Fall'llivet Native New prevost High Principal . A former Notre Dame parochial school pupil has n;turned to his native Fall River parish as principal of Prevost High School, duties he assumed yesterday with the opening of classes for the 1961-62 scholastic year. He is Brother Roland, F.I.C;, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roland A. Vigeant of 59 Bogle Street, Fall River. It is Brother
BROTHER ROLAN:D
Roland's first assignment as principal after 18 years of teaching experience. He succeeds Brother Ignatius, F.I.C. who has ,been transferred to Detroit Cathedral High School where he has been assigned as superior. Brother Ignatius served a total of 11 years at Prevost High. ' The new principal is a brother of Mother St. Florent of the Jesus-Marie nuns. She is currentlyassigned in Woonsocket. Brother Roland has served in teaching assignments in schools in Biddeford and Waterville, Maine; Plattsburg, N. Y., Detroit and Montreal. He entered the Brothers of Turn to Page Eighteen
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The ANCHOR Att Anchor of the Soul, Sur, Q,nd li'irm-BT.
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PAUL
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 7, 1961
Vol. 5, No. 37' ©
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PRICE IOc $4.00 per Year Second Clan Mail Privilegel Authorized at Fall River, Man,
196,1 The Anchor,
Laymen Must Accept Blame forlnaetivity OKLAHOMA ,CIT Y (NC) - From Baptism to funeral, arrangements, tQpics treated at the 22nd Nort,h American Liturgical Week here ,ranged over a broad spectrum of issue ~ of Christian concern. The meeting brought together priests, Religious and lay- gathering in the Oklahoma City men from many parts of the Municipal Auditorium. ' U.S. and Canada for discusFather Benedict· Ehmann' of sions on the general theme S~. Mary of the Lake church,
SCHOOLS ARE OPEN AGAIN: A record number of mol'; than 23,000 boys and girls today are enrolled in diocesan school classes for the 1961-62 academic year. The Anchor photographer was on the job, snapping pictures of pupils throughout the diocese. Here, Very Rev. Leonard J. Daley, pastor of St. FL"ancis Xavier in Hyannis, greets two pupils at Nazareth School for Exceptional ,Children in Hyannis. Our cameraman then 'jumped' to another Cape town. (SeePage Two).
Stonehill Begins 14th Year With Record 800 Students ,
,
, Stonehill College in North Easton - only Catholic college for laymen in the Fall River Diocese - begins its 14th year when formal classes commence on Monday, Sept. 18 with an estimated enrollment of 800 - the largest in the history, of the institution. "We expect a: Freshman Class of approximately 300/' Father Aloysius E. Cussen, C.S.C., dean and vice president announced . ' today. "About 120 of th,e O'Hara Hall dormitory for' the conclude 'with Ii one-day retreat ,total enrollment will' be in residence,'~ Father Cussen reported, saying he anticipates the Sophomore Class will num. ber ab()ut 200, with 160 in the Junior Class and 140 in the Senior Class. Eighty-five Freshmen an~ 35 upper classIr:len,will be 'using the,' new' ,Cardinal
first time. "We expect that about 60% of the student enrollment at our co-educational college ,will be young men and 40% will be young women," the Dean revealed,' Orientation week for the, if}corning, Freshmen will· begin ne~t Monda'y; Sept. 11. It will
for faculty members and stude~ts on Friday" Sept. 15. The re~reat will be conducted by Father Joseph Kenna, C.S.C.. who heads the English Department of the North Easton college which is staffed' by members of the Holy Cross Fathers. Formal ci~sses for aJI student. '" Turn to Page, Seventeea
Norwood Man Wins R'acicil Award
iames J. Hoey A~ards for Inter- and of the National ASsOciatioll 'for tpe Advancement of Colored racial Justice~' ' insurance 'official and a Ralph Fenton of Norwood will People. She is the wife of Albert "Bible, Life, and Worship." But Watkins Glen, N. Y., criticized social worker have been be'the white recipient and Mrs. ' C.' Spurlock, an Indianapom ovet'-elaborate funerals in an SC01'CS of other subj'ects were . Osma Spurlock, Indianapolis' high school teacher. They have chos~n to receive the 19.61 treated during the four-day Turn to Page Fifteea two children, a son and a daughsocial worker will be the Negro ter. recipient of the annual honor. _ _-IY1t. St. Mary Academy Alumnae .., ,The silver medal awards are named for the late Jaomes J. Hoey, a pioneer in race relations , work who was the first president of the New York Interracial v . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - B e g i n Training Tomorrow--.... Council. They will be presented Four alumnae of Mount St. Mary Academy, Class of 1961 wiil enter three religious on,Sunday, Oct. 29 in New York. active in work of the " Sister St. Ludger is new novitiates tomorrow, Feast of the Nativity of Our Lady, to commence, their religious and B 0Fenton, s t o'it 'Cat'holic Interracilll superior of the White Sisters educational training in the Sisters of Mercy, Sisters of St. Joseph and the Sisters of Good Council, is in the Third Order of Shepherd. Two young :women will enter the Mother' of Mercy Novitiate in Cumber- St. Francis at St. Anthony's convent at 194 Second Street, iand. R. I., Grace Eleanor William's Parish, Fall River. Bond was a cheerleader and Shrine in Boston. He directs a Fall River. She replaces Sister ,Agnes Lucille, who hal Bond, daughter of Mr. and While at the academy she was a yice-president of her class dur- program known as Action for been assigned to the commun'M 'L' 'J' B d f 64''5 L ' member of the glee club, the 109 her freshman and sophomore Interracial Understanding for the Third Order. The father of two ity's house in Gadsden, Ala. rs. eo '. on 0 aw- liturgical choir, the Mercycrest, years. da~ghters, Fenton is an alumnus Also', newly assigned to the ton Street, IS a member of St. and the dramatics' club. Miss Turn to Page Eighteen of Northwestern University. He Fall River house is Sister Franserved in the Army during cois, Alexandre. There have World War II and ~as also been no changes at the New served in the Massachusetts State Bedford convent of the White Guard. Sisters. Mrs. Spurlock is vice president Also known as the Daughters of the Indianapolis Catholic Inof the Holy Ghost, the White terracial Council. She is an Sisters operate the Bishop alumna of Hunter College New Stang'Day Nursery in Fall River, York, and, Atlanta (Ga.) tJniverand do horne nursing in Fall sity. She is the director of social River and New Bedford. services at Flanner House, a The Sisters, with little blacll. social work organization. Mrs... bag in hand, are a familiar sight Spurlock is the first Negro and in both cities as they make their first woman to serve on the daily rounds in all sorts of Board of Health and Hospital weather, ministering to the sicle Corporation of Marion County, and answering the call of those Mrs. Spurlock is vice chair- in need regardless of race ac man of the Mayor's Human creed. They are a constant reRights Commission, of the ad- minder of a work' of compassion visory committee of the Down- and help that goes on unceasLYNNE F. BASINGEE KA.TlI:ILEIQ\J JI. OOOOIltE MiCHELE POMFRE1: town Center for Senior Citizen ingly.
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Fall River Girls to Enter Novitiates
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Set Fall Retlrects At Good Coun!el·
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Thurs., Sept. 7, 1961
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Fall retreats for Our Lady of Good Counsel Retreat House, East Freetown, are announced as follows: The weekend of Sept. 21 through Sept. 24, a retreat for laymen; Sept. 29 tJu"ough Oct. I. laywomen; Oct. 6 through Oct. 8, laymen; Oct. 13 through Oct. 15, Legion of Mary; Oct. 20 through Oct. 22, laywomen; Nov. 3 through Nov. 5, Serra ClubS; Nov. 10 through Nov. 12, nurses. . The Retreat League, organization promoting the making of more frequent retreats, will hold. its annual meeting Sunday, Oct. 22. League president is Mrs. Emmett P. Almond, assisted by vice presidents from the five districts of the Diocesan Council of Catholic . Women. Rev. Wiliam J. McMahon is spiritual director of the league and in charge of the. retreat house.
AS'chbDS~@P
VATICAN CITY (NC)-L'Osservatore Romano confirmed that the .Archbishop of Conakry was expelled by the government of Guinea because of his pastoral letter denouncing the seizure of the Catholic schools of that West African republic. There was no immediate comment from other Vatican sources but the Vatican City daily cited other. press reports stating that Archbishop Gerard de Milleville, C.S.Sp., of Conakry had issued a letter to his clergy and laity "in defense of the Catholic schools, concerning which nationalization measures have been taken." L'Osservatore continued: Asked Retraetion "The preiate, establishing his point. of view and that of the other Ordinaries of Guinea, had underlined the gravity of the measures proposed for action. "It is known, moreover, that, responding to the Archbishop., the President of the Republic, Sekou Toure, had asked Msgr. de Milleville to retract immediately some statements under pain of expulsion. It is now learned that the threat has been unfortmlately been carried out. The prelate has been sent·out of the country arriving Saturday evening ~. Dakar, the capital of ·Senega1." .
ApostlesholJ) of Sea Planning Convention NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The national director of the Apostlesh., of the Sea in Australia will be a special guest at the 16th annual meeting of the National Catholic Apostleship of the Sea from Oct. 16 to 19 in Mobile, Ala. After the convention' Father Eamonn P. Dundon will leave for Rome to attend a meeting of the International Conference of the Apostleship of the Sea.
...:8T. JOAN ~F.ARC.IN 6RLEAN~: .Tpe only parochial ~lementflry ~hool'on Cape .Cod is::: conducted' by Father James E.-:Lynch:at S~.:Joanof Arc. In Orleans. Ho,,: .arc: m~ little, friends ?'.~ asks' tlfe .lcindly..pasto.r,·as· :he greetsa.lialf-qozen youngsters making.thelr way .. . Mass 0,'do·. to' the' 'classrooms': Now, on the following pages, may 'lVe suggest Y0l;l foll~w our photog. . . raphe,r around the Diocese. on .his school picture taki.ng~assigrtm,ent.", . , ..' . .. ",....,, FRIDAY~Nativityofthe Blessed
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· Collect 'St. ,Adrian,: . Martyr;, . Creed;-Preface ·.of B,lesse.cl,: CINCINNATI (NO) ~ , -nature"'. are -commonplace' in duties ·if.theY· ~f 'their cl,lil· Virgin.-· . . " .. :' . > fiims'- today"':"":for .example, ·the·dreD.to attend fiJ.D1s-oo(approvect SATURDAY - Mass of t.he< Hollywood ha.s:· discovered ' t ease. . for .them."" . ' :.,: " 'f ...' ' S trip, ., · Blessed, Virgin for' Satt'irday; "new' and' daring ways .or 3. Nudity either in fact or by Among the proposals listed. by, . IV Class. White. Mass Proper; violating' the·oasic ~orm.s. of . implicatiaon, including over·,exthe l:FcA motion picture depart-· Gloria; Second' <.' Collect St. decency in :the past tbree years. posure .. of the' male figure" is· ment "which could contribute to Gorgonius, '.Mattyr;.no Creed;'. Mrs. 'James F. Loonim, chair... exploited. a' return to tesponsible produc-' Preface 6f Blessed Virgin. man of, the International Feder4: Situations of a highly sugtion and· exhibition" was f'a'sysSUNDAY - XVI' 'Sunday . 'Ait~ ation of .Catholic Alumnae's gestive nature have been height-. '. tern to safeguard' young' aild iin-" Pentecast. II. Class.' Green.. Motion' Picture Department,'" ened .by dialogue. and' accom-' pressionable minds' froW' that'· .' Mass ·Proper; Gloria; Creed; made 'this' accusation at. the 47th panying actions.. ' . subject matter and tre!1tment· in' Preface of Trinity. " anniversary converition of the 5. FilIDs : have· moved into films which' they are-··nQt yet. MONDAY - Mass of previous' federation here. night clubs and brothels in addi-· . mature. enough to assimilate." Sunday..IV Class. Green. Mass. In her report· to "the: conven': ' . tion to the usual boudoirs lind This w6uld call for pr6ducers ·Proper; No Gloria; ·Second· tion Mrs;' Looram:: cited 'tile" bathrooms. ":" ".' . . themselves to label films" as "fit· ,Collect ;SS. Protus and Hya-'. "al~ming increase" of. objec":, '6; Perveriioilin' one. form or for familieS or orily fOr aduts.. , '. Previ~~s" . ".': cinth,' : Martyrs'; )no" Creed; tionable films -produced' m' the. another hasbeeil irltro'duced. . Common Preface.. ,: ....., - U. S. ' . ' . ,." 'Mrs: i.60r~~, who~~~'d~partIn another proposal, the de~ TUESDAY-'-Most ~oly. Name of. .Moreover; ·the "moriil' quality,. mtmt serves the Natioriai.tegion partment called on the' film in~" Mary. II Clas.s. WhIte.: Ma/?s, in· both theme . arid' trea.tment of Decency, declared that i'a 'i:-e- dustry to "'effect:a' ·radical refProper; . Glorla;·n~' ~reed;, presented a 'bold 'ahd 'unprece~ formed Motion Picture Produc- ormation'of "its excesses in' Preface of Blessed Vrrgm.... , ' dented departure by Hollywood' tioii Code" A~itiistra_tion" is '. plotin~ films." ':T~ailers (c(j~ing WEDNESDAY-Mass of prevlOu~ from previously accepted and . needed. ,~,':. c' attractIons) very .often are little' , su.nd~Y:. IVN' CGlalss...G.r~enc M.a~~" respected" standards fora JJias:(, , " ' . Parents ~ short of beiJig borderline' por" roper; <;>LBlesse!i, 0. orla Y,lrgm. ~r, . ree '; medium ofentertaihment," she: . , "A"morallY'wholesome ' nscreen o g r a p h y ; " ··th,·e rep~r. ,Preface said. . .. , t·iridi.cated'-:.
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·Sensationa1··'· cannot, be guaranteed by law," ,. she said, "but only by respon:uinl :~'n~ 7}e.~' . "New elemenis of obscenity, ble: self-control' on the part" of ILBv UIIV IC II ri:I perversion, and borderline por-, the industry, aided' and sup. nography" have bee"n introduced, ported ·by the influence of the by she' said, well as the treatment Legion of...Decency and of other le~c@n @~ ~~~e~~y of religion "in' a sensational. social organs' of public opinion." The following films are to be manner." "Parents particularly must be added to the lists in' their re"In' the past," reported .Mrs.·. reminded," she added, "that thllY . spective •classifications: Johnny .le·mos Flori~t Looram; "the common d.enomare seriously delinquent in the Unobjectionable. for General inator of objectionability' in 'B' fulfillment of their parental It> Hyannis ''''' .. Sp.. 5-233~. PatrOl:llige.:,Everything's ,Ducky. films was' either vio)ence,.or 'Oojectionable in Par~ for All suggestiveness' in costlirriing', sit.' -:-Back Sti~et. .(Obj~ctiori.:·..T ends . uations" dancing,,·and· dialoglie; '. to. elicit undue' sympathy, for' , 'BONNER flOWERS ·'.'Today, many 'B' ,films contain " illicit love;' reflects the" acceptanot only these elements' in an ,SpeClaUBt8 111' : . 'bility. of divorce.)'. ',.' ,. . .'f '.,:"',' increased degree'! but add'itional '.. Floral Arrangements '.Condemned-'-- Sins' of. Mona " oojectionable elements, she llaid.·. ' Spe~l ',- '-.. .'. .... , : .' ~ .. FUneral 'Home" ".. ;. Kent.; ·{Objection: This' filni 'in, ; '. ..' "Change,;;· .:. '" ';' ;" t •. ·Fun~rals·· • Corsages b~th .,t1;Ji:!P1e.. ang . treatment. ,is " .550 Locust SL ."Amo~g't~e, ~hang~s f';r the , • Weddings c» Hospital seriously of~ensive.. to .JudaeoFaU River. MalIS.· . 2082 Robeson St, Christian standard.s .of morality worse, Mrs. LOOraIn;'Cited: .' . ~ .. . f. ,.Dialogue in' many 'B' films OS 2-2391"' Fall ~iver ." OS,5-7804 and decency'.): ~'. ~ is not only brashly frank about Rose E:-Siillivan Jeffrey E. Sullivan' ',. sex but involves vulgarities and double meanings." ., FORTY HOURS ~. Actions . of' "an . "orgiastic
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Sept. 10-St. Anne, Fall River. WESTPORT (NC)· - "Some St. Dominic, Swansea. 10,000 persons took part in the Sept.17-Holy Cro:ss; - F:a'll ....:, sec(lIid"natiofl3l"Patrician Year River. '.:'., ,,:;, ,',pilgrimage ,to.: ,n,e.;l'rby CroaghSt. Joseph, Attleborp', patrick, ,thEL "'holy mountain" Sept. 24-St. A:~+p))~y,,~if'!,<W:h~e::St:,ratri.C;~~!Ji1deryventhi,s ," Padua;. NeW'Bedford. '~'. celebratedtprOloMed,.fast.
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. ':Rosal'Y,J!'aU RIver,;-. . ..•. 'TilE ANCB:OR~:Iii;'tsth~ d~th .. Our Lady of the Holy .' .jUlDiversary dates of prles1s;) , . : Rosary, Taunton ' who served' the Fan ·River "; Sacred He.art, New BedDiocese since its formation in ~~ :,'0 ford. . , 1904' with the intention that " the faithful will give them a - ~;. THE ANCHOR prayerful remembrance. . . SEPT. 13 ',. Second Clll8S Postage Paid at .FaD River. Mass. Published eve". TbUrsi1a7 nt . no Rev.j Charles A. J. Donovan, Highland Avenue, Fall River. Maas_ by 1949, Pastor, Immaculate;.C9nthe Catholic • Press of. the ,00oeesB of Fon River. YJ'.lb;cr~piton·"nrice hv mAti ~ption, North Easton; .; " .
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FULDA (NC) _ A" 'protest against limitation of the Church's freedom in Red-do'minated East Germany was made by the Cath:' olice Bishops of Germany at their' annual meeting here. The Bishops declared:· "For the first time since the wareven since time immemorialit ·happens that the German bishops of the Soviet zoJie 'are prevented by political auth'orities' from 'attending the ". annual' .. meeting at Fulda.'" '. ',' , '''. ' .
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THE ANCW1"Thurs" Sept. 7, 1961
Pope Jc~~!i'll ~~ys
Tlr'u~ §r.~~R'!lfrD$~ Feo r!i G(l)~
OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) - Protestants and other non-Catholics in large numbers attended the 1961 North American Liturgical Week here and came away with high praise for what they saw. Some even said they found in the liturgical development within the Church a possible meeting ground for Catholic and Protestant reconciliation. . The Rev. John C. van Dyk, dean of St. Paul's Episcopal cathedral her~, noted that. Protestants are beginning to worship not only in words but in action. "The Roman Catholic Church bas had action, but it has been obscured by details. Shear 'away the details and there is 'rev~aled . a common meeting grounil/' he said. Dean van Dyk said tendencies toward simplification in the Catholic liturgy, including use. of the vernacular, are "terrific." The Episcopal clergyman was one of several hundred people of various faiths who visited a special interfaith hospitality lounge set up for the liturgy meeting. Beliefs of visitors ranged. from "high" Episcopalian to fupdamentalist ~:'otestant.' with. some who said they believed 111 no formal' religion. ·The Rev. Forrest A, Carharrt of the Capitol Presbyterian
:~~r~~~:~~~~~d a~~that?~~~~~: to m,ake, their forms of worship JP~re meaningful to th~ people.. "
Lay Miss,ionaries', GefAssignme.,ts'
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CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) - A holy fear of God is the natural result of the research of the true scientist, Pope John told a grout) of United Nations scientists here. The group, received in audience,' consisted of about 200 scientists and technicians from 60 nations participating io the United Nations Conference on New Energy Sources, held in Rome. They were led by Col. Alfr~d Katzin, secretary emeritus of the c;onference. The Pope noted that members of. the group had taken into consideration iri their conference not only the scientific and technical aspects of their study but also the human, moral and spiritual facts relating to it. This was logical, he stated, because of the very fact that they have man and his true well-being as their . object.
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ST. JOSEPH'S'IN FAIRHAVEN: The Smith sisters, 12-year old Estelle of the seventh grad~ and iline~year Qld'l{athieen of ;the :fourth gr~de, stop in the school yard for a few words with, Fathe.r ,Oolumb~,Moran, SS.CC.,' pastor.
.. C·a~h'ol.ic~· ,~'la;9.: in·. Use
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'LOS ANGELES (NC)-Twen'Beginning this Fall"an aii"-" lions, of students over mant 'sive factor;in' the 1960 presidenty trained lay me;, and' women '. ' . . tial race - television, which flas accepted three... yea~ mission as,:, plane will' drOne' in " clr~i~s ,'years.. h' ',' . , '. h' 'd· , " r .'~ .E,TV::is also viewed asa po- sh.own its power to inform and signments to Africa and Ecuaqor f ,or ours .. eac '.' ~r ,.o~ er '_ tenUal' spacE:-saver. For instance, influence for good and' ill in 10~lowing· aMa~s in St. Vibian's central Ind,lat:l~.Gon~ent~9n8:l :'. bac1t~rs: . say, ,ETV may well' these and countless other ways, cathedral here. . will suddenly fall flat on its face James Francis Cardinal McIn- in, ~ppearance, it will n«;v,eJ::the~ , make'big.~ 'and 'expensive tyre, Archbishop 'of Los Angeles, " less b~ ~he focus of· ,o.~e of ;~the : :'ali~it9ria. 'C?bsp!~e; since 'the when'it tries, to teach jntroduc'accepted their' s.olemn promj.ses. b?~d~st ~Uc.!ltio!l.al''proJ~c~s. in,,' asSeml~IY.:f~llctions. for. whic.h' tory' French or plane' g~llietry? ' . ' -. they are m;ed can Just as effl-' . '. . ' '" as members of the Lay ,Miss~on" history. " The t;>lane bean' ,~.;-~,;'';''':. ',~iEmtly a'ndeffectively be han~ . CatlioUcs . -Helpers Association of. the Lo~ tl;lleyision ,transmitter. 'It: will' dIed via a ,closed-circuit systeJ;Y1. W!la~ of Cathqlic schools and Angeies archdiocese'. . recorded " ', educahonal television?. ·H 0 w· . '. " lessons . . bY".' . '.. -'" Savings h h' The group included seven beam flight teachers onto, classroom " "~' : ' . . . muc· , 1\S ,the, CatholIc school registered nurses, five qualified television·.'sc;reenswitl1 a p6te'u:':' ~s; f~r fmances, publIc school ,system contrib~ted to ETV and teachers, an aircraft 'p i ,lot, tialaudience, of five' milliOn. o~!Ic;.~~ls pf Dllde County, ~la., to ?~w m~ch has, It ~enefited from plumber, constructi.on :worker, children half.:a-dozen' Mid,. cite one e~~mple, haveeshmated It. " 'school adminiSh-ator, hospital western 'states.' . 'that. televlslo~ ~aved them. more . ,The. answer is: discouragingly administrator, magazine. staff . .' . . ,than three ml.llIol1 dollars 111 one lIttle. And therein according to artist and two secretilrial work~ot Poor C~~sin. ' . .' year ~n. ~~nstr~ctioli costs. The some opservers, li~s a special bit ers. Two of theinen previously EducatIona~ teleVISion -;- ETV '. 'superintep.dent of schools' of the of irony. served three-year mission tours for short -;-,IS' no longer a poor,-- Buffalo N.Y.' diocese' has stated For . T d th ' . 8 d " " . ' ' , , at a time whe ' n, accor d'Ing y as members of the lay mission co~sm. 0 a : . ere ar~ 5 e u-, . th.atit would cost- $500,000 a' year to , reliable estimates, half the society. catIona~ teleV:I~lon s,tatlOns scat-. in.,salari,es ,to· supply .the art, nation's sch091-age Catholic chil60 ill Africa ,tered, throu~hou~ . the. ~ount.ry.... music' and lano:ua~e instruction ·dren are not in Catholic schools' more are 111 the plann1l1 ~ nnw, brought to, his schools via when there· is talk in som ' The 20 Helpers will leave New ~any L ' 1 t· d'" e quar_ t egis a IOn p.en. mg 111, Ty. . '. ' tel's of cutting out some grades York, Monday, S,e!?t, 25 for mis- s age. sion' stations, accompanied by C~lnl:ress w~Ullbdl mafke. up to ~t50 'Educational television . does in Catholic schools; When rising Msgr.. Anthony .1. Br'lUwers,' ~l. Ion aV~1 ~ ~ Qr,'new s ~- hllve its critics, however. Ulti-. c~ristruction costs and teachers' their director, and Fath.:r Aime, hons ,an~ If It IS enact,ed. their mately, their, most serious ob- salaries are putting an all but inLacasse, W.F" veteran Africa!) n~m?er IS expected to. ~o~lble jection. against ETV is that it t?lerable 'burdenon both Cathoor f,our ye.ars, under.' won't work; that children cannot lIc .. _ missioner who helped train thE:1 wlth1l1 't . . three + . ' " , t parents and school ad m1l11S IS Impc,us. .. be taug~t,o,ra~ lea,st not well, r~tors in many areas,- educagroup. But t':1e ETV stations make ·up by felevi~i9n.· .' ' . ' ~ional television could do much, The. two priests :-v ill yisit 60 'But, 'reply proponents, is it In. the est~m~teof its backers, Lay Mission Helpers now st?- onl! on~ face.t .C?f th~ t.~ta! .cdulogical to think that television, to relieve the pressures on the tioned throughout Afr~ca and cahonal teleVISion, pIcture. will survey requirements' of mis"C,losed-Oircui*s "which can sell millions of dollars Catholic school system. sion dioceses for lay workers: . Importllot, too, ar!! clos~d-cir~ , worth of .aut?mobiles')and deter•••••••• . . The 20 Helpers enrolling Sun- cuit syst~ms, for telecasting • gents; which has made national; , .~ • • • • • day are being given assignments 'Yithin one institution or, among heroes of. Dav'y' Crockett and ' . ' . A FAMILY TREAT, • at the requests of mission bishops' a l,imited I\ti~berof inst~tutions.: :~ogi ~Bear; "W~ich: has., been ·,BAR"B-QCHICKENS. for their specific proJ'essional a'nd, Already 'foresighted schopl plan- . accused' of causmg Juvemle de- : ' • technical skills. ' , riel'S are maki!lg sure that the' linqu~ncy anel', Qther social ab..,. • blueprints for ne:-v s~hool build- errations; w~{ch proved a deci- • • KC Seniors, Juniors " inp,'s includt1" th.e . wiring and C K 'f C • FARMS • other f?cili.ties n.~:e~s·art 'for "apetip.' 0 . . ' . . • T'o I nstall Officers closed circuit operations:: " Committee heads for the com- :l45 Washmgton St.. FaJrhaveI'!. 'Activities on the Fall calendar Also. looming large' a r'!! the . ing .year·' '!f'orWalter Welsh' . Just off Route 6 • of Fall River Council, Knights tel¢~ision' ~e~o~di~~. t.~chniqu~s Council 2476 of the Knights O f : WY 7-9336 .• of' Columbus; inClude participa"':""vldeo' t~pmg 1,l(1lt~sUl-table for Columbus, Provincetown,- incll.lde. .Watch for Signs' '. tion ina Columbus way celebra- 'educationa~:usewill)~o in.t6.proLeo' R. Gracie; Catholic 'activi-t " .• tion 'rhursday, Oct. 12' and in-' ~uction in 1962,a~d ~ill ¢?st' an, ties; E:rancis'H. M;arshall; council . ' While out fo~ -. Dr~ve ' '. stallation of ,new council officers ' estimated $20,00~,:a drop I~ the activities; MiltorrMorgan,mem- I Stop '';t this DelightfUl, Spot. Ml>nday, sept. 25. bucket alongside such budg!!tary bership, insurance; Anthony E. • .. . The council's junior unit, Bish- items as teachers' salal,'ies and Souia, 'publicity; James J. Cor':' op Feehan Circle Columbian • classroom, construction costs.' deiro, youth activities. .Mr. Squires, 'has been na'med one of Kinelicoperecordings, .which are: Souza, also serves as grand two top-ranking circles in the '16 mm. #lms, cost about $175 knight. of the t:ouncil. 'state. It. will receive an award for the' master. ,print; .additional from KC' national head'qual~ters, prints can be made for about $35 this montQ. each· and can be used until-they The junior group plans a cake, disintegrate. . . . sale Saturday, Sept. 16 and ·will Economy . hold installation of new officei's, The great virtue 'of ETV is Furn~ture including Robert Firlit, chief economy: of time, of space' and JOSEPH M,F DONAGHY squire, Sunday, Sept. 24. of money. . .. owner/in gr. • ' , Up till now a teacher has been 142 Campbell St. limited to one classl'oom, oile set Legion on Radio Daily spiritual messages are of pupils.; With ETVther'e is New Bedford. Mass. being presented by the New almost no limit on the number WYmon 9-6792 Bedford Legion of Mary' over of pupils'he can, reach simultaneously; add to that the advant_ HEADQUARTERS FOR a local radio station. Given by Rev. Albert F. Shovelton, Legion ages of television recording, and COLONIAL AND moderator, the program is' heard a single lecture by a single rRADITIONlAL FURNITURE teacher can go on reaching milat 10:50 nightly.
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Pope John complimentt.-d the scientists further on their interest in applying the new forces of energy to countries now undergoing development. He noted that this was an irrwortan~ point' of his recent encyclical, "Mater et· Magistra," in which hI. exhorted Catholics and all men of good will to become more conscious of their duties toward their less favored brothers. "Men will be grateful for wha~ you are doing and .rig'J.tly so,", the Pope told the scientists. "and what is of even greater value God will recompense you. fO; every work done by man for the welfare of his brothers ,:n a ,spirit of noble disinterc,;:ed" ness' gives g.Jory to God and attracts His graces." 'Directing his attention to the work of. the' sCientists, the Pope said: "Do not your labors, nowever, kee!l you ,in contiriu JUl 'Contact with Gcid's omnfpotence'! Are not' the still' mystenous forces that you make th~ object of your investigations His wOrlt:l? Experience proves that the true men of science recognize the immensity of the Creator withol1t difficulty, and that they are well disposed to the pr·actice of ChriStian 'humility."
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Cite Slovakia's Urgent Need For Priests
THE ANCHOR,Thurs., Sept. 7, 1961
4
Surv<ey lPl7'e$<e~ts New FD~UEreS
0111
PITTSBURGH (NC) - A ' bishop, and a monsignor urged here that steps be taken quickly to prevent
'Di'Yclrce
ST. LOUIS - Marriages in wEich Catholics are married to Catholics have the best chance of survival, the
.. Slovakia, in the eastern part of Czechslovakia, from becoming a land without priests. The double plea was made at the convention of the First Catholic Slovak Union by Bishop John J. Wright, of Pittsburgh' and Magr. Andrew R. Biros,' supreme chaplain of the union. ' 'Bishop Wright aske'd the 500', , delegates to respond generously to the appeal for the Institute' of SS. Cyril and Methodius in. Rome, which trains priests for the apostolate in Slovakia. Msgr. Biros warned that "within one generation our good Catholic Slovakia will literally ,become a no-priest land unless steps are taken in the Free World to prepare new priest-apostles for Slovakia.",
American Sociological Association was told at its ,56th annual national convention here. Dr. Lee G. Burchinal, of Iowa State University's department of economics an'd sociology, told, ' . the convention of a survey made in'Iowa during the last seven ' years which ~ndicated this fact.,' The survey was made with, Loren E. Chancellor, of the Iowa State Department of Health, who co-authored a report on the findings with Dr. Burchinal. Divorces 'Tile survey indicated 10 times as' many divorces among Protestants married to Protestants, numerically, t han Catholics married to Catholics. This figure Missionary Peace Corps can be misleading because of tile far greater number of Prot- ' Bishop Wright said: "For cenes'tants living in Iowa than Cath- . turies the Church has sponsored . olics, it was stated. , the greatest peace corps in hu- , When the marriage-divorce , man history through its mighty. statistics were converted to dimissionary program. Now comes . vorces per 1000 marriages, they ,the need for bringing back to showed Protestant-to-Protestant the Old World the Faith the Old divorces three times as prevalent World gave. to us. as Catholic-to-Catholic marriage ,"Clttarly Divine Providence break-ups. Divorces between gave us our blessings of politiCatholics married to Protestants ·cal freedom not only SO that we were five timE!'s as prevalent as could keep the Faith and prac'in all-Catholics marriages. ,tice it ourselves, but also so ST. FRANCIS XAVIER IN ACUSHNET: Father AII~xis C. Wygers, SS.CC., pastor, First Year that we could share it with our Dr'. Burchinal reported that registers two 12-year old eighth graders. They are Donald Fahey and Kathleen Kennedy, kin'smen once the Iron Curtain among 14,193 marriages where both of whom are perfectly content to return to the books after 10 weeks of leisure. melts and the ancient land of both parties were Catholic only Slovakia is free again. o 32 divorces resulted during the "We must cooperate with Difirst year of marriage. Among vine Providence," Bishop Wright the 52,720 marriages contracted under his direction, grew to be augurated such' national observ'Stated, "by generously giving of WASHINGTON (NC) where both parties were Protestrepresented in 90 affiliated dioances as National Catholic. Youth our sons and daughters as future ants, 728 divorces resulted dur- The heads of two National ceses 'and to embrace some seven Week and National Youth Adopriests and Religious, and also ing the first year of marriage. Catholic Welfare Conference milion Catholic youths. ration Day. , by charitable gifts to the eduIn 5,572 mixed marriages, 126 agencies are leaving the conHe founded the National cation program needed to preThe family life apostolate hEIS divorces occurred during the ference for new posts. spread to almost every diocese Catholic Camping Association in pare for the day when Faith :first year of marriage. They are Msgr. Joseph E. in the nation since Msgr. De,1951., It then 'consi§ted of ,five and' freedom enter into their "The divorce rate per 1000 Schieder, 'since 1948 director of Blanc became director of the member camps. Now it numbers land again." during the seven years in Cath- the NCWC Youth Department, Family Life Bureau in JanuarJT, more than 90 per cent of the olics married to Catholics was and Msgr. Irving A. DeBlanc, 1956. There are now diocesan Catholic camps in the country. 46," Dr. Burchinal said. Among since 1956 director of the NCWC ,family life directors in more Auihor, Editor DONAT BOISVERT Protestants married to Protest- Family Life Bureau. than 130 dioceses. Msgr. DeBlanc was named asants, it was 132. Among Catholic INSURANCE AGENCY Migr; Schieder, whose resig. Established by BishopS sistant director of the NCWC wives married to Protestant husnation from the NCWC was efThe Family Life Bureau was All Kindt Of Inlurance Family Life Bureau in June, bands it was 205, and among fective last Friday, will become established by the U. S. Bishops 1955, and director in' January, Protestant wives married to ,96 WILLIAMS'l'BEET director of religion at Maryin 1931 in response to Pope, Pius 1956. ' Catholic husbands it was 207. mount College, ·Arlington, Va. Xl's encyclical on ehristian marNEW REDFORD. MASS. In the past six years he has The' total for all marriages was Msgr. DeBlanc, will leave the riage, "Casti Conubii," in which written some 300, articles and DIAL WY 8-5153 120 divorces per 1000 marriages. NCWC ,riext Tuesday for dioche called for action to proteci two books ~ "Population RealP~I Service esan work'in the Lafayette, La.,. marriage and the family. Its as- , ism" and '~The, RoIe of Father." diocese and the pastorate of Our Isistant director) is Father Henr:, Lady Queen of Heaven parish, V. Sattler. " Lake Charles, La. Msgr. De Msgr. Schieder founded Pro,CULLMAN (NC)-Some 250 Blanc said he has been recalled , gram Service and Youth New·· high school students from nine to the Lafayette diocese by notes-subsequently Youth Mag·. ~tates participated in the south-' Bishop Maurice Schexnayder azine--in 1950. In 1951 he for·· Home made eastern regional study week of because of a pressing need for mally established the National CO. CANDIES the Young Christian Students at " priests there. Council of Catholic Youth, which St. Bernard's College here in During the two NCWC offiCHOCOLATES Alabama. cials service in Washington the 150 Varieties Speakers included Father Catholic youth and family moveThomas Sadler, Mobile-Birming_ ments both have flourished. PWM8ING ,& HEATING, INC. ROUTE 6 near ham diocesan director of the Pon , for Domestic tifical Mission Aid' SQcieties; Founded Youih Work ~365 NORTH FRONT STREET Fairhaven Auto'Theatre Sister Rosalie of PittsbuI'gh, coThe: National Council of NEW BEDFORD -..A..~ & Industrial ordinator of the .Federation of Catholic Youth, of which Msgr. FAIRHAVEN, MASS. ~ Sales and WYman 2-5534 Catholic Hgh School StUdents; Schieder was, first director, is Oil Burners Service Charles Keating, Jr., of Cincin- represented in 90 affiliated dioWY 5-1631 nati, a leader in the Citizens for ceses and, embraces some seven 2283 ACUSHNET AVE. Decent Literature; also Father million Catholic young people. FOUR CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE' YOU NEW BEDFORD John Powell; S.J., theology pro- , Msgr. Schieder has also foundfessor at West Baden (Ind.) Col- ed and directed numerous other ONE - STOP BANKING lege, and Father Robert Greene, organizations and publications M.M.; who was a prisoner of the in 'the youth' field and has in.., JOHN E. CO. Chinese communists for more . Inc. than two years."
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T11ÂŁ ANCHORThurs" Sept. 7, 1961
Educator Asserts Am~rrican Hngher Educatio~ Ph@ny
Sister Madeleine Clemence, director of St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing in Fall River, has announced the acceptance of 49 young ladies as freshmen into the three-year training program of the School. Enrolling from 1'1 communities, the new freshmen reported this week. . The student nurses and their home addresses follow: Jacqueline Allard, 63 RenC'1 Street, Fall River; Mary E. Arruda, 32 Pilgrim Street, So. Dartmouth; Jeanne Auclair, 77 Jackson Street, Taunton; Lucille Bel'geron, 362 Tarkiln Hill Road, New Bedford; Doris Blanchette 307 No. Front Street, New Bed~ ford. Marguerite Bohanan, 127 Park Holm Street, Newport; Beatrice Bouley, 31 Prouteau Street Acushnet; Susan Bourgeois, 34 Wamsutta Avenue, Acushnet' Carol Bowes, First Avenue Os~' terville, Mass; Jeanne BraUlt, 152 Last Street, Fall River. Maureen Breault, 243 State Avenue, No. Tiverton; Margaret Campagna, 205 Maple Avenue, Middletown, Rhode Island; Elizabeth Caron, 35 George Street, So. Dartmouth; Lorraine Champagne, 426 Cass Avenue, Woonsocket; Nancy Considine 129 Fifth Street, Fall River. Marguerite Costa, 11 MariOl1 Street, Fall River; Cecile Desnoyers, 2182 Pleasant Street Fall River; Carolyn M. DiLeon~, 45 Beach View Terrace, Middletown; Bar,bara Durfee, 31 Beardsworth Road, Tiverton; Margaret Fitla, 183 Orswell Street Fall River. ' Mary Lou Galvin, 22'1 Warren Street, Fall River; Doris Goyette, Sawdy Pond, .F a 11 River; Maureen Griffin, 126 Norwood Street, Swansea; Cynthia A. Hodson, 152 Newton Street, New Bedford; ~aureen M. Hopkins, 26 Lester Street, RFD No.3, Woonsocket. Marianna Houlihan, 39 Park Holm, Newport; Elaine Jordan, 1207 State Road, Westport; Annette ~avoie, 452 Osborn Street, Fall River; Beverly Leach, 175 Jackson Street, Fall River; Joan LePage, 48'1 Slade Street, Fall River. Therese Martin, 39 Garfield Street, Fall River; Claudette Meunier, 610 Tremont Street, Taunton; Trudy Morris, Rhode Island Avenue, Middleboro; Anne Pelletier, 654 Fisher Road, No. Dartmouth; Jeannette Perusse, 14 Princetoa Street, New Bedford. Helen Piekielniak, 20 Barrett Street, Fall River; Jeanne Roy, 352 Barnes Street, Fall River; Helen Savaria, 13 Valentine Stl'eet, New Bedford; Christine Ann Segura, 4 Fishburn Court, Provincetown; Susan Senesac, 219 Cedar Street, New Bedford. Jeanne Soucy, 147 Deane Sh'eet, New Bedford; Barbara Stocklinski, 52 Huard Street, Fall River; Carol Sullivan, 25 Benefit Street, Taunton; Judith Sullivan, 783 Second Street, Fall River; Sandra Ann Sylvia, 53 Briggs Street, New Bedford. Margaret Terceiro, 33 Bay Street, No. Tiverton; Charlotte Torres, 152 Longwood Avenue, No, Dartmouth; Patricia Viveiros, 371 Crescent Street, Fall River; Ruth Zawrotny, 495 Snell Street, F'all River.
Says Outlook Bright In Latin America CINCINNATI (NC) - A "dynamic' nupsurge" is taking place in the Church in Latin America, says Father Ronan Hoffman, O.F.M., Conv., professor of missiology at the Catholic University of America, adding that he sees "solid ground for optimism" about the Church in Central and South America. Father Hoffman, who recently returned from an extensive tour of Latin American countries, said a "much more dynamic apostolate" is evident there. "The religious unity which existed in Latin America for three centuries and was interrupted by the wars for independence has not only been restored bIDt hEJB been put into ac~" 1Jl:0 ~AIZb
5
SYRACUSE (NC) - One thing wrong "with American higher education is its downright 'phoniness,''' a priest
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NEW BEDFORD: Father A. Castello Branco, pastor, welcomes a new sIx-year old first grader, Antle Fidalgo, right, who was escorted to school by her veteran seven-year old second grade. sister, Catherine.
Choice of Prelate
Experience Factor VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope John said he chose Amleto Cardinal Cicognani to be Secretary of State because of his "proven experience in so many tasks of the Church in the East and in the West, in the ancient and in the new world," it has been learned here. This statement appeared in a Papal letter,appointing Cardinal Cicognani to his new. post. The Pope's. letter now has been published in the Acta Apostolicae Sedis, official organ for publica_ tion of decrees and other current documents of the Holy See. Pope John said in his letter he reserves to himself the choice of his closest collaborators, "called to know near a.t hand the anxieties of Our ministry and to share them with Us." Requires Special Talents Of all the cardinals of the Holy See's central administration, the Pope said, none works closer or is of greater help than the Secretary of State. He said the post requires special talents because of its "nobility of oUice, the multiplicity of the priestly virtues it demands, and the vastness of iJts projects and tasks." . The Pope said his choice bad fallen "on you, Lord Cardinal, who seem to Us particularly adapted to the assignment because of the proofs of priestly
virtue, of dedication to Holy Church ,of real and untiring zeal which you have always given in the diverse duties entrusted to you." Worthy of Responsibility Pope John then reviewed the Cardinal's qualifications including his legal studies, his writings, his experience with the Sacred Consistorial Congregation and the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Church, and his work as Apostolic Delegate in the' UnIted States. In this last post, the Pope said, Cardinal E:icognani "worthily represented the Holy See for a long period of residence during years full of historic events." The Pope summed up his thoughts on the appointment: "This proven experience in so many tasks of the Church in the East and in the West; in the ancient and in th~ new world, tells Us that you are well worthy of
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receiving this new weight of responsibility as Our Secretary of State, abOve all in the present moment, full of intense expectations, and also because of the preparations f~r the ecumenical council." '
told some 1,000 delegates to a Catholic youth convention here. Father Robert F. Grewen, S.J. former president of LeMoyno College, Syracuse, charged that a materialist philosophy is taught in most American colleges and universities. The Jesuit priest, now spiritual director of seminarians at Bellarmine College, Plattsburg, N.Y., addressed the 106th national convention of the Catholie Central Union of American, which seeks to develop social action leadership in Catholic youths. Seek Power Father Grewen asserted that school administrators seek only bigness and power, and as a result students "think that a college education will help them obtain better jobs, more money and more social prestige." "The college student of today who studies on a campus where materialism is the watchword," Father Grewen continued, "will meet up with a leader who will say to him, as Khrushchev is saying to his people, 'I will give you security if you will give me your freedom.' "And the trouble is that such 11 young man, indoctrinated in the -philosophy of materialism, will see nothing wrong with paying the demanded price. . "Another difficulty wit b American higher education," he stated, "is its outright 'phoniness.' The important thing is the multiplication of buildings and courses. Money is needed. The more tuitions the better. Therefore, easy courses must be installed for the unqualified. "Catholic colleges," Father Grewen concluded, "still teach that the first security a man should look to is the security of his soul; that, if you cannot have both, fl'eedom is greater than material security."
Delegate Returns LONDON (NC) -Archbishop Gerald P, O'Hara, Apostolic Delegate to Great Britain has returned to England after a vacation in his native United States.
6
THE·At f::::::- '":~Dio'cese of Fall River:"Thurs. Sept. 7, 1961
The School of Home The record number of those attending parochial schools - from the elementary to the college level - also points 'up another fact, a sadder one: the re'cord' number of those denied entrance to Catholic elementary school and high school and college because of the lack of physical space a~d the shortage of teachers, both religious and lay. ' _ It is sad that in every parish in the area - and perhap~ in the country - the priests dare not talk about the advantages of Catholic education because their hearers are all too well aware of these and anxious to seize upon them for their children and yet ~annot find space in a Catholic~ school. The inability of parents to place their children in a parochia,l school does place upon parents a greate'r awareness of the necessity of religious training in the home. Actually it brings to the fore the fact that the first obligation of 'inculcating the dogmas and practice of religion is that of the parents and it is more often than not a work that many parents are 'happy to leave to the Sisters oro' Brothers and the school. , Indeed, the tragedy of too many students and too few spaces for them can give rise to a greater zeal on the part of parents to assume their rightful and primary role as spiritual educators of their offspring. And what better source from which these lessons to come than' from parents, and what better place to learn them than in the home. , Parents are charged with the work of bringing their, children to maturity physically and emotionally and, with ,the help of schools, intellectually. Theirs is also the work to bring their children to a spiritual maturity' as' well, with the help of the Church. In this way they give to their children' the example of: how parents should act, they show to their children the full role of the parent, the role the children themselves,' most of them, will fulfill in life. In this way they teach the lessons of religion in the home" the natural place for children to learn, the place where religion is lived, the place where most children will live their religion both as subjects of their parents and as parents themselves. . Surely if parents appreciate their work as religious educators their teaching of religion in a formal way and by informal discussion and by example will have a greater influence than religion' taught in a classroom with a "monastery" or "convent" stamp, about it. The on~, is part of the child's life; the 'other is a course in school. This is no attempt to downgrade the Catholic school and HOLY FAMILY IN NEW BEDFORD: "Glad to see you 'back," says Auxiliary Bishop its va-lue and place in ,the religious life of the YO!Jng. But James J. Gerrard to a couple of six-year old, second gTad~rs at the parish school of it is a fact that there has been all too little emphasis put St. Lawrence's. Being we]comed on their return are PatriCK Mu~d()on 'and Anne Doherty. on the place of the parent as religious educator. .', ' ,The Catholic school can and does buii<i on what parents· and ·home provide. The' Catholic school is hard ,put, to supply ", . what parents and home hot or do not.,
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The Choice ': .',.
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,A fasciria ting ch9ice is shaping up as a c~roJ1ary: 14 tite present crowded condition:: in 'the parochial s¢ho.ol'sYstem', Those, in authority in the Church are faced, with, the possibilitY that lower grades of the Catholic school system. ,must be sacrificed ''to provide' the space and 'teachers for . ,th' , 'd Th Ca th 0 l'Ie h'Igh' sC',h"00I a~d, th' ose In , e upper gra, es. , e, college must expand at the exPense of the elementary'school. And the youngsters from these lower grades ,must to the public school system for education. Here is where the choice comes in. If these youngsters present themselves at the doors of the over-crowded public schools, the community must find , space and teachers for them. That hits the whole community in the pocketbook. . The only alternative might be some sort of aid from public tax funds 'for the parochial school system. to assist it to educate every child who wants an education in a Catholic school. But critic(s of the parochial -school syste,m refuse to approve of. tax funds for the parochial school system. So they must choose between expanding the public school system at a prohibitive cost; or swallowing their harsh words and grant to parents the right to educate their children in a system not less capable and democratic than the public school system, and in assisting the child to receive an edueation in the system of 'his parent's choosing.
"By'REV. ROBERT W. ·HOVDA, Catholic' lJriiversity ... ...... " . . , .. ' , '
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TODAY-Mu8'lUl on 'Sundli.y. once promired. Eyeri'mpre tjlan " frequently in -the Church, as ,in There should always ,be at least her physi~almother~9od, ·it)s ~ .the Synagogue of old, the laws brief on reference to the Sun- her '. acceptance .of "the" Word 'and rubrics become as gods. And, - some day Mass' Saturday night at, (Gospel) that is praised.·' : ',instead. of. interpreting 'them in, . home-perhaps just a line or . ' , ' the sense' in which they wer~. , , ,. . 16th ~UNDAY~FTER PEN-..;: given-(Le., toheip -the Christian two from the Epistle and Gospel, ,perhaps a reading of the TECOST. The Epistle tells us people to worship better and 'to collect in English. There shO\ild that the purpose of the Church's make their common prayer m'ore be enough to draw- the attention sacramental life and of her real to them), we often use of th~ family to the fact that whole public worship is that 'them as clubs against those who Sunday worship is something Christ may dwell in us and we are seeking, with the Church, special, that its message is the may dwell in Christ. And the . ways in which to make public . most important message from Gospel tells us why, despite the . liturgy a dynamic experience. God during the week, and that Church's sacramental life and in it we, have the gathering her common prayer, this may TUESDAY-The Holy Name of the whole parish, the whole not happen: because a pharisai- , of Mary. None of that hypocrisy cal hypocrisy may render these taints our Lady's soul. This is, I Church, . living and lifegiving 'acts sterile suppose, why we admire her so Part of the life to which Jesus and fruitless. 'much and why she shames us raises us is community life, rE!CNo one would argue with the so. It was not by law, not even ognition that we are part of His Mystical Body.' Sunday Mass fact that, for the sake of a by the known laws of nature, should, be the symbol and 'decent celebration of Mass and 'that she judged the Word of the other sacraments, in con- God that came to her. For her, ' strength of that unity and com- for'mity with the mind of Christ, law was subject.to God, not vice munity. the Church needs to lay down versa, and her holiness is a consome laws and rubrics to guide stant witness to the difference TOMORROW - Birthday of her ministers and people. between a legal and a personal the Blessed Virgin Mary. The relationship to the Father.' Gospel, speaks of Jesus as the MONDAY-Mass as on SunSon of David and the Son of day. But it. is also true that no . WEDNESDAY - Mass as OD Abraham. '50 the communitY to one can argue with the fact that Sunday. This is why the Church . which we belong is not only feels free to change the rubrics a community of the here and Catholics in ,Koreu and directions and laws for Mass now, it is a community extendand other services. Because, like ing back to Abraham, our father ContinlUle to Rise ,most ,laws, they are simply cusin faith. So our Lady's geneCHONGJU (NC) - Bishop .toms that became crystallized, alogy is a reminder that the James V. Pardy, M.M., Vicar hardened and accepted. But if a People'of God has depth as well Apostolic of Chongju, said here custom becomes accepted in an extension-has roots in his- that during the past year the age or generation when the litOFFIC!AL NEWSPAPER Of TI:iE DIOCESE OF, FALL RIVER as tory. number of Catholics in his' urgy is not too well understood, vicariate rose to 27,343, an in- it IUay actually fight against PUblished weeKly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River SATURDAY - Mass of St. crease of 2,419. the purpose for which it was 410 Highland Avenue . Mary on Saturday. It is because The Brooklyn - born Mary- ordinarily framed. Fall River, Mass. OSborne'5-7151 of this profound historical sense knoller listed 2)60 adult and The trouble is sometimes we PUBLISHER • that the Christian liturgy has 1,102 infant baptisms in the 20 . Christians love our fossil cusMost Rev. James l. Connolly, D.O., PhD. always made so much of our parishes of the vicariate, he said.. toms more than we love the Lord's mother. Daughter of AbThe total population of this', truth of Jesus' Gospel and we GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER raham and of David, she pro- inland vicariate is 1,251,481. fight any change. As a Boston Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. D'riscoll vides the', full, assurance that Working for the conversion of psychiatrist put it, "we take for MANAGII'lG EDITOR God has come in the flesh and this population are 32 Maryknoll 'devotion' what ..is really an atHUS~_ J. Golden that His coming is the salvation pr~ests and one Korean priest.. tachmimt to, custorn."
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.®rhe ANCHOR
Second' Retreat We~k Begins
"91'il
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. '7, 1961
7
Bias in American CoUeges Shocks
Mc~day
l'he second week of retreat for priests of the Diocese will begin Monday evening, Sept. 11, at Cathedral Camp. The
Af1r;can ~
S;ft'ude~t$
WASHINGTON (NC) Africans who are students at American colleges admitted "shock" and "hurt" here
.retreat, conducted by Rev. Win,frid McDermott, C.P., from the Passionist Monastery of Our because of discriminatory treatMother of Sorrows in West ment they had received at one 'Springfield, will close Friday time or another in the U.S. ,evening, Sept. 15. They also were hurt at the dif, The following priests will atficulties often placed in the way tend this second week of retreat of their own country's envoys 'at which Most Rev. James J. when they sought housing and 'Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary other needs. One student said. Bishop of the Diocese, will prehis country's embassy her e :Side: should be closed. Rev. John F. Laughlin, Rt. Rev. These reactions were reported Hugh A. Gallagher, Rev. F. Anaby Father Patrick Cotter, S.J.. tole Desmarais, Rev. John A. an organizer of the first Seminar Chippendale, Rev. Joseph K. for African Leadership Training Welsh. which was held at Xaverian Col· Rev. Walter J. Buckley, Rev. leciz, the area seminary of the Joseph F. Sutula, Rev. James E. Brothers of St. Francis Xavier. Lynch, Rev. John Medeiros, Rev. ,Arthur C. dos Reis. Experts Lead Diseussions · Rev. AsdrubalA. C. Branco, The seminar brought together Rev. J. Orner Lussier, Rev. Jose for 10 days 25 students from 10 M. B. Avila, Rev. Henri Charest, African nations who were se'Rev. Cornelius J. Keliher. lected on the basis of essays Rev. Maurice H. Lamontagne. which they wrote analyzing Rev. James F. McDermott, Rev. problems of their' nations. William D. Thomson, Rev. WilDiscussions during the seminar were led by American governliam E. Collard, Rev. William R. ment .officials, social and ecoJordan. nomic experts and religious Rev. Laureano C. dos Reis, Rev. Howard A. Waldro,n, Rev. leaders. Leo' M. Curry, Rev. George S. Cotter, who represented ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, NEW BEDFORD: Rt. Rev. Msgr. Albert Berube chats theFather NCWC Foreign Visitors OfDaigle, Rev. Lester ,L. Hu11. · Rev. Alfred J. Gendreaa;lte'r. with two s'eta of twins who are numbered among the pupils attending his parish school. fice, also reported that the AfriAlfred R. Forni, Rt. Rev. Hum:- The twins are Jeannette and Jean Martineau, lO-year old fifth graders and Daniel and cans thought that Americans ~ berto S. Medeiros, Rev. Edmond Louis Steblin, seven-year old third graders. Their friends stop on their way to classes pected too much of them. Tremblay, Rev. Henri R. Canuel. to look on. · Rev. Willbim H. O'Reilly, Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, Rev. Ernest R. Bessette, Rev. Clarence J. NEW YORK (NC) - The Nad'Entremont, Rev. John G. CarConference of Christial1! DALLAS (~C) - Com- edly reaffirmed that obscenity against material which offends tional roll. and Jews is planning a three-day Rev. Donald E. Belanger, Rev. munities have the 'means stands outsid,e the constitutional their standards. meeting of churchmen on the guarantees of free speech. State Rep. Tom James, spon- Federal aid to education controGerard Boisvert, Rev. John J. '0 f protecting themselves He said that in 1957 the court sor of a new Texas anti-obscenDelany, Rev. Stephen J. Downey, against indecent literature, held that the test of obscenity is ity law, said the measure dQes versy before the next session ~ Rev. William J. McMahon. Corigress in January. whether: or not material is Rev. Lucien Jusseaume, Rev. 'speakers at an anti-obscenity judged to exceed contemporary not involve censorship, since it The session will be one of a rally here agreed. ' calls for review and evaluation series of meetings the conference 'Joseph F. O'Donnell, Rev. DoncOIiUnunity standards. ' by officials and courts at everi will sponsor with a previously ald A. Couza, Rev. Edmond L. , Rep. John Dowdy of Texas 'Dickinson, Rev. Robert Stant~n. ,told a meeting of the local Citi- , Charles Keating of Cincinnati, step. announced grant of $325,000 from Rev. Ernest E. Blais, Rev. zens for Decent Lrterature the founder of the national Citizens , Representatives ,of religioU!! the Ford Foundation to promote discussion a m 0 n g religious James A. McCarthy, Rev. Adal- U. S. Supreme Court has repeat- for Decent Literature movement, and civic groups and state and said this puts it up to commun- City officials attended the meet- groups which differ on public bert Szklanny, Rev. James F. ities the~selves to. "take action .lng.' ,issues. McCarthy. Rev. William J. Shovelton. In School Enrollment , ' I,', ' Rev. George E. Amaral, Rev. PHILADELPHIA (NC) - An Dividends On Savings Deposits At The OPEN FRIDAY 9 A.M. to 8 PoM. John P. Driscoll, Rev. Albert F. increase of between 50 and 75 , Shovelton, Rev. Louis R. Boivin, Fall River Trust Are Exempt iF~'o~' ' per cent in enrollment' in PhilaRev. Thomas J. LeBlanc. ,delphia archdiocesaQ schoolS "Mass.' State Income Tax. Rev. Maurice E. Parent, Rev. can be estimated within the next " , William E. Farland, Rev. Francis .decade,the sch091 superinten;B. Connors, Rev. George J. 'dent says: About 258,700 are ex:' Souza, Rev. Andre P. Jussaume. pected this year. Rev; 'Norman J. Ferris, Rev. "Father EdwardT. Hughes, "; Henry T. Munroe, Re:v.,W~lter A. :'superintendent; said, tha't -more" Sullivan, Rev. Edward J. Burns, than 80 ,per' cent, ·of Catholic" Rev. Luciano Pereira.,' " . children of school age within . Rev. Roger L. Gagne; Rev. the five-county, archdioces~ are, Edmond J. Levesque, Rev. James In Catholic schools. A. Clark,Rev. Bento R. FrMa" Iii the city' of Philadelphia, Rev. Armando A. Annunziato. ' 39 per cent o'f all children of Rev. Edward,J. Mitchell, Rev. school age are expected to enroll J. Adrien Bernier, Rev. Arthur in Catholic'schools this Fall, an K. Wingate, Rev. Vincent F. increase of 10,546 pupils over Diaferio, Rev. James F. Buckley·. last year: ' Rev. Robert F. Kirby, Rev. Bernard Lavoie, Rev. Roger J. Levesque, Rev. Hugh Keenan, Rev. John V. Magnani., Rev. Thomas C. Mayhew, Rev. Daniel F. Moriarty, Rev. Martin f[GTI~ E=a@~d$ ~&u® ~@~I ROW~[f 1Jli'lI.JJ~fl' L. Buote, Rev. John F. Moore, Rev. Agostinho S. Pacheco. Whether you are in the' market for a new or used. car Rev. John J. Steakem, Rev. Kenneth 'J. Delano, Rev. Louis the Fall. River Trust will finance 'it for you at J. Joseph, Rev. Francis J. LOW BANK RATES. Mahoney, Rev. John W. Pegnaro, Rev. Evaristo Tavares. We will also include your insurance premium in the loan - simply
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8
Advises Women On .Leadership
THE, ANCHORThurs., Sept. 7, 1961
Woman's Home Larger Than Ever CINCINNATI (NC)-Woman's place is in the home, but a "home" takes in more than the flour walls .of her house. This was the message of Msgr. Joseph B. McAllister, nationai director of the International Federation of Catholic Alumnae, m his keynote address at the federation's 47th anniversary convention here. Msgr. McAllister, who is vice rector of the Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C., emphasized that "women are naturally and primarily destined for the home. Their talents and eapadties prepare them ina special way for building and preserving it. Their work in the home is of the vastest importance ..." But he went on to say. that "'the concept of home and family needs broadening in terms of contemporary urban culture." "Quite generally," he said, "it <ambraces more than one's own household. Today, home and family extend out into the community; into schools and libraries £lld museums, into highways, parks, and playgrounds,. to the neighborhood movie and the ' corner drugstore. "The modern home cannot be isolated or quarantined from the community. Home environment in its completeness must be considered, and this is large1¥ woman's task .....
SIOUX CITY (NC) - SueeessflJI leadership of a Catholic: organization calls for giving of self, a bishop told Catholic: women at a leadership institwte ihere. " Bishop Joseph M. Mueller said that "if everything is done for the honor of God, leadership 'will be fruitful." The Bishop of Sioux City spoke to more than 100 women from 14 dioceses in the area attending a Leadership Training Institute sponsored by the National Council of Catholic Women at Briar Cliff College. The NCCW is sponsoring a series 01. such institutes during the Sumo 'mer. Bishop Mueller stressed that "leaders must atempt at all timeS 'flo be right in what they say and, what they dQ, and they must attempt at all times te please God." "A leader must be fearless to do right, must be dedicated. Her motives must be the very best," he said. The Bishop urged the wom6l!l ilostand up for principle. "If you are right, then you do not hesitate to go forward," he said. "Leaders must accept ignominy. That goes with strona. determined leadership." I
Prelate lauds Vitality
Of Latin Language .. ST. GEORGE'S IN WESTPORT: Father Lorenzo H. Morais, pastor, greets three at the new parish schooh-They are: Left to right: J'anice Parent 7... Denise PaJ:eIit 9, and their cousin, Diane Menard 12. ~pils
Urges Ma jor Efforts In Obscenity Fight CINCINNATI (NC) - Rep. Kathryn E. Granahan of Pennsylvania called h'ere for major efforts to wipe out obscenity, pointing out that "commercial traffic in obscenity and pornography" is creating' an "irisidious, creeping moral paralysis." Rep. Granahan, chairman of. a Bouse postal operations subcommittee, has' held hearings and lPonsored . legislation dealing with, obscene matter sent through the mails. She spoke here at a ,banquet during the 47th convention of the International Federation of Catholic ,Alumnae. Mrs. Granahan said "the young people of America are at the top of the sucker list for all kinds of poisonous degeneracy" distrib. uted by dealers in obscenity. , "These conditions demand extra-' ordinary ,provisions in the law, with firm standards and guidelines," she said.
Explains Difference BetweE!n By John Jay Daly
,R. A. WilCOX CO.
LONDON (NC)-A Catholic mother of four children, Mrs. Cecily Madejczyk, announced ahe is ta~ing over a suburban movie theater for three mornings to show the public SOIlM!' film "gems." She is reriting a French film on St. Bernadette and the Hollywood production "The Road." All schools in the district aN! .being invited to send their stude'nts. and any pro#t!l will go. to charity. " , , : "I am perturbed· at the squalO«' ~.' A ¢ae. 01. tomatoes, .boiled of many current films and the degenerate effect on the.young," . down to pure. juice, smothered ,Mrs. Madejczyk told reporters: them. Over this she spread a. "The two simple lovely films! container 01. 'sour cream, makpropose showing will be gems ing a luscious gravy. She put on ,the lid and let Nature take among squalor." ' course. lD & little while, the odor of, Need Teachers The Catholic Women's Club ~ sanctity spread over the kitchen, , Otis Air Force Base" which has drifted into the dining room, as one of its projects the teaching to the side porch' where . the hungry horde ha~ assembled, of catechism to grade school children, is in need of catechists. They may call Mrs. Joseph S. Hayes Jr. to volunteer their services.
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preparatory to attack. The~, at home." (Mary Tinley Daley, is _ practically broke down the bar·· "Tell me the . difference," . vacation. To make' ber variers getting to the spread. When' 1ll1ll'ged Ginny; eation complete, tbeHead of they did, Wowie! Hard.ly could . Works Like Pod the House-'-'-also on vacation they wait for the Old 'Man o;t "When I cook at home," said -is substituting for berthia the Household to say Grace. 'Papa', "Mamma says I use' too . week.) . 'Papa' Jarrin 'many pans. That's because cook-, Poets, artists, cooks and We have a 'dear friend rated ing has to be done thisway and hefs are born, n"'t, ro' ade.' If 88 'one of the' greatest chefs .OI:L, ~at. We professionals make so C v this side of the' Atlantic. Hill much, fuss about it. Now yotl there is any doubt about this.; name is, ''Papa'' Jarrin---,.ClaudEl take your mother. She doesn't R. A. WILCOX CO. as . fat· as cooks are eon", Jarriri., "Papa" .has, been chef fill cook in a fancy way as 00 men. eerned, we have living. proOf. Paris, London,'WashingtOn, Mon·, chefs. She cook'll straight. Is that OFFICE FURNITURE 'Monimie is the only' oneill ,·treal and Caracas hotels. NoW' DOt so? bl8~k . i. immediate, Dellvel7 the family who really relishes' in his 79th ye.ar-born in Pari!: "We, we" 'said' Ginny~ . '. DESKS • CHAIRS veal cutlets. Knowing this, she Aug.. 14" ,1882 - ~e studied. That's just how it was' done; FILING' CABINflS hold-s back; has them rarely. under the. chefs' chef, t;lle fam- Mommie, true to her mothei'ly Theil she does a job in the cuI_oUS EscoffIer.for whom IS n~ed instincts, we!1~ at her cooking • FIRE' FILES • SAFES inary department to make all.. the wor~d WIde gou.~met SOCIety as a poet writes a poem, an artFOLDING TABlES hands--and mOUths--reach for Les AmiS de .Escoffier., ist paints a picture a sculptor' , AND CHAIRS her piece de resistance. Yummy!. ~ell, "Papa:' Jarrin.heard from sculps. a statue. "She does just However, the other day as the' Gmny who IS studymg French. what she thinks should be done ,,Lady' Of the House brought a She told him in hi~ native lan- explains "Papa" Jarrin, "Whidh , 22 BEDFORD ST.' huge cutlet from the refriger-' guage that Mommle had come is why there will always be pies fALL RIVER 5-7838 ator there was Ii mumur of pro-, up with a new dish-and that like mother used 'to make." test. it was a 'dilly; her own words. Meets Challenge "Your mamma is now a cre"Mommie," said Ginny, lead- ative chef," said "Papa." "That . TIJe Qualify .. ing the pack, "can't you cook is, she would be called a chElf a veal cutlet some other way, if she were a man. Being a wo.,. instead of as you always do?" man, she is a cook." "Why do you say that, 'Papa'?"" Challenged, Mommie found III way; and pronto. She got out asked Ginny. ,the Scimitar, the Big Egyptian "Because," he explained, "men carving knife, chopped the cut- who are chefs--professionalslet into bite-size pieces, put them operate entirely different from in a bag loaded with flour, salt, the way women 00, wl:Io .cook pepper, . orengano, then shook 'em up. Taken out, she placed the· pieces ,in her electric frying
Mother Rents Theater ,To Combat Squalor
':,BL'UE ,RIBBON LAUNDRY
Cook~
VATICAN CITY (NC)-:...ciuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo, Prefec,t of the Sacred Cogregation of' Seminaries 'and Universities, has defended the "perennial 'vitality" Of the Lat1n Language.' , The Cardinal,' writing to' i meeting of educators in Milan, praised Latin for i41s' "highlY ',educative power." , "The Church bee always judged the teaching ,of thi!l tongue as an essential element for ,refining the mind and spirit 'of man' and-for· enabling him to understand and approach the ~ghest levels 01. culture,", the Cardinal said.
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Epistle Narrates Mission Story
Papal Volunteer Leaves for Peru
ROCKFORD (NC) Four Rockford couples who spent their vacations as lay missionaries in the southern U. S. may not rival St.Paul-but they do write epistles. At least, they wrote one epistle, in which amoBg other thinBli they said: "For we would not, brethren. have you ignorant of the affliction which came upon UfJ in Georgia, wearying us even of life, in many labors, in swimming m 0 r e frequently, ill splashes above measure, often exposed to sunburn. "From the babysitters, five times I received 40 dunkings, less one. Thrice I was pushed in, once I hit my head on the- bottom; dirty diapers beyond measure, a night and a day we were adrift on the road, a week and a half without air conditioning, in journeyings often, in perils ..• at the Holiday (motel swimming pool), in perils at Savannah beach, in perils from fake brethren, in hunger and thirst, in fastings on peanut butter and Kool Aid often .....
BOSTON (NC) - The first Papal Volunteer for Latin America from Massachusetts has left Boston to begin three years of service at a Catholic lIChool if!. Lima, Peru. She is Sally Hanlon, 26, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hanlon of Needham, and a 1957 graduate of Notre Dame College of Maryland, Balt~more. Miss Hanlon had a private interview with Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, before her departure. The Cardinal offered Mass for ,her in his chapel. During her three years in Lima Miss Hanlon will teach courses in English literature and grammar and business English on the junior high school level at St. Rose School. She has had previous experience teaching English to Spanish-speaking students. Felr two years she served in a lay apostolate program begun by Regis College, Weston - one year in New Mexico on the U.S.-Mexican border, and one year in Honduru.
Aided MIlIsi_er
The four couples, with 14 children among them, are Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zielinski, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Conboy, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Muraski and Mr. and IIrs. Kenneth Farrell. All are members of the Christian Fami1,. Movement and at st. Patriek pari_ heft. For two weeks they worked . . J.,- ntissionariec hi Georgia, helping Father .Tohn Loftuaof the Glenmll17 Bome Missionen. They .ere accompanied ."" Father William F. M c ~ at Rockford and by two babysitter's, Maureen Chrisman and Janet Riehle, both high lIChool MIlion.
French Girr Likes Corn; Finds Broccoli Inedible CINCINNATI (NC)-A French teenage girl here M an exchange student has discovered an Amenean treasure - corn-on-thecob. But her hosts have been unable to convince her that broceoli is edible, and .he in turn has failed to convert thelri to eating snails. Marguerite Stark of Perencbies is here under the International High School Program of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. She is residing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.acob R. Herr and will be a classmate of their daughter, Mary :To Herr, at Mother of Mercy High School here. The visitor confessed that "French" salad dressing and "French" bread in the local supermarket bore no resemblance to what she knew in France. The 17-year-oldhigh school senior said French girls usually do not date or attend dances while they are in high schooL
Use Tape Recordings For Science Lessons :ELIZABETH (NC)-More and more students in the North-Jer..: sey area are getting some-of their training in the sciences from tape-recorded lessons, according to boosters of the technique. The Catholic Round Table of. Science - composed of science teachers in this state's Catholic schools-is one of the pioneers in taped instruction. Only two other taping centers for Catholic instruction are said to exist. One, specializing in social studies, is at Mt. St. Scholastica College, Atchison, Kan. The other, for reading and arithmetic, is at Holy Names College, Oakland, Calif.
Bishops of South India Discuss Marriage Bill ERNAKULAM (NC) The four Archbiahops and II Bishops of Kerala State have met bere to discuss a bill put forward by the central government 01. India to regulate Christi.. Dtarriap. The bill would gige the government the right to ~. . . Miai8ters and even churches the aUthority to oItWMe ...........
9
TtfE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Sept. 7, 1961
High School Graduates Aid Peru Maryknoller
m.
ST. JEAN BAPTIST, FALL RIVER: "~ell, wel,laow'. the .boyr Father Maurice Jeffrey, curate, inquireIJ of lS-year old eIghth grader. The pansh curate had greeted Carol Laroche. lS-year old eighth grader. before the eameramaa had ehance to sJUqt the welcome.
Advises Solving Home Decorating Problem By Aliee BcMtgh CahiD
Sometimes the very thought of sharing ideas with other people is all inspiration, because y()Ul" problems caB often be minimized when you realize how other people have solved similar "headaches." Take, for iast,mce, the long, narrow upstairs ball which is an architectural feature ill man y houses. If you have a phone there and it ring5 in the night, the patter of feet down the ball can be very annoying. Try this - TOU can make such ahaU appear shorter by carpeting it with a bold plaid pattern. That minimizes the length; then, to muffle noise, lay the carpet over thIck padding. Since bedrooms open off this hall your phone may best be left'in its present location, but you would probably get a lot more convenience if you had the phone company put a long extension cord on it, so it could be brought into the master bedroom at night. Does your downstairs powder room lack "umph"? The use of unusual wall paper can add distinction to a tiDy powder room. -A large mirror on one wall will give the illusion of space and a counter top that turns a corner iH aD "V' under the mirror will provide you with a dressing table. When you shop for wallpaper for this room, watch for the new conversation _ starting designs. Don't be alarmed if they cost more than paper you use in other rooms, for you will need only a few rolls to change a powder room into an unusual, distinct, and individual spot. Small Han If you have a small entrance hall, where there just isn't room £01" furniture, you might like to use a wall shelf with drawers and hang above it a triple mirror, lovely open or closed. The side mirrors may be backed with wood to match the hanging 9helf, so when eloeed· it gives the ,appearance of • panel. You might complete 1his groupiDe with a ship'. lantenl at the lIide. You'll find the drawers Mod,. to .ton aloY-. clai17 missal and pone, right . . . 7'l* OM Nada tbea ..
"OWl
"our
you hUl'l)' out to ear17 M... A, person who usee window shades instead of blinds can add a decomtive touch bJ" cutting designa from wall covering and pasting them on _ ordinary 'roller shade. You may have a window in a kitchen or pantry where you can't use a shade, but would like .IOIDe design at the window. This does the trick. U you have a famiq that • constanUy on the go - children who must see the dentist, who take a piano leSson, meetinBli you and your husband must attend, the ordinary small bulletin board isn't large enough f« notices and reminders. Get a piece of cork the size of one wall (perhaps the well over the table in the breakfast nook), and you will have a place to accommodate notices, shopping lists, and recipes you plan to try. This board can be framed with strips of pine, or the frame can be painted to match your woodwork. Now you have a family "message center" to care for everyone's reminders. Solves Pet Peeve One of my friends had a pet peeve - it was about a door. She had bookshelves and storage c~binets on each side of the door and then was faced with the problem of opening and closing it. We finally solved this problem by splitting the door to save critical inches. The double door was a wonderful solution and a nice touch was added by using large round brass pulls on both hall and rOOm sides. Louvered folding
ctoor. could be 1Hed to get t1Ua _ e effect. Meny people use Neh doo" between a dining room and ball, or" adjoining
room.
Want to util-ize an alcove ift Jamily room, play room, or child's room? Turn yOW' window seat into an extra guest bed. You'll be surpri~ what you can do with an alcove six feet long. Take a mattress from an old day bed and cover it with fabric matching your draperies. Under the seat you can get two large drawers for guest bedding. For light, get one of the new type pull lamps which adjust for reading and which can be pushed out of the way when not in Ulle. Another use for a bedroom is to build into tlbis recess a big, big dressing table. It is easy to attach a shelf to the wall with large angle irons. The dressing table skirt can be hung like a curtain with brass rings that slide on a brass rod. In answer to the question "What makes a good house good?" it's the little details, the novel ideas one employs.
SHORT HILLS (HC) - Three New Jersey gfrill have returned home from a Summer of mission work ill Peru which meant they "ve up a European "'acation planned for two years. Hila-ry Hinchman, 18; Claire Donohoe, 18, and Anne Moore, 17, all .Tune graduates 01. Oak Knoll lIChool in nearby Summit. went to assist a Maryknoll musionel' at the suggClftion at Anne's father. In Peru, they worked among the destitute people of Lima and Ciud,ad de Dios, a sandy, dirty settlement of 10,000 persons outside the capital city. Their main task was to conduct a census for. Father Will i a m MacCarthy, M.M., in his recently formed parish. They aleo worked in a clinic ill Lima.
Housemaids To Meet MUNICH (He) - "Nothing can be done without us" will be the slogan of the German Cath01 i c housemaids' association meeting at Fulda Sept. 22-24, it was announced.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 7, 1961
Bishop of Tainan Faces Problems With Optimism BUFFALO (NC)-Twentyfour priests, no schools, no house and no cathedral. The Most Rev. Stanislaus Lo Kuang will face these problems after his enthronement as the first Bishop of the Diocese of Tainan, Formosa. But, he has no fears - even when he faces the additional burden of having only 13,000 Catholics out of a total population of 1,100,000. "Our Catholic population will grow," Bishop Lo Kuang said. "Missionaries on Formosa have made tremendous strides over the past several years," he said. "The outlook for the Church is very bright and conversions will continue to rise. Pontiff Confident "The Holy Father has shown his confidence in. Formosa by appointing Thomas Cardinal Tien as the Apostolic Administrator of the archdiocese of Taipei and by directing Archbishop Paul Yu-Pin to become rector of the Catholic University 01. Formosa. "This gives further evidence of His Holiness' idea to continually develop a native clergy to care for the people in the mission areas of the world," he added. "I only hope that I can justify the confidence the Pope has shown in giving me this position." Bishop Lo Kuang, a native of Funan province in communistdominated China, was a professor a.t Propaganda University prior to his consecration by Pope John earlier this year. In fact, his appointment to Formosa will mark his first return in 31 years to the teaching of his people. He has spent the last 27 y~rs in Rome as a professor. Prior to that, he was a student.
Heads Alumni Clubs GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARK (NC)-Some 300 members of the National Catholic Association of Catholic Alumni Clubs have elected Homer Sweeney of San Francisco as president. He will direct the operations of the association which was begun .in California in 1957 and now includes 19 clubs with nearly 5,000 members, all of them single Catholics who are college graduates.
Requests College
Catholics Build
Students Support
School System
Refugees' Cause PITTSBURGH (NC)Catholic college students were urged here by the executive director of the United States committee for Refugees to associate themselves with the cause of young refugees. Edward B. Marks told the 18th national congress of the National Federation of Catholic College StUdents that "we sometimes lose sight of the fact that half of the millions of refugees in Hong Kong's huts, Gaza's tents and Europe's camps are children and young people, with many of the same hopes and ·aspirations as yourself." "Some are recent victims, as are the Cuban refugees in Miami; others have spent their entire lives in flight and limbo," he said. Cites Obligations Marks declared that "as AmerIcans wan a numanltarIan tradition we have an obligation to help these young people, to prevent the tragic waste that their enforced idleness represents." "It is not enough to keep them alive," he said. "We must help them realize their potentialities. We may not be able to solve the world's complex refugee problems, but we can help individual refugees gain dignity and usefulness." Marks told the convention delegates they could help "by learning the facts about the world's refugees and informing others; by giving a warm welcome to those students and other refugees who are fortunate enough to reach our shores, and by giving dimes and dollars to help those who still wait."
Reminds Motorist$ Of Moral Duties
NAZARETH IN FALL RIVER: "I'm so glad to see the both of you," says Sister Mary Maureen, R.S.M., principal at the Fall River school for exceptional children, as she meets two of her pupils ascending the school steps. A second diocesan school for exceptional children is conducted in Hyannis.
SACRAMENTO (NC)-Bishop Joseph T. McGucken said here that regulations of the civil law and the warnings from traffic authorities are binding in conscience upon all automobile drivers. The Bishop of Sacramento made the statement in a message calling for Labor Day safety. Thp .IY\P~~~gP UT::I~
Speaker for Tolerance Cites Lincoln's Words WASHINGTON (NC) - AbRep. Seymour Halpern, of raham Lincoln's historic conNew York, in a statement in the demnation of anti-Catholic big- ,Congressional Record noted that otry· was cited by a Congress106 yearlll ago, on August 24,1855, man, in an appeal for tolerance Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter during the aid to education concommenting on the anti-Catholic troversy. Know Nothing movement. Lin:-
coIn said: i'As a nation we began by deelaring that 'all men are created equa1.' We now practically read it, 'all men are created equal except Negroelll, foreigners and Catholics.'''
~t.
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 7, 1961
Kansas to Se n d More Volunteers To Latin America,
For Missions WASHINGTON (NC) The Catholic Church, which has created one of the world's great educational systems in the United States, is helping to build an equally impressive system in more than 70 mission territories overseas. The Mission Secretariat, which has headquarters at the National Catholic Welfare Conference in Washington, in, a survey of American missionary educational efforts, reported that more than 3,000 priests, Brothers, scholastics, Sisters and lay people engaged last year educating about 400,000 peoples in other lands. Conservative Figures The report stressed that all of its figures are conservative ones. They do not include the countless bush schools and the hundreds of catechism classes that missionaries conduct. TIle l'elJun
salU l't
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difficult to total the number of people affected by the 70 radio schools of the Maryknoll Fathers in Bolivia, the recent educational television efforts of the Jesuits in Manila and of many other similar programs. The American sponsored institutions range from a university in Bagdad to the amazing network of Columban Fathers' lJ,igh schools in the Philippines, the primary schools of the Maryknoll Sisters and the Dominican Sisters of Amityville in Chile and Puerto Rico and the farflung university system of the Society of the Divine Word. Almost the entire educational system of parts of Africa is under American supervision and the only Catholic institution of higher learning and the oniy Catholic school for the blind in Korea are American sponsored, the report said. Seventeen American missionaries teach in the national university at Taiwan and among the few foreigners in Nepal are 13 missionary teachers. Many of the schools are the best in the areas in which they are found, the report stated. This is true of the Christian Brothers' and Jesuit colleges in the Phil-
HOLY NAME IN FALL RIVER: Sister Mary Dermott, S.U.S.C., registers nine-year old Paul McHenry and to-year old Joan Flanagan as the pastor, Father William H. Harrington looks on. Holy Name is opening a fifth grade this year.
Bishops of Polish Descent Plan Shrine WASHINGTON (NC)-A chapel dedicated to Our Lady of Czestochowa, patroness of Poland will be constructed in the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception here. . The chapel proJect ~s ~ undertaken under the dIrection of the eight U.S. bishops of Polish ancestry. A nationwide collection will be taken up in Polish parishelll in October to help pay the estimated $325,000 cost of conllltrueting the chapel. The eight bishops noted in a statement that in 1966 Poland will celebrate the I,OOoth anniversary of its conversion to Chri~t~nity.
Spiritual Support
::111
ippinca, the secondary Bchoola of
Sunday Masses in the diocese. '''A grave moral responsibility," he said, "is imposed on all drivers. to avoid every danger of maiming or killing others or themselves. Our religious belief and training must be put into practice while driving a car, as in all Q.f our activities."
"Now i" .. most appropriate
the Holy Cross Brothers in Pakistan and the Ursuline schools in Thailand.
time to express gratitude in a public and prominent manner :for the preservation of this Christian heritage and also to lend the strength and power of our spiritual support to our brethren across the ocean where they are hoping and praying for deliverance from suffering and prog-
YOP::It:l
French in First PROVIDENCE (NC) - Study of French will be introduced in the first grades of all Providence diocesan schools this Fall.
11
ressive religious Gppression," the bishops said. "The erection of this chapel to OUr Lady by the people of Polish descent in t~e United St3:tes ?oubtlessly WIll exert a tel~g Impact . . . upon the people In Poland in these exceedingly critical times when the enemies ' ,
of the Church are actively favoring a national church; discour. aging and impeding devotion and pilgrimage·s to Our Lady of Czestochowa; making every effort to separate the clergy and faithful in Poland from the Holy See and to split the faithful of Polish extraction in AmeriC6.
Seminary to Mqrk 1GOth Anniversary
"In view of current world conditions, the present moment is also very opportune for this appeal, which is in the nature of a prayer to our Blessed Mother, whom Holy Mother Church addresses as Queen of Peace," the bishops said.
CARTHAGENA (NC)-A six. day celebration has been planned to mark the 100th anniversary of the foundiQg of St. Charles Seminary here in Ohio. The seminary is the motherhouse of the Society of the PreciOUll Blood. The main event of the celebration has been scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 10 when . Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati will offer a Solemn Pontifical Mass at which Bishop Joseph Marling, C.PP.S., will preach the sermon. Bishop Marling at one time was provincial of the society.
Prayer to Queen of Peace
WICHITA (NC) The four dioceses of Kansas have set Jan. 28 as the departure date for a second wave of lay missionaries to leave for Latin America under their sponsorship. The four Kansas dioceses have been among the nation's leaders in promoting the Papal Volunteers for Latin America program. Last June 11 the first U.S. Papal Volunteers - 22 laymen and women sponsored by the Kansas dioceses - took part in a departure ceremony in Kansas City. They have been assigned to Belem, Brazil, Lima, Peru, and Belize, British Honduras. Participating in the Kansas program are the Archdiocese of Kansas City and the Dioceses of Wichita, Salina and Dodge City. Need Qualified Persons Announcing the date for the second departure ceremony, Fr. Michael J. Lies, Wichita director of the Papal Volunteers prqgram, said further requests have been received from Brazil and Peru for volunteers. He said there is a need for persoqs qualified in such fields as social work, sanitation education, architecture, medical technology, pharmacy, medicine, nursing, dentistry, construction work, plumbing, clerical work, teaching and catechetics, credit unions and Catholic family movements. The Papal Volunteers program was initiated last year by the Holy See to recruit laymen to work in Latin America on behalf of the Church. The special mission of the volunteers is to help train Latin American laymen to do apOllltGlic work.
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"There could be no more fitting place in our country," continued the bishops, "for the construction of this beautiful chapel to Our Lady of Czestochowa thaa in the majestic National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, located in our national capital and dedicated to the patroness of the United States of America~ We are deeply appreciative of the unique privilege accorded us to sponsor this chapel."
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StrorJg Reaction Opposes School Questionnaire FRESNO (NC) -
What would be your reaction if
someone asl~ed you thls three-part question: "Howmueh money would you want to (a) spit On the Crucifix? (b) eat a pound of human flesh? (c) desecrate a Church service?" This question is included in "2) Spitting on the American a test called "Measurements flag." "Which is worse: of Wants" which was given "1) Denying the existence of. at Ganesha Public High God? School in Pomona. "2) Laughing while the star The question and others about personal actions and religious attitudes drew attention here when the Fresno County Board of Education was asked to ban such queries from public schools without parents' permission. A minority report of the Citizens Advisory Commission to the Joint Interim Committee on Public Education of California, condemned this type of question in September, 1960. The report presents evidence ~ support its conclusion that California is using many different devices to test and to influence attitude and beliefs of lIChool children without the knowledge or consent of parents. The committee report listed examples of tests whicb. they considered objectionable. Religious AUitudes A questionnaire' on religiOUll attitUdes, said the report, asked the following OIl a true or falM buis: "Man has no IIOUI 01' spil'it. He .. just a superior animal wita aothing but a physical body." "Values are all relative. There He no absolute standards 01l. right and wrong." "Religion is merely a cruteh which insecure people rei, on." Another questionnaire, under the heading of "About Myself," asks on a yes-no basiB: "I'm afraid someone will hit me." "I'm afraid of. the dark." "Sometimes I have to s*l things." "I'm afraid of loud no......
InveatorT Tes4 The minority report takes strong exception to a «Moral Value Inventory test" wh~h conMined these questiODiJ: "Which is worse' "1) Spitting on the Bible?
Spangled Banner is played? "Which is worse: "1) Being a failure in business? "2) Being a failure as a father?" Fourill Grade
Some of these tests are designed for children in the fourth grade.. They are said to serve to identify emotionally disturbed children. The job of identifying rests with public school teachers, many of whom are not qualified to make a diagnosis of emotional problems. The matter of such questions was brought to public attention when the Fresno County Board of Education met to hear a petition by Mrs. Thomas K. PrestoB of Laton, Calif. She asked the board to ban such tests from the Fresno County School System unlelll prior consent 0If pare.nw ill obtained. Ia. repl)o, the eounty boaN denied that any o{ the te.t. meationed aa objectionable ill the minority report were heiD« uecI ia the county system. PareDt View In addition iDe county acbool IUperint~_lent, Walter G. Martin, said that aa a parent he would personally object if lOme of the questions mentioned were asked of his children 01' grandchildren. The board agreed to take the matter under earnest consideration with the view of makinr recommendations • the Sta.. Board of Education. However, Mrs. Presioll said that many of these questionnaires are purchased by the schOOls or by teachers directlT from institutes and testing organizationa without the knowledge or approval of the eountr school board.
Detroit Sisters Try to Set Aside Trust Fund for Orphans and Aged DETROIT (NC)-Micllipn's Attorney General Paul L. Adams asked the Wayne Circuit Court to dismiss a suit which attempts to upset a million-dollar bequest to "Protestant, Catholic and Colored orphans and old people." The donor, William J. Hartwig, Detroit industrialist who died in Dec. 1941, left $710,225 in a trust fund. Income from the money has been distributed equally to religious and racial groups since his death. Over the years the fund· has grown to an estimated million dollars. Claim DiacrimiDation The will stated that after 20 years the principal should be liquidated equally to the beneficiaries. The request would be fulfilled at the end of this year. Administration of the will is being conducted by the Detroit Bank and Trust Company, the Wayne County prosecutor and the Detroit Community Trust. All three are named defendants in a suit brought in Wayne County Circuit Court by Hartwig's four daughters, Mrs. Esther Holzbaugh, Mrs. Harriet Sherwood, Mrs. Evelyn Johnston and Mrs. Marian Johnston. They charge the trust is illegal because it discriminates on the basis 'of religion and color and the beneficiaries are "too indefinite." Their suit asks that the administrators be restrained
Teaches Theology NlJMEGEN (NC)-Dr. H. van der Linden, a former minister of the Dutch Reformed Church who became a Catholic in 1960, has been named a reader (assistant professor) in ecumenical theology -at the Catholic Universit!y of N';megen here ia tIM Meu.erlands
from dissolving and distributing the fund and asks for an accounting of all money in it. 20 Year. Late Attorney General Adams, contending the trust is valid, has asked Circuit Court Judge George E. Bowles to dismiss the case. Detroit Prosecutor Samuel Olsen declared that if the sisters had wanted to contest the will they should have done so 20 years ago. The Detroit Community TrUitt in answer to the suit, declared that the sisters had received approximately $400,000 1rom the estate and had not raised 0bjections to tl:\e will earlier.
Scores Favoritism In Education Aid SYDNEY (Ne) Normaft Cardinal Gilroy has said the Australian government exercises favoritism by using tax money to aid government schools only. The Archbishop of Sydney speaking at the dedication of ~ new school in nearhy Central Bankstown, said: "While we view with satisfaction the spending of millions of pounds by governments on education, we cannot help but lament that the spending is exclusively on education as imparted in government schools." "All citizens," !be Cardinal continued, "are compelled to pay taxes from which the government spends money for the education of the children of onl)' some of the citizens. "This favoritism ~ the government toward8 some of .U. citizens at the expeD8e of other citizens .is clearly 1IJIfUIi . . Iboulcl be Nmedied.If
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J e sui t Declares West I·s At Fault For Red Spread
'ftf! AN~-DtoceMof Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 7, 1961
NOTRE DAME (NC) Father Louis J. Twomey, S.1. has told the 12th annu&l Christian Family Movement
==0
convention that "pessimism hall no place in a Christian's Life." The director of the industria! relations institute at Loyola University in New Orleana placed the blame for the 44year spread of communism 00 the anti-communist West in hill talk at Notre Dame University. "Communism is certainlykl be damned," Fat her Twomey emphasized, adding, "And we will not rid ourselves of the guilt by shouting, however long and loud, for communism to g0 . to hell. Nor by joining anticommunist organizations whose ends and the means employed to reach these ends are at variance with the clear teachings G1 the Church." Appalling Record Father Twomey stressed the West has fallen down in its fight against communism by failure to heed the advice given in the papal encyclicals dating back to Rerum Novarum issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891 and including the recent Mater et Magistra encyclical of Pope John XXIIL "But who has listened to the little old man in the Vatican?" Father Twomey asked. "For' the most part not even we Catholics. And with what result? Read the appalling record of· the past generation and there you wm find an incredible listing Ol! wars and rumors of wars, ~ injustice and uncharity on III global scale, of man's inhumanity to man in an unprecedentecll degree." Interracial Justice Fat her Twomey declarecll Catholics will measure up teD their responsibilities only when they heed the advice given by Pope John in his recent encycli,:" cal..,.--"We affirm strongly that Christian social doctrine is am integral part of the Christi. eoncept of life." The Jesuit asserted CatholiCIJ In this country have aided th€l communist cause by their failure to promote interracial justice. He said: "For non-CatholiClJ to indulge in racial injusticea and uncharity is serious enough. But when Catholics do it in defiance of the clearly enunciated teachings of the Church, we are up against an aberration ~ b'ightening proportions." Fat her Twomey upbraide<l Catholics for opposition to the United Nations and its varioulJ agencies. He pointed out that recent popes have thrown theh' Bupport behind the UN. immigration Law. Another target of the Jesu* was the U. S. immigration and nationality law, popularly known as the McCarran-Walter Act. He said: "Whatever else may be said 01. this act, it cannot be denied that it sponsors a racial theory of Anglo-Saxon super'ority." The' Loyola director pointed out that one critic of the law asserted it "recognizes only one mortal sin, that of not being an Anglo-Saxon." There is no valid defense for the racially restrictive provisions of the law, Father Twomey emphasized.
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'Volume No. 0 e. flOW on lale. Each week for the 0Ie1lt fOllr weeb. a flew Volume will be placed on lIale. Then. two new Volumes'will be placed On sale ~eell week, until ell 20 Volumes have been made ovell6ble to our customers. The complete set will h available by the end of November. in plenty of tllM for Christmas gifts. Melp rOllt Boy or Girt in 5c"00'- and Get til,,' Huge Bonus of S & HGreen Stamps to Fill Your 100. Fester. Get Free .Gifts Sooner. Visit your. Mlrest ~rot Notional Store for eompfete detail..
Bishop Foery Pleads For Traffic Safety SYRACUSE (NC) - Bishop Walter A. Foery issued an appeal for highway safety to the fai~~ ful of the Syracuse diocese, particularly in view of the accident record of Labor Day. "It must be emphasized," 1Jbc Bishop said, "that highway saf0ty is a year-round responsibility. Emphasis on holiday weeken<hl does not mean to imply that care and vigilance ape unnecessa~ at other times. "Traffic' safety ia a moral 00sponsibility and as s.uch always obliges. Behind the steering wheel of an automobile we are cel'ltainly o.ur 'brother's keeper! Love of neighbor Is never mOM binding than on the highwaI;\. God's Fifth Commandment"b4lbades death on the l'oads."
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THE.ANCHOR-Dioce,se.of Fan·Riv.er~thurs~ ,~ept·.,·7" 1961
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Fall Activities
The Pari§hParade .,',
ESPIRITO SANTO. IN FALL RIVER: "Hi, Father," says 13-year old Patricia Pacheco as she stops Father M.anuel Andrade, curate, on his way to· the parish school b.uilding. John Costa jockeyed into position to shake hands, too, with the assistant priest.
IMMACUlLATE CONCEPTION. SS. lPETER'AND PAm.. FAU, RIVER FAlLlL RIVER The Women's Guild and Holy The parish will sponsor a parName Society will co-sponsor an ishola Wednesday,Sept. 27 with auction at 7 Saturday night, Mrs.. Raymond A. Dooley Wl Sept. 23 in the parish hall. Cochairman. chairinen are Gerald Cloutier ,ST. lPATRlICK, and Mrs. Harold Ward. JosephFALlL RIVER McManus will be auctioneer. The Holy Name Society will ST. ROCH, offer a variety show Monday, FALL RIVER Oct. 16, featuring selections by A fashion show is scheduled the boys' choir of the parish. for Thursday, Sept. 14 at White's 'George F. Curry is chairman of Restaurant by the Council of the event and Edward Smith is Catholic Women. Mrs. Ernest director. Gagnon and Mrs. Ronald Fortin, S'll'.AN'IrHONY OF PADUA. co-chairmen, announce t h a tFALL RIVIER' . State Sen. Mary L.Fonseca will The Council of Catholic Women be commentator. .will hold a style show today at SACRIED HEART, ,White's restaurant. NORTH ATTLEBORO .ST. JOSEPH, ' . : Ladies of Ste. Anne will meet FALL RIVER In the church at 7:45 Tuesday Mrs. James Bradshaw and Mrs. night, Sept. 12 for prayers. The Thomas Considine are co-chairreligious observance will be fol- )l)en of a whist party to be held lowed at 8 in the parish hall by at 8 Wednesday' night, Sept. 13 a guest night program with Mrs. in the parish .hall on Brightman Clarence Fisher in charge. A Str~t. Proceeds will benefit the reception for Sisters of the par- parish CYO unit. . ish school will be held Tuesday, OUR. LADY OF LOURDES Sept. 26, also in the hall TAUNTON ST. MICHAEL, ,A clamboil will be served on FALL RIVER, . Sunday, Sept. 10 for the benefit of the school building fund. The annual parish celebration, Chowder will be served at 1 to ,be held the weekend of Sept. o'clock followed by the clamboiL 29 through Oct. 1, will mark the Adults, $2.50 and children under 31st anniversary of the construc- 12, $1.25. . tion of the parochial school. Ac- ST. PATRICK'S. tivities will include a ch9iroIa, , FALMOUTH bazaar and solemn high Mass on. .The 'second annual social and Sunday, followed by a street dance for parishioners of 81. procession. Patrick's and of 81.' Thomas ST. ANNE'S, Chapel will be held at 8 Satur-
Urges. Routing Out Memory of I nfatuoltion F~~~ ~~;RName Society has~~el~~:~o~~hT~~;~s. Ga~lea By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.
to follow, Chloe, take a good will lead you to believe that you scheduled its annual Communion Co-chairmen are Mrs. Richard look at your relationsh~p to th.is are giving .up something m~re breakfast for 9 Sunday morning, Pratt and John Farrell Assistant Professor of Sociology ma~., You have been smcere 111 th~n the enJo~ment of your ml.8- Oct. 8 at White's restaurant. It ST. STANISLAUS, . at St. 'Louis University facmg the fact that you· are gUIded affectIons. ,will follow 8 o'clock Mass, and FALL RIVER not good for each other. Why Don't fancy yoursellf an un- will feature Atty. Ted Kennedy A county fair is planned for "I'm a married woman with then do you find it so difficult fortunate. victim 'sacrificed on as guest speaker. this Saturday by the Parentf i V e wonderful children. to get him out of your mind? the altar of monogaml'· You al- ~~~E~D r 'Teacher and Alumni Association. 'r ago I fell in Is it n.ot because you are quite lo~ed your feelin.gs to run away Mrs. Alice Grom~da is chairman. Abo u t . a yea . unconscIously perhaps,' desper- WIth you, and fmdinlt the ex·The Catholie Women's Club love WIth a marrIed ~an. It ately clinging to the feelings and perience flattering and exCiting, will_hold its first meeting of the Relief AdminBstrator was mutual. When we dlscover- sentiments you experienced in you are still nursing your mem- year on Thursday, Sept. 14, T ' . ed what had happened"we stop- this relationship? ories. .' _ Dorothy DowerwiUdemonstrate ' 0 Serve in Congo ped seeing and calling each What were these feelings? ObTake an objective view of the that, "Hats can be, made from ' .... NEW YORK (NC) - Father other, but I can't get hi~ out of ; viously there was' a big boost affair-lOOk at it as if it had "anything." . Roland Bordelop, former pastor my mind. Although I've co.nfe~ to your self-esteem, since it is happened to a neighbor and you Refreshments will be served .o~ 81. Alphonsus churCh, Hesssed it many a 'flattering experience to feel will' see it in'its shabby, unro- . by' Mrs.·.Betty K~ and her Iller, La., has ,left from here to times, I fe~l that one is attractive . and 'can mantic context. . ·committee. . . '!lerveas temporBi-y program dirawfully guilty. '. mean so much toanQthez" , 'LOve 'Requires.Erfori .. ST~ LAWRENCE" 'edor In the COngo for Catholic Is this a sin......:. • ,There .was an element of.sex. . , . '.' . ; . ....; NEW BEDFORD·:' "'". '....,., .<. ·Relief··Sei-V,iceif:..:::-Natlon81 Cllth,riot wimti~g }o,~:.,fqr you. were.at~acled to; each',' . At JI.larr.Ia,~e y~u':p'~l~dged not The Couples Club will attend olicWe~are·Conference. .,other as a man' .and ~. woman."O~I~.fId:~hty .J:>,~t~oye, .an~. _af- 9 o'clock Mass Sunday moming, Father Bordelon, the second t h ink about ' him but still There was an element of.,;nov- fectio.':l' ,l:Il;lvEl, Y.pu af_ a couple" ,·".Sept. 17,and,receive corporate :'pril~st, to· be released- for work doing' it?,. How, . elty and excitement, increased taken your love for., g~a~ted?; Do;.; .-,Communion. ·.·That:' evening' a" ':with·c.the' overseas' relief· 'agency . ,do you fall,,()ut,.',n'Odoubt by,.. th~' fac(theaf.filir,' yO~.tr~ ?~?~~e,an.cJ do things, cComJJ:lunionsupperwill.be'held.-;'·by·Bishop :Charles P. -Greco of , ... of.lo~i~?'1 . ~,. . . was secret., " ,'.: . , . ,. . togeth~., .,.-: .' "., ",?at·7:15·,aF:Stev.enson's,Restau-·;;c.Alexandria,·La.,. will' administer You're 'suf- . '. There 'm~y also' have been an . ¥~rItal loX~'. .~ven, ~a~d on a,. rant, Westport.·,rro·be featured, ·distribution oireliefsupplies. He fe~illg ,from" a' element o~ venturesomeness and Sacrame~t~l.• ~?,I.!d, requ~es ef- will, be, installation'-Of'new o1£i-': f wiHbe'·statione'd in Leopoldville. severe' at'tack reileilion, for. what ':.spiI-itUal __fort .a~d m.lbatp~~, ~et yqu must cers by Donald Sciscento. The other Alexandria priest is of infatuation writers call the "monotony ofadnllt. ?Ilrlng thIS. laS]~ year at Mr. and Mrs'. Willis Goodwin" Father Joseph B. Gremillion, , rather than love, Chloe, and the being good" leaves soine' people . least yOU!, c.ontrIbutlon . must· are ,Sept~p1~ chair1!1en for the socio-economic director·for eRStwo are' not the same though vaguely restless and receptive have, b~n largely neg,atlve:, group. ,', ' . ' . " .,. ·NC~C. ' , they have several symptoms in to' new experiences. common.' Trouble Within Self ,True love between a man and How can you get this person woman is an evolving process, out of your' mind? You have' based on mutual affection and taken the first step, of course, attractioI:l, and gradually grow- by refusing to see or talk to him. ing through a shared experience In line with this, you should also that enriches both partners be- get rid of. anything' in the way cause their unity enables them of letters, pictures; gifts, .and so to reach a fulfillment together on, that might remind you of which they could not realize him. alone. But these initial steps are not In oth~r. words, love can be enough, as you have alread1' real and enduring only if the discovered. The reason is that lovers are good for each other. you have 'not touched the root Short-Lived Emotion of the trouble, which lies withInfatuation also involves at- in yourself. traction' and affection, but it Why not face the fad that is unconsciously self-centered, this experience Included many self-directed and demanding. It personal elements such· as the tends to be short-lived precisely feeling of increased self-esteem. because it is not nourished by success in allurement, excitea continuous, mutual exchange ment and so forth, which you of love; indeed, in some cases thoroughly enjoy and to whick it is a wholly one-sided affair. you are still clinging? You cannot get this man out . Hence infatuation tends to ., j burn itself out quickly if the of your mind because you have .\t partners are together very long, not rejected the pleasurable sen'" .',~; for each is seeking to enjoy only timents and feelings related to 'I his own feelings in the exper- your experience with him. Reience, and the initial glow of member Chloe, the whole affair '. pleasure has nothing upon which and everything connected with to feed. it was illicit. On the other hand, infatuation Romantic Mountain may persist if the partners are Don't make a romantic mounseparated, since through mem- tain out ,of this emotion-mole ory and imagination each can hill. All you experienced was a continue to enjoy his self-cen- case of mutual attraction and aftered to enjoy his self-centered fection that you allowed to get feelings without experieneing out of hand. It could happen the rude shock that would re- again with others if you' permit DOLY CROSS nil FALL RIVER: "How do you like my new briefcase for my books ?" sult from the discovery that in yourself to become easily en- !~q~ire~' seven-year (lId third grader Linda Strojny of Father Vincent Wolski, O.F.M.Conv. reality each is seeking only,him- volved. I hke It very much,," answered the Franciscan.. Taking ~ cll ill is Bine-year e1d 'fifth self. Don't caD It love, fw this grader Peter Gancar~lki. , If, this analysis seems difficult, tiUe. disguises its real natw'e and
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese' of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 7, 1961
The Burden Is Ours
IGod Love You
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By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.O.
How different things might have been! So often, after reading history, do we say this. Take, for example, st. John Chrysostom, one of the greatest saints in Church history. Famed for sanctity and eloquence, at the age of sixty he was sei2;ed by imperial officers at the instigation of jealous brethren. The moment his ship left the harbor en route to exile, he looked back and saw his cathedral in flames - the fire starting in the pulpit from which he so often had preached. Once in exile in a foreign land his mind turned toward the foreign missions.· He induced a hermit to forsake contemplation and put his piety to work in Phoenicia, Arabia and the Orient. He wrote to an abbot . urging him to send monks to pag·an lands, and to a wealthy friend urging him to support, the missionaries. Though a prisoner, 'suffering the most vile persecutions which led' to . his death, he was like Paul iii prison, seeking to bring Christ to pagan lands. If Chrysostom had been allowed to propagate the Faith as he desired; if his schismatic followers had loved the missions as they did intrigue, one wonders if Moslemism would ever have destroyed the Faith in those very lands. Had the foreign missions been mor·e Christianized then, the history, of the world would have been changed.
We are at a similar moment in history. His Holiness is begging us to support him, that he may send missionaries to Africa, Asia and other parts of the world. If we fail this time, not Moslemism, but Communism will take over these areas. While the government spends billions of dollars on foreign aid to save these peoples from Communist rule, what are we doing to save their, souls? We Catholics give an average of 27c per year to the Holy Father for his 200,000 missionaries. The government gives $66 per person in one country of Southeast Asia! Remember - what the world will be tomorrow depends on us today. Communism grows less by its o~wn propagan~a than by our neglect. As Our Lord told Pilate aBout Judas: "He that delivered Me unto thee hath the greater sin!' Pilate sentenced Him to death, but· the defection of an apostle was stained with the greater guilt. Oh! what a burden is ours! What responsibility! May the Holy Spirit inspire' you to not deliver Christ over to the modern Pilates in Africa and Asia. By sending your sacrifices to. The Society for the Propagation of the Faith you are supporting the Holy Father in his role as the Visible Head of the Church - the Church which seeks to be ever more catholic; to help and care for others in body and soul. .
ST. MICHAEL'S IN OCEAN GROVE: Susan Jenkinson and Roger Lizotte, two 13year old eighth graders, stop to pick up their books from Father Joseph A. Cournoyer, pastor of the Swansea parish school '
Laymen ,at
Continued from Page One addresS to a 'general session. He said that'there is "surely GOD LOVE YOU to J.S.K. for $2 "Enclosed please find $2 not much evidence of real faith" for the Propagation of the Faith; I saved up and hauled away in persons who prefer to send 1,000 Ibs, of scrap paper at 20c per 100." •.. to M.R.H. for $50 flowers instead of Masses to the "I am sending ·this for two favors received." ..• to A~M.A. for deceased. $104 "Enclosed is my month's social security check. 1 am sending 'Laymen Must Lead' It in grateful thanksgiving for ten years of an active and normal ,Father Alexander O. Sigur of life after a cancer operation; and for the fact that 1 am 'still' able Lafayette, . La.,. sllggested that to hold.a responsible pollitlon 'at the age 01 73." laymen who think they don't have .an active enoug~. role in , the' Church should spend more Send us your old gold and jewelry - the bracelet or riiig you . time blaming " themselves than no longer wear, last year's gold eyeglass frames, the cuff links the clergy. " you never liked anyway. We will resell them and use the money '~You ought to drop .the~inly to aid the mis9ions. Your semi-prec!oUS stones will' be winning veiied 'Father's at fault' routine precious souls for Christ. Our address: The Society for 'the Propa.".. Laymen must lea<i, Qe e:ngation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, New York. gines,'notcabOoses," he said Dr. J. C. Wnike of Cincinnati t> said: that there' is an "almost Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it. to .the total lack of real Catholic action in most 'IllY organizations today." Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director' of the Society for , the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N, y .. He urged that members of traor yOUr Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, ditional lay organizations-and 368 North Main Street. Fall River. Mass. the organizations themrelves-
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be reeducated to take, "~heir true place as a~tive, working members of Christ." Msgr. Martin B. Hellriegel of St. Louis said that the Mass should be made the center of spiritual retreats. .
"Not only when we are engaged in religious or 'apostolic' activities, but in everything we do, we have to proclaim 'Christ in us, our hope of glory' to a world losing hope in humanity along with faith in God," she said. "We do not have to show that we are perfected Chris'tians, but that it is suptemelyworthwhile trying to become such," she added.
Wrong Emphasis He said ihat this is "not the case at "present" imd that the emphasis, today rests rather on, 'retreat master' and 'conferences...·"· . it "":':'from . a theological. L'it!1rgy in' Engiish pastoral viewpoint-good judgeDr. Joseph Evans of Chicago mentto have for three, four days .. urged adoption of English for, a .very, 'low' Mass and then close', ,the liturgy as a means of prothe retreat with 'an elaborate . m~ting the teaching mission of 'holy hour'?" he asked. . . : the Church. Mary Perkins Ryan of Goffs-Noting that St. Pius X detown, ' N. 1:1., a member of' the scribed the liturgy as "the great Liturgical' Conference board of 'and indispensable source of the directors, told a general session' true Christian spirit," he comthat Christians "all are inescap- mented that by this definition ably on trial before our neigh- the liturgy is "the great teachbors, before the world." er." '
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ST. JOSEPH'S IN TAUNTON: Very Rev. Patrick H. Hurley, pastor, inspects a brief emlse being used by, 12-year old 'seventh grader Micha:el Botelho as Patricia, Cooke, a 13y~ old eighth grader, smilingly assents approval of the idea.
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De~Qney Says 'Made Up Own Mind'
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs:.Sept. 7, 1961
On federal Education ·Aid Vote
NEW YORK CNC)-J~mes J. Delaney of New York says he . did not contact any member of the hierarchy before casting .bis vote which bottled up the major bills for Federal aid to educa· tion. -"I did not consult any member of the hierarchy before making up my mind how to vote in the Rules Committee, nor did any member of the hierarchy attempt .·-to get in touch· with me. I made up my own mind," he said . Use All Alike The Congressman, who has ·been acchsed in some newspaper editorials 'and elsewhere· of casting "the Catholic vote," made· his statement in America, a national Catholic weekly review. Rep. Delaney cast a decisive ballot in an 8 to 7 vote by the Rules Committee to shelve all Federal aid to schools proposals.· The committee's assent is needed to bring maj or bills to the ,floor 'for debate. Usually an administration supporter, he· voted against · large-scale Federal grants to public schools and other Federal , aid bills. He charged that massive aid restricted to publie schools was discrimination - against private schools. In addition to the $2,484,000,ST. JACQUES IN TAUNTON: "It's nice to be 'back," says 13-year old Rita Menard 000 public school bill, his vote Father F. Anatole .Desmarais, pastor, as hel" eighth grade classmate, 12-year old Roland &lao held in, the committee a ·
to Masse listens intently to the conversation.
DD b rt J D Ro e . wyer, . . Bishop of Reno
Weare the monarchs of all we survey. In a truer sense than any of the world, h conquerors, we moderns ave at our disposal vaster stores of the earth's trea~ures than have eve r bee n amassed in any place at any time. . Nap 0 leo n stripped. the palaces . a ~ d. monasterI~ of ~talr'dand even u t: : ~ way e our ronze horses of San Ma~co, to ma~e ~aflS t~e artIs. tiC· capItal o:f the world. hHItler f se~ out to prove how mue 0 a mllquet.oast Napoleon. was by comparIson,. and 9u~cee~ed h~wever brI~fly - In. hIS dublOus enterprIse. .Yet b~th of them toget~er, WIth Talleyrand .and. Goermg thrown in' fo" goo~ measure, ~ossessed only a fr~ctlon of what IS ours for the havmg. Panorama of Art Today all we have to do is w~l1~ d~wn the street to any public library to hav~ set before us, throug;h the medIUm of excellent prmts, the whole panorama of. h1;1t;nan ~rt, from the most prIm.ItIve tImes to the most startlingly conte~l?orary: These are not the orIgmals, It is true, but the difference, for the most part, is .frankly: negligible, and the convenience more than makes up ~or any I . , O~ith our modest means we can make our own selection of the great paintings to lend distinction and character to our homes, be they mansiontl of only two-room apartments. . ., Best ~ ~usle ' . The same thmg IS true I~l the realm of music. The ArchbIshop of Salsburg emp.loyed the youthful Mozart as hIS concertmaster, but today' ~olfgang Amadeus plays for us In our homes at the turn of a switch. High Fidelity fans are as comtr' n now as baseball enthusiasts -and fare more unreasonable. in their demands. Travel improves the mind, doubtless, and Dr. Samuel Johnson is authority for the view that the Summer bonum of earthly delight is the prospect of the Mediterranean shore. Wonder of Photography Photography has advanced to . such a stage that one can ·spend hours examining the portals of Chartres without expo~ing one-
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self to the curio~ity of the gendarmes or the rIbaldry of stray urchins. 'Without discounting the advantages of ,the personal view or. the suddent impact of the reality, it remains true that the modern who must perforce stay at home is under no such handicap as plagued him in the good old days. He can discourse on the English Cathedrals wi·th quite· as much' authority as the rich man who has seen them and heard them explained by officious and abnoxious beadles. Museum With Open Walls The point of all this, as Andre Malraux has pointed out in his discursive and sometimes exasperating book,. The Voices of. Silence is what the world museum opened out all its w-alls. F'or'·th e f'Irst t'Ime In·' . h'IS tory the ordinary man, can know something of the universal art,· He has the tools to acquire an intimacy with the treasures of human genius and an appreciatic:) of what has been accomplished under its· inspiration. If he cannot possess them as personal property he can still store his mind with· their meaning and magnificence. No 'Sticks' Now Whereas in the past a tre-' mendous effort was needed to gain some acquaintance with even one particular field of art, now the whole vast ex,panse opens out before him. It is his own fault if he remains provincial in the sense of cut off from the knowled~ an<l enjoY-ment of the best. Potential for Good T'. h th Ime was w en ere were distinc.t ~dv~ntages to be gained fro,?, hvmg In some great metropolltan center, wh~re art treasures were gathered together, and symphony orchestras pl.ayed regular seasons, and the opera was an anual event; but today the actual difference between, say, Reno and New York is enormously reduced. There are no sticks now beyond our own divising. What all this spells out for the
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MWANZA (NC) - Over 130 delegates convened here on too shores of Lake Victoria for Ii regional lay apostolate meeting of East and Central Africa. . Bishop Joseph Blomjous, W.F. of Mwanza was chainnan of the meeting of laymen and clergy from Kenya, Uganda, Tanganyika, Nyasaland and Northena Rhodesia.
Despite Its nam~, GREEN GARDENS Is a place we don't want ,ou to see. GREEN GARpENS Is a leper colony In SBERTALLAY, SOUTH INDIA . . . Americans , who have been there came home bor· . rified, sick at heart. They had seell for themselves the. world's ugliest disease. They saw boys and girls, mothers and fathers-sometimes en· tire families - who bad lost their fingers and toes, ha,nds and feet. The~ saw hopelessness, dismay, suffering, . in the eyes of little children . . . it makes you wish Our Lord were OD _. uoly fJ _.L-'J MisJirm AifI ,earth toda, to cure the leper. ./UK fiI ramer J miraculously, as He cured them ta for tht Orimta/ ChIlf'Ch the Holy Land. It makes 'OU thank God for tho priests aRd Sisters who da, In, day out, live witb the lepers-soorifloe their lives to give lepers eDcouraremeDt, consolatioD, medical care. . . It's estimated there are 5-mlllloD . lepers ID the world todQ - but oaly ODe of twelve gets medical treatment. I'd leprOll)' ean be stopped; sometimee eured, by mealUl of modern mediciDe ... That's what our priests 1111111 Sisters are doinglB places like GREEN GARDEN8-carin. for bodies, aDd at the same time reaching souls. H only we bad ,more help, we could expand the work,. reacb more of the suf· fering 5-mlllioo. As alwaY8, we must depend 011 you, of course -:"the faithful _ders of this eoIWDD. Medicine b eQensive. and tbe lepers must be fed, boused aDd clotbed. Wbat wiD your· donatiou melD? Yoar $1, $5, $iO means food, a bed, 10m.. thlq to wear, 01' medlelDe, for 80IIMl iJatheUe leper. It. meaJlll FOU are belplag-Justu'if YCHI WeN washiDl' dishes or roJllq· balldaces iD GREEN GARDENS ..• Will you teD othen about oUr workT WiD you tell tbem tbe, can belp-by ofIerlq their prayen and bF sending a douationT WiD YOU tell tbem about .our . lDAMIEN LEPER CLUB-the meana by whlcb the, caD belp regularly? TtIe dues are onb $1 a montb (pennies a dan aDd a share iD your prQen. U yoe &lid 99 otben Jola our DAMIEN LEPER CLUB; we'D be 8ure of $1,200 more eacb ,ear. Imaglae bow we caD plan our budgets, Increase our work Immeasurablyl Perhaps you'll be able to organize a unit of our ·LEPER CLUB iD your ofllce, or amOD« your friends. Whatever fOIl do, you'D IN dotag it for le~and lepen touched the beart 01 Christ • • • Pie.. thin about our lepers, aDd 1M _ IIear fr(Jlll Foo right now!
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THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION ~ YOUR MISSION SOCIETY !'OURS ••• because lUI a member you make It possible to keep
priests and Slstel'l ill INDIA, JORDAN, SYRIA. LEBANON, IRAN, IRAQ. TURKEY, aDd ETHIo. PIA. . . YOURS ••• because through your prayers lOme 160-mUlioD ORTHODOX CHRISTIANS' will returll, please God, to Rome. lOURS ••• because wbat we OaD _ II determined br your ,eneroaltJ' and aacrlficeL Dear Monsignor: -Pleas. enroll me _ a mem*Naft)l .••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••
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welfare of hum~ civilization is breath-taking in its superb potential. It could mean an advancement 90 rapid and so satisfying as' to change 1Jhe entire aspect of normal livinl~. .It could people the €,arth with a generation of men and women possessed of a cultural breadth and understanding incomparably greater than anything imagined by the most apostolic of the utopians. It could br.ing nations and races together in a cornmon enjoyment of their "museum wlithout walls." Reverse Side Will it? The other side of the picture is the world at; war, the world· expending ills wealth and its talent on weapons o:f destruction, the world dividedl between those who believe in the spirit which gives life to luan, aDd those who deny the v(~poseibility of the spirit. ' We are caught between the promise and the threat,' between the wonder of the mUIJeurD and the imminence of its total destruction. We like those whose dream is ridden by ." nightmare. What will the awe&- . ening bring?
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measure to revise the 1958 Nationa! Defense Education Act which includes long-term construction loans to parochial and other private sc~ools ana a .pLa billion bill for college oonstruoYon. Catbolitlll Split "If and when the Federal government is to contribute to the support of education," he told America, "it should take our entire system of educatioD as it exists today and not favor one kind of. school against another." Four Catholics are membel'll of the Rules Committee. They split their votes. Two understood to have voted against tabling the Federal aid bills in the clos.ed meetings are Reps. Ray J. Madden of Indiana and Thoman P. O'Neil Jr., of Massachusettll. Elmer J. Hoffman of Illinow voted with Delaney.
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Stonehill College Continuecl from Page One will begin on Monday, Sept. 1~ after a solemn high Mass at 9 at the college. Four additions are being made to the college faculty this year, Father Cussen announced. Continued from Page One Dr. Frances Burlingame, who has been a member of the Wheaton College faculty, will join the stonehill faculty as a part-time member of the Spanish Department. • Joseph Chiccarella, who has been teaching at Fordham University in New York City, will join the Mathematics Department. Mr. Chiccarella is a graduate of Boston College. He did graduate work at New York University and studied in Rome under a Fullbright award. Francis Lee, a' certified public accountant of Boston, who earned his Bachelor of Arts degree at Boston College, will join the staff in the School of Business Administration. lit. Col. James B. McPharrin. who is currently doing public relations work at Fort Bliss in Texas, will become the college's public relations director. Lt. CoL McPharrin, who earned his Bachelor of Science degree at the Wharton 'School of Finance at the University of Pennsylvania, expects to join the college staff within the· next fortnight. Providenee College Meanwhile, two colleges in the contiguous Providence Diocese, are reporting increased enrollments this year. Providence College estimates tts 1961-1962 enrollment at 2210, an increase of 64 . over last year's student body. The estimated number at freshmen is 700, 40 less than last year, Sophomores number 630, juniors, 430, and seniors, 450. Salve Regina Salve Regina College will begin its fifteenth year in September with the largest enrollment in its history. A student body of 500 will arrive on cam pus during Orientation Week which begins on Sunday, Sept. 17 with' the arrival 'of the largest Freshman class in the history of the college-lOO students. . One member of this class wiD travel from California, two from Belize, British Honduras. Two Sisters from India will join the class, also. Two hundred ninet,' studen*, will be in residence. Sister Mary Hilda, R.S.M., J1l'i'esident, has announced the college will expand its residence facilities by leasing the home of' Mr. and Mrs. C. Thomas Claggett, . Jr., of Chevy Chase, Maryland, on Bellevue Avenue. The house, a Queen Anne style brick structure, known as "Wayside" will be named St. Joseph's Halt' and will have facilities with 50 resident students. Faculty Changes Six new faculty members will join the staff this year. Sister Mary Emily, R.S.M., new Superior of the Religious Community of the Sisters of Mercy who staff the college, will teach in the German department. Sister Mary Jeremy, R.S.M., will become a member of the French department and Sister Mary Ignatius, R.S.M., will join the Spanish faculty. Sister Mary Janice, R.S.M., will become a member of the Education Department. Rev. Christopher Johnson, O.P., has been appointed by the Provincial of the Dominican Fathen to the Theology and Philosophy departments. Wolfram Graber, former instructor in the Hatch School, Newport, will teach mathematics. He will introduce an Honors Course in the Mathematics Department this semester III Appli~d Mathematics.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 7, 1961
Rio's Urges
S~. ANTH?NY IN TAUNTQN: Out to greet the returning pupils at his parish school aSSIstant prIest Father Joseph Oliveira as he puts his arms around 12-year old seventh grader Charles Santos and ll-year old seventh grader Nancy Thomas. .
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18
As.~ert Social Principles Restore Order
OTTAWA (NC) - Christian social principles command attentwn as the only . . ones capable of restormg
order in society, the social action commission of the Canadian ·Catholic Conference - said in a Labor Day statement. "The study of these princlpies is the responsibility of all," the statement said, expressing the wish "that all may become aware of the luminous teaching of Pope John XXIII in his encyclical, Mater et Magistra." Papal teaching, the statement said, deals with all modern eco-' nO.~ic an.d so~ial problems. The directIves found there, so full of wisdom and prudence, are the only ones capable of reestablish~ng order in society and of assurIng to all peoples an era' . of' prosperity, joy· and peace," the statement asserted. 'Work With Everyone' "'Like Leo XIII," the statement says, "Pope John XXIII would make U6 ·conscious of' the need to work with everyone, individ,ual~, groups and public authorities, ·so as to resolve an evergrowing number of economic and social problems peculiar to our times." The statement observes in connection with the Encyclical: "Once more there is pity for
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the lot of workers ,even those in ~ndu9trj.~lized .countries, at least In certaIn ~egIOns and sectors of them. Their wages should be determined in jus tic e and equity... " . . The s.ItuatIon of th~ farmers also receives thea'ttentIo~ ~~ the Hol.y Father. The productIVity of thel~ ~or~ as well as their level of lIVIng IS too often bel0':'l' th~t -o~. a good number who lIve In cItIes... "Among all workers, a further extension of their right to unite would permit them to become better integrated into our society and to participat~ truly at ~ll levels of economic and SOCial life. They could thus be asso-
In University Post NEW YORK ('NC)-John A. ~onayne, 45, has been named administrative assistant to the dean of the Fordham University school of law. He retired.. as an inspector of the New York City Police nepartment to accept the post, having received his bachelor of science. and law degrees from Fordham, and two masters degree:s from New York University. .
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"Anothe~ p~oblem finds its true solutIon In the encyclical, Mate; et .Magistra, namely the relatIonship between a growing world population and the available .means of living. The basic solutIOn of this problem must not'be sought in. expedients which are contra~y to the na.tural order establIshed by God and att~ck the very source of human lIfe. "They wi! be found in new scientifi.c efforts on the part of man to mcrease his mastery over nature. The progress already realized by science and the development of new techniques open up unlimited horizons."
Open Seminary PONCE (NC) -Archbishop James P. Davis of San Juan presided at the opening ceremonies here of Puerto Rico's first major seminary, -"Regina Cler!." It hi on the grounds of the Catholic University of Puerto Rico.
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Continued 'from· Page· One Kathleen Judith Moore, daughter of Mr. 'and Mrs. Stephen T. Moore, and the siSter of Sister Stephen Joseph, R.S.M., resides at 399 Warren Street and is a member of SS. Peter and Paul Parish. A member' of the academy orchestra and the sodality, Miss Moore actively participated in both these organizations while a .student at the academy. Lynne 'Frances Basinger will enter the Sisters of Good Shep- . herd in Peekskill, N. Y. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Basinger of 812 County Street, she is a member of Immaculate Conception Parish. ·While a student at Mount St. Mary's, she received highest· honors .consis- . te.ntly and graduated cum laude. 'Among her activities were the gle~ .club, t~'e athletic: association, the Liturgical choir, the French Club, the Science Club, and the Mercian, the school newspaper. Miss Basinger receivedcertificates of member':' ship and merit in the Frerlch Honorary Society. the Diocesan Science Fair, and the' Auxilium Latimib. Michele Pomfret, the daughter of Mrs. David B. Pomfret and the late Mr. Pomfret, will enter the novitiate of the' Sisters of St. Joseph, Fall River. She resides at 120 Read Street, Somerset, and is a member of St. Louis de France Parish. A glee club member, she also belonged to the Mercycrest staff,Science Club, th'e sodality and the Litur-
VI or~<tl1
H@~~ Pope SBrt~dJ<Qry .
To
0,
. VATICAN CITY (NC) The' 80th birthday of His Holiness Pope John XXIII will be celebrated with special honor on Nov. 4 with acts of homage from Catholics the world over. 'The Pope's· actual birthday anniversary is Nov, .25, but observance of it has been moved . up to the Fourth, the date of his coronati~n three years ago. 'The' .Bishops' of . Uk entire' world have been u'rged by alIthorities of the Holy See to ask their faithful to offer special prayers for the Holy Father on his '80th 'birthday, on that date. Birthday 'Mass Giovanni Cardinal Montini, Archbishop of Milan, will celebrate a pontifical Mass in, St. Peter's on the morning of Nov. 4 in the presence of the Pope. Cardinal .Montini is celebrant by' virtue of, the fact that he is the first cardinal to be created by the present Pontiff. The Mass is to' be attended by a number of official delegations of various governments . which have relaST. JOHN TliE EVANGELIST, ATTLEBORO: Rev. Thoma'sF:. Walsh shake~ hartds tions with .the Holy See. . with Deborah Rerrins, 10~yearoldfifth grader' and James McIntyre., nine-year old fo.urth Many large pilgrimages are scheduled to come to Rome. to grader. . . " . , . ' ." '. -..' " ' . pay homage to the Pope durmg' . ; . ..'
~:.~7~~~:; ~~~~~i~:~~~~~~~: EX'plains "C:()n·trover.sial .~~o~i.cili~a.t~C;)I'~,,·:<:.:·.giCal choir.
By Msgr. . . ' of gr0i.!ps, .mo~em.e,nts, l,lssocla-. g~l,lye.;\eYIl and ,dlstur~an,ce .()f . Appea~sFor G . ge. G H' ...., .. tions and' mstItutIons . '.' both nght .orde~ to assign t9 a greater . O·'f F d . R'd . ' .'. Iggms within single national commuri:':" . ana" nigher: assOciation ~wfiat i. . r~e I Director, NC~C Soci~I.AdioD ,ities' and on an' irl'ternationai 'less~t: ~ndsubordina(eor~ari~za:' DETROIT. (NC) ---: The Nadi~!ll M~ntin1. . . De.pa~tmen~.; '. .. . level.". . , ' . . .. .. :; ~i()Ps c3I),:-do,'!-,' ; . tional Cathoiic Conference' for . t C·en t er ':" '. ....:, 'Moral Order Limi.ts ..~. ,.~~hideS' ·Govirnili~. nt'.: Programs' Interr'aCial Studen ,Tl}em:ost. ~ldely.·pu1;>11Cl~.ed.· . . , r. 1 . . . . . ... . ",. ...' '. ". ,. .' . , ' .. . 'Justice. has a·p'peaf",.d .. . " ' ',"'. ' • and 1l19::tL.con.trpvers1;1 ;secr.. , . p'ope, Jqhn. s~ys .that ..':':~ll,le,: ._: !f,ne ;:. tl,1i~d" 'lIii~take is mor~' to· ·President,'· Kennedy.: to take ~mon~ othe;r.~vent~ ma~kmg:~tioJi of. PoPe 'Johri.xXIII's·sqciali~~ti~n:."res.tricts~~~leran~e :lP~~I(tP 1?e:,made ;bY,ultr~-co1.1-. steps for the:rel~.ase qf:imi>ris.the Pop~ s. 80t~ blrthd.ay ,WIll b.e new. social enc cHcal M..a ter. ..9f t. he IndlVld1;lill ,Its,. re~.ar. d.s l:l.IS. :~~~Yat;lyes.: ... JY~o.m~ert>ret the. oned "freedom rIders"· In JackceremonIes connected WIth the . . .'., '. . y - .. ! ... . . liberty of, actIon, It does. no~ . principle' of subsidiarity so rig- son Miss. building of· a ?h!l~~h and '~stu~ et.~~~~lstrh" .IS th~on~ ,?eal.l;g 'necessa~ily' reduce men. to. ~U.7 :.,;. idly·':·a,s.~ ·l!lino~.'.to .excl~d~ .the . ~hey should"be freed, arg·!.ied d~hts: h'ospitalIty.center.for s~ud ~\-' ,'; p Te~o.meI,lon 0 .. socIa - tomatons....·.. '., ' ...: : ' ,,'.. possi.bi~ity·~of. ~ff~ctivegovern- the. conference in aconve!1 t ion · dents. fr 0 Ill:. undeI:dev~~~?e.:. lZ3: IOn.. : ~:. _ '. "~9~on~as ..s?c;ialIz~tI~n c09.:-~ ',' m~ntal,.~fti?n.<.:<.",. , ' . . .' 'resolution:; becatise "they are 'un':' coulltrles Cos ts' have been un c o,n tr r.. '.. " fInes ItS' actIvIty wltllln' the '.'., . . .JUS . tl ycon "f'" '. . · " . .:' .. '.' .. . . , . ,..... . . 0' v ethO . . ' ,"_,'; ." :1To' "".,' maRe' WIS mistakewould lIled. and have 'acted ilerwritteh . by' the c~er~y :,and. 'sy t,O v e r f · t~~ limits 6ftlie'm.oral or~e~, ~l()h~ .. ·be: :tQ'.ignotethe· 'nunierous refentirely' within.their.Ccihstltu::: e laity of the entire ~or.ld; "'; '. . se~: l.0n. . 01 t: ·t . the, lines. " indiClite~,". ~ he. ~ ~on:"' . ' etenc€s:;'. iIi' :.)the :. encyclical ':to. .' tional rights "0; . ..' . • • '.. ,The Gatholics of.Rome inth~' . e,n.c~clI~,a s af~· . cludes,"ifdoes .riot, oUts: natUJ;e,."·; iegHim~te 'governmental ~ro'; . ' . . "" next few weeki; win be cane~'o~ ';';1~I1, t .e ~?~, eritailserious, da~ger!l C1f'restti<i':' ,";"grams ih't'he field ofsoCilil wei- - -..-----~_---1IIi . C'ar d" ma ·1 M" 'socIalIZatIon t'Ion t 0 the d·t· , ...and' .•.. " .reform.. , . " by ·.Clemente. '" Ica~a,. . '. . ' e rImen t 0f'In d'I;\'I'd'.-- .. fare social .'. ... .' . ". '. Vicar of Rome to ofrer' speCIal Itself.. '. . '. ual human .beings;\ rather, .It . . I' ...... - - ."," r t'h I. , .'.for the . ,.Pope:.'. ". Several ·com. t"em th' . r., ' . 1""1" ' n ..summary,. pr.ayers ". " ". . ., heI ps to p~omo em th~ ~~-:': . r' . '.' e·, new . l' encyt. . ,• . . Concurrently with the 'birth:" . mentat.ors..have pression and development of ".. c ~ca, In: ,~v..or~.!1? s?~~a IZ~ lOn, _ ' , ...• e da . celebrations,' the members already pomte.d: . truly personal, character istics; it . ~Ith t!t . ~ua~!.flcatI,on~ no~ed of yCentral Commission for the . out ~hat ther~ IS produces, loo, an organk recon~ -,: ~b?ye,.}s g~vI.n.g .ltS blessl!1g,. ~1l'St 'Second . Vatican Council w.i~l . no lIteral eq~u~. struction of· ~oCi~ty, which. o~~': fnd f96er-~st" ?1J~ not eXcl~s!ve'C9~mef!:ial • industrial ther in ROme for the second alent for thIS m . . . predecessor Pius XI in the ency-' ,~, t9. ou ~ary. 'p~ogramsln t~~ ..Institution,al ga . 'nf ' eeting' the official Latin text. The LatIn clical Quadrag'esimo AiUlO put . flel~' of 'soclal reform and SOCIal seSi1lO 0 m " 't t F th J h . F Cro'n' ' '.. ' . . . ..... ..' welfare~" During these meetll1gs the ex ......,..as a er 0 n ~ m., forward and defende.d as the m~.:: .. ... . : . " ." .. ~ Painting' and Decorating cardinals,'· patriarchs' .and arch- SS. of ~CWC: reported at. the dispensable 'prerequisite for ,the . Goy~r~m~?tal, .pr~gram~fo~ :-135'Franklin Street· · . biShOps and bishops belonging recent ~,onven:tlOn e,f ~he NatIona~ satisfYIng' demands' of soci~l_' .' exa~p~e! ~oc~a! ·~7cunty-.are:alto 'the' central commission will CatholIc SOCIal Act.lOn.. ~onfer- . justice,'.' . . . so ·c~,lllmen.ded m S? far as ~~ey l=alJ River . OSborne 2-1911' . T'h M" . t . . ta. t'i " . are In ·hal'mony -WIth the prm'th preparatory work of ence--uses at least fIve dIfferent s t u d y.. e . .... . h th E gl' h '. ree Ism erpre ons .... . 'I 'f' 'b ·'d· '. ·t· ' th ther preparatory commis- . expressions were·· e n IS. Th' th "bl s.· ~lP e.o . SU Sl larl y., translation uses one 'and the same ., ~r.e are ~ee .POS~I. e way. . '-..r;.-oi!'..::;.p::.....;;::;i;;=';;.•.~:r:.~~;;;;';iOiir . e 0 MAILING sons. .' . word "socialization." of:. mlsmterpretmg wha~ the ~p.cyclical has to say about soclal- ..1 .... IE·W· '. ENGLAND IN NEW BEDFORD 'Condemns 'Socialism' ization.· . ". ·1'" DIAL '3·1431 Continued fro~ Page One .In any event, the' 'important The first would be to confus,e .'. I ". ' ' , : ' .. : . . ' .' thing is to try to·discover what socializatio~.Wi~.h s?ci.aIism.The. '. I'····:.~· K Christian Instruction novitiate the encyclical. really. means by second, whIch IS SimIlar .to ~he" I ' ; " : , , ' .. . afte~ his attendance at Notre "socializati?IL'" . ·~irs~,. would b~. toeQ1;latEl' so~ial~. '•. 1 Ever:y Sunday - $2.C?5 .Dame parish school. He earned In the fIrst place-as many' Izabon exclUSIvely WIth govern. . "1 cl' . A L' ' L b his .Master's degree . at . St.' commentators discussing the en;;' . mental actfon. The ~hird would. ': .. IOC U . lilg~ .. Ive 0 .st~r Michael's College in Vermont cyclical. have'· pointed I ,out-' be to equate .so~ia.lization·.e:iccl1,l:,·' :, . . . ..." '.. THE. . .' .' ,., IN FALL RIVER and he did advanced studying in usocial~zation!':isnot to be con,:,' sivelyw,ith volu,ntary a<:1I011:·' by"! . .: DIAL 2~13'22 or 5.!6~q ·theology in. Jerse'y, England, i* . fus~ti wi~~ socia~ism .. ~ocialis~. nO,11-gov:rn.mental.organ~zabons~'~ Ca' sh'U'8:0 i' . F . h' . 1959.·. ' , ' . .' in th~ stnctsense of ~hewordll;l o~ ,a,ssoclabons; thus rul.In~··ou~" I . '.... g~ !2,. ...n 9~/, air. aven, PRINTING Four other. transfers affe~tmg 'condenuled. in ..the' encyclical. almost every.kind of govElrnmen-.:," :" ,.:- '. . .. .. members C!f the .Prevost .faculty," . What, then, is meant by "so;. tal action.' . '. - '.' ." ,~. '.' .' ~~~~"~~~~~~"':'~'~~~~~~'~"'!.., ""~'· n,....""~" have been ilnnounced. They are:· cialization?",' . , The first· two mistaltes are' .' . .. ~,~ot~er M?rcel,.from Prevo~t.., .. ·."S~c1aliza~ion,":i.~'_.t~~ . 'cont~~t m9re li~ely,io be·.~~de by':~~-. ~ '."~.~"'. : . . '~,;. '.. ~ to La lVI!'l.nna~s Prep,Alfr~d, Me.' . of the new. enCYclical IS under- treme lIberals. who do not. sup-;:.: • ",. ,> -...... " , .... . . .' .Br.ot.~er 'Roger Efi mund ,. ~rom -stood' .as the "progress~ye. ~u~ti':' scri~e. to t~e prin_c~ple '.of subsid-:-.~. '7 ~:~ ~.. • , • r ' . · 'P~ey'.O~t to DetrOIt Cathe~ral .plication of··relations .in' society, iarity,·accordirig. to whic:h'"it, is .... High School.· . with different forms. of life and gravely wrong ~. takefro~ In. " . -'. ... ..... . .: ... ~ '" . \ :.~'rotherS: ¥arcel,_ fr()m ,S~,11- ~ctivity,. and juridiCal institll,:" dividuals :what they c~n ,~c·cp~:-:. . )." "'OOMESTIC' .ri' HEAV:Y . O·IL BURNERS · ·forq; Me.; toP!,evost.·, . tionalization."··'\.· , plish by their own initIahv~. a n d . : . ~." '. .. . :Gt,' .: .. 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·:·~'SHO·P. SATURDAY
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THE ANCHOR-·
Students Should Give Witness To Ideas
Thurs., Sept. 7, 1961
Charities Groups In Joint Meeting
PITTSBURGH (NO) Delegates to the 18th COBgress of the National Federation of Catholic College Students were cautioned here that the tragedy of their generatiOIll "may easily be that you will die the death of a mart,\!' without in fact being one." The warning came' in the key.. note add l' e s B delivered ~ Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, convention host, in which he called the 550 students representing 160 colleges "to be living witnesses for the moral and dogmatic values behind the Christian concept of society." Archbishop John F., Dearden of Detroit, chairman of the Youth Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference, told the delegates that "as college students you hold the greatest promise for the Church." He reminded them they represented "something of particular value in the estimate of lq,ng range interests of the Church ill the United States." 'Educated Eliie' Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, N.H., NFCCS moderator, cited for Ute student. their responsibilities as an "educated elite." He said this involved not ooJy "thinking with the Church... but feeling.
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TOLEDO (NC)-The 47th .!lD.nual meeting of the National Conference of Catholic Charities and the annual meeting of the St. Vincent de Paul Society will be held here starting FJoiday, Sept. 22. The two groups will meet jointly on two of the convention d<lYs, Sept. 22 and 23. On the other three days they will hold separate meetings. The Comm'odore Perry Hotel will be the headquarters for the Cat hoi i c Charities meeting, while the St. Vincent de Paul Society will meet in the Secor Hotel. The charities conference will sponsor a series of workshops on Sept. .25 and 26. They will deal with such topics as the problems of institutional living; careers in Catholic Charities; the relationship of Catholic Charities to Federal and state agencies; youth; problems of the aging; ond adopt:ion.
SACRED HEART IN NORTH ATTLEBORO: "Just a minute children," says Rev. Joseph S. Larue, pas~or, "the photographer wants a picture." Obliging are 12-year old seventh grader Claire L'Homme and her ll-year old seventh grade brother, Bertrand.
Jesuit Discovers Fate· of Liberal Education
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy department has long This ~,reaclinginperi~th~ mony with the pulsing beat 01. believed that Robert I. Ganthe Mystical Body of Chrie& non, S.J., is'one of'the most which is His Church." Bishop Wright's point about . incisive and delightful ,of
School Remodeling Cost Is $3 Million
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LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Angeles archdiocese NNl ,spent nearly $3 million in leso than two years to replace or remodel older school buildings in keeping with new codes «1. design and safety. The total reported by the ellgineering firm of Beatty aoo CIaI' does not include funda spent by .religious orders on their own schools. . Los Angeles CQtholic schools expect to enroll about 167,000' students in 322 elementary and high schools this Fall. The total will- be about 6,500 above lam , year's figure. ' Los
that the liberal education Ideal Its ideal of scientism "began to obtained in all· Schools in thitl dehumanize 'the A mer i can country once upon a time. schools," and it went a long way Quotes Brownson in bringing a'bout chaotic schools Liberal education was stin in a chaotic society. pre-eminent w:heri, 50 years Fights Rearguard' Action back, Father Gannon· was in col..., There bas be~n rea..tion against lege~ But it had, already, been this, and sporadic attempts to martyrdom followed, his scoring speakers -and writers,' and has vigorously chall~rigedand'Wtil t if correc. They have had meagre of the eXcessive preoccupation regretted that Father Gannon 'ja- being rapidly 'undermined. . ,'. success." h ear d : rela'" . "'with getting things done." Extremely interesting ill III' Looking back~>D .a half-cen"We believe. as a nation that· tively seldom quotation . from a lecture by tury' of involvement ih higher the world can· be $lived by pro- and Wf'ites rela-' Orestes Brownson,tlle famous education,. Father Gannon sees a gJ:ams and by projectS." he de- tively little. It convert, almo~ 100 years ago. : steady retreat 'from truly human was with keen dared. "Our multiplication of Brownson was llPeaking· of ~ education. . . . . pleasure, theretask .forces is one symptom of influential lecturer, Frances "~tno point in the fifty yea~s this belief. But the fact is that fore, that his Wright, wi1ih whom he had i.or- bas there been a frontal attack. the world wi~ not be saved by . new book,. 'The merly worked. ' N o one of imporlance' has said:programs and projects. 'The Poor Old Li~ It was her ambition" he said, 'Aw."ay wi~h,.l;l1Jlture. Technology eral Arts'(Farworld is looking ~r an idea." "to get rid of Cbristi-anity, and,· Is enough' for '.J!S•. Away with i'M, Straus and 'Die for an Idee' . to convert our churcheS into' wil!dom.We':want only· facts.' CUdany. $4) halls of science~ The plan was, The enemy" has 'followed' rather "The tragedy of your genera- was received,' not to make open attacks upon the military tactics made famous tion," be continued, "may easily , with keen imbe that xou will ,die the death ticipation. that the reading of it religion . . . but.to establish. by the' ~acedonian cavalry, . . .. "L1ke fleet',C'horsemen they of a martyr ~it:hout in faotbeing was begun: NOw_ that the yead- , system of state'-' w.e said tional -schools; from which' all. have relied" .on an, enveloping one - certainly not in' the ,fun. Jog has been completed, it· can Famous foil' our Prime Yich theological,se!llfe. , be reported ·tha~ the' antieipation religioJ?, ,was to. be excluded, in movement, while .the ancient which n~~l.ling was ~ be taqght .phaliul5t'ot'theliberal arts has .. "For a. martYr is not a person was jUstified..~ " ' ~ except such, knowledge sa, is ' been :st~dily:.givirig g.,ou'nd. all Aged Charcoal Broiled who dies ~tthe hand 'of a tyI '.Jesuits' Dedica.tion verifiable .by-the senses ... We. these~ year,s,~. fighting -a ~ear Yant, but one who dies· for an ."Aa flhe t~tle indic-a'tes, FatheY Steaks - also Roast, idea, who bears witness to a Gaimon is C9ncerned' with the . were to,have godless schools·f9r, guard'actiQn' "the hardest of all revealed ·truth, who fully iinmo- fate' of liberal education, liberal all th~ childxen,' of, the count:r,- battles towi~:'" Beef· Sea 'Food ComPact of Wisd Wit Intes himself to truth:The martyr artS 'courses, the liberal arts col- .. tow:hlcb the parents 'w9~ld be compelled by law.to send them.'! . , . o~" .. in ona, who' recognizes that 'life lege, He has seen their fortunes J!>hnoOO~hY of NatMll'ali~ . The ~oregoing I'fla;y give :the Dancins Every:' Sat~rdav is vile if retained at the expense decline' verY ·'SadlyY. But he is . ., . impressIOn-that thiS Isa dry and 'li\IIi~e to ~he Music of or the denial of a truth." •. considering'· as well education in . Fra,!~es WrIght ~.!is not alone' gloomy book. It is, indeed rigThe person who understands' " general, the 'educatiori system of, 10 deslr10g such a change. F,ather orous in analysis, ,But it is the [Edcllie Davis anell ~is this reflec;t$,"the highest perfec- the Jesuits, and the education of Gannon names the fo.rces which very reverse of dull or depressOrchestra tion of human personality," the Father Gannon. led oth~rs to espouse·.lt. One .was ing. It is deliciously. flavored Bishop stated, '!so the Christ-like .. The Jesuits' dedication to lib- ~!te phl1?sophy of naturalIsm: with reminiscences. Planning A Wodding. Showor., Gaw. dignity of students who' stawll era' education is based, he says, . nature .IS the source of all, all Father Gannon has produced a ready to' die for an idea.'; quot Or Meeting-Call our BcinqlloO on two postulates: first, -"that all IS exp.lamed. by nature because book compact of wisdom imd wit. Dopartment ~or dotails. All Portioo ~ men have the same principal th:re IS no reason, to suppose the He believes passionately in the o y NaUlIt1~, Of:mety, ~ur.pose in life and that ~hat pur- eXlstet.Ic~ of ;,he supernatural C>\l' cause of liberal education, yet us ~on .... r bport Attontiow-CaU . urbane in making the case for it. To Hono'r. Prelate pose is discoverable;" secondly, the s~)lrI~ual. . ~hls view radlcal.lY altered tbe As a prime example of its worth', MAYFAIR 4-9888.,-4-9919 ~E":. YORK (~C)..,- Bishop "that all'. men have faculties Stanisl2.us V. Bona of Green Bay: . which are capable of being estlma~e .of m~, hl~ Jlowers, hie! hE: is himself an excellent argu91 Crrandall Rd. Tiverton, ltD. . ment foy its'retention and de" Wis., has been named to receive train-ed, group arid name, them goal, his very Idenhty. . It had a tremendous impa~ on velopment.· the Shield of Blessed Gregory X M you like &S long as they cover education, begin~ing w.ith the Crusader aw~d of the' national bZ:oa~y tl;te intellect and the colleges ,and eventually. extendHoly N;une Society .fc:r memberll " VillI. .. . ". . ing, to practically aU schools. of the hierarchy..," '. -, ' ,'. ~ ·the~e oonvl~tion~ and 8Im&, Most powerful. in affecting, Ii. The award will be presented the. Jesuits -are cby no means to the prelate 'next- Sunday at a unique. Father Gannon makes an change in American edu~tioJ;1al , ceremony in St. Francis cathe- .' inform1l1 ~ut inf.ormed excursion philosophy _and proced.ure waD cfrcll, ,Green Bay. He ,has been ~ 'bl An:Ierl~an, liistory to show Teachers- C.o~lege. at Columbia. longtIme worker on behalf of ll the Holy Name S o c i e t y . , . y ,The sh~eld whicl}. Bis~op Bona '" Will receive is made of sterling silver attached. toa mahogany 2666 NORTH' MAIN S1. FAll RDVre~ back. It will bear the"orms of WI· ::I: 'm, Blessed Gregory X, the pope who ~ iELEPMONE OS' 5-7992 commissioned Blessed' John' .of -ii Vercelll to have the Dominicans Q d.~ ::III . ~ . . promulgate the', Holy Name- 0 iii devotion. :M; also will beM U Z
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, \ ,THE ANCHOR-:-Dioce5e.. ~ FanR,'!~!hur~~ SeRf.7,-.1".. . . .. ,',~. "'. ~. ': ..... ':. . ' .... '':." , .~'~.~. '.' .~ ,
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, CATHOLIC EDUCATION FOR ALL:, ,The Immacu}ate Conception 'are: Pamela, Michele, Patricia, Kathl~en arid Janet. Bottom left: The parish' in Fall River has no parochial school but provisions have been" :whole gang~s in their,seats, waiting for the driver to give ,the signal that made so that every boy and girl who wants, to can attend- aCatholic' school, ' they are On their' way. Who hates school~' These faces don't indicate any this year. Father ,Edward, G.. Dowling"has ,purchased tWQ, busses' to 'such attitude. ,Bottom Center: Sister Mary Nathan, R.S.M., principal of transport the pupils to vadous Fall 'River schools. Top-left: Father,Dowling St. :Louis parish' school ;greets .four members of the' Caine family who blesses the 'busses while Drivers Henry Lajeunesse, left; 'and James ,Gillet- 'will be attending her school this year. 'They are: Leo, Eileen, Edward and 'watch.' Top Center: ~ Driyer Laj~llneSt3e 'rea~h,es',for the biiefcases of ' Maureen. Bottom ,Right: Sister Mary Pasclial, R.S.M., principal; left, and - ' ,'Deborah and J acquelineLomaa 'who will attend,:.the Dominican' Academy. Sister'Mary: Lauritaat St. ,Jo'seph's welcome thre~ Wiles children; Richar«4 They arethedaughter~ of Mr;. and Mrs.,'Joh:i1 Lomas ,of 332 County Street. : Marl~aret 'and !Nancy., children"of-Mrs.:Margaret ,Wiles 'of 32-A Hillside 'Top right: Five ,Pari see ,children;' 'daughters" ,Of t'Mr: 'and' ,Mrs. Armand ," Manor. Thuso!l~ p~ds:h' 'without':'a, 'paroehiaf.8chool solves the: problem, o~ 'Parisee of ,Blos'som Road 'will attend ':the Sacred ,He'art" parish' school; They' Catholic'edueation ,for 1tS"yourigsters.'" "': " , ' , ".' ,' , " :
Scholars Urg~lnd~di.ng;Name()fSt~ ~o$ephinP ..ayers of Mas~ ,-
. .... CHICAGO (NO) -A memo-praying as if all· depended:' Oft ' ,published, in English, French;', - randum, prepared by sch.olarS G9d, 'while we'attempt to ,work Spanish, Portuguese 'and ltaliap;. under international auspices aqd ,,'as if all depended on \Is;" he said. !Ie ,is vice presi~ent o:E.,the i::!t. published hi ,'five ,lan'gua~es ,",.' 'Five 'Sigliers ., "., -" ~o~ep'h Research and Docum~n:" argues for the iilClusion of 'the " :, ,Fath~r Fila~ is,oneof'tpe,fiv~ ,,~b0ll., ~~nter, MontreaL ' name 'of St. Joseph in prayers ,of ,signers, of, the 75-page' printed T, h~, ,memorandum' recom-, the Mass." ' ," " :memorandum, which has be,en Jllends that the namE! of St. " Father Francis L: Filas, 'S,J" Joseph be included after that" of chairman' of the theology' de-, P'ilg~image the 'Blessed Virgin in the Con" partment at Loyola University fitftSl r , tpe Suscipe'Sanda Trinhere, said the memorandum is ,itllB, (Receive, 0 Holy Trinity), aimed primarily at the partici'HUE (NC):-Some '40,000 PeO-, the Communicantes (Sharing the pants in the coming ,ecum,eriical pIe took part in a pilgt:image to memory), and the Libera Nos council, ' t h e shrine of Qur~adY of La-. (Del.:iver us),. , To the' question whether, there Vang herein central Vietnam, , I t notes that petitiom; on this ' 'is' any "practI'cal" purp'o'se' t'o be Ar~hbishop,Pierie Ngo;.ciinh~ subJ'ec'tan'd other de' l'ng , 'th Thuc of 'Hue, brother of Presi':' '. th h .- ,- , ,'fsSt, ' a ..1 h hWI ' served by including St" Joseph's 'dent, N'g'o-d'ingh-Die'in 'of VI'et'" ' e" onormg 0 : Josep ave name in the Mass' Father Filas ~een d~!-"e~ted ,to the Holy See by , . rep I'Ie d : "When d"d " t 0· ' nam,' presided at c'e.remonies,at b'I'shops. 1 ,prayer , . , . , and' the, faI'tWul sI'nce' God ever stop being 'practical'?' t~e shr me . Most ?f tne other 1815 . 'bIShops of free VIetnam made ", " ' Alld, when did theinvo,cation of ',' th - "1 . ' 1y, p gr "mag , ' , , ' , .. , ' ' , ', ' , I"n: 1870,I't" pomts out. short Mary and now' of Joseph ~op , ~. 1, 1, e." " " ' before the, adjournment of the helping the Churcn an(i ,the , ','rh~, sh,rme ,of" ~a-Yang, ,~a~, , firstVatican Council 38 eardinals world?" ' , , - "estaolished &uring.'the ~ivi!,war ,'and, 218 bishops joined in one " of 1787-:-1802. puring those years "This is no quasi-miraculous of petsecuti(m, the 9iitholic pop- "petition for this purpOSE:, At the ' 't0 th e wor ' ld' SIS, 'II b u t sa,me, ti.me 43 superiors general so1u t Ion u.la,ti,on,' f,ell, from 100,000 to ' a proper propor t"IOnIng 0 f 1't , IS 30,000. The Blessed, Virgin ap- asked that 'the Saint be named peared to a' g~oup of Catholics . Patron of.the Universal Church. T~ke who had, taken ,refuge' in the Pope ~ius IX responded by dense forest o{La-Vapg, She ad';' --;-; ~ vised them to stay where' they' ESSEX' (NC) - Brothers, Miwere, Those 'whO"foiiowed chael Yamazaki, O,M,I., and ,advice were !!ave<l Leonard Ihui, O,M,I" will became the first Japanese semin-' arians to take final vows as Ob~ BARBER'O~S lates of Mary Immaculate. " At the same ceremony Brother Richard Bonang, O,M.I" will make his final profession and ROUTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE. will become the first American Near Fairhaven Drive-In . "MADE FOR Oblate seminarian to attend Our Italian Dinners Our Specialty Lady of Hope Major Seminary PARTICULAR PIEOPIl.!E'" Service On Patio of the community in Tokyo, Japan. "
&10,000 in' To' V.·etnam Shr' ."'n'e"
Japanese to Final Oblate Vows
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PllZA· PAno, '
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giving to.. St.' Joseph this latter title., in' 1960 U:S. Catholics gathere'd, more than 100,OOO"signa'tures of priests, Religious and ' ' ,,
Korea St'udent$ H~id ' , Retreat, Discussions'.
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KWANGJU (NC) - Catholic University and high school stu~ dents from almost all of &luth Korea opened their' annual meeting with a two-:-day retreat at Salesian Boys Sc,l!ool 'here, " " T'he 69 gI'rls anq' 120.', boys ',~ the convention of the Korean Catholic, Studen'ts' Society then " '" dIvided into' study groups' for f,our days of discussion o'f comm,unism; the Church and,' Korea.
. laymen for a petition on incluil'·lng·St,"Joseph's name in the " Mass, prayers, 'On, March '19, 19~11, the Feast . of St, Joseph, Pope John issued ,an apostolic letter in which he proclaimed St, Joseph' protector of the coming ecumenical council. :' Developments such as these, Father Filas commented, make it "opportune" again to raise the question Of including the Saint'. name in :the 'Mass prayers., ' : "The Chu~ch now teaches, a~ in pr'actice 'venerates him as sec~nd only;to Mary," Father Fila., said,' "lience, corresponding honor !inould be paid him in the , Church's supreme, act of wor~hip," ' ,
F. L COLLINS & SONS GENERAL'(ONTRACTORS and ~NGINEERS INCORPORATED 1937
JAMES H.: COLLINS.. 'C.E.; • Pres.
, Registered Civil and structural Engineer ,Me'mber ~ati!mal Society Professiomil Engineers FRANCIS L. COLLINS, JR., l'r~ 'THOMAS K. C;:OLLlNS, Sec'y.
ACADEMY BUILDING
FALL RIVER, MASS.