New South Chatham Church To Serve Expanding Flock
The ANCHOR .
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Construction of the new Our Lady of Grace Church in South Chatham is underway. It is expected the new 500-seat , structure will be completed to accommodate the 1963 Cape Cod Summer vacationers. Building of the new church is tho latest propect undertaken by . the matter and, on the Feast of the Diocese in the past few the Assumption in 1960, gave years to prov·ide for the his approval for bUilding a new spiritual needs, of an ever-in- church in South Chatham.
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, August 23, 1962
Vol. 6, No. 35
(C)
1962 The Anchor
creasing Catholic population on Cape Cod. ' "Chatham has always had a large Summer colony. As pas'tor of Holy 'Redeemer in Chatham, Father John J. Bl'ennan, SS.CC. . has had to 'cope with this 'problem-particularly attendance at Sunday ,Mass. Despite the addition to Holy Redeemer and a schedule of 10 Sunday Masses there is just no more room. However, this condition was foreseen by Father Brennan and about two years ago he ap-' proached the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop ofFaU River, with a possible solution to the problem. The Bishop considered
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Sister Ma,ry Hortense Is Acade~y Principal Sist~r Mary Hortense, S.U.S.C., for eight years head of the English department at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall ~iver, has been appointed principal of the high school, s~c e~eding Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C., named to head the new Memorial High School in Taunton. The new principal teachers of' English an opporholds a bachelor of arts de- tunity to enrich their own un-, gree from Catholic Univer- derstanding of English' litera'"
sity and a master of arts degree from Boston College. Both degrees were with a concentration English•. Sister Mary' Hortense has also done graduate work at Oxford University, where she received a' certificate. from the Summer International Institute. -This summer, she was awarded both a fellowship to the Harvard University English Institute, a program sponsored by the Commission on English of the College Entrance Examination Board, and a Wall Street Journal Newspaper Fund scholarship to Marquette University in Wisconsin. She accepted the Harvard University fellowship. 'The, purpclse of the Harvard English Institute is twofold: to give qualified secondary school
in
Transfers Affect' Holy Union N~ns Ser~ing Diocese
nounced by Rev. Mother Mary William, ProvinCial. Listed in the order' of name of Sister,pres_ ent assignment and new assignment, the transfers are 00 follows: Sister Bridgetta Marie, Sacred Heart, Taunton, St. Patrick, Havre de Grace, Md.; Sister Mary Agnes, Sacred Heart, T~unton, St. William of York, Baltimore; Sister Paul Winifred, St. Michael, Fall River, St. William of York, Baltimore; Sister Lawrence Marie, St. Michael, Turn to Page Five
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lISTER MARY BORTKNSII
Msgr. Manuel 'J. Teixeira Requiem on Saturday
ture, language, and rhetorical theory and to provide a' workshop for testing I theory and practice bE)ing developed by the College Entrance Examination Board for strengthening, the English' curriculum.
A Solemn Pontifical Mass of Requiem will be cele.brated at 10 o'clock Saturday morning in St. Anthony's Church, Taunton, for Rt. Rev. Manuel J. Teixeira, pastor of St. Anthony's Church for the past 18 years. Monsignor Teixeira, who celebrated his 1960, died Wednesday morning golden jubilee as a priest in St. A?thony's Rectory. with Solemn High Mass of B?rn .10 O~r Lady of Graoo . . ParIsh 10 Talul da Terra, st. Thanksgivmg on Feb. 6p Michael, Azores, son of the late
Sister Mary Hortense has taught at St. Mary's School, Taunton, at Sacred Heart School, Lawrence, and at Sacred Hearts Elementary School and the College of the Sacred Hearts, both of Fall River.
BEAUTIFUL STATUE OF ST. ROCH
GIFT TO FALL RIVER PARISH Imported Italian ]}Iarble Work of Art Honors Memory Of Priest's Mother and Father
. A beautiful st'atue of St. Roch has been placed in front, of the Fall River church of Transfers affecting schools , which he is the patron saint, of the Diocese staffed by Sis- the gift of Rev. Reginald M. ters of the Holy Union of the Barrette, assistant pastor, illl Sacred Hearts have been an- memory of his parents, the late Mr. and Mrs. Zenon D. Barrette. Chiseled out of white Carrara marble, the five-foot-six statue stands on a four-foot pedestal of Botticino marble, the combination of the two types of marble blending excellently to give a tone or distinction. The work was done in Italy
Land was purchased from Dr. D'Elia of Harwich Port; phina were drawn by the architect, Mr. Albert Roy; and in March of 1962 Thomas Haley, the contractor, began the job of clearing the 'site. And so, on the Feast of the Assumption in 1962, parishioners and clergy ,gathered at the junc_ tion of Routes 28 and 137 in South Chatham, to witness tho blessing of the ground and tho turning of the firSt earth for this new Church which will 1M known as Our Lady of Grace. It is expected that the church w.ill be, ready' for the Summer Turn to Page Five
especially for St. Roch's by the DeP:rato Stu d i 0 S of Boston. 'White Carrara was chosen in preference to others because of its rich color and resistance to New England climate. • The saint is depicted in his pilgrimage attire revealing his ulcerated thigh, with a dog carrying a piece of bread to him. The fa'ce is that' of a man in his late twenties, with brilliant, 'piercing eyes and a peaceful"
smile. The fingernails, the dog's' 'teeth and paws, and the knot in the cord are details that. bring out the beauty of the artistry. It is a startling fact that' our own personaI' knowledge 'of the lives of saints is very limited. We know few facts about the great saints, very little or 'nothing about the others. We utter their names. We even invoke some, without knowing a thing about them. St. Roch certainly falls under this type. His name has been on the lips of the people of this Diocese for over 58 years; and we would dare say that Turn to Page Eighteen
Holy erO'55 'Nuns In New Bedford L'ist Transfers
Mpke First Vows, Clothe Postulants At Mercy Chapel
Transfers and new assignments announced by the Sisters of the Holy Union and Seven Dolors from their
Twenty-four novices pronounced temporary vows and 19 Sisters have renewed the same vows at ceremonies in
Manchester, N. H. provincial house include Sister M. of St. Anne of the Trinity, Sister M. Yvonne of the Cross and Sister Mary of St. Phllip of Neri leaving Sacred Heart School, New Bedford. Sister Mary of St. Philip is retiring. . Sister M. of St. Raphael io coming tQ Sacred Heart School, New Bedford. Outgoing from St. Anthony School, New Bedford, are Sister M. of St. Gregorius, Sister'M. of st. Imelda, Sister M. of St. Pauline Therese, Sister M. of St: Francois du Carmel, Sistei'M. of St. Germaine of Rome. Retiring from St. Anthony's are Sister 111. of St. Cyr, and Sister M. of. . Turn to p~ge Eighteell
¥other of Mercy Novitiate, Mt. St. Rita Convent, Cumberland, R.I. ' Temporary professions were made by Sister P~ul Mary, 'daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James P. McKnight, 59 Wayne Street, Fall River; Sister Rose Marie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Smith, 507 Second Street, Fall River; Sister Patrick Marie, niece of Mr. and Mrs. John Travis, '1 Vestal Street, Fall River. "Renewing vows were Sistei' Mary Bruce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. McCann, 603, Durfee Street, Fall River; and Sister Mary Perpetua, daughter of Judge Mrs. Walter L.. ,Turn, to :page' EighteeD.
·MKSSWN WORKER: Fr. Thomas J. McCabe of Bos,ton has joined the staff of the Catholic Church Extension Society and will direct the Order of Martha, the society's women's auxiliary. NC Photo.
Manuel and late Emelia C. Teixeira, he received his education for the' priesthood in tho Seminary in Terceira, Azores. Ordained on Jan. 30, 1910 in Terceira, the late Taunton pastor served for nine years in hi.l native land. Following World War I, Mon-:signor Teixeira came to the TUM to Page Eighteen
and
MONSllGNOR TEIXEIRA
Council To Bring Bishopse Faithful C~@ser Tog~ther MINNEAPOLIS (NC)' Catholics will feel a new spiritual kinship with their bishops after the ecumenical council, Auxiliary Bishop Leon~ ard P. Cowley of St. Paul predicted at a meeting of the board of directors of the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women. He said this kinship will develop from a new, broad defi~ nition of the rights and duties of bishops expected at the counciL "The Holy Father was overwhelmed at the power he foUD4 TurD. ~ Page Eighteen
2
Mrs.F.B. Conno..s
THEANCHO~-Dioces'e of Fall .P;ver-Th')r c . Aug. 23> ~'962
Priest.. Psych(O)~ogD$~ Aga~nst
WiU",Pow®r
ST. LOUIS (NC) - A priest warned here' against 'being a · "will-power Christian" who depends too much on himself and not enough on God. Father Adrian van Kaam, C.S.Sp., called this a "highhanded approach to sanctity." Father van Kaam, a psychologist at puquesne University, Pittsburgh, made his comments in .Insight, a new quarterly mag_ azine of religion and mental health published here. Not Isolated He cautioned 'that the human. will does not· work in. isolation' and a man cannot manipul9.te himself as he would a lifeless object. " A spirituality 'based solely on wtil power, he said, "may become pious self-deceit or lead to a morbid compulsive existence." Ai the other extreme, he noted, 1B a lack of will' which "may incline man to experience himself· as 'driven by society by bis body chemistry and unconscious inclinations." . Correct Attitude "Such a view may undermine a vital Christian acceptance' 'of freedom, guilt and 'responsibility," he sai4. . Father van Kaam said the correct attitude lies 'between these extremes. "The religious will is the fundamental readiness to face and affirm God;'s presence
Requiem Mass Tomorrow
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Solemn High Mass Off will be celebrated in St. Mary's Church, Taunton, llIt 10 o'clock tomorrow, Friday, f<w the repose of the soul of the late ,) Mrs, Frank B. Connors, nee Mary E. Minahan, the mother of Rev. Francis B. Connors, lI9sistant at the Sacred Heali Church, Taunton, and CYO director of that area. Mrs. Connors, widow -of the late Frank B. Connors, died Wednesday morning at her home, 224 Washington St.. Taunton. In addition to Fathe1' Connors, she is survived by two daughters and two sons: Mrs. Raymond (Mary R.) Smith, Taunton; Daniel J., Deep River, Conn.; John J., Taunton; and Miss Ann' C. Connors" also· af Taunton. . . . Mrs. Connors, a. member a! the household staff for.- many years at 'St. Mary's' Rectory~ Taunton, will be buried in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Taunton. , A
Requ~em
as it reveals itseU in the daily situation ... The saint is not the willful ~thical superman, but the humble shepherd of the s.acred," he said.
Says~;w'o~g F@ath MIli~t Be ~ Rooted ..
.nlm . ~u€:harrisiJ' GHICAGO (NC) - Albert Cardinal Meyer told 1;500 delegates to the National' Laywomen's Retreat Con-
gress here that "a living. faith· should .be rooted in the Eucharist." Speaking at a Pontifical Mass, the Archbishop of Chicago said that <<perfection is not falling in love with' ourself, even with our virtues; it is falling. in love ·with God:' In strengthening the interior· life, he said "what counts is not· the gift of the mind but the gift of the heart: doing the will of God even when it seems that' God is distant and we find no consolation in :His service." Cardinal Meyer reminded the women that strengthening 'the·interior life does not imply escaping from the' daily life' in' society. He quoted Pope John:. "Let no man imagine that a life of activity in the world is incompatible with the interior life." New Volumes , . Represents Diocese . .NEW YORK (NC) -, "What Mrs. Emmett P. Alnlond. of . ia a Bishop?" is the 91st volume South Dartmouth, president :Of and "The Sources for the Life Our Lady of Good Counsel· Reof Christ" is the 92nd volume treat .'League, represented' the AD'the Twentil'lth Century' En- Fall: River Diocese at the cyclopedia of. Catholicism is~ vention. . " $ued by 'Hawthorn Books, Inc.. Bishop' John 'J.Wright of ", .•. , " " Pittsburgh, keynote sPeaker, erdo said it is more important for .. FRIDAY - ' St. Ba~tJi'olo-mew; clerics and laymen to think of ApoStle,. II (;:.lai>ii. ·.Red.: 'Mass themselves as members of a uni~' fied Church than as represents-· Proper;~ Gloria; . Creed;'Prefr tives of smaller groups within ace of· Apostles.. ' the Church. SATuRr)AY~t. ·'Li>1.irs; KLng "':'he Church ofChrisl Usa and Confesstii:·. J1I . -eJ.~ss. single, living. oiganllsm," 'he · White. Mass Proper;' Gi1>l'ia; said, "When people' are more_ · no "Creed; COmmon Preface. conscious of their function than SUNDAY-xi:. Sunday After they are of the fact . that the,. Pentecost... II Class. Green. ·are ide'ntified with Jesus Christ Mass Proper;' Gloria; Creed; through Baptism, then someone is missing the point." Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-St. Joseph Calasanetius, . Confessor. ill Class. White. Mass' Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY-'-$t. Augustine, BishNEW YORK (NC)-Thefourth. op, Confessor and DOctor of the Church. ill Class. White.· and final film .ina ',series of Mass Proper; Gloria; SecOnd Catholic international prOgrams Collect St. Hermes, Martyr; no is being shown on the televised "Catholic Hour"over most NBCCreed; Common Preface. TV ,stations on Suriday. Aug. 26, WEDNESDAY - Beheading of at 1;30 P.M. St. John the Baptist. m.Class. .The· presentation is entitled Red. Mass /Proper; 'Gl<!ria; "A Day in the Life ,of the Pope" Second Collect St.· Sabina, and was created. by RAJ TeieMartyr; no Creed;. CommOn visione ltallilna.iIt documents Preface.' . tWenty-,four hours liD the ;bwiy TI."URSDAY-St. Rose of Li.ii!.a. . life ofllis Holiness P-ope .John XXIII. The English narrative is Virgin. ill Class. White. . , Proper; Gloria; Second·YOUect .: spoken by Msgr. John J. Dougb55. Felix and Adauetils,··Mar-...; erty, president of Seton Han Uni- 'tYrs·:.oo Creed' Common .~ versity, South Orange, N. J. , " face:' , . ' .. " . The "Catholic' Hour" is .~ ·duced by the National 'Council of catholic Men in .association ., . with the National Broadcasting It is seen on a d~ea fORTY HOU~.s,:> Company.. basis in some areas and the DEVOTION '.' : NCCM advises a check of locaI " program li~ngs. : Aug. 26-St. Allth~ny of' the, . Desert, Fall .River.' . .' S1. . John . the. Baptist,' Central Village.' . Cenll'enary in Avila Sept. ~ur Lady of the ABAVILA (~C) - 'The city ,of . "sumption,: New BedSl' Teresa here in Spain ;and ford. ~ the . Cannelite Order are .preOUI Lady.of Mount Car-, paring to eelebrate the fourth meI.Seekonk. '. , centenary of the Teresian Re. ~ept. ~St. Anne, Fall River..' formation.', The International Congress 'cf St. Dominic,.Swansea the Venerable . Third 'Order 1ltf Sept.l6-Holy ~ FaUI Carmel and ,a triduum ~ at the River. . convent Church of San 'Jose will St. Joseph, A ~ Dllllit.'the anniversary .next .:Fdda,-. . .' . . . 1dWIIOB. ,5anJose was tbefirst couftDt
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MARKS POLISH CONVERSION: ::More than 1.0:000 persons turned ,out at the outdoor Mercy of God 'Shrine at Stockbridge to hear Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of -Boston, speak during novena devotions muking the 1,OOOth anniversary of the 'eohversion of Poland to Christ.: ianity.. .Behind the, Cardinal js the 'unusua:lpainting of Our Lady of the Ecumenical Council. NG Photo.
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STOCKBRIDGE (NC)---:Ricllard Cardinal Cushing charged here that the Christian heritage of Poland· is .being ",systematically and cleverly destroyed 'by .a communist regime." The Archbishop of Boston spoke to about 10,000 .persons at the Mercy of God Shrine at Polish Marian Assembly marking a visit of . the Pilgrim Icon of the Black Madonna, Our Lady of Czestochowa, Patroness of Poland. Cardinal .Cushing said· that· since the Second W-orldWar millions ·of Poles behind ·the Iron 'Curlainhavehad to stand b.,. .helplessly as they were enslaved ,by "an enemy :bent OIl denying all rcli.gious truth." "That .. (Polish) Church bI doomed to become a. Silent Church unless we .... ruse' the powerful practice of prayer and sacrifice in her ·.behalf,"he warned.. He singled Out especially Stefan Cardinal Wy'szynski, Primate of Poland, 38, "a tremendous power of fortitude for .the ' . . ,.' : Poles?" Be said :that~hen Cardinal WySzinsldWas .re!2ased.from custody' by the communists .m 1956 flbeimmediately .inspired his Catholic people ,to adopt il spiritual and moral .rebirth through 'The 'Great Novena' beginning in il95:iand ,continuing until 1966 when POland will.; celebrate themill.enium of its birth as a ·Christian nation:"
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Rt.Rev. FranCiscoC. Bettencourt, 1960, Pastor,' San t 0 Christo, Fall River. AUG. 29 Rev.' Joseph D. 'DeVillandre, D.o...· 1921, Founder, Sacred Heart, North Attleboro .
'con- , ChargesSY$~emcitic.Dest,r,uction Of Polanid's Chr,istian ,He,r,itage
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NEW YORK (NC) - Bishop Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh, N.C., national chaplain of toe Catholic Daughters of America, w1ll tie spiritual director of il pilgrimage to the Secona Vat> can' Council departing from here in mid-September.
Cardinal Cushirigsald tha¢. courage of the Polish p,iimate "reminds us that day .by daY the .heroic list of men '. and women who are not atraid, to· defy the demands .of the com:munist Caesars 'ofth1s wodd grows longer." , ' .
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Urging prayers especially' to Our Lady of Czestochowa for the eventuaI :freedom of ,the P-olish people, Cardinal Cushing said ..:there 'is a greater Power over tile world than the awful power of the growing communist empire. It istbegreater power ofa Divine Kiingwhorules the . world;" .
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lHE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 23, 1962
Chaplain:Chief Hits Deca'des Of Unsound Education
Private Schools Ask State Aid In Australca
PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The chief of U.S. Navy chaplains said here that American youth, "potentially the finest in the world," has been softened by three decades of unsound education. Msgr. (Rear Adm.) George A. Russo told the closing banquet of . the Catholic War Veterans The Monsignor, discussing the convention that "the old increasing problems Of juvenile staples . . . rea din g 'and delinquency in America, recalled writing and arithmetic ... have been neglected to the point where college deans have remarked about the inadequacies of college entrants in. simple grat'nmar and addition." Frightening "In normal times this would be a bad. situation," he said. "But comparatively, when we consider the Russian educational picture, it is frightening ...Soviet youngsters are being drenched in the fundamentals of sound education as our children used to be. "I find small reagon for complacency," Msgr. Russo continued, "in the metaphysical con~ention that .communism contains within itself the factors of its own collapse. That collapse lIlOuld be a thousand years away."
Cha.rities to Meet In September ATLANTIC CITY, (NC)-The annual mee,ting of the National Conference of Catholic Charities and Society of St. Vincent De Paul will be held here from September 14 to 18. Sessions will be devoted to discussions on vari'ous topics related to "The Role of Catholie Charities in the Life of the Church" and "Catholic Charities Facing the Problem of Change." Twenty two workshops .have been scheduled. . 'The Association· of Ladies of Charity of the U.S..will hold its biennial meeUng at the same time. ' , Among the convention speakers scheduled are Archbishop John J. Krol of Philadelphia, Commissioner· Ewan Clague of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher, !!ecretary of the National Conference of Catholic Charities.
GARRISON (NC):-"The primary obligation to heal the divisions in Christendom belongs to Roman Catholics," a priest declared here at the 43rd annual meeting of the Franciscan Educational Conference. Father Roger Matzerath, S.A., professor of theology at the Atonement Seminary in Washington, D. C., made the statement during the four-day sessions held at the motherhouse of the Fmnciscan Atonement FatherS' here in New York. "Ca tholic efforts to reconcile the world in Christ are part of the Church's constitutional mission," he said. "The aim of Catholic ecumenism is to integrate all Christians into the one Church established by Christ."
role of Catholic schools in a democratic society will be issued later this month. The status of private schools in regard to government aid has been a 3ubject of widespread controversy in Australian states since six Catholic schools in Goulburn went on "strike" last July. The schools had shut down for a week in protest against lack - of financial support from . the New South Wales state government. In Wagga, in the southern part of New South Wales, the Parents and ;Friends Association has adopted a resolution urging that the state pay for the education of all children, whether they attend public or private schools. In Sydney, however, the New South Wales 'Federation 'of Parents and Citizens Association is opposing state aid to nonstate schools. .
for the adjustment of personality problems. We have them now in every small city in America and emotional disturbances among our youngsters have increased rather than receded." Returning to the subject of education, Msgr. Russo. asked "did you know that roughly only half .of our (military) recruits can give a rational explanation of the Fourth of July? That an equally small percentage can distinguish the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence?" Compared to this situation, he said, "are millions of Soviet youth who know every canon of their creed, who can quote Marx and Lenin by the paragraph and who are pledged in their own hearts to die if necessary to vin_ dicate a system, however erroneous, which they believe to be right."
VIENNA (NC) - Franziskus Cardinal Koenig, Archbishop' of Vienna, was unable to go to. Poland to celebrate the feast of. the Assumption because Poland's communist government did' not grant him a visa, it was revealed here. A Church spokesman here said Cardinal Koeing had .applied for a visa six weeks earlier. The Austrian Cardinal originally had planned to join PoAsk Lay Suggestions lish bishops and people in a pilgrimage to the PoOn Vatican Council making lish national Marian shrine at SAULT STE. MARIE (NC)- Czestochowa .on Aug. 15•. Lay men and women of this Cardinal Koening has received Ontario diocese are being asked a message of regret from Stefan their suggestions on topics that Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of will be discussed at the Second Poland. According' to reports Vatican council. here, Cardinal Wyszynski unQuestionnaires have been dis- successfully tried to convince tributed and .discussion groups communist authorities in' Warorganized to. explore the laity's saw to grant Cardinal Koenig views on such subjects as the a visa. liturgy, moral problems, educaAs far at! was known here, tion, family life, marriage probAlfred Bengsch, lems, and discipline in fast and Archbishop Bishop of Berlin, held to plans abstinence. fA» go to Czestochowa for the Resulting opinions and sugfeast of Our Lady of Czestogestions will be brought to the chowa on Sunday, Aug. 26. The attention of Bishop Alexander German Archbishop, who lives Carter of Sault Ste. Marie on ia communist-ruled East Berlin, Monday, Sept. 24, whe~ parish was invited to take part in the priests of the diocese will annual pilgrimage by Cardinal gather. at Christ. the King recWyszynski. tory here for a ,Pastoral day.
Cites Catholic Duty To H~~I D~visio!l1s
SYDNEY (NC)-Norman Cardinal Gilrey has announced a pamphlet· informing the Australian community of the
when "sociologists said that the whole matter would be solved by a nationwide system of shim clearance." B t h d 1 "after' 20 u , e ec ared, years, no country in the world has so minimal slum areas and no country has SO large a delinquency problem," as the U. S. On Increase He added that "in 1935 a group of psychiatrists claimed that all we needed to solve our youth problems was clinical facilities
Red Gov'ernment Refuses Visa
3
Market Seminars SEA TTL E (NC) - Three seminars on the European Common Market are being offered by Seattle University as part of the Jesuit university's publie affairs program.
SAVE MONEY ON
YOUR OIL HEATI TAKES PERPETUAL·VOWS: Rev. George S. DePrizio, C.S.C., Provincial Superior, presides at impressive ceremonies held for the first time in the new St. Joseph's chapel at Holy Cross Fathers Seminary, North Easton, as Kenneth J. Silvia, S.C.S., Cathedral Parish, Fall River, takes perpetual vows. A graduate of Coyle High School and StonehiIl College, Mr. 'Silvia will continue his studies for the priesthood in Canada.
ctlH 1tt CHARlIS F.
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H4 ROCKDALE AYINUI NEW IIDPOID MASS.
Uganda Prime Minister Promises To Protect Rejigious Freed.om KAMPALA (NC)-The Prime' the right of the individual to Miriister of this African nation, freedOM of worship and that due to become fully indenendent right will be safeguarded by the on Oct. 9, has assured its peo- government." pIe ~hat his· government will Premier Obote also assured respect their religious freedom. the churches of the Uganda Premier A. Milton Obote I government's full support of spoke at a reception given in their work in caring for the his honor by Anglican Archbish- spiritual needs of this nation's op Leslie Brown of Uganda. people. Msgr. Joseph Ssebayigga represented Archbishop Joseph· Kir:t::;Z»;~:::~:::~·:::~::~~~':"~~:::~~~::$*~~:*:}-;~:$=.::t:::w;:;:::;:;w..~:;:;:::ili wanuka, W.F., of Rubaga at the reception. ". ~\ The Premier told the guests: "Under 'the new constitution it is not possible 'for the govern:~ ~ ment to recognize only one church as the official church of Uganda." . "I wish, however, to assure you," he contined, "that the 1\ government intends ~o respect
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THE AI\!('l-'l"'Io-f);"'cese of Fall River-Thurs.,Aug. 23. 1962
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WINOOSKI ~NC) - An educator ,said here that the primary' function of the CSJ,tholic press should. be "ex-
By Msgr. George' G. 'Higgins Director, NCWC Social AeuoD Department
Last week in this column interested Catholics were invited to attend the 1962 convention of the National Catholic Social' Action Conference which win be held in Pittsburgh beginning t9morrow., In summarizing the program of this important meeting No less important than, formal I forgot to mention that one session of the convention will or organizational inter-faith cooperation along these lilies is' the take the form of an inter- informal, day to day cooperation
, faith seminar on Pope John's which is carried on between in- ' historic encyclical.· Leading Pro- dividual laymen in non-sectaI'itestant minisan organizations devoted to the ters and Jewish . cause of social justice. rabbis from the .]Jewish Complaint . Pittsburgh, area have been inSome observers contend thaJ; vited to take the record of American Cathopart. The prinlic laymen in this regard leaves cipal address much to be desired. We read, for will be given example, in a 'recent' book by by Rev. 'A. two Jewish experts in the field Dudley Ward, of community affairs that "the a distinguished Roman Catholic group, as a Methodist leadmatter of religious principle and er in the field sociological conditioning, main-CARMELETTES: Rev. Stephen Louturiaux, SS.CC. 01 social action. The title of his tains a conscious, and' strong im,.. paper will be "A Protestant pulse towards religious separa- receives pledge from four volunteer aides who received caps Views the Encyclical and Catho- tism in almost every commutli- and pins after serving more: than 200 hours each at Catholic lic Social Action." Rabbi Marc, ty." Memorial Home, Fall River~ Recipients are, left to right, Tanenbaum of the American Catholic priests, we are told, Margaret Donald, Kathleen Clark, Ann Suneson and' Colleen Jewish Committee' will com- "tend' to isolate themselves, fuom ' ment on Dr. Ward's paper, after the mainstream of Ameuican Martfu. which ,Mr. John G; Deedy, editor communal life (Catholic, clergy of The Pittsburgh Cath9lic. wiU, have been described as. the least chair an informal discussion acCessible group in America);. and in certain areas press. their from the floor. laymen to do the. same." ("A Urgent Need Tale of Ten Cities: The: Triple. This inter-faith seminar will Ghetto in American' Religious READING (NC) - The James' "be a step in the right direction. Life" by EUgene J. Lipman and Burns family of Columbus" Ohio, Actually there has been a rea- Albert Vorspan, Union of Amer- is a religious, community in itsonably good working relation- ican Hebrew Congregations, New self-nine of them. ship for a number of years be- . York, *4.95). SO when Sister Mary Leo, who . tween' Catholic; Protestaht and This thUmbnail generalization was Camilla Burns, youngest. of Jewish organizations in the field is sO oversimplified 'as' to be al,. the family> professed her final of social action. most a caricature. Nevertheless, vows as a Sister of Notre Dame The three groups have co- it's something for all of us de ,Namur at Mount Notre Dame operated with one another ~rom priests and laymen alike - to convent here, in, Ohio, among time to time on specific projects think about very seriously. those' at the ceremony were her mother, a nun; two brothers with good results. Nevertheless, 'Room for Improvement who are priests, and five of her much more remains to be done. Donald Thprman, whose new six sisters~ also' nuns.' The sixth It is to be hoped, therefore, that NCSAC's initiative in spon- book "The Emerging La,yman" sister couldn't attend because' soring this seminar will en- was cited in this column ,last she is a cloistered nun. eourage other groups - in con- week, is one of those who thinks Only member of the family sultation with the proper eccle- that all too often the' accusation not in religious life is a brother, sistical authorities - to organize 'is true. who is the father of eight / similar meetings wherever it Many Catholics, clergy and' children. He aiso was present.. lay, hen contends, "find it difwould be feasible. 'When . James alld Gertrude Name ,Housing The urgent need for inter- ficult to rjd themselves of a Burns were married in Columfaith' cooperation in the field of 'mentality which' is' primarily bus, they made a promise to Project' for Priest social action, has been stressed 'concerned with things Catholic give pack' to God the sons and' NEW YORK (t'lC)-;-The New by many authoritative observers - to the exclusion of secular or daughters. He would give them York City Housing Authority in .recent years, foremost among a'-reiigious matters (and)'. . . in whatever vocation the chil- announced here it wIll name a them being Cardinal Bea" the are' somewhat afraid to take tbe dren chose. They: had 10 children 'new H~rlem housing project for bead of the Holy ,See's Secre- plunge and involve' themselves in. 13 years. One son died at the the late Msgr. Cornelius J. Drew, tariat for Promoting Christian in large numbers in the sea of age of 23. Mr. ana Mrs: Burns "a staunch fighter for improved Unity. civic, cultural· and community were daily com m u n i can t S housing' conditions in Harlem." Clos,er to GOal groups which are not Catholic in , throughout their married life. The ~nnouncement. was made 'Only a few weeks ago the orientation." Burns died in 1956.by William Reid', chairman of Whether or not Mr. Thorman Cardinal returned to this subthe city 'housing authority. Worked, Prayed Together ject in an interview published is right there is no use arguing Msgr. Drew, pastor of St. Charles One son is a Jesuit priest, anin the Jesuit weekly, America. about details. The important Borromeo church which is adother a priest of the Oblates of' thing to keep in mind is that "Think of what a wonderful ja<;ent to the Harlem project, thing it would be," he said, ~'if there is ample' room for im- Mary Immaculate. Three daugh- died on June 25, 1962. ters a're Franciscan Sisters, two Christians of all confessions provement. Cardina~ Meyer of Two apartment buildings to would work in close harmony Chicago made this point very 'are Sisters of Notre Dame de be named for the Monsignor 'are' Namur, and one is a Franciscan emphatically in his 1962 Lenten . for international peace; for the each 21 stories ,high. To be com_ Sister of' the Blessed Sacrament, ' achievement of human rights of Pastoral: "We must not be reluctant to the order Mrs. Burns entered pleted in 1963, they originally minority g r 0 ups '~md racial were to be called Section One of take an active part in local poli- after her husband's death: groups; for disarmament; and tical, and welfare groups. We Another son, Leo, spent a year the Alexander Hamilton lIouses. far the social .progress of' decannot leave civic responsibility in the Jesuit novitiate afte~ veloping nations." The' above-mentioned inter- to others. Perhaps a more genfaith seminar will not be of uine Lenten' sacrifice than the New Churches world shaking importance, but giving up of candy or cigarettelt at least it w'm l bring 'us a little might be found in the resoluLISBON (NC) - Manuel CarPlumbing - Heating closer to the goal at which Car- tion to join some civic organiza- . dinai Goncalves Cerejeir·a, PatOver 3S YeCln tion and to devo'te ti!YIe to ita dinal Bea thinks we ought to be riarch of Lisbon, has approved meetings and activities." airmng. of: Satisfied, Service plans for the construction of 37 new churches in the Portuguese 106 NO~ MAIN SlREET capital, mainly in new SUburban areas where a majority of the 'Pafli River OS >7497 people now live.
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position" and. only secondarily "news." "By its very nature it is: and must be a partisan press" utilizing the full resources of pro-,' fessional excellence to, state the, 'Catholic position," Henry Fairbanks s.aid. Fairbanks', chairman of th~ humanities department at St. Michael's College here in Vermont, spoke at a public relations seminar sponsored, at. the col!lege of the Bureau of Information, 'National Catholic Wel£are Conference. He maintained that' "adherence to a definite point of view'" on the part of the Cath.olic press "need not' cQ.mmit it to narrow .prejudice Or 'divisiveness'." Give
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"This ,is a constitutionally guaranteed right to freedom of expression which enriches Qur pluralistic society through the presses of wide spectrum of special viewpoints-Republican, Democrat, Protestant,' Jewish, even communist," he said. Fairbanks Urged the Catholic press to "minimize the negative wherever possible'~ in its trea,,," nnent of issues. "Censorship, birth control!, abortion are all problems, where the Catholic press can evidenee an understanding of the pll'oblem as it is real and pressing fol!l' those not of the. Faith, withc!iut renouncing a Catholic commit_' ment on these points," he said:.
Ordaine& at 70 B ER LIN
(NC) Father Stanislaw Szaro. 70, was among 10' priests ordained for the Diocese of Plock, Poland, by AUJMliary Bishop Piotr Dudziec 01. Plock, it was' reported here:
St. Frcnnci's· Resid~nce FOR, YOUNG WOM':N 196 Whipple St., Fall River Conduded by Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, Comfortable FlUnished Rooms , Witb Meals InquiJre OS S-2892
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Buddhist Judge Supports, Appeal" For Justice To Catholic Schools
COLOl\o1BO (NC) - A Buddhist judge has made a public appeal fOr justice to the Catholic schools of Ceylon, which. have been nearly wiped out in a nationalization drive. The 'judge, A. W. 'Abeysundera, spoke at an honors convocation at St. ,Joseph's College. He strongly defended, the right of the college to charge tuition, ' Under the school nationalization program the number of Catholic schools was reduced from 750 to 40 and only topflight secondary schools like St. Joseph's were permitted to 'continue. But these were oot al-
lowed to accept ,student fees and, ~re refused all governnneDt aid. At the same event the college rector, Msgr. W.L.A. Don Peter, put forwaid a strong case for the role of religion' in the new Ceylon educational system. He said that the new schools would be false to Ceylon's tradition if they did not color their whole curriculum with religious 'prin, ciples. The government has recommended that religion be taught only dUring one class period, without reference to particular religious prac:tices or rites..
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THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 23, 1962
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WASHINGTON (NC) higher education does not give enough attention to the study of comrnunii\m,
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according to a report prepared at the Catholic University of America here. J
The report is based on surveys of 83 'institutions of higher learning in eight states and the I District of Columbia. Fifty-five of the institutions are liberal arts colleges, and 37 are churchrelated. Enrollments range from lGO to 20,000. The r~port I was prepared by nine gradu~!.e students in the Catholic University summer session under the direction of Geor~e F. Donovan of the university education department.
BREAK GROUND FOR NEW CAPE COD CHURCH: CBDst:rucnon of the new GOO-seat Our Lady of Grace 'Church in South Chatham is expected to be completed for the 1963 Summer vacationers. Present' for the ground, 'breal?,ng were, left to right, ~ontractor t};lomas Haley, .Arehatect Albert Roy, Fr. Bomface G. 'Jones, SS.CC.,assistunt at HolyTri~ity; Fr. John J.Brennan, SS.CC.,
WeJcome,Returning Canadian Pilgrims MONTREAL (NC)-A party of 160 Canadian ItaUans 'Teturned proudly from an airplane pi~grimage to Rome and were welcomed warmly at Dorval AirI)ort here. Paul Emile 'Cardinal Leger, Archbishop ,of Montreal, and Archbishop Sebastiano Baggio,_ Apostoric Delegate to Canada, beaded the welcoming party. 'T-he pilgrims went to Rome for the observanoeof the lOth anniversary,of the encyclical Exsul Familia, which Is devoted to the we11-beingof world immigrants. The pilgrims eame horne with a repl'oduction of the ,celebrated Madonno of Pompeii painting. ''il'Ibe reproduction, blessed by Pope John, was clUTied in a Sower ;bedeck:ed nutoto the lItn'lian palish ChurCh oJ. Our Lady of Pompeii·· here, a gift tram .the pilgrims.
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Continued bm Page Qne 'of 1963, and with a seating capacity of .500 it should relieve the pressure at Chatham ,and will certainly make things easier for the Summer parishioners. Rev. James E. Lynch,pastol' of St. Joan of Arc in Orleans, blessed the ground and the Very Reverend William Condon, Provincial for the American Provincesof the Fathers of the Sacred Hearts, spoke briefly in explanation of the need for the new church. He congratulated
Chatham pastor; Fr. James E. Lynch, Orleans pastor; Cross Bearer Anthony Confalone, Very ,Rev. William Condon, SS. CC., provincial of the Sacred Hearts Fathers who aerve in several Cape parishes; Fr. Finbarr McAloon, West Harwich pastor; Selectman Robert McNeece, Fr., Christopher Ohristensen, SS.CC., .assistant at Ch~tha~; Fr. J. Leo Boyle of East Boston and Fr, Roy ¥urco, SS.CC.
South Chatham Father Brennan and the parish for ,their unselfish action I in taking OIl this addition 00 the ofChatham-truly unselfish in that the expal15ion, with its inherent headaehes, is for the benefit of the Summer popula-, tion--andexpressedadnliratioD for their courage ill accepting the financial burden which is .a Part of the projeel \ Then the shovels were br-ought into action and the first earth ,turned as the official start of the construction of the new church -Our Lady of GrlWe.
cares
Trade Union Grows
School.Prayers
KOENIGSTiEIN (NC) - IIIl seven years the German Christian Trade Union has opened more than 1,000 local offices anci. more than 100 regional units in West Germany, it was reported here.
PITTSBURGH (NC) - Delegates to the 71st biennial Ancient Order of Hibernians convention here .adopted Bll'esolution caHing fOIl' a ,constitutional amendment permitting prayer in pUblic schools. -
Annou'nce Journalism Scholarship Awards
Suggest
The study' showed that although a surprising number of the institutions offer elementary courses in the Russian language, few offer advanced Russian, most do not offer a major or minor in Russian studies, and few courses on communist education are offered.
Also suggested is a reappra isal MILWAUKEE (NC) - Three of the National Defense Edueastudents will pursue journalism tien Act with emphasis on social (lSurses this Fall as the first science, humanities, and similar winners of grants from the courses in which the communist Catholic Journalism Scholarship danger may be identified. Fund. . Msgr. John ·S. Randall, fund presi4ent, said the three, picked by the fund's screening commitMINNEAPOLIS (NC) - The tee from more than 20 applicants, are Robert Joseph Byrne, Archdiocese of St. Paul has sold St. Louis, Mo.; Peggy Ann Sieg- tlbe former Regina High School mond, G r ail viII e, Loveland, building to the Lutheran High Ohio; and William M. Donovan, " School Associ~tion of Greater Melrose, Mass. Minneapolis. The new school, to Byrne, who already has an A.B. degree, received a two-year be c~lled Mitmelilpolis Lutheran. grant to study toward a master's will be the city's first Lutheran degree in journalism. Miss Siegmond, a college junior, got a high school in 30 years. two-year scholarship for work toward a B.A. in joul:nalism. Donovan received a four-year grant toward an A.B. in journalism at Notre Dame University. FUNERAL HOME
Sold to Luthert.lns
D. o. Sullivan & Sons
T'ransfers Affect HolyU,nion Nuns Serving Diocese Continued :from Page One
River; Sister Maureen Joseph, St. Francis ,de Sales, New York: Fall River, st. William of York, CJty, St. Michael,Fall River; l8altimo.re. Sister Viviane Marie, St. Pie,ter, Sisler Agnes Virginia, st. An- Pt. Pleasant, N.l., S.H.A.Elem. !tihony, Taunton, St. Joseph, Dept., River; Sister Malita Swedesboro, N. J.; 'Sister Alfred Dolores, P~cipal, St. Francis Therese, Sacred Heart Scho01, de SllleG, New ¥orkCity, PrinFail River, Sacred Heart, Lew- cipal, Holy Name, Fall River. dston, Pa.; 'Sister Mary Jeremiah, Sister Marion Joseph, St.' St. Michael, Fall River, St. Peter, Mary, Taunton, Holy Name, Fall Pt. Pleasant, N. J.; Sister James River; Sister Celine Lucille, iMarie, Immaculate Conception, Principal, Sacred Heart, Taun'Taunton, 'St. Pete'r, Pt. Pleasant, ton, Principal, Sacred Heart N.J. School, Fall Rivei'; Sister John Sisler Nuala Therese, Immae- Francis, St. Peter, Pt. Pleasant, u'late Conception, Taunton, Sa- N.li., Sacred Heart School, Fall cred Heart, Mt. Ephraim, N. J.; River; Sister Anthony Margaret, Sister Annette Marie, S.H.A.. St. Joseph, Taunton, Sacred Elem. Dept.-, Fall River, St. Heart :~hool, Fall River. Francis ,de Sales, New York City; Mother John Alicia to Sister Paul Dolores, ImmacuPrincipal, St. Francis de Sales,. late Conception, Astoria, N. Y., New York City; Sister Adele Sacred Heart School, Fall River; Thomas, 'Sacred Heart School, Sister William Therese, St. JoFall River, St. Francis de Sales, seph, Swedesboro, N. J., Sacred Heart, Taunton; Sister Stella Patchogue, N. Y. Marie, Immaculate Conception, Sister John 'Marie, Holy Name, 'Fall River, St. Francis de Sales, Astoria, N.Y.j Sacred Heart, lP'lltchogue,N. Y'; Sister Marin Taunton; Si~ Mary Dermott, Dorothy, . Immaculate Concep- Principal, Holy Name, hU tion, Taunton, St. AntbQI1Y, River', Principal, Sacred Heart, Portsmouth, R. I.; Sister Francis Tauntoft. Sister lane Chantal, St. MlMargaret, 'St. Mary, Taunton, lIlIoly 'Ghost, No. Tiverton; 'Sister ehacl, Fall River, St. ~ l<lseph Teresa, St. Joseph,Ta'\,1nton,Principal Holy 'Ghost, No. Tiverton. 'Sister Anna Marguerite, Principal, Hoiy Ghost, No. Tiverton, Principal" St. MiehaeI. FaD .AFTERNOON (3-5)
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Taunton; l?ister Mary WillEred, St. Joseph Swedesboro, N. J., st. Joseph, Taunton; Sister Catherine Francis, Holy Ghost, No. Tiverton, St. Mary Taunton; SisterMaryJosepb, St. Anthony, PortsmouU1, R. I., St. Mary, Taunton. Sister Anne Marthe, St. Francis de Sales, New York City, Im_ maculate' Conception, Taunton; Sister Edmund Marguerite, Sa·cred . Heart, Mt. Ephraim, N. J., ImmaculateConC6pUon, Taunton; Sister John Dolores, Holy Ghost, No. Tiverton, 'Immaculate Conception, Taunton; Sister Joseph Regina, St. Francis de Sales,PatchQgue, N. Y. St. An., thony, Taunton. Sister Winifred Marie, Sacred Heart SChool, Fall River, Girla'
Memorial High,Taunton; Sister Sahn Elizabeth, Principal, Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, Pl'incipal, Girls'Memorial Jligh, Taunton; Sister Mary Teresita to Girls' Memorial High, Taunton.
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. Disease· usually':'means germs or:~iruses attacking .the human body and bringing terrible :djsorder in the human organism. The very' mention of disease brings to mind aU 80rts of frightening' pathological conditions, arid summons up pictures of racked bodies and wasting frames. . A distinguished' British surgeon; the president of the British Medical Association, Ian Fraser, has called attenJion to other human dis~ases, not so often classified as such,· but equally responsible for tragedy 'and unhappiness with viruses and other more obvious causes. This leading medical figure has pointed out that a breakdown in moral standards has reduced the effect of medical contributions toward happi~r and healthier lives. Although-unlike many diseases-these are avoidable" such things as alcohol and bad manners and selfishness and carelessness are diseases which _bring sorrow and which doctors are 'finding it ever more difficult to combat. As Dr. Fraser said : "We· cannot leave 1962 with a happy feeling of complacency. We m~~st look to the debit side. A change in the mode of life that is causing great and genuine alarm is the deterioration in morals, manners and ethics." ., Medicine strives to make man happier, to ease his ills, to provide for him a better life, to make the strains of ordinary living more bearable and more understandable. It seeks to enable the human organism to function more perfectly and to overcome the enemies that 'attack it. With all the wonderful benefits brought to man with erhnouq.h the. W~£!t With thE ChWtch surgical techniques,· medicines, therapy of various kinds, man is still beset with evils, and these in the moral sphere. !By .REV. ROBERT W. lHlOVIDA! Catholic University While these' are the concern of the religious shepherd, they are also the concern of the physician as the one attacked 'lI.'I{)DAY St. Philip Benizi, , M:O~DA Y - St. Joseph Cab~-: is the human person and the organism hurt is the one he Confessor. "It is good to praise santius, Confessor. The senses has 'sworn to protect. . the Lord" (entrance psalm) is a of the child are fresh, receptive, It is sad for a dedicated medicalnian to strive to give familiar liturgical refrain. For .resp~ctftil ,of the meill~ing of man deliverance from evil by the use of drugs and skin that praise which we daily offer words. So,in this Mass honoring and research knowledge and therapy, only· to find man in innumerable ways-by appre- a coIifessor 'of the Faith who de"ciating the value of creatures, voted his life to the young, the brought to unhappiness by a decline in morats. by doing our work well, by our
(
Yatican' Council By Rev. Wm. f. Mogan, C.S.C. ~ Stonehm Professor
Ecumenical 'Council and Ecumenism
When Pope J ohIi XXnI first indicated that he intended to convoke an ecumenical council, he pointed
out his hope that this councn would contribute to the reunion of' Christians. As a result so m e' authors thought that the principal reason for this council was to attempt to effe-' a reunion; but t his mistaken idea has been rectified by now. While re u n ion is. something earnestly hoped foE, it is not something' we can expect to immediately issue forth from the Second Vatican Council; but we can expect that the Council may smooth out some of the problems which prevent .it at present. World Council ][neffec~ive. Ecumenism (union of the Churches) is very much before the minds of men today. The Protestants have in recent yea18 formed a World Council of Churches in an attempt to evenChurch iistens to Jesus' teaching tually bring unity among the community, and civic responsi- about childlikeness as a quali- varied denominations. bility, etc.,has both its formal fication' for the kingdom &If This World Council is actualq expression and its greatest stim- · heaven. , ineffectual because it has no real ulus in the common assembly for The adult Christian must authority over' the Cfhurches The art and· science of public relations has reached " public wNship. This is one way make' a regular effort to recap- which belong to it; it ,can only which the Eucharist is related ture that freshness, that recep- make recommendations to the dazzling high in the United States. Whether it be a poli- in to our mUltipie week-day con- uvity,that respect, if the Word member churches about policy ieal campaign or ..a school safety drive, a launching of. II fessions of faith.' ' of God is not to be drowned for or doctrine, but it cannot impose 8uper-market or a pressure group program, the watchw.ord. TOMORROW - St, Bartholo- him in the clamor of the human 'any laws or beliefs on them. of each and all is-get a good press. This involves a skillful " . 'Pr<>testant sects with very difmew. Apostle. The 'first reading city.' public relations program-a program of education and per:- iii this celebration in the com- : , TUESDAY - St. Augustine, ferent'views on basic questioJllll suasion. In the eyes of the world~ .Americans are quite pany. of an Apostle 'of Jesus re, of religion belong to this World good at this sort of thing. True, the program sometimes is minds us ')f a fact we experience . 'Bishop. ConfessOl'~ DoCtor. "k!. Council and their types of WMthe ·gathering.of the Church, 'ship are equally as divergent all more dazzling than the reality it is -pushing, but the tech-· (or should. experience) every Lord opened pis mouth" begiDBtheir beliefs. With no real time we gath~ around the altar mque that goes into the campaign is. impressiv~. . the Mass of the great Christian authority on the part of the for Mass. thinker'and teacher. And ~yone World Council and no real Moo :It . will, do the American image much good for ~ If our public worship is what would I bear ,an· effEictNe tempt on the part of the memworld to see the reaction of the AmeriCan Bishops to the it shoiJld be, it is here that we. who .see the different roles of the witness to Christ in our 'world ber churches t~ have unity ol forthcoming Ecumenical Council. various members of the Body, ali must ,Hnd his major source of. belIefs. it does not seem possible Instead of pushing for a good press, efficient publie cOntributing sound and action inspiration and formation ~'in the that this World Council win gathering of the Church," ill ever, produce any type of united relations-all of which are important:-the Bishops of· this ,(the' expression of prayer and 'publle wors~ip. ,. church. intention) to ttle 'Symp~ony. eountry have called for a novenaof,pray~r and pena',lc~.to Lack of' participation on 1he Various Movements be carried out in all. parishes and ~chools and relIgIOUS . SATURDAY-St. Louis, Kinlr. .part of the congregation at MasS CatholicS cannot associate houses in the country immediately preceding the Council , ·CoDtessor•. It is' not because and the use of a dead or foreignthemselv:e~ with Pretestant eeQAnd "an our non-Catholic brethren" have been invi- ,Louis was a king that he is II language in worship are crucialmenical movements because We saint and a model and interces- problems, not because we cannot .firmly believe that there is • ted' to join in praying that the Council may serve as "an. .&Or for' Christians. The GoSpel worship thereby, bu:tbeeause we unified Church. existing todaer instrument for the promotion of Christian unity." makes this clear. do not learn what we are me,ant '88 established by 'Christ; thUe the fact that he was a king to learn and our ears are not there is no need for varioue The emphasis is on' prayer and penance. Technique is .is But not to be regarded, either, as not to be forgotten. Nor are public 'relations downplayed. an obstacle to holiness. No tem- opened and our tongues are not churches to get together to tr7 to establish a new unified' But the moving spirit before and within the Council must poral activity, no human and loosed. 'church. Wl!:DNES~AY-The Beheadiq natural profession or commit.be the spirit of prayer. But there are various CatholiC ment, need prevent us from that · Of St. John Baptist. 'Tociay we movements which have eco. A great deal of study and work will go into the Council. love of God and men which is celebrate. a man who bore wit.as their goal. The The Fathers of the Council are jllost ready to enter into the holiness. It is in these tasks that ness before the mighty and paid 'menism Church Unity .Octave held ia the .ultimate price.. The Chris- ··churches every Jan. 18-25, when heavy demands that the sessions will make upon them; and we can and'must love God. tian's liturgical assembly gives are surely anxious that the sessions be conducted' with efELEVENTH ~UNDAY AFTER him the' opportunity to 'order his Catholics gather and pray that dissident churches will return fiency and skill. But their confidence will come mainly PENTECOST. TOday Christ, in :life to God, to confess, give from the knowledge that a v'ast highway of prayer has been the power of His Word, touches thanks and praise,' to hear the to the true fold of Christ, the Catholic Church, is perhaps 'the their road to the Council-"::a highway of prayer built by' our lips and our ears, as He onee Good News and become estab- best-known ecumenical mov&Catholics and non-Catholics, built with the sacrifices of did in our B~ptism, and frees lished in it.· It also should give 'ment in this country.. them to speak and to listen.' He hUn the courage to opp'ose injusThere is it Benedictine monayoung and old.. . . refreshes jaded senses, enabling tice, to .:lash with the powers tety at \Chevetogne, Belgium,' In a setting of prayer and penance, the techniques at man again to hear the Word cd tnat be, to say the unpop~lar which works hard to promote work in the Council will·achieve.the~ maximum efficienq. God and the cry of his neighbor word ~hen this is necessary. reunion and edits a rev~w foUl' above the lesser nOises of the urnes a year which .is esteemed eity. , Driye by non-Catholics as wen Enabling man again to utter Catholics. with sincerity and vigor the Most Famo1lll wonderful words which the' Mass Fo~ RICHFORD (NC) ~ A priest The, Unitas' aSsociation III liturgy places in his mouth:--:words of faith, o( sorrow, 01. has promised to continue efforts ,Rome under 'the leadership .. to bring new industry to this Fr.' Charles Boyer, S.J. and the thanksgiving, of appeal. Enabling man again to share Vermont community despite col- .CathOlie Oecumenlcal ConfEShis' brothers the gospel lapse .tkplans· for the establish- ence in, Holland are two ot~ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER THE DIOCESE OF fALL RIVER 'with .~important . movements whiela truth slimmariZedin the' first · ment of Ii plartics firm. Father George St. Onge hall . are contributing in good me~sUM reading. The liturgy is· never Published ~e~kly by The Catholic Press of the Dioc.s. of fall Riv... satisfied with merely audible been heading a' group of private . to the retu~n of non-Cathohes ... . 410 Highland Avenue sounds from the aitar and a re- citizens. seeking to obtain new' the Cat~ohe Church. Fa" . River, Mass.·,· OSborne 5-7151 The German Ul1:8 Sancta sponsive JlOise from the people. industry, as a boOst for the RichPUBLISHER The sound~ frem the altar mUst . ford economy., When efforts to moye~ent is probably the JnOlII Most ·Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0.. PhD. ring. their way into the hearts of brings a plasticS firm here fen famous, of the ~cumenical mo~ . men; must be truly heard. And through,' a $50,000 fund cam- ments,. of whlch·a .few ot~ GENERAL MANAGER ASST .• GENERAL MANAGER the response of creed, of hymn. paign.t9 finance the project, W8ll could we)).~ m~nbon~d. Rev. DanielF. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll ,A mere listll~g of these 3S80of "amen," must carry the com- e8lled off and· '!loney which had MANAGING EDITOR raised was returned to the ciations and the ~act that Pope mitment of whole men, emoti~ Hugh J. Golden as well as free assent. prospective stockholders. . , Turn to .Page. Seven
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Vatican, Coun~,i~":" Buzzards Bay CnurchFlourisheSAs, ,MissiOn, B' ,n :. 0 D'· L ... lo~n ·ecomes· ;nCfltve, r ,U/I'18' :tn'· wn 1I'\."g"'u
. Continued from PageSiz, ' , <J4:' '. . 'k' .. has established a USeere-,<' Wint for Fostering the Unity of, ' , '. " . . ., ' . I christians"clearly indicate ~ Marion 'UllSWoI',th" IJoly Mother Church is vitally eoncerned with reunitingChris-st.Mnrg.aret,:s :ChurCh"BUZza1'ds Bay:,wJlume ~'tory as a parish is 1~S8 ttans, to Catholicism. !long as itshistoI:'Y as a' mission, is located :alongthe Cape Cod Canal, one
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It is hoped that the forth-' eoming Vatican CoUncil will be able to help foster reunion. by 'explaining and clarifying doctrinal' matters. This does' not mean that the Church can dtange some of its doctrines in order to make them more accep_ table to non-Catholics; for these doctrines are divinely esmbJished and cannot be changed. But it .might be possible to explain in clearer terms .some easily misunderstood notions; very often the technicaltradi-, tional phraseology produces misconceptions in the minds of those outside the Cat hoI i c Church. Cardinal Bea, the president of the Secretariat for Christian Unity, indicates the following points as those which need particular explanation for nonCatholics: the nature of the Church, the Catholic conception of dogma, the unchanging charDcter of the Church, and the lluthority of the Church and that of the Pope. Many leading non-Catholie theologians have requested explanations of these pointsrother than of the matters that the original leaders of the Reformation attacked in the 16thcen-
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than half as of mbe :area'ts .Of Persecution busiest ,sections and 'one,whichfigluredmlthe dew.e1o,Pment :of jIDeCatholie :community VANClOUV\ltR (NO) - ",on the Cape. Im 1901 :anew Church, 'Corpus (Chriisti, was ,dedicated at Sandwic~ ,site !Lithuanian !priest'desenDed of the:fir.st .CathD1icehtJ.ltCh . , here b,o.withe oncetflour. 'on Cape :Cod. ;Sett1edehief1y 'dshing :Chureh in 'his 'homebecause of the ,glass 'indu&land has b~en ;reduced 'by 22 try, SandWich .had since :years of 'communist per.secution
1830 been the 10nly ;pariSh for the . to the level of .bare :survival. area. Since the Soviet occupation in By 1911,St.Patri~sP.arish 1941, said Father V a c I 0 vas in Wareham was establiShed, Gutauskas, 'S.J., the Church in and the' iaithful in Buzzards Lithuania has been all but Bay had to attend Mass either wiped' out. in SandwiCh or Wareham. But Father Gutauskas,head of at about the sametiine' construcfue Lithuanian Youth Center in tion was begun on the Cape Cod Chicag{), gave this !picture of the Canal and more and more Cathcommunist persecution of reliolics were moving into Buzzard's gion in an interview: Bay. All Catholic schools and magTo relieve thehardsmpsof azines in Lithuania have been travel, Rev. JohnF. McKeon, closed down, Most Catholic then pastor at Corpus 'Christi, churches have been :taxed out of Sandwich, hiredF.ranklin Han emstence. Three of Lithuania's in Buzzards Bay,and the first ' four bishops ,ore in jail, ,and Mass was held there in July of most priests have beeneitber 1911. When Rev. Joseph Lyons jailed or deported. became pastor at Sandwich in ·Po1h:eTc.-peSerr.::ons 1914, he realized that Franklin' Hall was insufficient accommoOnly one Catholic church has dation, not only :for the large been built in Lithuania .since crowds in the Summer but :also 1941. In J'llnuo:ryof this year, 'for the much smaller Winter >three weeks before its -scheduled ST•.MARG.A!RET'S CHURCH, BUZZARDS BAY congregation, so 'heimmediately :de d i ·c:n t lio n, the 'two parish began plans to build ,a church. priests were ,arrested. _ Sandwich Mission After it was coID;P1eted:forthe .burned, and work hod ,to pro'Those who -I1'ttend services in L d . oh d ln~" ,llecond tim e, announcements ceedfor ,the ,third time. The the few :churches which:remain an was pur ase, ,lille center of Buzzards Bay and were mad~, that the first 'Masses ,persons responsible for :the open are ,observed by governtory. It may well be that ex- Thomas Kelleher, who had pre-. were to 'be celebrated thefol- blaze have never been discov- ment agents :and suffer discrimlplanations of these points, will viouslY built Corjpus .'Christi . lowing SWlda,y;. iDuring ,that ered. nntion [or their church :attencontribute to the reunion 'of Church, was named as ,contrac- week, the ,chapel was again In 1960, ,St.. Margaret"ll under , ,dance. Sermons are taped ,by /poChristians to Catholicism. tor., By the following'yeorSt. Father O'Brien, was enlarged liee for possible use ~ ·evidence Pius XU Encyclicals Margaret's Church, with a :cafor..thefusttimeby ,a substan.. .againat ]lriests, The Council of Trent was pta-' pacity of 350 people, was com'nle lone .semi.nary in ''m1e tial addition on the. rear of the hibited from giving' a clear pieted and on July 4, 1915, it edifice, forming the' first open country hOB been closed. Ev.en treatment of the nature of the' was dedicated by Rt. Rev. Daniel while it ~vas 'open, the ,gOVCer:I1sanctuary in the Diocese. Church and the Franco-Prussian F~Feehan. At 'the present· time, 'St. 'Mar- ment permitted 'o~seven of .ST.LOUIS·(NC)-The,Central' Wat interrupted the First VlltiSt. Margaret's continued as a Catholic Union of .America has garet's 'has a capacity of 600, a ±heaver.age of .50 applicants can Council just as it was r~lldy mission of the SandwiCh Parish stronglyoppose~ Federal care necessity .ina parish which !has :each .year to ,enter. 110 Consider the matter. .. through the pastorates ,of Rev. 'lfor the aged prOgrams andcrit- a Summer congregation of six . Associate !Editor Pope Pius xn of happy George MaxweIl" who was sta- icized the U. S. :government for or seven thousand, and;a WJ.nter mory bas prepared the way ~or tioned there fl'om 1918 to 1934, "v.acillating, empirie diploma':' population of apPl'·oX<imatelYUNICNCIT:Y '(NC) _ Fatner the 'Council to consid'erthis and Rev. Thomas McNulty, who "C'Y." These istands ,were taken ;~ghteen:hundred. ' . Arthur McNally; C,P., has 'baen questio~ through his encY~ical' succeeded Father Maxwell In .in 'aserJ,esof resolutions passed , In fr.e same year, :St. M81lga-appointed associate editor of the on the "Mystical Body of the meantime, .the permanent at the close ,of rthe union's 107th :ref'll was ,assi;gned' itsfirstlls-' 'Sign magazine, 'published ,here Christ", an encyclical which and. Summer ,Populations were ;annual convention here, which sistiffit priest, Rev. Francis :L... by. the PassionistFathe:rs.E:e served to enlighten many Pro- increasingrepidly, as were the some 800 persons. attended. . M~(;ll:~~y_ who . :was assigned to l!ucceeds Father. Gerard Rooney, ·teslants concerning aspects. of the' . duties of the clergy at Corpus Other resolutions ·enlled .upon' B'uzzards Bay after his ordlna- 'CP., wbo last month 'Was elected Catholic Church they had not Christi. oCathnlics to take ~the lead in' tion: Howev:cr, there is .still ne'ed' provincial' of the Passioni~ consider'ed or dreamed of," and By, 1946, it was . evident that' opposing pornography, called :for for assistance iri .such a busy Fathers~ East.em 'U.S. prov~nCe. htl;' . encyclical on the liturgy, St. Margaret's was becoming too less government interference in ,area as Buzzards .Bay ,and Onset, . "Mediator Dei". " large to continue as a mission, agric.uJ. ture, ,and :eriticized 'the imd, during the Winter time, two Theologians tell us that if the and in 1946 it was established as' Supr~me Court, decision on the Sacred . Hearts Fathers - fioom Fairhaven comeeaclI Sunday, ecuiuenical council would con:" a parish in its ·ownright. Father New York Regent's prayer.· . sieler the implications of tb:e McNulty became :first, J'esident The Central Catholic Union of and in .the Summer two Jesuit Fathers from Holy Cross College teachings in these encyclicals,' pastor. ~erlca is a spcial 'actIon gr.ouP assiSt' Fathers' O'Brien Q it d ecumenism would be greatlY- . Immediately, Father McNulty' fanned in the rJ.9thcentury Mahoney. . furthered: ' purchased a boarding house among German ii:rim~grantll. . . I , ''MOll"ning 'Kindergarten ~ses, ObjectIves which had belonged to the WalSo~ .IDartmouffa The resolution on care of :the , Po. new .project has been added; The movement towards re- laCe :family of Buzzards Bl:)Y" .aged·' .su,ggeste.d .that private :and!.HycmftI:i) union of the churches can be had it moved to property. an'.:. medical ,care insur,ance plans be' to the parish since Father increased if the Council willjacent to the. church, and. reno': promoted.. It ,suggested studies O'Brien 'has 'beoome pastor for $@. '~l'!]rntlLT%~ , arouse and direct the action of . vated it for use as a rectory. of the problem of . s uch insurance, he purchased a town school, had ' the Universal Church and in- After brief six months at St. "with particular attention to .the it .moved to the church proper~y, 'WV '1·~3QL3 dividual Catholics towards un"; M;argaret'sFatherMcNulty was pdncipleof ,subsidiarity. to. the and now il kindergarten under HVUl~:J ~;D2~ ion; and from all indications it transferred to St. Kilian's in end that care of the bodies may the direction of Sister .Mary will do so. Ne'ld Bedford and Monsignor nQt be achieved at the expense .TUde of the Mission~y Servants ...-oDOaaD::;;;:.:;;I..~ CardinalBea has suggested Leonard Daley,now' pastor in of personal dignity ,and freedom of theMostBlessedT.rinity is conducted mOrnings during the " that the' Fathers of the forth- Hyannis, was named second pas- of choice." coming Vatican Council might tor of St..Margaret's. ''In many thousands of .in- school year. Sisters of the same arrange for the establishment of Monsignor Daley renovated stances, the care :to which the community, 'from St. Patrick's diocesan, national and inter- the' church ,and tended to the aged are entitled ev~ when they Cenacle,Wareham, also -direct national ecumenical groups. needs of his ever-groWing con-' are too sensitive to say so out Christian Doctrine classes at 5t. Pope John XXIII has told 1ill gregation until 1954, when Rev. loud is not primarily that of Margaret's. ,I that this Council is expected to' David O'Brien, the' present pas,:, shelter .and .regular meals ... but aid reunion through its renova- tor, was sent to take over the of tangible evidence that they ·1 .~y~ rmW'ir~lQ\[I.' £.Wo tiOri and reformation of .the parish. are still pad of tbe lamilY,' the :~~H1t~AV:~O\D ~nse1 lFibres Parish, the community," it added. Church and the renewal of the' .'Wl! ~422 TI (,j, St. Margaret's also serves as spirit of the Gospel. OJ1J)~'~~~ a mother church, for its clergy Should the Council tre::!t ~!,Q)©~{fD®:,)[}uD[,D'@{F~®@ nothing e1{plicitly about reunio l1 , have charge of a mission, St. «:iOJM~AINl"tJ' Mary's, Star of the Sea, in Onit cannot help but aid tne cause M®®'lf S@~fl' TI Il set. The construction of the On:of e'cumenism Ii it fulfills the. ~@~~~©~<! Q"Oli'\lO '-NEW" ORLEANS (NC)-"Reobjectives and purposes stated. set' church was no1; a simp~~ , :1 newal 0'£ Christian' Life at Sea'" task, for in the process of its ~!)t5Mj:r.~ M~~~1U@:~u by. pur Holy Father; for ~ese will be the liheme 'of the '17th erection, it was burned. ,~~t~:J 'iT©:©! 12~3 matters .are essential to reunion. annual J'l'ational, CathQlic ApQs-' Ecumenism and the forthcoming ~/Pl~~!:''':;~ $Ii'.,FGiG>i}()AV~G'.J .I~©!i\!!~ :rr~© SiMA1[1. tlesmp of the Sea 'convention in [?'MMO$[}u rnlolb~o@~[]'@[9)[}u)J ecumenical council wilJ go hand Baltimore beg'inning' Monday, WYmcIn 3-2~]] in hand. . @{F ~@~rii7illliJ[jil5~!N\ltXl®[]'@ 'Sept. i7. .. '. (Next Week: Secrecy, ScholarWASHINGTON (NC) - The Father Thomas A. McDonough, ship and the Ecumenical Coun- Cutholic 'University of America C.SS.R., .New Orle~s port chapcil.) Press has announcedpublic~tion lain .an!! conferenoe ,secretary, M!NfE~$ ofa ~omprehensive bibliography said a highlight of the conven..,' Inc. ,,' EC!lrly Start be a '5:30 P.M. Mass in of the literature of thecommun- , tion .M~in 'Omce~nd Pl~nt ,MIO V!E.R S the BaSilica of· the Assumption.' ~ROOKLYN (NC) - Twenty- .1st movement in America. LOWELL, MASS.· Ballim~~s Archbish6p 'L3wwork contains more' than two ., se,lected students fro)D. a 'SERVING Shehan; c.onvention host, dozen high schools in New York 1,700 entries, each with an' obTel~p'hone, 'Lowen Fan :River7 'New Bedford are .among85~ students attend- jective observation as to the im-' will preside. Auxiliary Bishop ia.Q33 and .oL :1-1500 Cape Cod Area' ing Summer sessions .at St. F1;;lp- portance of the publication dis- Leo R. 'Smith of 'Buffalo, episcoAgent: cussed. ' . . eis College, taking basic chempal moderator of the 'conference, Auxilklry¥ICinb ,AEROMAYlFLOWER .EntiUed· "The Literature' of will offer the .Mass ,and Au:x:i1iary istry, biology, history" Spanish and ma~ematiC8 courses as. a, American -Communism," it was Bis~op Edwarq .E. Swanstrom of BOSTON TRANSlT CO. INC. head start on their college Written by' Robert· F. Delaney, New York, executive direptor of Nation-wid. Moven OCEANPORT,N.... • ! ~ers. The program for ~gh ,is now serving as .publie Catholic Relief Services-Nation,WYman :1-0904 PAWTUCKET, 'I.L sehool students is tbJM affairs officer' at 'the U. S. Em- alCatholic Welfare Conference, '30. IemPloD 'SL.NewBeClforiJ . Tear at the eo.llep. will .preach. btis¥ in El SalvadOL
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CHICAGO (N~ - A rem.. gious retreat is not a time to catch'up on sleep but to engagE! m. spiritual exercise, a bishop told a meeting of 2,000 Catholie By Mary Tinl~y Daly and non-Catholic women here. The retreat should not be l'@c> A nationwide feeling of gratitude is accorded' Dr. garded as some "form of escape Frances O. Kelsey, ,F.D.A. physician who; by withholding from the burdens· of life, iii approvai of the drug thalidomide; has probably caused unperiod o~ and relaxatioill from workday pressures," Bisholi' numbered babies to be born whole and entire; rather than Leo A. Pursley of Fort-Waynebadly deformed. For her ,South Bend, Ind., said at the stubborn, but polite refusal She had, she told' me, Interned silver jubilee congress of the to be dissuaded from what, in a Catholic hospital, had lived National Laywomen's Retre~ in the Midwest. she thought was right, 'i~ Movement. As to the widespread use of spite of tremendous pressures, drugs for minor" ailments, Dr. Bishop Pursley said it Is 1ll/jjp this 48-year-old Federal em- Kelsey is not for them. Speaking , fortunate that many people rea 'j)loyee has gard a retreat as a time "t@ of 'whY she had the courage to been given the catch up on my sleep." withold approval of thalidomide, highly .prized He, maintained that this idc&lll her reply was the same as she Pres ide n, "misses the main point entirely," had made to the drug cc'mlpany: ~al Feder'al ',because a retreat "Is a time ~ "I just didn't think its results ,Employetl ilntense act i v i t y, immenseIw were right." , meaningful and rewarding." Award. Ensuing publicity has desStep s are ,''It is," he continued, "'s cribed Dr. Kelsey as III "plain DOW underway spiritual exercise, iD the fullest Jane." This she laughs off.' "But to strike a gold sense Of exertion, which enI am getting a little 'tired of NEW BEDFORD DANCE: Chattirtg at dance conducted gages the whole person, all the medal . in her telling the colOII:' 01. my hafio and '. honor, 'similar' by New Bedford Catho)ic Womau.'s C,lubat the country club, powers of his being, and carrie. eyes!" ., to that pre'Asked aa to her opinion of the are Dr. 'and Mrs. Robert W. Horan at left and Mr. and Mrs. him along under the steady eented by Preswinds of grace on a kind oi Arizona ease, and others, she ident Eisenhower to Dr. Jonas withholds judgment. Asked' also . Henry J. Fanning Jr. Mr~ Ho~ait and Mrs. Fanning were· voyage of discovery in which he Salk, . discoverer of the entipolio about experimental testing by eo-chairmen. learns so much more about God &el'UDl in 1955. and so much more about himseAf FDA that, too, she believes kJ than he ever knew before." . National Fame DOt in the ken 01. this Govern'According to Representative ment agency•. Women's Organization Barris B. McDowell Jr. of Del- . The applause, ~ publicity, aware, who introduced a joint all this Frances Kelsey takes in Tops 150,000 Members resolution to this effect, Dr. stride: She is content to go to. RENSSELAER (NC) - "We , which take our cultural way of BALIFAX (NC) - MemberKel~y "is a noteworthy repreher office, take up the' next need television clubs and we life into ~very small. village In ' ship In the Catholic Women'fJ sentative of the great body of problem, go home rmd take care need movie clubs in every par- . the world." League of Canada has passed Federal employes who dischar~e of her family, even u you and ish if we are.to transform modthe 150,000 mark, it was rea Leisure 'l'ime Problem their duties quietly by' effi- L ern commercialized entertain-' ported at the organization's 42ncll ciently and, often in the face of "It. is our mission," he said, annual convention. Perhapo the effect of a real ment," a Canadian, Catholic lay unjust 'charges and mounting eOntribution by a woman to the man has declared. "to make tha,t way of life beauThere are 1,703 parish uniW Romeo Maione, assistant to ,the' tiful and to transform this mod_ in nine Candian provinces. The harassments." welfare of humanity will offset Since the last interview with tine type of publicity usually director of social action ,in the' ern technological world into league raised and expended 'this' remarkable woman, re:- tlCCOl'ded women. Canadian Bishop~' Conference,' ~m.~thing beautiful. ' $1,789,468 in parish and comPorted in this column. II few addressed some 300 Young Chris"In order to do thi&-l-to love munity work last year, ano~ weeks ago, fame has come her tian Workers and their chaplains others and love our world....l. report stated. ' way. Naturally, the honors men,4during the lOin aDnual YCW , ~e ,have to first love' ourselves tioned above have centered pubmudy week at St. o!0seph's Col--..., a.nd this is precisely ,the leisure lic attention on her gallant stand lege here in Indiana. . time problem of people today, in protecting ft,merican babies "More basically, we . need that they do not love themselves , . from malformation sueh Ba kl WASHINGTON (Ne) , - The members in the' young Christion - . beCause they do not know themknown to infants in other coun- aireat posed ~ eommunism ki, Workers who are extending' selves. They live instead in & tries. , . h 1 one phase of a special study and themselves' and gathering facts .frenzied world, 80 fast they may, R0llrE 6, HUnLESON AV!. Matter of fact, the woe discussion program on Latin 'In a changing .world, who are '10 into orbit. ,Near Fairhaven Drive~ln "'drug .problem" has come into America announced here by, finding out what are the patterns' ''We are lacking," Maione em.. Italian Dinn.... Our Specialty sharp focus em the American Mrs. Arthur L. Zepf, president 1lll the leisure' time of their phasized, "any sense' that' leisure ' , Service Oa Patio ecene. oil the Natlonlll Council of friends," he said. .: . , affords us a spiritual remaking Dr. Kelsey has been testifying Catholie W~men. \ Maione, former international of our whole person or that'leibefore Senate committees, has program, win be known all YCW pr~sident" stated that "the ~ is' worship of God in, the been interviewed widely in the "Focus: Latin America." De-' greatest missionary group of our sense that we give glory to God press" and on national television. signed for nine meetings, It win time Is not any religious order. by the beautiful things we see As a result, she confesses, she w be ready for affiliated groups B is the economi~ institUtiOIW in the world." "quite mbit more bl;lsy than Of the NCCW and other organl' Home mad,. usual." , zatioDS/ beginning the week.GEl Nuns leach, Chiidrea:i At this time, more than 500 Oct. '1, Mrs. Zepf said. CANDIES· II"'\Jl. M' i' P I letters have been sent to her, ' Topics to be studies and dis- Vlf "tory ersonne CHOCOLATES ONE ~TOP with more piling up every day. eussed<wlllinciude Latin Ameri- '. HEIDELBERG (N,e) - A These are from grateful Amer- ean social and political change, group of 40 English-speaking §HOPPING CENTER ,150 Varieties ican . parents who find their Ills exemplified by' Mexico; the nuns, five seminarians and a • 'ii'elevlsioD • Furniture newborn babies with arms and plight of the Indians of the ,priest are spending' part of their ROUTe 6 noar legs, usually taken for granted, Andes; the urban explosion is Summer vacation giving reli'. Appliances • Groc:el7 Fairhavon Auto Theatre but which might have' been Sao Paolo, Buenoo Aires and gious instruction 'to more than 1M Allen St., New Bedford "fins." One, letter, Dr. Kelsey Caracas; agrarian reform; the 4,000 children of U.S. military' , WYman 7-93M FAIRHAVEN, MASS. ~IIaYs, ia from a woman whose economic problemo of one- personnel In all parts of Europe. ' ehild was born deformed. She product countries; the Inroads The' purpose of the program wrote to thank Dr. Kelsey fOlr of communism and Its challenge lls to provide catechetical in~ , 8llving others. to democracy, ,to Latin American . str~ction m grade~ one to ).2 The white heat of publicity Ifl leilders;to U.S. Catholics and tic for children whose t~o-to-four- _ on Dr. Frances Kelsey, that's fOIl Americaa c1tizentl In general. year stay in Europe often delIW'e. '''Focus: .LatlD 'America" II' prive&, them of Il parochialWill It change her? I very much doubt It. Dr. Ke~ designed lUI an educational pro-', vcbool environment. .ey'is just about like a visit to gram .ID line with the present interest 01. government ,and the Women/s, League Plani yOU,Ol'" you, 'or you. Her home, wide center-hall plan, looks Church 1ft Latin America: This Study of. E.~cydi~al :.,." about like yours or ours on a new project ill being prepared DES MOINES (NC)-A four.Sunday; The two Kelsey daugh- with the assistance 01. the Forters were upstairs. Her husband eign Policy Association, Inc.. of year Bible study program for greeted us cordially, then, armed New York, a non-partisan,' nOD- laity of ' the Des Moines diocese, ' with' the Sunday papers, re.. profit educational' OI'gimizatloa.. ' will be interrupted this Fall for , &JtUdy of Pope 'John;.' enCyclical treated to the porch, exactly on soCial questions,· Matei' ,et ~ what most husbands were doing. Magistra. " . , , _ Young Workers Give Up' 'Pla~ Jane' Bishop EdwardC.Daly, O.P... "The Heroine of the FDA" Beer, To Aid ~issions 01. .Des Momes· announced the received us in a striped seerST. PAUL (NC)-Have an- temporarr : susp4insion Of' the 8Ucker dress, flat heeled shoes. other beer or give the money to , Bible' study ,project, being earShe sat In the comfortable living a miss~onary? Msgr. Joseph ried out here by dlscussiollSl '100m, talking of this-and-that. Cardijn, founder and interna- under auspices of the Catholic tional chaplain 01. the Young Women's r.eagUe~ The league Christian Worker. Movement, ,will also conduct the new study. Cites Need To, Promote said .that he' recently gave this choice to one of his Y.C.W. Women's Vocations A fAMILY TREAT GREEN BAY (NC) -Bishop leaders ill Belgium. Under gentle prodding the BAR..B·Q CHICKENS Stanislaus V. Bona of Green Bay has cited a need for a women's youth revealed that he consumed organization to help promote about 20 bottles of beer III week. "Can you not give one bottle for vocations to the religious life. FARMS , Speaking at me 10th quadren- our missions?" the Monsignor l41 Washington St., Fairhaven nial convention of the Women's queried. "Perhaps two or thi-ee Just oft Route CI Catholic Order of' Foresters, bottles?" The answer was yes, and the Bishop Bona observed that Serra WY '7-9336 spread. On a subseClubs throughout the country beer Watch for Sigilli are doing a good job of promot- quent "dry Sunday" Y.C.W. '. While out for iii Drive Ing vocations among men, but members in"a city "not as big as StOP at this Delightful Spot that ther~ is no comparable or- St. Paul," Msgr. Cardijn said, ganization amoDg women... __ ' contribu~ed'more1han $4,000. 5' ~.~ rtMfflhiittirii**ee.
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Is 'la've:' of··.God~:·Nei9hbor~
.,." THE: ANCHORThurs.. Aug. 23. 1962
,.
Ste. Anne Nuns Change Habit
By Father John L. Thomas, s.J. Asst. SocloKolrY Pi'of.-St.
Loms
1Jllilivel'S!~y
''1 have a 'sister-in-Iaw that my brother and I greatly detest-we disliked her eve~ before she married into' the family. Over a period of 16 years I have ridiculed her and lied about her to the rest of the family. so that none of them will 'speak to her. She claims I have to make resti- may ba putting last thingg first tution by telling them I to start with concern about re~ lied. I think if I feel charity titution. . As the last line of your letter
fJor her in my heart, malte a graphically indicates, you still good confession and tell God harbor the black, cancerous evil i am sorry, and of hate within you, &nd u'nless t'J8Y no more you undergo a radical change of about her, that's heart, anything you do will enough. Why amount to nothing more than should I tell external whitewashing, of little, my brothers I avail for the salvation of yOUi' llied? They soul. think very There is a frightening realism b,ighly of me, in the teachings of Christ. Let 1m why hurt us Christians not fool ourselves; myself and run either we practice charity in the r i s k" of thought, word, and deed, or, in them being an~' the words of St. John, the begry at . IIie? After all, they know by now loved' Apostle, 'we are liarD b. how dumb and stupid she is." calling ourselves Christians.· lFimlmn lWessmge Your letter reminds me of the Indeed, the great Apostle goes atory they tell about a certain further: "We know that we have eolorful character attending an passed from death to life, beold-type revivalist m~eting, at cause we love the brethren. ~e the' end of which the "con- who' does not· love abides in '1Terted" were t9. com~ up in death. Everyone who hates his ~ont, publicly· confess their brother is a murderer. And' you sins, and pledge future fide- know that no murderer has lity to God. . ' . eternal life abiding in .him" (I After this c h a rae tel.' had John, 3:14-15). . launched into his confession; the In thesa words, St. John w preacher suddenly stepped up merely re-echoing the final and stopped him· with the words, message of Our Lord to His Dis~rother, you ain't confessln', ciples after the Last Supper: "A you're braggln'!" new commandment I g\ve. you, False Situation . that you. love one"another; that lUI I have loved 'you, you also Frankly,'l findlt hard. ~ neve thlit any mature ChriStian love one another.. By thill will woman could have any serious all men know that you are my doubts about her strict obliga- disciples, if you have love for tions in the situation you 'des>- one another" (John, 13:34-35). . Demands Selt Discipline cribe. When we' think ot the practiAccording to your own testimony you lied about your sister- . cal implications of these inspired bl-law to other members of the words, we realize why Chesterfamily untll you succeeded in ton (I think it was) could say destroying her reputation among tfu.t Christianity had not been them so that they' all refuse to tried and found wanting-it had never been tried! . .lJPeak to her. Tbis false situation now ·.per- ' ~e GoSpels tell· us that God sists because of your lies, and itJ love, arid the, essence of only you can change it. ,. . Christian living. is the pra~tice . . of love-toward God and our. Undo Consequences neighbor..Why do we fail so pitIt is patently hypocritical t9. ifully? : spenk of feeling charity for' her The. practice of charity dein your heart, or of makiIig II mands cons~t self-disciplinegood confession and telling, God llS a Christian, I am not free' to )'ou are sorry. . think or say' or do· :Nhat I like, What can such terms as but my inclinations,. drives, im·charity," "good conf,essiou," pulses, aims and aspirations and "sorry" mean ,in this context must be checked, curbed and If you refuse to make use of regulated in terms of my oblilill the means at your disposal gations to others. to undo some of the evil conseImage of God quences of . OUr hate-inspired This essentiai Christian disactions? .' position is possible only if we It will cost you something. of recognize and respect the othercourse; you' may indeed even ness of the other-his right to have some little experiences of be .himself--only if we see the the type of suffering she must other as a person, a distinctive, have endured as the result of unique image of God, destined to your falsehoods. fulfill 01' 'realize this .. image in Frlglltening Realism the human community. Yet considering your pro~lem Qur narrow self-centeredness from the. viewpoint of Christ, it leads us to forget this otherness of the other-we tend to use others as things,. liking, them if· they are good. ... tO or for us, pushing ·thein around if. they" get in our' way, and ignoring them if they are not within immediate reach. . DUficllIl()' Lesson Thus charity requires a humility and abandonment of self that is a kind of death to self: "Uniess the seed fall into the ground and die,· it shall not produce fruit." This lesson is difficult to learn, so we seek escapes by' multiplying prayers, devotions or services we happen to like rather than humbly disciplining ourselves and acting like Christians. . The latent hypocrisy implied in such actions has plagued Christians from the' beginning. Perhaps because of the intimacy involved, once love turns APOSTOLATE: Virginia to hate in family relationships, Gonsalves of Newport, a no failures of charity become as June graduate of Salve Re- destructive, enduring and bitter. gina College. sails Monday to Spiritually, you are a very sick woman. Los,e no time in turning teach in the Sisters of Mercy humbly to the Divine Physician, mission school, La Ceiba, for your day is a1rea~y fat spent, Hondurae. aod the night is coming.
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WORCESTER (NC)-There'll be some changes made in the habits of the Sisters of·Ste. Anne. 'I'he close fitting coif worn by the nuns will'give way to a coif opened at the neck. A TV set may be installed in community rooms to view educational telecasts. Lay lecturers may be invited to speak before the nuns on civic, educational, social and political matters. And members of the community may visit their families after they have taken perpetual· vows. , The changes have been voted at a general chapter meeting at which Sister Mary Claire des Anges .was elected Superior General, The com m u nit y, founded at Vaudreuil, Que., in 1850, has more than 2,000 members in Canada, the United States and Haiti.
The Sisters of Ste. Anne operate, the fast-expanding Anna Maria College for Women in Paxton (Mass.) Jn the Worcester Dioce~.
GrCll~t ~oi" Join~ S~udy
Of Mission Schools CONCER~
PREPARATION: Dr. Francis Findlay prepares for a rehearsal of the Holy Union Concert with the assistance of Sister Stephen Helen, S.U.S.C., directress of the Holy Union Chorale, center, and Sister Maurice Louise, S.U.S.S., concert mistr,ess, right.'
Dr: Franc'is Findlay To Conduct Holy Union Sisters Concert Francis Findlay, noted New England conductor, will lead the Holy Union Chorale .and Orchestra in a ~hree-concert series at 2 Saturday afternoon,. Sept. 1 and at 8 Wednesday and Thursday evenings, Sept. 5 and 6. The Saturday afternoon concert will be for area religious and the evening string, brass and woodwind enprograms will be open to the sembles. He is honorary president of the New England Music public. All performances will Festival Association and of Kap-
be in the new auditorium of pa Gammi Psi, national ftl,usie Sacred Hearts Academy, Proa- . fraternity. pect Street, Fall River, and willl be the Initial presentations in The September concerts will the building. include 10 selections by the enSister Stephen,Helen, S.U.S.C., tire chorale and ·seven by the· orchestra. Additionally, Sister director of the unique religious Barbara' Thomas. soprano soloist, orchestra and choral group, studied at Manhattan College will offer ''Madame Jeannette," and St. John's University, N. Y. "Over the Rainbow," "Die LotosShe received a bachelor of music blume," "Autumn Song," and 'degree from ManhattanvUle Col- "Je dis que rien ne m'epovante." lege of the Sacred Hearts, PurSister Marita Elizabeth will chase, N. Y. render "In the Garden' of ToOther studies have been with morrow" lUI a saxaphone, solo HarQld. Spencer, a piano pupil and Sister James Miriam will of Schnabel, and with the inter- plaY "Serenade" from "The Stunationally fam{)us Gregorian dent Prince" on the clarinet. chant expert, the late Don Ludo. vic Baron. Sister Stephen Helen has attended Master Classes in choral ,conducting with Elr. Peter WiI:lI.aundry Fiber Cas~ $4.95 housky, ':conductor, 'composer, and arranger and has furthered . . 31" .SCilODI :rrunk· $11.9$ her' liturgical music ,stUdies, 2 Suiter .,'..... :.... :... $15.95 under direction of Dr. Cliffor4 Zipper 'Overnie~ Bag Bennett; president· of the Grego-, . rian Institute of Amer.ica, and Split Cowhide ......,..$9.95 Alexander .PeloquiQ, director of ,16" Zipper EnvelopE> the Peloquin Chorale. !11i.leathel' .....:......... $3.4)5
.Back 10 Schloi
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Boston
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Dr. Findlay graduated with honors from New Eng~anl;i Conservatory of Music and earned advanced degrees at Harvard and at the Mozarteum Ac~demie, Salzburg. H~ has taught and lectured at many universities in the United States and abroad and as a conductor has· appeared with such orchestras as the Boston Poys, St. Louis Little Symphony. and the Worcester Symphony. Dr. Findlay's published' ar-' rangements include works for
Ho;y Hour CLEVELAND (Ne) - A Holy Hour for the' success of the Second Vatican Council will be held he~e Sunday, Oct. 7, feast of the Holy Rosary, in the city's huge public auditorium. It is being sponsored by the Diocesan Holy Name SoCiety.
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OUSHIIO'S 211 UNION STREET'. NEW' BEDFORD
NEW YORK (NC)-The Ford Foundation has .granted Catholic and Protestant scholars $11,300 to launch what may become a wide-ranging stUdy of Christian mission schools in Asia, Afri.ca and Latin America. The· grant will .be used to finance 11 "preliminary appraisal" of the signi#cance of 11 larger study whieh would investigate the secular education In Christillll. missions. The $11,300 went to the Institute of Social Studies Ilt the Hague, the Netherlands, a Proa testant body. The institute !a being· joined in the project by the International Federation ~ Catholic' InstitutloDfl of' SocioReligious Research, which hall headquarters' in Brussels, Ford Foundation spokesman llll1d.
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10
Citize"s Question' Candidates Stand On School Aid
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River,....Thurs. Aug. 23, 1962
FirstComm'uni'on Here Every Other Sunday·.
NEW YORK (NC) - A · questionnaire on Federal. aid to students in church-related schools has been sent to
WELLSVILLE (NC)-In most pari~hes, First Communion is on the calendar. once' a year. But at Immaculate Conception here in this ohio' community it happens almost every other Sunday. Since Father Gerard Curran became .' pastor last year, the parish' has had the smallest "class" The pastor is more concerned (one) and its most unusual. ~th a child's knowledge than F' t his age. If a youngster is ,ready an d mos t f reque,n t Irs at 5 or 6 he makes his First
Communioll celebra~ions. Communidn. Others might not Among other thmgs, Father be ready until they are 8, he Curran: . said. Purchase of clothing presents Assigns parents the t~sk of mstructing thei~ own, youngst~rs no problem.. Boys are asked to on, the meanmg.?f confessIOn ,wear only "a neat suit or jacket." and Holy CommunIon. Girls wear white dresses or veils Lends or sells (at roc~ botto.m their parents can purchase a~ prices) First CommunIon veIls cost or borrow from a stock of and dress~s. ' 50 Father Curran has on hand at Reserves a seat in the .front the rectory. But any other white pews for the First Commu~lCant, dress is fine. his parents, brothers and SIsters. p' t Ava'l ble . together rles " I a 'l'hey go t 0 C ommUnIon . . No appointments are neceso:Announces from the pulpit the sary. The priest is available at , First Communicant's name. . 2 P.M. Sundays to receive parInvites the youngs~er and hiS ents and prospective First Com'" family to the rectory for break- municants. EVERY OTHER SUNDAY: Michael Hanlon, 8, refast. ' " Almost every other Sunday at . No Rehearsals, the 11 A.M. Mass, some ,young-. ceives his Firs't Holy Communion at' Immaculate ConceJ)-: There are no, formal instruc-. ster in the. parish makes 'his First tion Church, WellsviIfe, Ohio, from Father. Gerrt;lrd Curran, tlon . sessions or rehearsa:~s;, no, . Cl?m~unio~. The child, his par-·, as .hisparents and his sister l.{ay, await reception. NC processions for'" youngsters .and' ents and brothers and sisters eat 'I no 'shopping tOurs for their breakfast with .Father Curran Photo. parents. '. , ,'" afterward at the reetory.Regti"Receiving Christ for the first Jar guellts are, the two ~Ursuline, time isn't anocc'a'sion for senti-. nuns who teachln' the school. . ' mentalism and undue exCite,The .breakfaSt, FatherCurraJi SEATTLE (NC) ...,... The Chris- human. ,or Christian,", Father . ment." the' pastor said. "O~ten~' ,feels, not oply l1*rengthens' the tian vocation demands involve- ,~errigan asserted. . the months of class preparation,bond of' friend~hip between, ment in the affairs of the world', The Jesuit poInted to the exInnunierable practices and' un-" priest and laity, but it ~.1so BC';', the 1962 North American, Litur- istence of "a world of turmoil due attention to external'prepa- 'quaints the pastor witq, parel1tf1 gical Week .has been .. told by and crisis,of despairand inju'sration leave, 'a child almost ,wQo are non-Cat1:)olics: For Father' Daniel :'Berrigan, S.J., ticeand grinding indigence." devoid' 'of the real spiri~ual many. it is their tirst close look. poet, author and educator. "The ~~Christian insight knows' it is preparation' for First Comlllun- inside a rectory~ and first 'infor~ . Christian mind cannot conceive there; but human selfishness, Ion," mal chat they've. had with. a o f itself' as exl:ting out of this 'which is also Christian" skill, hali Parents ,Teaeh . priest, Father .Curran said. . world, out of its own times, its 'own way of a~oiding the isFather . Curran gives parents ' '. ,while still claiming to remain sue," he said. . • catechism and the,task of in~ DePaul· Stores Help auuction because. they are the 6 281 ....• d • Y' "God-given teachers of religion ' " l""lIIIee y In ear 10 their .children." He insists the SYDNEY (NC) - Stores conehildren understand rather than ducted by the sf Vincent de . memorize the' explanations, of . Paul Society in New' South , Penance and 'Holy Eucharist. Wales 'assisted 6,281 'needy per": "The 'knowledge and informa- sons last year, according to a tlon must be exact, because they report issued by store operators 'will c'arry it with them the rest assembled here'for .their annual of their lives," Father 'Curran convention. l8ilL . The stores distributed 43,133 articles of clothing and 6;496" pieces" of furniture and, other " , F~om'Wheelchaif ' goods to· the poor, and ,made 'an LOURDES (NC)-.,-Archbishop .' additional ,trading profit of $54;Alfonso Carinci,' 99 _ yeai' -"old' 000 to support the' society in iti member of the Vatican admin- speCial works of charity,. " They, alSQ "sent 80,000, articles istrative . staff, offered Mass from a wheelchair at Our Lady's of. clothing to missions, in Suva;, d'" ' " shrine here during a" 'Pilgrimage Fiji, Hong Kong."': and' ,'the" '0".... ol sick Italian priests. '. , Northern' Ter~itory of· AustralIa., .
J esul' -t Dep Ior.es'Unt-m' I. ely' SI-Ie'nee" " '
· candidates for U.S. Congressional nominations in 13 New . York State primary contests by the state chapter of Citizens for Educational Freedom. Dr. Mark Murphy of Flushing. N.Y., CEF state chairman, said'. the candidates', answers, or' failure to answer, "will be widely distributed by Our organization" before Primary Day. which is Thursday, Sept. 6. . The 13. Democratic and 16 RepUblican condidates have' been \ . asked: "I) Are you for or against Federal aid to education? "2) If there is to be Federal 'aid, are you for the inclusion of all American children Or for the exclusion of the 7,000,000 American children in churchrelated and other independent schools? '(3)' If elected to Congress, do you pledge, to ,vote against any Federal aid which does not treat all children "equitably, regardless of the· school they attend?", . " ,Dr. Murphy told the canc:h.. dates: ' !'C i t i zen sfor Educational Fr:eedom, is a national non-profit, non-denominational, non, partisan organization with headquarters in St.Louis, Moo' · ,"Our aim is the protection of the civil., a'nd' constitutional rights of .the American children in independent (non-state) schools. ' After the primaries, Dr. · Murphy announced, a similar 'questionnflire will· be sent to everY state candidate for the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Pe'f . t'' r ec f,or.'
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Barbe'cues
CHAPLAIN DECORATED: Father (Capt.) Robert F. Auer, a priest of the Dubuque archdiocese and a chaplain at Lackland Air Force Base, Texa~, receives the Airman's Medal for heroism- from Maj. Gen'. William Bell, base commander. Last September, Father' Auer quelled a man woo had gone berserk and threatened to kill members of ·his own family. NC Photo.
Oven - Fresh Daily at your
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Stays Fresh Days Longer
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u. S.
Fails In Duty
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Aug. 23, 1962
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11
Stress C@1f~olics' Duty to Defend Human Rights
To Latin America PUEBLO (NC)-The n.' S. is not sending its proportionate share of religious personnel to Latin America, a priest told the National Sisterhood Vocation Conference here. Father John J.' Considine, M.M., director of the Latin America Bureau, the National Catholic Welfare Confer-- pictures and television shows., ence, said "the U. S. occupies This, she declared, is a basic a modest third place" behind re~son' why 79 per cent of all
BUENOS AIRES (NC) ., TWo hundred and fifty delegates representing 36 top internationally 0 r g ani zed Catholic bodies left their congress with a charge to tell their own groups: Catholics have a "serious duty of conscience" to come to the,defense of human rights whenever and wherever they are in jeop-
Spain and Germany in pro'viding priests, Brothers and Sisters for the area. He told some 2,500 delegates from 27 states that this country "can feel happy about the 12 and a half per ~ent increase in its Latin American manpower contribution" from 1960 to 1962.
girls who enter convents today have met with some parental objection., "But we Religious are at fault also," she said. "We have not' ~d~ • always taken time out to explain The assembly of the Conferourselves, or our' lives, or the ence of International Catholic human side of this wonderful Organizations asserted that Cath_ vocation which is ours." olics as individuals or in organTypical Group Europeans Sister" Daniel Miriam des- , izations can not shirk their "However," he said, "our cribed a "typical postulant duties toward the defense of European friends note that com- group" in a religious community human rights in an era when pared to such countries as Ger- whose work is chiefly teaching violations of these rights "cover many, the Netherlands, Belgium and nursing. The group "would such large parts of the earth." and Switzerland, our Church in probably range in age from 17 The declaration added that EXCHANGE' GREETINGS: On his arrival at Lamthe U.S. is not at all carrying to 30 years and be composed of beth Palace, the Anglican Primate's residence in London,' "Catholics canll, t remain neuits proportionate loaa overseas."- three or four copege graduates, tral when it comes to the deA nun told the conference, three or four two-year college Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., .left,' president of the Secre- fense of human rights." The conference's summons to which was sponsored by the students, two or three registered tariat for Promoting Christian Unity, is greeted by, the Theresians, national organiza- nurses and ,~our, or five nursing Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Arthur Ramsey. Cardinal "its member bodies to stand up tion of laywomen for the pro- students, so~e "{ho had done Bea was in Britain' to attend a conference on Christian and be counted in the ranks of human rights defenders now motion of vocations, to the Sis- secretarial or clerical work, and unity at the Jesuit College, Heythrop. NC Photo. goes back to these organizations terhoods, that many young the rest high school graduates,it and their members. ' women turn away from there- - . she said. , , ' They iriclude broad catch-all llgious life because they do not ' "In our group last year," she groups such as the International know ~nough about it. 'continued, "the high school Federation :>f Catholic Men and graduates included two prom , Misrepresented, the World Union of CatholicAccording to Sister Daniel queens, a star shortstop, the Miriam, vocation director for the'usual town joker, a 'good 'barber,. HEYTHROP (NC)-A leading' Christian unity held at the Women's Organizations, and Sisters of Charity' of Cincinnati j shop quartette, a square dance official for the corning ecumeni- Jesuit-conducted College of St. more specialized associations the religious life has been 'mis-' caller, and an expert 'on knitting cal council said here in Eng- 13 e 11 a r'm i n e here., Some 80 such as the World Federation of represented in books,' motion arid quilting." land that there are great diffi- priests, inchiding five bishops, SodalitieS of Our Lady, the culties to Christian uriity and took part in the conference. Its Legion of !\-iary, the World Union these clmnot' be eliminated in pi'incipal aim 'was' instruct of the Catholic Press, the World the space of a few' years. priests in the nature of ecumen- Union of Catholic Universities and the Interna'tional Young The statement was made by ical work in Brit/iin. ' Augustine Cardinal Bea, S.J., 'Asked at what point he en- Christian Workers~ . president of ,the Preparatory visaged a union of all baptized WASHINGTON (NC) - Mar- ,ceptlon. Auxiliary Bishop FUlton' Secretariat for Promoting Chris- ' Christians, Cardinal Bea replied onite Rite Patriarch Paul Mea- J. Sheen of New York, national. tian Unity for the Second Vati- with the following Biblical quo- , Latin American Aid uchi of Antioch and All the cUrector of the Society for the can Council. PARIS (NC)-'-Special stress tation: "It is not for you to East will come here Sunday to Propagation of the Faith, will He spoke' to newsmen after know the times or dates which was placed on aid to the Church officiate at the dedication of II preach at the service. taking part in a conference on the Father has fixed by His own in Latin America when the supreme council of the Holy ChildMaronite Rite seminary. Expect 16 Students authority" (Acts, 1, 7). hood Society at a meeting here He is also schedule.d to pay Ii Some 2,000 Eastern Rite Cath'Jus& Begun' allocated a total of $3,451,200 to courtesy call on ~reslde':lt Ken- oIlcs from all' parts of the na1,128 projects. ' 'r.he Jesuit Cardinal agreed nedy at the White House next tion .are expected here for the that preju,qice and suspicion in Wednesday. ceremonies. After the service in The Patriarch, who resides in the shrine a dinner is schedUled MIAMI (NC), - , The Diocese regard to attempts at unity exist Beirut, ~banon, 'was invit~d to at which!' Danny ,Th0n:tas,TV, of Miami Vocation Office has to a high degree, but added that the capital ,city. by" Archbishop and night club comedian"wiU be been commended by the Sacred these cannot be eliminated CorivalescentHome; Inc. Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washing- master of ceremonies. 109 GREEN STREET FAIRHAV~ , Congregation of Seminaries and quickly. , "We have, oply- just begun to ton. The Maronite prelate ()riFather' Elias EI-Hayek ,is ree- Universities for sponsoring a WY 4-7643 announces additional accommoginally was scheduled to corne tor of the Our Lady of Lebanon ' meeting of religious vocation move toward each other, and we, , dation. for men' and women caI,:mot expect that prejudices here last May bu.t h!s t;rip w'as , Maronite Seminari which the directors early this year. 24 Hour Care Special Diets delayed by hospltahzat~on fol-, Patriarch will·' dedicate: Con'Some 40 priests, who are voca- and misunderstandings created , Opt)JI for inspection alwaYG lowing minor surgery. , . verted .from a large residence, tion directors in 25 archdioces through many very Sad centuries Prop. Lena M. Pillino The Patriarch will be accom- the seminary, expects to have 16 and dioceses in the eastern U.S. , can be overcome in a, few years' and Joan Larrivee , time," he said. panied by Archbishop Anthony students at the opening of the attended three-day sessions con':'The,' Cardinal ' expressed, the , Khoreiche of Sidone, Lebanon.: ~'. Fall tenn, Father EI-Hayek said. , ducted 'at Miami Beach last : ... belief' that ,'once non-Catholics Following, the seminary dedica-' - . Foll.owing the' ceremonies January. learn about the teachings ·of the ~ " Electrical tion, the two prelates will con-' here, the Patriarch arid Arch;' Referring to' reports forcelebrate P 0 n t i fie a 1 Divine 'bIshop' Khoreiche :will make a warded to the congregation , Church, her make-up, her doc,trine and authority, there will . Liturgy (Mass) in the Nation8I ' tour, of the United States as from the meetin'g, Giuseppe ~hrine of the Immaculate' Con-' 'iuestsof the' State Department. Cardinal Pizzardo' wrote to be no difficulty in regard to 'their acceptance of papal in-' Bishop Coleman ,F. Carroll of fallibility. Miami: "The rePortS have been examined with a, lively interest DRY CLEANING and ,I willingly express the pleasure, of this Sacred Congreand gation for ,the depth of the docFUR STORAGE trine as well as for the practi944 County St. -" . cality of the pastoral suggestions New Bedford contained therein." The' congregation particularly cited the comments at the meet,;, 34-44 Cohannet Street ~I"'I"'I"'I"'I'''' ing by Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta, who spoke on Taunton VA 2-6161 the problems of vocations in colleges, and Msgr. Ernest J. ~ CO. ~ Fiedler of the Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., diocese who spoke ~ HeatDrru~ Oil~ aP on recent declarations of the INSIlJRANCte AGENCY, iNC. Holy See concerning examination of candidates prior to en96 WILLIAM SiREET teri,ng the seminary.' 36£ NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD, MASS. ~ , l!'" Stresses Importance I fi\IIIEW BEDFORD ~ WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167
Cardinal BeaCites Obstacles To Unity; Counsels Patience
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Praises Miami Vocation Office'
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RED FESTIVAL FLOPS: With moSt of the returns in from Helsinki, it looks as though the communist-sponsored World Youth Festival was not worth the money it cost Moscow. Its propaganda value was greatly dulled by riots and anti-communist demOll8.tratiollB throughout. NC Photo.
NEW YORK (NC) The leader of 3,500,000 Episcopalians in this country reminded his fellow churchmen that the Second Vatican ,Council will be' "of immense importance for us all...· In an official "statement to the church," Presiding Bishop Arthur Lichtenberger asked U. S. Episcopalians to offer "frequent and regular prayers" for the success of the council. Last November Bishop Lichtenberger met with Pope John. It was the first time a pope had received in private audience the head of any U. S. Protestant denomination.
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WASHINGTON (NC)-We need as a people to re-estab,,.Ush respect for law and order. This' is the sobering·advic.e of 'the director of the FederaI Bureau of Investigation, who reports. that there is a "massive avalanche of crime" sweeping over the country. "We' The following letter WaD received at our shall see no abatement in Hoover calls ''long a foreboding sionary: widespread . lawlessness as facet in the crime picture," con.'~In the evening I stopped in a small long as there is wholesale tinues to rise. Arrests of persons village where there was a single Catholic disrespect for taw and order in under 18 years of 'age ·in 1961 family who wished to hear Mass and have' Gur. Nation," J. Edgar Hoover were up four per cent over the their new-born baby' baptized. TwO. boxes .has said in a message sent to 1960 total. This age represented .served as the altar, and ten .square yards of lawen for c e men t . officers 43 per cent of alt' arrests for the a cow-dung muddy floor were the cathedral. throughout the land. more serious crimes. Two candles were lighted and carefully put While warning that "there is Action SOll'eb' Needed . in' Ii safe place to avoid the danger of fire. no one r,emedial answer to the "As could be expected with a problem,'; . because "the causes spiraling crime rate," the mes"When n started ·that Mass with the' and' factors of crime are far too sage continued.' "the role of the CITED: Msgr. John E. wonderful 'rrntroibo md altaN DeA,' II closed· varied. and. complex," .the FBI law enforcement officer has be- Kelly, director of the Bureau my eyes anGiJ thought that foli' mUes anell chief saUl: "I n d u I g e 11 c e and come increasingly hazardous. Of miles aroUnd we four people well'e too. only ~f Information, NCWC, will· materialistic s elf ish ii e s s are the 71 officers who met violent worshippers of the true God, anell- n the eroding the tried and true deaths during the course of their receive the 1962 Communionly priest who c.oulllll celebrate Mass. 'Americantraditlons of honesty. .duties last year, 37 were killed cations Award.Of the Reli-' 'Fheil did 1I feel that being n missionary by vicious criminals. TWelve of gious . Heritage of America. was e really wonderful thmg. I! 1uYlll the. sensatAon o~ being' In integritY,and ~air play. . t~e killers were 21 years of age The bureau is ..an informa-, the most beautiful cathedral In the world. 00 .Il11nge tilllIt Ii could lIlights. Diminish or YO\lnger." . not 'see the wlr,lIs. The organ wms pWying music· I! bad not hetlrd ': He said that "day' or night, at Only an awakened and well- tion and. public relations in any other church-the music nature p!z,ysonly dAmly. fum work or play. the individual's .. infontled. pul;>lic. opinion can , agency for the Church 'in the the town but loudly in the wilderness. At the consecmtion'I! !>asic rights of personal security solve the increase in' crime; or U.S. NC Photo. . felt the eyes of God upon me-I! was the only Eldest in the rcgion and pursuit of happiness are. any social problem, Hoover be"offering lIllis Divine Son to lHlim. l8Iow lecnty I! tim to be tI miDsteadily diminishing." The aver"- . lieves.· He :feels th~ cquntry's monary!" 1P[j'@fr®~{f. [L®@$OITU@ age man. woman. and child "is news media ·have done a "supein greater. danger than ever be- rior public service" in presenting fore of becoming a victim 'of this a factual picture of the situa- @~~ofr}f [}=lj@~[9)ofr@~ Why not cut out this letter, bring it to your office and see <iriminal onslaught." he added. tion. how many willing souls there are who will give you a' quarter or .The FBI head does not despair · As evidence of the "massive ~O$t1'®ll'l}u@@C& more for this poor priest and others like him. The sacrifices'. you avalanche" he warns, against, the of Americans' ability to handle gather will be sent to the Holy Father, and he will make the WASHINGTON (NC) FBI director said some 1,926,090 the situation. if they make up distribution. That is the way The Society for the Propagation of serious crimes were committed . their minds to do so. "History has The U.S. Supreme Court has the Faith works! We look forward to 'hearing from you. ' in 1961. ''topping the all-time proved...· he said, "that Ameribeen asked to review a Kenhigh record of the previous year cans, when .faced with hard tucky Court of Appeals deby three per cent." reality calling for effective cision which upheld the leasing GOD ·LOVE YOU. to· ~.C.C. for $2 "This is the winnings of : In fact, he added, "during the action, traditionally rally to the to a si~terhood. of a hospital ' a: friendly bet. 1 bet it win be put to good use." . . . to Mrs. past five years. crime has out- cause." . '. . built largely with public' funds" P.K. for $115.50' ''In thanksgiving for a favor; 1 had deeided stripped the growth of the popuHe believes 'action in the 'war. A taxpayers' group. led by a that when'l stopped working I would send.1IlJ' last pay cheek tation' five to one." against crime' has never been Rev. G.R. Albernathy. 'claims in .to your sick ,and pOOr." •.. to M.B.T.M. for $1 ''I am a girl 01 ;. Youthful cl"iminality. which more soreiy needed. a petition filed on their behalf eleveu and JUst want to say. 'Thank you, Mary';" . • • to M.L.&. that .the lease arrangement vio$2 "Thanks to Sl. Jude and Sl. AnthOll7 for favon reeelved." ' rauff~lo lates proper' relations· between . . Cb.urch and State. The institution is' the IrvineWeare' not- only asking for your Sacrifices. but for your ·.B U F F A L 0 (NC) Msgr. diocese. Msgr. O'Brien remains' . Estill County. It prayers too. Send your request lllDd an offering of $2 for the was built with Ky., city Hospital. and county· Rlchard O·Brien. reputed to be active.· administering affairs of funds, plus Federal monies WORLDMlSSION ROSARY, and we Will send you these multit~e oldest active pastor in. the Annunciation parish here and through the Hill-Burton Act, colored beads blessed by Bishop Sheen'. 'Each time you say the . . nation. 'will observe his l00th, .plans to celebrate hiS' bIrthday' - and is being leased ·to the Bene- WORI;DMISSION ROSARY you will remember to put' aside • IJ!rthday on Saturday. Sept. 1. anniversary quietly. -0 dictine Sisters of Covingt~ daily" sacrifice .for the Holy Father. : This na~i~n was gripped·in·:the ·Msgr. O'Brien generally of- Ky., for $1 a year. . b~ood~ 1VI1 .War when he ~as fers 7:30 Mass each morning, 'MissIon 01 Cllv"cb' . ~rn m AlbIOn, N.Y., to Irish then spends some time at work . Cut out this· column; pin yOUr saertf1ce to It and Diail it to the imm~ant p;lrents,the uurd in at his desk in the rectory before The Kentucky.' Court of Ap- . Mon ~v. F~ton .J. 'Sheen, National Director of the SoCiety for a. family of five boys and a a sUbstantial breakfast. He fol- . peals, in its May 5. llHl1; deci- tht! Propagation of the Faith,. 366 Fifth· Avenue, New York '1. N. Y.. gi,rl. .. loWs no special diet,. but . eats sion upholding the lease ar~ or iqur' DiOcesan Director. RT.· REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, A late vocation. he was or- fruit regularly and drinks eof- rangement, noted that after the dained at age 33 on. Dec. 21, fee sparingly.' ' . ' \ institutiOn was. built, the city 368 North Main Street. Fall' River, Mass~ 1895, after studying at St. After consultationis with \ hitil and county foUnd' they did not YOURS TO LbVE. AND TO ~Ive' Michael's' College; Toronto. Ont.. two assistant pastors. the Mon- - have adequate. financial rean~ Ass u m'p t ion Se,minary, sign~r has lunch"rests briefly sources to run it. . ... Ilfe of • DAUGHTER Of n. 'AUL Lo.. OCMI _ , aU ...... MUla lmowledp CIIId 1_ of Wmdsor,Ont. . and each afternoon, weather ';l"he authorities "sought Ja. God by. Ilmrisil Him ill a Mislioe which __ the ... .He has worked the ~ years pennittlng, .with cane in hand . vain for some' time" to find a Praa; .Radio. Matioil Pictvns.. CIJICI lV•.eo brine eli his priesthood in the Buffalo he takes a walk. ' private. organization willing to Hie Word .. lOuis .verywhe.... Zealoul ,civng undertake the operation and fingirh, 14-23 yeaN interemd .. this UIlIqIA ally obtained an agreement with' Apoetolate may writ. to: . the religIous' community.. the REVEREND MOTHER SUPERIOR court said.. DAUGHTERS OF 510 PAUL The appeal to the .nation's 58 ST. 'AUL'S AVE. BOnON lW. MASS. high court says' that the Sisters would operate the hospital "for religious purposes and not simply as a public charity.'~ This. ,the would make "a public facility and. ,Home . Owner · a mission of the church," the petition states. . . Thoe· Speciali"ed.. J~b '0.* a C~operativa Bank ·Wall· of' Separation' The document also state's that the lease· arrangement 'constiVA tutes' the donation of state and , . : .. ' . . . ", Federal taxes to support the religious act i v i tie s Of. the WINTH,ROP STRIEET - TAUNTON· .. .... ) , Catholic Churcn. ACROS§ THE STREET FROM THE ·POST OFFICE The petitioners said that the Supreme Court should review Where it PAYS to get together · the case because the court has held that "there is III wall of · s.ep~ration .ere c ted between Bo Thrifty - Be Wise Church and State which cannot Ask your Meatman for a be breached by eithe....." . DAVIDSON'S . ' The constitutionality of the use of Hill-Burton funds for (MacGregor .Brand) !Iect arian hospitals is also raised' • SW£ETNIC • in the petition which charges that the local. government di-' Bake i~ the Bag-No' BalSting verted the Federal funds under ."Mrii!' sar.I - . ' . . the act to the .Sisters. "WINNING FAVOR
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New Commuftuf'y . LAKE WORTH (NC) ...:... The · O~F TO MISSIONS: Si~ter Mary Thomas' More~ right, Sisters of Mercy of Moate prepares to leave Boston for Matute, Peru, whereE!he will .. Co u Po t y Westmeath, Ireland: ,
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ta~e charge of ~ me.dical clinic. She is part of a team of . Bishop have' accepted an invitation Coleman F. Carroll
fou~ Marist Sisters 'at San Ricardo parish staffed by the SocIety of St. James the Apostle. Seeing her off are Msgr. Edward T. S\yeeney, director of the society; and Mother Mary Cyr, rel!ional superior of the Marist Mission.arv Sisters. NC Photo. '. -, . • .. •'
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SAIGON ·(NC) - The first Vietnamese Jesuits Olf modem times, possl·bly the first in his.tory, were professed on the feast of St., Ignatius Loyola when five men took· their vows in the Society of Jesus in the novitiate at Thu Due, near here. The'
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A "tremendous change" has resulted from a CtirsiIlo de Cristiandad among men of St. Rose of Liina parish here, Father James Channell, pastor~
novitiate was 0llened t'W'O yeaq ago. . The Jesuits founded the permanent missions in Vietnam imI 1615 and continued to labor ba the country until late in the 18th century. They returned to Vietnam in 1957.'
'!'hey conduct thE Pon:ttflC8l Seminary in Dalat and II resi=dential center fOil' university mtudents in Saigon, where foUl' of them teach in the university. They are about to open anothei' ' center for stud~nts in Hue.
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The first Cursillo de Ci"istian-- . dad-meaning "Little Courses in Christianity" - in· the YoungStown diocese was held by the parish. It is an intensive course in Catholicism for laymen which, . since its introduction in the U. S. five years ago, has turned many a lukewarm parishioner into 0 zealous Catholic, Father Channell states. For example, Father Channell explains, two years ago at StRose, few men made their Easter duty; others would stay away from Communion for weeks; virtually no one showed any interest in helping the ChUrCh. . 100 AtteDcl But now, some are daily Co~ municants; many receive 'Communion each Sunday, and most do some apostolk work-some privately, some through the Legion of Mary, and others afl Confraternity of Christian Doctrine helpers and home visitonJ, the pastor added. The first Cursillo was given hi 1949 in a Spanish monastery Olll the Mediterranean island <If Majorca. In 1957, eight laymen participated in the first U. S. Cursillo at Mission, Tex. • Father Channell has arranged for two Cursillos for his Puerto Rican parish in the past two years,· and 100 men have attended. Laymen Impressive They slept on Army cots for three nights in a school gymnasium, heard five talks by the priest-director on doctrine, and 10 talks by laymen on practical topics ranging from the meaning of piety to the resolutions which eursillistas (participants) should make to become better Catholics, the pastor said. The lay speakers' role its emtremely important, said Father Channell. "Their talks are very effe<:tive - even more so than the priests'," he detailed. "I think it's because the participants regard them as one of their own. When these men-ordinary fellow&-get up and talk about 0 life of grace, then it makes an excellent impressIon."
Prelate Receives Heritage Award WASHINGTON (NC) -Msgr. John E. Kelly, director of the Bureau of Information, National Catholic Welfare Conference, has received the 1962 Communications Award of the Religious Heritage of America. The award, an engraved scron, was presented to Msgr. Kelly today by George Cullen, president of the National Press Club, at a luncheon. Several 'hundred religious leaders, members of the press, radio, TV and other communications media were present. Lester O. Shriver, RH,A exeeutive vice president, said Msgr. Kelly was selected for his I'distinguished service· in promoting understanding and good relations for his Church among people of all faiths through the nation'. radio, television, magazines and other communications media." The RHA is an interfaith organization which emphasizes the spiritual basis. of American
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Pope Posters LONDON (NC) - The Catholic Inquiry Bureau has arranged to have huge portraits of Pope John posted on billboards in London's central subway prior to the opening of the ecumenical council. They will be part of the bureau's campaign advertising free courses of information abQtd the Church.
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First Vietnamese Jesuits Make Profession
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OBSERVER: Dr. George Lindbeck, a professor at Yale Divinity School, is one of two men appointed by Luther ali World Federation to .act as delegate.observer representing some 50 million Lutherans at the Second Vatican Council. NC Photo. G
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Artist Deplores Commercialism BUFFALO (NC) - The. artist today must avoid the twin evil&! of "commercialism" and "aestheticism," a Catholic art-specialiot and editor said here. "Both commercialism and aestheticism are· perversions ~ normal art, where the mlifer'1l first motive is to make a needed thing as well as possible," Graham .Carey told the annual Catholic Art Association convention. CareY asserted that, "seem- I larism is . . • the gE'eat enemy oB. healthy art." "The doctrines of the secullll!' 'art world,' which are acCepted by almost every American who is interested in 'art' at all,- are directly oppoSed to the traditional view of art which sees art as the proper making of anything that needs to be made, no . more and no less," he said. He deplored the "blasphemy of ugliness" in churches and said . it is "due almost wholly to commercialism, an il10rdinate concern with profits." Both commercialism and aestheticism - "an inordinate concern with thrill and with reputation" - are aspects of secularism, he declared. "Money and pleasure and reputation are good things and like all good ~ings are to be enjoyed," Casey said. "But when they become a primarY motive for working, the workman ceases to serve God and neighbor and becomes a servant Olt himself."
Warns of Toying With Destr~ction WELSHFIELD (NC) - ~e . Bishop of the Byzantine Rite :Diocese of Pittsburgh said here in Ohio that those -who toy with _ abortion, divorce and immorality "are toying with the world't.l _ destruction." Speaking to. an estimated 15,000 pilgrims at the shrine of Our Lady of Mariapoch, Bishop Nicholas T. Elko warned that "unless the world bowl. before God and His laws, it will 'bow to annihilation and distress." Men who do not believe In God often attempt to disguise evil with the words "democracy" and "freedom," Bishop Elko Ml- . oorted. "People eannot vote on that which God absolutely decrees," he said. "What God has ruled is right, and the majority cannot overrule Him. His standards of morality are as irrevocable today DB they were on the day Moses received the Ten Com.mandments on Mo~ Sinai."
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Recalls Effort"to 'Transfer Date of Saint's Feastday"
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A ~arden:-loving golden jubilarian-that's Sister Mary Aidan of the Sisters of St. Mary D Namur'l!'0r~e:ly of SS•.Pe.terarrd Paul parish, 'FaIl River, she was in the city. recently on a home VISIt to her SIster, Mrs. Catherine A. Toole of 29 Vincent Street a mem~ . On Aug. 15, 1769, 'feast. of Our Lady's Assumption bel' of Holy Name parish. Daring her religious life, Sister MarY Aidan ~has tau~ht var~ L.etizia Ramolino, \Vife of Carlo-Maria Buonaparle, gav~ • I , ' 10us' primary grades in' adbIrth to her second son and n~med him N apoleone. Asa dition to domestic' science d~vout . if somewhat superstitious Corsican .she· was' de'courses. At present she is lighted with the co-incisacristan for her convent in dence; she had attended. scholars of the utmost probity,. ·Buffalo. N. Y. and her gardening Mass that morning in the and nothing said here is ·inhobby supplies the chapel with fresh flowers daily-even such Cathedral of' Ajaccio and tended to reflect upon their exotic blooms as orchids on prayed that the anticipated ac- learning or' their virtue. But in which she's concentrating' just couchment might be propitious. Napoleon's time they were, shall now. . All went well; we say, more amenable? the infant had So they promptly produced a "We call her garden 'the Gara praternaturreconditioned St. Neopolis. Bishden of Aidan,'" confided ,Sister Mary of the Sacred Heart. the ally large head' op' and Confessor, and were ful- . jubilarian's traveling companion. but otherwise ly prepared to furnish him with seemed normal. a biography' of any desiredlFellow Gardener, Why Napo' length. After all, the royal ho.use While in Fall River; Sister, leo n e ? The of Valois, long before. had inMary Aidan attended Holy Name n arne was vented St, Felix to grace the . Church and more than once was clearly chosen family - annalS. and there was . found deep in conversation with to honor the no reason why the Bonapartes its sexton about the soil and memory of a, should not enjoy the same privi.. shrubs of the lovely church cousin who had lege. grounds. fallen in battle.. It is not recorded that .NapoAnother ta1Eintof the versatile ':" some months before; in. the 're- leon himself had anything to do religious is cafeteria managevolt led by. the enigmatic P~oli with this liturgical comedy, but ment. She was in full charge of against the French occupation of 'on' the other hand he took no a high school c&feteria of her the island. Beyond that. it is steps to stop it. Undoubtedly, if community. difficult to associate the name he thought of it at all, it was '8 During her. stay, she made a with any known Christian pat- sop. for the supers~itious. special point' of visiting an au'nt, ronYrnic ; , seemingly. thep as Graeiou8 Gesture 90 this month, Mrs. Julia Macnow. a good deal of leeway wan Furtherm.ore, since NapoleOn's Donald of Somerset. Other relapermitted at the baptismal font birthday co-incided with the Astives and friends were also on in the way of indulging a taste sumption, it was, decided as a her calling list. grown long since for novel nomenClature. But gracious gesture. to transfer' the .her last home visit some five later on, after Napoleone had~ 'feast Of sf Neopolis, now reyears··ago. become Emperor of the French~ . named SL' Napoleon,' to that .' Sister .Mary Aidan. said her the attempt :would be made :to :'da~,... " ,!:' ' . . '; I., '" community has' members in lirik the name with a certain St. It was, in fact, rather confiLowell. Buffalo, parts of Texas Neopolis. commemorated in the dently anticipated' by the more and in Lockport. N.Y. The SisRoman martyrology on May 2. enlightened that in time ,the ters are teachers and nurses. Obscure Saint Blessed Virgin would yield: . Qne more avocation - Sister ,Now it is far from evident-that pride of place to the Emperor, loves airplane lights. "Just like Napoleon and Neopolis actually and that the 15th of August I sitting in a living roOm," said refer to the same person. So would be celebrated the world she nonchalantly. little is known of St. Neopolis, over as Napoleon's Day. HOME VISIT: Mrs. Catherine A. Toole enjoys visit moreover. that it is next to imIt is certain that Bonaparte'l'.I from her sister, right, Sister Mary Aidan, S.S.M.N. Stand- Hospital To Become' possible to put a face on him as subsequent difficulties with that a foreground for his halo. completely unreasonable and ing is Sister's companion, Sister Mary of the Sacred Heart, College Residence The Roman martyrology re- stubborn old man. Pope Pius S.S.M.N. '. CARBONDALE (NC) - The cords the passion of four martyrs VII, led him to favor this deformer St. Andrew Hospital in o.~ that date, Neopolis, Saturni- velopm:nt the mo~e actively. ~earbY Murphysboro, m.• is be-· nus, Germanus. and 'Celestinus, There IS no questIOn that all 109 converted into a residence', . but neglects to mention when Napoleon's star passed its zenith o center for male students at' they suffered. It simply says that and he. bagan to manifest both ,,'"fI'"~ .fl...G i8I n1m, HG'" .JJ,a M, ~.J1 nn~n S o.u th ern illinois University: they underwent. great torture :megalomania and confusion, bie !J V>!/I trU\9Ulf' hu<QJ v u(Q]~~U here. . " and were finally thrown into bitterness toward the Church' and demoralize the former .in-· '. p'r,ison where they died. 'hardened. PITTSBURGH (NC) -- 0 n e Father Cletus Hentschel New- . habitants of these areaS. The good Bollandists. working More Difficult Today great paradox in the economy of man Club director, said the hos-· Great Strength on this unpromising material, But 1814 changed all that. 1'h~ salvation involves the place of pital operated by.- the Diocese of "In Greek mythology there came up with the not-too-en- fall of the Empire meant the ex:- :community worship and ·action Belleville closed two years ago. 'was·a giant whose strength was lightening theory that they were tinction of the cult of St;. Napa- 1p'relaxation to private prayer, 'impressive only so long as he when the new St. Joseph all transfers from the Alexand- leon, and poor St. Neopolis; "Father John F.Cronin, S.S·.•. told had contact with his native Memorial Hospital was opened:' rine martyrology, but no pre- blushing furiously no doubt, the sixth annual National Cath- earth," 'he continued. "Lifted The Newman Club will direct·. cise date could be established went back to May 2 in the 01ie Social Action Conference above it, he. became a weakling. the housing center but residence and no further information was martyrology and took up resi- convention here. this thought to ~ocial will l?e aV;1i1able ,to students on fo~thcoming.'The Syrian liSt, for; dence once more with his old: . "Our Lord tells us' to tetire Applying action, our strength is' greatest a non-sectarian basis. Named St.. May 2 speaks of St. Saturninus cronies. • ·to our rooms' and to talk to the so long as we have meaningful Philip Neri Hall. the center will but ignores the others." And Our Lady quietly re- Father in private," Father Cro-.. contacts with individual workers serve 75 to 100 residents. . Political Consequence sumed her sway over August nin, declared. "Yet He also says and em~loyers, with the Negro. 'Letizia and Carlo Buona,parte 15, though for .years afterwards, that where two or three are· the migrant, the delinquent. .•. Uked the sound of Napoleone, even undex: the restored Bour- gathered together, ·He is in their Plans can aff~ the environment (j~M~AN ~!LJLA which, it must be conceded,ill bons, the day also commemo- m i d s t . ' . of such persons, but only human '!So it is wjth social adion." 'and personal influence can as good a reason as any for se- rated the Concordat, which still lecting.a name. Nor were they remained in force. Not all the Father Cronin continued. "Our change character." <C~~[Q)O troubled oy the dubeity about evil Napol~on did .lived after . immediate concern may be with Father Cronin stated that "our his patron saint, any more than hiril. nor was all the good in- organization. and legislation. We challenge is to make social acCONSTR1UCTlION CO. it can be established that the terred with his bones. m.ay seek to influence the cus- tion and Christian action a persame problem .caused their SOil It is m'uch .more difficuit, toms and ~aws o! society. But,we fect blend. Our apostolate should ~~~Ifu@~fr [P@\70ern~ . to lose sleep. nowadays, to persuade the Con- 'must never forget that the ulti- be that of love in action;" Nevertheless. 40 years after gregation of Rites to confer theSe . mate purpose of all this is to AND his baptism it became'a questioiJ. small favors. on budding dicta- . help the individual and the of grave political consequence. _ tors. Juan Peron, for instance, family." ESTIMATES ON Sermon. Here he was the Emperor, mas- got exactly nowhere. with his o DRllVIEWA1YS ter of Europe and author of the bid for the canonization of his Father Cronin. who is assistant M@ffi30lL wonderful Concordat with the dear wife. Evita-for which we director of the' Social Action o SIDlEWAlLJK:S Holy See which. so it was hoped. may all be duly grateful. '. Department. National' Catholic o ll"AllIrUING AllIEAl!il ~1E1g(\fU(61E ~'ii'~'ii'U©~ had put an end to all the reliSo if the reader has it in mind Weifare Conference in Washing_ o GAS S'EA'll'lIONS gious antagonisms of the Revo- to imitate Napoleon Bonaparte, ton, prea'ched. at a community ~® N@li'frlJu ~frli'®@ifr ll!-tion; it might be well to attend ~ Mass whiCh opened the tnreeRout(il 130 Sallllafwnellll fffl'1f O~ 'lLiturgical Comedy' such an item as this. unimpor- day convention. OM: 'STOP SERVICE "'But alas. 'he had a name no- tant though it may seem 'at the He said that "justice and char-· SP 5-9846 . bbdy had ever heard of before, moment. in good' season. Time'is ity can be corporate in expresand if he really had a patron of the essence. . sion. But the love that should ~int. as his great-uncle Lucien , ,inspire these virtues must be claimed' with vigor. poor St. 1%.~~a®D@l!JlsOliilsfrIJ'M<efrD@D1l . ·personal. We lose 'something' of Neopolis was so vague and shathe perfection of Christian chardowy as to be an embarrassOS [p>«IIIJ'@lJ'ilfl'$°!Q)Mfi:)'.: . '.ity whe·n. we deal only .in the .. ment. So by all means let the HONOLULU, (NC) , - Bishop abstract with such groups as. liturgists get to work. ' "James J. Swe~ney of Honolulu labor, minoriti~; urban dwellers'· . 'Liturgists today; of c~urs~;'~re told parents here that a "Cath- or rural dwellers." " '. . .' . olic school is no substitute for a "Those who live in sl\unS; who: .: Ho!yd«:!lY Mass' Catholic home. It , suf,fer ~conomic and often racial CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)....:.:· ". Speaking at the blessing of dlSci-iminatibn; 'are human' I ~ Pope John offered Mass on the .the ~ew convent of St. John the ings; possessed both of immortal feast of the Assumption here in', B~ptist here, Bishop Sweeney souls and of all the feelings 'and the parish church of Castel- ". saId the "erection of a Catholic :sensibilities . of 'the 'human pei-- ·gandolfo, the village where his" school and the arrival of Sister-II ~p/' Father Cronin said. ~'·When Summer residence is located. and, Brothers to teach does not we forget this, our work of soci8i Twice during the morning after relieve parents of their obligu- reform often becomes artificial:" ~ass he welcomed the crowds of tion to inculcate religious truths and unworkable. We may replace pilgrims who came here for the in the minds and hearts of their slum buildings wIth modem ·cbildren.....'. feastda,y. ·'Do.using, but we mat'alsoscatter-'
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D.
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Bishop of Keno
'M~uD=O~~O~ ]
AN N
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TH£·ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Aug; 23,1962
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THIRD· ANNUAL
CHORALE and· ORC·H'ESTRA CONCERT
"Music Through The Years" ,
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in the', NEW auditorium .
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: ACADEMY OF THE -SACRED.. HEARTS Prospect Street" Fan, River .
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Wednesday; Sept. 5 and Thursday, Sept. 6
8 P.Me Admission'
~.OO
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Benefit: Building Fund
SPECIAL PERFORMANCE FOR RELIGIOUS OF DIOCESE SATURDAY SEPT. 1 at 2:00 P.M.'NEW AUDITORIUM ...... - - - -' - - - - -
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r.- M. . . . Is $pofts~ 8, T~ FoIIOW;II9 Indiyiduals .." Itainesi COItCerns ;" Greater Faft River: ANI Dale ProducIs, ... BracIr Elec:tiic Supplf Co. Cascade DNg Co. . Ettterpile . . . . . Co. "Gold Meclal •• ad Globe ~. . . . . . . Co.
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....chiMoa Oil Co. ' , ~ Ladies ' Garment Worken UniOil '" MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. , :, ,Malon Furniture Showrooms - Gerald E. McNally, Contrador, . George R. Montie, Plumber -,
Plymouth ,Prrinting Co., Inc. Sobiloff Brothers . Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America. AFl-CIO
Yellow Cab Company
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By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John So' Kennedy Harold Mehling, a former newspaperman, has wr,itten a long, fac.t-packed book about television. One has on1y to hear the book's titie to know theautlior's opinion of Ithe medium, or at least of the use now being made of it. The title is The Great TimeKiller (W 0 rId Publishing of the deleterious -efiectsof ;base Company. $4.95), and, :should and'corruptive pl'esentations, Ihe ~oubtremain, the jflcket is said to bea ,promoter <of ,cendescribes .it as '''a documented sorship and ,opposed .toweedom indictment and ,constructive of expression. study of televi'The 'broadcasters loudly ,protest their noble dedication Ito sion, the mindseduction maliberty in general 'anp free chine." speech in' partiCUlar,' :and, just . Mr. Mehling to be sure ;alI bases ,are ,touched, maintains t h a t d e c 1 a r e that .theindustry 'isalin its ear l. y ready .self,.;.regulated in ;a most days television :scrupulous way. Tills, of 'course, :S how ed prois hogwash. mise ,of '~atMr. Mehling devotes manY taining 'decenhorriblyfascinatingpa·ges .to .ey," which.P~ w.hat is ;all,.;imil'or:tant in 'TV: . bardly the ,ultinamely, ,the commerCial. 'lJ1he mate :- eomnumber of commerCials is :sta,g. pliments. But ~ven t(hat 'modeSt gering: he ,counted2il'ma <onepromise, he declares, has:been holk ·lProg,ram. "[\hey :a~e a.ass. unfulfilled. Now, in the il960~s, ,tricky,':and .sometimes dQw.nlielevisioois,in his opinion, .sa right false.. . -dreadful .as to :show'~certaintYTheir'absurdityiswell -dem.of becoming a major national onstrated ;bY the .fact Jthat~ur seandaL" NeW1t-on iN.. Minow is .manufacturer, -of .'::eter;gents illSeS evidently not ;aloneinhis view flatly Icontradictoryargliments that to day's television is lnothing' :in .pushing two of this products: but a cireal'Y wasteland.. the first is ~eeommended !beHow ·did. this abysmal faiilure eaUse it -does 'Dot make ,quantities eome about?Fir5t, through ,the of 'suds,.the :second because .it public's not comprehending that· . does ma'kequanti.tiesof ,them. the airwaves are ita pro~y,B.a.tingS Mumbo-J,umbo ~nd that, therefore, it has a But -don't.tlhe·ratings .show det,rm~native .say as to their. that the' public likes the cem- ' uSe. SecondlY, In default of pub- mercial-slanted drivel ,it is tic awareness and responsibility, getting? The ratings are, "ac-commercial forces have pre- _ cording to Mr. Mehling, so muCh ,empted the airwaves .as if t'hey mumbo..,jumbo. They are not owned these, and used themal- scientific at all, not truly repremost exclusively for their own sentative. aggrandizement. Supposedly the William N. Hurwitz, chief 01. Federal. Communications Com- the statistical research division mission is protecting the public of the U.S. Bureau of the CenInterest, but actually this is not sus,. has said that "n,on-resp'bnse at all the case, in -Mr. Mehling's rate ranging from 2510·35 'per 3udgment. cent do not meet our .standards.• Commercial Forces ' But such is the proportion, 01. _ By commercial ['Orces are non-response in the narroW' meant, 'first, .the networks and samplings made by the rating the local stations, and, second1y, services. . the firms which sponsor TV pro!FCC History Wre&ched grams. Thl! networks and the ll1urning to (or is 'it '"on'''?'>_ local stations make more/.by the FCC, Mr. Mehling summailelling timl! to sponsors. rizes its history, and it is pz:etty In the' :main, sponsors and wretched. He ;suggests steps by their adveJ:tising agencies de- which n,~ functioning ·of thia termine what will be telecast, commission .could be vastly imand their ,mtire interest is in proved, to the tremendous adselling the sponsor's product. vantage of the Ame~ican people. The effecti"eness of their pro-, He does not see subscription gramming ss 'a sales pitch is de- 'TV as ,a '·panacea, 'but rather is . cided, notcml,yby the rate at apprehensive about i~ .going the which theilr goods move, but sorry way of nllminally "free~ also by the l:ating services which radio and TV. purport to. produce scientific Again and again, he hammers findings 'as .to public preference at the necessity' of the public's in programming. awakening to. the fact that it Mr. Mehling gives the back owns the air waves, and the ,of his hand to all involved in f~rther fact that networks, statthisprocedure and the 'reason- .bons, sponsors, and federal ing on whic~h it is based. authorities will be resp'onsive Snles. Pitch to its wishes if only these wishes Two adv1!rtising men (and are forcefully and persistently they' should know) have given . made 'known to them. . the tip-off las to what we 'are Abet by Silence allowed to 'see on TV. One said Intelligent, articulate ,ccitithat the general run of. televi- cism by John Doe and Mary Roe .sion fare is designed, to create is indispensable. It should be "a mood in which.' .. the people eXpt;essed in cogent letters to are most prepared to accept the all who are accountable for the kind of commercials we do." revolting omessthat telev[sioD And the other said that the 'has become. . ~bject of broadcasting is' to .The industry has a ,brazen '''create as pleasant and favor- way ,of putting 'its ilapsesand cable an impression as possibie betrayals behind it-as in the lor the company or product .case of the' scandal of rigged :sponsormg ,the product." quiz ,shows, ,and :going ahead :as In 'short, ull .programming is if it were confirmed in perfeegeared to the sales pitch. And tion and answerable to no one. when you re~lize that the pedIf, 'by ;si!ence,' 'w.eabet !this dling of pills' and soap domi-' getting-away-with-murder we .nates TV, y'[)U can hardly be are guilty .accomplices.' iMr. ,surprised at the dismal dis- Mehling does his 'best to rouse gorgements.o,£ the magic ;box., . us to our responsibility. When anY~lne expressed fear
Swiss Contribution
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EINSIEDELN (NC) - 'Switzerland's 2.2' million Catholics ·contributed about a million dolilars for .relie.f activities du'!"·ing the Swiss Bishops' Lenten fundil'aising campaign,' it was an1I10unced here at the Bishops' anJIlual conferenl~e. Half the money will go to the missions and half 119 ,domestic dlaI'ities.
.Co.IJe,ge President
ROSEMON.'J.' (NC) - Mother Mary 'George 'has been appointed ' prilsident of . Rosemont College ,conducted here .in Pennsylvania by .sisters of the Holy Child Jesus. She succeeds Mr' 'Olr. Mary . Aidan, stue.." at ' who will _ J the University of Friboug, Switzerland. The' new. president had been dean of the college since il:956.
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TAIPEI (NC)-Formosa's Catholic population has, inereased by more than 1,000 per cent during the past 10
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Ceylonese W'elcome Brothers" Superior COLOMBO' (N€)/-Thl'ee Cey-. lonese city councils warmly weleamed the Superior General of the Christian Brothers to this coun'lmy which has seized: all but 40 of 750 Catholic schoolS in the past two years. The city councils: of Colombo,. Chllaw and Kurunegala gave Brother Joseph Nicet,. first. Surperior General o1i the' Brothers. of Christian Schools to visit Ceylon in 100 years, a warm civic welcome The Ceylonese national government has' taken a harsh line toward Jrivate ~hooIs. Since the ulj)pointment ~ J'u1y, 19&1, of Mrs. Sirimavo R. D. Bandaranaike as Prime Minister, her leftist government has confiscated mOire than 700 Catholic schools unda- the nationalization act passed late that year. Fur'thermore, the 40: SCthools that have rna. 'aged to stay out. of government hands are cramPed by the seizure law's provisions' which deny them government funds imd! fo:-bidi them to accept tuition fees.
Salaries Ovell'due: BUENOS AIRES (NC) - The Bishops of Argentina,. meeting here in extraordin3l')' session, have urge(i the government. to pay months - overdue salaries and pensions. to goveznmeat employeea, .
7
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years, according to statistics released here by the nation's Bishop. On .Tune 30, 1962, the Bishops reported, Formosa Catholics totaled 219,214, compared with only 20,112 on June 30, 1952. In, addition to the baptized Catholics, there were also 52',463 ectechumens taking instruction in the Faith prior to baptism. Il'ol'mosa's seven Sees are now 62L'ved by 651 priests, including 247 Chinese, and' 576 Sisters, o£ whom 270 are Chinese, the Sish-, ops said. DecliBne Ends Missioners here are especially encouraged by the end to the decline in adult baptisms. These rose yearly from 2,067 in 1952 to 25,338 in 1957. Then they dropped, and from 1959 to 1961 averaged between 13,000 and 14,000. Last year they reached '17,842. . Missioners give' several reasons tor the·renewed: rise in conversions. One is the growth at. Church organization. In 1961 two new dioceses were established and 8ft apostolie prefecture was raised to dioceslUlr rank. Since then, two more apostolic prefectures have been elevated' to dioceses. steady Growth They also point. out that there is a new factor to be noted in the recent conversions. During the 1950s, the majority of converts came from among the mainland-born ~hinese who had eame to Formosa to escape communism-who comprise less than two million 01! the 11 million population-andl f'l'om among the_ 100,000 abol.'rginal population of the mountains, who are 00: Malayan stock. Father Leonardi R. McCabe, M. M., vica1l' general' of the Taichung' diocese, has stated: "There is' now very little' work to be done among the aborigines. The last three or four years have seen the numbers of aborigine converts diminishing to almost nothing. ~ong the aborigines in the dioeese, there· are very few who a.Jl'e not either Catholic or Protestant~ . "The convert wOJrk among' mainlandellS 'during the last three or fOlD years: has alSo levelled' offL This: leaves witb a steady growth int c:Qnversions among. the native-born people, with every indication that this, work will continue to expand."
~'
Thurs., Aug. 23, 1962
BE'RLIN (NC)-The number of men and women in religious orders in Poland in.. creased by 9,274 in the decade from 1950 to 1960, according to a new atheistic paper pu~lished in War~w. The paper, entitled Zesyty Argumentow (Book of Proofs), says that the number of men in religious orders increased from 6,833 in 1950 to 8,425 at the end of 1960, and in the same period the number of women in religious communities rose from 22,318 to 30,000. This is a total increase· of 9,274. The figures are in an article entitled "Religious Orders in Poland." The author says that the 'Church in Poland "has at its disposal an army of close to 40,000 people, .. bound by the vow of obedience and trained to perform zealously the recommendations of the Church Hierarchy." ' 'Mainstay of Hierarchy'
POSTAli.. HIKE PRQPOSAL.: Floyd Andersen, center, president of the Catholic' Press Association, chats:-willha group of non-Catholic editors. The editors testified before a Senate committee investigating 3J. P1'0posed l'i:i:ke in postal 'rates' for nonprofit religious pel''iodicals. FJ.I'om left to, right are Edward. Et Grusd editor' of the National: Jewish MonthLy; James A. Doyle" executive secretary,: of the: CF'A; Flo.yd: Anderson; John Ribble of the Protestant Ptrblishel"S' Association, and Ford Ste-wart, editor of the Christian Herald. l ,
Reli:gioUI$ Publicati.ons Op"ose, Posta,l! Rate, Increase
. The article gives: these other figw'es: Houses of men Religiou~ increased from 47'l1 in 1953 to 520 in 1959, and the number oil houses of women Religious i~ close to 3,000. "It is a fact," says the author of the article,. "that the religiouB orders and congregations hava become a mainstay of the Church Hierarchy in Poland" the van,guard and unified army devoted to the interests of the Vatican in tha realization of its taslts."
Protestant magazine the Chris- House of Representatives': The Han, Herald, and Edward, E'. bill is' inte,rlded to, bring in GJ!usdi editor oj!' ilia National added Post Office revenues, chiefly by increasing first class Jewish Monthly. The c~mmittee is conducting- and airmail rat~s. hearings OD' H.R.7927, which Civil Rights Study Third CIa. was passed: in January by the. NOTRE DAME (NC}~Julian. In general the measure would continue' intact the- reduced-rate' Samora, associate professor of secondl and third cla'ss status soci0logy at the University oj! Notre Dame, has been granted: currently granted'· to· religious nonprofit publications~ It would, $12;060 by: the U.s. Commission. on Civil Rights for a study OD however, increase the third "Civil Rights Programs of Span. crass bulk rate from 16 cents to NE;W YORK (NC) - Religion . ish-speaking People in tIle 21 cents 'Per pound, is more important to the iives United· States," the universi~ and problems: 011. psychiatric Anderson told the committee has announced. . patients· than some psychiatrists< that he was appearing because of' reports in the general press n01llIlal1Jl' allow" a<:cording to a psychiatrist at the Menningcm that the traditional reduced Advises: Cloritf.ic:otion Clinic. rates for the religious publications "might be in Jeopardy" ·in Dr~ Philip WooIlcott, Jr., of Of Church: Teaching the Senate.. NOTRE' DAME (NC)'-Catho- the. cdinie in Topeka., Kan., says He said the action. 011 the lies interested in promoting' that. "to consi'der the patient~s Christian unity should' stl'ive to reug.;,aus, life outside the 'psy- House in continuing. the tradiclarifY Church teaching"so that chiatrist's territoJ:Y' is' no motre tional rates represented an ackit can be- und'elIStood' by other reasonable than SQ. to· consider Jl<Iwledgement of the "conttibutions being made to the deaominations, a theologian de- his: sexual life." Wool1cott expresses hiB. views strengthening of the moral fibre clared here. ' Thomas F. Monaghan Jr. Father' Robert Pelton, c=.s.C., in an' article ill' the July issue off this· country" by the religious press. head: af the' theology department of the Journal of Religion'. and' Treasul1er aU Notre Dame University, made Health, quarterl'y, publication of the' Academy of' R'el'igioft and the statement at the dosing exCite Motion, Picture ercise· -of a, week-long Institute Mental Health. BERLIN (NC)-"Through a 142 SECOND STREET for Loe'al Superiors. More than He states that psy.chiatrie case Glass, Dali'kly," molion picture 1,500 nuns' representing 84 con- histories; and treatment proproduced by Ingmar Bergmann, OSborne 5--7856 gregations and 168' .provinces in cedures, tend to neglect'religjon, the U.S. and religious commun- . both as. a factor in ill ness: and: a· won the first prize award: of the International .Catholic Motion FALL RIVER ities in nine· foreign countries possible. resource in the pa,. Picture 13ureau' at the internaattended the- sessions. . tient's recovery, . tional £il,mdestival here. "Growir,g toward each other PositiVe Feeli."'!:'s melJons' that we need in a certain sense to retranslate our' teachi'ng, He· says, tlHlue is. "a tendency' without betraying' it, into a in writing, psychiatric case studscriptural' and patristic language ies to stress the patient's negwhich is more communicative ative or pathological features, to the' Reformation Christians," ignoring. his positive religious Fatl'la- Pelton said. feelings; values, ethical conI. AUTO~\OTIVE. cepts .and oth~l' potential as...
WASHINGTON (NC)' - The president of the- Catholic Press Association told a Senate committee here that increasing: the postal rates of religious 'nonprofit publications /'might mean the death of some~'" CPA president Floyd Anderson urged' the Senate Post Office and' Civir Service Committee not t-o change' provisions of the house-approved postal rate bill which relate to nonprofit religious publications. Simil'ar' Pleas Similar pleas were· made by Ford Stewart, publisha- of the.
Reli.g;ion, Factor
In Psychiatry
MONAGHA,N
A(CEPTANCE
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WM. J. MANIN'ING (0,. WHOLESALE
Warns of American Secularism Dri·ft, '
PITTSBURGH (NC) An archbishop haS' specul'ated' that secularism ril become· America's official religiollJ i! the' trend illustrated by the U. S. Supreme Court's prayer decision continues;
Baltimore's Archbishop Lawrence ;T. Shehan has told' the Ancient Order. of Hibernians national con:vention here· that Federal aid to education must be viewed' in light o~ this, trend. He warned that exclusiollJ born Federal -aid Of private and cburch-related schools would! be "a tremend'ous blow"· to religion and "8 tremendous victory" for Beaularism. The role of' the American Hierarchy in the political field is to preserve Catholics' religious fl:eedom from this secularism, be
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For' many patients, he says, "religion as th.ey understand and: experience it is more relevant to their' live, ilTIlesses, and' perllaps' treatment. than the: paucity of reported d'ata in their' clinical' records! or the judgments of their- physicians wouM indicate."
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rHE ANCHOR,Diocese of
Fa~ River-Thur~. Aug. 2~, ,1.962
Msgr.. Texeira. Requiem Saturday
Statu.e H@[Mlors Memory of Parrents
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Continued from Page One but for a few no one knows who St. Roch was, It is Interesting to note that Father Giguere, the founding' pastor 0:1' St, Roch's Church in Fall Rivl~r, chose St. Roch as. patron of his church .in memory of St. ROI~h's Church· of the City of Quebec in which' Church he had been baptized. Pleads for' Son , The life of Saint Roch is most interesting and fascinating. It is the type that if written in present o.ay form would captivate the reader more than any novel., " Saint Roch was born iri the village of Montpellier in France in 1295. This vilage is in the southern. part of. France hot far· ,from Marseille. His father was the gover,nor of that village and section. His mother was a very holy and saintly person who devoted herlielf to her husband and to family life. After years of conjugal life, she was seeing Herself aging without 1!J.aving children. She pleaded with God to send her a . son, Her prayers w1re answered in the person of Roch.. From birth God destined him to a 'saintly life. It was noticed that he had ,on his· chest a red cross. Thill reB cross is very important for it will be the only identification of Roch at the time of his death. Alids the Sick From,hill early youth:Roch was brought up in an atmosphere of prayer; cllarity and sacrifice. At the al:e of 18 he lost· his father, and two years later his mother. After the death of his 'mother he gav~ all his riches to the pOOr and the direction of the ,village to his uncle, and after donning the habit of a pilgrim he left for Rome. . . On his way to Rome, crossing the Alps and the cities of Italy, ,Roch was touched by the sick· people of these villages who had been strieken' by the Black P-Iague. I suppose that to 'us today we would, call it some kind' of influenza. Roch could not see the misery 'of these peOple without helpi~lg.' He stopped' and nursed them. He recruited other men and w:ith their help he gradually formed dispensaries and hospitals to care for the sick. He spent night after night at the bedside of h,is patients. Strange ,enough it was noticed that those for whom he' cared were re-' stored to' 'health very quickly. After his work was completed in one villag,e, he' continued in another. ,It was during these days of mercy that he himself was stricken wiith an ulcer on the thigh. He was' ostracized by those to whom he ministered, and was obliged to take shelter in a hut ou.tside a village. During these lo,nesome days, he was'
Take First Vows Continued from Page One Considine, 12 Pa'rker Street New Bedford. ' " Forty-two p'ostulants, includ. ing six £rom the Diocese, were clothed in the habit of the Sisters of Merey and received religious namel; in ceremonies also' held in' the novitiate cha~l. From thi!; Diocese were Miss Grace E. Bond, Sister Judith Marie, daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. Leo Bond, East King Road, Fall River. Miss Mary Ka"lolchok, Sister Marie Corle en, daughter of Mrs. George Ka);.olchok, Mt. Vernon Avenue, No:rth Attleboro. , Miss Linda Precourt, Sister Marian Timothy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Precourt, 43 Emory Street, Attleboro. Miss Suzanne Nnlan, Sister Marie Laetare, daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. Leon F. Nolan, '27 Maple 'Street, Utleboro. Miss Clau:lette McCoy, Sister Anne Maureen, daughter of Mrs. Germaine Mc,Coy, 240 Whipple <.... Street, Fall River. Miss Kathleen Moor'e, Sister Mary Ellen Theresa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Moore; , 399 Warren ,Street, Fall River.
consoled only by.prayers and a dog. Every noon this dog came to Roch with a piece of bread. It belonged to a rich man of the village. At meal time the dog' would take a ~arge piece of bread an~ run mto the woods with it. The servants noticing' this daily routine of the day became curious and followed the dog. They came upon this poor sick man. They reported it to the. master who took Roch in his castle and nursed him., This is the most popular representation of St. Roch, as we see it in our church, with a dog holding a piece of bread in' his mouth and St. Roch showing his ulcerated thigh. Man of God Fully recovered, Roch completed his pilgrima'ge to Rome. In Rome after making, his pilgrimage to the great churches, Roch again' seeing the great number of sick people decided to stay in Rome. With the help of some recruits he formed dispensaries and hospitals of the care of the sick: In this work ' he was the forerun,ner, of St.' Camillus. After, spending three years in Rome, in order to escape public praise, he returned to his native village of Montpellier. Having changed· so much during those years of travel; he was mistaken for a spy, apd WClS thrown in a black dungeon. For five years he lived on bread and water without seeing the light of day. On the ,day of his death he asked to see a priest. This privilege was granted him. As the priest came to give him viaticum the cell miraculously lit up. Then and there .the priest COUNCIL FATHER: St. realized that this was not an or- ,Gregory the Great, Pope and dinary man, but ma,n of God. Doctor of the Church who He hastened to ~ell this to ~he ' died in 604, recognized the governor of the VIllage, the uncle f'f h ,. 1 '1 of Roch. But it was too late. As' 1 t ecume~lCa C?UnCI held, " they came to him he was dead. at Constantmople m 553. NC , Sees Red Cross Photo. Opening his shirt to give him a Christian burial, they noticed the big red 'cross on his chest. 0 rOSS Immediately his uncle realized what he had done. This was . CSllltinued from Page One, . Roch. He had jailed his own St. Elizabeth of the Visitation. nephew. So it was thaf he reSister M. of St. Andre de Florturned to his Lord and' Master ence is assigned to Pakistan; at the age of 32. In no time Incoming to St. Anthony's the news travelled throughout are Sister Mary Dian'e Michele, Europe, e~pecially in France and Sister M. Annette of the Angels, Italy. The people prayed to him Sister'M. of St. Clement, Sister and' the priests and bishops M. of St. Rose of 'the Cross, Sisbegged his protection in times of terM. of St. Alice of the Cross. epidemics. ' St. Ann;s ,School ' At the time of the Council of Outgoing from St. Ann's Constance during a, terrible epiSchool, New. Bedford, -is Sister demic the Fathers of the Council M. des Ly.s. Sis~e~ M.' of St. Bonordered prayers and processions. aventur~ IS rehrll~g. . ' in honor of St. Roch. The success Incommg are, SIster M. of St. of these prayers surpassed allr' Yvet~e of the Cross. a?d Sister expectations. So it was -that he M.RIch~rd of the TrImty.. , was granted the honor due to Outgomg from St. Hyaclt~th s Saints. His body now lies in School, New Bedford, ar~ SIster Aries in France. His feast is M. of St. ~ormand and SI~ter M. celebrated Aug. 16. of St. B~rnard of the PassIon. We have here in St. Roch's Outgomg from· ~t. ~oseph's Church a precious relic of St. Scho~l, Attlebo~o, ~s S~ster M. Roch obtained fro~ Rome by' Bermce. Incommg IS SIster M. Father.Giguere through. the me- of St. J~hn of Jesus. , , di.um . of Cardinal Begin of' Incommg to .St.. George s Quebec. / School, Westport, IS .SIster M. <JI. Prayers Are Answered St. Gertrude of Rhelms. The glory of St. Roch was in In 16 Languages his care of the sick and afflicted. Those who .invoke him in times TORONTO (NC) - The Gosof epidemic and sickness have pel is read in 16 different lannot bee,i1 forsaken. It certainly guages each Sunday in Catholic has been noticed in this parish churches in the Toronto metroby priests who have ministered politan area, a survey has disto the people, that seldom if ever closed. In the last io years, the have our children of the parish Catholic population has inbeen stricken by p.olio or other creased, almost 80 per cent in the contagious diseases. St. Roch has city and 137 per cent in the marvelously protected his chil- suburban area due largely . to dren devoted to him. St. Roch" immigration from European' pray for us. countries. '
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Nuns
Continued from Page One United States and' arrived on Dec. 24, 1919 and said his first Mass in this country on Christmas Day in Providence. pn Jan. 1, 1920, he was appointed as an assistant to. Mon'signor ,Viera pastor of Mt.' Carmel Chtzrch: New Bedford. Following five years in the New Bedford Parish, he was appointed pastor' of St. Anthony's Church, East Falmouth, where he rem~ined for' 20 years. .
three sisters; Mis. M~Y Pacheco, Falmouth; Anthony J. S. Teixeira, F 0 n tan a, Cal.; Joseph Teixeira, Providence; Mrs. Diamen~ina ~a~heco, ,Fall River; DaVId TeIxeIra, Falmouth; and . Mrs. Pauline Pacheco, Falmouth.
C ·I 'OU ncm Continued from Page 0ne concentrated in congregations iB Rome," the Bishop said, "and he intends to restore authority to the individual' bishops~ This io a 'peaceful revolution' that he has requested." "Each diocese will have its own flavor, but there will be no conflict with the Universal Church," he said. "There will be different cultures, but each bishop will discipline local rituals." .
On Sept. 6, 1944, he was named .pastor of St. Anthony's Church, Taunton. During his 18 years in' Taunton, Monsignor Teixeira was re'sponsible for the building of the new St. Anthony's Church, and 'for the erection of the firstSt. Anthony School. ,A member of the Board of, Diocesan Consultors, Fat her The topic of Bishop Cawley'li Teixeira was elevated on Sept. . discourse was on the agenda dis_ 6, 1952 to the dignity of a Docussed during' the first week of mestic Prelate with the title of May by' the Commission :for Rt. Rev. Monsignor. Bishops and the Government <JI. Monsignor Teixeira is surDioceses under the presidener vived ,by three brothers and of Paolo Cardinal Marella.
INDIA: 106 HUMAN WRECKS FA'I'llliR AN'1'HON'i AKKARA IS OUR .l'luJ>ST IN RA!\'IA-' VARMAPURAN, INDIA. HE GIVES HIS LIFE TO ,HUMAN ..... W1i-"(;A\.~ • . . 1US dark eyes llalSD brightly as he shows you through his "home." i'These are my people." he says with satisfaction. "They're mine-because nobody else will take them." ... Unmarried mothers, 'some 01 them holding their infants, nod respectfully at FATHER ANTHON~. Tiny tots, in an improvised nursery. come running when' he enters the room ...•"Human wrecks can be repaired," says FATHER ANTHONY. , 7Zt Holy Palm's Mission AitI "Our Lord forgave the woman taken o .for lbi Oritl/tal Churrh III adultery.-And, as for the child. Why' should he bepooished 'because of the mother's sin?" . , • For 15 1ear:sFATHER ANTHQNY has provided beds and medical care for young girls who otherwISe might have gone to, an 'abortionist. He gives a home, too, to Ulegitmate childrea '-until, if ever, 'the mothers can eare for them .•• What, of the future? • . . "Our problem,": says FATHER ANTHONY, "is lack of room. There are hundreds more each year who Ileed ,our help" but-liee for yourself-we 'just don't have the beds." " . . For an up-to-date maternity bospital III RAMA- 0 .VARMAPURAM, FATHER ANTHONY already bas tbe land, and blueprints. The toW cost is a 'modest $4,700 ... To collect , this money in INDIA !sout of tbe question. FATHER ANTHONY must beg now just to meet his day-to-day expenses ..• FATHER ANTHON'i needs also a small orphanage 'in which to give unwanted children a home. It wlll bave dormitories ($500 each). a kitchen-cafeteria ($500), a chapel, ($350), etc. The orphang. also will cost altogether $4,700 ... Would you like to help? ..• Next year FATHER ANTHONY will celebrate his 25th annIversary as a priest.: We'd like bim to bave ,by then the buildings be needs . . . Perhaps one 01 these buildings (either the hospital or the orphanage) is the lifetime mission-gift you'd like to make in memory of your parents or a loved one. If so, please write to us today . . .' Or perhaps you'd like to give . a bed ($25)" medical equipment ($100), sheets and pillow-cases ($10), or clothin&, ·for a child, ($10).-Please give whatever you can afford-$I, $2,.$5, $15, $20 .• , FATHER ANTHONY loves his buman wrecks. You can help repair them..
WHAT PRICE, CATHOLIC SCHOOLS? TO' DEVELOP AN EFFECTIVE LAITY, we must build , Catholioc schools. In IN~IA, JORDAN, 'EGYPT, and ETHIOPIA, however, our Catholics haven't the 'money for a school. That'. why we turn to you. .~ I 1. FOR $2,500 YOU CAN BUILD A SCHOOL. Write to us; we'll tell you where it'. needed most-We suggest, 'too, that ,y,ou name the school in mel,p0ry of yo~ parents, husband, wife. 01' loved one. ' , .... ' , 2. FOR $1,500 YOU CAN BUILD A CONVENT. The Sisten you help will never forget you. 3. FOR $300 YOU CAN TRAIN ~ TEACHING SISTER. Her training lal!t for two years,. costs, $150 a year ($12.50 a month). The Sister you 'adopt' will write to you, ,you may write bI ber.-Write us. ' . 4. FOR $25 A YEAR YOU CAN CLOTHE A TEACHING SISTER. The Religious Habit costs $12.50;' her shoes, $5.001 fDcldentals, $7.50. . . ' '. , 5. FOR $1 A MONTH YOU CAN JOIN OUR BASILIAN CLUB-WHICH SUPPORTS MISSION SCHOOLS. Write lUI today. and say. you'll joinl Dear Monsignor: I enclo(le $ THE ·BASILIANS.
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Pittsburgh Diocese Seeks Po renta I Reaction to Shared-Time Proposal PI1TSBURGB (NC) - ~ Pittsburgh diocese is aBklng parentB 1m their reaction to a major shared-time propos8I in Monroeville, a Pittsburgh 5llburb. Msgr. John B. McDowell, miperintendent of schools, diGcussed the project in un interview here. Shlll'ed-time education oonsistB of dividing a student's 'school day, IIl'r II portion of It, between church-related ond public schools. Heooid parents are being nsked if they agree with plans to allow' some students from Catholic \ high sehools to attend rome cJa:sses in the brand-new Forbea Trail Area Technical School .m Monroeville. The technical school is for gifted children and will, offer courses in electronics and other sophistieated scientific fields demanding expensive facilities and highly qualified instructors. 'Wonderful BehtiGnship' Msgr. McDowell oald area Catholic sehools were invited to rend students by Dr. Alfred Beattie, county school superintendent. ''We were delighted to accept and have gent a letter to parents to see if they share our enthusiasm," he said. He added that the proposal includes transporting the Catholic school students from the public rehool nearest their own'institution to the Forbes Trail School. Msgr. McDowell !.laid Pi~ts-
THE ANCHORThurs., July'19, 1962
Negro C@tholics ContinM@ ~ight, For RigGu{(~
burgh Catholic schools, which en1'()l1 about 130,000 children in 284 schools, have had a superb re1Dtionship with public schools. "It haa heeD extraordinary. n wonderful working relationship," he &lid. Goal Beyond Beach The Monsignor, a principal backer :in Catholic school circles of share4-time schooling, believes that statistics make it necessary to discuss proposals to divide class time. "OUr goal of having every Catholic child in a Catholic school is no longer within reach," he said. ''Despite the tremendous growth of our sehools in the past 10 years, only 50 per cent of our children are ablt! to attend Catholic schools. As the nation continues to grow and as the Catholic community grows with it, the situ,ation will obviouliJy worsen." Magr. McDowell thinks it is better to have as many students a:; possible receive Catholic ochool instruction in value subjects, such lila social studies, than to have this education given only to full-time Catholic students, while {Ither Catholics in public schools would get none. He said the Forbes Trail experiment this Fall' is the only major shared-time project in his cliocese. "There is nothing else under active discussion at the moment," he said.
LAFAYETTE (NC) - A national Catholic Negro 'fraternity has pledged its "con· tinued fight . . . to attain
Anglican, Catholic Pre~ates Ask For State Aid ,to Church Schools 'PERTH (NC) - The two top Anglican and Catholic leaders in Western Australia have made a joint proposal to the State government for Bome financial aid for Church schools, it waa , revealed here. , Anglican ArchbishopRW. H. Moline, of Perth and Catholic Archbishop Redmond Prendi- . ville of Perth made the propoGal in, a joint letter they sent .10 David Brand, Premier of Western Australia. . "We are anxiouothat the ,service offered by our schools to" children, parents, and· the whole community should not be restricted to the wen-to-do," the churChmen said. The archbishops' letter wM revealed by the Ven. T.B. Macdonald, Anglican Archdeacon of Perth. lie said the proposal ealledfor: 1. A payment to sChools, for each, secondary pupU enrolled, of a sum equal to half the C1ll'rent cost 'to 'the government for educating a child in State high schools. 2. .Extending the. p r ~ sent
living-away-from-home allowance to the parenU of all secondary school children, to make it available to those who send their children, to boa r d.i n g schools irrespective of whether there is a high' school in their district. . 'Look for ·Justice' 3. Assistance in capital development either in the form of grants or by covering interest payments on funds bOlTowed from commercial institutions, or ns captita! loans free at interest or at low 'interest .r.ates. RepayDlent would be made over 25 years. 4. Certified teaChers to serve their r e qui.re d probatlonary teaching period at any accredited secondary schOol ,instead of only in State schools. The fact that the archbishops had sent the joint letter to Pr-emier Brand was madeknowD shortly after Archbishop PreniUville declared ina speech that Catholic parents seeking ,governmendaid for their schools ,"are not looking .for l! handout" but "are looking for justice."
19
BICYCLE PRIEST:' Pedaling a bicycle through most of his missionary career, Father John M. McFadden, S.S.C., finds that in some areas its the easiest-way to re'ach people. Father McFadden, operates a hotel for sailors in Buenos Aires while serving as Apostleship of the 'Sea chaplain there. NC Photo. .. ,
loyola- Gets Gover.nment Hospital Land for New Medical Center
every right guaranteed to evei'Y American citizen." In a statement on interracial justice adopted at their 47th an. , nual convention here in Louisiana, the Knights and Ladies of St. Peter Claver declared their opposition to "Americans who harbor racial hatred, foster segregation and deny civil rights teo fellow Americans on account oJ their race, creed, color or their previous condition of servitude." Some 1,500 de~"!gates representing councils and courts in 2'i states passed a resolution which included the following statements: Equal Housing ''We subscribe to equal housing and urge the President, .. to' sign an executive order declaring the principle of equality in all public housin!5 completely de. void of racial dis'crimination." "We' believe that the right tf' work i~ fundamental, person'a] and the indispensable meanF toward the maintenance of family life. We therefore urge the President to strictly enforcr the fulfillment of Federal contract clauses relating to nondiscriminatory' hiring. "We ask the Ordinary of evel1' Catholic diocese to require non• discrimination clauses in all contracts let for the construction, repair or maintenance of Churcl; property." . Commend UnloW!, '''We believe .hat every American ,child is entitled to an education as prescribed by law. The implementation of the SU"lreml' Court decision must be fully reali~ed.in our time with more.delibet;ate speed. We further believe that means should be devised by the Congress to render a form of aid to public educGtion." The resolution commended "those bishops who by their forthright action on the issue of segregation and discrimina·tioo agahist the Negro have acted with determined vigor."
CHICAGO (NC)-Sixty ael'ea DOW on the site to relocate its of property belonging to the p~Phology', medicine and surgery Hines Veterans Administration d,epartments. Hospital, 'Maywood, m., have The Health, Education and been given to Loyola University Welfare announcement of th~ as the aite ofa University Med- trapsfer of the surplus property ical Center. said in a statement released Transfer of lli acres win take here: "After an exhaustive replace immediately. The addition_ view and evaluation of all applial 4'1 acres will be retained by catioW! for the property, the deCANTON (NC) - ConstrueHines for five years because of partment determined that the tion has begun here in Ohio Q!l government facilit:ies located . publie interest' would best be a new $900,000 Loretto Home for nerved and the· greatest n~s the Aged that will replace the there.. At the same time, the Illinois met by recommending convey- present home. The Sisters of the Department of Mental Health ance of the property for the two DiviJ:le, Spirit will operate the ne'l/V home. acquired an adjoining tract of health progr.ams." abOut 30 acres as a site feE. The transfer had opposition mental hospital clinic. here from Protestants and Other Both transfers were made Americans United for Separation under the SUll)lusProperty-Act of Church and State which said ·of 3'944. They were disclosed to the transfer of' Loyola violated LorQla and theminoin agency Church-State separation. But is waS supported by both U. S. Dlinois Senators and bY a MILAN (NC)-"'The ,Church' ishing,dUeiOmiBsiou817e:efarts 'GeneraI, serviCeS 'A~ NEW aIDFO. . eommUtee o~ local businessm,m. in kfri1:a is .regnrded '88 a'ana .in llart.iculartheefforte ~,bothin washington. ' banded together to raise funds ~lonizing power but as a :friend .tlbeEnglish 'and Ir.ish;" ,~yola will be,giIl immediate for center'.' 'INDUSTRIAL OILS who seek:sto aid ,greatlY the Asked, W'hnt bnpressedhim ,construetion of the first phase progress ·of the'African people." most in bisAfrican .travehl, the of a $16 million medical ,center. ' HEAriNG 00.5 This' was, ·the eonclnsion of Cardinal ·said it was ''the ,deep This will consist of a basic sclIt A. WILCOX CO. ·GiovanniC n r dina 1 Montini, desire for culture, far. instruc- ence building and :an .adjoinb:lg , t TIMKEN ,OFFICE FURNITURE Archbishop ·of MiJ.an,after re'- 'tion. I W28 pa~cularly inter- SOO-bed hospitaL turnin,g £rom 'athree-weekvis1t ~tedin the development of the' The 'university's 47-year-old ... 8toc11 .fOIr lmatediate Pdh'~ 'OIL BURNERS to Ghana, Upper Volta, Nigeriallniversities, especially in GhanaStriteh School of Medicine will ,t DESKS • CHAIRS .mld ,Southern Rhodesia. where I visited an imposing and make 'use of five of the buildinga' flUNG CABINETS ,~ales SerVice Spetiking in 'general pf the most beautiful llniversity and .. ,t FIRE FILES t SAFES missions and cities he' visited, also in Nigeria." AnLEBORO'S· FOlDING TABtES Cardinal Montini said that in ·Oommunions 501 COUNTY ST. Leading Garden Center Afriea'lCatholics are still a Asked what his lasting imAND CHAIRS minority, butnotewortQy be- pressions ,01 Africa were, CarNEW BEDfORD cause of their numbers and reli- dinal Montini singled out the 22 BEDFORD Sf. giCUB development.' Faith of the .Airi.can, Catholics. WY 3·1151 Schools "On maI\yoccasions there was FALl RIVER 5-7838 South Main & Wall Sts. '"The 'Catholic scllools, ca:Pe- demonstratedn Christiani'ty with cilllly,we handsome- and fiourgreat faith. Mi mind lstull of these .remembrances: IIYOUR GRQW1NG BAN.K" CA 2-0234 "NumerousHo!Y Communions St.John~s ma .Nigerian city, when four of WI (priests) for ,half an hour .dis- . JAMAICA (NC) - st.John" tributed ,Communions an .an orSOMERset, MASS. UniversitY' .hwlannounced plana dinary day; the baptimn of an for 8$10 million expansion pro- adult man in ,Ghana,ceremonies '$200.000 to $2,000,000 in 2 Years dedicating a new dam ••• gram .at its New York campus. "Impressions a n <I rememFather Edward I. Burke, CX, T;reaI Yourself 10 CowveAient Banking Sam. J. LaGasse, Manager university president, ,said that brances which testify to a.great excavation ;and 'foundation work .Faith ,and toa ,lively desidefor 1172 ACUSHNET AVE. Somerset Shoppift$l ANa at tfte Bridge for • library, administratiOR rebirth which gives hope for the 'near BroOklawn Park Mem'ber FederalDepoeit Inslll'onee Cotp. political and religious :1utureof buildiDI and a e1u8room buildAfrica 'and particularlyClllf 1:be ing Is expected to start agala A11Deposh. lnsUreci Up To $10,000 NEW lEDFORD, MASS. uations which I visited.within a Jfew week&.
Home for, Aged
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20 , THE ANCt10R-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Aug. 23, 1961
J~cademy
I
of Sacred Hearts Observes Diamond Jubilee'
, Despite ,the tremendous handicap, - no longer existent with the opening of the new gym , of having one hall to serve as as, sembly room, con~ert hall, theatre, and gym the academy is uniFail 'River, 'the Academy of the que among the high schools in Sacred Hearts in the :See' City the area in offering a period of has provided the best, in Cathogym at least once a week to lic E~ducation for girls from preeach of the ,four years. ,primary through the four years St. Margaret's and St. Agnes', of high school. ' the now famous Red and Green Today the Alumnae numbers teams, engage in heated and enclose to 2,000, many of whom thusiastic competition, and the are :representative Catholic lead- ' annual gym meet in which' all ers in all walks of life. As the students participate, rivals mothers of families,' doctors, the World Series for interest and law~'ers, teachers, social workexcitement among 'local sporta ers, nurses, and members of fans. . ' various religious ,orders they are Silver Shield Competition . living the ideals of love of God Anotlier unique feature of and service of their. fellowman school life at SHA is the team instiUed in them by their, teachcompetition for the Silver Shield • ers, the Sisters of th~ Holy of Honors' in, SCHOOL SPIRITUnion. . SCHOLARSHIP - S P OR T S. , The leadership of' ~he late Adapted from the English House Rev. Mother Marie Helena, the System, the organization difoundress and first Provincial vides the student body into two Superior of the order, in the teams to one of which every United States, remains alive, tostudent is assigned. ' day in her successor., ' Stimulated ,by the mot t 0 Almost upon the arrival of ~h~ . NEW ADDITION TO SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY INFALL RIVE~ , EAcH FOR ALL.- ALL FOR 10, ,pioneers, Belgia~, French, and Irish Sisters, ~ho came from GOD, each student is,spurred on Up until. 1936 the Academy graduating classes, ,are college' and freshman, classes. the General ~otherho1,lse in' continued to maintain, its; status bound the program of studies is - ','the liturgical seasons with the ' ..to gain merits and avoid' ;deDouai ,France, apr, i vat, e as ,a small private boarding and essentially' academic, wi~h stress' 'recurring feasts are celebrated,' merits" since the latter: cancel bOardIng and day, s'chool .. was day school. At, this time, with on preparation for liberal arts with spe~ial' emphasis on devo-' out' the fQ9Der,· and pile up a established in the' fram~ build- increased demand for the, ad- colleges, nursing, art, music,. tion 19 the ImmaculatEiaeart,of . ,winning final score for ,the ing then fronting Prospect Street mission of 'more day °studtmts, business, and other professional Mary. and the Sacred Heart ,of,' awarding of the shield. which served as school and con- the, elementary' department was schools: Jesus, the Two HeartS t<{ which' , Though enthusiasm' is at its vent during the first'. few years. moved to its present location on The first two years are purely the Religious of the Holy Union' peak during the annual' gym , The program of studies at this Highlan'd Avenue where the en- academic for all, giving the re- of the Sacred HeartS' are ellpe': meet, the system stimulates all time followed the pattern of the ,rollmentfrom' pre - primary quired foundation in language, cially, dedicated. ' the contests held throughout the, European fin ish i n g school, through' eighth grade is close to math, science, English and his": The Sodality of Our Lady of year and is designed to sustain stressing languages, music; ad 200. tory. the Annunciation carries on a ,that interest and provide an op' and needlework. In 1906 the, In the junior and senior years. very active program, for those' portunity for all to take an· ac,The space ,vacated 'by ,them' brick building, now' familiar to students select courses according. drawn to the, Sodality 'Way 'of tive part. -. the Prospect, Street, neighbor- was converted into the present to their specific needs concen'-. Life, and the annual retreats This all-round participation io music' building ,witli teachers' hood, was erected~ , " d ' t' three - day J'ust another facet of the school's studios, prac,tice rooms for piano trating in the classical, academic; ,provl e an, In ense "tua I tr amm . . g f or a11. program planned to provide the The late Sister Ad r i e nne and voice, and an orchestra re- or business c;ourse. SPifl 'The students at the Academy greater good for ,the greatest Marie, a native of Ireland, be- hearsal room. The converted Spiritual Formation were pioneers in cooperating number. came the first principal to 01'- music rooms in the main , ganize the curriculum according building provided more classAdhering closely to the spirit with Rev. William J. McMahon, Holy Union International , to'the requirements for state ap- rooms. of the Holy Father's encyclical director of the Diocesan' ReThe Religious of the Holy ,prova'!. From the start she set By 1950 it became apparent ,on the Christian Education of treat House, in his efforts to Union of the Sacred Hearts is a high scholastic standard, and Youth which stresses the need stimulate interest in retreats for an international teaching order in 19i:9, under the principalship that the school could no longer for "the development of 'the high school students. Every year founded in Douai, France in of her successor, Sister Mary accommodate boarders, and their ,whole man," training at the ,'the seniors spend their three days' 18~6 by the Abbe Jean Baptist Aloys'la, the Academy of the dormitories :were converted into Academy provides' amply for at a closed retreat in Lakeville, , Debrabant, a parish priest of the Sacred Hearts was one of the additional c I ass roo m sand' spiritual, intellectual, physical, while the underclassmen have diocese of Cambrai. first Catholic Secondary Schools science labs. social; and cultural growth, in their cannual retreat at the During the government expulProgram of Studies in the New England area to be order to prepare young women school. In -May, and June oppor- sions of religious orders from admitted to membership in the Again in 1960 with the stu- "to live fully and to live it well". tunity is offered for the under- 1895 to 1905 the order was forced New England Association of dent population still on the inIn addition to the' regular classmen' who choose to profit" to tranfer the mothcrhouse from Colleges and Secondary Schools. crease the expansion program daily instruction in religion, stu- by a closed retreat. 'Douai to Tournai, Belgium. To' Social, Cultural day the Generalate is in Rome Since,that time the association just nearing completion under dents are encouraged to make To assure a well-rounded edu- where the Superior General rehas gained increased importance the direction of the present the chapel and the Blessed Sacas the accrediting agency for Superior of the A cad e m y, rament the center of, their lives cation for all, the students, in sides with her Council and pJ;"ethis rl~gion" and in 1957 under Mother Anna Gertrude, was as it is the heart of their school. addition to the required acade- sides over the affairs of the Con,the principalship of Sister John launched. With' the added class- The chaplain, Rev. John, H., mic' subjects, ,the program is gregation in Italy, France; Belrooms, ,labora~oi.-ies,' cafeteria, Hackett, teaches religion classes - designed to giv,e' a basic training ,'guim, Spain, England, Ireland, Elizah~th, the school was relibrary, and gym the high school twice weekly to the seniors and ' in music and art for all. In the . Africa, North America, and ~valuated' and received full ap' proval for continued member-- will ,accommodate 400 students. one a week to the juniors; giving , freshman and sophomore yclU'fjI South America. ship. ' She is assisted by the ProvinSince 75 per cent of SHA's a monthly talk to the sophomore every student in requirec;l to 'take a general introductory cial Superiors in Lille, 'France; course in art and music. London', England; Buenos Aires, . In, art they learn the princi- Argentina; Fall River and GropIes underlying the various ton,. Mass. Reverend Mother 'techniques and acquire certain Mary William, the Provincial skills. Those' with special talent Superior for the Immaculate are then encouraged to continue Hea!:t Province whose headthe 'courses in the other years. ,quarters are at the Provincialate, The music course, besides giving 492 Rock Street, is a graduate of training in musical notation, the Academy. ,,'provides an' opportunity to d'eAt present the Superior Genvelop a-taste for good classic and eral, Very Rev. Mother Philomodern 'music and teaches 'stu- mena, a native of Galway, Ire, dents how to analyze and ap- land, is in this country for her preciate the best of the masters: official visitation of the conIn 'order to encourage students vents and schools. She is accom, to seek for ,and enjoy the 'finer P!lnied by the Assistant General, things of life various trips of ,Rev. Mother Dorothy Marie, : cultural, artistic, literary and from Southampton, Engla~ : his tor i c value are planned ,during the year in connection with their courses in 'l:J.istory, art, literature; and music. It 'is thus that "the whole man", - mind, heart, soul and body" is , prepared well for life. Student Activities A well organized Stu'dent Council, the governing body of the Student Government Association, is responsible for a full program of events sponsored by 'the various organizations under ,the direction of the individual ",faculty moderators. School publications, JANUA and SHACADY, Debating, Giee . Club, 0 r c h e s tor a,' Dramatics, French, ClUb, Seventeeners', a , social committee which sponsors tlie school dances, and an athle. tic council pre'sent a wide varieof after-school interests. , ALUMNAE SERVE ON FACULTY: Left to right, front, Sister Stephen Mary, Sister ty SHA'is justly proud of its fine ,Fra~ce8 Aloysius. ~ac~, Sister. Francis Sebastian, Sister ~arie I~maculata, Sister Mary "reoord in the physical educatiOA AdrIenne. " ,: , ' '\" " progtam. FR. JOlIN B. BACKEft
Since October 1886, when the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts first" came to the Diocese of