL SAN'l'OS

Scc.res Increase In Ta,'erns MONTREAL (NC) - The in­ creasing number of taverns and other liquor outlets in Montreal drew condemnation from Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbish­ op of Montreal. Speaking to several thousand members of the French Cana­ dian St. Jeanne d'Arc an'd Lacor­ daire temperance societies at St. Joseph's Ontory here, Cardinal Leger said: "Instead of m u I tip I yin g taverns and liquor-selling places, we 9 h 0 u :[ d be multiplying bakeries and flour mills t<l feed those who are dying of hunger. That is only eternal justice." Thf~ Cardinal also scored liquor advertising which, hi! said, "invites people to drink to quen,~h their thirst in Summer, and to warm themselv-es in Wint'er."

Uniiversity Heads To MeElt $It CU WASIDNGTON (NC) ' - More than 5(, heads of Catholic uni­ versitie.. from various countries will attend. the one-week tri­ ennial meeting here of the In­ ternational Federation of Cath­ olic UniveJ'sities, starting Sun­ day, Sept. 1. The meeling will be the fed­ eration's first in the U. S. and will take place at the Catholic University of America. The uni_ versity's rector, Msgr. William J. McDonald, first Ameiican fE'del:ation president, will pre­ side. .

j~id

Vietnamese

SAIGON (NC) American servi.cemen w~rking in the Mil­ itary Assistance Advisory Gr{)up (MAAG) headquarters here do­ nated t1:le equivalent of" $1 ,224 on last payday for local familiell stricken by two bomb explosiON outsi.de the MAAG compound.

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Enjioy Dining IN THE

TAIPEI (NC) - The Bishops allowed purely civic honors .. of Formosa have issued instruc­ be paid to Confucius and per_ tions to the clergy here regard­ mitted civic respect to be shown ing Catholic participation in tra­ the dead at pagan funerals in ditional Chinese rites and cere­ both Japan and Manchuria. In monies. 1939 Pope Pius XII approved for A joint statement signed by 'all China instructions of the· Thomas Cardinal Tien, S.V.D., Sacred Congregation. for the Apostolic Administrator of the Propagation of the Faith regard­ Taipei archdiocese, and other ing civic rites and respect shown pictures of the dead and tablet. Bishops laid down five rules: bearing their names. 1. Catholics invited to the ban_ quet which follows Pai-Pai may lVelcome ltuJingS attend if they do not enter the In the 17th and 18th centuriet pagan temple. (Pai-Pai is a pagan religious rite honoring a there had been hel,lted contro­ local god to which all friends versy among missionaries over whether certain rites were and relatives of the person giv­ merely civic or whether they ing it are invited.) 2. Tablets bearing the names involved superstition. Pope Ben­ of deceased persons may be set. edict banned further controversy out, but without the use. of the on the matter in 1742. term "Lingwei," which means Missioners in Formosa wel­ the 19cation or place of the soul. come the Bishop'S' ruling ibat 3. Bows or prostrations before Catholics may retain certain' these tablets or the coffins of cherished customs which are not superstitious. . Formerly many thl' deceased are permitted. 4. Catholics may place fruit or Chinese were deterred from be. other food before the tablets of eoming Catholics because thq the dead or before graves. thought the Church forbade re­ 5. The offering of paper spect for the dead. This' false money or the burning of it HI idea arose from the fact that prohibited. Catholics did not show the CUll­ In 1935 and 1936 Pope Pius XI tomar)' signs of respect.

Was St. Thomas Once In Mexico?

KecClllQ' we read an inkl'esiine beoIl by a writer from INDIA. _ fie aDibor placed pictu.... of alleie.' lDdiaD temples, eus&o~ a"elI, _ well .. hairdos, foods a . clotHS, eveD faces, side by side wit.. _ from Mexico and Peru-tIM idea beiDI .. prove tha' exploren ,...... India firs' discovered &belle OOuog'iell . . . n reminded u.s of tbe MexicaD· legend that ST. THOMAS aile APOSTLE once evangelisetl &here. One &bing seems ceriai.: aba. be did missiooU'J work .. INDiA. . Southern Chris'i. . then are eaUed TbomiM CJuistians. TI# Hoi, 'lIIb,,'s M;ss;oJf AHI .. &lie diocese 01 TRICHUR amonc

lor lin (hi,fIIM Ch'ff", * - Thomist Christians, in ....

.issioD ceiHer of PALGHAT, &he puter aud his 80ck are &l'3'inl .. build a churcll, rectory a.d eemetery . . . Their Bishop writeII .. say &hia area may k a bisb.pm . .e .ay, .. he "anta bllild­ IDp Dea' aDd a"rafl~ive fer Divine services, to «Ive a rood 1m­ preslliOD to Ute sea fill Hi.du ud MolIlems &bereaboDtlI. Par'" ionel'8 ne_her only 1500 ... Folll' ye.... aCO tbe ehurah basem." wu buUt, bat ao furtber pro&,r_ "a" de for laek ., ,. . . . Help" nceded to _tbe urellt 01 $5,* The Bishop bopell .. raise . . equal amount am.~ tIM! ,",oPle, "hose waces aver...e only ar_d $70 a year. Will you "elp him aDd St. ThomM .. further &he Church's ".rll ill this laDd "bere CatholiclI al'e ...y one per cen' 01 the popUlation!

A mOtlGHT FROM PL4TO The great philosopher .f Greece, Plato. once said that we shouldn't look too long at one beautiful object lest we cheat our­ selves from seeing others equally as beautiful. What's more, we'd fail to see the beauty that li~s behind beauty Maybe you have a beautiful-looking bank account. Why not translate some of that into the higher beauty of grace? You can, by help­ ing our MARY'S BANK CLUB and CHRYSOSTOM CLUB with $1 a month and a prayer for the education of Sisters and semi· narians. ANYONE FOR ADOPTING A SEMINARIAN OR SISTER?

Yes, this is the nicest Ilind of adoption lor by paying the expellll4lll

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cover eQenses . . . Sistel'll like SISTER BERCHMAN ...

SISTER PHILIP NERI, Carmelites 01. Kothamannlam, 1Dd1.,

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MASS STIPENDS. Please remember us when you are ha"JII'

Masses said. The 15,000 priests III NEAR and MIDDLE _AM

look to Ill! fiM' these, often their only d.lIy support.

"I'

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are ita JtERALA STATE ill the aouth. Just consider tile .....

W!k before lUI of bringing Christ's story te this country aIeM .••

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Loan to Hospital WASHINGTON (NC) - ~ Housing and Home Finance Agency has announced approval of a $900,000 college housing loan to St. Joseph's Hospital, Phoenix, Ariz., for construction of apartments for 48 interns and resident physicians. The hospital ill conducted by Sisters of Mercy.

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Chaplain Denies Missouri K of C Bars Negroes

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 8, 1963

Declares Chicago Anti-Smut Drive 'Only Beginning'

ST. LOUIS (NC) - The Missouri Knights of Colum­ bus have no "anti-negro" policy, Father Homer Noser

CmCAGO (N C ) - The' chairman of the Chicago Citizen.s for Decent Litera­ ture says he Is encouraged

of Bonne Terre, Missouri State

chaplain of the Knights, declared here. It was pointed out that while only one council of the 37 in the St. Louis metropolitan area is integrated, Negro members be­ long to councils in Springfield, Rolla, Fort Leonard Wood and .Iefierson City. K. of C. officials state that only a handful of Negroes have been proposed for membership in the Knights, an organization which has a well developed in­ .urance program. While three negative votes in • council are sufficient to pre­ yent a candidate's adm4ssion, 'I'homas Byrne, chairman of thE" St. Louis chapter, denied that this procedure is -intended to .iICourage Negro membership. PracUciDc Ca&hDlIe "Every potential member must 110 through the same procell8," he .id. ''The Knights have no "nti-Negro' polley. There is no ebjection at all til the colored but a man has to be recommend. M by one of the council mem­ bers before he can join." An­ other requirement is that the prospective member be a prac­ ticing Catholic. The 37 councils in the metro. politan area have a total of 5,500 members. The St. Louis University council is the only ODe with Negro membership.

Ii-Racial Council To Combat Bias NEW ORLEANS (NC)-A bi­ racial group has been formed here to promote a community climate of mutual understanding and respect among all peoples III New Orleans. Aim of the Community Rela­ a~>n6 Council of Greater New Orleans is to have all citizens work together to build a society based on equal opportunity for IlI1 persons. The ':::ouncil will seek to ac­ oomplish its goals through free communication, objective study et. community problems and dis­ eussion of economic and social wues at the conference table, laid W. Theodore Baptist, pres­

ident. Council consultants Include Benry Cabriac, director, South­ ent Field Service, National Catholic CQnference for Inter. ncial Justice; J. Harvey Kerns, executive director, U l' ban League of Greater New Orleans, • nd. Irwin Schulmann, director, Anti-Defamation 4ague B'nai B'-rith.

COLORED CARDINAL AT KNIGHTS CONVENTION: Laurian Cardinal Rugambwa M Bukoba, Tanganyika, first Negro cardinal attends the 48th annual convention of the Knights of St. Peter Claver in Indianapolis, Indiana. With him are his secretary, Father De&gratios, left, and Father Harold Perry, S.V.D., national chaplain of the Knights of St. Pet-er Claver and rector of St. Augustine's Mission Seminary, Bay St. Louis, Miss. NC PMte.

Churc'h Rectory Must Go to Market Place Need of Greater Suppport NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The "market place" is not going to come-10 the Church rectory ­ the Church must go to the market place through a televi­ sion screen, says the president of the Catholic Broadcasters As­ sociation. Father Kenny C. Sweeney of Indianapolis declared that Cath­ olic broadcasting in the United States "has been mediocre for the most part with only flashes of greatness now and then." "This mediocrity has been due to a lack of technical know-how, finance9 and lack of recognition of the potential power of the mass media," he asserted. "It is of divine commission by Christ to 'teach.' Many fail to realize that the mass media (radio, TV and the preSll) hold great influence as teachers." "Whe-n a priest appears on TV he is judged as representing the Church," said Father· Sweeney.

Church Encourages Apostolate of Sea

ST. LOUIS (NC) - "Seamen are endeavoring to form a revo­ lution to fight for their Christian heritage and the Church is be. hind them," Father Thomas A . McDonough, C.SS.R., secretary of the National Catholic Apos­ tleship of the Sea, U. S. A., said here. "Our work is to help seamen become convinced of their own aposUeship of the sea," he said. "We have to convince them of Rev. Edward J. Mitchel1, dio­ their work as Christ's couriers eesan priest, 'recently returned to all ports of the world." trom his studies in Rome, will The Redemptorist priest, one present an illustrated lecture on cf only four full.time port chap­ Ilia viewing of the events of the lains in the U. S., cautioned, Ecumenical Council, the burial however, that the Church "must et. the late Pope John XXIII, do this slowly." and the coronation of Our Doly "Seamen live in a unique, I'ather Paul VI. special world of their own, Fr. '!'hi. lecture, under the auspi­ McDonough noted. ''They are a ... of the Confraternity of minorit) group and are general_ Christian Doctrine Society of the ly not considered human. They . . Phu Tenth Church, will take are migrants. For all their ap­ .lace in the aUditorium of the parellt toughness, they are very Dennis-Yarmouth Regional High timid. It is only lately that the School, Station Avenue, South' Churcb bi beginning to be iden­ Yarmouth, on Sunday eveniOi, tified with the sailor. in the A.... 11, at 8 o'clock. OOl'ts of the world." 'l'be public is invited.

Father Mitchell Cape Speaker

Praises Priest WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen. Paul H. Douglas of Illinois paid tribute in the Senate to Father Kmest J. Zizka, O.S.B., of Chi­ -eo, who earlier this year cel. ebnlted the 40th anniversary of .... ordination and was from 19M ~ 1941 editor of the Narod, • Czeclwslovak Catholle newa­ paper pUblished in Chicpo.

5

~or

"The matter that he presents ie important, but the manner of presentation and the appearance of the speaker may be equally as important. "He must be trained to appear on TV." The religious program is often times marked by the introduc­ tion of squeaky organ music, stained glass windows and a church cross, said the 37-year­ old priest. "Catholic programs must com­ pete with the best before the eyes and ears to channel divine love to hearts and minds," Fat her Sweeney emphasized noting that hundreds of millions

Favors Government Out of Education

of dollars are spent by the Church in the field of parochial education, adding "only a few thousand dollars" are used for radio and television broad­ casting. He recalled that Pope Pius XII told the Church to get di­ rectly involved in newspaper. and broadcasting and Pope John XXIII "felt the importance of this direction and ~any times reaffirmed the position that the Church must become involved in the mass media."

Cursillos Courses In Santo Domingo

SAN.TO DOMiNGO (NC) ­ The Cursillos de Cristiandad movement has organized 22 STEUBENVILLE (NC) - The short courses on Christian teach­ Supreme Court verdict in the ings here for 700 men and school prayer case means that women, according to Santo Catholic weekly the g.overnment has been bluntly Domingo's Fides. told to get out of education ac­ Archbishop Octavio Beras of cording to Bishop John King Santo Domingo and Archbishop Mussio of Steubenville. Bishop' Mussio said he reached Emanuele Clarizio, Apostolic this conclusion in studying "the Nuncio to the Dominican Repub­ strained efforts of the judges to lic, sponsored the start of the drain public education of aU movement in the Dominican specific values and yet to em-. Republic in 1962. A secretariat phasize the importance of reli. filr the cursillos was set up last February. gion ir. life and development." The prelate urged a revamping of the American school system, retaining the present public schools as community institu­ tions "private in the sense of being operated by the chosen MAKES YOUR educators of a local community," CAR RUN BEnD and providing financial support for all schools through scholar­ /IttI N.w Car Dea.... ships or grants to parents. .... s.r"tee ItatioM Gilvernment's only interest in Iverywhen schools, the Ohio prelate assert­ ed, should be to insure that they prepare students for their obli. gations under the American wa., of life.

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K of C in Chicago Hit for Negro Bar CHICAGO (NC)-Two Cath. olic lay leaders have rebuked Chicago councils of the KnightS of Columbus for having 44,000 white members and not one Negro. The two are Mathew Ahmann. executive director of the Nation­ al Catholic Conference for Inter. racial Justice and John McDer­ mott, director of the Chicago Catholic Interracial Council.

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Mother General GREENSBURG (NC) - Sister M. Victoria Is the new Mother General of the Sisters of Charity of Mother Seton. A graduate of Bucknell University she re­ ceived a graduate degree In Eng­ lish from Fordham University and has served in various capa­ cities at Seton Hill College here in Pennsylama. She will aerve for six years.

Mass Media

over efforts to rid newsstands of pornography. "And the battle is just beginning," according to Edward Rekruciak, one of five members organization b e i n g sued for $375,000 by a New York publisher. "A year and a half ago only two Chicago policemen were responsible for ferreting out in­ decent literature," Rekruciak declared. "Now, because of an order by Police Superintendent O.W. Wils{)n, every beat police­ man is responsible for elimi­ nating pornography from ,his' district." Sellers Sue Since February 1962, there have been more than 100 arrests of sellers and distributors of questionable books and maga­ zines, Rekruciak stated, n9ting it is. important to make all aware of smut 80 they can be better prepared' to combat it; "Many good people don't have a knowledge of the availability of smut," Rekruciak said. "Good people are busy taking care of themselves while smut dealers are busy taking care of everyone else." Rekruciak and five members of the Chicago chapter in his decent literature group are being sued under the Sherman Anti-Trust law in Federal Dis­ trict Court by the Universal publishing and Distributing Company of New York. The suit contends the group is respon­ lIible for refusal of book com­ panies to handle the firm'. paperback9 in Chicago.

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6

THE ANCHOR-D.ioceseof Fall River-lhurs., Aug. 8, 1963

It's About Time

Not All Sordid

Elte••ieI

Lest the recent news from Britain give readers· a jaqndiced view of what is going on over there, information has just been released on a project suggested to British Catholics several months ago. These were asked to observe a voluntary fast for a single day and to give the money saved to the Catholic Fund for Overseas Development.' . , This voluntary family fast has produced $168,000 and the money is being used. to support such diverse works of charity as aiding a: center in the West Indies that treats malnutrition, subsidizing a Boys' Town in India, purchasing a herd of dairy buffaloes for Indian families on mission land, helping set up a local fishing industry in East Pakistan, maintaining a social and poultry farm in Tanganyika. This is charity at its finest. The giving of alms has always been one of the basic Christian activities. And the ideal has always been to deprive oneself of something in order that others may have more. The purpose of alms is twofold: to take from oneself-an act of sacrifice-and to give to oile in need because in him is seen the suffering Christ-an act of charity. This plan that was so successful throughout Britain is one that could well be adopted by groups or individual families. It brings those in need very close to a family, and enables the family to see the imlilediate effect of sacrifice in their Qwn lives on the lives of others. So the news coming out of Britain is not all sordid.

The Image Changes

PAVU REV. JAMES A. CLARK Assistant Director . Latin American Bureau, NCWC .

Latin Amerloa CalliD3"

One native priest cares :rnr the Christianity of 40,000 Catholics in Santa Cru., Peru, and yet this parish has

.

In ever-increasing volume, 'reports from Spain are coming in relating the strong stand taken by the Spanish bishops in favor ,of the workingman and especially their endorsement of the Spanish Workers Movement, a progres­ sive labor organization. For centuries now, the Spanish bishop has been pictured, and, unhappily, at times not inaccurately, as an aloof prelate exuding the spirit of authority but with little human warmth and intimate involvement with the common man. The image is changing. The Spanish bishops of the present have been trans­ lating into action-a slow but deliberate process-the social teachings of Leo XIII and Pius XI and Pius XII and John XXIII. The Spanish bishops have encouraged lay leaders to take up the challenge issued by all these Popes for laymen to heed and respond to the issues of the day. . It is a happy state of affairs that headway is now being made and the hierarchy and lay members of the Church in Spain are drawing closer together in mutual' concern and cooperation. That is as it must be. The Church is not the body of bishops or the priests. The Church is· not just those bearing the title of laymen. The Church is both. And both must work together to translate the Gospel, the "good news" of Christ, into action, bringing to the contemporary scene the justice and charity which Christ meant His followers to breathe into their world.

Some Differences :Delegates to the Lutheran World Federation meeting in Finland have chided one of their committees for failing to sum up Lutheran teaching in simple and easily-under­ stood language. And Lutheran theologians have been eritisized for being too technical in their language and have been urged to listen to the laymen and to speak in the language that he uses and understands. '.l"his is another example of the tendency that is evi­ dencing itself among all religious groups-that the various theologians present their dogmas not in the language that they use in speaking with one another within the group but in words that all understand. And this is a very good sign. It is not far wrong to say that the impetus given to more understanding among reli­ gious groups by the Vatican·Council accounts for much of this. Catholics are trying, as never before, to explain what they believe in words that non-Catholics understand. The first purpose of the ecumenical spirit is not compromise but understanding. And now non-Catholics ar~ re-exami!1ing their own beliefs and, in some surprising instances, realiz­ ing that they are not so far away from Catholics as both groups once thought. . Not all differences between Catholics and non-Catholics are differences of language. That would ~ too easy an assumption to work on and would lend to dissappointment. But some of the differences are jus-t that. And it is well that these be revealed. ,

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

~rODA1:-St. John Mary Vian­ nelr, Confessor. The "just man" is anxiou:3, in the sense of being watchful (Gospel), about one thing: his openness and accessi­ bility to the Word of God. Is he listening when the Lord calls? Is be present when the Lol'd comes? If the answer is "yes," then it will be no great chore to do the deeds we hymn and praise in this Mass. The chore is already done -in his a.ttentiveness to God.

~rOMOItROW Vigil of St. La'wrenee, Martyr. We prepare for thisu-aditionally important feast of a martyr by listening to Jews' invitation to self-denial and a ~ross (Gpspel). It is not a total self· denial He asks, for He expects and even insists that we wiBh to "save our lives." "He who would save his life will lose it." And he speaks of reward. It is not our "selves" at all we must den~" then, but that sin and preoccupation with lesser things which render our inner unity.

SATURDAY - St. Lawrence Martyr. "Where I am there also sh~lll my servant be" (Gospel). This is the glory of Christian death in ,general and of martyr­ dom in particular. A bountiful sowing Crirst Reading) of that which ma.n prizes most highly­ life itself _ brings a bountiful hal'vest. So the liturgy teaches us to offer our life in death, to make death a free gift rather tha.n to suffer it with violence. ~rENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST. In the midst of ciUes and whole countries torn and facing violence because of inj ustice in relations between groups of men, today's Mass re­ ite:rates that we are one in Christ. It is 0:31y through the Spirit tha.t we can say, "Jesus is the Lo:rd" (First Reading). And, say­ ing this, we are one in Him, whatever the variety of our gifta and talents. The Pharisee (Gos­ pel.) rejects this unity, holds himself aloof from his brothers (for holy reasons). ~rhe publican has rejected this unity, too, at times-that is why he is a sinner. But he admits his sin * * * and his fraternity. He la presumably ready to do some­ thing about it. Every celebration of the Mass means these things, bu·t this one spells it out.· The tragedy is that so many Chris­ tians still cannot "read" the pub­ lic worship of God's People, lind go on pla,ying the Pharisee who "shall be humbled."

1110NDAY-St. Clare, ViTgin. "You loved justice and hated wi,~kedness" (Entrance Hymn), we sing in tribute, first, to Christ thE: Lord, and then 10 those who,

60 per cent of the people attend­ ing Mass regularly, the highest vocation l' ate in all Latill America, a diM. i gent concenm . for receiving the last sacra­ ments and ., surplus of do­ nations for the needs of the lo­ cal'church. This pleasing proportion o:ll religious spirit cannot continue unless additio... al priests appear on the sce.De. Other religious groups have'. ... ready captured some 2000 co.... like today's saint, share His life verts because they have a suffi­ as faithful disciples. cient supply of personnel. This, the liturgy suggests, Js This land that so lacks prie. the true source of joy, of "glad­ is in almost every other way a ness." The First Reading sees taste of heaven. It lacks little it as faithfulness tot.he wedding that would make it more invi" vows between the Church and ing for it has water, electricity" Jesus Christ. The Gospel pro­ telephones, sea-level altitude, claims it as a sharing in the mar­ Recalling that the Buddhist up­ riage feast, of which the Mass warm but not humid climate, is earthly sign and sacrament. one single Spanish dialect in the whole area, and a good income TUESDAY-Mass as on Sun­ from agriculture, mining, coffee day. God .is the S1'viour of those and cattle raising. SignificantlJ' who suffer injustice, the righter it has churchl!s but not rectoriee. of wrongs, the one who will Test Area humble the proud. Entrance, The neighbor of Santa Cruz­ GradUal and Offertory Hymns fill the Christian people with Pucala-is a test area for the this confidence and hope. We are remedies recommended in the His instruments, so it must be. encyclicals for social ills as the achieved through us. But as long proprietors of the sugar and as we worship Him and are will­ cotton hacienda's seek to im­ ing to be His instruments, there prove the living and laboripg conditions of their workers. is hope of its achievement. If their hacienda cooperative WEDNESDAY - Vigil of Ule is successful it could become Assumption of the Blessed Vir­ the masterplan, the Christian gin Mary. Preparing to celebrate solution to the dilemma facing Mary's everlasting participation all landowners in Latin Amerieta in the glory of her S~n and in on how to overcome the defi­ His redeeming grace, we think ciencies of the present lanel of as one who heard the Word of ownership problem. Pity the poverty of prieste God and kept it (Gospel). The fruitfulness of the Word in her which curtails the contact of the reminds us that it is meant to Church from these Christiatl be sterile in none of us who solutions to the social problems. hear, in none of us who listen. Strangely enough the difficulty of finances which so plaguea priests eJsewhere on the globe i8 Pope Lduds British not present here for the planta­ tion owners promise to provide Study of Encyclical all necessary funds for the VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope priest's activities and yet they Paul VI praised a group of Brit­ guarantee along with the fundw ish Catholics here for making • freedom for the priest's intiative. special study of the encyclical Mater et Magistra. Expects Faster Pace Speaking in English at a spec­ ial audience for members of the Catholic Young Men's Society of At Council Session CINCINNATI (NC) Tb. Great Britain, the Pope urged them to give special attention to change of popes will not change the results of the Second Vatican the character of the Second Vat­ Council, whose second session ican Council, Archbishop Kad J. Alter believes. . starts Sunday, Sept. 29. "We are aware," he said, "that· T'h e Cincinnati Archbishop, your society has promoted • former chairman of the Nationel special study of the recent en­ Catholic Welfare Conference aeL. cyclical of Our predecessor, Pope , ministrative board, said he ~ John XXIII of happy memory. peets the Council, which resumes This is an excellent undertaking. Sept. 29, to follow "the course The knowledge of the teachings already set." The only change he of the Church is today very im­ looks for is in a "speeding up" portant and most useful, because of· the procedure of the councll they are a precious synthesis of meetings. the doctrine of Our Lord and of In addition to the liturgical human experience. They offer revisions approved by an ovell­ the key to solutions for many of whelming vote at the Council'e the problems of. thought and first session, Archbishop action in this modern world.· believes the Council will lead .. changes in canon law. These changes, he said, woulll Braille Catechism concern the further internation­ ADELAIDE (NC) - Prisoners alization of the Roman curia, the at nearby Yatala prison have Vatican administrative stalf, and 'transcribed the New Australian "a decentralization in favor 01 Catechism into Braille. The more local episcopal authority" prisoners' group works with the decide questions where local i_ Braille Writing AssociatiOil of formation and judgement . . required." South Australia.

A,t.


School Days of the Holy Father ~

.

THE .ANCHOR::"Oiocese of Fein River-Thurs., A~g. 8, '1963 . . .

-

~

·7

KNOW YOUR 'POPE: Life 'of Paul "VI

The Montini family had gathered together in their comfortable home in Brescia with a few close friends to hear an important announce­ ment. Grandmother Tagliani, al­ ready 92 years old, rose to tell the news: "Giovanni Battista has decided to become a priest." Today, nearly a half century later, Giovanni Battista Montini is Pope, and there are people liv­ ing in his hometown who still remember that fateful afternoon when his grandmother an­ nounced the decision. Don Luigi Benassi, now a par-' ish priest at nea~by Farfengo, said: "I remember it well, a Summer afternoon. As a friend of Giovanni Battista, I was pres­ ent. His grandmother said the HOLY FATHER'S MOmER boy had decided to become a priest. And she said it was a good example that others should shortly before seven o'clock and follow." the three Montini boys, followed Most Catholic boys, at some by their mother and father, stage of their growing-up, think would come out and walk to the of becoming a priest. Young local church for morning Mass. Montini's "decision" was probDuring the day there were set ably no more than that. He was times devoted to prayer. When in grammar school at the time. the family was at their Summer The subject was never again'. home at Verolavecchia, a bell mentioned until Giovanni had was rung at three o'clock each finished college. afternoon. No matter what their . During the years that inter-' activity, the boys stopped to. 'Yened there were strong traces / pray' for a few moments. of a priestly vocation, to be sure. From what Giovanni Montini's Like many Catholic boys, Gio­ friends say, there was little vanni Montini was also an altar doubt that he would <'ne day be- ~oy. Msgr. Morandini, now close eome a priest-:'and a great one. to. 90 . but still serving as parish Every morning the front door .. priest . in the nearby village of of the Montini house would open Marone,. recalls a conversation

with the young altar boy. "1 told him one day to sing the responSeS to the Mass," Msgr. Morandini remembers, "but Gio­ vanni Battista replied that he was tone deaf. 'What will you do when you are Bishop?' I asked him. And just think, he's Pope now!," During these formative years Giovanni was 'also active as a catechist in the Oratory of St. Philip Neri. At the invi~tion of . Father Carli, the rector of the Oratory, Giovanni helped to pre. pare children for their first Holy Communion and to review and explain the regular lessons for the.students. Father Carli recalls .that Giovanni Montini accepted this work with joy and his zeal brought about astonishing re­ sults. When he was 19 Montini vol­ unteered for the Army. Italy was involved in the First World War, and the son of a patriotic father was no less in love with his country or freedom than the elder Montini. He was turned down from the Army, however, because of hia poor health. That same year, 1916, Giovan.­

Council Session IFuneral1 For Latinist Trends RENSSELAER (NC) - An official theological advisor at the Second Vatican Council said here that the council's first session was "almost a solemn funeral of Latinist trends within the Catholic. Church". Father Bernard Haering, C.SS.R., said that He said the Church must prac­ during the council's first ses- . t~c~ penanc.e an~ humility if.re­ sion there was wide recogni- ' .1lgl<~US umty IS to become a t -Ion 0 f t h e need f or f ree dom reallty. Myster,. of VnU,. and diversity on the part of the Church in bringing the word of God to men. MLatin is kood as a means and as far as it is a means" F~ther Haering said. "But it i~ never a . goal. Our occidental thought ia good as a means to proclaim the word of God to occidental men but it is not good if we insist and expect that oriental men should express the divine truth in occidental thought." Father Haering spoke at St. Joseph's College here. The German-born theologian teaches at the Alphonsianum Institute, the International Redemptorist college in Rome.

The ecumenical council is "not yet a council of reunion because Our faith in the great mystery of unity is not yet deep enough," he'.said. . "Our readiness to do penance -that is the only way to unity­ is, not profound enough, but with tne grace of God a great step has been made, a greater step than 'we could hope for," he declared. He said "the Church of the Second Vatican Council is the Church of penance." "Only in the spirit of penance can we open our hearts to the Word of God, to Christ," he said. "And it is in penance that we look to the desire of the whole world."

AS PARISH CURATE

nI entered the seminary to pre­ pare for the priesthood. He en­ rolled at the Brescia Diocesan Seminary. But again, as in high school, he had to drop out of active en­ rollment. He studied on private. ly, under teachers from the sem. inary and with' the aid of .. kindly local priest. He showed both enthusiasm and talent, sometimes even trying his hand at trial sermons for the priest. Although he bad been in' ac­ tual attendance at the seminary for only six months out of the three years, Giovanni successful­ ly llassed his examinations in 1919. He was ordained a priest in the Brescia cathedral on May 29, 1919, and offered his first Mass in the Sanctuary of the Graces in Brescia. His taste of parish life was very brief. It lasted for only a . few months. Father Montini was not to return to the cares and joys of a shepherd of souls for thirty-five years, when he went to Milan as the Archbishop of Italy's largest diocese. In the Fall of that same year, after a Summer of parochial duties, the Bishop of Brescia aent him to Rome to live at the

Lombard Seminary and continue

AS WARSAW A'ITACIIII:

BARBERO'S PIZZA-PATIO

Pro9_ress in Spain Author Cites Economic Improvement In 25-Year Period

ST. BENEDICT (NC) - Spain has made outstanding progress, particularly in economic life, in the past quarter of a century, ac­ cording to Richard Pattee, wide­ ly traveled columnist and author. "The Spain of 1963 is now in the process of so total a transfor­ mation as to be no long~r recog­ nizable," he says in an "article in the July-August issue of St. Joseph magazine published here in Oregon. He says "the economic balance sheet is most striking." "Over the period of 25 years," ~ase he continues, "steel production ''Why does it balk at legislating has increased five times; coal for the welfare of its 20 million 100 per cent; * * * housing has loyal Negro citizens? Railroads quadrupled and irrigated land or other carriers are prohibited represents two and a half times * * * from confining livestock for what it was in 1935. In 1935 there

was' no automobile industry at more than 28 hours without un­ loading them int'o pens for at all; in 1962 a total of 76,200 motor least five hours for rest, water vehicles were manufactured." ,and feeding. Bas Grave Problems Pattee states that "the em­ "Are cows, hogs and sheep more valuable than human be. phasis on transforming the land ings? Is their rest, water and' economically has taken hold of " feeding a proper subject for con- the.popular imagination." · gressional legislative action but ''The Spanish are eager to the rest and feeding of .Negro emerge from the long years of . Americans in hotels, restauran~ · arid' other public places an im­ prOper subject for congressional action? High Duty

"Insofar as the Congress re­ sponds, favorably and decisively, COMPANY

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Says Congress Protects Live Stock But "Hesitates in of Negroes NEW YORK (NC)-Tbe Cath­ olic Interracial Council of New York has endorsed testimony given by an official of the NAACP before. a Senate sub. eommittee in Washington. George Hunton, council con­ sultant, praised the "eloquent language" and "over-all excel­ lence" of a statement made by Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Wilkins testified on the pUblic accommodations section of proposed civil rights legisla­ tion before a sub-committee ()f ~e Sen lte Commerce Com­ zpittee. " Subject for Action

The NAACP official told the subcommittee that "the propri­ etors of small establishments, in­ eluding tourist homes and gas­ oline filling stations, are no less obligated to render nondiscrim­ inatory public service than are the proprietors of huge empori­ ums or hostelries." "The Congress has legislated for the health and welfare of livestock," WitkiM continued.

PONTIFF'S FAmER

hia studies at the Gregorian trot­ veI'9ity and the University of Rome. He was still frail, but his health was better now, and he plunged with that familiar Mon. tini zeal into his new life. The following year Monsignor Giuseppe Pizzardo, Substitute Secretary of State, called in Father Montini for an interview. He liked what he saw. Despite diplomatic protests, the young priest from the north was at once enr.olled in the Ecclesiasti. cal Academy, which is Rome's diplomatic finishing school. Here he earned a degree in both civil and canon law. From the other universities came degrees in philosophy, theology and letters. At the age of 26, Father Mon­ tini was loaded down with de­ grees, influential friendS; and the reputation of being one of the sharpest young men in the city of Rome. . With ordination 10 the priest­ hood, his vocation was assured. Now his career in the Church was about to be launched. (Next week: The Apprentice Diplomat.)

FAIRHAVEN LUMBER

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8

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

Spec'iaI Atti tude To Adopred Child

Shopping Spree Ends in Buying

More of Same Style Clothes

By Mary Tinley Daly We - a friend and I - had arranged to meet our teen-age daughters at the store having the sale. "Be there right after work," our daughters had promised. So, evi­ dently, had half the teenagers in town, distaff half of those teeners. We have never ''But you already have print seen more girls congregated blouses, and plenty of skirts," in one spot, darting about, we advised. "Couldn't you find shouting to one another, something different?" bolding blouses up against them­ .elves before a mirror, con­ sulting, pon­ dering. "Do you think this does anything for me?" a strange girl asked as abe tried on an orange p r i n t over-blouse. Bright con­ trast ,to her brown eyes and dar k beehive bair-do, we as, lured her we thought it "did things," very pleasant things. ''Thanks,'' she smiled. "Hope my mother likes it. She was IUPposed to meet me here, but I, can't find her." , My friend Ruth ,md I found ourselves in a duplicate situa­ tion, hoping that some other mother, perhaps the mother of Dark Eyes, was assisting our daughters. , Look AUke "Seems incredible not to be able to spot your own offspring," . Ruth commented, "but honestlY9 they all look alike!" And look alike they di~ print blOUses, usually sleeveless, a la Mrs. Kennedy, wrap-around or straight skirts in every shade from drab olive to bright red, In lengths that would hardly trip them, even were they walking on their knees! Around most of the heads was the ine­ vitable head band or the tiny little bow perched on the fancier bair-dos. Loafers, sandals or sneakers were on the'hundreds 01. pairs of feet. "I didn't realize how much they look alike," Ruth sighed. "Suppose it's the 'peer group' psychology we hear so much about, the' 'rather be dead then different' way of thinking." Circumstantial evidence, in ,this group at least, seemed to support Ruth's observation, the feeling' of security in this rather insecure stage of life, that can come about by conforming pretty closely to one's contem­ poraries in the matter of dress. Finally, by the law that, given enough time, people moving about in a crowd eventually see every other member of the mob, Ruth' and I found our own daughters. They had been looking for us too, but hardly with undivided attention, the racks and tables of those sale items proving an irresistible at­ traction. Arms piled high with "poss.ibilities," the girls joined in the dressing room where ultimate decisions must be made:

.8

Catholic Woman Heads Korean Democrats SEOUL (NC)-A Catholic was elected to head the newly re­ Yived Democratic party. Joanna Park Soonchun, one of . the five supreme commissioners of the old, democratic party, i, the only Korean woman to head • political party. She is married to Paul Pyun, a former univer­ sity professor.

Central Village The Ladies Guild of St. Joba Ba'pti8t parish, Central Village, will meet . at 8 tonight in the parish hall.' Hostesses will be Mrs. Mary Best, Mrs. Virginia ~aral and Mrs. MarY Azevedo. Mrs. Jacqueline Hasson, bazaar chairman, announces that plans are complete for the annual event, to be held from H,to 9 Saturday, Aug. 10 in the parish hall and community house. A ham pnd bean supper will be featured :from 5:30 to 'L

Come-uppance was that they did not want anything "differ­ ent," they just wanted a more complete wardrobe of blouses and skirts "And these are such tremendous bargains" plus the fact that "that's what everybody wears' and we don't want to put on the same old thing time after time." Somewhat supinely, Ruth and I gave in, along with plenty 01. other mothers. This was standar­ dized equipment, seemingly ..... and the girls could jolly wen wear. 'em out before another shopping spree! On the way out of the store, Ruth and I and our somewhat reluct1Ult daughters stopped by the women's department of New 'Fall Fashions. "Capes!" I tried one on. , "And cape dresllCs!" from Ruth. "That's wbat everybody ~ going tobeweaiing. How'.· about coming back tomorrow, Mary, and get ourselves into1he procession?" , Agreed. In the back seat, on the way home, sat the girls, rejoicing over their buys of "what every­ body is wearing" and the some­ what ironic, "Isn't it just 'gr-reat that we're. out of high .school uniform and can wear what we please," So ,we go along with the "peer group," all 01. us, in outward ways, afraid of being "some kind of nut" if we vary. Thank goodness, though, tbat while we may all loo!\: alike, there is still room for individu­ ality in thinking, in action. and even a slight sense of revolt being cookies cut from the same cutter.

Says Spiritual Family Bulwark Against Reds ONAMIA (NC) ...... The spirit­ ual and moral guid1UlCe of a God-centered home is one of the best safeguardB against commu­ nism, according to J. Edgar Hoo­ ver. , The FBI director says in 11ft article in the July issue of To­ day's Family 'magazine, pUblish­ ed here in Minnesota by the Crosier Fathers, the "good home. -'the one which meets moral. and Spiritual at! well as physi­ cal needs adequately--is a basic . weapon in' the masshre struggle in which we are engaged." Declaring that 'the U.S. mUst' "build solid bulwaru agaimrt" eommunist 'expansion," he add, that "one ~ch bulwark unques­ tionably isa God-fearbil,' in­ formed family in a stable Amed- . can home." . "

Mexico's Anti-Religion Laws Still on Books

ME1~TS PRESIDENT: U. S. President John F. Kennedy grHeted members of the Girls' Nation gathered for their annnual meeting in Washington. He is chatting with Kath­ leE~n Ann Vorhies, newly elected president of Girls' Natio~ She is lL student at St. Anthony's High School, Wailuki, Ml~ui, Hawaii. NC Photo.

Action of Grace

Hoi), Father Cites Importance to Members

Of Catholic Organization

,rATICAN CITY '(NC) - An awarenesll of the action of grace ill II necellsity for Catholics who want to ~:ive a good example of thE'ir Faith in society, Pope Paul VI told a special audience grant-· ed to dlo<~esan presidents of the Italian Catholic Action organi­ astion. . 'l'he POI;Hl'S talk to the diocesan prtlSidentll was taken from the thE,me of their Rome meetinl, "L:iving Grace." He said: "The question of the super­ natural Hfe of Christians is not a cklctrinl! which can be ignored or considered to be of secondary 1mportanee in the religious plan. "It is :fundamental, as every­ on,~ knows, and it constitutes the profound, original and esseI}1ial . nucleus of the religious relafions wbich Christ established with tht! human beings who wished to follow Him and wished to be bOll1nd 10 Him not merely through llimple fidelity but also through 11ital communion." life rem.inded his listeners that thHY had already been told that thll ecumenical council is a call to a more attentive knowledge of the int'erior life of the Church, and not (Inly its exterior life. He eontinueCl: "Those who devote themselves

Hcoly F,other Goes le. Summer Villa

'lTATICAN CITY (NC)"":'PO];le Paul VI ldt Vatican City Moll,­ dB;, and went by ear to hI" Sum­ mt~r residence at Castelgandolfo. " 'rhe Pope left the Vatican' at 5:3:0 P.M. and arrived at the hill-' top village in the Alban Hilll about 20 miles south of RQmeat ~. He went immediately to a bal­ co:ny 'Qf the residence which overlookll the village, square to' blllSs thii townspeople for the fir st time since his election .. thl~ pontificate. . .' . , :Pope p'aul spent the laSt: night before the opening of the con­ eUlve which elected him at Cae­ ,telgandolfo as a guest of Dr. . Emilio l3onomelli,director of tb,e papal villa In Catltelgandolfo.

NEW ORLEANS (NC)­ Mexico's anti-religious laws are , still on the books, "but by and large they are, not enforced," a Me:x:ican nun commented here. "We are still careful not to, embarrass the officials by pub-. ' Jicly acting counter to the laws. We never wear our religious­ habits .on the streets. Instead we. WJe dark colored clothes wbeD we go out' in public, as do all other Mexican nuns," related Mother Maria of the Oblates' of the Holy Eucharist. She and Shter Benigna stopped off for a two-day rest at the Ursuline Convent here while enroute from Mexico City to Cincinnati. They are making the 4,500-mile trip by bus to learn how to bake better altar breads . from a community 01. Franciscan DUDI in CinciDnati. ' ,

~~RJ~CIA

BROS.

to the practical activity of bear­ ing witness to their Catholic Faith have, more than anyone else, .the need and the duty to foster 1D 'themselves the know­ ledge, reality and awareness of the living and personal contact with Christ through grace so that they . may experience within themselves and show others that their Faith is not a conventional display of given forms of tl)ought, customs and rites, but is a vital principle which gives ab­ solute' sincerity to their religious profession."

Home Mission Sisters Open 'Candidature' CINCINNATI (N C) - The Glenmary Home Mission Sisters have established a "candidature" for ,young women who apply for admission to the society. , ~other G.eneral Mary Cathe­ rine said the candidature will be "a period of preparation before the postulancy, the duration de­ pending upon the age and pre­ vious preparation of the candi­ date." Completion of high schOOl wUl be a requirement for entering the candidature, she said. Candi­ dates will attend classes at the Sisters' convent in Fayetteville, Ohio, and at the Ursuline Sis­

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-'------------~---------YOURS TO LOVE AND TO GlVEI 11M lie DAUGHTII Of IT. PAUL ...,. . . ,_", alltl . . . Ie N"II 1I11.wIetI. . IIIMI Ie". .. 'laN by .. Hilll ill • MIt.IOII which _ .... ~,..., A'idlo, MollOll PIctv.... lIII4 lV. Ie IIrbi, HI. WOld .to N"I. z.al_ """1 gi"'. 1".21 yea,. I"t.r••tod lit ..... _I..... Apo.tolcl'" lIlay write tel IEVEIEND M0rttEI IUPIIIOil

DAUGHTIII Of St. PAUL

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DAR-ES-SELAAM (NC) ­ Catholic missionaries here preaching the Gospel in the Swa­ hili language may find the going a bit easier in the future. The Tanganyika Catholic Sec­ retariat has announced it will be aided by Dutch-born Jan Knap­ pret, an authority on Swahili, in ,trying to bring uniformity in­ to the use of ecclesiastical ex­ pressions in the tongue. When the missionaries started to preach the Gospel in Swahili, new expressions had to be coin­ ed for such words as Pontifical High Mass, abbot and confession­ al, sinCe the natives' did no& know what they were.

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CYrTAWA (Ne) - Proper at­ titudes and motivations are necessary far successful adop­ tions, Father Peter McCabe, di­ rector of charities in the London diocese, told the provincial council of the Catholic Women', League at its meeting ~ere. Parents must make sure that the adopted child "feels secure and wanted and that he knows he is liked, not just because they chose him but because he ia • likeable person." Father McCabe said. "Some want a child to cuddle or fondle, to dress up and show off," he stated. "It, is surprising how many people seem to forget that a child is alive and a per­ son -that a child gets dirty, talks back and hates as well at! loves."

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THE ANCHOR-

Strong Conjugal Love Creates

Perfection"Holiness in Couple

Thurs.; Aug. 8, 1963

9

Name Di rector

By Father-Walter W. IlDbiorski Dear Father: ,Pope John the XXIII told us that love is the core of ,the Christian Life. St. John said God is love. Cana eon­ ferences ten husband and wife to love each other as the central and most important thing in marriage and child raising. What precisely is ,ood. Her love lacb the wight love anyway? Mary Ann and the courage to say. "Stop," Dear Mary Ann: Thia will. not the emotions. ia The most useful thing I the seat of love. It fa possible to

To Head Study NOTRE DAME (NC) - Reg_ inald A~ Neuwien hal been named ditector of a nationwide study of Catholie elementary and secondary education under­ way at Notre Oame University. Neuwien, who has been asso­ ciate director of the project. sue­ ceeds William Conley, who was recently named president of the new 'Sacred Heart University, Bridgeport, Conn. Neuwien'. appointment was announced by George N. ShU8tet. assistant to the president ot Notre Dame. who Is a member of a three-man committee with overall responsibility for the Catholic education study. Carnel'k Grant The other members are Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, G.S.C.. Notre Dame president. and Msgr. Frederick H. Hochwalt, execu­ tive secretary of the National Catholic Educational Association and d,irector of the Education Department, National Catholie Welfare Conference. ~he stud}', of Catholic educa­ tion is being financed by a $35Q,OOO grant from the Carnegie ,Corporation, New York.

un tell you about love ia that love without llklng. The dirty, you will never get a precise crippled, ugly begger who comes definition that illuminate. the to the back door may be com­ whole subject for you. Love pletely repulsive but if he ~ sent away with a coin. eome bread mtut be discovered. savored. ex­ perienced and contemplated in and a blessing he hal been loved. • thousand forms for a thou­ ,"Liking" i. an emotion and the ADd day. before understanding movement of the emotions can­ not ~lways be controlled. . begins. Love Is Creative A clinical analysis UI fore­ Our Lord never commanded .oomed. but let's .ee if we can capture some glimmers and in­ OJ to like everyone. but He did ,command U8 to love all men. to qIlts­ aeek and do theit g!lod. 11\ mar­ 'Misused Term' Love i. a much misused term. riage then. when the husband Men rarely use the word. They ~ thoughtless and cruel, the wife think it effeminate. Women use harsh and insulting, when emo­ it indiscriminately referring to tions of anger and vengeance well up, it is at these moments mother, fla, or finger nail pol­ ish. Love ia not sex. Love can ot disliking that love is tried. Real love. that 'is. the realization even exist without sex, as be­ ,tween a mother and daughter 9r that I am bound and committed , TO PU~RTO RICO: Membel'l of the La,. Extension two marines dying on a bloody to discover and will and do the Volunteers leave Idlewild Airport for teaching assignmerits good of this person. must take beachhead. Sex is wonderful be­ over.·" ' , 'in Puerto Rico. The' yOung ladies and'the colleges they attend cause God· designed it; it J$-, a 'Love is' creative. It creates the 'are~left to right: Joanne Barkley~St~ Joseph's College, means toward love in mariage. 'lover; If I love an orange, I de­ 'Emmitsburg, Md.; Veronica Carioll~ St. Joseph's College, but love, is far .stronger.. . , Love is not self-seeking. Susan site to possess it. I eat it up. I ,Emmitsburg, Md.; Diedere Carlfu" St. Joseph's College, says: "John has ,gotten a raise. have gained something. protein. Brooklyn, N.Y.; Margaret DeRocco, St. Theresa College, Now, if I play my cards right­ carbohydrate. energy. I· have 'Winona; Minn.; Patricia Quinn, Caldwell College, Caldwell, , DUBUQUE (NC)-Archbtshop ,anticipate his every whim and changed, I have been added to~ , want, and wait on him hand and , If I love a symphony and N. J.; and Catherine Sciacca, St. Joseph's College, Brooklyn, James J. Byrne of Dubuque baa loot, I can get that mink coat by , give myself to the music' and ;N.,Y. NC P.JJ.oto. asked the people of his archdio­ 'let it flow'over me and become Christmas." ' ' cese not to attend or participate part of me; I am changed. I am This expreiiee. a mere facade in beauty contests in which the , richer 'for the' experience. ''if I 01 love. falie because ahe is not contestants parade about In oonsidering the good of the one love a person, I will change my­ bathing suita. beloved. She is loving herself self. In a letter published in the Kir'rored in the eyes of his be­ and using lohn for her OWil Iowa archdiocesan paper. the Visitation Nuns to Convert Girls' School

loved, a man sees hia ideal .elf, eolb, Witness. the Archbishop said: "I "what .he wanta me to be. what Seeb 1IIchf* GeM ask all Catholic women in thu In St. Louis County

she believes that I am." I am What then ia love? The defini­ archdiocese to have nothin, to tion is prosaic but profllUDd. motivated and inspired perh~ ST. LOUIS (NC) - A dole- lem, caused by the faet ibat do with any 'beauty contest' that to mave moreo!ten, stop ,itainki.ng, willing and accoa­ embodies bathing-suited contest­ tered eommunity el nuns Hi eon- religioe deals in abstract eon­ plilhing the highest good fOIl' iIIe CW'Iing. to be more sensitive, te yerttne .. fashionable etrU' cepta and In the put has heeD ants being paraded and judged. forget 'fear. to use and live up other.. Thinking ia essential. As "I also ask all Catholic men to 8ChGOl here into a full-f1eclged taught. for the most pari, ver­ pimal cannot love becalUe it to the talents I possess, that ~ MootealOri-type IlChooL 'ba1I.J'. ,'have nothing to do with arrang­ ' ' ..... 1 am perfected in love. eannot think. It cannot figure ing such a contest. I ask all Cath­ 'God i'll Me' The ~chQol is Visitation Aea­ ,BeU&,IOIl CIa!l!Mlll out what the real good of u. ,oUes to abstain. from attendioC , In love the beloved is create4. ~y, wblch moved to a new. $I "The Montessori method, on the other animal 1& any such exhibition.· • In conjugal love, the norm 'ot A shy and frightened child million campu. in wburban $t. ottier hand, .tresses the develop­ comes to school and encoUnterl Louis County last year. The ment of the child through highly · l(We is not my own will, nor a teacher who is warm and un­ acade~y. originally opened It. structured equipment. materiaL'l , wen' excluMvel,. what· the be­ Civil War. and app8!atus. The verbal ap­ loved wants. but tather real derstanding, sympathetic ad doors here before 'What · Deed of the otherperlOll,' You ·patient, and soon the chUd be­ , 'It had SQme' 367 studel1tS in 11'. proach is foreign to the method. gins to be drawn out, to attempt 'gra~es during the pastS(lhooi But ' at, Visitation. religion , must love aeearding to the needs things to' live up to the promise year. classes will be approached with 01 ,the spouse. ',' an effort to teach children to ex­ I remember,a, certain coun· that UI in him. The Visitation experiment Is ' perierice God and theit rela­ " A 'wife ,who bring. strengths · selling case in, which an elec­ , cOMidered" noteworthy because ' tionship 'to God, she said. The vonics engineer 12resented his "and, weaknesses into het mar­ one criticism leveled at Mon­ lit,Urgy, com b file d with the riage. if she' is loved, can say, wife with a ranch house, a sta­ tesorri-type schools m the past Scriptures, will be among the "'Although he knows the worst tion wagon, a mink and a maId, has been the absence of reU­ instruments used. ' and yet was so preoccupied with of me, yet he desires me. There­ "There is no curriculum estab­ gious orientatiOn. his career (70 hours a week) fore there is good in me." This frees her from fears and Sister Francis Marie O'Con­ llshed, but we will certainly that he never gave her his time, his thoughts, his heart. or him­ anxieties, allows her to meet life nor" principal of the academy, by pas Ii the 'learn - by - rote· and experience and become a a,dmitted that there was a prob- method." Sister Anne Madelaine, self. She wants a divorce be­ who recently com.pleted her "in­ caUse he loved her according to valiant woman. As the warmth .•. A Franciscan Sister! of the IIU1l ltlowly draws buds ternship" in Montessori training, his will, not her needs. 'said. ' into blossom.' so strong. secure, Nurses' Award, GIVING YOURSELF to • Seated in Will intimate conjugal love teaches," The Attl~boro 'Area Catholic ·life completely dedicated to ~onsider the kind of wife who the salvation of lOW. :. . sees hel:' husband drink six .-or creates in and educes from the ;, NUrses' '. G:iJ,ild' has 'awarded • TAKE TIME OUT, through prayer, work,aac­ .even 'Bourbons everj' evening couple, the per1~ion of their 'partial scholarship :to Miss Ann 01. • rifice and joy;. • . by USinI >' "for. P.rsona' Inventory' I (''because .it'relaxes rne, becaUse . personalities, which is holiness. M.Guillette of pl61nfield. Vlce­ your talent. a Nurae. 'prftident 'of her parish CYO and .; I am under 'Pressure, because I and Renewal Laboratory and X-Ray Tech­ :an honor student 4t hlgb School, need a stimulant") and 'wafICf1,es Pre'J'ate to Make A Week-End nician. Secretary,' Account­ MiN Guillette' will enter 1be his social drinking become. al- : Retreat Celiter ant, Dietitian, SeamJltreA. , Rhode Island Hospital Scho91 of coholism without protest· or "", "Retre~tat the ' HENRY (NC)......King·s House, , ,If~ing. Cook. as well u in other '. ,, , remonstrance. hospital departments and In Holy Cross Fathers She is not really lovin& her' first, retre.at center of the Peoria a new extension of ow husband because her norm is the diocese. will be dedicated Thurs­ Retreat House work in the Catechetical and IIlisguided will of the beloved clay, Aug. 22 by Biahop John B. Rte. 138, No. Easton, Mass. Social Service Fields.. aod not his real need or real Franz of. Peoria. More than 1,000 men. women There I. No Greater Charity! Men. Womerl - Couples FOR YOUNG WOMEN and high school youths have at-

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10

THEANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River-Thurs., Aug~ ,8, 1963.. '. - ". ". .... -. .'. ' ~.

'

.

"

\

OUR LADY OF THE LAKE: Oh, to be young and at Our Lady of the Lake Girls' Day Camp! What fun they have we see as left, Jane POWE!rS and Janice McDermott, both Fall River, learn the fine points of h;fmdcraft from Sister Mary Therese, S.N.D.; as Briana' and Eileen Doherty, both

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North Dighton, go asailing with Amle Murphy, .instructor; and right, as Mary Mikina, New Bedford, goes merrily water skiing uDder watchful . eye of Kathleen Hughes. The Sisters of Notre Dame of Stang High staff the Girls' Camp. .

Caught Imagination Welcomes

LAKE JANALUSKA (NC) ical (:oncern and effort; and drsA new Catholic spirit linked .matii:ally bya single momen­ with .ectimenism is in evidence ' tous single event, the second VATICAN CITY (NC) tOday, Archbishop Paul J. Halli- Vatic,an Council." nan of Atlanta told the meeting The Archbishop stressed that Pope Paul VI tOld a group of of the World Methodist Council this renovation and renewal is Vietnamese students that here in North Carolina. in no senSI! a turning back by their nation's unity can be "For an Archbishop of the . the Church upon the past, "be­ found in the Christian brother­ Catholic Church to come before cauSE~' the past iB her inheri­ hood that exists in the Catholic • distinguished assembly 01. - tance' . . . Faith:! Methodists is surely a sign of our 'Council 'Unforgettable" Speaking in French, he wel­ times, of this brave new world of "Yet," he said, "a new Cath.. comed them as the "living echo the. ecumenical impulse," the oUc ilpirit· is evident today-en­ of a country which We love. Archbishop said. "Yet it i s . kmdled, under God,' by our. greatly and whose merits, needs,. blessed sign of this age ·that the 'POpeil and bishops, preached and high civilization and Buffering' bravery no longer liea in your' encourageQ by our .prie~s and We know well," He assured them inviting me, nor in my willing- teachers, put into practice by of the "esteem, s~pathy and ness to' accept·, but rather in our our people " •• It .is not a spirit hope with which We watch your mutual· courage to· -face the' . 'of disriiptio:cl nor rejection. Much present and your future," future." 'less is it on4~ of compromise with The Pope called the stud,en~' ,The World Methodist Councn othel' beliefs, Q1' of easy accom­ attention. to a. cons,i,deration " has - a 19,272,185 . members . modation k; the pressures of the

which, ~e said, "Is ~ert~inlY ~ot, throughout the world, 15 million world.'

new to you but WhICh IS ~lways . ·of, them in North America.

fruitf~, ~nd which ~o Our way ''We are witnesses of a great . . . of thmkm~ cann~t ?,e passe.d 'hist~ric shift, from 'what ,might' over at thIS me~tmg:. be termed the. 'post-Reformation POP!! Paul cont.lUued. . centuries' to a new periOd of' "You are here lU Rome and in Church history" the Archbishop . BATON :ROUGE' (NC)-Bish- . the house of the Pope, yet you Ilaid" op Hobert Emmett Tracy has are not strangers here. You are" .' ordeI'ed ra.cial integration at received as friends and as citi­ "It is marked on the Catho­ four Catholic high schools in zens and, if you have the good lic side by a sertes of remark­ Septc~mber 1964, as the "initial fortune of being a Catholic, you able;! popes from Leo XIII to. step toward abolition of segrega­ are received as sons and broth­ Paul VI; by a resurgence of Bib­ tion in all Catholic insti,tutions ers. . lical and patristic studies, new in the Baton Rouge diocese. Th,e' announcement was made We call this friendship and ~astor~l methods, reform of the spiritual parenthood to your at~, liturgy, and increased ecumen­ in a paStoral letter read in all tention to remind you of the diocesan Catholic churches. universal character of the Bishop ~~racy directed that. Church,' which has this city as . ~cialbars. be ~I)pped in the its center but whose mission is 11th and 12th grades of four. to spread its evangelicalmes­ DAYTON '(NC)-The Dayton Catholic high schools in East' sage of. brotherhood throughout Board . of Education has ended a BatOJl Rouge.' I . Bible reading the entIre wor d. 'Th,~- prelate sal'd th;~ .' policy of required ... WJ'U brI'ng "ThInk of it. You see that you and recitation of the Lord's the Catholi<: high schools in line are here in one of the most in­ Prayer in this Ohio city's .public with public schools which will teresting points in time and schools. begin accepting. Negro students space because the secret of this in the 12th grade in September. place is unity. And, if you have It was up.derstOod, however, The integration of the public the Faith, We can tell you that that these practices may' be con­ school:! was ordered 8B a result the mystery of .the unity which tinued in, public school' class­ of a recent Federal court order one must discover is here." rooms at .the discretion Of·indii­ alter an eillh1;.year legal battle. The marvel of this discovery, vidual teachers. Bishop TrHCY said the court the Pope said, is in the fact th~t The ed!Jeation board acted on ordeI' came too late to effect in­ ..this spiritual voCation of unity the advice of City Attorney Her­ tegration for - the Catholic applies just as well to your n;l~ bert S. Beane that required re­ ~hoc'16 this yeSI'. 1ion ~. it does to others," ., 'ligious exercises in" publte schools are contrary to the U;~. n~f,."D/Orsa ~eceives Supreme Court's ruling against public school prayer and Bible reading. FO~T: JACKSON (NC)-Gen•. Charles'S. D'Orsa,' commander Q~ake of F~rt Jackson was pre. FREIBURG (NC)-The Inter­ sented:' with the Cross of the (;rand Order of Knights of St. national Caritas (Catholic Char_ Gregory the Great here, by Msgr. ities) organization has respond­ Southeastlar" Mallachusetts'

Donald C. Hamburger, personal ed quickly to the emergency in Larljlest lI,dependent Chain

representative of Bishop Francis quake-ridden Skoplje, Yugosla­ via, sending medical teams with F. Reb. of Charleston, S. C. Gen. D'Orsa was named .for blood plasma, bandages and the honor last May by the late medicines valued at more thaJ,l We! Give Gold Bond Stamps' $10,000•. Pope John XXIIL

. Ref~rring to the Second Vat-: 'ican 'Council, the Archbishop sMd that "statistically the re­ sults seem rather meager," but "in the familiar language of 'opening doors and window' ** • the eight weeks of the first ses­ Sion were unforgettable for all of us who participated, unfor. gettable too for the Church, and it may well be unforgettable for the Christian society and the world at latge," He added that it was probably the wide open .debate at. the. Council "that best caught the iIllagination' of the world," and that a result of it "the ,pop. ular picture of. the. Catholic. Church' ~ a vast monolith is bEidly ;Shattered,"

Test Ban Treaty

WASHINGTON (NC) - The president of the Catholic Associ. ation for International Peace hal welcomed the limited test ball treaty negotiated by the United States, Russia and Great Britain.' CAIP president Harry W. Flan­ nery said in a statement that the treaty offers "the first glimmer of hope" that the free and com­ munist worlds may have' achie­ ved a climate in which true dis­ arm8meI\t will be possible.

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'rH!'ANCHOR-Dioee;,~ of Fan Rl~er~,",u~., Aug: 8, 1963

BOYS, BATS, BOATS, GUNS: Those are some of the ingredients of • successful day camp and Cathedral Camp has 'em in abundance. Left, Wayne Grenier, Dartmouth, swings the'bat as John Schroeder~ Fall River, waits to catch and Ronald Gamache, New Bedford, is umpire. Center,

Status of Church In Free Malta Is Undecided

1t

Robert Lopes, Taunton, and Edward Tucker, Fairhaven, pay strict at­ , tention to Instructor Albert Hamel, ,center. Right, Ronald Rheaume, Fall' River and Michael CUrran, Taunton, lear,n about rifles from James Stager. 'Diocesan Seminarians staff the camp.

Liturgical Week To Feature English Mass

Catholics Up 2,000

CHUN CHEON (NC) -Irish­ PHILADELPHIA (NC) '-- A gregation (Introit); the Lord ,After .tbe homily the priest born Bishop Thomas Quinlan, : demonstration sung Mass in Have Mercy (Kyrie); the Glory . goes ,to ,the, altar. for the first S.S.C., of Chun Cheon sai~ here English will be featured at the to God (Gloria); and the prayer time to begin the Preparation of that the number of Catholics in National Liturgical Week to be . oJ. the people (Ora,tion). the Gifts (Offertory). There the ..Is divided diocese has gone up LONDON'(NC) - The fu­ held by 2,057 during the past year to here starting Monday, Aug. priest reads a list l)f interces­ The' section called the Cele­ ture status of the Roman 19. bration of the Word includes the sions called "bidding-prayers," 42,821. The Demilitarized Zon& North and South Catholic Church in Malta The most unusual feature of Epistle; a meditation. song which beg God's blessings on all dividing was left unresolved in the the new Mass is that no part of (Gradual); the Gospel; and hom­ classes of men. The people stand Korea cuts off a third of the when the priest sings the prayer diocese. British government's decision to the liturgy is performed at the ily. over the gifts of bread and wine. grant the island independence b7 altar until the Offertory. All acMay 31, 1964, Commonwealth tion up to that point takes place Not Ileal Offcrinc and Colonial Secretary Duncan at the 'lectern and ambo, a small The Canon of the Mass will be AVE MARIA platform from which the Epistle Sandys said here. recited aloud. At the end of the GRAND FALL TOUR, Sandys told the House of Com­ 'and Gospel are read or sung. 'Pri~ate Canon the, celebrant will raise mons at the close of two weeks Almost 6 Weeks 7 Countri.. Recommendations of liturgists the conSecrated bread and wine of talks with Malta's political arid proposals made at the first BRASILIA' (NC)-The Arch­ so all the ,people can see them, OCT. 5 - NOV. 12 leaders that there are still seve- . ~siOJ'1' of the 'Second Vatican bishop of this Brazilian capital mstead .oJ. the slight elevation SS INDEPENDENCE ral outstanding questions to be Council 'guided . the. oommittee 'has underscored the 'need to re­ which,is customary now., 55 AMERICA settled, including the position oJ. Oklahoma priests' who com- lipect the rights of private prop­ The last section of the MaSs, $693.00 of the Church. pOsed.' the demonstration Mass.. ' 'erty in arty land reform program. ,tb'e Communion Rite, begins 'Tour price includes: The' Church's code 'of canon The committee is directed by 'Speaking to a congregation in with the OW' Father and closes Transatlantic steamship, Sightseeing, law J)ow has the status of civil Father David Jones, consultor to his. cathedral that included PreB­ with a hymn of thanksgiving. servicei Of Spiritual director, baily law for Malta's 330,000 people, the Oklahoma-Tulsa diocesan identJoao Goulart, Archbishop' , The purpose of the demonstra­ Mass On· Land and Sea, Most famous nearly all of whom are Catholics. liturgical commission.. ' .' ,. JPBe Newton de Almeide Batiste tion Mass, whicb is not a real Shrines, Land transportation in Deluxe Malta's law does not recognize Pre~aiiOJloi GUts • • said· that the Church has been offering of the Mas,'S, ,is to ex­ Motor . cOaches. Experienced tour ... , civil marriage and divorce. s~pporting land reform for 15 , . p~ain the, meaning of the Holy corts, first Clots or best accommoda-: Wants Changs The first part of. the new Ma'ss years in Brazil.· Sacrifice ,as' it 18 now, and to tions if! hotels, twin bedded rooms, The opposition Maltese Labor (Mass of the CateChumens) i8 He then made the point that show what the Mass could be first dots' train travel with reserved party wants this status changed. divided into two sections.: the· the Church opposes collectiviza­ like within a few years. MOts, most meals. The ruling Nationalist party and Entrance Rite and the Celebra- tion ,of· agriculture and defends three smaller parties want the tion of the Word. the principle of private property status kept as is. The Entrance Rite includes the as being rooted in natural law. Sandys told the Commons that entrance 'song' sung by the con~ Th e B raZl'1'Ian bOsh TRAVEL AGENCY

lOPS, wht'le he has invited Premier Giorgo backing land reform as a gen­ 49 Centre St.,

Borg Olivier to hold discussions • BUILDING MATERIALS eral goal, are divided on the West Quincy, Mass.

in Malta with representatives of means. Some support a plan to GR 2-3232 • NEW HOMES all the political parties on the re­ take over estates and pay for 107 South St., Hingham maining . disagreements. '. BUILD:NG SITES them 'with long term govern- , Mass. RI 9-9500 Should the parties fail to reach ment securities. Others hold that VA 2-7186

agreement, the outstanding is­ Crvi_, steamship, tou", hote'" ,BERLIN (NC) -A vigorous witli Brazil's runaway inflation TAUNTON, MASS.

air, car-hir•• sues will be referred for decision defense of the late Pope Pius XII this would be the equivolent of ' "either to the people of Malta against a playwright's accusa­ confiscation. . or to the British government." tion that he was soft to, nazi anti-Semitism has been pub­ libhed here in book form. Pope Pius' defender is Msgr. Walter Adolph, who was active in work with the laity in the SACRAM~NTO (NC) Cal­ .Berlin diocese in the 1930s and ifornia's Gov. Edmund G. (Pat)­ 15 now vicar general of the dio­ Brown issued an executive order cese. His target is the play "The Hyannis

outlawing discrimination by pri- . Vicar" (Del' Stellver!J;eter) by . ~Rolf Hochhuth, already seen in 335 Wint... 5t. 5.p. 5·0079 Tate businesses which have deal­ Berlin and London and sched­ ings with the State. :, NOVEMBER 2, 1963 The eode of fair practices order uled for a New York production. In rebuttal of Hochhuth's the­ bans' discrimination by state unoor the aUBPices of the agencies and requu-es them to , sis that Pius XII failed to do IN initiate a "special' recruitment what hE: could to save the Jews of Germany and eastern Europe progr~m" if exi~ting job ,patterns IT'. IUggest "something less than from extermination by Hitler, Msgr. Adolph draws on-his own eompl¢te adherence" to the orr All inclusive - Cost $1,790.00 THE ' experiences 'to conclude that del'. ' The order also is aimed at Hochhuth oversimplilied the sit­ Leaving New York or Boston to visit San Francisco, operators of bars, barber shops uation and assembled his evi­ Tokyo, Kyoto, Osake~ Hong Kong, Philippine Islands; and other businesses licensed by dence from a prejudiced stand­ at. 163rd Street Hawaii. Returning Sunday November 24. All Jet the state which refuses'to serve point. customers because of race, creed, The book, entitled "Reply to "AM.RICA'. IAO.Te travelled For folder and 'complete itinerary: eolor, religion, national origin Rolf Hochhuth," also asserts FUNDeR,uL COURTS or ancestry. that Hochhuth's attempts to ReSORT-MOTeL" ""'0 The order is chiefly directed marshal documentary evidence LA SALETTE MISSIONS, Southbridge, Mas" .304 air-conditioned rooms against contractors or merchants to prove that Hitler stopped the • 3 swimmIng pools 764-2879 operating under state contracts persecution of Catholicism dur­ • FREE self-parking for !l00 cars. who refuse to hire Negroes or ing the war "gives history a .Iap . Church & Mass Information other members of minorities. in the face."

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12

THE ANCHOR-.-Diocese of Foil

River~Thur •.,

Aug. 8, '963

Poverty of Spirit'

Hatch's ,'Man Named John' 'Not Deeply Penetrating'

God Love You By Most Rev. Futto. J. Sheea, D. D. EverT cia,. In the M..- we praJ' for 1&: a il1mc1red tlmai ...,.

JJy Rt.. Rev. Msgr. John S. Keuedy

we atter petitions for It: a tholllUld tim. . . c1a7 we fall III DIe pracUee of It.· We see It .. the most Deeded vIriDe of oar u...e.,

Perhaps the most' recent really probing' book, in English. about a pope was Z.E. Y. Hales's Pio Nono, and its subject. PiUB IX.: died 85 years ago. There have been reasonably good biographies of later pontiffs, but none

truly critical and full, much

less definitive. Which makes a man of noble birth and patri­ cian polish, taU and distul­ it likely that a substantial guished, of brilliant intellect but work about John XXIII will aUo immenseI,. practical.

ad J'et we· feel we mould D~ eve. be wrlUq aboIIt It am we becID to practice It more. Bat In erder that we lllaJ' Impre. eanelvetl with the Decesllt;y of doln&' better, we be... emph..... ... neecl- the "It.. belq the Ylrtae 01 l"WerVl

,

\

We know what poverl;r is -It 11 a destitutlol1 of tbingJI whlell

are necessary for the body. But the poverty we are talkinc about .. iI not .a much related to thinp .. it is

related to God. It does not mean a poor

dwelling, patched trotUers and cheap food. He was consecrated in Rome, It 11 poverty of spirit in which we rec<>g­ and naturall,. the young priest

NEW PREFECT: TIde­ me our wretchednen, our spiritual naked­

from Bergamo wal present for that. The biahop seem. to have brando Cardinal Antoniutti, !leN, our soul-hunger, our blindness to the . been taken with him; at an,. 64, ha!l been named Prefect vision of God in an things. rate, he chose Roncalli to be hiJ of the Sacred Congregation

Poverty of apirU doeI Dot meaD 11Mlac' .ecretary. ThU apparentl,. of Religious, filling the va­ . _atve eomfol1l•.A bea.W.l .,111 til' a chance encounter WIlS to have

elever mUllclan who never thaBb God

incaculable consequences for the cancy c:aWled by the death of Ie bel.Dg beautif1l1 GI' rIch1,. endowed

Valerie Cardinal Valeri. whole Church. would be wantln« in povertJ' of spirit. For

Cardinal Antoniutti served Spirit of Si. Francis with sach P'&titude would come' recopl. It is interesting to llote that ill the Vatican's diplomatic BoD that the giftl come from the Father of Radini-Tedeschi elected to be corps from 1927 to 1962 when Gifta. But poveny of IIPlrlt does mean a

consecrated on the feast of 8t. aeIIIle of absolute dependenee on God. The other claJ' a ml_oaarF Francis de Sales, since he had a he was named a cardinal. NC M ow table was &skod If he enjo,.ed his lamb chop. He replied: particular devotion to this saint Photo. "I enJo,. it ad thank God for It, just .. when I had to live . . who was outstanding for. the dogs (not hot dO,I) for elrht months. I thank Him when Be warmth of his humanity. PTes me tastJ' food, and I thank Him He gives me tood tIIM Certainly the spirit of St. kee(M me. frpM .tarvlDg." Francis de sales was evident in the Ponticate of Pope John. IIi

MANCHESTER (N C) - A . fact, one thoughtful observer re­ The problem of converts essentially related. to poverty of

marked to me, at the. time of the p;riest-seismolQgist was named..aJl spirit. Those whom we seek to convert are attached to the world,

pope's death, that John XXllI himorar;f. m,ember in the S ~ 10 how can we convert them unless we our,elves are detached!

made the .benevolence. of· de Reserve here in New Hampshire. In the thirteenth century, when the Cistercian abbota were sent Father Daniel Linehan, 8,3'.. to Languedoc by the Holy Father to combat the Catharist heresy, Sales shine forth upon' the .whole world from the lighthouse of the d:ifector .of. the Weston College the,. failed utterly. because .of their servants and fine horsell. ;Observatory" serv.ed wi~h .th~ Saint Dominic and Bishop Diego of' Azvedo advised them to return Vatican. . There are other ·elements in S·eaBe~ in the Antartic and Will .10 the monastery. and come' back p'oor. Then they conquered the the life of· Radini-Tedeschi the firsl; to measur~ the thick.. heres;r! .

.n,ess ·of ice. at the South -Pole:

which were later to be ,magni­ tied in the pontificate' of Pope Be also made studies qf . So It Is todaJ'. When missionaries have nothing materially; m. John. For example, the bishop fE1Ctors at.. the various United It lliir.kea them realize that theJ' have u ........ IIpirUuallJ', and :States naval.bases establiShed iA " What one takes to be the ori- remarked to the secretary, "Pru­ UaIs empUnelS God tlll. bJ' Sendin&' them converts. Won~t J'otl tinal text ends with the concllol- dence d09 not consist of doing Antartica. aclmowledge your depenl1ence oa God f9I' Ibe &'ift8 Be lIae The honorary award was pre­ -of the first session of Vati- nothing. It means to act, and act llent J'ou b,. aiding Tlte Soolet;y for tile Prepap.tloa ot the Faltlaf 9E!nted to Father Linehan at an Council n. There. has been well." Surely this was the prin­ The poor ot the world depend on us - and we depen' on "011. added a section, on slick paper ciple behind so much which the Camp Allen in BedfQ.rd,. where and with p hot 0 g rap h s. con- late pope did - far one thing, the Sea:Bees constructed. 4or­ eerning the last days, the, death. the convening and the guidance m.itory that provides Summer GOD LOVE YOU to W.x.c. for $150 "ThH may be wed Iar and the funeral of Pope John. of the council. The .secretary rt!creational facilities for near1)­ wIlerft'er it is moat needed and whenever it wID do the ag,st 50 blind girls. . Familla.rAnecdeiea said of the bishop: eoocL to B.J~r. fIJc $2 ''This. is part of '1»7 birthday .m-Oaer FatbeJ~ Linban, who retume4 Mr. Hatch's book is sympathe"What long-suffering patience which I want to share with God's poor." •• -to G.O. for $25 "Uae tic, but not deeply· penetrating. he displayed! Others IellS ardent fI'Om Africa a month ago, recent­ .. 70U see best in gratitude 'for my Faith and family.n It .represents the best of il1ten- would have· given up long be­ .1)' serve,:! as aUnited States.,:ep. ,rt!sentatlv~ OIl UNESCO' miAi~ tions and considerable work. But ·fore. He never gave up.~ Can­ MCIDE 'FOB YOmtSELF if ,.wre· a JIlea~ ef -na. hardly anything in it Is fresh. not· the same be said of Pope tel Southeast .Asia, S,outh Amer­ Cltwell 01 tile Poet" til' ""TIle POM' ChUl'clt" lifter ka,the Middle East apd A1r~c•. 'l'he long 'famlliar anecdotes are John? His patience was 'extraor­ 8e.&ember-October IlPeClai "'eof MlSSION~ • y•• are Det.­ rehearsed. There is orderl,. reci- dinary, and he never gave up, .......m~ Hst fer tIaIa bl-.OIl&hIJ' m~adae, e_aialal' articIeI, tation of the principal features even in his terrible final illnen. ~ eai'tHos &ad -pleture., J1HIt 1I8k us TIa: 'DIe Bodet-,. . . 'of Pope John's character, hisRoncalli was Radini-Tedes­ . . PropacMlft of tlte F .... 366 Fifth Avenue, New Twk 1, tory, and pontificate. but little chi'. secretar;y for ten years. In N.t . .wing and anal,.. <If thee. hiJ fifties, the bishop 'WU His is a story which neither striclten with cancer. He oHered . BOSTDN(NC) - A number we nor, one dares say, future his life for the .Chur-eh, hisoi~. New England priests have Cut out thII colQDUl, pm J'our sacrifice to 11 and mail tl to generations can ever', tir~.Of priests, seminarians, people; and . b,~en elected to important of­ Ole Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Bool_ hearing. There are those' 'ap- for peace. .' '£lees in. the newly organized for the Propagation 01 the Faith, 366 ~th Avenue, New York pealing beginnings in Sotto il Is it fanciful to see htlre the ; Catholic MisSion Radio Associa­ J. ·N. Y., or J'our DlocelllUl Director. RT. ~V. RAYMOND T. Monte. Here I, at least, learned seeds of what Pope John, dying tion, a 'communication network CONSIDINE, 368 North Main street, Fall Kiver, Mus. for the first time that the house of cancer, was to do so many oJ: ''ham'' radio operators among now occupied· by the Roncallis years later: namely, offering missioners in United States. is not the birthplace of the pope. his life tor' the .success of the' Rev. Daniel Linehan, S.J., of It was only when Angelo Giu- council which was to effect the Weston, will serve as corre­ WITHOUT TRAFFIC & .PARKING PROBLEMS seppe was six that his father aggiornamento in the Church spondin~( secreta1'7 and ReY. had scraped together enough universal· that Bishop Radini- Joseph. McCarthy of Framing­ at the money to purchase' the present Tedeschi had sought to brfng ham ia treasurer. house. And it was in that same about in Bergamo? Msgr. Walter J. Furlong, 81ao ,.ear that the lad started to His y'ears as Nuncio to France ol~ Weston, and Msgr. Charles I. school in ..Carvico. <i944-1953) and Patriarch of -M:ahoneJr ~f Providence are SOMERSET, MASS•

. When he was 19 he went to Venice (1953-1958) are the best· memberlJ of the advisory conl­ As~ets Over$2,6QO,ooO. in '.Years

Rome, to the famous Roman known of ,those prece,di'rig his '. mittee. . Th. mod friendty, democratic BANK offering

Seminary. His studies were in- election.to the papacy in October Use of the radio serve. to 1m­ terrupted by .mmtary service, 1958. In Venice, :thl!! estim~te of prove . I:lODlmunications . &mone Olte~Stop,Bo'nking but in 1,904 - he was ordained. him was voiced: "No one 5hotild missioners and also aicU mH­ After a brief stay at home he be .deceived by: the Patriarch's . sioners and also aids :missionen Checking' Acc:ounts Auto Loans was sent· back to 'Rome to do aimp1icit;r into thinkiIig: him' a' 'iIll reaching their superiors and , Savings Accounts Buslnesi' loans graduate work in Canon Law. simpleton. His simple 'mailner . rE!lativel,. in tm. country. Clul. Accounts ' Real . ~stote LOON Impact of Bishop is the result of his holiness, but During his seminary years, the he is a ver,. complex and prof·riest~s, Seminarian AI Som.rHt $hoppi... Area-Brightman St. Bridg_ biShop of Bergamo had been found personality." I . Member, federal 1)• .pOl~t Insurance Corporation Camillo Guindani. Mr. Hatch The truth of that was to be ;n March credits him with being an mroep- vindicated under a· spotlight PHOENIX (NC) - Four ArL tionally able organizer, especial- more glaring and revealitig than ulna priest. and • aeminariaa 1,. of groups of laymen, and any trained on the episcopal . were 81110ng 2,0Q!> persons wbe Perfect for Parties - Cookouts these, with a total me~bership throne of Venice. particlpnted in' an interracial of over 40,000, are said to have Ther~ is nothing novel in what justice march through downtowa Peen ,"the precursors of the great this book says Qf Pope John'. Phoemx. Italian Catholic Action move- reign. In the main, the account The demonstration. aponlOl'ed Famous MCIIClGregor Brand ' ment." , .' ~ , of .it is journalistic, and the b:, the Id:aricopa County chapter I, . 'Hi~ory Smoked .. One" can easily appreciate the pages 'on the C~n.~ncil, though not oj: the National Association for itnpression this rallying 01. the liven to gossip,' are in consid- the Advancement of Colored Old F~shioned laity would m.ake .qn a YO~!1g erable measure speculative. The. ' P!'O . . pIe, . w.as characterized ,.p,. ,. .'. .German Style m-an . preparingfot 'ttie pt'iest~' . account of the pope's illnesS aJ)dLincoln ~ale; local NAA¢P hood; and tht! influence it'would' death is simple and moviilg:' '.' ol~i~. U ~~j;he most peaci!:ful have when that same jQurig mall' ~. Quite a few error. of fact dl!DlOostration ever staged in the . ultimately reachedthe"supreme might be pointed out (since United Btates." .. Made ibe choice. pontifieate. ',,' ....., when, for example, did Cardinal The demonstratoi'sended the ' tnnedIents Greaterltill, however, was Bea become ''emormously iall" D:taI'ch In front of Cit;y lIaU ON S~AT YOUB. the impact of the churchman - except, of course, in the where ~l list of grievances was . PATOBlTl!: MEAT MABKE'!' who became' bishop upon 1he figurative sense?). And there p:resented to Phoenix Kayor' death of Guindani. This was are opinions expre:Jsed which, Sam Malrdian, who complimented Giacomo Karia Radini-Tedeschi, to /lAY the least, one could chal- the assemblage on the orderli­ whom Pius X chose from the lenge. But the book, a workad.,. . n,ess of the march and promised , MEAT PRODUCTS ranks of minor curial officiabl production, hall its uses" It is the grievances would be .welled ~""e~ • take charge of Bergamo. gra~ed b,. an abundallile of __ b:, him ,imd membera of tile CUr' . . . . . . ~... WYI-,.... Ra~Tecies.chi wu in WSW... eel1eat .p~ COUDdl

not appear for many decades to come. And this we must regrirt, for he is p r o b - ' abl,. the most tascinatiIig pope of mod ern times, one abo u t whom many of us are anxious 'to kn~ w much more of a per8Onal, not an official, s 0 r t. The reason is that he exerted an incomparable personal appeal, and people of all kinds would like to get to the roots of . it. to discover the facto.rs in his background and. career wJ;1ich account for that splendid, seren~, profoundly paternal. exq~itely evangelical spirit. . . ,There are bound to be. inI;ll,lmerable popular books aqout ·him. The first of the~e. to. appear after his death ·is Alden 'Hatch's .A .Man. Named J:ohn (Hawthorn. ~.95.) Obviously!t was in preparation for some time befor~ His Holiness. b~ca.m.e

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Future Coyle High School Seniors Look Forward to Top Positions In Extra-Curricula r Act'ivities

THE ANCHOR-

Wilmington Sets Diocesan School System Study

Two shining examples of Coyle High School training are Daniel Hoye and Timothy Andrews. These upcoming Sen­ iors at the Taunton all-boy school have proved themselves outstanding students in a variety of ways, not least by their membership :in the National Catholic University and while I\onor Society. The society there will probably make up accepts only students who his mind as to a future career. Dan, like his three elder have proved their ability by maintaining a scholastic aver­ age of 90 or better. Daniel is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Hoye of 32 Cedar Street, Taunton, and is a mem­ ber of St. Mary's parish. He is one of nine children, eight of whom are boys. "Our sister holds her own, however," com­ ments Dan meaningfully. Tim is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Orton Vincent Andrews. He lives at 260 Broadway, also in Taunton, and. belongs to Immaculate Conception parish. Both boys have attended Coyle since freshman year. "Is there another school?" they query. Like Languages Languages are a favorite with both Tim and Dan. Dan likes 'em all, while Tim leans to French and Latin. "It isn't just a matter of getting good grades in languages," says Tim. "We really enjoy them." The boys are alike, too, in a taste for music. Both belong to the Coyle band. In addition, Tim 18 a member of the swing band, a smaller group at the high 8Chool, which plays for many affairs, .especially dances. Both bands play at all varsity football games and also· play charity concerts in the course of the year. Three were given' last year. Their major produc­ tions include Christmas ahd Spring festivals and two dra­ matic presentations. Brother William Lowney, C.S.C., is band director and there will be 16 senior members when school begins in Septem-' ber. ,Meantime, Tim 11 using part of his vacation to instruc~ freshmen in trombone tech­ niques, h<>ping to uncover some talent to fill the musical ...oid left by many of last year'. seniors. Many Actlvftfes· Both Tim and Dan are inter"­ ested in other extra-curricular activities. Both are members of the debating club. Dan has re· eently been elected president of this group and hopes to bring Coyle to the top of the Narra­ gansett Debating League. Tim 11 right at his side al secretary of the club. The "twins," at least insofar as activities are concerned, are both members of the Coyle "Warrior." This outstanding newspaper is considered one of the school's public relations vehicles. Tim is literary editor and Dan is roving photographer. The newspaper appears four times during the school year. Dan, obviously, has photogra­ phy as a h<>bby and both boya, again, share· the interest of reading. This is proved by their good grades, attesting to excel­ lent general backgrounds, ob­ tained only by wide reading. Dan likes all kinds of books, and has a special leaning towards adventure stories. Tim is just now reading the works of St. Thomas Aquinas, ..ying he "finds the 'Summa Contra Gentiles' a challenge." He also likes· plays,. especially those of Shaw and Wilder.' .

College is in the future for

both boys. Tim hopes to attend

Pope Offers Prayer; For Skoplje Victims' VATICAN' CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI prayed for the victims of the Skoplje earthquake when he recited the Angelus during his Sunday noon appearance. An estimated 20,000 stood in St. Peter's square when the Pope' made his customary Sunday ap­ pearance at the libl'at'7 window on the second lloor of the Apo.. tolic Palace. '

13

Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

WILMINGTON (NC) Wilmington's Bishop Michael W. Hyle has ordered a major study of the diocesan school IYstem to determine "the extent to which the Catholic population can support an expanded sys­ tem." The study has been made nec­ essary because of swelling school enrollments. Bishop Hyle di. rected the study determine the immediate and long-range needs, the requirements for c~~ital ex­ penditure and needs for service. and personnel. The study will be undertaken by a New York managemeni consulting fIrm under the direc­ tion of the Bishop's Advisory Board, which is composed main­ ly of laymen. Bishop Hyle said the study .. designed to prepare a program for sound administrative and fi­ nancial planning for the school system and to provide an esti­ mate of its future operating costs. "In the field of education," he emphasized, "the goal of the dio­ cese is to establish and maintain a school system which provides an education which is at least the equal of the public educa­ tional system in the community for as many Catholic children M possible." In the past 10 years, the s c h 0 0 I diocesan population, which includes Delaware and the Eastern Shore counties of Maryland and Virginia, has in­ creased to just under 20,000 from about. 10,000.· In New Castle County (Del.) there were 13,500 school children last year and this is expected to increalle to more than 20,000 by 1970, ac­ cording to diocesan officials.

brothers, will attend Holy Cross. "It'~ a family tradition," he says. One of Dan's brothers will attend Tufts Dental School next year and Dan himself hopes to pursue a career in medicine. Both boys are strongly in fa­ vor of Catholic education and are of the firm opinion that boys should be taught by Brothers. "Brothers can put across the man's point of view," says Dan. HAnd discipline is more easily handled by them," adds Tim. Oh, That HomewOf'k "Catholic education prepares a student to be a Christ-bearer in the world. It is essential." states Tim. , And Dan adds, "Catholic edu­ cation is the best you can get. It's the best way to meet the challenge of the. world. You .DANIEL HOYE AND TIMOTHY ANDREWS

get the right viewpoint." On the subject of homework, incltisive one, In that it sets out ordlnator for the club II Brottler the boys expressed the tradi­ tional viewpoint. It's a neces- to affect the whole school, not James Derrig. sary evil. . just a segment of It. A typical There are other extra-currie­ yeS meeting opens with a ular 8(ltivities at Coyle, includ­ Dan conceded It was n'eces­ sary for good grades and Tim· .prayer. Each meeting is presided ing dramatics, radio and chess felt it wasn't a problem when over by a different member of clubs. The sports program, too, subjects were interesting. He, the club, so that all may let 11 outstanding,· and has brought confessed, however, that ~ath their chance to lead the discus­ many honors to the school sion which is the main part of. homework is. often a chore. However the scholastic pro­ gram ill the / reason for the Both boys found that period. the meeting. After the opening prayer a, school's existence and, recogniz­ ical reading helped build their background and interest in passage from the New Testament ing this, Coyle was one of the history. Time, Newsweek and 18 read and discussed, and fin-_ first schools in the Diocese to Life are regular fare for them. ally members discuss some prob­ award varsity letters for scholas­ Tim is also an avid reader of lem of 8Chool life within their tic excellence. One of the biggest Worship, liturgical magazine competence to correct or change. events en the school year • published by Benedictine monks After a llOJIletimes heated dis­ the June Honor Night when stu­ at Collegeville, Minn. cussion, an action. is' adopted dents are recognized for scholas­ Both Dan and Tim are cur. which is then carried out by tic: achievement. The highest ren~ly enjoying Summer sports, members before the next meet­ ranking student in each course New Editor including swimming and sailing. ing. ia commended and outstanding BOISE (NO,)-.Father Perrt Dan has a full-time Summer , Scholastic !.etten stUdents in extra-curricular ac­ W. Dodds has been appointed ed­ Job at a Taunton drugstore, This II an organization that tivities also receive awards. where he also works part time affects .student life. Here At the present time, Coyle has itor of the Idaho Register, Boi­ during the achool year. changes are made by students more than 550 stUdents from all se diocesan newspaper. He baa Tim will spend a good part influencing other students. Co- parts of the Diocese. been associate editor since 1958. of the Summer, in additi<>n to. teaching his aspiring freshmen, in reading and studying, while. Dan will be on the lookout for ideas for the Viking, Coyle yearbook, which he will edit for the 1964 class. Coyle History The boys are proud of Coyle's history. The school is more than three decades old and is named for the priest who conceived * the idea of establishing a boys' high school within the confine. of St. Mary's parish in Taunton. Msgr. James Coyle worked hard to raise the funds needed to construc:t the school but it. wasn't until .after his death in. 1931 at the age of 80 that plans for the erection of. Coyle High were announced. Bishop James E. Cassidy, who preached the eulogy for Msgr.. Coyle, made the anmluncement and stated that the new high, school would be known as Msgr. James Coyle High in honor of the priest who labored 110 . long for its establishment. It was in 1933 that the first class began at Coyle and many of those first students are now sending their sons to Coyle. From C<>yle have come more. than 100 priests and brothers, and It is a proud statement that more than 20 per cent of the priesta in the Fall River Dio­ cel!e are Coyle graduates. The curriculum follows tra­ ditional academic lines and in­ cludes classical, scientific and

.'. 'college prep courses, geared .­

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lleir~bors is your ref~posal lor expert .d~ prebleJna. Keep it a family lIeCret Extra-curricular activities have -181 iDclnerator. There's no Bmot. . long been a part of the Coyle DO amo~e, h~dly any ashes. program. It is the only school in the Diocese to have eStablished the Young Christian Student (YCS) program. This group en­ deavors through a select core . of exemplary students to pro. mote attitudes and ideals of Telephone OSborne 5-7811 Christian leadership in all school ,'. 155 North Main st. activities and organizations. The YCS proiram ill an, aU­

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. ·14 ,

THE ANCHOR-Dioc~se M ·FafI·Rlver-Thurt'.·,Auo- l,l963

Urges Film Ratings To Protect Youth ~L~ANY (NC) The rating of motion pictures on their suit­ ability for youngsters of school age has been recommended by the New York State Board of Regents..' The board's proposals were forwarded to Assemblyman Lu­ igi R. Marano of Brooklyn, chair­ man of the Joint Legislative Committee for the Study of the Dissemination of Offensive and Obscent Material. The committee is studying the proposals. The regents urged that" film censorship be retained but con­ tended present regulations are inadequate for the protection of children and young people who

David LawrencC!' Fears Civil Rights Support by Church By Msgr. George G. Higgins

Director, NCWC Social Action Department

During the 'week of July 21 official sPokesmen for the National Council Churches, the Synagogue Council of America, and the Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference presented joint testimony be­ fore t h r e e Congressional against pending legislation. On committees in support of the the other hand, I find it difficult President's Civil Rights Bill. to believe that he is unqualified­ This was the first time in ly committed to such a doctrin­

of

the history of the United States that the major religiOl,lS organi­ 1m tions in the . United· S tat e s had presented a united front in support of a particular legis­ lative program. In the past they had always acted independ­ ently of one another, though eft e n 'enough, of course, their eeparate statements on pending IIOcial legislation were basically very much alike. To the best of my knowledge, the only nationally syndicated columnist who has thus far com_ mented on the joint civil rights testimony of the three religious groups is David Lawrence. His comments on the testimony were anything but favorable. . Doctrinaire PositiC?n It is difficult to determine preci;>ely what Mr. Lawrence was really driving at in his recent column on this matter ("Today · in National Affairs," New York. Herald Tribune, Juiy 29). I got the impression, however, that what he meant to say was that Il"eligious organizations .should refrain from passing judgment­ either separately or jointly~n.· the moral issues involved in pending social legislation. "There's supposed to be a 'wall of separation between church and state' erected under the Con- . .titution," Mr. Lawrence pointed out in the opening sentence of Ilis column. "But something hap­ pened in Washington last Thurs­ day," he continued. "which in­ dicates that the wall apparently bars entry from only one side • • ... Whether it is in the field of 'conscience' or 'commerce,' the principal religious organizations of the nation now assert the right to"''''''' take part in the­ pressures, being exerted in the lobbies of the Capitol to secure the enactment of certain laws barring racial discrimination ..... So there appears to be a one­ aided wall of separation .between church and state." Two Related Answers On the one hand, then, Mr. Lawrence seems to be saying that it is improper, if not uncon­ stitutional for religious organiza­ tions to testify either for or

aire position. I doubt, for ex­ ample, that he woy.ld have any objections to testimony by reli­ gious organizations against com­ munism, or socialism, or the real or alleged evils of the so-called Welfare State. What is really bothering him, then, about the recent civil rights testimony of the National Council of Churches, \ the Syna­ gogue Council of America, and the NCWC Social Action Depart­ ment? There would seem to be two related answera to this question: 1) Mr. Lawren<:e is not in favor of civil rights legislation and consequently 141 unhappy about the fact· that religious organizatiol1ll are supporting

it; 2) He is afraid that religious organizations will eventually go beyond the endorsement of civil civil rights legislatwn as such and come out against tho.~ state laws which prohibit interracial marriages. "The expressed position of the churches today on racial discrim. ination," he says, "could lead logically to a legal sanction of intermarriage or at least a dec­ laration that for a state to for­ bid it is 'a blasphemy against God'." states' Richts ill Ma.nia~e I hope that Mr. Lawrence'. fears on this score was well­ founded. It should be noted, in conclu­ sion, that Mr. Lawrence's de­ fense of state laWll prohibiting interracial marriages is patently inconsistent with his own philos­ ophy of government. Mr. Law­ rence--as regular readers of his column will have noted-Is al­ most frantically concerned about the rights of the individual in economic and social life and is unalterably opposed to anything that he regards as excessive gov­ ernmental interference with the free exercise of these rights. This is all well and good, but what about the right of the indi­ vidual to enter into marriage with the person of his choice, re­ gardless of that person's racial 1 ckground? Surely' this is a r.ore fundamental and more sacred right than "lY of the eco­ nomic and social rights that Mr. Lawrence has spent so much energy defending during his long and very distinguished career as an editor and publicist.

CAUSE ADVANCED: The Sacred Congregation of Rites has examined the heroic na­ ture c,f the virtues of Father Gaspa.re Bertoni, founder of the Stigmatine Fathers. He was born at Verona, italy and was ordained June 17, 1800. NC Photo.

IFlorida Passionist

IBack.s Teenagers

PALM BEACH (NC)-"Don"t sell teenagers short," says a :I'lorida Passionist Father who should know what he's talking a.bout. "Our young people have a lot c,n the 'ball" according to Father Cyril Schweinberg, C.P., direc­ tor of Our Lady of Florida Mon­ astery a.nd Retreat House. "They .have a lot of good ideas. They want to do what's right. They are entitled to a change," says the priE,st who has worked with thousands. "'There wasn't a dud among tll1em," he noted. "True they need help and that is where a retreat can be important. Here a fellow can listen to conferences . geared 'to him and his world. He . can sit Clown and talk to one of the six priests who assist ill l"lmning these retreats properly.Conducting retreats for teen­ agers "isn't the easiest thing ill this wOJ'ld," Father Schweinberg c.)mmented but "it certainly is one of '~he most rewarding." "Who,. except the g06d Lord, c,)uld tell the results of this in­ fluence?" he inquired.

Interracial Council. ISack:s Ordinance · DIVIDES EXARCHATE: Pope Paul VI has divided the :, Byzantine Rite Exarchate of Pittsburgh into two juris­ · dictions which will have the status of eparchies immediately · subject to the Holy See. One eparchy is located in Pitts­ . burgh, while the other is in Passaic, N.J. Bishop Nicholas .' Elko, left, is elevated to the status of Eparch of Pittsburgh. Bishop Stephen Kociskobecomes Eparch of Pnssaic. NO Photo

DETROIT (NC)-The Catholic Interracial Council here has voted to) support an ordinance which would forbid discrimina­ tion in 2111 Detroit hospitals. The eIC-endorsed ordinance a:[)plyinl~ to hospitals and con­ valesceD.t homes would make it a misdemeanor for such institu­ tions to refuse service because ol I'llce, crf!ed or color

For Auto Safety· COLUMBUS (NC)-The Vol­ unteer Vehicle. Safety Check pr,ogram of the Columbus Ohio diocesan Catholic Youth Council has been named the best youth­ sponsored program in the nation by the program's sponsors, the auto industry and Look maga­ zine. .

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Reglistrars Help

British Pastors

LONDON (NC) - The post' ,I)f pal"ish registrar has been ,:reated. by ttIe Newman Demo-' ,irraphil: Survey, a body estab­ lished b.ere a decade ago by the' :N'ewman Association to use l.tatistks in the Church's apos-' ·~olate. He ill expected to become the' ~~ey man in the Parish Census ServiCE' which the survey baa alreadJi' in operation and which haaalr,~ady been used by a num­ ber of parish priests. The parish registrar, says a lIurvey report, should preferably live in another parish. Under the direction of the parish priest, his job wo uld be to deal with all the routine clerical work on the records, leaving the clergy free. to conc,entrate on priestlY duties.. "The service of a parish ·regis- . t.rar," SilyS a circular announcing' the conference, "should inake it· llOSSiblf! for the parish to have <:ompreb.ensive, up-to-date pa­ l'ishion(!r recorda without' in-' volving the parish priest ill Ume-c<:>Dsuming clerical work lind without the irritation of fre­ quent outdoor, (door-to-door) censuses."

aer "being increasingly exposed in motion picture' theatres to films unsuitable for their level of social and emotional matur­ ity." They urged a rating system be adopted.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River.-Thurs., Aug. 8,1963

1S

Engaged Couples

Prepare for a Happy and Holy Marriage

ATTEND PR"E·CANA CONFERENCES

REGISTRATION' AT A PRE-CANA CONFERENCE

The Spiritual, Psychological, Physiological, Economic and Social Aspects of Married·

.Life are discussed by

• 20 Priests

.• 16 Doctors

• 18 Married Couples-

Consult your parish priests for scheduled conferences

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.


16

THE Atr

' -" -Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

Parishioners in Florida Adopt

Exiled Bishop's Cuba Parish

'Relations With Roman Catholics' On Wor'~ Council Unit Agenda ROCHESTER (NC) - "R~la­ (tons with Roman Catholics" wi:ll be among the subjects discussed by the policy-making body of the World Council of Churches at • meeting here in New York starting :Mo~y:, Aug 26, it has been announced. ' The meeting of the World C:ouncil's 100-member central eommittee will bring together Protestant, Orthodox and Angli­ ean Church leaders from many partl of the world for discuseions of Christian unity. }It will follow by barely a month the close of the fourth International congress of the World Council's Faith and Order Commission in Montreal. For the first time in history,

Catholic observers attended the Faith and Order meeting. Report on Council . The central committee meet­ ing here will consider reports on various aspects of unity adopted at the Faith and Order, meetin~. according toa World Council announcement. During the central committee meeting a report on the first session of the Second Vatican Council will be given by Dr. Lukas Vischer. The 36-year-old Swiss theologian represented the World Council of Churches as an observer at the ecumenical council's firs·t session and will return to Rome in September when the Vatican Cou,ncil's sec­ ond session begins.

Exiled Cuban Nuns Are Adjusting To New Life in United States COBPUSCBllIS'I1 (NC)-A II"OUII of exnect Cuba. 'PHI" Clll1"e Nuns .811e ~ustinC .. life til IIthcentur7 America ie­ lIPite the idei that • ]YI'ki~ meter .ia 1IQIDe kinli 01 weiCkiRI

t,. grew that they eou.ld not re­ blBn t{ Cuba, 1he,. began IGok­ ifig f.()r a place ~ .tart a Dew ,fGuudation in the U'Dited States. Many letters .w~ writtell Mld 'l/he reply from BhlDep Cal'riga previded the answer.

Settled heremTeJtu at 1iIIlt tnvitatwn of Bishop :Maran. S. Oarri«a, the lltmil 1IIlTJvea Nt New Orleans from June tiMlMJ6l November, 1961. Cuban militia had malle ~ ~r_ tress· of their monastery amel harassed the lIl1m constantly. The Castro government also cut oH. their food, and after months of privation the Dum; had. to leave. The eommunity hadensteli in euba for more than 300 years. As time went on and the certain­

Waive ltUle • When a new foundation itl1»e­ iIil.g made, theemnmunity's rule el strict enclosure is waive4. One of the nuns needed new glasses, necessitating a Gl1'!ive CliGwntown. . The outside world can look quite different after 30 years in cloister. When the driver put a coin in a parking meter, one of the nuns inquired if the meter was some kind of. weighing m.achine.

maChine.

.

WORLD CONGRESS: Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher, secretary of the U. S. Na­ tiOll Conference of CathOilic Charities will be amoDA' tAle 8ipe&kers at the world. 'eN­ greM. 0[ the Catholic mter­ Rational Union forSoeial Service at Nijmepll, 'file Netherlands, Al1g.!4.NC FA~l).

ISflent Prayer' SADDLE BROOK. {Me} Tbe B@ard of Edueatiollll et tiIU New Jersey oomDuuuty ~ . . 1-1 v/j)te approved a period'" iIileat JiN"ayerat t'he beCiJmi-e ef each scho&lday.

parish in Cuba is in cooperatloa with the League of Prayer for the Captive Peoples whicll la now being organized under the chairmanship of Bishop Alfred F. Mendez, C.S.C. of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. Objectives af. the league are to encourage the faithful in free countries to adopt spirituaUy and pray for the priests and laity in parishes of Cuba or be­ hind the Iron and Bamboo Cur­ tains who have been deprived of their spiritual freedom and the ministrations of a priest.

Catholic Archbishop Welcomes Lutherans DORTMUND (NC) - Arch­ bishop Lorenz Jaeger of Pacier­ born published a message of welcome to those taking part in the National· Lutheran General Assembly here in Germany. J)ortmulld, about 55 mile. fro... Paderborn, is m ArchbWh­ op Jaeger'. archdiocete. Archbi80p Iaeger, who" a .ember el tile Secretariat lor Pr_otillC Christi. . UnitY,laid tilat tile lo~ ·fw Christian 1&tU1J' ill very ~ fa divided CAri.tiamtr'.

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Campaign Against Christianity

Among Refugees From Angola

LEOPOLDVILLE (NC)-Per­ .ans irrfluenced by foreign COUtl­ vies are campaigni.ng amon,g Angolee refugees urging them. against Christianity, an Angolese Catholic Action leader said in . . interriew here. Pierre Mayaya, preaidellt fIIf Workers' Catholic Aeticm GIf AR­ IOla, said that often are reiugeel do not distinguish betweem a just legal campaign fortbe rlgh ts llI'l the people of Angola and a .ub­ Yersivecampaignagainst .chris­ tianity. :He QokefoUCilwing a tour of refugee centers. The refugees have clHRe toto the CGngo from Atl,JNa, a Por­ tuguese-ruled flerritor,. "uta ld the Congo, whieJa has Deea

FORT LAUDERDALE. (NC)­ The Auxiliary Bishop of Havana, Cuba, offered Mass here in Our Lady Queen of Martyrs church where parishioners have spirit­ ually adopted the prelate's parish ;n Havana. Bishop Eduardo B07A y Mas­ Vidal, who was forcibly exiled illl 1961 by Castro forces '/lIld now resides in Venezuela, is pastor of Our Lady of Charity parish in Havana. , Each month priests and pa­ rishioners of the local parish of­ fer a Mass and corporate Com­ munion for the spiritual and physical well-being of the pa­ trolled Cuba. Speaking in Spanish at the Mass, Bishop Boza expressed his thanks and praise for the charity and kindnesses shown to Cuban refugees in Florida by Bishop Coleman F Carroll and the DJo­ cese Df Miami. The »piritual adoptiGII. Itt the

SUPER-RIGHT BONELESS BEEF OVEN ROAST

SHOULDER· ROAST ·POT IOAST''::~HT~1T 59 ROAsTII' CHICIEIS L,45 Callned Ha.

troubled by liberation move· ments. The U. N. Secmity Council,. a resolution adopted July Sl, called on Portugal to recognize the right of the inhabitants of her African territories to "self• determination a.nd independ­ ence," and to stop "all acts 01. repression" there. Mayaya said Ilhat Angolese refugees have started farming in lleveral regions in the south~ part of the Congo. At Kionzo, where the refugeell are particularly .numerous, :Be­ demptorist Fathers :have set Q a school where they expect. have lIOme Angolese t.eachers .,. ·tbe Dpening of the "school year.

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15,000 Visit First Convent/Built

2 49 •.

In Sweden Since Reformation HELSINGBORG (NC) - Po­ Deemen controlled traffic as 15,000 Swedes filed through the newly...completell1 Carmelite con­ veo't at Gant.ofta near here, the first Catholic cloister built in thil!l country since the Reforma­ tion. A five-day. inspection peri­ od was allotted for the general public. Six Belgian nuns and 1IH'~ native Swedish Carmelites, are moving into the $200,000 facility, clesignedby the famous Swedish architect Hans Westman. ~­ mission to build was granted .by the Swedish government in July, IG61, ia MlCQlldaooe witll aew .H­ JigiOU8 legislation passed .in 1951. Officiating at the solemn con­ IleCration was American~born Bishop John E. Taylor, O.M.I., of Stockholm. Also present were Archbishop Bruno Heim, ApolJ­ tolie Delegate in 'ScllDlfittaria.; Bishop Johannes Theador Subr, O.S.B., "of Copenhagen, De.­ mark; Bishop James Mant:ers~ S.M., of Oslo, Norway,amI ' . Auxiliary Bishop J oha ,(kahn. O.C.S.O., and Auxiliary Bishop Leo De 'Kese.tl of Ghen~, BelgiUR\, • brother of the 'Prioress 9f the Carmelite Sisters in :BeJci'um fio -built the convent. The convent opening had wide

coverage in the press of Sweden and on the Swedish radio and TV network.

Urges Catholics Fight Injustice

,------------>-.. . -

JANI PARKeR

ALEXANDlRA (NC)-Bi9hop Charles P. Greco bas urged. Catholics of the Alexandria (No­ cese to help 'put an end to racial and· other forms of discrimina­ tion in this country.

cioin« 110, the LGuisiana pile­ late gave an answer to a question often asked: Why has the Church a.t taken upon itseU the jc41 9f removing segregation from the South? The Bishop said that if "the Church had Wlliertakell 10 __ move segregation from the Southern scene her effectiveness ill el.l'l"YiDg out her fundamentM apiritualmission would have OeooseriollSly hampered • • • .. DeleC'llegation Inevitable Bishop Greco made the state­ ments in a pastoral letter .read in all churches of the diocese .Sunday. He also said that "de­ aegregation is inevitable" and that the Church has never ap­ proved of segregation u a mM­ ter of principal. II1l

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Encyclical Guide

Victim's Parenti Plead for DriYer In Fatal Crash

In Labor Dispute PARIS (NC) - Maurice Cardinal Feltin, Archbishop of PariB, has urged the par­ ties of a' labor dispute here 10 reconsider' their stands in the light of Pacem in Terris. Cardinal Fellin, in a statement released by the National Secre­ tariat of Religious Informatioa here, said that, in the face :>f t;'reats of firing hundreds of workers in 'several busil1E'SSt'S, a reading of t~le e!lcyclical brings up thoughts "other than those of a strictly technical or eco­ nOlllic order," "'Tha: is why I ask: . Hl'irst, that managers of busI­ nesses ask themselves if, in their decisions, they have .e:iven prior­ ity to man, his family, his life, his fu1ure, and that they exam­ ine themselves to see if their management has been compe­ tent and disinterested. HSecond, that financiers er groups ef financiers relIed .. see if they have furnished cap­ ital for the good of the Dusi­ neue. and of those woo work tbfte, and not just for their per­ BONI profit. SMlree ., S.l.ti•• "'Third, that responsible labor leaders hold back to see if they have had the necessary courage t. enlighten their superiors tiiHicult situations. "Fourth, that all the workers ask themselves if they have lteen satisfied with looking for individual security or if they have acted, without bitterness, t4l defend their rights through the labor unions; if they have eooperated in a positive manner 19r the success of the businesses. "May these thour:(hts facilitate • ~ialogue among the interested parties. It would be the source of peaceful and advantageou. ICIlutions."

.11

Ask Clarification Of Proyer R,ule "MIAMI BEACH (NC)-Aa ap­ peal to Congress to clarj,fy the right of U. S. public schools 1ie have "free and voluntary parti­ cipation in prayer" has been Hlade by the national Conference of Governors. Suspending their rules against passing resolutions, the state ex­ ecutives supported by a 38-tO-l vote the proposal of Gov. John H. Reed of ::\Iaine, which was de. scribed by its author as' "in no way critical of the U. S, Supreme Cflurt" for voiding present laws on school prayers. The lone dis­ senter was Gov. Karl F. Rolvagc of Minnesota. .

British Racketeers

Conference Target

LONDON (NC) Catholic hflusing experts here met in con­ ference to pool plans to beat the propel·ty racketeers in the ~omiDg over-populated indus­ trial areas of Britain. The conference, first on a na­ tional level ever held by the catholic Housing Aid Society, eGincided with further news­ paper disdosures 'of millionaire property gangsters operating in JHIorer industrial areas and .mung immigrants a.nd with a hitter parliamentary row .vet" . . crisis caused by rocketing MUlle prices. . . The society'!!, members include pl'ofessional men ift law, proper­ .." dealing and HCWar ltousing MCiety .m;anaitement ae well ae­ priesill, Their normal function in the plaeell where they operate­ LeDdoa. BiTmingham, : M ~ Mr, Liyerpool-is to advise Cat­ belie home buyers and provide fhwwllcial help where ponible for larae lower income families un­ able to pay high rents or _ri­ J8eH.

Youth Activities Clib Scouts of St. Joseph's par­ .... Fall River, will hold a fa~ ~ .icnk: at Camp :N'oqUoeAoU . . Sunday. Boy SeolMe aft pUlHlilll a trip to Mystie, C_. . . . . . . . . . AU&. U.

17

Ttff ANCHORThurs., Aug. 8, 1963

Prelate Suggests

CLEVELAND (NC) ­ Brothe-r Edwanl C. SpaR«. S.M., was a maJl who lovee boYl'I. That love continued .. live after him. as his parents ap..

STUDENTS IN WASHINGTON: From left, Rev. Joseph Fredette. M.S., Rev. Roger Benoit, M.S., Rev. Richard Delisle, M.S. All have served in the Fall River Dioeese and are enrolled in Summer sessioDlI! at Catholic University, Wal"hinp;ton, D.C., Father Fredette in edueation courses; Father Benoit in education and paHtoral p:-;~Tl'holop;y; and Father De­ lisle in pastoral counselin~.

Jleart"d in court here to plelHl fOl' the youth who drove tIM the ~ar that took Brothel' Spang's life in a Holy Week auto crash. "My son devoted his wlw>)e life to work wIth. teenageI'll,· Leuis Spang of Dayton, Oftie, told Common Pleas Judge Victow CQhen. "He did everything . . could to help them. "He would, I know, rather 1:1'1. this hoy be worked with and N­ h:.lbilitated. This is my he. . als&."

Spang added that he speaking for his wire also. CW-I;e." . .

WIllI

Itr.ther Spang" instructor . . .

athletic mHer~ at St. JOIe1lA Hi«k Sehool ~ was ill • 1M! G. - smash.ed broad3ide by a ew 4riven by Sam Il'clge, 19. Polift &ad clocked the youtla lit . . _il6 an lMur sh~rtly before . . at'cident that took Bro....: SIlang's life. Young Edge's attorney tolcl the l!Ourt that prior to the acd­

~nt the youth had been preH"

lay Ar..aDd J. Goulet during .a family- quarrel, aIMs

_ which his father left the house.

St. Anne's Parish, New Bedford He said the boy was emotionally

I think there comes a time in everyone'!'! life when it's pOl'lsible to look hack on the tJplIet and looking for his father

when the accident occurred. year~ gone by and to recall the days of early childhood. Some of us can remember waking After Brother Spang died, . . . morning after morning to find our father had already completed several hours of work .dents and alumni of the Marian­ - in what at that time constituted a. 12 to 15 hour workday. We can remember how upon ists' St, Joseph HigJr aclleol his return he delighted in hundreds of similar basic ques­ trine wishes to generate into the flooded local newspapers with the few remaining hours of tions to: fix and re<:ognize our individual family lives of its letters expressing their aHectiOli' for hini. the day, sitting by the fire, personal liability to God's loan. parish ioners.

The answers are frequently not

smoking his pipe and reading And where could there be a Socio'ogy Conclave very simple to come by. his n.ewspaper. As for JlW)t.ber, better start than to imparl upo. before dad's retura bome, . . . ~wever, with the constant the journey of helping parents n use of the abundant graces Q()d whc have recently been blessed had managed to

LOS ANGELES (HC) - 'l'H has a.f:focded \IS in' the sacrament with a new-born chili? What start the early sociology of religiOn, population, morning wood of matrimony and with the de­ could be more satisfying to aM delinquency are amona tIM fire, baked sev­ votion of our kindly ·Bishop of pal·ent.!! than to !:lave an inter­ topics to be discussed at tIM eral loaves of Fall River to guide us, eacll ested and trained Parent-Educa­ three-day 25th annual conv... brea4l and 19 Gr pal-e-nt, I'm sure, will find the tor help them along the finer tion of the American Cath.u. 12 pies, and answer to. his particular probleM points of raising children-how Sociological Society at LoYQ. spent the rest qut>stion. best to develop an environment University here startine of the- day laun­ The Confraternity of Christiaa centered around God's love for August 23. de-ring, DlI!'nding Doctrine Program, soon to be aft family life-how best to teach and tending to the task of disci.­ integral part of parochial life offllpring the ch...in of binding pline and formation of her cail­ within the Diocese of Fall River, family prayer-how hest to ap­ d~n's character. is formulated to help aU parents preciate the tender moments of Now the years have passed. in the fundamental principles of tw'king in a "babe and listeninJ( INSWANCE AGENCY, INC. Our parents are either in retire­ raising children in the desh~l!l to his prayer as he briefly in­ ment or have passed on to their which God has intended. " WJlM· M SlAm vokes "God ble,.::; :\Inmmy-God eternal reward. We, their chil­ The Parent-EducatOi' section bless Daddy!" NEW BEDFORD, MASS. dren, have taken our places in of the Confraternity is one of the The finer :hings of life YOU society. The more we think important 'phases of the program wy 8-5'53 WY 7-9167 mi,!lht say, are 3ft!:'n by-Ja;sed about it, the more we come t4l desi,~ned especially for parents. unnoticed because they are not believe that our parents were ·It helps parents to know and ad­ HItSONA!. SERVICE givt"n to us by God on a "loan just to the new "books" that God tied in with the love that only God, through His '{race, can out" basis. We find Him slowly has sent to their family book­ impart. reclaiming them to Himself. shelves, Li~htens Path Like Liltnry Books Trai.ed f\i*S Com~let. If this be the case, conversely, If YO\.l've had th~t certair, fe-eI­ From the day a child ill 001'­ our children too must be on ing of being within th,e sh:Jdow tized and following through to of God'!! mantle; if you've ex­ "lnan out." Like books in a li­ a child's first days of school, a br.ary, God dispenses and re­ perienced the a<'hievement of c1aims his children as He sees thoroul'(hly trained and compe­ family ~lidarity---God love you! fit, Like the rules that are posted tent Parent-Educator in each Tbf'Ie are ~ many who have on the library walls, H-e halt parish of the Diocese will be not. There are countlesa thou- \ made available to parents. Hi4I given us the Commandments and lristol sands who have not yet found the librarians of the Church 00 duties--the initiation at pro­ the means and who have not yet grams for personal counseling, guide us'. come to the full realization tha,t In the books or children that the education and moral guid­ God has placed an impl}rtant re­ an'Cl!' of children of pre-school He dispenses He has cummaooed sponsibility on tbem in the chil­ Bris~1 us to care for them, ~ cherish age, and the affording of parenti! dren that He has loaned thena. them and to derive from them freM all walks of life th~ oppor­ The Confraternity seek,; M whatever fruitful love and con. tunity to discuss their problems lighteft the path and ti,~hten the solation can be nurtured within in l.eal environm€ n t, all these bond beeause for many of Ul! the tbe pages of their lifetime, The allld many other wholesome pro­ 'AUN1C~~" MASS. library books are out and the Eternal Libl"arian refHinEis us, gram_will be invaluable t_18 1000S are in pr<JgreM. however, that _ Cli'ay He will to parents in every parish of the 1'MI UNI( aN. Diocese. The honor we reap WheR tIM

reclaim His books and the eMl­ Eternal Librarian· rel:alls HitJ

dition in which they are re­ JAUNJOM .... What with lifl!' al!' difficult as­ turned will determine the fate it is for m-a.Dy of us in this age loans will depend nnt upon t1M of our eternal destiny. ........ ~IP MD .

of automation, speed· and cost ultimate condition ()f the cover alone but on noW we'll the iJ16ide It behoove. loW aU, therefore, -...ra_.. ,. c~ttj.ftg efficiency, it is conBOling te take a good 'Iong l~ at tilese to generate' 'vithin the J)eQCe IH!ld paies and contents wel't! used. loaned out childrea we eaJl q liifi of OUJ homes the siml!'}le

"OUFS"-to uk ourselYe:J if we thoughts surrounding God's love.

are providin: a sound family ·Where there is a laborer wh. tHwkcaee ttl properly care foc tille YolNmes tbt God has made has !til!' Jiol'tume tm rl!Jtww 1Ie lIil home to find that the light of \M respOl'lsible for. As tt.e ~ges of our children's kve is burning as strong all liveB unfold, are they. becoming when he left, Ulere you will fiJWi frayed around the' edges fro III a home where God has wUf'ld a restil'1g place for his wearJI JIIisuse,-or tOl'n down the mid­ thorn-punctured head. dle with misunderstanding?' k JkT~'" E...... the book properly bound wit• family }kayeF and loyl!' for one It is with a pure sense of hu.

another? mility and love ()f God and

Be they a debit or a cred. neighbor that the work of the UNtON WHAIf, 'AtlltfAYEN .. _, we _ MIL _ 1...CQIiltraternitv &{ Christ.iaA D9c-

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Confraternit,· Program Helps Porents Rear. Children According to God's Design

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.18

lHE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR River-Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

. CATHEDRAL CAMP: Fulltime campers Emjoy variety of activities. Left, Alfred Mendes, New Bedford, and Richard Waring, Fall River, test truth of saying "There's nothing so good for the inside of a man as the 'outside of a horse." Center, swimming attracbl David Dexter, New Bed-

Cars Chief Factor in Delinquency Continued from Page One . outright poverty in this country in this age; there are too many agencies to look after the wel­ fare of the citizens. "A lot of these cases involve drinking parents," he continued. "But others are a result of the easy divorce laws, giving rise to a generation of fatherless chil­ dren. It is not un~ommon for a 10 or ll-year-old to be making decisions for himself and his b.others that he normally · wouldn't be making until.he was , 18 or 19 years old." \. Finley said another top reason for juvenile crime is lack of . family life. "Families live in the same house, under the same roof, each with different schedules and different ideas-and nothing in common," he declared. "Parents are sometimes very selfish, even disassociating themselves from their children. They consider the children a social barrier." . Religion plays an important role ill deterring juvenile crime, Finley said. "We find fewer offenders from a family where religion is a part' of the daily life," he detailed. "Of these few from practicing

Catholic Press

Continued from Page One tory listing shows a total circula­ tion of 354,570 for 62 publica­ tions. Another major area of circula­ ~ion decrease was in the con­ sumer magazine category - the number of publications dropped from 60 to 57, and circulation de­ creased from 5,752,765 to 5,615,­ 518. An increase was shown among 246 U. S. English-language mag­ azines which do not accept ad­ vertising - the 246 publications iisted a 1962-year-end circ1ula­ tion of 15,274,493' compared to 230 magazines which listed a total circulation of 15,084,655 at the end of 1961. Total circulation of 286 North American maga­ zines which do not accept adver· tising reached 16,379,276, an in­ crease of 134,550 over the 1961 • total. The Catholic Press Directory, an official reference v6lume on · the Catholic press for libraries, schools, institutions and individ­ uals, contains complete listings of names, addresses, personnel, circulation, advertising data, etc:; for the 610 newspapers, di­ rectories, and magazines which make up the North American Catholic press.

religious families--of any de­ nomination - the percentage of second offenses is extremely small"

Mansfield Man Continued from Page One from Great Britain," Brother Harold has leljrned. "They haven't yet learned how to ad­ minister democrac;r." Brother Harold has not only taught but· served as cottage . counsellor for 15 boys, and coached winning basketball teams from 1961 to 1963. Brother Harold was born in Central Falls or. J'uly 21, 1938• He attended elementary schools in Mansfield; graduated at Coyle High in 1956. From St. Joseph's Juniorate, where he took his first vows of chastity, obedience, poverty and serviCE: in foreign missions in August, 1956, he entered the Holy Cross novitiate in Rolling Prarie, Indiana, near Notre Dame, Uni­ ve··sity. On Aug. 16, 1957 he took his second vows and was assigned to St. Edward University in Austin, Texas for three years of study and was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in June 1960. He taught elementary school subjects in Our Lady of Mt. Car­ mel School in the Bronx for a year and, at the same time studied further at Fordham University.

Vietnam Facts Continued from Pag.e One so they are trying to do it through the false issue of Bud­ dhist persecution." Recalling that the Buddhist uprising began when the govern­ ment issued an order banning display of the Buddhist flag at public functions, Bishop Carret­ to said: "What we have not been told in the press is that the same order applied to Christians Con­ fucionists and to adherents of the Caodai faith." ,Bishop Carretta stressed he is not defending President Ngo dinh Diem because he is a Cath­ olic, and is aware of the Presi­ dent's shortcomings in the use of his office. "He is, nonetheless," the Bish­

op pointed out, "a man who is

fighting to the death to save the

whole of southeast Asia from

the communists, and deserves more help than he is getting

from the press representatives who influence the world."

The Bishop said charges that President Diem is attempting to suppress Buddhism are "absur~."

"

-ford, front, Edward DOherty? Attleboro, Gregory Sullivan, Fall River. Right, William Blottman, instructor, s'hows Peter Cordle, Attleboro, and Gary White, Assonet, the fine points of bullseye hitting. Camp is on lake in East Freetown.

Churches Gain

In

Russia

SUl'vey Claims People Regard Persecuted Clergymen as Martyrs MUNICH (NC)-Antirel1gious propaganda efforts are still in the horse-and-buggy stage in the Soviet Union, but the teaching of religion has soared into the space ~Ige, according to. a survey made here by the Institute for the Study of the U.S.S.R. The study by' the organization ,()f former Soviet scholars and .scientMs stated that anti-relig­ ious efforts are crude and out­ moded, and cited a Soviet writer as say;:ng that the "servants of :religious cults * * * are dressing up religion in new Clothes which are in harmony with our times." It said that the failure of anti­ lrel1gious work is particuluarly :reflected by a lack of testimon­ ials for atheism from well known :Soviet scholars. It quoted an ,atheist writer in the youth news­ paper, Komsomolskaya Pravda, who complained that it is most unfortunate that scholars avoid Bpeaking out for "scientific ath­ eism," :Punitive Measures The lItudy noted that even the most materialistic minded sci­ ,mtists have been alienated by

the primitive mehods used by antireligious agitators. It repdl-ted that a recent issue of Komsomolskaya pravda ad­ mitted that punitive measures have-.....been used in the battle againsl religon and warned that "fists are of poor assistance in antireligious work." The survey claimed that the closing of churches and persis­ tent persecution of clergymen make the people look on priests as martyrs. Because of the fail­ ure of the mailed-fist. approach, the survey said, antireligious work is out of step with the times and conversions to atheism few.

Council Expert

Second and Morgan Sts.

COL:LEGEVILLE (N C ) l!' a the r Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B,. of St. John's Benedictine Abbey here in Minnesota and l!ditor of Worship magazine, has been named an expert of the Second Vatican Council.

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,'Fly~ng/'Priest'

Gets Top Civilian Award

DUSSELDORF (NC)-Father Paul Schulte, O.M.I., Germany's "flying priest," has received thia nation's highest civilian award, tile Grand Federal Cross of Achievement. Father Schulte, a pilot in. World War I, pioneered in ad'apt­ ing modern means of transpor­ tation in unexplorP.d mission areas. In 1927 he founded the Missionary Transport Agency. Earlier this year, in what he said was perhaps his lQst great flight, he delivered a transport plane from Germany to South­ west Africa.

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs.• Aug. 8. 1963

The Particular Council of St. Vincent de Paul Society ., the Attfeboro Area sponsors Legion of Decency List .... puWic Hl'Yice 10 readers of The Anchor.

Says Laity Role Poses Challenge For Musicians

Legion of Decency

A

NEW ORLEANS (NC) ­

An authority onchurcll

music believes the trend

toward greater participation

A-1-Unobiedionable . . General Patronage

lick..

A.,.

Alm~)St:

~rs

Hon.ymoon MachIne

Panword is Cour~

How the W.st Was W.

PT 109

A " _ t Outw $paw It's (',-". Mon.y laid.rs of Leyte Gulf hoi, Th. Jason and tile Argenautl laven. Th. loy Who Cought a Crook Joseph and Hi.....th.rll :;nake Woman Captur. r. ,t Cap.ule ,. Son of Flubber Coptain Sinbad KiA or Cur. Summer Magic Cottle King LEa.nd of lobo Tarzan', Thr•• Chaneng•• eon,tantin. and the Cro.. Lossle', Great Advenlur. Tammy or I the Doctor Damon and Phythlas List of Adrian Messeng.r";" n Goes to India Day Mars Invaded the Earth Longest Day. Th. Tftnage Millionair. Make Way for Lila Thief of Baghdad Dru...s of Africa 55 Doys at P.king Man from the Din.r', Club Traitors Flight that Disappear'" Marco Polo Hars. Ge"ering of Eagles Miracl. of the Whit, Ugly American Gidget Goes to lome Stallions Viran. the Unbeli.vabl. Gret Escape Mal' 'le Moon V,-'e to the B... tom Great Van Robb.ry Murder at tho Gallop of the Sea ".rculesand tho Captl". No Man is an Island Wonderful World of the W_ ,. Professor P- ' -s Grimlll

CIasa A-Il-Mora11y Unobiectionable for Adults and Adolescents All tile Way Ho_

Fk. ' I tho Str.. ts Pirates of Ilood River Four Day, of Napl.. Playboy of tho W.stertl I) Pounds of Trouble World r-rantlc I' for A Heavy­ , Budd Fury of the "agone wei!;' ds, Th. Girls. Girls. Girls des of the Wor'" Itadl Fox Guns of Saniuro Iridge !.. the Sun Sa"age Guns Huns. Th. Scream of .or Harbor LIght. CcHtin-. Th. Just for Fun Secr.t of D.ep Harbor Centurion Kiss of the Valllpiro Shame of the Sabl... W _ child " Waiting c~ ", with Me lone.lot and Gu:...".r. Showdown lowrenc. of Arabia Square of Violence Convicts 4 Court Martia. Lion. Th. Sla"e. The Sword of the Conqu.ror Courtship of Eddi.·s !'ather long Abs.nce Miracle Worker Taras Bulba D."ld and Lila

1110 lumlng Court Da)s of WIn. -.I ..... Murd.. en the Campve 1110 Day and the " Mutiny 0" the Bounty D.vil .. 4 o'clock

My HaJM Is ,,,. The Old Dark House Diary • • Mad.­

Naked Edge The Terror .Donovan's Reef

Paranoiac To r 0 M~ekingbirtl Duel of the ntan.

Play tt Cool Trur,k, The Electra

Samson and the Snen Mira-Twice Told Tales 1w,}'botIy Go Ho_

AN N·,.ht long Amazons of Rome Antigon.

DcrrIr.....

A-II-Morally Unobiectionable for Adulta ~

CoIIlIIICIIId

Battl- of Stalingrad

..aclt "arty Breakfast At Tiffany'. Iy.. Iy. Birdie r,.,.~takers

Caire Co_ Blow your Hont Come Sept.mber Corridors of Blood Crime Dt Not Pay Critic's Choice Crooks Arionymous Day III Court Dime With A Halo F' • MiI.s to Midnight Great War. The '

Hud Hustl.r. I Coufcl Go On Singl... If A Man Answ.rs I Thk A' Fool '" The Fr~nch Style lo". At Twellty lo.. Is a Batt Magnificent Sinn.r Manchurian Condidate '~arriage of Figaro ,'Aarried Tc:> Young Money. Money. Mon.y Nine Hours fa lama One Plu· One Passionate Thief Period of Adjustm.nt

Police Nu....

Reber with II Cau..

Rififi In T~fO

Iocca and his Ir.th.,.

Seaets of Nazi Criminalt

Sparrows Can't Sing

Sp.ncer's Mountain

Summ.r and Smoke

T.rm of Trial

Thr.. on a Spree

Thunder of DrulIM

Tower of laridon

Town' without Pity

Toys in the Attic

Tria', Th.

West Side Story

A-lV-Morally Unobjectionable for Adults, with Reservations Adam and E"e I> J ' ' , . and Consent Circle of Deception Cleo from 5 to 7 Crowning Experi.nce De"il's Wanton Di"orce. Italian Styl. Eeli".. Freud Fellinl

Girls of the Night Imp"rtant. Man 'ntn..

" Shaped R"om .... 'qs La Dolce Vita Lolita long Days Journey into Night Mondo Cane

H• .,.r Tak. Candy frOM a Stranger Press.' " Point Sky Abo"e and the Mud Below Storm Center Strangers of the City , Suddenly, Last Summ.r Too Young to Loft Walk On the Wild Sid.

Class !-Morally Objectionable in Part for All

o

Arture's 'sland Jessica Baell Str.et Cleopatra Condlde Irma La Do_ Chapman R.port Joker. Th. Day the Earth Co"" Fire Joum to the Sev.nth Dr. No Plan.t Irmd of lo"ing Explosive G.neratlon londru For Lave er MollOY'

' l.eda Fireb Th.

Follow the loy,

La.,.r, Come lock Forc. of Impuls.

lover. Oft a Tightrope Free, W' • and 21

Madame Frightened City, 1110

Main AttractifWl • Goodbye Again

Ma.. Trap Gypsy

Marilyn Marin.s let's Ga Head, Th.

House of Fright

Maxine Ho•.• of Wo_

Mongot. Island of lo.,.

N.w Kind of love

Night is My Futur.

Ni,' of Evil

No lo". for Johnny

Operation Bikini

Pass:on of -'ow Fire

Purple Noon

Rampage Sodom and Go-..ah Stripper Tanars T_e Out for Lovo T.mptress and the MonIt Two Week. ill Another Towll Vampire and the 10...,1110 War lo"er White Sla". Ship

Class C-Condemned laIeony. Tho loci of Gra.. Bell'Alltonio

Law. i"h.

. "art of Desir. let Uasons Danger_ "ot kum. Prime Time Lo". Garno

hccaccIo Lave is My !'rofe.,l. .

"rivate Property ..._thle.. Lovers, The

Satu. ~ay """ht and Mademoisen. Striptease Sunday Morning Cold W' J ill August Come Danc. With MJI Ma",dalena 5o"ag. Eye

c·,.,en Capital Sins

Maid ill "oris During On. Night Sins of Mona Kent

Expresso flongo Mating Urge Miller's Beautiful Wif. Smll.. of a Summ.r Hlvht

Fiv. Day lo".r Tal.s of Paris .

GIrf wlth the GofcIoa Iyoe Mltsou Temptation

Gr.... CarnatiOil Mom end Dad Gr..n Mar. Nude Odyssey, Th. Third Sex

Too Young. Too Immo,aI

Heroes and Sin_s Odd ObS.llifWl Trial. of Oscar Wild.

I love, You lo.,. Oscar Wilde Truth, Th.

Joan of the A......' "allionate S v _ "o'!4:,=,na JvIes _d Ji.. Phaedra w_.. of lhe WorW L·Anenlur. I'laY!liri After Dark .. Notto ........ Mot ....

19

CHAPLAIN MAKES FRIENDS: Father Thomas A. McDonough, C.SS.R., port chaplain at New Orleans, ex­ ehanges stories with two Bailors on a Greek freighter. He is one of only four full-time port chaplains in the United States, and is also secretary of the National Catholic Apoa­ tleship of the Sea, U.S.A. NC Photo.

Mission for Irish California Important Field for Priests

From Dublin Seminary

LOS ANGELES (NC) - For added, '"became a Bishqp itl almost 100 years California baa Cal ifo rnia, Father Eugene 1aeen one of the principal mission O'Connell." fields for priests from All Hal­ - In 1861 he was eonsecrated a lows Seminary in DUblin, Ire­ bishop and named Vicar Apos­ laDd. tolie of Marysville. In 1868 he was appointed first Bishop of Father James Murphy, C.M" vice-rector, visiting here, said Grass Valley, now the Sacra­ . more than 600 priests from All mento diocese. Hallows had come to California Catholic homes of Ire­ in the past century" At present, land," Father Murphy said, "are he estimated, there are about still nurturing grounds for 'vo­ 150 All Hallows alumni working cations." in this state. "Ours is a missionary ,college

for the English-speaking world. It was founded in 1842 by Father

John Hand, a Dublin diocesan PHOENIX (NC) - Catholic priest, to provide priests to fol­ low Irish emigrants at the time cemetery directors from through of the famine," Father Murphy out the country will meet here Tuesday, Oct. 15 to 1'7 for their recounted. 16th annual three-day conven­ "In 1892' the Irish Vincentian tion. Fathers were placed in charge. The meeting's theme will be Over 4,000 priests have gone out . of All Hallows in its history," "Caesaris Caesari, et Dei Deo"­ a phrase from Christ's words in he added. the Gospel, "Render unto Cae­ Nurturing Grounds sar the things that are Caesar's The brisk, athletic - looking and to God the things that are Irish educator said priests from God's." All Hallows are sent to America, The keynote address will be Australia, New Zealand, South given by Paul Daggett, director Africa, Great Britain and New­ of cemeteries for the St. Paul, foundland. ,Minn., archdiocese. Father Rob­ "One of our professors," he ert F. Allen of Southfield, Mich., ia pnlsident' of the conlerence.

"The

CemeterY Directors

To Meet in October

Serra Executive CHICAGO (NC)-Patrick E.

Raleigh of Chicago hu be~

named executive assistant for Serra International, business and professional men's organization which seeks to promote voca­ tions to the priesthood.

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by the laity in Catholic serviCei

and the use of the vernacular

present a challenge fDr Ameri­

can poets and musicans to pro­

vide suitable material.

Msgr. F. Thomas Gallen, di­

rector of church music for the

Diocese of Columbus, said M

Loyola University's Summer

school of liturgical music her~

"u we are going to sing ver­

nacular, we're going to have to

have hymns that fit the actioD

of the liturgy. The widely sung

'devotional' hymn!! do not, by

their very nature, fit the action

of the liturgy. In this respect we

have II challenge for American

poeta and musician!' to write

thin«s that would be suitable."

Musie 0: Pasi 'nle text of hymns used during .. the Mass, Msgr. Gallen said. sbould fit the action the priest ia performing. While the vernacular sho:u14 Be utilized if it will get people to participate in the liturgy, he declared "we should not sever" , from Church music of the past. "'I think we would be very fool­ ish if we would cast aside a lit­ urgy nf 1,000 years," the Ohi. prelate commented. In this respect, said Msgr. Gal­ len, there is room for participa­ tion by the laity but still room for keeping the choir, which would specialize in good tradi­ tional Churcb music. AsJu Proficiency U there ia to be good liturgical music both for the laity and the choir, Msgr. Gallen said, one of , the first thiI1gs to be done is see that the organists and choiJI­ masters are properly trained_ "they have to be professionals.· One problem, he observed, W , that so many people feel they can sing or play the organ, but '"very few" are interested in be­ ing proficient in these fields. Msgr. Gallen said he feels that choirmasters and organists of aD area should have periodic meet­ ings "to inspire one another' to higher goals" in church music.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-:Thurs., Aug. 8, 1963

ROSE HAWTHORNE HOME: Sisters at Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home, Fall River, enjoy a Scrabble break.. From left, Siste;r M. Immacu­ lata, Sister M. Avila, Sister M. Rosario, Sister M. Louis. The dog is Taffy.

Praises Growing $outh American Mission Force LA PAZ (NC) - Bishop John W. Comber, M.M;, Su­ perior General of the Mary­ knoll Mis s ion e I' s, has expressed his admiration for the growing number of U. S. priests, Sisters and laymen working in Latin America. Bishop Comber spoke at a meeting here with Archbishop Abel Antezana y Rojas of La Paz, Archbishop Carmine Rocco, Apostolic Nuncio to Bolivia. and other prelates during a visit to Maryknoll missions in Bolivia, Chile and Peru. He said: Country-wide Effort "It is wonderful to see the work of the St. James Society (founded by Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston) and the various American dio­ ceses represented in Bolivia and Peru, particularly the St. Louis archdiocese and the Dioceses of Jefferson City, Mo.; Ogdensburg, N. Y.; La Crosse, Wis., and Kan­ AS City, Mo." Since his last visit here, he noted, priests and Sisters have e<lme to Bolivia from many parts of the U. S. Besides American diocesan priests, Dominicans from the Chicago province, Fran_ . ciscans from the Province of the Holy Name of New York, Resur­ rectionists from Chicago and the Order of the Paracletes from New' Mexico, are also working here. .

Chanr:e In Decade Ten years ago, Bishop Comber· recalled, Maryknoll Sisters joined Sisters of Charity of Maryland in the Diocese of Cho­ chabamba. Since then Domini­ can Sisters from Sinsinawa, Wis.; Sisters of the Precious Blood from O'Fallon, Mo.; Poor Clares from Paterson, N. J., Franciscan Sisters from Peek­ skill, N. Y.; Loretto Sisters from Kentucky and Sisters of St" Mary of the Third Order of .St. Fran­ cis from St. Louis have come to work here.

Honor Cardinal Bea

. -~

MUNICH (NC) ' - Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., President of the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, has been awarded the Grotius Medal of the International Grotius Foun­ dation for the Advancement of International Law for his achievements in the ecumenical field.

Right, Sister M. Robert cares for a patient. Home will celebrate its 31st anniversary in the Diocese Aug. 28.

Sisters' at Rose Hawthorne Home Open

New Dimen.sion of Charity to Patients

]lJy Patricia McGowan.

Charity never faiteth. 'For almost 31 years it has burned brightly at 1600 Bay Street, Fall River, site of the Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home, where 11 Servants of Relief for Incurable Caneer, headed by Sister Paul, superior, make easier the last days and nights of suffering men, women and sometimes children. Five years ago The Anchor carried an article on the work of the The grounds about the Home growing group of fervent well­ c()ngregation in the Fall are 'oeautiful, reflecting the im­ wishers, made up of relatives of River Diocese. It is still·true. port:lnc~ Rose Hawthorne La­ patients, of nurses and doctors The article noted "Although throJ) attached to lovely sur­ who have directed sufferers to every Bishop in the land would welcome its servi.ces, the fewness of its members limits the con­ gregation ~ activity in only six Dioceses. Fall River is grateful to be among them." Need is the only requisite for admission to the Rose Haw­ thorne Home, and once within its walls a patient enters a new' dimension of charity. Its att;ributes were outlined by its foundress, known in religion as Mother Alphonsa, but to the world as Rose Hawthorne La­ throp, convert daughter of famed author Nathaniel Hawthorne. No Money They are listed by Katherine Burton in her biography of Mot­ her Alphonsa, "Sorrow Built A Bridge": "She would have' no experimenting on the incura­ bles in her care . . . There was to be no aversion shown toward even the most diseased patient. There was to be rio wearing of rubber gloves to show disquiet or fear of the patients. No money was to be received from relatives or friends of the patients. 'These things,' she dedared, 'shall be· anathema.''' . Indeed, the Home is a place of peace. In each bright and airy ward is a comforting shrine to, Our Lady, Health of the Sick.. In contrast to most hospitals, this one welcomes little children, as visitors. On a recent Sunday, for instance, a patient held in his arms his month-old grand·· son. Tears were in his eyes, bul; they were tears of joy. Flowers are everywhere in thE! Home, and patilmts. are welCOmE! to aid in arranging them, as they are free to aid in other small chores. There is a patient, for in·· stance, able to walk about, who makes sure that his bedfast com·· panions are kept supplied with cool ddnks, h.andkerchiefs, o.r whatever else they may need. There's a pleasant choice of drinks for patients, too. The Sis­ ters will willingly bring beeI', soda, coffee, tea, or any other beverage to bedsides at' an:1' time. Candy bars or other snacks are also readily available.

roundings. Ambulatory patients the Home's doors, and of priests enjoy them especially, while the and religious who have seen for Sisters look forward to sunsets themselves the work of the Home. over Mount Hope Bay, spectacu­ About 15 postulants enter the larl)' visible from the Home. No questions as to creed are community each year, say the asked of patients at the Home, Sisters. Some hear of it through but ·there are many cases, say the the printed word, others because Sisu!rs, of deathbed conversions relatives or friends are patients. or return to the sacraments. Most have to overcome special Daily Mass is offered in the opposition to their special voca­ Home chapel and ambulatory tion. Mother Alphonsa met the opposition too, and tossed it aside paU~nts may attend; while those in bed receive Holy Communion in a typically breezy manner, several times weekly, if they writing: "Our Sisters have al­ ways improved in health after wish. A touching ceremony takea entering the community. There seems to be a romantic notion place on the feast of Corpus abroad that our members are Christi, when Benediction is cel­ squeezed of every ounce of vi­ ebrated at ward altars and those tality and endurance. If people unahle to visit the chapel may would look at our solid and com­ join in adoration of the Blessed fortable maidens, it. ought to Sacl'ament exposed. clear up such an idea." Bed patients; however, are-able With regard to the difficultiea to join in the morning and even­ .of the work, she said, "It takes ing prayers broadcast from the a week or so to get used to it, chal~el. They include the rosary, and during that time' it ia try­ litanies and· acts of faith, hope ing." and charity. . There Is Aid The Rose Hawthorne Home To return again to The An­ • reac:hes out to the Diocese in many ways. About half' of itll chor's article of five years ago: patients are usually from the "In their work the Sisters have Diocese, the remainder coming aids. One is the single word en­ from the other New England graved on the ring worn by each professed member: Jesus. An­ stat~s, but nearly every parish other is a motto in the Home's guild and council has a commit­ tee active in making bandages small office: 'Silently love your God.' and other supplies for the Sis­ "The peaceful atmosphere of ter!l. This work is also under­ the Rose Howthorne Lathrop taken by members of many Pro­ Home lingers in the mind. Hope teslant churches. 'I'here are also many youth is its keynote: a fragile hope of earth, a triumph.mt hope of groups and organizations of old­ heaven." er folk who remember the Home at Christmas and on other holi­ da~'S with special programs and concerts. Several civic groups have among their projects .money-raising activities on be­ half of the Home. The Specialized Job of And the Sisters have an ever-

$

Laity on Board I..A CROSSE (NC)-The La Crosse dioltese has set up a LaT MLisionary Board of seven mar­ ried couples and five priests who wilil' recruit and screen lay can­ ciidlate.t for mission posts.

15 Lay Missioners Get Assignments BALTIMORE (NC) -Fifteell young men and women of the Baltimore archdiocese leave Sunday for a minimum of one year's service in the lay misaion. field. Archbisoop Lawrence J. She. han will officiate at a departure ceremony in the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen. Three will serve for three years in South America. Mr. and Mrs. G. Daniel Griffin will go to Natal, Brazil where he will work as make-up editor for a Catholic weekly, and she will engage in catechetical work. Mary Ellen Dawson, a nurse, will begin a year's training at the Grail Institute for Oversea. Service in New York before be­ ing assigned to Latin America.

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