Catholic Pupils Win Bus Rides
The Town of Berkley School Committee must pro vide transportation for Cath oUe boys and girls attending diocesan secondary high schools in Taunton as long as it offers transportation facilities to other students attending public schools i!l other communities. : This is the ruling of Attorney General Edward W. Brooke to State Education Commissioner Owen B. Kiernan. _ The transportation dispute ~rose during the hist scholastic year when Berkley refused to transport boys and girls attend ipg Msgr. James Coyle High ~nd Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton. Berkley has no high' school, It tuitions its high school pupils to a public regional high school in neighboring Dighton. Several Berkley Catholic boys and girls
State Education Head Directs Berkl·ey To Provide Facilities for T rasportation See Page Three for Opinion and Decision preferred to attend Coyle and Cas sid Y high schools but were denied transportation to those dioc e san schools, hence the protest which was carried to the State EduCMR. KIERNAN cation Commis- sioner who petitioned the Commonwealth's chief law enforcement officer for an opinion as to the legality of the town's Education Board action. The Berkley School Committee is obligated to provide transportation for private school
pupils to the same extent as for public school pupils even though the cost per capita may be greater for the private school pupils, Atty. Gen. Brooke has declared in a written legal opinion to the State Education Commissioner. "A school committee could lose its right to State reimbursement if it seeks to discharge its. obligation by paying a transportation allowance to the parents of school children instead of providing the actual transportation," the Attorney General sai4 in his official ruling.. "We are pleased that the Attorney General has so clearly defined the concept of equal
treatment which the Jaw requires," . said Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Dioc esan Superintend ent of Schools, when advised of the legal advisory opinion today. "In den yin g transportation to FR. O'NEILL private s c h 0 0 r children, the Berkley School challenged what we consider very basic rights of parents. Throu~hout the issue, the Berk ley School Committee has as serted their good faith in wish ing to observe the law ail they
A record number of ele. mentary and secondary pupils~24,600-were in at~· tendance i n 7 5 schools· throughout the diocese as the first bell of the 1965-66 year sounded yesterday.
"We have registered approx imately 5,300 in 12 high schools in the diocese," Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill reported today. "And, we have about 19,300 in 63 elemen tary schools," the diocesan su perintendent of schools said. Sister Marie Celeste, R.S.M.,
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 9, 1965 1965 .The Anchor
PRICE lOc $4.00 per YeM
'Diocesan Unity Board Swings Into Action
Bishop Gerrard to Attend Vatican ·Counc·il Session
CAPE COD SCHOOL: Rev.. Finbarr McAloon, SS.CC., pastor. of Holy Trinity School, W. est Harwich, and Sister Marie Celeste, principal, welcome Patrick Ritchie and Sharon Bouvier to classes 'at the opening of this new parochial ele~entary school.
Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Big-hop of the Diocese, and pastor of St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford, and Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chancellor and pastor of St. Michael Church, Fall River, fly from New York to Basilica of the Holy Crolla ia Rome on Sunday to attend Turn to Page Eleven 'Very Rev. Roland R. Bed'ard, M.S., provincial superior the opening of the fourth of the La Salette Fathers, announced today the transfer Appointment Session of Vatican Council II. Monsignor.Medeiros is a Vat Most Rev. James L. Connolly.. of the La ·Salette's provincial headquarters from South ican Peritus, an appointment re Ordinary of the Diocese of Fan bridge to Attleboro and the transfer of the 01'001"8 stu ceived from Pope John XXIII. River, announced today that :at. dents .of theology from the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Consi ireats and days of recollection. D.D. Bishop of the Diocese, plans dine, Diocesan Director of the Attleboro Seminary to study Rev. Armand Proulx, M,S., hu to depart for this session at a Propagation of the Faith and at the University of Ottawa been named superior of the Pro later date. . pastor of st. William Church, where they will reside tem vincial House. Ordained in 1955 Bishop Gerrard will join more Fall River, will act as Vicar porarily with the' Oblates of. in Grenoble France, the new than 2000 Bishops f!'Om every General of the Diocese dUring Mary Immaculate. superior has served as a teacher corner of the world in a pene Bishop Gerrard's attendance at In addition to 'serving as a at the La Salette Minor Semi tential procession through the the fourth SessiOil of Vatican provincialate, the building will nary, Enfield, director at Camp 5tceets of Rome from the Council II. Turn to Page Fifteell !lave facilities for priesb' l'e-
LaSalette Provincial House Now Located in Attleboro
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is principal of the new parochial school at Holy Trinity parish ill West Harwich, which opened ibl doors for the first time yester day to 138 pupils in the lower four grades. The opening of the Cape Cod elementary unit marks another milestone in the diocesan educa tional system. The Sisters of Mercy comprise the faculty at West Harwich where Rev. Fin barr McAloon, SS.CC. is pastor. The expanse of Catholic ele mentary school education on Cape Cod is also noted in the opening of a combination pre primary and first grade at St Peter the Apostle parish, Prov incetown. A total of 105 are en rolled at the new school which Turn to Page Three
Diploma Awards. For 37 Nurses Next Sunday
Three members of the newly-formed Diocesan eom mission for promoting Christian Unity have already met in Boston and swap notes with' committeemen from 10 other New England Dioceses. Present at the regional meeting were R·t. Rev. Henri, Hamel, chair- assembled group of priests, sis man, Rt. Rev. Thomas Walsh ters and laymen: "Our six states 'tch II and eleven dioceses of New End M 1 e, gland are so closely tied to each and R ev. Ed war' secretary. The meeting was other that we must of necessity chaired by the Rev. Charles work to~ether for our common Von Euw, a Boston Seminary ecumenical goal." These goals professor long active in ecumell- for Christian Unity w~re then ical work. Father Von Euw sum- discussed by the delegates in a inarized the purpose of the New four-hour session. England-wide conference for the Turn to Page Eighteea l
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Record Number in Schools
The ANCHOR Vol. 9, No. 36 ©
understood it," the diocesan school head said, adding: "Now that they have an au thoritativ.e interpretation, we trust that they 'will prove their good will by providing for these children without further delay," Commissioner Kiernan imme diately issued a directive to the Berkley School Board, advising its members that they are re quired to provide the same transportation to and from the diocesan high schools that it offers to other town pupils at tending the out-of-town Dighton regional high school. The opinion of the Attorney General stands a's the law for all Massachusetts communities if and until it ilii altered, changed or reversed by the courts of the Commonwealth.
Bishop Connolly .will J)r& side and the guest speaker wjll be Lt. Col. Phyllis J.. Verhonick; R.N., Ph.D. at graduation ex ercises for St. Anne's Hospi tal School of Nursing, Fall River, to be held at 2:30 Sunday after noon, Sept. 12 at St. Anne's Schooi Audito rium. Lt. Col. Verhonick h e a d I the Department at. Class Preside lit Nursing at Walter Reed Arm,. Institute of Research, Washint ton, D.C. Turn to 'Page Four
.ITA CAMPBilf
Sister Georgine Joins Diocesan School Staff The appointment of Sister Georgine, R.S.M. has beell announced to the Supervi sor's Office of the Diocesall School Office. A graduate of Holy Family High School, New Bedford, and Catholic Teachers' College, Providence, she is a candidate for the master of artll degree at St. Xavier College. Chicago. Turn to Paile Twelw
:'2
:··House·Votes New
Immigra.tion Law
,tHE ANCHOR--cDioeese of FdnRlver-Thtirs.,·'Sept.' 9, 19'65
Diocese of Fall RI'ver
OFFICIAL
WASIDNGTON (NC) - The Ho:use has ,passed the adminis ,tra,ti9n-:won,llored ,,~gratioD bill ;W~~h ,Would d() away w~th the, 41-year:-<>ld .natio,nal ori~ : ll~~tion. "" .'. ... .. , ~e measure w.asapproved~ a vote of 318 to 95' few hO\lJ'S ., ~r PrE.!si4ent Johnson called it . "an ~!!:ctr~p1E;I( iI:'IlpO~Ilt , p\~~ of leg:t$lation. . . A"si~ar bill'in the S~nate won approval from the JudiciaI'7 C9mmi~e the day after House action. , The 'House meaSUre eliminates provisions'in the 1924 immigra tion act, which restrict immigra tion from southern and eastern Europe. Critics of the law have argued that it had racial impli eations and was based on statis tics long out of date. Prtorb' to ChIldren The House bill will end the national origins quota system over a three-year period ending JulY 1, 1968. As a substitute, the U. S. would admit 170,000 "regu lar" immigrants a year on • first-come, first-served basis. Individual nations outside the Western Hemisphere would be limited to 20,000 immigrants' in anyone year. Besides the new quota ar FAMIL Y BLESSING: Father Mark Dittami, O. Carm., rangement, the House bill pro vides for a series of preference . . S 1M' h blesses his family following hIS FIrst 0 emn ass m is . categories that give priority to former parish, St. Michael's, Ocean Grove. Front: Cathlin . minor. children, the spouses or and Marietta Leahy, his grandchildren; rear: Mrs. Ange parents of citizens or resident lina Dittatni of West Medford, his mother; and Mrs. Ursula aliens, members of the arts or Leahy of Wilmington, his daughter. . professions, skilled and unskilled laborers, and for refugees driven from their country by political or racial persecution.
a
APPOINTMENT
Rt. Rev. Raymond T: Considine, Director. of-'the Propa gation of the Faith 'and Pastor of St; William Church, Fall River,as' acting Vicar General of the Diocese during the . . Period of Bishop Gerrard's presence at the FO\lrth Sessi~n
of ,Vatican CO\lDcil U.
~~/62--;;g.. Bishop ot' Fall River
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" .
Proper of the Mass Fourteenth Sunday After Pentecost INTROIT-Behold, 0 God, our protector, and look upon the face of your anQinted. Better is one day in your courts than. a thousand elsewhere. How lovely is your dwelling place, 0 Lord of hosts! My soul yearns and pines for the courts of the Lord. Gloljt be to the Father, etc. ]3ehold, 0 God, our protector, and look upon the face of your anointed. Better is one day in your courts than a thousand elsewhere. GRADUAL: It is better to take refuge in the Lord than to trust in men. It is better to take ~refuge in the Lord than to trust in princes. Alleluia, alleluia. Come, let us sing joyfully to the Lord; let us acclaim the God of our salva tion. Alleluia. OFFERTORY: The angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear him, and delivel'S them. Taste and see how gOod the Lord is.
For Closer Relationship
Illinois Priests Celebrate Mass Weekly
In Homes of Parishioners
Concelebrate Mass In Pavilion Chapel'
NEW ,YORK (NC)-A father and his son, both priests in the Mass will be celebrated in each ROCKFORD (NC)-Two pas COMMUNION: HSeek first the kingdom of God; and Byzantine Rite, concelebrated tors in the Rockford diocese be . district \lDtil a service has been things shall be given you besides," says the ,Lord. Masa in the Chapel of the Good held in all of the neighborhoodll live a new program is helping Shepherd in the Vatican Pavilioa to bring their congregations into within the parish bO\lDdaries. A social gathering follows each at the New York World's Fair. a closer relationship with parish Father Gregory Moneta. pu Mass, allowing' the parishioners life. Msgr. Thomas S. Green, of St. their guests and·the parish priest tor of a Byzantine-rite parish ill Kingston, Pa., and his son. Mary parish, Sterling, m., and an opport\lDity to become ac HOUSTON (NC) - May 0 r only ad hoc communication be Father Robert Moneta, assistant Father William Boland, pastor, quainted. Louie Welch and the Houston tween races and little with the St. Patrick parish, Dixon, m.. chancellor of the Byzantine Rite CFM Assists . City CO\lDcil have been peti real victims of poverty and dis Another' advantage seen in the Eparchy of Passaic, N. J .. offered have beg\lD to celebrate weekly tioned by three religious groups crimination. One tragic 'incident' "neighborhood Masses.'" program is the opport\lDity of . the Mass. • to establish a, Human ,Rights could provoke violence." The progiam, inaugurated by fered those \lDable to attend . Until 1928, priests in the East Commission.. Mass because of their physical ern rites in the U. S. were per Bishop Loras T. Lane of Rock ailments. According to Father John E. mitted to marry. Father Grego~ ford, permits priests of the dio One woman who had been un McCarthy, chairman of the Cath ordained in 1924 also has an cese to say Mass in homes of Qlic Council ort Community Re able to attend Mass for the past other son. Father Robert waa their parishioners. FRIDAY-St. Nicholas of Tolen lations, one of the petitioning ordained in 1951. The two pastors have divided 12 years in St. Patrick's parish tino, Confessor. m Class. groups, the request has been White. Mass Proper; Gloria; their parishes into districts made commented, "How wonderful this is'" I thought I would triggered by the. Los Angeles up of from 12 to 126 families. A no Creed; Common Preface. riots. ' never be able to hear Masa SATURDAY' - Mass of the again." The petition, noting that 25 Blessed Virgin for Saturday. In both parishes, members of per cent of the Houston popula IV Class. White. Mass Proper; the Christian Family Movement tion is Negro, said: Gloria; 2nd ColI. SS. Protus Helen Aubertine Brough
SEPT. 17 have assisted in organizing the : "Many have realized the ben and Hyacinth, Martyrs; no William H. Aubertine
Rev. Thomas F. McNulty, 1954, Masses and providing locations. efits of affluence. Their leaders Creed; Preface of Blessed Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bedford. Brian J. Aubertine
Area coordinating committees are educated and responsible. Virgin. SEPT. 18 have been appointed to make There is general lack of law~ess OR Spacious Parking Area Rev. Luke Golla, SS.CC., 1945, personal invitations to the Cath ness. Hate groups- such as the SS. Protus and Hyacinth, Mar Seminary of Sacred Hearts, olics and their Christian and WY 2-2957 Black Muslims, KKK and others tyrs. Red. Gloria; 2nd ColI. Wareham. 129 Aile" St. New BedfDrd non-Christian brethren in their are weak. Blessed Virgin for Saturday; SEPT. 19 respective neighborhoods. , "On the other hand, frustration no Creed; Common Preface. Rev. Hertry E.S. Henniss, 1859, and bitterness do exist. There is SUNDAY-XIV S\lDday after Pastor, St. Mary, New Bedford. Pentecost. II .Class. Green. SEPT. 20 O'ROURKE Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Rev. Simon A. O'Rourke, 1918, Preface of Trinity. Funeral Home Chaplain, United States Navy. F ....eral Dome FORTY HOURS MONDAY - Mass of previous Rev. Omer Valois, 1958, Pas 571 Second Street S\lDday. IV Class. Green. tor, Sacred Heali, New Bedford. 550 Locusi Street Mass Proper; No Gloria or Fall River, ~Mass. SEPT. Zl 'Fan River. Mass. . Creed; Common Preface. . Rev. George Pager, 1882, OS 9-6072 TUESDAY - Exaltation of the FO\lDder, Sacred Heart, New OS 2-2391
'Sept. 12-St. Anne, Fall River. Holy Cross. II Class. Red. Mass Bedford. MICHAel J. McMAHON
St. Dominie, Swansea. Rose B. SullivaJI
Proper; Gloria; Creed; Pref- . Licensed Funeral Director
Rev. George Jowdy, 1938, ~effreJ' E. Sullivaa
ace of the Holy Cross. Registere,J Embalmer
Pastor, Our Lady of Purgatory, Sept.l9-Holy Cross, 'P .11 WEDNESDAY - Seven Sorrows New Bedford. River. of the Blessed Virgin Mary. II Class. White. Mass Proper; St. Joseph, Attleboro. Gloria; 2nd Coll. St. Nico DRY CLEANNG medes, Mar t y r, Sequence; and Creed; Preface of Blessed FUNERA~ HOME, INC. St. Louis de 'Prance, FUNERAL HOME FUR STORAGE. Virgin. Swansea. .. Marcel Roy - G. Lamllne Roy 469 LOCUST STREET THURSDAY - SS. Cornelius, Rapr laFrance Pope, and Cyprian, Bishop, ,FALL RIVER, Mas•• FUNERAL· DIRECTORS ,and Martyrs. III Class. Red. THE ANCHOR OS 2-3381
15 'Irvington Ct. second Class Postage Paid at Fell River Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd Coll. fIIass. Published every Thursday .t 410 34-44 Cohannet Street .Yiil'"", ~ . Ja'mei E:.··
5S. Euphemia and Compan : . 995'-5166 Highlano Avenue Fall River Mass. by. tIM C;lthollc Press of the Diocese of Fall Rlvar. ions, Martyrs; no Creed; Com. Driscoll' Sullivan. Jr.
Taunton VA 2-6161 New Bedford S~bscriptiOA price II) mall, IIOItlNtl4l ....00 :mQn Pl'eface.·: , - - ;.. ~. .. .: ...'.~..;.'';";.';.:.1. . .-0.;......;.'..;-;.-..' per "YIl1f.· • . .. •
an
Houston Religious Groups Place Safety in Rights Commission
Mass'Ordo
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AUBERTINE
Necrology
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JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN
DEVOTION
BROOKLAWN
DERMODY
CLEANERS
D. D. Sullivan &Sons
I
AHorney· GenerGl', Rules Berkley School Board Must Offer Rides for Catholic School Pupils
'niE ANCHOtt-l)iocese of Fa" Rtver-Thurs., Sept. 9, ·1965
3
C~~missioner
Orders Bus Rides
F()r Coyle, Cassidy· Students
transportation for private,school pupils to the Bear Commissioner' Kiernan: same . extent as for publio school pupils even I am in . receipt of your request of .July 1, this request~ The parents appeal 1965 for my opinion on th~ qU$tions relating·' " though the ;ost per capita may be greater for "'~~ the private school pupils. The paragraph from .. In the Appeal of· Robert J. ed this decision under Chapter to whether the town of Berkley must provide e. 76, § 1,. quoted above Contains no exemption ~ynch et ali V. School' Commit 71, Section 88 (Jf the General transportation· forsb[ high school· students at Laws. from possible financial hardship. Furthermore, tee of the 'rOW-A of Berkley.. tending approved parochial sctwols in the ad A.-reed F_ts· ...... "Pupils who, ,in the fulfillment e. 71, § 7A, (relating to state reimbursement for Joining city of Taunton. The parents of six: ebildrell .., "the oompulsory attendanoe local school transportation· outlays) provides ift Y{)u state·. ill your lett« that Berkley has filed a petition under' Chapter requirements of this section,at part: .act high ilehool and that the town· sends its high 71, Section 88' of the 'General tend private· schools of elemen .. .• • • that the amount of grant, per. »ehool students to a regional high sehool in the· Laws, alleging that the 'chitdren tary and high school grades so pupil; for transportation· to private adjoining town of Dighton..You also state that involved at ten d· Monsignor approved shall be 'entitled to the schools in towns which furnish such the Berkley school committee provides bus trans James Coyle High School and same rights and privileges as to transportation, shall not exceed the . ren to and -from school in portationfor these child . Bishop Cassidy High Sohool in transportation to and from amount of grant per pupil for ,transpor Dighton. school as are provided by law Taunton, and that all the .chil Chapter 76, § 1 of the Massachusetts General tation to public schools. • '" • ,. for pupils of public schools and This provision, restricting the amount of grant drenlive more than two miles Laws provides in part that: from these schools. They asked shall not be denied such tral:ls from the state, assumes that in some cases a "Pupils who, in the fulfillment of the the Department to. require' the portation because their attend school committee may have to pay more per compulsory attendance requirements of anoe is in a school -which is con pupil for transportation to a private school than town to furnish transportation to this section, attend private schools of ducted under religious auspices and from the respective schools. to a public school. elementary and high school grades so The town of Berkley has no or includes religious instruction It should be further noted that e. 71, § 7A approved shall be entitled to the same in its curriculum." requires competitive .bidding on oontracts to high school and tuitions its pub rights and privileges as to transportation Rulin~ lic high school students to a transport school children: to and from school as are provided. by public regional high school lo Since the public school stu law for pupils of public schools and shall .. '" '" * no contract shall be awarded cated in the adjoining town of dents in the high school are pro not be denied such transportation be except upon the basis of prevailing wage vided with bus transportation Dighton. The town furnishes bus cause their attendance is in a school rates, as hereinafter provided, and of to the public regional high transportation daily to and from which is conducted under religious aus sealed bids, and the school committee ;he regional high school for school outside the town the De pices or includes religious instruction in shall, in the event that a contract is partment finds that the student these students and the per pupil the curriculum." awarded to other than the lowest bid cost of this public transportation residents of the town who at In the case of Quinn v. School Committee of der. file with the department a written tend the same grad~s in a paro Is $79 per pupil per year. The Plymouth, 332 Mass. 410, the Supreme Judicial statement giving its reasons therefor, chial high school outside the town of Berkley is paying the Court interpreted the above paragraph (at p. which statement shall be open to the town are entitled to vehicle parents of each private student 41'2) as follows: public inspection '" '" • " transportation to and from the $79 per pupil per year, but said .. '" • • We think that by its enactment As a result of this provision, a school committee $79 dOE:s not cover the cost of parochial high school, and so the Legislature intended to make avail could lose its right to state reimbursement if providing transportation for the requires the school committee able to children in private schools trans it seeks to discharge its obligation by paying a of Berkley to furnish said trans children. portation to the extent· as a school com transpol"tation allowance to the parents of school' The parents petitioned the portation and to follow the pro mittee within its statutory powers should children instead of providing actual transporta visions of Chapter 71, Section Berkley School Committee for make transportation available to children tion. Clearly, the payment of a transportation 7A of the General Laws in actual transportation to and in public schools '" '" '" The question is allow~nce violates the requirement of compet awarding a contract for this from the schools equal to that not what the committee can be made to itive bidding in such a way as to jeopardize furnished students attending the transportation. do. The requirement imposed is that state reimbursement. Chapter 71, § 7 A further regional high school in Dighton Owen B. Kiernan
there be no discrimination against pri states that: Commissioner of Education.
and the school committee denied v2te school children in what the commit .. '" '" '" No expense incurred by ·a town tee in its discretion decides to do." for the transportation of pupils shall be approved by the commissioner for the The Court in the Quinn case went on to re purpose of such reimbursement, if it tluire that the Plymouth School Committee "pro Each year more and more par Continued from Page One vide transportation to (a parochial school in the appears to him, after diligent inquiry, ents manifest a desire to send has been opened by Rey. Leo adjoining toVltl of Kingston) for pupils in grades that such expense has been incurred their children to the nearest J. Duart, pastor. III throug~ VI to the extent that transportation * '" • pursuant to any contract awarded parochial school, Fr. O'Neill ob Sisters of the Love of God, is provided by the committee for elementary in violation of any provision of this served. "And the time is not which founded a community in school pupils (who are sent to a public school in section or of section four of chapter this diocese only a few years too distant when we will be the adjoining town of Bourne)." The rule of this forty * '" '" " opening the new high school for ago, are in charge of the P-town case was treated with in two previous opinions To summarize then, it is my opinion that the boys, with a Jesuit faculty, in class. kom this department (May 4, 1961 and Novem town of Berkley must provide transportation to In Taunton, Our Lady of Fall River," the Superintendent ber 2, 1961). A school committee must provide pupils attending private high schools in Taunton, commented as he noted the zeal transportation to an out-of-town private school and that this obligation is not met simply by Lourdes parish has added a of pastors in modernizing the in for pupils in the same grades as pupils whom the paying a transportation allowance to the parents sixth grade for the first time as dividual school plants to meet the enrollment at that elemen of these pupils. . school committee transports to an out-of-town public school. The School Committee of Berkley Accordingly, I answer your first question tary school eased-up to a new the "rowing needs of the day. is thus obliged to provide transportation ':for the in the affirmative and your second and third high. six high school pupils who attend parochial questions in the negative. sehool in Taunton. Very truly yours, "Never depend completely on the A school committee is ot)ligated to provide EDWARD W. BROOKE The CYO of Sacred Heart advice of a man in difficulty." parish, Nort~ Attleboro, will open its 10th year Tuesday, Sept. 21. A whist party is planned for 8 Thursday night, Sept. 23 in the parish by the board of advisors. Other plans for the year will be discussed at the Tuesday meet ing. CINCINNATI (NC)-A bishop force for good is gradually de The bishop called attention to ebserved here in Ohio that to . teriorating," the bishop said. the need for Catholic teachers day's tea·chers are engaged in a In its place, he added. are to recognize "our growing in high calling made more difficult growing "more powerful forces volvement with the civil law by the weakening of home in of evil, not the least of which is and hence with the system of fluences. public education." television." CO. ( Auxiliary Bishop Paul F. Lei·" He warned that "mediocrity Through the National Educa bold of Cincinnati, speaking at has no place in your office/' Elder High School's faculty day noting that "ability il) demanded tion act and the state bus bill "we have been recognized as a exercises, said in times past in y.our subject matter, as well real contributor to the education E:atholic s c h 0 0 1 s emphasized as spirituality and morality." of the citizens," he said.
"knowledge, truth, and apolo 365 NORTtf FRONT STREET As collaborators with the
getics'" and left the element of "We should be aware of this· bishops, teachers in a Catholic historic accomplishment and be ~ eatholic living to be supplied by NEW BEDfORD femily training. But "that social school "must preserve the high prepared to adjust our educa est idea of your providential ti~nal sights accordingly," he ~ WYman 2-5534 ( mission," he said. saId.
~ .....,." ~ ~ He urged them to "be ever
•. You cn bank-by-mail heft at mindful of your most powerful The OLD REO BANK. FREE mail instrument of pedagogy - good COLUMBIA (NC) -The first forms! For savings, mortgage, example" and to demonstrate Negro to graduate from the loan, life illsuranee paYllents, etc. University of South Carolina the virtues of charity, interest since immediate post-Civil War edness, patience, sincerity, and INC. days is a member of St. Martin piety. The de Porres parish here. Henri Monteith, a 20-year-old ~olumbia girl, received her Late afternoon and early eve bachelor of science degree at ning courses· will be offered by Fall River Savings Bank Summer commencement exer Salve Regina College Depart cises of the university. She plans ment of Continuing Education, 141 NO. MAIN tID teach this year in the 5th beginning Monday, Oct. 4. Offer gcade at St. Martin's school. ings will be in the fields of FALL RIVER Miss Monteith entered the uni education, art, science, history, versity in September, 1963, after English, religion and psychology. 873 COUNTY Winning a desegregation suit Further information is available SOMERSET against the schoolila U. S. Dis from the dean's offioe of the ~ Court. .el)llege.
Record Number in Diocesan Schools
North Attleboro CYO
Says Weakened Homes Burden Teachers
Prelate Says Force for Good
~eteriorating
~~;'~1
~ ) Heating Oils ,
) and Burners ~ ~ (~
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Catholic Girl Is First USC ·Negro Graduate
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Wherever In The World Yo. Are Or Are Going
D & D SALES AND_SERVICE,
Announce Courses
FRIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERATION
APPLIANCES
AIR CONDITIONING
363 SECOND ST.
FALL RIVER, MASS.
Old Red Bank
4
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
CYNTHIA BURKE
MARCIA CHAMPAGNE
FRANCES MULDOON
PATILICIA 18I1ISSme MATHI£lI
No. Westport
New Bedfonl
New Bedf.rd
fall liver
GRADUATION EXERCISES AT ST. ANNE'S SCHOOL OF NURSING IN FAl,L RIVER SUNDAY AMERNOON
International Liturgy Body To Guide New Translations ATLANTA (NC)-A Pennsylvania priest has been Jlamed secretary of the international body which will plan and guide the work on the new liturgy translations for the use of English-speaking Catholics throughout the world. He is Father Gerald J. Sig son, is a distinguished Shake ler, assistant chancellor of spearian scholar who has been the Erie diocese and secre professor of English at the Uni tary of the Erie liturgical versity of Michigan since' 1949 c:ommission, who will serve the International Advisory Commit tee on English in the Liturgy. The seven members of the ad "isory committee were also an nounced. They are: Father God frey Diekmann, O.S.B., of Col legeville, Minn.; Professor H. P. R. Finberg of London; Prof. G. B. Harrison of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Father Percy Jones, University of Mel bourne, Australia; Father Fred erick R. McManus, director of the U. S. Bishops' Commission for the Liturgical Apostolate, Washigton; Father Stephen Som erville, Toronto, Ont., and Father Harold E. Winstone of London. Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta stressed that the group is not a committee of translators. Translators will be called in later, he said, after the committee has worked out pro cedures, plans and principles with the help of biblical, music, and literary specialists and se cured the approval of the various hierarchies. Five Years Archbishop Hallinan said the entire project will take at least five years to complete.· Transla tions will be made of the litur gical texts of the Mass, other sacramental rites and the Church's dailY'prayer. Of the advisory committee, whose work will affect nearly tiO million Catholics, about 70 per cent of them in the United States, three of the seven mem bers are from the U. S. The U. S. layman, G. B. Harri-
Vocations Campaign On Parish Level SAN JUAN (NC)-A parish level campaign for vocations to the priesthood will be conducted by the Puerto Rican chapter of Serra International in the San .Juan archdiocese, it was an nounced here by Archbishop Luis Aponte of San Juan. The prelate said Serrans al ready have established voca tion committees in a number of parishes. He said the Serrans claim the best way to foster vocations is to make parents realize they should feel proud to contribute a son to the Church. The archbishop said a lay man advised him to "sell priest ly vocations like any other product." The prelate added: "To sell vocations we need the communications media - tele. vision, radio and press."
when he came to this country from his homeland, Great Britain. In addition to Father Sigler and Father McManus, the other American, Father Godfrey Diek mann, O.S.B., is a veteran parti cipant in liturgical reform. The Benedictine from St. John's University is editor of Worship magazine, a pioneering liturgical journal, and is this year's winner of the Cardinal Spellman Theol ogy Award.
Texas Priests Invade Alaska ANCHORAGE (NC) - Riding in a rented car, four priests from Texas have invaded Alaska and demonstrated to Alaskans the way to promote state-wide events. Using their vacations to do missionary work for San Anton io's 1968 "Hemisfair," the Texans visited every Catholic institu tion on Alaska's main highway network, were interviewed by newspapers and appeared on TV. They presented special invita tionS to the Hemisfair from San
Antonio's mayor.
Among the "salesmen" are:
Father Lawrence Steubben, vo
cation director, archdiocese of San Antonio; Father Charles Herzig, secretary to San Anton io's Archbishop Robert E. Lucey; Father Gilbert Cruz, hospital chaplain of Kerrville, Tex., and Father John Mullally of York town, Tex., chairman of the Na tional Association of Catholic· Chaplains in Hospitals. "We're going to have a great show and we're selling it from the top to bottom of the hel')li sphere," said Father Steubben.
Two Colleges Name New Presidents JERSEY CITY (NC)-Father Lee P. McLaughlin, S.J., 53·,.who has been president of St. Peter's College here since last May, has been appointed president of Fordham University in New York. . Father Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J., 50, has been appointed president of St. Peter's, where he has been director of student personnel services since 1962. Both are natives of New York and alumni of Georgetown Uni versity, Washington, D. C. They joined the Jesuits on the same day, Sept. 7, 1P
Diploma Awards Continued from Page One The 37 graduates include 14 from Fall River, 11 from New Bedford, four from Taunton and one each from eight other com munities. From Fall River they are Brenda Caron, Patricia Ellen, Joan Fisette, Kathleen Furze. Theresa Lowney, Patricia Mathieu, Margaret M u r p h Y , Anne Rousseau, Joan Silvia. Virginia Burgmyer, Madeleine LeComte, Lois Oliveira, Jane Silvia and Paula Tavares. New Bedford graduates are E 1 a i n e Blanchard, Rochelle Chandler, Rachel Langlois, Lu cille Thivierge, Margaret Wig nall. Carol Cisek, , Marcia Cham pagne, Pauline Gasse, Jeanne Guilbeault, Pauline Langlois and Frances Muldoon. Dolores Costa, Barbara Cross, Joanna Fernandes and Irene Fonseca are from Taunton. The other graduates are Cyn thia Burke, North Westport; Jean Gross, Newport; Jeanne Hebert, Somerset; Linda Pelder, Hyannis. Rita Campbell, Somerville, Joann Martel, North Dartmouth; Linda Roberts, Otis Air Force Base Falmouth; and Anne Marie Ulewicz, Fairhaven.
Assigns Legion's Work to Women STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Cath olie women will take over oper ation of the Legion of Decency in the Steubenville diocese, re placing parish priests. Bishop John King Mussio ex plained involvement in legion activities by priests in this Ohio See has meant extra work which at times complicated the proper exercise of their other duties. Under the 1\ew plan, each pas tor will appoint two women as legion representatives. They will post film ratings on' their church's bulletin board each Sunday. In addition, deanery directors will be chosen. These women will contact area newspapers and theater managers, urging that the legion's listingS" be in corporated in newspaper listings of local film attractions. The women will keep a check on each theater's offerings and twice a year will send a letter of commendation to cooperating movie houses. Publicity will be sought in daily and Catholic newspapers for theaters which assist the program.
Miss.•oners Leave MEXICO CITY (NC)-Seven graduates of the Institute of Santa Maria de Guadalupe for the Foreign Missions have as signments in Korea, Japan and Africa. The institute is respon sible for missions in Aizu Wakamatsu, Japan; Sun Cheon, Korea, and Kenya ill Africa.
YOUR
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'fIt1 HDLY 'AIHIA'I MIS.ID.. AID TD TN' DIIIITAL CHURCH Father Cyriac In Perlkalfoor needs your hand. your prayer., your heart. T'" church you build (or help to build) will brlnl God home to luck less, penniles. people. • • • Perikalloor Is • frontier town, scarcely 12 years old, In the Wynad forest In southern India. Children and CHILDREN grownups (600 all told) stand outdoor. for FAINT Sunday Mas. because they have no church. IN Some of them faint In the summer heat, miss THE Mass entirely during the monsoon reins••••. HEAT, "Ifs the tiny tots especially I worry about/' says MISS MASS Father Cyriac. "Our Lord would build a church WHEN with His own two hands If He were here. Wtsn't IT He a carpenter?" ••• A church built to last will ~INS cost only $3,100 (the cost of the materials) because the men In the perish will do all the work free-of·charge· at once. Give them your hands? Name the church for your favorite saint, In memory of tllose you love, If you give the full amount. Give something of yourself at least ($200, $100, $50, $25, $20, $15, $10, $5, $3, $1) right now by means of the coupon below. , Could Christ the Carpenter not notice what your hands are doing? 0 Churches, schools; seminaries, will come Into PLEASE being in Asia and Africa this y'ear thanks to NOTE scrap metal, newspapers, and castoff clothing (worth $750,000) ~udents In Germany collected door·to·door. Here are some suggestions:
TEACHERS
D $8.50 a month ($100 • year, $600 alto gether) trains a boy who wants to be a priest In our IS-country mission world. He will. write to you. D $10 a month feeds an Arab refugee family. We'!1 send you an' Olive Wood Rosary from·the Holy Land. D $10 • month gives "adoption" to a deaf mute boy In Lebanon, an unwanted boy III Baghdad, a Ijttle girl In Bethlehem. We'll send you a photograph, some detail•• D The Holy Father uses your "no strings at- I tached" lifts (in any amount) where they're 1 needed most. C MR. X Thank you for your $60 gift for EthiopIa. Dear Moneipor Ryam
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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President MSGR. JOSEPH T. RYAN, National-Secretary I Write: CATHOL1C.NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue • New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 9, 1965
Adult Temper Tantrums Manifest Immaturity
Priests' Retreat
To Conclude
By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. We're great people at throwing around words, we Americans but often enough, we throw around words we're not ~uite sure of. Take .that little W()rd "maturity," for example and think of all the bloopers .we've included und':lr it: We look at a per First of aU, you have son who seems mature-one temper!' to remember that we are all we have never even talked different in temperament. For to perhaps, and we say "How some reason or other, some peo mature." We judge maturity by how a person dresses or how much he dates and whether or not he drives a car. We know a baby has to be immature and so we fig ure that any non-baby must, therefore, be mature. But maturity is a
lot . more than t·h·e departure from infancy. It's something, moreover, that we do not nec essarily grow into, but must etonstantly work for. Otherwise, we can well end up just big old babies.. Outsized Infant The big clod who can't lose on the football field is a baby. The eharaeter who is always right when the umpire is wrong (the one we like to refer to, espe dally if it's ourself, as "a great competitor") is nothing but an outsized infant, who hasn't learned to take defeat with the maturity it demands-far more maturity, usually, than that re fluired by victory. But these are only examples. Ane maturity goes much farther than games. The immature person of any age pouts when he doesn't get what he wants. And it doesn't matter what it is he wants at the moment-food or comfort or the car for a date or liberties with "his" girl. But many as the manifesta !tons of immaturity are, it would be hard to find a more unlov able one than the gimmick in fants of all ages use most often to get what they want-temper. Grotesque Penchant The baby will, in fact, con tinue to use this as long as it gets results. But if he is trained early to see that all a tantrum gets him is neglect or punish ment instead of attention and other rewards, he11 soon drop it. But a penchant for temper tantrums persisting into the years of reason, into the teens and even into adulthood, be eomes not natural but grotesque -because large economy sized infants are simply not as lovable and entertaining as the smaller aize. The trouble is that the "adult" temper thrower didn't get this way overnight, but because his tantrums were given in to early for the sake of peace and quiet. And for parents, the battle is won this way, and the war is lost. , Different Temperaments But look a little more closely lilt the type who "has a terrible
Names New Paper 6Delmarva Dialo'g' WILMINGTON (NC) ...... The Delmarva Dialog has been se lected as the name for the Wil mington diocese's weekly news paper which made its debut en Friday, September 3 with Sohn A. O'Connor as editor. Wilmington's Bishop Michael W. Hyle said the Dialog will be gin as a 12-page paper, printed in offset, and an inaugural cir eulation of some 30,000 among Catholic families in the diocese which encompasses the entire Delaware - Maryland - Virginia ~mar~a) peninswla.
ple are more passionate than others, and so on. Some people are more seri ously tempted to sins of impur ity, for example, than are others. Some do have quicker tempers and flare up a little more readily than others. These people are usually all too eager to learn control and, following' Christ's example, they can do so. But the immature temper thrower is not such a person,
but he is, rather, one who has "a quick temper" now because he has cultivated it in the past as a means of getting his own way or of seeing that his own opinions go unchallenged. And the trouble is that he's become so accustomed to losing his head that he doesn't even notice any more when it's missing. Infant Type There is a fundamental diffi eulty with this infant type, which makes it very, very hard for anyone. to help him, or even to tolerate him with any degree of liking. He has convinced him self, not only that he has a touchy temper, but that this is somehow or other a red-blooded, lovable trait. You will actually hear him bragging about it: "I really let fly." "I really told him off." "I tore her to pieces." You've heard the old cliches until you're tired of them,-too. And somehow or other this refugee from the cradle seems to think that this lovable trait of his temper is something unique lyhis. Nobody has a temper like his, and this, he thinks, is won derful. ' Little Courtesy But the fact isn't so much that nobody has a temper like his at all, but rather that nobody has as little control and courtesy and maturity as he has. It could well be that there are others far more deeply tempted iq this line than he, but they' have also had the courage and good manners to control themselves. Above all, perhaps, it would be pretty silly to imagine that we are anything but babies in the eyes of Christ when we use hasty temper as a tool--espe cially when we think of how much more reason he's had, so often, for losing His temper with us.
Appo.ints Dominican To Delegate StaH WASHINGTON (NC)-Arch bishop Egidio Vagnozzi, apo stollc delegate in the United States, announced here that Fa ther Thomas C. Kelly, O.P., has been added to his staff as a secretary. Father Kelly has been serving as secretary to the pro vincial of the Dominican Pro vince of St. Joseph. Born July 14, 1931, in Roch ester, N.Y., Father Kelly stUdied at Providence College, from 1949 to 1951, and made his studies for the priesthood at St. Joseph Priory, Somerset, Ohio, and Im maculate Conception College in this city. He was ordained in St. Dom inie's church here, June 5, 1958 by Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, then archbishop and apostolic delegate in the U.S. He made post-ordination studies in the ology at Immaculate Conception College here, and in canon law iii the AnielicUlll iA Rome.
5
MOSCOW BOUND: Rev. Eugene V. LaPlante, A.A.. who has been assigned to serve as pastor for Roman Cath olics in Moscow examines his passport with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. LaPlante of So, Dartmouth.
Institute on Wheels Lay Missionary Organization, NCWC Sponsor Unit to Foster Understanding BUFFALO (NC)-An unusual "institute on wheels" is currently touring Mexico in an effort to foster international understand ing t h r 0 ugh person-to-person contact. The AID Mobile Institute in cludes 41 persons representing 11 nations. Now on the road for three weeks of living and work ing together, they will seek to put their experiences to use working with 'foreign students at U. S. universities when they re turn here. The traveling institute has been organized by the Associa tion for International Develop ment (AID), a lay missionary organization, in cooperation with the Foreign Visitors Office of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. Most of those in the mobile in stitute are from the western New York area and are cooperating with AID's office here. The group includes 24 university students and young professional people, three couples and their children, two priests (one of them from Africa), and two com munications specialists. From 11 Countries Countries represented are Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Puerto Rico, Tanzania, Kenya, Ghana,
Nigeria, Southern Rhodesia, the Caroline Islands, and the United States. Upon leaving Buffalo, the in stitute traveled to New Orleans where members took part in a seminar conducted by the Inter American Center of Loyola University. In Mexico, group members are living with members of the Christian F ami 1 y Movement. They are spending a week in Morelia in the state of Micho acan, where AID has had a social action and cultural program for seven years, and a week in Mex ico City.
Missioners Staff Sate Fair Exhibit DETROIT (NC) - More than 100 missionaries representing home and foreign missionactiv ities greeted visitors to the 1965 Michigan State Fair here. The missionaries were head quartered in the Catholic World Mission Exhibit Bunlding, spon sored for over 10 years by the Detroit archdiocesan Society for the Propagation of the Faith to publicize the Church's mission work.
The annual r~treat for Dioc esan priests will conclude next week at Cathedral Camp. The retreat begins Monday evening and concludes on Friday eve ning. Retreat master for the three weeks of retreat is Rev. Robert P. Phalen, S.J., pastor and superior of St. Mary's Church, Boston. The following priests of the Diocese will attend: Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, Rt. Rev. John A. Silvia, Rt. Rev. Joseph A. Cournoyer, Rt. Rev. William H. Harrington. Rev. Joseph Eid, Rev. Lorenzo H. Morais, Rev. George E. Sul livan, Rev. Arthur C. dos Reis, Rev. J. Orner Lussier. Rev. Jose M. B. Avila, Rev. James E. McMahon, Rev. James A. Dury, ~ev. James F. McDer mott, Rev. Bernard H. Unsworth. Rev. WiIlam E. Collard, Rev~ John T. Higgins, Rev. Laureano C. dos Reis, Rev. Ambrose E. Bowen, Rt. Rev. Joseph C. Canty. Rt. Rev. Bernard J. Fenton, Rev. Thomas F. Daley, Rt. Rev. Al fred J. Gendreau, Rev. Lucien Madore, Rev. Manuel M. Re zendes. Rev. Herve Jalbert, Rev. Wil liam A. Galvin, Rev. Donald E. Belanger, Rev. William J. Mc Mahon. Rt. Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, Rev. Joseph' ~. Martineau, Rev. James F. Kenney, Rev. AntoninG C. Tavares, Rev. Robert L. Stan ton, Rev. Luiz G. Mendoza. Rev. Daniel A. Gamache, Rev. Francis A. Coady, Rev. Reginald M. Barrette, Rev. George Eo Amaral, Rev. Roger P. Poirier. Rev. James P. Dalzell, Rev. Joseph Oliveira, Rev. Francis B. Connors, Rev. William F. O'Con nell, Rev. John J. Regan. Rev. Edward A. Rl!usch, Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Rev. Bento Fraga, Rev. Armando Annun ziato, I,tev. John R. FoIster. Rev. James F. Buckley, Rev. Roger ;[. Levesque, Rev. Thomas C. Mayhew, Rev. John J. Smith, Rev. Martin D. Buote. Rev. Thomas E. O'Dea, Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, Rev. LuciG B. Phillipino, Rev. John F. An
drews.
Rev. Edmund T. Delaney, Rev.
Barry W. Wall, Rev. Joseph F.
D'Amico, Rev. William G. Camp bell, Rev. Edmund A. Connors. Rev. Robert J. Laughlin, Rev. Donald J. Bowen, Rev. Thomas J. Harrington.
Notre Dame Grant NOTRE DAME (NC)-Notre Dame University will conduct rc,!{ional population conferences ar.d in-depth studies of popula tion problems with the help of a $100,000 Ford Foundation grant..
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
Liturgists' Favor
New Horizons
Growing Market
In EducatiolJ
A report in The New York Times states that the paper back smut books continue to thrive as outlets for these "grow.An·editor for such a line of paperbacks notes that there are fewer and fewer taboos to be obserVed in sex books: "The censors have suffered several setbacks nation ally. Our main problf>ms are now the local levels." . These publicati(llls have been. growing-in numbers and in the types of aberrations they portray-because the public is willing to set a low standard of community values against which these llre judged. In an age that is more and more complacent, about dress, public behavior,' movies and film advertising, community values are at a new low and the paperbacks can aim at the lowest common denominator. People are apathetic. They have the strange,. almost naive, attitude that virtue and vice can co-exist with little damage to either. The world of evil and darkness is a far-away world unless :and until it touches their own family or their own convenience.
It is not very fashionable in some Catholic magazines and newspapers to talk of these matters nowadays. It smacks too much-in the minds of some-of a negative approach which· thev feel is out of step with the times. But these paperbacks are being printed, they are damaging souls, they are an offence to· decency, and the Catholic is expected to let his light shine before men and exert his influence in every legitimate way for what is good and right. The positive approach must always be encouraged in this instance, the promotion of good books, the encourag ing of good taste and proper values. But it is not out of place to attack what· is evil, to try to keep high community standards. Christ drove the money-changers from the Tem ple. A negative approach but one. that He did not hesitate to use.
POR~LAND(NC) -. Nttw broader' horizons ill Catholic ~ucation have b~eJl suggested at the 1965 IA urgical Week herein Oregon. Ecumenism, interracial and in ternational justice, "intellectual and civic competence and excell ence anc;l love of a meaningful liturgy" are "all goals which need to be formally introduced into our school curricu19m,. said Father John J: Brenkle, secretary of the Santa. Rosa, Calif., diocesan liturgical com mission. Father Brenkle expressed the belief that "in general * * *. we have done a far more effective task in teaching subjects other than religion and its social co~ sequences" in Catholic cshools. Stressing the need for "action;" in religion classes, he propOsed, such assignments as "attendanee at a city council meeting, at an . interfaith· group, at a pover'" program ·meeting." Sister Mary Inez of Mercy HighSchool, San Francicso, said educators "must be convinced that the path of learning is from the emotions to the intellect." Wrong Punishment ..It is an error," she said, "'te attempt to educate the child in concepts or thoughts, however lofty or edifying, without first giving him in some concrete measure an experience of the realities "they express. This ill precisely what the liturgy does." Father Gerard Sloyan, head of the religious' education depart 'men! at the Catholic University of- America, called religious schools "a possible agency" fill. religious education, but add.ed: "So aJ:e social action, the line .arts, home life, parish life, and above all liturgical ce1ebratioa .built around the Scriptures." Sister Cecelia Ann of Holy Family School in Seattle criticized prayer in Catholic schools as being too often a "form of discipline, .obtaining order and silence though an automatic Sign of the Cross at the sound of the bell, followed by a rat\led formula." Sister Jean Marie, Confrater nity of Christian Doctrine super visor for the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., urged teachers of religion to be "totally a'Yare of the world m which tile student lives." "If the teacher is a Religious,· she added, "sh~ must be very
conscious ··"that the children aN
wno,ot)l .u:.~d.-~O$t' ~f them neve!'
and
Publications Aid Teaching Catholic Social Doctrine
By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) Toward the end of his great social encyclical, Mater et Magistra (Christianity and Social Progress),·Pope John XXIII affirmed that the social doctrine of the Church. is' The cry of "censorship" or of "narrow-mindedness" an integral part of her teaching and eannot be ·separated· ehould not deter thQse who know th8Jt they are working for from her general doctrine on through reading and discussion . oecency and wholesome.ness. the life of man. For this rea groups, to become more familiar The growing market of smut will not be stopped by son, he asked that more and with the encyclicals, ·"it is" ·his· talk-alone but by action. It will appear to be narrow-minded more study be devoted to special desire that it will ad-. action-but onJy to t.hose whose· sleazy livelihood at the this teaching and urged, first of vance the cause of teach~ng the encyclicals in high schools, seiniall, that it be taught ·as a require expence of decency is being· endangered. naries, colleges and univers\ies." ment in Cath": We share Dr. Brown's hope olic schools, at and are pleased to recommend. every level, and the series very highly. especiany in the For College Credit The American hospiool ship Hope has just returned seminaries. "We wish," he con The second of the three pubto this country after a ten-month visit overseas. cluded, "that it lications referred to above also be added to the originates in Chicago. It is an The incident may seem a minor one compared with religious excellent correspondence course the many crises and concerns that occupy the front pages instruction pro on the social encyclicals preof the daily newsp3-pers. But the ship's tour was not in a grams w h i c h pared by Father Robert Reicher parishes and of Chicago's Catholic Council on minor vein. 1 a y organiza Working Life under the auspices· _ - _ of the Home Study Division of . Operated by the independent, non-profit People to tions teach to People Health Foundation of New York, the Hope, in the inspire their me~be;S to tile Loyola University (Lewis Towlast five years, has treated well over a million patients on apostolate. Let this doctrine. go ers, 820 N. Michigan Ave., Chi. out to the people by every mod cago 11, lll.). board and on the shore$.of the far-away countries it has ern means, by daily newspapers Father Reicher's course, w)lich, visited. It has immunized hundreds of thousands of child and periodicals, by learned and again, I am pleased to recom-· ren against communicable diseases. The· ship's staff has popular books, and by radio and. mend very enthusiastically, con:" television." trained more than three thousand doctors, nurses 'and tech fers three semester hours of undergraduate .credit in eitherso-. nichms, conducted moret~an-sixtho~sand major oi>erations.-. Fill Gap .,.,
The complaint is· sometimes cio10gy or theOlogy and, to the' . Father .Donald .Conger, . paSt_
This is the kind of charity that .individuals do and . voiced that there simply are not best of my knowiedge" is the ~nly correspOndence· course .of·: ofH,oly .Fam!-ly Church,' .KiIk~
that individuals can recognize. It. is ·the answer toan~d. enough teaching materials.avail This is the kind of service that impells the missionaries· tG able in this country to enable us its·okind· cur·rently being offered" _ land, Wash., and'·a member eI
·hei p·. bodies so.that they may also tend to souls, the.kind of 10 carry out Pope John's· wishes . by any Catholic university in: the Seat~i~ .~rchdiocesanlit~r
the United .States. . . gica1 commisSio'n, said the great..
in this regard. service that was given by a Tom Dooley; an Albert Schweit Recen"tly, however":""as coinci I might add that Loyola is the:. est challenge in teaching. liturgy :ler. ,.. dence would have it-I received only Catholic university .und~r.. t()d~y may lie in trying to re in· the saine mail aq,vance copies' contract with the U. S: Armed discover thettue nature of iDe In an era of needed huge organi~tional service, it ill· of three publications which sig-' Forces Institute· for correspond- - Church." . nificantly· help to fill this gap ence courses. Word ~ God .till good to have individuals he~ping.individuals. and· should make it easier for Praetieal Treatise "To try. to tram;late native eur adult education· programs The last of the three publica- awareness of 'community' to that and our Catholic schools, at tions is aimed at a much more of the holy community already· every level, to acquaint their' sopJ;1isticated and more limited estaQ1ished-by Baptism,Confir.. students with the essentials of' audience. It is a completely re- mation and the Eucharist Win Catholic sOcial teaching. vised edition of Johannes Mess- be the task of the catechist" be Five Booklets ner's monumental 1,OOO-page said. The first of these publications book entitled, "Social Ethics: He also deplored aO"poverty of is a series of five attractive Natural Law in the Weste",n love ror the Holy Scriptures" booklets. containing the text of World" (Herder Book Co., 17 and said: "We must teach espe OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER the principal social encyclicals,. Broadway, St. Louis 2,· Mo., cially that we assemble on the together with a teaching outline, $17.50). Lord's Day to hear the Word of Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Foil River chapter summaries, discussion Dr. Messner, who teaches at God." questions, and a detailed index· the University of Vienna, is one 410 Highland Avenue
(Outline Encyclical Series, Our of the world's leading authori Fall River, Mass. 675-7151
New President Sunday Visitor Press, Hunting ties in the field of Catholic social ton, Ind.). teaching. This new edition of NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Sist.er PUBLISHER The editor of this timely his master work on social ethics M. Maris Stella, director of the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., PhD.. series, Dr. Francis J. Brown of -translated from the German division of education of Xavier GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MA'!AGER DePaul University in Chicago, by J. J. Doherty - makes for University here in Louisiana, has Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll been named to succeed Sister M. notes in the preface that while it rather difficult reading and ob MANAGING EDITOR Josephina as president of the is his hope that the series will viously is not aimed at the pop univerility. e nab lethe general public ular market.· Hugh J. Golden
People to People
can
®The ANCHOR
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'mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Rlyer-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
.MARGARET.MURPHY
WCILLE THIVIERGE llew IIIdford
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JOANN MARTEL No. Dartlnoutll
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RACHEL LANGLOIS New Bedford
THERESA LOWNEY Fall Riv,r
'3'1'YOUNG WOMEN COMPLETR'TRAINING AT' ONLY' CATHOLIC HOSPITAL
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Summer' Secular ... ~Avoid.:C:oinprom'i~e:.for .1Aggiornamento ' Desperate Need . , Jogs Benefit
For . Missioners Jewish Philosopher 'Cautions Catholics HOLY TRINITY (NC) - The Seminarians
-shocking" situation regarding ,
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MONTREAL (NC)~Five 'seminarians who spent their ·Summer' vacations .working at everyday jobs have de
NEW YORK {NC) - A practically anything to get it." , Jewish philosop"ner' and au.- "Let me remind you," he said, ' .. . ." . ' o.... . ' .• . • : .•.f'that, 'humanly speaking, the. tho~ has .. w·al"!l~. 9atl,101.1~~. 9hurch' has grown great not by agaInst comp1'()nusmg theIr. ' accommodating' itself to the'
'beliefs for the sake of "aggior- changing spirit of the age but by namento." taking a stand over against it.". "Of course the. Church must be In particular Herberg warned relevant to the times. But rele- the Church against seeking to vance does not mean taking over come to terms with contempo the follies and superstitions, the rary "secularism, nationalism false beliefs, false attitudes and and socialism." Uneasy false practices of the age i n : order to seem to 'modern" and, '. " .. 'up-to-date' .. declared Will He said he was unea!!y .about Herberg. ' the use· of the vernacular 10 the Herberg, a professor at Drew University, Madison, N. J., and' author of the book "Protestant, Catholic, Jew," spoke at the golden jubilee convention of the National Newman Federation. MADRAS (NC)~The Madras Describing himself as "a sin supreme' court granted a Catho- . cere friend of the Church," Her lic nun the right to· select 50 per· berg warited that certain devel.. cent of the students to be ad-: opments connected with the ecu-' mitted to the training school she mencal council endanger essen operates.' . tial elements of Christian teach- .' But .the court order. is a .pro ing preserved in the Catholic' vi~ional:'one, with the final de Church.. " cision yet to come. The cal1e began when the ·Ma Declaring that, in: the spirit of dras state government denied' -aggiornamento" or updating, Mother Marie Andries of the some expect the Church to "slough off its old ways and Sisters of the Immaculate Heart bring itself up to date by adjust-· .of Mary the right to ·recruit stu dent!!· for the Infant Jesus Basic ing itself to the spirit of the Training. School for Women. The age," he commented: . . state took over the function of "'I say just the opposite: in· admitting students to the insti all that is important, the Church tution.·· must stand firm in its witness Then Mother Andries chal to the truth that is eternal and lenged the government's action unchl'mgirig; it' needs no updat-' as unconstitutional, on the' ing, it is incapable of any up grounds that the Indian eonsti- . tution granted minority groups dating. "'The Church must not ·try tq the right "to establish and ad accommodate itself to the world; minister educational institutions InstitUtion to the age, to the Spirit of the of their own choice." 'rhe' senunarianil . said" 'their . age. If it is to remain true to its The court declared that, until conversations with fellow work:' vocation, it IriuSt take· its 'stand further notification, Mother An ers convinced' them ·that ''the against the-world. against the dries has the 'right to fill' half' Church' remains for th'etn mOre of age, against, the spirit .of the age '. ~e ntimber of'seats in the school.' ". .
a clerical· ·institutiOn . outside -because the world and the age . are alway~ to a degree, to an r--_":'.-.;'...._._....__... their oWh ·world.": " . < . "Others," they Stated, "do not important .degree; in rebellion
takeexception.to a life of very' against God;~ ,
. '. Overhasty . ,. subjective moralitY,particularly' . . witli .regard to conjugal moral,;, . .Warnin~ iigll:inst aD. t·~ver~asty· ity." - .. ' 'Reg. Master Plumber 2930 • spirit of' aggloniafuento," Her-' 'GEORGE M. MONTLE' " It was' dilficuItfor us to share berg said ther~'are "many'" 'Over '35 Years' - , the faith, hope and charitY which Catholics; "consumed with a' '" the Gospel proposes to uS,"·they· sense' of inferiority,'" who are of Satisfied Service' . said. ~ "Many Christians live "most eager for a crumb of rec::' 806. (lid. MAI~' STREEr without· hope .and without faith 'ognition, from the secular cul~ . Fall River. OS 5·7497 · in s a I v a ti 0 n through Jesus' ture and are ready to swallow Christ."
acribed . their experiment as a valuable "experience in matur ity...· The five seminarians of the Montreal 'archdiocese lived to gether during the.Summer with .~ priest. They worked during the .day and had Mass in their. resi ·dence each evening. One was employed as an op ,.. erator in a stove factory, another as a manual laborer in a food products store, another as an office worker, the fourth as an attendant in a large hospital, and the fifth as a busboy in a fa§hionabie restaurant.. . Life in World' Reporting on their experience •In La Semaine Religieuse,' Mon- . treal archdiocesan' publication, · they said they undertooK' their' experiment in order to. learn' more about the ordinary" life of , Christians in the world as' well ·as out of a "need to earn money" 'and "a' certain taste for adven-' lure...· Among the things which they gained . from their experience, they said, are "a great admira tion for the courage"of the peo · pIe with whom they worked, "a .. greater interest in their preoccu pations, a sense of reality ..... In a word. it was an experience in maturity." "'It seems to us," they added, "that our lives' as priests· will · henceforth bear the imprint of this stay in the work world."
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missions in the United States was underscored here in Ala .bama by a novitiate official Father Roderick Keane,· M.S. SS.T OJ spoke at ceremonies which honored 11 seminarians who completed studies here at the Holy Ghost Novitiate of the MiSsionary Servants of the Most . Holy Trinity and go to the com munity's major seminary at WinChester, Va. Also honored were a class of eight postulants who had completed studies at Father Judge Seminary, Monroe, Va., and entered the novitiate. Father Kean~ urged the semi narians to "persevere in your AmbuiguitT.. studies because missionaries are lIerberg also deplored "a cer needed desperately right· bere" tain ambiguity" which he said in the United States. has appeared in recent Catholic . 'Shocking Situation' . statements on socialism. "If the Catholic Church should "One of our Trinity missions begin to waver out of a dellire right here in this country is to get in line with the spirit of larger than the state of Connec the age, where then could we ticut," Father Keane related. "It look for understanding and nwnbers 168,000 souls, only 410 strength in our never-ending of whom are Catholic. That's one battle to preserve our civiliza Qut of every 400. tion and our' freedom from the -rhe situation is shocking, es furious 'onslaughts of the bar barians of our time?" he asked. pecially when we consider that one out of every 12 ·.Africans is a Herberg had praise for many Catholic and one out of every aspects of the Vatican council, 75 in India," Father Keane saying it marked the' end of the added. "cold war in Christendom" which has prevailed since the Protestant Reformation and the Council of Trent. •. NO JOB TOO BIG But, he declared, "to interpret NONE TOO :MAl1 what has been happening to and within the Church as an exer cise in updating, in bringing the Church into line with modem . . PRINTERS times, seems to me a most dan .gerol,l~ misunderstanding of bC?th . Main OHiee' and Plant
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liturgy because of its national-· istic implications. -It has many advantages, of course," be said, "but in the last analysis what is it but another stage in the fragmentation of the universal substance of the' Church along national-cultural lines?" "'The vernacular liturgy nlay give the Church a new look," he adde~, "more modish, more up to-date, more in line with the temper of the times. But what will it do to' the Church's unity, and universality which are among the essential marks of its life in the world?"
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VARIOUS SECTORS OF DIOCESE A.REREPRESENTED AMONG GRADUATES AT ST. ANNE'S HOSPITAl, IlCBOOL OP lWRSlNC . .
Reprints Cardinal 'Cushing's
Poem in Reply to Requests
By Mary Tinley Daly
See Poverty's Face
New Jersey Couple Describe Conditions
In Kentucky Mountain Region
Cape Women Set AcNvities :Father Francis Mahoney !rae installed the following officers ~ the St. Margaret-Mary Guild:
RIDGEFIELD PARK (NC)Shoeless ill-clad eountry folk A New Jersey couple who spent living in tar-paper shacks with Annie Eldridge, president; their Summer vacation doing out sanitary facilities. Virginia Bradbury, vice-presi census work for a Catholic mis A baby covered with filth dent; Katherine Bowan, record sion in a mountain section of cradled in a cardboarc box. ing secretary; Rita Simons, cor Kentucky got a first-hand look People carrying water a mile responding secretary; Pauline at the face of poverty. " Sanna; treasurer. The making an d a 'haI f 'In b uck e ts . Among the impressions gar of baby layettes is the guild's A vomiting child wiping hts charitable project. Past presi nered by Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Gaw during their stay in 'face with newspaper. dents' night will be held Wed "Some months ago, you printed
The Gaws served St. Clare's nesday, Oct. 6. A rummage sale Steady my hurried pace with Rockcastle County in the Appaa poem by Cardinal Cushing tM 'vision of the eternal reach Iachia section of Kentucky: mission in Rockcastle County, an. will be held in October ,and the that really
area with 13,000 people-six of Christmas Bazarr on ThursdaJtp of time, helped me. It
them Catholics. Three priests of. Nov. 11. Give me, amidst the confusion New Council to Help the Covington, Ky., diocese work was about tak
01. my day, the calmness of the ing time to chat
out of St. Clare's and cover an Committee chairmen were ap everlasting hills. Spanish-Speaking area larger than Rhode Island. pointed as follows: with a friend,
Break the tensions of ,my BOSTON (NC)-Residents of Each drives more than 400 mile. look at a flower,
nerves and muscles with the several well-to-do Boston sub Rose Brady, spiritual devel ,very Sunday to offer Mass. pat a dog, read
soothing music of the singing urbs have formed a West Sub opment; Marilyn Burns and a book. I clipped
Bate Negroes. Catholics streams. Marion Ellis, family and parent; urban Catholic Interracial Coun it out and stuck
Help me to know the magical cil to promote the welfare of the The couple, who were re Mary McManus, Catholic youth; it in my mirror.
restoring power of sleep. cruited by the Glenmary Fathers, Kay Willis and Charlotte Fer growing number of Spanish EveQ' ,time I
Teach me the art of taking speaking persons moving into lived in the parish with their nandes, ways and means; Ida found myself
one-minute vacations··· two ~ildren, aged 3 and 4. Also Gibseon, cooperation with Cath the area. rushing pell
Slowing down to look at a Aims of the Catholic group are helping out at the same time olic Charities; Gertrude Kelli mell and getting an tense and flower, to chat with a friend, to were two couples from Pennsyi her, hospitality. nervous I'd read it over. Then, pat a dog, to read a few lines ' to teach English to children, pro vania (with 10 children betweeft vide tutoring for their parents, this Summer my girls decided to from a good book. Also Marilyn Lakin, publica" obtain Spanish-speaking priests them), a priest from Ohio, an ",uprise mother' by makipg a
Remind me each day of the to hold services, and publish a other priest and a seminariaA Eve Shaker, Katherine Bowaa dean sweep of my bedroom fable of the hare and the tortoise from Rhode Island, two nuns and Virginia Bradbury, program; and there went the poem. I that I may know the race :ill Spanish-English newspapa. Mary Fuller, handbook editoq from ChiCago,' and young volun hadn't the heart to scold the not always to the swift; that teers from North Dakota, Ten-' Muriel Ellis, auditor; Helene ehildren so I wonder if you'd there is more to life than in Allden, Rosemary Sweeney and nessee and New York. American Sisters Run lend me a copy?"
Everywhere they went in their :Mary Fuller, directors. creasing its speed. From Chicago, from Richmond,
Let me look up into the Colombia Parish Center eensus work they encountered from Bethesda, Md., and other branches of the towering oak CALI (NC)-Four Benedictine hatred for Negroes and Catholics. places have come like requests. and know that it grew great and Sisters whose motherhouse is ift strong because it grew slowly Beech Grove, Ind., have arrived Effect on Wile Our Lady of Angels here to take charge of the Cau A man reader tells of cutting and well. ONE STOP
quits parish eenter in a slum Slow me down, Lord, and in Our Lady of Angels Counci1 out the poem, scotch-taping it SHOPPING CENTER
spire me to send my roots into section of Cali. of Catholic Women, Fall River, to the kitchen wall "right over The nuns were identified as the soil for life's enduring values will precede its meeting Wed • Television. • Furniture the stove" and of the effect it that I may grow toward the stars Sister Gertrude Gettelfinger of nesday, Oct. 6 with a 'potluck' • Appliances • Grocery had on his wife: Bradford, Ind., Sister joceal supper. Mrs. Mary Correira is 9f my greater destiny. "When things used to get hec 104 Allen St., New Bedford Schink of Dale, Iild., Sister Mary chairman. A Halloween dance 11 Slow me down, Lord, that I 1Ic, I'd say to the Lady of Our Cabrini Laverdiere of Belcourt, may live abundantly! planned for October and a penny House, 'Come on now, Gertrude, . WYman 7-9354 Slow me down, Lord: Slow me N.D., and Sister Phyllis GroneUl sale for Nov~mber. Holy Rosary take it easy. Play it cool!' Well, 01. Evansville, Ind. Sodality of the parish announces", ,; Mrs. Daly, I don't know about downl Parish centers are the Church" a Communion breakfast to' fol- . you but this used to make my answer here to the problem' of low 8 o'clock' Masa· Sunda7' wife see red. She'd snap back, " Enjoy Dining Centenarian Receives earing for the large numbers of morning; sept. 12., ' "That's' easy enough' for you to people flocking into Latin . IN THE 88y but if YO\1 had &11 the things . First Communion American cities. Each center hY 10 do that I have, YOU' couldn't
CINCINNATI (NC)--8fx d&Y8 a medical dispensary, a eommis- , . take it easy or'play it· cool. You'
. JQLLY WHALER. men!' she always finished off after JaeOb Buchert eelebrated sari' store, grade school, paris~ .-·AND ' , , with, and that made me mad,. his 100th birthday, he received h&11 aDd a ehurcho his first Holy CommunioJl.o .SPOUTER INN:· 110 then there were two of WI." ,
The' retired Cincinnati busi Cardinal" Cushing, ,with ldII
, .ESTA~HrS . . ' ',Who waS' aCtive, until beautifully ,expressed sent1me~~ ,
lJoIItOB Chapter of Trtmb' eoI- . '• . ," " ' he 96, entered the church seems to succeed where ae.-'
'·Atwoys. Parkl;.g JeRe Almmiae ~ilt1OI1 .in· ,Hyannis:' '. ~. Yeart~o. A, stroke kept trude's husband failed." . held a tea saturd~, 'Sept. ) l ' ~. BarnttClbi,' l.>ad ". h'om receiving, the sacra "Every now and' then,- . ~ . ' menb of Penance and Ho17 ift Cohasset. Entering fres~a, Jetter continued; "~ JJotice, bei will be honored, tDeludins ,1ltiSI, ,~ __......SNP_s.ooN· _7N~"" ;H.....~., J'eading that poem while she's Communion. Paula Powers, Swansea.' ' ' Recovered from the stroke eooking and by golly, she" does and fully alert, though confined .low down!" So here we go again, for you to a wheelchair, be' assisted at who missed it on the first round, Mass for the first time in the DO~NELLY or lost the clipping, o'r just need living room of the home of his daughter, Mrs. Louis M~ Mc another reminder (as'140): Glaughlin of St. Mary's parish, where he resides. Day of Recollection Father William G. Topmoel The Oblates of St. Benedict ler, S.J., professor of dogmatic Commercial • Industrial will hold a Day of ~ecollection theology at St. Mary of 'the Lake Institutional " seminary, Chicago, who went to at Portsmouth Priory next Sun Painting and Decorating day, Sept. 12. The service will school with some of Buchert's start with a 9 o'clock Mass and grandchildren in Cincinnati, of Fall River OSborne 2-1911 conclude with benediction at fered the Mass facing the little UNiON WHARF, FAIRHAVEN. congregation, and gave Buchert 3:15. Relatives and .friends at 7.4 Williamson Street Communion under boU1 apee!es. the Oblates are invited.
For S'Ome reason-perhaps a carry-oYer from the re laxation of the Summer-many readers are writing in for a reprint of Cardinal CUShing's prayer, "Slow Me Down, Lord!" From South Hadley, Mass.: "l should like to obtain a copy of the poem and per Slow. Me Down, Lord! haps use it in our Rosary Slow me down, Lord! Ease the Altar Society Bulletin."From pounding of my heart by the "Mother of Six" in Canada: quieting of my mind.
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Nuns' Fashi'ons On Display
By Marilyn ~ Joseph Roderick Anyone who has read this column regul,arly has prob ably discovered that I enjoy the idea of children in the garden. I enjoy nothing more than watching the children pick a tomato, an apple, a pear and anything else they can find to ea~ Th.is they relish when, in order to eat in haste, and I don t thmk there can he requested his slice of meat be be greater satisfaction for placed between two hunks of the gardener. bread. The popularity of this
ROME (NC)-What's new III fashions for nuns? At a private showing in one of Rome's top fashion houses, around 25 superiors of congrega tions for nuns were given ideas abo1,1t what can be done to mod ernize or simplify habits for their Sisters. The show was staged at the fashion salon of Fontana Sisters and was organized by an Amer ican television network (ABC). The designers .displayed tlnee new habits as suggestions for ~tu~: c.hang~s, ,,'.' The habits had skirts ending abput halfway below the knee. . dark stockings and slightly' tail- . ored jackets either with a v neck or a white piquet collar similar to that worn by a priest. Glan Christian designed a light headcovering with a small veil gathered at the back, while Fontana suggested a black tur ban-like head covering.
Children do not necessarily food item has increased so much have to be bystanders to the . over the years especially with gardening process, however, and our working population that this is the point to this article. most every home has at least Early this past Spring I set out" one lunch carrier.. The mode of the coldframe' with the intent of carrying the sandwiches has be starting some seed arid was ac come mor~ sophisticated since companied by my daughter th.e days o~ ,th~ lunch pail. but Melissa. :".' .:' ,: ;:. j:; tQe·. :ingredi~ts. ~re "somewhat We mixed a little peat moss the same. and sand and placed it on the' Last year was the first time manure which formed the 'bot- .J that I was conJ;ronted :with .this tom layer of soil in the frame. challenge daily and I am KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Welcoming Lawrence Cardinal Melissa then seeded some aster ashamed to admit that I fell Shehan of Baltimore to the ·annual meeting of the National seed which i had· purchased be": down disgracefully on the job.,' . Federation of Catholic College Students is Oliver Barber, eause she liked the pictures of My older daughter was required the, asters on the seed packet. to take her noon meal with her Jr., president of the federation. Cardinal Shehan keynoted :We watered them and looked at each day. the meeting in Washington. NC Pho~ them every day. It travelled in a gaily deco It didn't take long for the seeds rated lunch box, plaid at first . to sprout and Melissa was quite but when it turned out that al excited by the little green shoots . most every other child had the College for Sisters eoming up out of the soU. Well, . same colored lunch box we a month or so went by and the' switched to one decorated by Is· Open to Laity plants became larger and needed' Mary Poppins. WASHINGTON (NC)--Cath urged that the'two groups "co thinning so I let Melissa do this' However, .there was nothin~ olic college students agreed at operate more fully and move sT. LOUIS, (NC)-St. Mlll7'a job under my supervision. It . supercalifragilistic abo u t the their convehtion here to push toward eventual union." There College of O'Fallon, a junior col-, didn't take long before she took content~. It varied from tomato for more cooperation with other is a great deal of overlap" in the lege operated for Sisters of the sole possession of her "mums". . soup to tomato soup and from national student groups and functions of the two groups, Most Precious Blood, of O'Fallon, Why she insisted on calling them . peanut butter sandwiches to with groups of other religions. Kurtz said, with both groups will admit lay stUdents for the JIlums I don't know but I do· peanut butter sandwiches. True, Recommendations of national maintaining national offices. first time this Fall. About six know that I have given up try_ her taste lackS any adventurous officers adopted by the conven Merger would also create "a men and 20 women have already Ing to correct her. bent but then I must confess that tion of the National Federation united Catholic student voice," registered for classes. . Proudest' Gardener I didn't lose much sleep trying of Catholic College Students in he added. The college is operated by the to convert her. eluded: Kurtz said most of the prob nuns to prepare Sisters for their In late May we transplanted ' That Cheese' Taking necessary steps "to en'" lems are "structural and admin own order. It presently enrolla them with the help of about five The one time I did' decide to able campuses and regions to istrative rather than substan children to a little bed behi~d be more adventurous by putting celebrate the liturgy of the East tive," but he cautioned~ "Let's 60 junior Sisters. the house where they are 10 a luscious piece of Italian cheese em rites"; not get our hop~s too high. Let's full bloom now. Needless to say in her. lunch I forgot to reckon "Continuati9n of joint action not get discouraged" if the mer Set Calendar I have the proudest gardener with the ageing process of strong program against apartheid"; ger fails to come about. around. Not a weed has dared cheese stored in a tight contain 'Participation, if possible, in The Council of Catholic Women tG show i~ he~d. among the er in a warm cloak room. That . YMCA-Young Adult w 0 r k of st. Jean Baptiste parish, Fall fl~ers. Melissa IS like a savage day when Meryl came home to camps in Latin America; Honor Franciscan Nun River, will open its year Sunday, Wlth weeds, calling them natX)es tell how no one would sit with Establishment of. communica h R ' A d Sept. 12 with a coffee hour. The · W It as she. pulls .them out of the her in the lunch' room because tions with·Pax Ro~ana, interna ecrulter wa[ , first meeting will be held at 7:30" arround. ," " ... of that cheese. -Back to ,the pea tional student organization; CmCAGO (NC)-The' re~gi.. Monday night, Sept. 13 and a <?ddly enough almost ev~ry . nut butter sandwiches. Increasing .cooperation wit h ous vocations recruiter award 'Communion' breakfast is slated, viSItor "we have had has ~ Well, this year I have decided . student'groups as the National of .the Sisters Vocation Assocl for Sunday, Sept. 26. October mar~ed on the .prettY asters, so .. to do the girl proud and I .have . Student Christian Federation ation will Qe presented here will' feature a living rosary and Melissa glories In praise at least. been trying different spreads be and the U. S. National Student Saturday, Sept. 18 to Sister·, November a turkey whist anda once a week. f th eed f th . A _ ' ti Mary Clairiee of the Francis- . cake sale. A Christmas party is As'd fro th fact' tb t .• i ' ore e n or em .aI'l;ses. .......sOCla on.
~ e m e a see ng The following two are quite The delegates also heard • can Sisters of the Immaculate planned for Wednesday, Dee. 15. • chIld grow and lo-ye her ~wn tasty, easy to prepare and. keep call . to consider merging the Conception of Rock Island, m.. flowers is cute I think Melissa well in the refrigerator. NFCCS with the National New The presentation will be made has learned a great deal from Bacon and Liver Fillin&' man Club Federation (NNCF). by Mother M .. Lois, SVA presi . her experience. Sh,: has learned % cup chopped, cooked liver Donn Kurtz, NNCF president, dent, at the annual Sisters Vo . CAPE COD'S a ':lttle about the life cycle, has . (this is no effort if yOU have a cation Workshop. Sister Clairice enJoyed . the . satisfaction· of . blender) . . has been vocations director of LAR~EST BANK knOWing that she helped some 4 slices panbroiled bacon Honor Danny Thomas, her community for the last thing beautiful come to life, and (crumbled) five years. Wife for Charities has l~~rned that asters are 3 tablespoons salad dressing LOS ANGELES (NC)--Come -mums . 2 .teaspoollS minced onion 'dian Danny Thomas, founder of .. In the Kitchen 1 teaspoon prepared mustard As the school bells ring out 'h teaspoon salt St. Jude Children's. Research per annum
again, .figuratively if not liter Va teaspoon monsodium gluta-. Hospital, Memphis, Tenn., was ally, the majority of mothers mate honored here for his .charities. • • Our Investment Savings Plan
breathe a sigh' of relief. Needless 1) Cook and finely chop liver, He was made a Knight Com, • Dividends Paid Quarterly
to· say it has been a long; hot panbroil bacon '. ' mander with Star in the Eques trian Order Of the Holy Sepul' Summer and most of our nerVes 2) Mix togetlier the salad SO. Dartmouth : are at the straining point. . dressing onion mustard salt chre of Jerusalem:Jam~sFran~is: I find it amazi,ng just _how and glu~tamate.' ,. Cardinal :Mclntyr~ of Los An":' • " . and Hyannis • gelespresented the honor on • . . • many friends' two little girls 3) Toss together the chopped • manage to acquire during a vaca liver and crumbled bacon. Blend 'behalf of the order. Mr. Thomas". named So. 'Dartmouth WY 7-:9384: ' tion period, and ho'I;V many of in lightly the salad dressing ,wife, Rosemary,' SOUTH YARMOUTH these little' friends manage to mixture. . Lady Command~r., . • Hyannis 2921 • . ,Hy~nnis - .Dennis Port spend what, seenur li~e: Jllost of .' 4) Store this filling the re .: Yarmouth Plaza. , their waking hours' either in my . frigerator untll ready to use. Visitation .~uild 1 back yara or in my hbuse. -Ham 'n' Cheese Supreme New officers Visitation Guild" Suddenly I feel a kinship with 0/4 cup cream style. cottage Eastham include Mrs. Arthur Dagwood Bumstead ~ I recall . cheese . " . Cestaro, -president; Mrs. Edm.ond the . many days this" Summer . ¥" cup (3 oz. can) dElviled . Hebert, . vice-president; lI4rs. ....hen I would decide to ~ake a ' ham Basil MacDonald, treas~rerj MI;a. short nap only to .wa~en sur'14 cup salted peanuts, with Michael Kane, secretary. rounded by the .CUrIOUS ~aze of out skins; chopped a troop of four, fIve and SIX year 2 tablespoons salad dressing olds or more embarrassin~'still 1 tablespoons prepared horse to have them troop en masse radish into ,my bath while I grabbed 1 teaspoon chopped chives 427 Second St. Cor. Morgan frantIcally for a towel. 1) Put in a. bowl and toss to• BANQUETS • WEDDINGS • PARTIES These togetherness problems gether the cheese,' ham and Ed. McGinn, Prop. less~n considerably as the schopeanuts. OLIVETTI • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS lashc world beck~ns but a new 2) Mix together the dressing, C'tdculators-Adding & Ace't. problem presents Itself and that horse-radish and chives. 1343 PLEASANT ST., FAll RIVER Machines -ill what to put into those lunch 3) Blend the dressing mixture boxes for the next 40 weeka. lightly with the cheese, ham, We Do Duplicating OSborne 3-naO Popularity Increases and peanuts. . Tel. The Earl of Sandwich had no 4) Store in refrigerator until 679-6712, 675-7806 -7807 Idea what • trend be' had atarte<t zeady to spread on the bread. . , ;
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THE ANCrfOR-Diocese of
DOLORES ARRUDA
F~I)
River-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
,KATHLEEN FITZGERALD
MARY ANN FERRY
JOANNE MOSLEY
NOREEN 81NGLEY
JANE SULLIVAN
JOYCE CHRUPCALA
MARIE MORGAN
EIGHT MT. ST. MARY'S ACADEMY ALUMNAE DEDICATE LIVES. TO GOD'S S'ERVICE
Pontiff Requests' Agency Increase Vietnam Relief
Sheridan ,Guards
Mark Centenary
Eight Young Women Enter Religion • N()vitiates Mount St. Mary Graduat'es •n
Six June graduates of Mount St. Mary Academy, Fall River, and two 1964 graduates have entered religious life. Five girls entered the Sisters of' Mercy request of Pope Paul VI and of Novitiate, Cumberland, R. I. yes the Federal government. terday, one entered the Mary Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle knoll Sisters, one the Felician Clf Washington, chairman of the Sisters and one the Poor Ciares. Entering the Sisters of Mercy administrative board of the Na were Dolores Arruda, daughter tional Catholic Welfare Confer of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Arruda, ence, made the announceIl}ent. St. Patrick's parish, Fall River; It was in response to a direct appeal from the Pope to the U.'S. Kathleen Fitzgerald, daughter of hierarchy for increased aid. In Mr. and Mrs. James Fitzgerald, recent weeks, the Catholic agen- ' St. Patrick's, Fall River; Joanne ey, and other private voluntary Mosley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. erganizations, also has been Joseph Mosley, St. Patrick's, asked by the U. S. government Fall River; Noreen Pingley, Our to raise their contributions. It is expected that a "substan tial portion" of the worldwide relief work of the U. S. Catholic agency wID be concentrated in South Vietnam from now on. NEW YORK (NC)-Sup.; The aid will be used to alle port for President Johnson's viate what officials call the ur-, gent needs of 650,000 refugees, Vietnam policies and for Ne and other war victims as well as gro civil rights, as well as to' help develop long-range plans condemnation of anti-Semitism for economic, stability of that and the Ku Klux Klan, were eountry. voiced in resolutions adopted by , First to Arrive the Catholic War Veterans. Some 4,700 members of the U. S. Catholic aid go~s into South Vietnam throught the fa CWV, atteJ?,ded the organi:i\ation's eilities of Catholic Relief Ser 30th annual convention here. vices-National Catholic Welfare They elected' Martin Riley of Conference, w h i c h presently Philadelphia national command eonducts relief programs in 79 er, succeeding Charles F. Shel- ' nations in Africa, Asia and Latin ley ,of Brooklyn. " The resolution on Vietnam America. called for efforts to resist com CRS has been in South Viet nam since 1954 when the U. S. munist aggression there while also urging the U. S. to press for government requested its ser vices. It was the first private an end to hostilities through honorable negotiations at a time, U. S. relief agency to arrive. to be chosen by this country. Following' Arc h'b ish 0 p Several resolutions asked in O'Boyle's announcent, the exec utive dire(ltor of CRS, Bishop creased benefits for veterans, including a cold war G.I. educaEdward' E. Swanstrom, an . nounced at the agency's New tional assistance bill. The civil rights resolution York headquarters that the first shipment under the increased backed racial justice in the use program will be 200 tons of salt. of public facilities, in voting, in , The prelate, who announced equal employment opportunity tbat his agency now helps and trade union membership, in about 450,000 J?ersons' in South anti-poverty efforts and in ed Vietnam, said salt is acutely ucation. o the r resolutions: urged needed. It will leave from New Orleans by ship on Sept. 7, he stepped-up civil defense efforts; asked passage of new federal .aid. legislation against obscenity; called for liberalization of U.S. immigration laws; backed prayer Providence Priest in public places, even if this Gets Stein Award should require a constitutional NEW YORK (NC) - Father amendment; endorsed continued observance of Captive Nations Edward H. Flannery of Provi dence, author of "Anguish of the Week and asked for formation of a congressional committee on Jews; 23 Centuries of Anti Semitism," will be presented the captive nations; and called on 10th annual Edith Stein Award the CWV to cooperate with New man Clubs, the Catholic Youth on Saturday, Oct. 9 at the annu al Communion breakfast of the Organization, and the Confrater nity of Christian Doctrine. Edith Stein Guild here. The award is for contribution New Seminary of better understanding between BROOKLYN (NC) -A new Jews and Catholics. The guild is college-level seminary for the named for a convert from Juda ism who became a Carmelite Brooklyn, diocese will be con nun and 'rlied in a nazi concen structed on a 27-acre tract in the tration camp in World War II. Douglaston area.
WASHINGTON (NC) Catholic relief efforts in South Vietnam are being sharply stepped up at the
u.s.
Veterans Support Johnson Policy
Lady of Fatima, Swansea; Mary Ann Ferry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Ferry. Enters Maryknoll Jane Sullivan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Sullivan, St. William's parish, Fall River, has entered the Maryknoll Sisters, Topsfield, Mass. Joyce Chrup cala, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew Chrupcala; St. Stanis laus parish, Fall River, has be gun her novitiate as a Felician Sister at Our Lady of the Angels Novitiate, Enfield, Conn., and Miss Marie Morgan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Morgan, St. Patrick's, Fall River, has entered the Monastery of St. Clare, J'aJllaica Plain.
Wins Lebanese Award ".
Ambassador Presents Order of Cedars To American Franciscan
WASHINGTON (NC) - An American priest who served in the Holy Land for 20 years has been awarded Lebanon's Order of the Cedars here by Lebanese Ambassador Ibrahim El'Ashdab. "We have a holy saying in Arabic: 'Closest to God are those who love their children,''' the ambassador said. "And Father Denis Mooney is closest to God because he loved all the children' of Lebanon - the Palestinians, the Lebanese and those of his English-speaking parish." Father Mooney, • Franciscan' who was field director of the' Pontifical Mission for Palestine and pastor of English-speaking' Latin-rite Catholics in Beirut, was unable to attend the cere;;, mony. He is in Mercy Hospital, Baltimore, following surgery~
Miraculous Medal Novena Changes PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Re visions have been made, in th~ pI:ayers and hymns of the .per:" petual novena in honor .of Our Li\dy of the Miraculous Medal. Father Daniel L. Doyle, C.M" .director of the Central As~ocia tion of the Miraculous Medal here which promotes the devo tion, estimates over five million persons each week, participate in the devotions in 3,500 churches throughout the country. He said there are no radical ,changes made in the prayers, ex cept for modernization of lan guage. The hymn "Immaculate
Mary" has replaced "Mother Dearest, Mother," and "Hail,
Holy Queen Enthroned Above" has replaced "Mother Dear, 0 Pray for Me" in the devotion.
Heads Chaplains BOSTON (NC)-Father Joseph O'Malley of Denver, was elected president of the American Cath olic Correctional Chaplains' As sociation at the 95th Congress of Corrections here. Formerly of Worcester, he is attached to the Department of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, assigned ~o the Fed eral Correctional Institution, En liewood, Colo.
His brother, Fat her Kevin Mooney, O.F.M., accepted the award for him. Father Denis, youngest of 11 ehildren, also has three sisters who are Franciscans in Balti more. oMission Direetor Father Denis was sent to Cairo in 1945 and served in Egypt and Jordan' for' seven years. Then he was named pastor of Beirut and director of the Pontifical Mission's Beirut office. Ten years later, in 1962, he be came field director ot the Pontifical Mission. ' He recently established an, English-speaking s c h 0 01 for Arabs at Ain Anoub, Lebanon, to be staffed by Sisters of Mercy from Albany, N. Y., the first American community to work in Lebanon. As pastor of Beirut, he estab lished a Catholic Worlren's Guild and the Schola Cantorum, a choral group.
'MANCHESTER (NC) - The Sheridan Guards, a military unit formed to protect· St. Anne'S church here from mob violence, recently observed the 100th an niversary of organization. Back in 1885 the No-Nothing party, a violent anti-Catholie group was, active here. On all August night a band of the fa natics marched on St. Anne'. church bent on destroying it. . John Maynard, who lived nearby, appeared with a shotgull and warned he would shoot the first man who tried to damage the church. The 'mob dispersed. As a result of tile' incident parishioners decided to form a military unit to, protect the, church. They called the unit the Sheridan . Guards iri honor Ot Union Gen. Philip H. Sheridan under whom a number of the parishioners served during the Civil War. The unit continued itS services to· the parish over the years. A contingent served in the· Span ish-American War and in World War i.
New Offices. EAST ,ORANGE (NC)-New offices of the Advocate, Newark archdiocesan newspaper, and'. central archdJocesan supply ser vice were dedicated here by Archbishop Thomas A. Boland of Newark.
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TffE ANCTiORThurs., Sept. 9, 1965
42S Volunteers
To Take Mission Posts in u. S.
College StuC:ents Study Church's
CHICAGO (NC)-A rec ord 425 Extension Society Volunteers have completed training here and are head ing for mission posts in 32 U. S. dioceses. The volunteers, who total 80 more than last year, have for feited salaried positions to serve as teachers, nurses, medical technicians, campus workers, parish helpers and social work ers at 164 U. S. parishes and in stitutions.. Sponsored by. the Catholie· Church ~xtension Society here, the volunteers are drawn from 116 dioceses and 185 colleges. They will serve in major cities, remote migrant worker camps arid racially tense areas, such Selma, Ala. Sixty-two members of this year's volunteer corps hav~ al ready served at least one year in the four-year-old program. New Ventures _ Officials said that the in-' creased number of volunteers has made possible some new' ventures, notably a sharp rise in inner city and interraCiat work. Volunteers trained in these fields last year went to. Chicago, but this year they also will go to Detroit, Okla homa City, Wichita, Kansas City, Omaha and Salt Lake city. . Teachers, nurses and parillh' social workers will go into AIi-: palachia, the area where i.lliter acy arid unemployment are the highest in the nation and where a special' federal effort to assist' development has been launched. The volunteers are men and women between the ages of 21 an4 45, single or married with out dependent children. More thliD 90 per cent are college graduates. They will be given room and board, transportation costs, hospitalization insurance' and a monthly stipend of $50.,
Mission Task CINCINNATI (NC)-Stu dent delegates from some 50 c(>lleges and major seminar ies studied deeper commit ment to the Church's missionary task at national conventions here. Meeting for the first time in separate. conventions were rep resentatives of 'college affiliates of the Catholic Students' Mis sion Crusade, at Our Lady of Cincinnati College, and of CSMC 'seminary affiliates, at St. Greg ory's seminary. High school units of the million-member -CSMC University of Notre Dame.
as
Focus Radio and TV Programs on Council. CHICAGO (NC)-Nationwide radio and television network' programs produced during the' coming season by the National Council_of Catholic Men wili be' focused in part on a more thor Ough understanding of the pro nouncements of the Second Vat ican Council. This is one of several decisions made by the national executive committee .of the NCCM at a two-day meeting here under chairmanship of John F. Don nelly of Grand Rapids, president. In cooperation with the Na tional Broadc!lsting Company,' the NCCM has been producing, The Catholic Hour on radio since' 1930 and o~, TV since 1951. The. 13elief has been expressed .that inore non-Catholics than. Cath-' olies see NCCM programs, al-' .hough only one-tbird of the re-; suiting mail is from non-Cath-: .lics.
New President LIVONIA- (NC)-Sister Mary Danutha has been named presi dent of Madonna College, a school for women operated by the Felician Sisters here in Michigan. Chairman of the col lege's biology department for 10 years, Sister Danutha suc ceeds Sister Mary Raynelda, president since 1960.
Elect Mother General NEW BRITAIN (NC)-Mother Mary' Amadeus Sitko has been elected mother general of the Daughters of Mary of the Im maculate Conception, a teaching congregation in Connecticut, MassaChusetts, New Jersey and New York. ...... '. . " ~ ,_"
11
College delegates heard Father Ronan Hoffman, O.F.M.Conv., professor of missiology at Catho lic University of America, Wash ington, D. C., describe the Church's missionary vocation as "more urgent than ever before." Father Hoffman said the "large majority of the human family" lives in "absolute misery" be cause of material poverty and, also is "spiritually indigent ill not knowing Christ." Prepare for Service He urged students to prepare "for service to the. world in keep PRIESTS CONCELEBRA'I'E AT RETREAT: During the. annual retreat for priests ing with the broad mission f>I. of the Diocese at Cathedral Camp, East Freetown, a ooncelebrated Mass is offered each the Church today." "Become acquainted with the afternoon. During the first week, Bishop Gerrard was principal celebrant, while six priestS the Precious Blood, Rev. Ernesto Borges' yarious organizations, both Cath acted as concelebrants. At ,the Communion olic and secular, which aim tfi holds the chalice, while Rev. Edward Sharpe, receive,S Blood o~ Christ. . serve mankind, such as Papal Volunteers, Extension Volun ·teers, Lay Mission Helpers, In ternational Catholic Auxiliaries, the Peace Corps, World Health Organization, Food and Agricuf. Accompani~s tural Organization, UNESCO," he said., "Become acquainted with the' The first matter on the agenda pressed by' the Council Fathers eontinuedlrom. Page One Jerusalem to the Pope's own. is, the Declaration, on Religious seems to be their fear of how' recent papal encyclicals dealing this important declaration will' with the worldwide missionary cathedral, the b~silica' of. St. Liberty. This document has al ready been debated ·and revised very possibly be misunderstood. task of the Church and the grave' John Lateran, one' half mile social questions facing the world· according to. the 'expressed However, since it is a fundamen apart. . . . There will' be local note wishes of the Bishops. A final ta:l truth of our religion anyway, in this generation," he added. sounded at the start of the pro-' vote was about to be taken on the problem seems to state 'what cession. Bishop Cassidy, under the last day of the Third Session has already been true - if not wliom Bishop Gerrard served as. and its postponement triggered always in' practIce-now in clear Chancellor of tbe DioCese, do-' a so-called rebellion in the and'decisive language. ' nated a stain' glass window that council when 1400 Bishops ap Following the debates con is in the Holy Cross Basilica;' pealed to the Pope to overrule cerning the revised text on Reli It' was the' Church of the bite' the decision of the Council Pres gious Liberty and the vote. of the Cardinal Fumasoni-Biondi who idency. However, the Pope Fathers, the Bishops will then backed the board of cardinals to served ~ Apostolic Delegate to turn their, attention on three the United States and was the afford the Fathers more time to sch<!duled sc1}.emata: The Church Rudy the revised text. eorisecrator at ceremonies ele in the "Modern Worid, Priestly Following'iite Pope's promise,' Life and J4inistry, an~ the Mis vating Bishop Cassidy to the Hierarchy. . however, the declaratiori is the . sio~~. The other .eight proposi The first day Gl Vatican 11; first matter on .the agenda. Arch'; tions have not yet been. officially . Session 4 will be devoted to the . bishop Aiter'. termed this a mat sCheduled in the agenda. .' . .importance of prayer and pen ter of "supreme importance :P " • ance which Diust precede all truly a prerequisite for 'peace in the . fruitful work. 1n the morning eivil order and for effective ecu the Pope will concelebrate Mass menical progress * * *" with :!2 officials of the Council. TAUNTON, MASS. MOst of the apprehension .::. Among the officials will be 12 Presidents, 4 Moderators and 6 " . THE BANK ON Archbishops and Bishops of the 245 MAIN STREET Councii Secretariat. Americans TAUNTON GREEN concelebrating with .the Holy fALMOUTH-KI 1-1911 Member o( Federal Deposit . Father are Their Eminences The first meeting of the ~a- . ARMAND ORTINS, Prop. Francis Cardinal Spellman and son for the Benedict Circle No.. Insurance Corporation Lawrence Cardinal She han, 81, Daughters of Isabella, will Council Presidents and Arch be held Tuesday night, Sept. 14, bishop John J. Krol, a Council at the K of C Hall. Under-Secretary. Following the business meet In the afternoon the Council Fathers will gather at the ing, an enactment of the seven Basilica of the Holy Cross of Sacraments will be presented Jerusalem, where many of the under the direction of Mrs. Richard Beaupre, chairman. relics of the Passion are pre served and venerated. The pro Mrs. Richard Gaulin will be cession will make its way to the chairman of refreshments. Pope's cathedral, St. John Lat MANUFACTURERS
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Tt1f. ANCHOR-;Diocese of,~.FQII Ri~e('-Tburs,."Sept,.9,.1,96~" :"" J":' ". I':., ' ......... ."., .... • f _. • "'C:"
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Out of Love for Him
God'" Love Yo..'
Fo'rme,'Prisoner in Laos Tells Horrors of Captivity
vividly and deliberately are the horrors of those 17 months recited. At the, close, n[r. VVolf~ .{ i 11 expresses Ills delirious de light in release and the reader whg stays to the last page will feel a, kindred delight. ~ A, cease-fire , was supposedly in force when the author start ed out on a routine helicopter flight from Vietiane to Padong. Thepilot was an American civil ian named Ed Shore, and John McMorrow, the mechanic, was also an American, not yet 21. Ovei' open country the helicopter began to lose altitude, and had to make a crash landing. VVheth er or not it had been fired upon was 'never determined. The three Americans, safely out of the wrecked chopper, felt that they would quickly be spotted by a friendly craft and rescued. Instead, they were discovered and'seized by a group of native soldiers who belonged to the so called neutralist forces of Sou vanna Phouma. This did not strike them as the worst, of fates, until they were put in bonds and forced to march through jungle, in steaming heat, attacked by mosquitoes and leeches, with scorpions numer ous and ever threatening~ , Their guards abused them, but when they were taken by truck toward Ban Namone, their hopes rose. For at Ban Namone' were meeting representatives of the Communists, the neutralists, and the rightists, to work out a peaceful settlement of the Lao tian Conflict. Rigorous interrogation These hopes were dashed, as many others were to be In the months ahead. The prisoners were not taken to Ban Namone, but to Yang Vieng, where they were staked out on the ground in torrential rain. They were, now, _ they realized, in the hands of --'Pathet Lao (Communists). They endured rigorous inter rogation for hours on end, were thru~t into, a truck wit~ a fat and filthy pig" were forced to walk through rough c,ountry and a river in flood, were shot ,at, and all the time deteriorated physi cally', , Pui a plane, they' 'tbought they might "be on the 'way to freedom. But their destina~on was Latrang, where they were locked in a filthy room which was completely boarded up' so that' they were in perpetual d,arkness. Their food was a little cold rice and rock salt, morning and night. They were always fiercely hungry, dreamed of the luxury of rooting in American garbage cans, found that mere survival was to be their major problem. Primitive Guards One element in the problem was their treatment by the ruards, primitive and probably psychotic, brimming with hatred for Americans, slinging their deadly weapons around with trigger-happy abandon. To keep sane oneself, to avoid provoca tion and still not yield an inch
on
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By Most Rev. Fulton J. SheeR, D.D. Two lawyers, representing one of the best-known t1~ In the theatrical world, eame to our office. The1' stated that their client wanted to give a large sum of money to help the poor. They were instructed not to give, the alms to an1' organization which would invest them or use them to construct large buildings. Furthermore, the entire sum had to be spent within a year outside the United States and wholly on the d~stitute, the sick and the socially disinherited. The magnificient gift of this television person ality was' given to the HoJy Father's Society for the Propagation of the Faith because the lawyers agreed that It fulfilled all of these conditions. It already has been, forwarded to the Holy Father to be distributed this year by his Commission"fulfilling the order that it be given, to those who have nothing.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Grant Wolfkill, a photographer for the National Broad easting Company, was a prisoner of the Communists in Laos from May 14. 1961 t.o August 17, 1962. This experience is detailed in Reported To Be Alive, which he wrote with the assistance of Jerry A. of dignity to these bullies, was Rose '(Simon and Schuster, an acute concern. It was at Latrang, during la $5.95). Reading the book is an excruciating experience, trine outings, that the three M
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made the acquaintance of an American Army sergea~t, Or ville Ballenger, who had been a prisoner for many months. VVhen One never kno~''What,~oes on deep In tiie,~~ of another they were moved to an old human being. That Is why It takes a God to Judge- us. How SISTER GEORGINE, R.s.M. a:arely does one find ,that, those who . French fortres~ at Nong Het, in . . .... . ; " ': .~. "Uve lil eomfori mat· have' Uncoinfori-" ,the mountains,' 'B8Ilenger 'be-" came their cellmate, and, like able hearts--6tirred by the finger of them, was 'put in crude stocks God so that, If not tllrough love of Him, each night for eight months. at least out of nneaSinesS, they ea$t Continued from Page One Thereafter they were taken themselves upon His Sacred Heart. How She has tal.!-ght at St. Patrick' back to the black room at La often, too, the Holy Spirit Who, as the trang, then back to the stocks and St. Louis Schools, Fall River, wind bJoweth where It will, leaves this at Nong Het, seemingly senseless St. John Attleboro, and St. I'entle dew Inside souls to make them moves which perhaps were Teresa, Pawtucket, and served mlndful of th~ poor. We are Uvlng liJ. meant to destroy their painfully as principal at St. n[ary's, New a new age where holiness will be in Bedford. maintained morale. separable from the service of, impov In April of 1962, they were erished, humanity. The worst of, all cU The new member of the Dioc transferred to a hut in the esan School Office staff is the vorcesb; to separate the love of God midst of a military camp. Un daughter of n[r. and Mrs. George from the love of neighbor. He who pro certain as to what this meant F. VVise, New Bedford, and the fesses to love God and, not the poor, does not love God. Who but strongly wishing that it was sister of Mrs. Roland Proven became poor' for our 8akes that we might beeome rich. But a step toward deliverance, It cher, also of New Bedford. they.. who 10vetlle poor because they want to make up for their was only at the end of July that falUDgs, will surely find God~ they learned of the possibility of their release within a month. May the Holy Spirit inspire souls who read this column to This came on August 17, when make up for their sins by sacrifice. May they complement their they were flown, in a Russian love of God by love of the destitute and implement the sacrifice plane to Vientiane. of the M8!ls by the sacrifice of iheir comfort, even a little. Christ DENVER' (NC) - VVhen nuns will reign more completely 'in their hearts and give them Inner They differed In religion. and priests are seen in the front VVo1fkill had none. Young n[c peace because they spent something out of love for Him who spent n[orrow was a Catholic and ranks of civil rights demonstra Himself even unto death for love of them. prayed regularly. Shore and tions, is it a cause of scandal to the Church? Ballenger were Protestants, ev GOD LOVE YOU to the Cardwell family for $10 "In thanks idently of the evangelical sort. "Definitely not," asserts Sister I'lvlng for a wonderful and safe family vacation, we are sending Each evening after the anguish Mary Luke, ,first American you our last traveler's check for the poor." ••• to Mrs• .J.D. for of the day and before the terrors woman to serve as an auditor $50 ''In appreciation for a ,good harvest." ••• to a friend for of the night, Ballenger read at the Second Vatican Council. $100 "I was going to get a new winter coat this year. Since I aloud the twenty-third Psalm':' The Sister of Loretto mother do not really need one, I feel so much more at peace In making "The Lord is my shepherd." Of general said in an interview this offering. all their guards there was one here if there is "scandal" within who showed some regard for the Church, it lies with so-called' . So many who c'annot make large, gifts add to their sman them as human beings; they felt Catholics "who remain indiffersacrifices the prayers which' are so precious in the sight of God. sure he was a Christian. ent in the face of glaring social 'Wssionaries, who 'in the field working in your name, need' Mr, VVolfkill says categorically injustices." your daily prayers. The different colored decades of the VVorld that the North Vietnamese were Sister 'Mary Luke, chairman of mission Rosary remmd you to pray for the Missions in every part of ' in Laos in numbers,and con the' Conference of n[ajor Supe the world. For your rosary, blessed by Bishop Sheen, send your' ducted the war on the Commu , riors of VVomen which ended its offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth nist side. He is sure, too; that five-day meeting here was asked Avenue, ,New York, N.Y.' 10001; some of the high officials he en to comment' on criticismchlU'g- ," countered were the Chinese ing that it. is not "dignified," nor Out out this CloI1UD11. pin ,"our saerlflee to It and mall It .. Communists. "cultured" for nuns and priesta Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Soclet,- for Again and again he alludes to to take part in demonstrations. the Propagation of the Faith, 366 FIfth Avenue, New Yorkr N. Y. the maniacai hatred with which' She replied with questions of 10001, or to ,"our Dloeesall DIrector, Rt-Rev. RaJ'Dlond T. Coll 'the Communists fire their"troops. her own: "VVhat do these critics ' .Idlne, 368 North Mala Street,. Fall River, MassachusetU. From first hand' observation he mean 'by culture?" she asked. draws a very ugly picture- of the "To my way of thinking, culture enemy in Asia. is mankind's best efforts to im His book acquaints the reader prove the human condition. This with that enemy. It also gives is also a prerequisite for all the reader a hard look at the Catholics, religious or laity, who powers' of endurance of quite wish to make the Church rele ordinary Americans. But it is vant to the modern world." no Fourth of July oration. Its She sl11d that integrity rather language is rough, sometimes than lack of dignity is shown by extremely so, with vulgar and obscene idiom used on almost nuns and 'priests' who actively , support the civil rights move every page. It is not for the per ment. ' , son of delicate taste or tender "If an individual Catholic rec- , sensibilities. 'ogIJ.izes racial injustices as an . First on JFK affront to Christian principles, The first ,of the memoirs,con what is wrong when he oJ;' sl,1e,' 'cerning President' Kennedy to , protestS .these injustices?" ,she ~ be published by persons regu , asked. "Arid what is cultured or larly associated with him is My dignified 'about looking the other ,Twelv.e, Years with John F.. Ken way when confronted wJth these , nedy' (n[cKay. '$5.50), the work' , injUlitices?" -, , of n[rs. Evelyn Lincoln, who was personal secretaty to 'n[r. Ken nedy when he was in Congress and during his stay in the VVhite House. It is lengthy, prolix, and in the main, vapid. Although daily in touch with him, n[rs. Lincoln obviously was not close to n[r. Kennedy. Either • HEARING AIDS. ZENITH. ACOUSTICOH • UNEX that or she is the most discreet • COSMETICS • BIOLOGICALS • YITAMIIS of beings. Her book is packed with detail, but most of it is trivial. A little can be gleaned as to the late President's person IRENE R. SHEA., PROP.
ality and character, but hardly enough, ,to warrant struggling Prompt, Free Deliveti ill fAlL RIVER, SOMERSEt'. lMIIOII.' VICINITY
through the sands of insignifi 202,ItOCKST. (CORNS Of flM£ STJ 'AU.1t1VD
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LOIS OLIVEIRA Fell River
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ILL PERSONS ·WILLRECEIVB BENEFIT FROM SERVICES OF 3'1 NEW GRADUATE NURSES
Priests Open Apostolate In Apartment Building
Clergymen Observe 'Conversation Day'
DETROIT (1'i[C)-The pastor of St. Agnes' church 'here and his three assistants are causing a stir in the neighbo!' hood and that is exactly what they intended to do. The four clergymen are occupying units in two different apart ment buildings and from them are introducing them non-involvement. was re~ected selves and the Church to the in a recent door-to-door can · vass. crowded eentral CIty area In one crowded block 85 per about them. The four priests are Father Francis Granger, pastor; and his assistants, Fathers A r no I d Brouillard, John Markham and Edward Farrell. All four take their turns at occupying the apartments, most ly during daylight hours, to. make friends with the neighbors, serving as advice-givers or sim ply chatting with those who want someone to talk to.
cent of the people did not know where St. Agnes' church was located (less than two blocks away). The same percentage had never been inside a Catholic church. KBow People
"It is part of the pastoral re sponsibility to get to know the people of the parish and their problems," said Father Granger.' Father Farrell revealed that· finding the first apartment for the priest was a difficult task. "The owners didn't want Catholic priests living in their buildings, perhaps stirring up trouble." What can the apostolate . . complish? One job Is to combat the de spair and hopelessness apartment dwellers feel toward making im provements in living standardll.·
BERKELEY (NC) - Eighty Catholie priests and 120 Protes tant ministers gathered here yesterday for a "Day of Conver sation and Prayer for Christian Unity." Co-sponsored by the Diocese of Oakland and the Eastbay Council of Churches here in California, the ecumenical meet ing was held. at the Pacific School of Religion, a Protestant seminary. In a letter urging priests to attend the meeting, Bishop Floyd L. Begin of Oakland said: "If Christian unity is to become a 'grass roots' realitY', religious leaders must get together on the parochial level, as well as on the diocesan level." L'afayette Schools
Urges Catholics Use Leisure Time
To Increase Knowledge of Faith
NO!RE DAME (NC) - Lei sure IS much more than just a time for loafing. That was the gist of advice passed on by ~sgr. Reynol~ Hil lebrand, national chaplam, to some 5:000 .p~rsons at. the 14th annual ChnstI?n Fanuly Move me?t c?nventIon here at the Umverslty of Notre Dame. He emphasized that leisure wBl pile up in the years to come because of automation, elec tronics and other new develop ments. He said leisure should be employed by Catholics to add to their knowledge of their faith and enrich their lives with cul tures of the world. "It will free men from inbu mane labor, allowing men to devote more time to the finer things of life," said the mon signor who is pastor of Sacred Heart church in Hubbard Woods, a Chicago suburb. "There is nothing sacred about the 4O-hour week, just as tbere was nothing sacred about. the 72-' hour week," Magr. Hillebrand said. Given by God He called leisure "a "alue given to man by God" which can lead to development of "apostles of Christ." He advised
that leisure be used for activity in civic and political organiza tions as a means of learning about cultures. '''We must prepare for leisure time, and this we have not done," said the monsignor. "He member, heaven is all joy and no work." .A pan~l of Epis.copal laymea
WI.t~ theIr chap!am brought a sPln~ of ecumemsm to the con
ventlOn. They told the delegates about th~ benefits of tl,Je Chris tian Farmly Movement. \ CCD Facility
EDINA (NC)-A 23-clasftolB Confraternity of Christian Doe trine center has been dedicated at St. Patrick's parish here in Minnesota by Archbishop Leo Binz of St. Paul. All religious in struction in the parish is handled through the CCD school, which has 1,100 students attending for one hour per week. The clasa rooms are designed for a maxi mum of 15 pupils each.
Integrate Calmly NEW IBERIA (NC)-Racial desegregation of Catholic schools here and ift other partS of the· Lafayette diocese was accom plished without incident or dem onstrations. . Catholics m Iberia parish tcounty) were among 29 in the What About You? diocese who accepted all quali fied students with the beginning of the 1965-66 school term. Priests to .Peru The desegregation plan for Urges Cooperation public schools of Iberia parish JEFFERSON CITY (NC) (county) was unusual for Lou Two more priests of the diocese Of Lay Apostolate isiana because all grades were of Jefferson City 'here in Mis ADELAIDE (NC)-Coadjutor open to qualified students. This Archbishop James W.· Gleeson contrasted to six other parishes souri will take up missionary work . in Peru, according to Community Service of Adelaide called on the vari «(lounties) in the diocese deseg Bishop Joseph M. Marling. The ous lay organizations of Austra gregated only two or four grades . two are Father Edward Doyle, ee k ing ersonne. lia to "encourage the work of this year. ordained in 1964, and Father WASHINGTON (NC) - T h e one another in a spirit of unity" Eugene Speichinger, ordained in National Catholic Community not of competition." :May, 1965. They will 80 to PeFU Service is recruiting personnel Archbishop Gleeson gave the Schedule Catholic in October. . ••. A Franciscan Sister! ill line with USO plans to expand closing address at the first na Youth Week Oct. services because of the build-up tional seminar of adult organi GIVING YOURSELF to 8 1if1l com WASHINGTON (NC) - The pletelv dedicated ~o the salvation of .iIl the armed.forces. zations of the CathoDe lay apOll-· 1965 National Catholic. Youth souls .. through prayerl work, sac· Officials of the NCCS, which tolate. . rifice and joy ••• by usIng .your tal· Ie a member agency of USO, said "The Vatican council haa' 'Week, sponsQred by the Nation . eilts as a Nurse, laboratory and X·Ray men and women are being sought stressed the unitY ol the' al CYO Federation, a -division of Technician, Secretary, Accountant, 01' u directors and assistant diree Church, and each diocese should the National Council 01. Catha- . etitian, Seamstress, Cook, as well as COMPANY. tors of:USO clubs in this countl7 . be· a modei 01. individuals and' lie· Youth,' .will· . be observed' 11\ other hospital departments and .In .starting Sunday, Oct. 31; it. ,."sa' a new extensiOn of OUr work In Cat.. and overseas. - . groups working in unity under 8nnou~ced 'here. :.... '-, .' ; . c.llettcal and SOcial .Servlc. Flel~ •. Applicants 'must 'be at lea. . . th.eir bishoP,"Arebblsbop Glee Complete . Intentions for ijds y~ar'1I week, . '~ yelU'lil'!>f .-~ef. M.ve acolleg. .. ~n: said., 1'tien,. .. ·NO the· 15th ablce ~ week ~a8 . ~'Charityl ,. . Ik,ilding'Materiols .
. ~egree. ··soJ:!ie·.··-expe~ence ill . first celebrat~iIl i85~, ~ re~:' fN. YOII Iftl Over. le, write to. "Iter Me!, ,epmmunity Qrganizati~n, volwi.. .' See's ·.P·o'I'wc".'y _LI"""I·h· , ~gnition a.nd f,lll;e~llC .by .yo,uth 1eer recruiting I!Jld ~ng and - . Clarice, O.S-F•. 80x, 111, cat~ollc; Siste'" •, SPRING •·IT., . of their rights, and duties; wit . . _ 'AIRHAVEN I:, ... . Colluse, Waslllni!tOll, O. C. 20017 for tw· soine familiar.i.ty With recreation,"GlaSI' Size nessing ~f . truth, 'Ustice. an«;l tiler dttu,1s 011: tt1ls !lap",' life.) . social work; public JlelaUoDi _ . " . . .' WYman '·~611 teaching, . _. NEviARX·· (NC)'-A policy, brotherly. love by.. ,70uth; lind 'World peace. ~miting to 50 the size ol a class. in schools 01. the Newark archdi . neme for the week will be ocese has been PJ1t into effect NY 0 u t h an IDstrument of Requests Memorial' thi~school year•. .. Peace." For Fr. Flanagan Msgr. Joseph P. Tuite, school WASHING:TON (NC) - Rep. IlUperintendent, said he antici Rt. 6-Between Fall River .and New. Bedford
Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska pates a total enrollment of some St.· Francis has asked Congress to authorize 160,000 in the archdiocese's One of the Finest Facilities in Southern ·New England
a memorial to Father Edward ~. schools. He said the individual Residence Available for:
Flanagan, the founder 01. Boys schopls have had a year to plan FOR YOUNG WOMEN ToWn in Nebraska. for the class size policy and ex BANQUETS • TESTIMONIALS
196 Whipple St., Fall ·River
pected general compliance. Cunningham's bill would per Conducted by Franciscan.
FASHION SHOWS and· SPECIAL PARTIES
mit the federal government to He estimated that the average Missionaries of Mary'
provide a site on which Boys claSS would be from 35 to 40, but· FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CONTACT:
ROOMS - MEALS
Town would erecet a monument > that· the size would be higher in WYman 9-:4984 or MErcury 6-2744.
OVERNIGHT HOSPITAUTY
here in 1967, the 50th aunive.. ~hools in the heaviq populated IlIqul,. os :1-2892
Ftrsi The . "apartment apstolate" Jw "The "apartment apostolate" ia ..chdiocese. Father Granger explained that within his parish boundaries there are 60,000 people, 60 per eent of whom are located in mul tiple dwellings. "Urban studies have shoWll that only two per cent of these people living in an inner city atmosphere will seek out their neighborhood church voluntar ily," said Father Granger. Apartment dwellers'typical
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
PATRICIA ELlEN
BARBARA CROSS
• PAULINE GASSE . Ne. Bedford
Taunton
Fall Riyer
UNDA. PELDER
GRADUATES START CAREERS WITH PRAYERS AND BEST WISHES OF ENTmE
'President_Salutes Catholic Youth Week
Polish descent to serve in the Cabinet," and. "one of the very few men with a doctor of phil osophy degree ever to .Sit in the Cabinet." Of O'Brien, #rst. appointed a WJ1ite House aide by. I"resident Kennedy, the President said he is "a talented and ardent prac titioner of government," and that he "knew of no. single indi vidual who has contributed more to the enactment of legis lation that touches the lives of· so many Americans.
DIOC~SE
til.
Sisters of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, Mass.
In conjunction with the ob servance, the NCWC Youth De';' partment announced it is dis tributing kits containing posters, suggested programs; publicity aids and other materials in con junction with the obser.vance. The kits, priced at $2.00 each, are availabiefrom the NCWC Youth Department, 1312 Massachusetts Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C.,· 20005. '
·'~Great!•.
·CASH savings r-ight down the' line",
Pope Receives
War Vetera ns
CASTEL GANDOLFO (NC)S eve l' a I hundred ex-soldiers who took part in the battle of Reception Ceremony
Monte Cassino were welcomed For Marl"sf '51'sters
by Pope Paul at his Summer home here. WHEELING (NC)-The first About 250 fo~er German sol reception cerem~ny for new diers, and a number of others Marist Sisters In the United from various European coun States was held m. St. Vincent tries, all veterans of the World . de Paul's church here in West War II battle over the great· Virginia.... Benedictine monastery in cen . Three postulants received the tral Itaiy, heard the Pope speak dark blue and white garb of the in German, French, Italian and . Ma'rist SisterS: in' the ceremony. English. : The garb ~as;Jninwi.the rosary, Pope Paul said he grate Benedictine Retreats cross, and cincture' which will ful to· see reunited "in the name.' be added when the Sisters take of 'reciprocal',' Undersbiriding.. Popular With Women~ their final vows. once di\Tided. by the absurd PASSAU (NC)-A convent of The Marist Sisters, founded inneeessi~y 'of war, .blJt'n.ow'~ade. Benedictine nuns at Tettenweiss France,. came to" the dioCese of 'brothers by a bon.l,l of. esteem, here· in, Germany hils become a , Wheelin'g .in l~~and opened a friendship and affectiop.;" ' popular place of retreat' for lay postulaney here in 1964. It is the' Pope Paul told them: "Your women who. want to become only one the ,Order has in the presence as survivors .01. the, . "nuns for a· week."' , " U. S, At present eig~t Marist Sis"-' violenc~ " of .combat, ' though Women come to the convent tel'S'· are teaching -and working bearing the marks' of ,its. dan/ft'r from Germany, Austria and in the dioce~., and courage, tells.the world, hoW' ' Switzerland. For one, week theY, great the desire for, peace is iii wear a special habit, call each the fam1ly of man• Plans to Complete . other "Sisters," keep the monas "This desire goeS beyo~d an, tic rule and attenil conferences School Integration . miserable ethnic, and political and meditation periods.. ALEXANDRIA. '(NC)-A tar-. rivalrieS, beyond nationalistic' Abbess Michaela.Harberberger said the retreats have the double, get date of september, 1966, has enmities" beyond .egotist~c com benefit of giving lay women an been fixed by Bishop Charles P. ~iition~," the Pope said., insight into the lives of the nuns Greco for; racial desegregation of and enabling nuns to understand all Catholic schools in the Alex Na'tive to Return the problems facedby·the laity. andria'diocese. ' JAFFREY CENTER (NC.)-A In a pastoral letter read in an of the diocese, the Japanese priest, is returning to Alhambra President· churches' Louisiana bishop reminded that his homeland as a missiona17 NEW YORK (NC) - Vincent he had called for desegregation after seven years. of semillll17 Caputo of -'\rlington, 'Va., was' of the first, second' and 12th and postgraduate work in the elected Supreme, Grand Com grades ift Catholic schools in U. S. Father Augustine Koba yashi, SS.CC., is one of six mi& mander of tbe International four counties this school term. Order of the Alhambra, a lrater The duty of Catholic' parents • sionaries of the Fathers of tbe nalgroup within the Knights of to provide a Catholic education Sacred Hearts for whom depar Columbus, at the conclusion of for their children' also was ture ceremonies will, be ,c0n the group?s 31st 'bien,ilial conven lltressed by the bishop in the ducted here in New HampshiN. tion here. Bunda,., Au&- 29. 1e*
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Invite, cenerous Joan.- ladles -to,toln tile. .. leadlol' a ... relilious life of 10Yl!. adoration. aDd reparatiOn. .. that the Sisters devote tIIeir tim. to education If Jolltll,r:Y: work, aDd domestic .dlltllL . For further riiformiitfl!lI. apply to . .
WASHINGTON (NC)-Presi ick J. Stevenson, director of the realization of their responsibil dent Johnson feels the theme of Youth Department, National - ities to society," the President the 1965 Natoional Catholic Catholic _Welfare Conference, the wrote. "Realizing these respon Youth Week "is a timely remind President said: . sibilities, may each according to er that men and women of all "I salute your organization for his abilities and opportunities ages can and should contribute taking up"this vital call.and I work for order and peace among .to the attainment of' universal , applaud your dedication to the men." peace and good will." ideals and aspirations' which National Catholic Youth Week The theme is "Youth-an In have throughout the years fos observance was founded in li)51 strument of Peace." The observ tered the growth of our land." and is sponsored by the National ance is scheduled :kom Oct. 31' "It is my hope that all who Catholic You t h Federation, participate' in National' Catholic . which operates within the frame-' ta Nov. 7. In II message to Msgr. Freder- Youth Weekwill come to a fuller work of the NCWC Youth De· partment. .
. JOHNSON CITY (NC)-He wants to strengthen the "deep and hi,storic' bond" whiCh, exists. between Poland 'and the United States, President Johnson said in " naming Postmast~r General .John A. Gronouski ,to be the new U. S. Ambassador to ·Poland. At the ~ame time, the Presi dent announced that presidential assistant Lawrence F. O'Brien will become Postmaster General. Gronouski was the eighteenth Catholic actually to serve in a president's cabinet. O'Brien will be the twentie~. , The president said of Gro nouski that "America is in his blood, but so is Poland. He was born the grandson of a Polish immigrant.'" He added that ~he new ambassador is the man to· carry to Poland the message that we wanf to work together with Poland for peace 'and the liberty . of all people. ' ';' The president noted that GroDouski is "the first American of.
TauRtn
THE SISTERS" OF. THE sACRED HEARTS., AN.... OF P~!lPETUAL ADORATION,
·Hails Dedication to Ideals and ~Aspiratio~s
President Names Ambassador To Strengthen Bond With Poland
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THE .ANCHOR-Diccese of ,Fall River:-Thurs., St:F>!: 9! }~65
Advises Girl Select 'School O~fering Best Education
Exiled Cardinal Says Church' Fares Worse Und'er Reds Than Nazis.
By John J. Kane, Ph.D. --What are the purposes of a girls' school? What are the advantages and disadvaJitages of' going to a girls' school? I have always wanted to go toa girls' school, but my parents never saw any need of letting me go. Please let me know what you think and tell me where I can find such you note he did it most prudently. He referred to age and circum schools." Well, Katie, you stances. have certainly written an un Pro and Con
u!?ual letter. Many girls do not Perhaps the advantage of a want to go to an all-girl school, girls' school on a high school and partly out level is that it is possible to of economic teach certain sUDjects which reasons, many might have to be excluded from of our Catholic the curriculum in acoeduca high schools to tional institution or at least day are becom played down. It also decreases FATHER PROULX. M.S ing co-institu the distractions that undoubted tional.' S 0 m e ly do arise when boys and, girls are eve n be in their teens take classes to_ coming coedu gether.
Continued from Page One cational M 0 s t
But there are also certain dis , letters I receive advantages to an all-girls or an Pius X and director of the La abo u t girls' ' all-boys school. In our society Salette College Department in schools tend to the circumstances are such that East Brewster'. Father, Proulx has been a berate them, probably with more 'men and women are considered emotion ~han justice. equals. This does present certain member of the PrOVincial Coun cil of the·, Province of the Im While you do not make It problems.. clear 'in your letter, I presume Margaret Mead, a famous an~ maculate Heart of Mary since . you are talking about high thropologist, has pointed out last year: The Provincial Superior has school. The insistence on all girls' that women learn to compete or all boys' high school or col with men in work and probably also announced the appointment leges is partly the result, of in the classroom too. Then when of Rev. Donald Paradis, M,S., a New Bedford native, as superior custom in the United States and they are married, they are sup certain European countries. posed to complement rather of the La Salette Shrine, Attle Formerly, girls used to go to than compete. It is a lesson she boro, succeeding Rev. Rene Sauve, M,S., who founded the what is called a finishing school believes many women find dif Shrine in 1953. Father Sauve has in which they probably learned ficult to learn.
been named provincial treasurer. more about the social graces Separate Classes
A graduate of St. Anthony than' about the humanities and
Some have argued that the the social and natural sciences. segregation of sexes in Catholic High School, New Bedford, the In other words, woman's place high schools and colleges tend to new director received his de gree in Theology from Angeli was believed to be in the home, facilitate mixed religious mar and relatively few married riages. They believe that if cum University, Rome and, a women worked, outside the Catholic boys and girls met and master's degree in French Lit':" borne. mingled in the classrooms, there erature from Boston College. He Radical Step would be a greater chance Of. also attended the Catholic In stitute of Paris and the Univer 'Oberlin was the first men's marriage within their faith. sity of Montreal. . •' college in the United States to Actually, we have no sound He was' ordained in Rome in admit women. It' was it rather studies to prove or disprove this 1958 by Luigi Cardinal Traglia. radical step for the times and statement. my observation ,In addition to the above ap": yet ft apparently worked out there has never been any serious pointments, Rev. Arthur Den successfully. To day practically difficulty for a girl in an all-girl eault, M,S., will direct priests' all public schools and almost ,all school to meet boys. The oppo retreats anG Rev. Raymond Mo state eolleges and universities' site is equally true. quin, M,S., has been assigned as are coeducational and I believe The present co-institutional superior at the La Salette House that the future will see more, custom, however, has certain ad in Southbridge which will now not less coeducation. vantages. It is possible to set up serve exclusively as the La Sa This is largely the result of separate classes and thus cut lette Foreign Mission Center. social change in American so down on the reputed distractions ciety. Today most single girls that arise when the sexes mingle do work outside the home and, in the academic situation. At the Set Tuition Charge
in fact, we have more married same time it offers adequate op For Grode Schools
women in the labor force than 'portunities for them to get to at any time in our history. gether socially. CAMDEN (NC) - Catholie A century ago there were very grade schools in the Camden, Many Fine Schools few fields of a professional na N. J., diocese will charge a max If you prefer to attend an all ture for women at all. Dr. Mary girls' school and assuming your imum tuitiori of $75 for the first Walker, one of the early women parents can afford it, and your child and not more than $50 for physicians in this country, who, 'academic ability justifies your ,the rest of an entire family, used to dress in ,men's clothing, admission, I can see no objection Father, John J. Cl~lrk, superin aroused no end of criticism.' tendent, has announced. ' . , , Worn_en Wfr~ a~ceptable 8I!l' to i~." Each pastor will· determine UnlesS you M've a career nurses and ..teachers. They'sim- , planned which would necessitate . the exact amount below the $75 plY' did' enter" fieids like the taking of cou'rscs not offered and $50 ceiIill'gs and will' pay 'medicine~ law and engineering, in a giFls; high school, and the cOst of tuition fora child. ~ ~hey do today. -, : ' frankly it .isdifficlllt, for me to unable to meet it, the, superin , '" ' "Cites, Encyclieal imagine such a career,I would tendent ~id.. , . Father Clark !aid the tuition , I, think you can' see from this urge you to' ask y()u/:, .parents 10 ' rate should distributeth~b>ur:,:· that, the purpose of, a girls' reconsider ,lhe 'entire matter. den of supporting Schoois more ilcMolln the past' was ·to afford Aside from, what, I have al equitably, 'cut" down .on fund~ 'Ii differe~t tyPe ", of education . ready said, I clm see no great ad 'raising events arid enable ad th;m tha~ giveJito men. Th~re vantage or.. f,lisadvantagein at miriist'rators to establish 'better was ,alsO great deal more con tending one type' of school over ~salarysc'ales lor' lay ·teachera. cern' abOut the' mingling Of the other. It is largely a matter sexes at'the high school and col of taste. What is farmore'impor Blue Army·' lege: age: As a matter of fact, tant is that you select a good FATIMA (NC)-The Latin rite llome 'feel we have gone too far school where you can realize down that road already. to your fullest potentiality the chapel at the. headquarters of the In the Encyclical, "Christian talents which God has given Blue Army was blessed and in Education' of Youth," the Holy you. augurated by Bishop Costantino Father pointed out that men and There are many fine high Cristiano Lun of Zacapa, Guate women in keeping with the de schools and colleges exclusively mala. Msgr. Harold V. Colgan of signs of the Creator were des Plainfield, N. J., founder of the for girls, and you will find ad tined to complement each other vertisements for them in the . Blue Army, was present with in the family and in society. pages of Catholic newspapers some 200 American members of Precisely because of their dif and magazines. There is also a the organization that prays for ferences, which ought to be directory of American colleges the conversion of Russia and maintained and encouraged dur and universities which you can world peace. ing the years of formation, there find in your local library. You should be the necessary distinc might also ask your present Nun Gets Post tion a'nd corresponding separa teachers to recommend certain tion, according to age and cir schools to· you. But I simply DETROIT (NC)-Sister Bea cumstances. ' would not recommend any triv, a veteran nursing educator. At the time of writing his En school merely on the basis of is the first Catholic nun to be": cyclical his Holiness, Pope Pius the fact that the sexes are seg come a faculty member at XI. ~eplored coeducation. But I'egated. :Wayne State University here.
LaSalettes
In
ASSISI (NC)-J'osef Cardinal say that while men in EastetJl Beran, the exiled archbishop of ;Eur.oPean countries must' suffer Prague, Czechoslovakia, has, for their faithfulness to God 'and stated that the condition of the the Church, men in Western Catholic Church in his country countries must' beware of slip under the communists is worse· ,ping into a· kind of religious than what it was under nazi laziness. domination. "It is a severe warning for us • In a talk: at the Pro Civitate he said. "The faithful of the Christiana center her e in '\Testern countries must take the Italy the cardi~al said that in greatest possible advantage of five years of occupation the living in religious liberty and nazis were unable to carry thus contribute to the growth of out their plan to de-Christianize religious life follOWing the wise Czechoslovakia. But ip. only norms the Vatican council has a few years the communists already given and will give in have reduced more than 2,000 the future. ", ' priests to the status of laymen, "This 'Will b~ also 'a great c~mleaving only a few for pastoral fort and consolation for our work, he said. Holy Father who in his', dis "Religious ord~rs have all been, courses often exhorts us not to suppressed, and, generally, reli forget our gre"t duty to cooper gious priests are not able to help ate in the. happy and joyous ,de their brothers in the care of velopment' 6,f, olir ,Holy Mother .... souls," said' Cardinal Beran. , the Church." .' ' "Congregations of Sisters are. practically condemned to death because they caimot open novi-' 'MaryknoJ.l Appoints tiates and are therefore bound to disappear in a while." Layman Teacher The cardinal declared that MARYKNOLL (NC)-Thomas only, two seminaries remain in J. Hinnebusch, an instructor in existence, and they can receive Swahili at the Institute of Afri only a few students each year. ('ClTJ Afhirs at Duquesne Univer Each student must have the sup sity, Pittsburgh, has been ap port of some backer of the Com pointed by Maryknoll to teach at munist party, so to become a its language school in Musoma, priest in Czechoslovakia today Tanzania. it is necessary to be recommend The appointment is the first ed by a party that is fighting to of an American layman to the destroy the Church. school, according to Maryknoll's Severe Warning superior general, Bishop John Cardinal Beran,· went on to' W. Comber. Mr. ,Hinnebusch will be rePropaganda Fails . sponsibJe for the coordination VIENNA (NC)- Both Chris-' and instruction of the Swahili tian and atheist, propaganda ef language program for .newJy forts have failed to make con arrived missioners and the l;m~ 'vertS in commu'nist-ruied Czech-' guage 'review programs for the oslovakia, according' to the some 95 Maryknoll missioners Prague ,periodical, Sociological currently, stationed in Tanzania, Review. ' Bis~op Comber said. '
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THe ANCHOR
Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965 ~:
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Legion Chaplain Urges Return To Religion
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PORTLAND (NC) - The threat of communism in southeast .As i a isreal enough, but "just as real and
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threatening are the materialistic, God-forgetting, self-sufficiency, independent rules by which, we are living," the national chaplain of the American Legion declared here in Oregon. Father Morris N. Dummet, a diocesan priest from New Or leans, 'called on Legionnaires at their national convention in Portland to use their effective organization in a "continuous crusade against the abuses and offenses and missed opportuni ties of our nation in this gener ation." Speaking at a patriotic and memorial service, he specifically cited the increase in crime and said the "basic causes" must be diminished. He said that a large majority of those in .prison in this country come from broken homes, and according to studies, two-thirds of the people in the psychiatrists' offices are from broken families. Family Life Perhaps, said Father Dummet, "we have to revert to those by gone days in which family life was considered the heart of society." He called for a return to "the simple God-based beliefs of our forefathers," which, he added, seem to have become "anti quated." Was George .Washington a "square" when he took the first oath of office as President, April 30, 1789, and declared, '·So help me God"? Father Dum met asked. Expressions of faith, he noted, have permeated official docu ments and functions of this na tion for centuries. The drafters of the Declaration of' Independ dence, he continued, "left no doubts about their beliefs" when they called on theprotec tion of Divine Providence. "A society based on God was good enough for George Wash ington, James Madison, Thomas . .Jefferson," said Father Dummet. "Is it not good enough for us?"
Inner City Reading Progranl Success >
NEWARK (NC)-Almost ev eryone concerned with a feder ally aided crash readIng pro gram at an inner city Catholic parish this Summer wants to do it again next year. Sponsors, teachers and the vast majority of students and their parents urged a repeat per formance at Queen of Angels parish where 165 junior high school students improved their reading skills by the equivalent of six months of regular class work in five weeks of four-hour daily sessions. Located in the heart of this New Jersey city's Negro slum area, the parish lined up seven' teachers with master's degrees and more than 34 aides and 100 volunteers. Many were drawn from Seton Hall University and Caldwell College, both Catholic institutions.
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Peace Pilgrimage BONN (NC)-A pilgrimage to pray for peace will be made to the shrine of Our Lady at Lourdes, France, by pilgrims . from several German dioceses. They will take to the shrine a new reliquary containing relics of St. Bernard of Clairv3ux and ot St. Hildeiard of Bin"en.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
JEANNE IHEBERT) CAROl Somerset
MADELEINE LeCOMl£ fall liter
PAULA TAVARES fall River
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LINDA ROBERTS Otis A.B., falmouth
PAULINE LANGLOIS New Bedford
BISHOP CONNOLLY TO PRESENT DIPLOMAS AT NURSING SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES
Establish Family Planning Group In Conn·ecticut NEW HAVEN (NC) - A JteW organization aimed at promoting a method of fam ily planning morally accept able to Catholics has been estab lished here by a group of lay persons. The organization, known as the Natural Family Planning Asso dation of Connecticut, is model ed after the rhythm counseling eervice in Montreal known as SERENA. Its principal organizers are Dr. Claude Lanctot, obstetrician and gynecologist a~ the Yale Univer sity medical school, and State Sen. and Mrs. Frank Piccolo. The organization will promote a couple-to-couple approach to teaching a family planning method based on fluctuations in the woman's body temperature and observance of physical symptoms at the probable time of ovulation. Known as the "sympto-thermic" method, it has proved highly successful in Canada, proponents say. Dr. Lanctot, who has been do ing post-graduate research in infertility at Yale, said the Mon treal plan "stress responsibility as well as generosity regarding marital -rights. The program helps to plan children from the beginning of married life." In preparation for the estab lishment of the new family plan ning organization some 30 cou ples, counseled by physicians and clergymen, have participated in a pilot training program for the past year. The Natural Family Planning Organization is not officially a part of the Archdiocese of Hart ford's family life program. How ever, the director of the archdi ocese's Marriage and' Family Apostolate, Fat her Randall , Blackall serves on the organiza tion's committee as liaison with the clergy. Mrs. Piccolo said a prime ob jective of the family planning group is to clear' up widespread misunderstanding of the rhythm method. The group was sur prised, she said, to discover "how little communication there was in this field, particularly among Catholics." Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith, ehairmall-couple o~ the or~ni :zation, ~aid the immediate goal is to instruct new teacher-coup pIes throughout the state in the sympto-thermic method. By next Summer, the association hopes to have enough trained couples to accept all requests for coun aeling.
Refugees Filter Through Iron Curtain German Catholic Center Aids Escapees CINCINNATI (NC)-Commu nism's unrelenting cruelty is re flected in the faces of men, wom en and children who escape or are expelled to the West, accord ing to a German priest who helps them adjust to freedom. Msgr. Wilhelm Scheperjans said here in Ohio that about 70 persons daily, or 2,000 a month, filter through the Iron Curtain into West Germany. Nearly aU of them come to the government sponsored Camp Friedland, a staging area for fugutives and refugees located near the East West frontier. Catholic Chapla.in He is Catholic chaplain of the center and director of Caritas, the German Catliolic Charities organization, at what the Ger mans call Grenzdurchgangslager Friedland, which has taken care of some 2.4 million freedom bound persons since World War II. Many refugees in the current stream, Msgr. Scheperjans said in an interview, are German farmers from remote areas of communist Poland. "Now they are being permitted to leave provided they deed their lands to the Polish state and pay the costs of the legal procedures, Of he said. Find New Lite Penniless and often in rags,
Newmanites Honor Chauncey Stillman NEW YORK (NC)-The man who was instrumental in estab lishing a chair of. Roman Cath olic studies at Harvard Univer sity received the banner award of the golden jubilee congress of the National Newman Club Federation here, given annually to a Catholic layman who has made a distinguished contribu tion to the goals and ideals of the Newman Apostolate, Chauncey Stillman of New York City was honored with the 1965 Cardinal Newman Award at tbe concluding banquet of the 8-day convention attended by more than 1,000 delegates. Stillman's effort at Harvard was termed "one of the most im portant and significant projects for the work of the Church in higher education," It has re sulted in the establishment at other universities of like chairs.
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some are finding a new life in farm villages being erected by Caritas with the aid of the fed eral government. Other "legal" refugees. arrive in a steady stream from Rumania and Russia, he said. More dramatic is the arrival of the "illegal" fugitives, who escape fro m communist-con trolled East Germany. Along the border between East and West Germany, he noted, the com m u n i s t government has
cleared a zone about three miles in width, which is patrolled by armed guards (the "Vopos") and their dogs. The area usually is sowed with mines, and fenced with barbed wire. ... "It's not surprising that only six or seven get across out of every 100 who try," commented Msgr. Scheperjans. Nevertheless, in the four years since the Ber lin wall was erectefl. to seal off the eastern zone, about 21,000 have escaped into West Germany.
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In Problems President Johnson Cites Administration Aims
In Fields of Education and Population
Interest
WASHINGTON (NC) - His administration will always press for educational opportunities for all children, regardless of their financial situation, their race or their religion, President Johnson has declared. Speaking at the swearing in of Dr. John W. Gardner as Sec retary of Health, Education and Welfare, Mr. Johnson said: "We will, as long as I am Pres ident, Dr. Gardner, try to pro vide an educational opportunity for every youngster in this c 0 u n try, regardless of the condition of his birth, the section he comes from, the poverty of his family, the color of his skin, or his religion."
Dedicate Seminary OAKLAND (NC)-Archbishop Thomas A. Boland of Newark hns dedicated here in New Jer sey the Queen of the Missions S~minary, a minor seminary of thf' Pontifical Institute for Mis sions, known commonly as the P.I.M.E. Fathers. The' building has a capacity for 60 resident students.
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Declaring, too, that "this ad ministration intends to bring the healing miracle of modern medicine to everyone in this country, no matter how remotely they live from the city," the President continued to say "this • administration is seeking new ideas and it is certainly not go ing to discourage any new solu tions to the problems of popu lation growth and distribution."
Social Justice
Students, teachers and chap lains from various parts of the country will engage in discuS sions of such matters as honesty in the Church, the relevance of the parish structure, students' reaction to authority, the clergy laity relationship, the Church's approach to social questions, and the success or failure of Catholie education in preparing young persons for adult Christian
life.
The Catholic Hour is produced by the National Gouncil of Cath olic Men in cooperation with the National Broadcasting Com pa,ny.
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NEW YORK (NC) -On the four Sundays in September, the Catholic Hour radio program will examine the "Crisis of Faith" experienced by many of today's college students.
HOUSTON (NC) -The Gal veston-Houston Diocese wi 11 mark Aug. 29 as Social Justice Sunday, featuring evening panel discussions in six Houston par ishes on the theme: "Work: a Divine Call, a Human Need."
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THE ANCHOR·
Thurs.,' Sept. 9, 1965
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The
Parish Parade
Camden See Spends Nearly $20 Million ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-The diocese of Camden encompassing the six South Jersey counties, has spent approximately $19.5 million on building projects during the past five years, according to a diocesan official. Msgr. Charles P. Barth, secretary "of the diocesan building committee, said in an address at _ the Atlantic City Rotary' Club that "the Camden diocese beats 'any giant investment firm or developmeQt corporation with- its extensive bUilding program' in ~outh Jersey." The prelate added that dUring the next 12 to 18 months, the di ocese is, committed to spend another $4.5 million in building projects. He said that he foresaw no slow-down in the building program, which includes schools, churches and facilities for the
ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER Mrs. Cecile Cummings, pres~"clent of Council of Catholic Women, has 'anj).ounced the schedule of events for the parish ~rg~ni~at'~~n~: ,'., ,,",', Edward C. BerUbe,J}9stmaster, ,Gf F~llRiver.,wi" be -th~ 'guest llpe'aker at the first meeting .scheduled fo~' Monday night, Sept. 13, at 7:30.' The meeting will be open'to relatives, and friends of the members. A cake' sale will be conducted In the Church basement on Sunday, Sept. 26, and a dinner dance will be held at White's on Saturday evening, Oct. 2. A barbecued chicken supper will be served in the school hall age, on Saturday night, Oct. 9, and it will be followed by a square dance. • 55. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER The first whist party of the year will be held on Wednesday evening, Sept. 15. Mrs. Rocco Postiglione will serve as chair man and Mrs. Stanley Janick will assist as co-chairman. ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER Edward Peters will be guest soloist at the first meeting of the Women's Guild scheduled for Monday night, Sept. 13, at 8 o'clock in the American Legion Hall, corner of Third and Wade Streets. The Boy Scouts of the parish ",ill benefit from a rummage tale planned for Friday, ~ept. l'7. Miss Helen Goff will serve as ehairlady of the public whist to be held in the school hall on Thursday night, Sept. 23, at 7:30. ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER The 15th annual Clam Boil and Field Day under the sponsorship .f the Holy Name Society and Ladies Guild will be held Sun .ay, Sept. 12, on the Church It'ounds. Servings will be held (rom noon to 2 o'clock.
Unity Board , Continued from Page One Top priority was given to the yarious diocesan directories that provide guide lines for inter faith meetings. Such guide lines for level action are based upon the Vatican Council decree on ecumenism, and directives of the American Commission. The y take into account conditions peculiar to each diocese and eontaJ:n blanket permission for .. trdinary inter-faith encounters. [n all of the dioceses special per-, mission from the Bishop is re IIuired for' extraordinary acti v lties, such as worshipping in wmmon, during the Church Unity week. Other subjects under discus sion were the New England Con ference for Christian Unity schedules for the Summer of 1967, the question of mixed mar riages, the Jewish Christian dia logue, programs for the Church Unity Week and the Apostolate of Good Will. The delegates agreed to for ward their Diocesan Directories to each other and to keep each other informed of local activitiea for documents of notes. This first exploratory meeting proved so stimulating that the delegates voted overwhelming ly to meet regularly on a semi annual basis. Monsignor Hamel spoke for all the delegates when he said, "This meeting was both instruc tional and inspirational. We are grateful for the opportunity of participating in it, we shall re turn to our efforts for Christian Unity with new zeal."
Apostle to Sick Seek Lay Catholic Leaders on Secular Campus, Apostolate Official Says DULUTH (NC) - Patients at St. Mary's Hospital say angels:. wings must sound a bit like the, whirr of an electric wheel chair. The reason is Sister Hedwig, the hospital's resident' apostle to the sick and dying, who is known affectionately as "Sister PuttPutt'~ because of the wheel chair she uses to get around. The tiny, elderly nun, just over five feet tall, has comforted thousands of the bereaved. Confined to a wheel chair, she nevertheless leads a full life at what she calls "Sister-visitor of the apostolate of the sick." How does she help them? "1 don't know exactly," she says. "It's something 1 have to depend on God for. 1 act as the situation calls upon me to act.
"With a daughter who has just lost one of her parents I may put my arm.about·her and say, 'Now don't keep trying to keep ,your tears· back.-, Sit down and cry as ,hard as you want for' a little while.' "To a man who has" just lost his wife, and doesn't want his grown children to smother him, 1 may suggest he go down and have a cup or two of 'coffee and a cigarette. And,r may find ways to keep the children with me. As I said, it all depends."
Then there are the deaths that seem particularly untimely. "1 can't pretend to be able to explain it," Sister Hedwig said. "1 don't even try. 1 try to be there. 1 know it helps-just my being there.",
Seminarians Favor Interfaith Meetings CINCINNATI (NC) - neie gates from 26 major U. S. semi naries at the first national semi": miry convention of the CathoJk Students' Mission Crusade called for "ecumenical ineetingir with students from noil-Catholic lent": in:aries." , Meeting at St. GrelOl'7's ~m':' inary here in, Ohio, the delegates . approved a 'resolution recom mending, that CSMC groups ill' affiliated seminaries take the initiative, with approval of their superiors, in setting up the pro posed ecumenical meetings.
At a parallel national conven tion of college CSMC units, held at Our Lady ,of Cincinnati Col lege, delegates from 23 colleges and universities appealed to re-· ligious communities to involve junior professed Sisters itt CSMC activities. '
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'Atrragon .
Conquered CIty GIT ~!I. Go Mania Great Race , . . ,. Greatest StorY Ever 'fold Hallell/jab Trail' . 'Help", ': ' 'Hercules, SampsOlland" U1yssl!! Incident at Pbantom' HIlI ' laughing Twenties
, Sword of Ali Baba . Magnificent Men III Flying Machines, . " Those'Calloways Man From Button WllJlow Train . Mara of the Wilderness Treasurer. of Silver LaIle Murder Ahoy Topo Gigio "' . Mwietta , Up From the. Beal;h My Fair l~ , '. Von Ryan's' Express Piliocchio "in Outer Space' Voyage 'to End Universe
Requiem for a Gunfighter Willie McBean
World of Abbott and Costetlo
Sandokan the Great Yank in Viet Nam. A seaside Swingers Shenandoah • You Have to Run ,Fast . Swingers Parad~:. . Zeb~ in the ~itchen
8*
Glory Guys Gorgon Great Si~x Massacre Harvey Middleman, Fireman . High Wind in JamalCi Ipcress File· Ivanhoe Donaldson King's Story love and Kisses Masquerade Mirage Nobody Waved GoodbYe Operation ColA Overcoat
HUNTINGTON (NCj' -r Despite criticisms of Catho lic 'education, parents a r·e voicing an "ever growing de
Reward secret of Blood Island Secret' of Success ' Seven Slaves She 633 Squadron Situation Hopeless That Funny Feeling
Tickle Me
Tomb of ligeia Unsinkable Molly Browl Wild on the ,Beach Wild, Wild Winter
Young Fury
Morally Unobiectionable for Adults
Agent Backfire Battle at the Villa F10rlta Bay of the Angels Bebo's Girl . Blind Comer Brainstorm CrOOked Road Die, Die Mv Darling Finnegan's Wake Genghis Khan Goldfinger
Guide Having a Wild Weekend Hush, Hush, Sweet Hysteria II Bidone R Successo I Saw What You Did Italiano Brava Gente La TiaTula Nothing But a Man Once a Thief Operation Snafu
Patch of Blue· Sergeant Deadhead Ship of Fool~
Slave Trade in the World Today Strange Bedfellows Third Day Umbrellas of Cherbourg ' Very Specia: Favor War lord West Side Story Wild Affair
For Adults (With Reservations) lIlis efasslflcation Is given to certain f nmi, Which, while not morally offens," " themselves. require caution and S011l e analysis and explanation as a protectlOi to tfle uninformed against wrong Interpretations and false conclusions. Anatomy 01 I M8rr1ap UlltIJ Suddenly last SuIll1llll' Best Man Love I la Carte Taboos In the World , BlacII like lie Martin Luther This Sporting life Collector Moment of TrutIl Under YVIII Yum Tr.. Coot World Organizer Y"lctim . Darling 1Ioth1!'B But the Best Yfsit, TIle Dr. Strangerove Pumpkm Eater Walll on Wild Side CIrt With till Creel lJII Sky Above & .d Below Yellow Rolls Royce ICnack Stralli8rs Ia till City Young & Willing
Morany Obiedioncible in Part for Everyone A1nerlcanlzation of ~ Amorous Adventures Black SabblC'tft Blood and Bid Lace Casanove 70 Cincinnati Kid City of Fear Desert Raven Diary ofa ChambennaJd Eva 4 for Texas Get Yourself A College Girt Gir!s on The Beach· Harlow How to Stuff I Wild Bikini
Joy House Kitten With AMill lost World of Sinbad les Abysses loved One love. the Italian Way Marriage on the Rockl Mozambique Male Hunt Money Trap Naked Prey . Nutty, Naughty Chateau Psyche 59 Quick, Before It Melts Raiders From Beneath the Sea
Bambole . Circle of love F- 'v Canvas High in Rdelity lefs Talk About Women
love Goddesses Magnificent Cuckold Married Woman New Angels Monda Pazzo
Sell and the Single IIrI Small World of SaIlllllJ ... The Devil and the 10 Commandments The SarKIpiper Time Travelers Under Age Vice and Virtue foung Dillinger What A Way. To Go What's New, Pussycat Nhy Bother to Knock Yesterday. Today and Tomorrow Zombie
Condemned Sweet and Sour Terrace To love Woman in the Dunes White Voices
Drop Suit Against Magazine With·- Publication of Apology FRESNO (NC)-The attorney said McCormick who added that ·'or five priests who filed a $5 petitions lor dismissal of the million damage suit against suit will be filed immediately Time, Inc., said the litigation is in Merced County Superior ended with pullcation of an Court and Fresno Federal Court. apology to the priests in Life Denied Story magazine. ~Life, in a correction published Richard McCormick, leg a 1 in ita Sept. 3 issue, says that' it spokesman for the five Merced, was misinformed when it re Calif., priests, stressed that the ported in a June 4 article that original purpose of the suit was Merced priests had counseled a a retraction and not money Merced Catholic housewife to damages. proceed with an abortion. She "The priests did not ask .Ior a feared that German measles she eash payment and none was contracted during her pregnancy
made as part of the settlement," . would cause physical and mental damage to the unborn .child. The pries.ts, who are the only Inquiry Course priests in Merced, denied talking AUCKLAND (NC) - In the with the woman, - Mrs. Dolores four years since the opening of Stonebreaker. the Catholic Inquiry Center h~re McCormick said ' that the in New Zealand, 10,094 persons priests first asked Time, Inc., lor have enrolled in its correspond- a retraction, but that the parent - ence course. Of these, 494 are company of Life refused and the known to have entered the only course left open to get a Church, the center reported. correction was a damage suit.
1965
Prelate Predic.ts Bright' Catholic School Future
. . Unobiectionable for Adults, Adolescents Agony an~ Ecstasy Arizona Raiders .Bedford Incident Brigand 'of Kandahar Cat Ballou Curse of the Mumlll)ls Tomb . Dark Intruder Dr. Terror's House of Horrors Farmer's Other Daugllter Fool Killer Cunfighters 01 Cast Grande
?,
",
MOrally Unobiectio~able forEvery~ne 'Bil ie
19
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept.
A
SERRA ANNI,VERSARY: Marking lSl.st anniverg.ary of the death of the California missionary, Father Junipero Serra, at his statue in the U. S. Capitol building, were left to right: John Winston, president of the Serra Club of Washington; Father Francis MulIer, O.F.M., vicar of Holy Name colIege, Washington, and Rep. Burt L. Talcott Mon'teNy, Calif. NC Photo. '
Honor Father Serra California Congressman Says: Priest1s Record Greatest Legacy
mand for JI?-ore Catholic schools,"
.according to the president gen 'em of the National Catholic Educa~ional AssoCiation.: Writing in Our Sunday VisitQ1', national Catholic weekly pub Ushed her~ in Indiana, Bishop ~rne~ J. Primeau of Manch~ ter, N. H., adds that "never in the, .history of the Church, in America have our schools been in a better position to fulfIll the demands made upon them."
Bishop Primeau charges that
much current criticism of Cath olic education is "negative, un fair and destructive" because ... "our schools were never asked to do what these critics contend they should have done." "Given the religious, political and social climate of the first 50 years of this century," he says,
"the aims set by the school au thorities were necessary, prac tical, within the range _of the system, if not as all-embracing as we, with hindsight, might have, designed." Good Signs But despite the criticism, ~ adds, "our Catholic parents not backing down from their conlmItment' • • • and they need not, for all the signs are good." The bishop lists these pIa. marks lor Catholic schools: "Catholic education has never had better prepared teacherS Of better lounded hopes of still more eompetent teachers te eome." "Facilities are growing and improving."
'"The curriculum vies with the·
best of public' and private
achools." ,
"New and relevance II being given to the teaching' Of leligion. The mission of the faithful in and to the world II being underscored...
are
life
WASHINGTON (NC)-Father D. C., and Fort Belvoir, Va., In Junipero Serra left an "indelible eluded the placing of a wreath mark" on California, Rep. Burt at Father Serra's statue. Talcott of California said here. . "Father Serra, in spite of Talcott, representing the lameness and material poverty Carmel-Monterey .area where during a b:pef span of approxi~ "the apostle of California" died . mately 15 years, left his indel in 1784,said Father Serra'. ible mark on the history and "record of work and accomplish- landscape of California," Talcott INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.'
ment is his greatest legacy." dedared. Talcott spoke in Statuary Hall Engineering Marvels 96 WILLIAM STREET
of the Capitol building, at a "His primary mission may NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
ceremony comni.emorating the have been the conversion of the 181st anniversary of the death of Indians, but _he was not content WY 8-5153 WY 7-9167' Father Serra. with merely serving the spiritThe ceremony, sponsored by ual needs of the natives. He PERSONAL SERVICE the Serra Clubs of Washington, helped toestabllsh civil govern ment in California. He promoted agriculture. . Priests Ask 'Suits "The Franciscans' early irriga Replace Cassocks tion systems remain marvels 01 engineering and of ingenuity. M~DELLIN'(NC)-Agroup 01 priests of the archdiocese of They constructed mills for the crushing of maize into flour. Medellin sent a petition to Arch Husbandry of cattle herds, at bishop Tulio Botero Salazar ask ing permission to replace the the missions, formed the basis cassock with the clerical suit, as for the present beef industry of 273 CENTRAL AVE.
is being done in other Latin our state. "His trails became the skele
American' countries. One reason given by the ton 01 our roads and superhigh
WY 2-6216
priests, is that a suit "makes it ways. The Spanish influence, imported by Father Serra, has easier for priests to go into cer NEW BEDFORD
tain environments where the branched alar from the famous El Cammo Real," Talcott said. cassock would not be favorab17 . received." During a recent course on pas ~ ,~
toral action given by the Latin ".~ American Institute for Pastoral Work (ISPLA),' in' Bogota, ari ~ ~.
other group of priests wrote to , SHARON, MAssAcH1J5ms . , .the Colombian Bishops' Conler ence making a similar request.
DONAT BOISVERT.
BLUE RIBBON
LAUNDRY
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SACRED HEART SCHOOL
._
Newsmen Organize TAIPEI (NC)-Catholic news men working for Catholic and secular publications met here to draw up a provisional. constitu tion lor a Taiwan Catholic presa association here in Formosa.
~.
A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS
-4
THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART
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Grammar Grades 4-5-6-7-8
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'20
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Sept. 9, 1965
DIAMOND JUBILEE OF MT. ST. JOSEPH'S, FALL RIVER: Left: Rt. Rev. Alfred J. E. Bonneau, P,astor of Notre Dame, FaH River; Mother General Maria de Grace of the Sisters of Charity; Mother St. Martin, superior Pl'ovincial; Rev. ,Roland Brodeur, an alumnus and preacher at the' Pontifical ,Mass. Center: Officers of the Mass were, left to right: Rev.
-'Prelate Expects Mor,e Changes In Liturgy CHICAGO (NC) - Litur changes by the Church "are not made for the sake of change, bu t to make ~ical
Christian worship more mean ingful to all men," Archbishop .John P. Cody advised here. The newly enthroned spiritual leader of the Chicago archdio cese said he anticipates further changes in the liturgy and in canon law may be made at the fourth session of the Vatican council, which convenes Tues day, Sept. 14. He asked aU Catholics to '''catch the spirit of perennial youth" from the Church and ac cept the changes. He spoke be fore some 7,000 participants at the Liturgy Week convention here. Archbishop Cody also remind ed that "each man's problem: is every man's problem." He coun seled that "while you may bear no burden of injustice, another man, because of skin color or national origin does bear this burden and it must be yours." He' cited overcrowded and seg regated schools, discrimination in housing and other bias as the "burden and responsibility" that all must bear. ' 'Only Beginning'
Maurice R.'Jeffrey, subdeacon; Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis, deacon of honor; Bishop Connolly, celebrant: Rt. Rev. Louis E. Prev08t, pastor of St. Jos eph's, New Bedford, Rev. Romeo Murphy, O.M.I., deacon; Rev. John E. Boyd, deacon of honor. Right: Among the notables present were; left·to right, Antonio Prince, former R.I. secretary of State and Bishop Gerrard.
,Praise Veteran
Prayer of the Faithful To 'e Recited For The Success of Vatican Council" Priest: _'he Lord be with you. All:
And with yo,!!r spirit.
Priest: Let us pray. Beloved in Christ. Let us ask our Father in Heaven, who gathered the Shepherds his Church together in council, that he bring to completion the work they have begun.
of
Lector: For the Holy Catholic Church, that the Lord renew her, in Unity and Faith•. All:
We beseech you, hear us.
Lector: For Our Holy Father and our Bishop, as well as all the Bishops of the Church, that the Holy Spirit enlighten and protect them. All: We beseech you, hear us. Lector: For our priests and religious, that they remain steadfast in service of the Lord. All:
We beseech you, hear us.
Lector: For our President and all civil authorities, that the in the paths of wisdom and justice. All: We beseech you, hear us.
Lord direct them
Lector: For (N.N. and) the sick (of our parish), that the Lord grant them health of soul and body. All: We beseech you, hear us. LeCtor: For (N.N. and) all the faithful departed, that the Lord grant them eternal rest. All:. We beseech you, hear us. Lector: Christ, hear us. All: Christ, graciously hear us. Priest: God, our refuge and our strength and source of all goodness, heed , the holy prayers of your Church and grant that we fully obtain what we ask for in faith. Through Christ Our Lord AU: Amen. To be said on Sundays and Holy days beginning September 12th
Father Frederick McManus, retiring president of the National Liturgical Conference, said a primary concern of the organ ization always has been "educa tion, the spread of understand ing '" C> * for liturgical participa tion and understanding." He welcomed Protestant, Or thodox and Jewish participants to the convention, observing ~every gathering, great and small, soothes the path a little." He asserted: "We pray together for the unity of all * • * and we ask their prayere," Father McManus said the li turgical changes in the Churcb LOUISVILLE (NC) - Two "came as a sudden surprise," but the temptation now is to regard 'nuns who were natural sisters them as "a big step." He added: are the only two teachers for "The liturgical renewal is only eight grades at St. Ambrose School in the farming commu beginning," ' nity of Cecilia, Ky. Sisters, whose total years Appoint Columban ofThe teaching add up to 110, have NEGROS (NC) - Father Paul taught at St. Ambrose for 17 Richardson, S.S.C., of Boston, years, and now are teaching sons has been appointed chaplain at and daughters of fortner pupils. Kabankalan College. This is the The alert, jovial nuns are first time the Philippines college Sister Blandine, 74, and Sister has had a permanent chaplain. Antonia, 77. Sister Blandine has
Two Aged, 'Nuns Teach Eight Grades
taught for 53 years, and Sister eight. In the school's two class Antonia for 57. . rooms desks are lined up in four Sister Blandine is the mother rows. Each row represents one superior of their little brick grade. The Sisters work with one convent, which houses four nuns, but she won't readily identify grade at a time, while th~ir other herself as such, because, "we all three grades are doing class work together," The other two work. The teachers speak quietly nuns are a retired teacher and to each group with which they the school's music teacher. They are working so as not to disturb also serve as housekeepers. the other classes. Sister Antonia teaches grades "You'd be surprised how much one through four, and Sister the children can concentrate," Blandine irades five through Sister Antonia said.
ForCh~rity LITTLE ROCK (NC)-An 8T year-old Spanish-American war ,veteran has been cited for hi. charity by the Veterans' Hospi tal here. Ralph Bohny, a member of the Knights of Columbus and Span ish War Veterans sick commit , tees, was cited for 2,500 hours of visiting patients at the hospital, which keeps records of such visits. Bohny spends almost as much time at St. Vincent Infir mary, Baptist Hospital, Nazareth Nursing Home, the Granite Mountain Home and the Fort Roots Veteran's Hospital. It keeps me out of the rockin, chair," he said.
Council Auditor VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has appointed Baron Walter von Loe, chairman of the German and International Cath olIC Farmers Movements, as a lay auditor, for the next session of Vatican n.
Continuing Education FALL SESSION
Sept. 28-Dec. 7 Ten Tuesday Evenings 7:30
to 9:30
P.M.
The Contemporary Novel .. Amerlel Creative Writing Effective English The New Grammar Public Speaking Reading Improvement For Adults Drawing and Painting The Artist At Work Interior Decoration Personality ,Improvement For W_ Conversational French-8egintlera Labor Law
Modem Math For Parents PhilOSOPhy In An Age Of AnxIetY You And Your Child Current Views On Tension .. World Affairs ' You And The New Morality Accounting For Non-Accountants Insurance - (Prep. Agents' & Brokers' Exam.) Investing In Stocks and Bonds ' Training Course For Supervisorl Real Estate Persuasive selling Elementar, Shorthand (Cret!It
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