t
Bishop
IssuesLitur~y
Mandate
New American Ritual Is Effective Next Monday
Diocese Will Use English' at Masses Starting Nov. 29 By mandate of the Most Reverend Bishop, the following directives on the new American Ritual and the Roman Missal are to be put into effect in the Diocese of Fall River. Directives on the Ritual become effective in the Diocese on Monday, September 14, 1964. Directives on the Missal become effective on the First Sunday of Advent, November 29, 1964. 1. In accord with the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, §39, the Bishops of the United States ·have approved a new American Ritual, which is to be in troduced on September 14, 1964, and a new edition of the Roman Missal to be put into use at a later date. 2. Since the principal purpose of these new texts is to provide liturgical rites that are readily intelligible ~ the faithful and condudve to thei!; active and fruit-
ful participation, the approved vel'sions of both Ritual and Missal are t<l be used regularly throughout the Diocese. 3. Pastors who feel that the needs of their people would be better served by use of approved texts in other languages should apply to the Most Reverend Bishop for permission to adopt them.
FORMATION 4. Since fruitful participation in the Sacred Liturgy first of all requires understanding, priests should study the doctrine of divine worship, especially as it is taught in the Introduction and First Chapter of the Constitu
tion on the Sacred Liturgy, and should use every op-
The ANCHOR 1964 Fa II ROIver, M ass., Th ur$d ay, Se tp10 .,
Vol. 8, No. 37 © _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;;..
1964 The Anchor
PRICE lOc ;.;.$;.;..~.OO.;.:;.pe;;,r...;y.:.-;.;.
Penitent Now MakesReply
portunity to instruct the faithful in the nature of the Liturgy as the worship of Christ and His Church.
RITUAL 5. Rites and blessings not found in the new Collectio 'Rituum may be taken from the English translation of the entire Roman Ritual approved by the American Bishops (The Roman Ritual, Bruce, Milwaukee).
BAP1'ISM 6. The Rite for Private Baptism may be used ill the reception of a convert whose previous baptism is of doubtful validity. (Can. 759, §2) Turn to Page Seventeen
Diocesan Commission To War on Poverty The Chancery Office announced yesterday the formation of a Commission for bring. ing co-ordination of various diocesan social and education agencies into the fore. The war on poverty, as envisioned by the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, provides for "coop. 'eration of public and private agencies in the struggle to offer all Americans opportunity to live in decency and dig. nity." Among those named to the new Diocesan Commis. sion are representatives of
Another Papal Volunteer Leaves for Latin America
"I am happy to be able to do something extra for God." . With these words of dedication on her lips, the third Papal' Volunteer from the.. Diocese of Fall River, Miss Arlene Schreiner, boarded the Taca Airlines Jet that would bring her safely and quickly to her . eherished mission assign ment in Belize, British Hon duras on Sept. 2nd. Arlene
is the daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Schreiner of 'Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish, Seekonk. She joins 38 other American Catholics who are working as Papal Volunteers in British
Honduras. She will teach in a
To enable the laity to have full and fruitful participa state owned Catholic high school and will live on a $70 per month tion in new formula for the Sacrament of Penance that will salary: $40 for housing and food be introduced throughout the United States on Monday, and $30 for personal expenses. Sept. 14, the following method of going to confession is to She is a 1963 graduate of Rhode Island College. During the past be followed: . year she taught History and En As soon ·as the penitent has in the confessional. examined his conscience while Having confessed his sins to glish in the junior high grades kneeling in Church, he then the priest, the penitent must at St. Margaret's School, Ru'm . : should say the Act of Contrition thlm express a firm purpose of ford, R. I.. Arlene is typical of a budding. immediately and not wait until amendment, oBi;";.; . Tul'Q to Page Four . tile pl'ieat ia aivwa ab.ilOlutioD '1'~D to Paae Flv.
ARLENE.SCHREINE&
Catholic Charities activities, eatholic You t h Organization, Catholic Welfare Bureaus, awl the Catholic School sy9f.em. T'he Commission includes Rt. R,ev. Raymond T. Considine, Di· ocesan Director of the Propaga· tion of the Faith and pastor ot St. Willil\m's Parish, Fall· River, chairman; Very Rev. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis, and dean of the Cape Cod area; Rev. Jose M. B. Avila, pastor of Mount Carmel, New Bedford; Rev. Ed· mund L. Dickinson, assistant at Sacred Heart, Attleboro. Rev. John F. Hogan, assistant Dioce9an director of Catholie Charities; Rev. Walter A. Sullie van, Diocesan director of the Catholic Youth Organization; Rev. J-ames F. Lyons, assistant at 1m mac u I ate Conception, Taunton; Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, superintendent of D i 0 c e sail schools; Mr. Robert V. McGowan, K.S.G., Attleboro; Mr. James W. Killoran, Esq., Somerset, awl Turn to Page Five
More and More Crowd Facilities
25,300 Students EnroU In Diocesan Schools studying Saturdays at the Olllege ttl tt.. Sacred Hearts, Fall River. Also introduced this year in the ele mentary schools is a new science pro gram in grades 4, 5, 7 and 8. Teachers Bishop Feehan High, Attleboro, is ap will take in-service courses during the erating for the first time with the full year to aid in teaching the new met~d. four years of secondary education. Holy In-servke courses are also schedu"l.ed Name School, Fall River, has added an for art and physical education. eighth grade and Our Lady of Lourdes, New courses of study for the high Taunton,' has a fifth grade. A new build schools have been prepared by curricu ing is being constructed for St. Joseph's lum committees meeting at. regular in School, Fairahven, with completion date tervals. sUll uncertain. A special institute for principals will Ground will be broken in the Spring be held Saturday, Sept. 19. Speakers will fur the new boys' high school in Fall. be Dr. Wil-liam Wallace of the State De River. partment of Education, who will discUA Modern math is now being taught in laws affecting schools, and Rev. Edward grades 1-4, 7 and 8. Every instructor in Norton, S.V.D., of Boston College who new math has had a oolle~e course in will speak OIl principal and personnel teachine procedUl'itlil I;Q prepare them, relat60Dlilo
Catholic schools of the Diocese opened yesterday with an enrollment of approx imately 25,300, including 5,300 in high schools and 20,000 in elementary schools.
ENROLLMENT: This scene at Immaculate Conceptron School, New Bedford, was repeated throughout Diocese yesterday as schools opened. Left to right, Sister Dolores of Mary, principal, Thomas Orlowski, Donna ~rdeiro, Rev. GeQrge E. Amaral.
..
, 2
THE ANCHOR-'-Di~ of Fall liver-Thurs. sept. to, 19'"
Mother p'iette· Marie
JaequeliDe Allard
Mary Arruda
Lucille Bergeron
Doris Blanchette,
·G~.ADUATIONEXERCISES AT ST. ANNI~'S SCHOOL OF NURSING, FALL' RIVER, SUNDAY
Nursing School Graduates Receive Diplomas Sunday Thirty-nine students will graduate from St. Anne's School of Nursing, Fall River, at traditional ceremonies at , 2 :30 Sunday afternoon, Sept. 13 in the school auditorium. Presiding will be Bishop James J. Gerrard and Rev.. A. M., Seguin, a.p., hospital chap cine Bergeron, D<lris Blanchette, lain, will deliver the ope~ing . Cynthia Hodson, Helen Savaria, prayer. Susan Senesac and Sandra Syl Atty. Harold K.. Hudner, via. South Dartmouth graduates member of the hospital's board of governors will present the are Mary Arruda, and Elizabeth program and greetings from the Caron; from North Dartmouth is medical staff will be extended Carlota Torres. Claudette Meunier is from by Frederick J. Sullivan, M.D;, Taunton; Christina Segura from staff physician. Principal address will be by Provincetown; Maureen Griffin Rev. Patrh;k J. O'Neill, Diocesan from Swansea; Elaine Jordan Superintendent of Schools, and from Westport. From Middleboro, Mass. is the nursing school's glee club Trudy Ann Morris and Rhode will offer several selections. Miss Maureen Griffin of the Islanders are Marguerite Bohan. graduating class will deliver the an and Marianne Houlihan, New_ class essay and the Bishop will port; Margaret Terceiro and Barbara Ann Durfee, Tiverton; confer diplomas. . Margaret Mary Campagna and In conclusion the graduates Carolyn DiLeone, Middletown will join in recitation of the Lorraine Champagne, WOODNightingale Pledge and the . socket; and Maureen Hopkins, Bishop will impart his blessing. Slatersville. . Processional. and recessional music will ,be by Mrs. Oscar Barnabe. . To Graduate SEPT. lZ Graduates from Fall River are· Rev. John J.' Galvin, 1962, As Sister Mary Thomas More Joo sistant, SS. Peter & Paul, Fall queline Allard, Jeanne Brault, River. Nancy Ann Considine, Margue SEPT. 13 rite CQsta, Margaret Fitta, Mary Rev. Charles A. J. Donovan, Lou Galvin, Doris Goyette, An 1949, Pastor, Immaculate Con nette LavQie, Beverly Ann Leach ception, No. Easton. Joan Marie LePage Therese SEPT. 15 Martin, H~len Piekiel~iak, J ean Rev. Henry J. Mussely, 1934, ne Roy, Barbara Stocklinski Pastor, St. John Baptist, Fall Judith Sullivan and Ruth Zaw~ River. rotny. Rev. Brendan McNally, S.J., From New Bedford come Lu- 1958, Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass. . SEPT. 16 Rt. Rev. Jean A. Prevost, P.A., SAN JUAN (NC) - Use of P.R., 1925, Pastor, Notre Dame, Spanish in parts of the Mass and Fall River. administration of sacraments in SEPT. 17 Puerto Rico will begin Sunday, Rev. Thomas F. McNulty, 1954, Nov. 29. 'Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bedford.
Necrology
Start Nov. 29
Diocese of Fall River OFFICIAL APPOINTMENTS
yery Rev. Willi-am D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis . X~vler Church, Hyannis, to be Moderator for District No.5, Dl~san Council of Catholic Women. Rt. Rev. John J. Hayes, pastor of Holy Name Church, New BedJorji, to be Moderator for District No.2, Diocesan Council of Catholic Women.
I~ass
Ordo
Marperlte BohonaD
AFTERNOON
Former Mother-Daughters Act
Marks Religious Silver Jubilee
F'RIDAY·-Mass of previous Sun day. 1'/ Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; .VICTORIA (NC) - Not an rarily professed as Religious of Second Collect SS. Protus and Hyacinth, Martyr; Common performers fade away especially the Order of the Incarnate Word the unforgettable Jones girls of and Blessed Sacrament. Their Preface. the 30s who have been catering husband and father had died SATURDAY - Most Holy Name of M~r. III Class. White. Mass to captive audiences since their two years before. "debut" here in Texas in 1939. , . Mrs. Jones became Sistw' PiuS; Proper; Gloria; no Creed; _The Jones girls, .four daugh-. Ha;zel, Sistel," Jude; Gladys, Sis Preface of Blessed Virgin. SUNDAY -XVII Sunday After 'tel's and their mother,' are' all tel' Genevieve; Dorothy, _Sister Pentecost. II Class. Green.· Sisters of the Incarnate .Word Catherine; and' Evelyn, Sistel' and Blessed Sacrament and are' ' Dorothy. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; celebrating the silver jubilees, Sister Pius is retired at the Preface of Trinity. . of their religious profession motherhouse, but the fo~r reo MONDAY - Exaltation of the the Sisters' motherhouse here'. . maining Joneses are 'active Holy Cross. II Class. Red. Mass The religious quintet were teachers in several Texas ~ities. Proper; Gloria; Creed; Pref once members of an all-girl . Their music appreciation has ace of the Holy Cross. band, the Texas Rangerettes, ri't waned after 25 years of reo TUESDAY - Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin ::\lary. IT which played the nightclub and ligious service. Sister Pius taught theater circuit from Hawaii to· music at Blessed Sacrament Class. White. Mass Proper; Mexico and allover the United Academy in San Antonio and Gloria; Second Collect St. States: . now Sister Catherine is in charge Nicome:ies, Martyr; Sequence; Thel1' change of occupatIOn if musical duties there. Sister Creed; :Preface of Blessed Vir began July 26, 1939, when Mrs. Dorothy teaches music at st. gin. Mary McLaughlin Jones and her Ludmila's Academy in Shina; WEDNESDAY - SS. Cornelius, Pope, and Cyprian, Bishop, . daughters--Hazel, Gladys, Dor- Tex., and the remaining Sisters are indirectly involved in tbe Martyrs. III Class. Red. Mass othy and Evelyn-were tempoProper; Gloria; Second Collect instrumental field. SS. Euphemia and Compan ions, Martyrs; no Creed; Com mon Preface. TlfIURSDAY - Mass of previous ST. LOUIS (NC)-The board
Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass of directors of the U. S. Catholic
Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Church's rural life group has
A Second Collect Impression of warned it may withdraw sup
MARRIAGE Stigmata of St. Francis, Con port of the federal reclamation
fessor; Common Preface. MANUAL program and oppose any more
funds for western states.
FOR. In a hard-hitting statement,
CATHOLICS the board of the National Cath
to~Seton "DIl.WILLlAMI\.l,YNCH olic Rural Life Conference has '
charged that the 60-year-old
. SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The program which has irrigated
Mc:Graw-I~dison Company of millions of acres of arid land is
Elgin, Ill." has donated its re turning away from its original
se.arch lahoratory in West Or goal.
ange and Orange, N. J., and the - equipmen1 it contains to Seton Hull University. Although no price was placed on the prop erty, it was described as the "A MARRIAGE largest gift ever received by the MANUAL FOR un.iversity. Auxiliary Bishop John J. CATHOLICS" Doughtert;, of Newark, president Written by a doctor, with a foreword of Seton Hall, said the univer by RICHARD CARDINAl. CUSHING, city will llse the modern, 000 ARCHBISHOP OF BOSTON, A brand story bui:.ding to expand re new, authoritative book includes the search prejects in chemistry. facts of love and life, enkagements, marriage, honeymoon. 350 pages with THOMAS F. MONAGHAN JR. special sections on "limitations Of The Family" and Questions & Answers. Treasurer
at
Asserts Reclamation
Project Changing
lillinoi!i Firm Gives Plant Hall
MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE CORP.
FOR.TY HOURS
DIEVOTION
Sept. 13--St. Anne, Fall River. St. Dominic, Swansea. !lept. 2o--Holy Cross, Fall Ri-ver. St. Joseph, Attleboro. St. It.ouis de France, Swansea. Sept. 27--St. Roch, Fall River. Sacred Heart, Taunton. St. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford. Oct. 4-0ur Lady of the Holy Rosary, Fall River. Our Lady of the Holy R<.sary, Taunton.
Actual marriage mass included. For· Ackllts. Mailed privately.
142 SECOND STREET
OSborne 5-7856
FALL RIVER
III C.O.D. MONEY BACK CUARANTEE
$4_ 95
POST PAID
Home Promotions 305 Madison Ave.
PlIInfield, IU.
-=
BISAILLON'S
GARAGE \
24-Hour Wrecker Service
.
THE _NCMOI
!:econd Clal s Postage j>alll at Fall River, Ma:ls. Dubllslled evell fbursday at 410 Hlghlano ~verue Fall Rive, Mass. bY tile catholic Press 01 the Olotese of Fall 1IIv.r. Sut'scriptlon by mill. postpaid t •.OO
"',..,.
."Iet .
653 Washington Street, Fairhaven WYman 4-5058
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THE ANCt:t0R-Dio.cese ofFall River-Thurs. Sept. 10, 1964
Elizabeth Caroa
Jeanne Brault
Sis$er Madeleine
Lorraine Champacae
3
NaDe,. Ano Considine
·BISHOP CONNOLLY TO PRESENT DIPLOMAS AT NURSING SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES
Florida Schools Catholics Push Better To Teach 'About' Secondary Education. God in Classes '~
TALLAHASSEE (NC) WASHINGTON (NC)-CathoIic secondary education Florida's public schools have this year will step up movements toward stronger academic been advised by state offic 6(}ntent, fewer parish schools and closer ties with Catholics ials on how to keep religion in public high schools. It alSQ will continue to wrestle with in the classrooms despite recent the dilemma of admission 1;0 edueate more than 50 per cent Supreme Court rulings. In a letter to school superin standards, turn away hun of the eligible students." tendents, State School Superin Father Koob said the drive to t-endent Thomas Bailey and Atty. .treds of applicants in many places, and increase tuition raise academic standards has Gen. James Kynes said schools pl'ices. - amounted to almost a crash pro "are not required' to be and gram in the past three years.
This outline has been offered "We have made big strides should not be silent about God." "Schools have a responsibility by Father C. Albert Koob, O. toward getting in the main Praem., associate secretary of stream of ongoing academic to present knowledge about re the secondary school department movements and we will take ligion and to assist students to develop an understanding of the ef the National Catholic Educa more," he observed. role which religion has played tional Association. He cited the success of his in the growth and development Summer Institutes department's new consultant,· of our nation," they said. To Father Koob, there are two Brother E. Anthony of ba Salle Religion Course major facts of life about modern College, an expert in evaluation Kynes and Bailey recom of schools and teachers. Catholic high schools. "First, it "We invited schools to have mended that teachers instruct is imperative that we increase "about" religion rather than him visit them, study their cur OUl' academic challenge for stu dents. Secondly, we must accept . riculum; the background of the teach religion . They also advised county su the truth that we are not going Turn to Page Nineteen perintendents to work into clas ses in history, Iiterature,"art and music "an objective presentation of the contribution religion has made in shaping our history and culture." Baile ysaid schools could teach a course in "comparative relig W ASlITNGTON (NC)-Catholic elementary and sec ion or the history of religion." cmdary schools have enrolled about 5,653,000 students this month, according to a preliminary estimate made here. D'esignates Oct. 11 High schools, in contrast to the situ'ation of only'a few years ago, clearly are emer 'Gen. Pu laski Day' The NCWC department re ging as pace-setters in per WASHINGTON (NC)-Octo leased actual figures for the centage of enrolment in ber 11 has been designated as 1963-64 school year which illus crease, according to an esti trate the rapid growth of h,igh Gen. Pulaski's Memorial Day in a proclamation issued by Presi mate released by the Depart schools. dent Johnson. ment of Education of the Na Between the 1962 and the 1963 tional Catholic Welfare Confer The occasion will commemo school years, the department ence. rate the 185th anniversary of th-e said, secondary school enrol G r a d e school expansion, ment grew by 3.2 per cent while death of Count Casimir Pulaski, Polish general of the American which has run as high as three the elementary school enrol or four per cent in some past ment expanded by only 1.4 per Revolution. school years, continues a decel He flt!d from Poland to France cent. eration first noted sharply three In the nine years between where he met Benjamin Frank years ago. 1954 and 1963, chiefly because of lin, who interested him in the of the recent spurt in high American cause. He joined Gen. Teacher Shortage school population while grade Washington's forces in 1777 and Major factors in the slQw organized a cavalry corps known down in growth of elementary school expansion slowed, the as "Pulaski's legion." In October, NCWC department reports that school numbers appear to be 1779, he was mortally wounded grade-dropping, which will take while elementary school enrol in the Battle of Savannah, Ga. ment grew 40.5 per cent, second away 10,000 pupils in Cincinnati alone this year; a continued ary school student numbers went up 66.9 per cent. shortage of teaching Sisters be Courses ForI In the past school year, there cause they are being held back 1. Professional. Busin..., until they finish all college were 10,775 Catholic elementary . and General Industry schools in the United Staates courses; new regulations in sev staffed by 115,468 teachers. eral dioceses cutting down over age class size and the financial There were 2,487 secondary schools across the country with strain facing parishes from re cent costly school expansion and a faculty totaling 51,065, the NCWC department said. hiring of lay teachers.
Report Record Enrollment In U. S. Catholic Schools.·
Rapid Growth Nevertheless, the estimated 1964 Fall enrollments indicate another high mark in an un broken series of enrollment rec ords over the past two decades. Elementary school enrollment this year should be about 4,600,000 in contrast to 4,456,360 last year and high schools should enroll about 1,053,000 in contrast .. about 1.041,357 last year.
Bishop Approves Changes Of Sacred Hearts Fathers . The Most Reverend Bishop has approved the nomina tions made by the Very Rev. Daniel J. McCarthy, SS.CC.. Provincial of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts, Fair haven, concerning four assignments of Sacred Hearts Fathers to parishes in the Diocese, effective today. The Joseph's, Fairhaven, as assistant. Father Coyle has been in res assignments are as follows: idence at Wellfleet .since his re Rev. Ambrose Forgit,SS. turn from Japan. Father Yurgo CC., to Our Lady of Lourdes, has been aSsisting at various Wellfleet, as assistant. parishes during the Summer. He Rev. Francis Powaza, SS.CC., has just finished his year of 1;0 Holy Redeemer; Chatham, as pastoral theology. . assistant. Father Powaza is also .new to Rev. Patrick Coyle, SS.CC., to the Diocese, having been on the St. Joseph's, Fairhaven, as as faculty of Queen of Peace Mis- I sistant. sion Seminary, Jaffrey, N. H .. Rev. Roy Yurgo, SS.Ce., to St. for the past 10 years. .
Council Session To Open With Concelebrated Mass By
Rev. John R. FoIster
~ Anthony (;hurch -
.The Vatican has announced that the Third Session of the Vatican Council will be opened on Monday, Sept. 14, with a concelebration-a Mass offered by the Pope together with 24 Council Fathers representing the hierarchies of the continents of the world. For concelebrants th P d ' e ope an th IS OCcaSIOn, th e grea t a Itar representatives of the world'. of St. Peter's basilica will be Turn to Page Six enlarged to form a great square table around which will stand the Pope and the 24 prel ates. Since 'the promulgation of the Constitution on the Liturgy, nu merous concelebrated Masses have been offered throughout the world. However, these had something of an experimental character since they were to demonstrate the liturgical prac tices of this rite. The rite of Sept. 14 will be most meaningful. Henceforth, concelebration has its place, its precise and certain physiognomy in the worship of the Church. On that d·ay, the historical con celebration of Mass will simply obey and fittingly continue the Second Session: the' place, St. Peter's; the altar, that which rests on the tomb of Petel";" the O
•
Heads Alumni Clubs SQUAW VALLEY (NC) Charles Bradley of Chicago was installed as national president of the National Association of Catholic Alumni Clubs at its annual convention here in Cali fornia. Some 400 delegates from all sections of the country at tended. Bradley succeeds Rob ert Dempsey of New York.
Educa"tional and Psychological lesting Service Available by Appointment Only
•
New Bedford
Reading Courses Offered at Stonehill Provide Each of These Advantage5 Registration Deadline Sept. 22
STONEHILL COLLEGE READING INSTITUTE North Eoston, Moss
V,a Roule 2.. 10 Roule 123
4
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 10, 1964
Marguerite Costa
Sister Mary Thomas More
Gvolyn
DiLe~]lDe
Barbara Ann Durfee
Margaret Fitta
M.aI7 Lon Galvin
39 YOUNG WOMEN COMPLETE TRAINING AT ONLY CATHOLIC HOSPITAL IN DIOCESE
Papal Volunteer Continued from Page One refreshing new generation of American Catholics. These young adults have an intense interest in the Church and society. They are idealists who want "to re new the face of the earth." They are I' e ali s t s too - serious, thoughtful and dedicated - and h·ave an acute sense of what they call "their responsibility." Paradoxically, ~ this affluent society of ours, these young Catholics are more concerned with the spiritual aspects of life than the material. The "new breed", as "Amer ica" magazine recently described them, are found in secular and Catholic colleges and universi ties, in convents and seminaries, enrolled in the Peace Corps and PavIa. Arlene prepared herself for the British Honduras assignment by attending a 12 week-one night a week course in the lay apostolate at Boston College last Winter. Following her arrival in Central America, she attended an additional two weeks of training before she began her work. The young Papal Volunteer is not "young" in her outlook. She has been to Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Jamaica. Last Summer she attended the Institute of Technology in Mon terey, Mexico, where she took a course in archa-eology and served as a counsellor to American high school students studying Spanish there. It won't be all work and no play for Arlene Schreiner in British Honduras. But, whatever the challenges and difficulties, these will fade in the back ground, because her work is all for God and His needy children. And one who loves and serves God with a full heart and dedi. cated spirit receives in return the love of God a hundredfold.
Small Parishes MADRID (NC)-Spain's Cath olic population in the past four years has grown faster than the number of available priests, in creasing from 1,227 to 1,2~0 per sons per priest. Of the 20,000 parishes, nearly half have fewer than 500 parishioners.
Joseph Image of Reell Man Among Saints Strong, Silent, Dependclble Doer of God's Will By Joseph T. McGloin, SJ. There are undoubtedly any number of patron saints canonized to order for the edification of teen - agers (such as St. Jude, the patron of hopeless cases), as well as for the i I' parentS (such as almost any given mar tyr). At the risk of showing some prejudice, it should be said, however, that if you're looking for a real man among the saints (and by "man"I mean the type both menand women rightly admire, not necessarily the human zool ogy labs of muscle beach), your man is Joseph. He's no talker, and he didn't get the Scriptural headlines. In fact, he not only rated the poor est press coverage of any great man in history, but he has been maligned so much by well-mean. ing artists and second-guessers that he could well come back and d~ some suing for libel. Journey to Bethlehem Here's a husband whose wife is expecting her Child at any time. The preparations have all been made at home-the cradle, the baby clothes, the corner of the family room which is to be the nursery, everything. Then without warning, the emperor decides to count up his taxable subjects, and so he calls them all in to their ancestral homes to register. For Joseph and Mary this meant a trip of about 90 miles from Nazareth to Bethlehem. There were no offers then, either, to "Leave the driving to us," since the only driver's seat available was over the rear axle of a jackass. Even at Bethlehem Joseph runs into difficulties. There are just too many people around. Finally, he has to direct Mary and their four-legged jeep to a
Only Three Percent of Nation's Negroes Are Roman Catholic NOTRE DAME (NC)-Negro converts are entering the Cath. olic Church in the U. S. at a higher rate than whites. Father Harold R. Perry, S.V.D., provincial superior of the Society of the Divine Word in Bay St. Louis, Miss., has told the 21st annual Catholic Stu. dents' Mission Crusade conven tion that the number of Negro Catholics increased by three per cent last year while "the trend of the Church among the white population has recently been in
the other direction." Father Perr-y said there were 12,063 Negro converts last year, 700 more than the year before. Despite this gain, he said, mis sion efforts "have but scratched the surface" of the Negro apos tQlate. "There are 20 million Negroes in the United States, but only 723,000 belong to the true Church of Jesus Christ-a mere three per cent," he said. "This leaves the astounding figure of 97% to be brought into the fold.
cattle shelter on the side of a hill. You can he sure he didn't waste any time in self-pity, but fixed up the place as well as he could, building a fire for warmth, and converting the boat-like mangel' into a eradle. This great man is always in the baekground, yet always reo sponsible and dependable. When Simeon told Mary, "A sword of sorrow your own heart shall pierce," we're told that "Mary kept all these words, pondering them in her :leart." But they must have madl~ Joseph thought ful, toe,. Did God's Will One of the petty rulers of the time, Herod tl:.e Great, tries to get rid of a possible rival by killing every child who could possibl:r be the prophesied King. Joseph, however, has been warned about Herod by one of God's messengE'r boys, an angel, to take off for Egypt to get out of reach. And so, without question, Jo seph bundles up the family for another difficult journey, this time ir..to EgYI= 1. South they go into Hebron, west to Gaza, then south into Egypt, on a journey about which even a pious Fran ciscan monk who was trying to drum up enough people for a' pilgrimage in ';he 17th Century had to say: "* * * you see not a stone, nor a !:tream of water, nor a spring * 1101' a bush as tall as your finger, nor a blade of grass the size o:E a hair *." When all is clear, they return the same way to Nazareth-again at the bidding of an angel. _ All we know about Christ during this Nazareth period except for one occasion when He gets lost in the temple-is that "He was subject to them." But what a spot fOI' the humble Jo seph, showing the Son of God how to make a ,>lough or a bench or a table, realizing that this Boy could have turned to him at any time and said, "Joseph, there's a lot easier way than this to make a table!" But it was God's command that Joseph give orders to the Son of God, and, like everY'~hing else he was told to do, he ci id it, quietly and without fanfare. F'aith. Trust in God Yes, in Joseph you see some one who is all man in the best sense o:f that term. He's strong physically and every other way. He's cE!rtainly not the "life of the party" type, nor the blow
(j~SA
hard you meet occasionally (even among teen-agel's) who has to shoot off his mouth about all the good he's supposedly dQing. This is a man of absolute ob.edience to the will of G~d, and thIS under the toughest clrcum stances. He is a man of great faith and trust in God. Without this, in fact, Joseph would have been nothing. Nor would he have been chosen for this most difficult job. . But above all, this ~rong, SIlent, dependable man IS one who understand the real mean. ing of the word "love." He knew -and acted on the knowledge that love is shown in giving, not in taking. Here'is a man, moreover, who lived with the most attractive woman in history, a young man in the full bloom of his youth, not a feeble old man who knew nothing of youth's energy and drive. No, Joseph loved perfect ly with all his energy, but he turned that energy not toward his own pleasure and satisfac tion (which can be only self love), but toward the good of those he loved. So you want a picture of a man, of a real saint and not a plaster one-you loot at Joseph. Christ had a lot of praise for John the Baptist, but He didn't have to say anything in praise of the little teen-aged girl named Mary and the strong young man named Joseph who saw Him through His early life. Really great people don't need a good press, nor even the enco miums of their contemporaries, to be great or to be recognized.
now in training at the Institute for Intercultural Communica tion here. Father James S. Stefaniak, M.M., institute director, report.!l the trainees include six priests, 31 nuns, 36 laymen and four Jesuit scholastics. Their course in Spanish, missionary princi ples and Latin American cultu ral studies began Aug. 25 and will continue until Dec. 10. All Ages, Jobs The students range in age from 21 to 63, with 27 the aver age age. The group includes four married couples with three chil dren among them. The students come from 17 states and Nova Scotia. Teaching and nursing will 0c cupy the largest numb~r, but some will also engage in such fields as credit union work, social work, construction, ad ministration, youth work, cate chetics, and parish work. One will serve the missions as a pilot.
Quite Typical BONN (NC)-The Hungaria government so far has made no decision about granting exit per mits to Hungarian bishops who wish to attend the third session of the Ecumenical Council.
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tHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 10, 1964
Father Stanton
Doris Goyette
Maur~n
Griffin
Cynthia Hodson
Maureen Hopkins
5
Marianne Houlihan
MANY SECTIONS OF DIOCESE ARE REPRESENTED AMONG GRADUATES OF ST. ANNE'S NURSING.SCHOOL
Confession
Indian Priest Tells Need of Poverty-Stricken Anti-Poverty Unit In Philadelphia Diocese to St. William's Parishioners PHILADELPHIA (NC) - An
Continued from Page One "I am sorry for these and for all my sins, especially f<lr all sins _ ..._... _ (name a specific past sin), A slight, grey-haired priest, and I firmly resolve never a veteran of 31 years as a to commit them again". missionary in India, spoke The Form of Absolution last Sunday to parishioners When the priest wishes to ab IIOlve a penitent, he imposes a of St. William's Church, Fall salutary penance and, after the River. Under the Missionary Cooperative Plan, Rev. Baltha penance has been accepted, re sar Pereira requested aid for eites the following formula dur ing which the penitent should his Diocese of Simla, which has fisten piously and answer a total income of but $200 -Amen" at the conclusion of the monthly, yet serves a popula tion of over eight million. !lour prayers. "We get help from the Holy Priest: May Almighty God !lave mercy on you, forgive you Father," he explained, "but he your sins, and bring you to life must support mission all over the world, and what he sends us everlasting. is just enough to keep us in op Penitent: Amen. Priest: May the almighty and eration at our present level We merciful Lord grant you pardon, cannot expand." With only 1,500 Catholics, absolution, and remission of mainly recent converts, among your sins. eight million non-Christians, Penitent: Amen. Priest: May our Lord Jesus the Diocese is in sore need of ehrist absolve you, and by his expansion. "The non-Christians authority I absolve you from . are keen to learn about Chris every bond of excommunication, tianity," said Father Pereira, "but we have not the facilities suspension, and intedict, to the extent of my power and your to reach them." He said the Diocese, only four Ileed. Finally I absolve you from years old, operates with priests your sins, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of Gle Holy Spirit. Penitent: Amen. Priest: May the passion of our Lord Jesus Christ, the merits of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of all the saints, and also whatever good you do and evil you endure be tause for the remission of your sins, the increase of grace, and the reward of everlasting We. Penitent: Amen.
loaned from other areas. It lies partly in the Himalaya Moun tains, near the Chinese border, and partly in plains near the Pakistan border. 'Literally Nothing' ''The missionaries in the HI malayas have simple houses, but in the plains my Bishop /:Ind his priests have literally nothing in the way of shelters and must depend on the hospitality of their converts, most of whom live in one room huts. "The missioners stay over night in these huts and in Winter say Mass there. In the Summer they say Mass outdoors. "In Winter the missionaries pull straw together for their beds and burrow it in to keep warm, but in Summer there is no escaping temperatures that
often go to 120 degrees." Father Pereira said that in one part of the Diocese the govern ment rescinded permission for the use of a hall to say Mass. "Now Mass is said on an open porch and the people freeze in Winter and roast in Summer." Flowery Link Born in Goa in the southern part of India, Father Pereira speaks fluent English. He visited Fall River for a week, finding at least one link with home in hydrangeas blooming in the rec tory front yard at St. William's. He said the blossoms, common in Massachusetts, are also native to his part of India. He will visit other parts of the United States in his fund raising tour and return to India ift November.
Archdiocesan Planning Commis sion for the War on Poverty has been established by Archbishop John J. Krol of Philadelphia to coordinate archdiocesan efforts in the nationwide anti-poverty campaign. Auxiliary Bishop Gerald V. McDevitt is chairman of the ll-member all-clergy unit which includes several pastors and rep resentatives of archdiocesan agencies most directly concerned with problems of the poor. Bishop McDevitt said "partic ular programs are expected in remedial education, cultural en richment, home economics, and general family services." It is expected that the archdiocesan commission will submit its pro gram to a civic organization es tablished by the Mayor to direct Philadelphia's war on poverty.
War on Poverty Continued from Page One Mr. Larry G. Newman, Hyannis Port. Particular programs are ex pected to branch out more in the Fall River Diocese into the field Gf retardation, remedial educa tion and economic improve ment. Bishop Connolly explains his action by saying: "This is Our immediate response to Pres ident Johnson's call for a na tional crusade to combat pov erty. through total cooperation." "The American answer to pov erty," said the President, "is to help the poor help themselves eut of the ruts of poverty."
- Education Body Head Likes Party Plank TRAVERSE CITY (NC)-The national president of Citizens for Educational Freedom has hailed the education plank in the Democratic Party's 1964 platform. Atty. Stuart D. Hubbell of this Michigan community has praised President Johnson for what he calls the "equal treatment in the use of Federal funds for eduea tion to all children regardlei8 e( where they 10 ~ ICbooL"
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6
, THE ANCHOR-:-D1ocese, of f~t' River-Thurs. Sept. U), .1964 .
Warning Voic~
COilcelebration
. .;.
~ued
from Page Three :hierarchies; the occasion, the JIe t)J>ening of the Council; the co... ...egation, the Fathers in councll The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith have pub-;
and-since the ceremony sbd be eovered by radio and TV_ Jished a survey indicating' that a significant number of'
tM entire world. . American Catholics show anti-Jewish prejudice because of
Why Coneelebratkm'! their interpretatiqn of the Crucifixion.
Aside from the previous COBoe dliar decisions, what ext. If this is so-and there is not much reason to doubt
good can arise from concelebra. it-parents and teachers must be on their guard to give
tion? As a matter of fact • no false interpretations, to give' youngsters especially a'
would seem that stich a rite ~n~ true understanding of the central fact of the Crucifixion
complicates an already difficult enough rite. If it's unity, it that Jesus Christ, the Second Person of the Trinity made
would almost seem that the Man, took upon Himself the sins of all men so that all
greater number of priests doing share in the guilt of His suffering. The fact that He was
the same thing at the same time accused by Jews and nailed to a cross by Romans means
only confuses the issue. The simply that the whole life of Christ took place in a Jewish
questions and the answers are not new; St. Thomas Aquinas Roman historical context. It is likewise true that His
himself had ro deal with them Mother was a Jew and His Apostles Jews and the fiI'St
(Summa, III, q.82, a.2). Christians Jews. .
In speaking of concelebra tion, the Church has not toler Anything that smacks of prejudice, and" above. all,
ated the rite but has strongly prejudice against the people whom Christ honored in taking
recommended its revival (Const, His human flesh from theirs, 'is anti-Catholic and a betrayal
II, 51-58). It is not' a new rite. ,.Just as introduction of the ve.. . of truth. It has been said, "God·has no need of our lies." .n~\J.lar .Wall a m~entous pa8 Ii is likewise true that GOO. has no need of eurprejudices ,"...In varIOus pGrIs world ep1soJ. toral step, so coneelebration ill either. '. ' of war explode iii Ilia"'" IpGIb •• •u_ theology's great eontribution ' . ~""Vj&' ' - Paul VI. the liturgical revival. -~~:::~=-~. ~======~ One PrietIl " I f ~There is but one mediator be The n'L _. n H •. n H L •. tween man and God. If there is ,. The distinguished English Catholic newspaper,. . ' . - I nnouq. t ~ "WUR "witn -tn~ UJ\C lM>meone else who in some war Tablet, printed recently an article on Pope Paul's encyclical " . . also mediates, it is only because that gave illuminating insights into that first encyclical of " B)' REV. ROBERT W. HOVI)A, Catholie University thet person has been invited .. .. the present Holy Father. The Tablet suggested that the . do so by Christ Himself and .. . primary note of the encyclical on the Church was a variant ,-'~--'-------_-~~ J share in some leSller way in Hi8 TOII)AY-S,t. Nicholas of ToIl'IONDAY-The Exaltation of role.' of an expression used by the French philsophe~, ~acqu~ : entiDfl; Confensor. These consid- the ,Cross. "If only I am lifted . The Redemption of the hu~ Maritain, whose translator Pope Paul was. Marltam :once' erations are a rather severe test. up from the earth, I will attract . race, of all men of every age. pointed out to his fellow Catholics that "it is very important' .. Wher,e is our treasure-house and an. men ro myself" (Gospel). of you and me, has been wrought not to become more anxious to persuade than to see." What our h.eart? Is;.t in a power strucIt. is. this doctrinal orthodoxy once and for all by Christ alone. , the encyclical stressed is that Catholics must take the time' tu~e and a ",a~ of ~ife that is . th~t. gives to mankind's evolu However, for His own reasons, . h ' bUilt on oppr,~sslOn lIberated by tion .toward unity and solidarity Christ has deigned ro associate and make the effort to see the Church of Christ for VI at . injustice? Or are we free a depth and vision sufficient t4l certain men with Him so as .. she is. . enough to ,:hange our ways save, us from all romanticism apply this redemption direct),f • . • . when they are proven wrong? sentimentalism (and pragma~ to ,each man. They are to aet .ThIS 18 an age, the Pope recogmzes, when all sorts, Can we be "fools for Christ's -tism) .. It is this orthodoxy which for Hjm, in His Name, even wia of roles are being suggested for the Church. It is an age f)f . sake~' (Gospel)? has stimulated and animated Hi! .authority. Ilocial and political growth and change. Catholics,must take' . that evolution. To separate them Tl!ese personal ambassadON an interest in all of these, for all affect men who are the' . TO:MORROW - Mass as _ is to .weaken both and to make are the Apostles 'and their sue· ., H' 1.0 d 1 'f" Sund;,y. "May you and all the' both irrelevant. cel;8Ors the present bishops 4If children of God and the 0 b Ject, ,of IS ve an sa VI Ie. sain~: be ena':>led to measure, in Tongues which confess that the world. As the Church spreali plan. It is an easy, and a dangerous and false step, to pro.., its breadth and length and .Jesus 'Christ is Lord (First and activities multiplied, tAe pose, therefore, that the Church take to herself in the height and depth, the love of . Reading) are best able to artic- number 12. was also multiplied. Twentieth Century a role wherein these human preoccupa-' Christ" (Fint Reading). Our ulatethe social longings of the Diocesan Bishop tions become her essential business. But such is not and: worship insp.ires us not merely human family. . But even with an increased love wI·th number of shepherds, the flocks to our own. kl' nd of, ean never be her role. ' TUESDAY-The Seven SGr all its limi1ations, prejudices, rows of the Blessed Virgin Mary. could not be adequately attend As the Pope said in the very first sentence of the blind spots, but to "the love· of From the Cross, the Lord intro ed. Therefore, individual bisb encyclical, he is 'llot speaking of "the Church" but "His Christ." It m ..st be His work in duces not only Mary and John ops associated men to them us, if it is to be worth anything, (G ) b selves and gave them part of Church," the Church as Christ established her, the Church if it is to exalt us. ospel ut all of us to each their own power-as much as which is the extension of Christ in the world and whose other. He is the Universal Man they thought was necessary :for whose death is the death of us the adequate care of their in . t, essential business is and must always b e t h e work 0 f Ch rIB SATURDA'Y-The Most Holy all and whose rising again prom trusted flocks. In time, they COB a supernaturaI WOrk , t h e work 0 f G o. Naml~ of the Blessed Virgin ises all of us glory. d fided parts of their flocks to Mary. "Let i,t be unto me acSo the introductions we have l" new helper&-priests. The th m k'mg 0 fpeop e IS m fl uence d b y f orces an d cording to thy word" (Gospel). under His auspices, through these ,Thus, the diocese is the activities and developments that do not take their origins Mary's response is the norm of faith in Him, are no mere for C hurch in miniature. There is from the Church. Pope Paul urges Catholics in his ency- all Christian response, as her hu- malities. In Him we come to but one priest-the one Christ clical to think more about the Church herself. And, as The milit;y is the norm for all of us. know ourselves and to know one associated to Himself, the Apos Tablet writes, this is intended by the Pope to be corrective, She opened herself completely another. tIe, the Bishop. The others . h to God's message and to His work WEDNESDAY-SS. Cornelius priests (pastors and curate&), "to bring back into the Catholic conSCiOusness so lJlUC in hE,r. No one in the Church is ,., and Cyprian, Martyrs. Nor can . ueacons, etc., Share in the ;Bisb that has been for too long neglected b y people w h 0 f eed more exalted than she because persecution arid the "world's" op ' S Ch' t,.,· t d ro I e. rIS -ueslgna e no 'ime in the Church has hatred (Gospel) dim the mes Th'IS IS . th e grea t th eo I oglc . at theI'r I'magI'natI'on on the current concepti'ons and I'deas p...... L..,- sented to them by the non-ChrI'stI'an socI'ety I'n WhI'ch they matched her humble receptivity sage 0 f th e I ove we owe one truth that I's preached by the rl·te live." nor her great gifts. another and the oneness it en of· concelebration. In everyone genders. A pragmatic or senti- of her rites and ceremonies, the SEVENTEENTH SUN DAY mental basis will not sustain Churchattemps to preach some Only when Catholics are themselves, true to the Church, ' the Body of Christ into which they have been incorporated, AFT:ER PENTECOST. One of even, the most sensitive social, thing to us. The actions of the the strangest developments in conscience. celebrant at Mass are designat~ will they have something worthwhile to offer to their non modern Protestantism (and it Only faith will sustain it, only - by the Church so that in his very Catholic and non-Christian contemporaries. has jets echOf~s among Catholics, the faith that looks to Jesus bearing the priest will tell bis ·too) is a kind of division of Christ lind says "This is what people something of the gr~n . Christians into two camps: the man must become." Only faith . deur, the my~ery, the divini• camp of dodrinal orthodoxy on can, accept the inevitable set of the Eucharist. the one hand, and the ~amp of backs without relinquishing the Rites ~eaeh social consc:lousness and social hope and aim-for, apparent or ~n concelebration, we h~ve the action on the other. not it is God's will umque, the perfect, sign' of , . unity. All take part in the The reaso:i1S for this theoret greatest human act possible and ical division are many and com Few School Dropouts' each according to his capacity. plicated, but it is not compatible presides but the others ad with the Gospel nor tolerable for In Saginaw .Diocese One according to their own Churcll. believers. OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER SAGINAW (NC) -Drop-outs roles. . . It is not a reduction of Chris are virtually unknown among This does not in any way de Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the DiOcese of Fall River ' tilinity to the level'of a natural pupils in Catholic schools of the base the great ceremony of a SOCi~11 phenomenon to point out Saginaw diocese. Solemn Pontifical Mass. Both .n 0 Highland Avenue wha't today's lessons make so The 1963-64 report of the di of the ceremonies are impressive Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 clear: that. i:E Jesus is the Word ocesan school office showed only rites of the Church and each bae
t)f God to man, then the whole 33 of 4,911 students dropped out its lesson. ,
PUBLISHER orientation of man's development of high school in the past school A Solemn Pontifical Mass em
Most Rev. James L ConnoIlY"D.D., PhD. mus:; 'be stabilized in the direc year. That's a rate of .006%. The phasizes more the juridical posi tion of the social, the communi- ' report said 64 other students tion of the Bishop: he is the One GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER tari~ln, the l~ualitarian. This is transferred to public schools. sent by Christ, t~e Apostle, the Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll no political judgment; it is sim Principal cause of the total chief. Thus the ceremonies streSll MANAGING EDITOR ply .a necessity of orthodox doc drop-out was medical-involv a regal aspect and all venera1e Hugh J. Golden irinll. ing 13 students. Turn to Page Seven
Anti-Jewish Prejudice
0',It.
The Churllh's Bus:ness
h h
Ch
h
all
O
@rheANCHOR
II
'
THE ANCHOR":"'Oio<:ese'of Fan Rtver-Thurs. ·Sept. 10, 1964
Beverly Ann Leach
Annette Lavoie
Elaine Jordan
Joan
Marie LePage
Therese Martin
.
7
Claudette Meunier
SUNDAY GRADUATION WILL CLIMAX SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION OF TRAINING FOR PROFESSION .1
Report Says ~~d Czechs to Free'. Prague Prelate
CCD to Offer· Good Will Training Course
Paulist to Direct Workshop at Stang High.
The ,Rev. William B. Green~ , BONN (NC,>-The Czech spun, a Paulist Father and oslovak communist govern the National Director of the ment has declared it is ready Apostolate of Good Will for , .to authorize Archbishop' the Confraternity of Christian
Joseph Beran of Prague ·to go, to Rome" provided he agrees in _ writing not to return to ,€ z ech-. oslovakia. According to· a report pub lished ·by a German Catholic. new agency, the archbishop ·has"" .. been practically' isolated from the outside world in his guarded residence in Radvanov, near ·the .city of Tabor in soubbern . Bohemia. ,. Catholic circles in. Prague, on . the other hand, are now· afraid that talks between the Czecho-, slovak government and the Vat ican have entirely broken down. This fear is based on a recent statement made by Pope Paul VI in a private audience, where he. said: "Our sincere efforts to obtain . an improvement in the relations _ ·between the Church -and· ·the governments of the east-bloc, countries have unfortl,l,Ilately , .' met with n'o understanding on
the other side up to now."
r. .
Concelebration Continued from Page Six · the embodiment of Christ's teaching, authority and salutary
ects.
:Qo~trifle, will conduct a· special.. training course for CCD lay leaders in the diocese. during, the month' ofSepteIriber. He will hold a workshop at Bishop Stang High School, No. Dartmouth, on Sunday, Sept. 20, from 2:30 to 4:30. . Invited to' the workshop' are all Parish Chairmen of the Apostolate of Good' Will and" parish AGW group members;' Parish Executive Board Chair-' men or other board members representing the chairmen; and' the priests-Directors of the Par ish Executive Boards: During the cour~ of the work shop, the lay delegates will study and discu,ss the contents of a new manual and kit recently' published by the National Cen- . ter of the CCD. This manual and kit outlines a practical program for an effective non-Catholic apostolate in the parish which' is designed to meet the challenge of a new age of Christian . witness and unity. This new' non-Catholic apostolate encom.· passes six areas in which the laity can witness for Christ in the parish. 1. Prayer: To provide the means to unite all Christians in common prayer for Christian unity.
Concelebration does riot bar gain with any of these. Rather, it stresses the truth that all priests of a diocese share in the teaching role, the social author ity and the redmptive work of ISTANBUL (NC) - The Or their, bishop - as he shares in thodox Holy Synod of Constan Christ's. tinople(Istanbul) has announced Thus for the reopening of the that Archbishop Simeon Ama Council, the Holy Father has l'igLio of Irenepoli has been ap wanted to stress that· all the poimed to act as its liaison Bishops of the world share in official at the Vatican. The aroh his burden. But He is the Pope, biShop is the former secretary thus it is his unique role to pre of the synod. Side over such a ceremony. What me.aning; what teaching!
Liaison Official
Canadian Religious . Form Secretariate OTTATWA (NC)-A perma nent secretariate will beestab lished here for the 292 religious . communities of men and w~men in Canada. There are 73 communities of priests, 12 of Brothers and '207 of nuns in Canada. There also are two secular institutes of men and nine of women. Total mem bership in the religious commu nities is approximately 65,000. Father Hermenegilde Char · bonneau, O.M.I., will be· in charge of the secretariate. Father Thomas Rondeau; O.P., · Quebec provincial of the Domin- ' ,leans will serve as president of . ' the council ~ directors of,men .' religious, and Mother St.. Paul, Superior General of the Grq Nuns of the Cross at Ottawa, as president of the women religioua.
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harmony in the cominunity. 6. Christian Unity: To pro vide the means to help and fos ter the desire for Christian unity among our Separated Brothers in Christ. The lay leaders who will at-· tend the workshop will be pre pared to form and train Apos-., tolate of Good Will Committees in their own parishes. These committees will be made up of representatives of the various organizations ,in the parishes. They will serve as planning and' coordinating groups for the non Catholic apostolate in the par 'ishes; It is Father Greenspun's con viction that the Apostolate of Good Will cannot begin a real growth in the national CCD' Movement until Apostolate of Good Will Committees are brought into existence with the necessary means to sustain their efforts on the "grass roots" level· of the parish.
Aim to Improve CLEVELAND (NC) Lay teachers in Cleveland diocesan elementary schools have formed an association aimed at spiritual and p1'Qfessional advancement.
Advance Saint's Exposition Date ·PANJIM (NC) - Permission has been granted by the Holy See to the Indian bishops to advance the date of the public expoaition of the remains of St. Francis Xavier, enshrined in the Born Jesus basilica in Old Goa, six miles from here. , Originally scheduled to begin on bee. 8, the exposition will now' be held earlier to permit vi'sitors to view the relics be fore as well as' after the Inter national Eucharistic Congress, to be held in Bombay from Nov. 28 to Dec. 6, 1964;. . Goa's tourist department is busy arranging sight-seeing trips' for the visitors during the exposition of, the' body of the saint since the former Portu guese territory of Goa became part of India in 1961.
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NANAQUAKETT ROAD
TIVERTON, R. I.
* For the Benefit of . -te * The Sisters of the Holy-te * Union of the Sacred Hearts -te
MORNING" FIELD DAY'
Nfl/leiMIIN".,
• 25 BOOTHS
• RIDES, GAMES
~·!3
• PENNY SALE
• SNACK BARS
HEATING OIL
- FREE PARKING
8
THE ANCHOR-Oiocese of Fat' River-ThUH. Sept. lO, l:964
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~~:i::{~~:~:Kl~ ~~:.:~~~V' .• :•.•.:w....: ~~.:.::;
Belen Piekielniak
Trudy Ann 1IIolI'l'is.
Jeanne Roy
Belen Savaria
Susan Senesae
ILL PERSONS WILL RECEIVE BENE:FIT FlilOM SERVICES OF 39 NEW GRADUATE 'Nl1RSE8
Ch-a-nge of PaCE!, P'lace Works Wonders
Parish Operates A,id Program
Vacation in VElrmont Good for Columnist
OSSEO (NC)-Some 80 young people from st, Vincent parish here in Minnesota are currently receiving grants from parish funds to help them pay the eosts of a Catholic high school or coHege education. The parish's unusual education aid program was begun in 1958. Father Henry J. Boerboom, pastor for the past 48 yea'l"S said that then there were only 25 or 30 young people from the parish in Catholic high schools and col 'leges, compared witJh the present total O'f 80. _ .The parish also.oper·ates II t8ttion-free grade school. ' Funds from Festival "rhe parish education grants are given in amounts of $60 pel' etudent. SiJ:)}ilar grants, along with aid from the parish~oly Name Society, are. g&ing. to 10 young men from the parish wb. are attending seminaries. Father Boerboom said some familfes with three children in Catholic high schools or colleges are receiving as much as $100 in assistance from the parish. The education aid program is fi nanced by lMl annual pariSh fe& tival
By Mary Tinley :Daly
10 de anything we don't want te do, Hnd Wit:11 endless time for Thanks to pinch-hitting doing it" thHt made this a real Eileen (Daly) Brennan and . vacation. There were 'fishing, boating, golf, tennis, horseback the Head of the House, ridin,g for those so inclined; readers have had a welcome swimming, llhuffleboard, and change in the space accorded plain loafing for us, the less en this column. And the usual eol ergetic. umnist achieved -Mo:;,t Honest' also a welcome By way of rivalry, we did not change of pace. win iin the 'crazy hat" contest Comes late or in any of the sports, but the Summer and Head of the House did take first the human prize for bein,g "the most honest" spirit seems to in a game of miniature go1£ wi Ul high4~st acknowledged erave this ex
score! With ~. huff and many a perience, a res pite, no matter middle-aged puff, we pranced our way through the Virginia, how brief, from the daily, weekly routine, the reel, took lesllons from some. of pattern o~ life one has willingly the younger guests in new dance,s, played bingo and joined chosen. So, three weeks ago, we put the song fest:;. .Tanned, reined - six and • the cover on this typewriter, un plugged the alarm clock, packed pounds heavier, respectively our bags and took off ~ away . we le·ft "our" Lake Bomoseen from the heat and humidity, out and t,oo){ a trip to Northfield' for a visit with our friend of reach of the telephone, the office, the mail, far from radio, William D. Hnssett, literary sec'television, d ail y newspape1'6, 'retary tel former Presidents' even .'''all the loved scenes" at Roosevelt and Truman. Now re tired, Bill lives a serene and in our house that, frankly, had be eome a bit more than monot- teresting life amidst his books, . his fri'lmds anti his garden, prod Catholic Agency Tops . onOU8. uct of his OWl. labors, and envy }'ike Sparhetfi of any green-1;humber. '" Foreign' Relief. For. ·Ute first few days, ill. a Apex ef VaeatioD WASHINGTON' (NC) ' - 'I'he ·resort hotel beside a lovely Ver- . Fj~ally, and apex of our va... , overseaS relief agency main mont lake we simply unwound: tained' by U. S. Catholics far slept . late, visited a quiet little eation, came a week's visit with outdistanced 51 ·ather vo-luntary ,Catholic chapel a two-miuute our M.ary and her family-hus- . band 'rim, little T.J. and six-. agenCies engaged in the foreign . walk away,·went swimming, en relief field during the July '1 te joyed three delicious meals a . monthl;..old Tal'a, only red haired - Dec. 31., 1963, period, U. S. State day-not of our own preparing grandchild we have, our "Rhode Island Red" a~: the Head of the Department statistics disclose. --desultorily read a novel, The departmen's ageney lor napped in a chair on the beach. House calls her. That week increased, by how . international development :re We were as relaxed as twe Much we are not confessing, the . leased reports ,of i!lcome an~ plates of hot spaghetti. six and 10 pound heft addition, expenditures' sUbmitted by the We didn't even talk much, 52 agencies during the six-month 'except to agree heartily with the but by that time we didn't even care. :Newport, right on the period. sentiment of one of the other The statistics showed Catholie guests, an -office worker from Relief Services-National € a tb New York who, wading knee olic Welfare Conference had deep in the lake declared, "I conducted a program valued at - thiDk if I had to battle those $70,917,571 during the period. 'subways one more daY I'd die!" Next in line was CARE with a Crisp coolness of morning and £OA\PANY $37,225,763 program followed evening, hot mid-day sun, spar by Church World Servi~' kling lake, good food and quiet . (Protestant) with a· $22,751,454 surroundings gradually wrought _:ompl,ete line program. The statistics dis~losed their therap'eutic effect. An eve .",ilding Materials the total programS of a1152 ning of rocking on the wide agencies for foreign relief was verande, watching the sun go valued at $179,782,854. • SPItiNG 'AIRHAVEN down over the lake and behind the mountains, speculating 011. WYmal'l 3·2611 . which fisherman would get the African Mother Joins most bites was sufficient enter Daughters 'in Convent tainment as prelude to &n early
STEINERKIRCHEN(NC)-A bedtime. Later on oome long walks lII.
51-year-old Austrian widow, Maria Suess, has followed her the mountainous !territory, a
(:0. (
visit to a nearby marble quarry, ) three daughters, Agnes, Wal traud and Marga'reth.e, by joi~ a chair-lift to a mountain top
ing the Benedictine Nuns of the more than 4,000 feet high, with luncheon served on the windy ImmaCUlate Heart 'of Mary. Mrs. Suess lost her ;husband in summit as We viewed five states World War II and had to take below us, then leisurely shop care of her three daughters who ping for knickknacks, getting 365 IIIIORTH FRONT STREET) acquainted with the pleasant Clne by one joined the Benedic tine nuns. Now all the living strangers who were fellow hotel ,, NEW EIEJ)FORD " members of the Suess family guests. WYma,. 2-5534 ~ Perhaps it was, as the Head , belong to the same ·re)::gious order. of the House said, "Not havinl ~ ~ ~ • <
F.4IRliAVEN LUllABER
,r.,
---_._-----
rDEm~
) . Heatil19 Oils (
" alnd. EJurners ,
C
Plan Missionary Pilot Training
WASHINGTON (NC) - Mi8 sionary pr,iests and seminarian. win soon be able to take flight ocean, with its fascinatlng 9b&ps. tmining in srnaU aircrafi uoo. its millionaires' mansions, its a program being esta'blished by. beautiful Salve Regina' College priest at the Catholic Ulfliversiilr. through which Sister Mary Mar of America. . tha gave us Q personally con The program, caned MissioD ducted tour, ie a never~to-be &ry Flight Training (MFT), baa forgotten experience. been established by Father Be~ So, relaxed, refreshed far be nard F.· Deutsch of C.U. witb yond any anticipation, we head ed the red car back again to its the help of two Minneapolis bus own garage, ourselves 14> our inessmen, Lee Gilligan and Rob own house. . ert Held. While it has no fornuil Why, it was good to be home! connection. with the universiltJlo And great to see Ginny Itnd MFT will be open to any mis- sionaries studying at or near ~ Markie again! . , Heat and humidity? Not bad; school. Father De~ said the fHgbt not bad at all, quite what we training wilt begin, probaibly .. had always been used to. We went through the mail, November, using a new Cessna even the ads and bills; called up . 150 light aircraft· pu!'chased fCli
rel·atives and friends; tuned in' 1he purpOse. He. estimated "
on radio and TV; scanned back seminarian or priest could eliBi.
newspapers a·n d magazines; obtain a pilot's license durieS
made out a gr.cery list. the school yelK" while training
With weedlf growing ill the part time, or in four to six garden, curta~)s graying at the training fuK time. windows, tOI'Q)rrow and tomor. pow's tasks be.koned, .not mollO~ onous at all. . Inc. We plugged in 1he alarm elock, set it, unpacked our 'bags Arrangements Macle Fer.. ~took the cover off this type . AIR, IUS, .RAIL, SHIP ' writer and tapped ~ the lISUal, AT OUR HOUSE. 'rOURS, CRUISES,. HOTElS PersOnnel ~yi~8 ... ~ .
wee_
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While out for a Drive
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CRADUATIIS S'rAlft' CAR_ 1Rl'II PllAYBBS AND BBST WISHES OF ENTIRE DIOCBSB :.:..
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Stresses Church Antiquity, Youth CASTELGANDOLI'O (NC)A papti audience ia a Vip I ......... H . . poRtioa at What this represents basically werk II a ~ meBial aae, ar .is that ~W' or other lie iJI tbrougb time that renUJ 'the CIlurdl in ita ant.iQuit¥ ~d ~ if not menial, one which he dis'Jnokjog for a way oat which Iae likes, or one in which he is has neither the courage to :faee. vitality in the p~ dQ, Pope -Yin« II'OubIe wifJt bU assocl- nor to take. So ~ou are going to Paul VI told Rvenl tboIBand peI'SOI¥ at bis ~ eenenl ates er.-periors? have to shoulder the responsi.. LelIa pleuan~, are there any bility. Therefore, I urge that ~ou audieQee at hia SUOUDer' belli}Wohlems at hOme that teDcl to take this problem up first with deDc:e~ One cbaracteristic of • papal .drive him oUt fi the house? Are ',him. I am ~ ~ IaDgWne 70ur relations warm and loving? about the resu1tI, but at least M , audience, tbePontiff told his Do tile chiltit"en tend to get on a wife, ~ou do have the obliga- visitors., including 250 ItudeDb his 1Ift'YeS? "·the hc:w,De kept in tion oJ, tn'~ whelp your hus- from to countrielt ia that _ell oceasions turn GIle'& thoughta,tD good order'? Do 70uhaV& an7 band _:Dt ~ Id$ problem. the past, to history and tnditioa. serious financial problemS ~ ...... Pries& ID fact, he said, it may lead , As 70U see, I can, cmI7 ~ If..this ~01l persona!q peopJe toda1' to, conclude that these various possipiliti,es.. None sho¥1d CO ~" . ~ of the peri&h the Pope and the Church are enof them maY be c::orreet" but IprieSt$, ten·.~what you have in ~inga ,which are ,strongly sus~t I ~ve. hit o,n writtep. rme and spell matters meshed ('perhaps .very curious an4 ftq' ; one of two of -.e'~'he.be- .out in d.e~ My own impression pretty, but 'strange and superlonp to so manY dnircli socletielr. is that 7011 inq have 80Jile real fluous to modern life." • Since your husband does be- idea of the ·seriousness of the The Po~" said that "na~' aDd since he does attend Mass problem. bat tbnIugh modesty each Sund87, 70U must realize or. sbame, you hesitate to put it we cannot agree with this opinthat 7011 have a powerful aD7 in into words. Please 40 no 40 tbis . ion, :which we seem to see writ-:ten in the faces of :man,y of our oae of tile parish priesbl wbo when 70U talk to the priest. CllIIlld have a talkwitb him.. Por the present time ;you wiJ1 visitors." However, he said, cer.Bmrimlb' be BeemS to be a re1i- have to deal with the children tam partieu1ar forms whkIl ~ wile is beiDg toni te younelf. Reassure tbem again 1DIII'k the extericJr upftt of the pieces lIT IIOlner IdD4 of a 8e1"io.- aDd again that 70ar busbaDd'1I Ch~. am be debated.. ..But ~ are 1I~ glad tbatJa pnb1eIa. statements are DOt vQe. Tr7 -. ~ to our.bO,me and ~ 8eeb .CItaat&e £OIlviDee them that be 8llft " • ., ' ' a ;JoJr.e. Sinee !bet De pI"~ me 0\11".•~.~ur,v~, " .~ 'wone, ~ ·baS.failed ,I!t :fut asleeP wben be ~ . .are led .. Ih'e • glance at tile eoaficfe In 7otl' regardin&. U:aia . aome' at lJIree. 01' bIr .clack PMt. albeit a rapid and ..........,.. . tiifftcult7. TIle D,to~. he" ~ fa the m ~ 7011 .~ ODe. beeauIe au. cIuee at tbe 11 IlJ 1:iimseJf. tile leS COmmDll1. needn't eVeD . . . tile mau. 01. past, we think, is ~ Gl die ~ cetive'M iii' wflIt )'O'II,·witlt 'the :bis excessive drinking. . efits of the papal audience•.. 1t • priest, or with sOme COunselor! I hate to add what I ani now • btight flash over the put Clenthe mere serious' this problem about to. say., but I feel I Dve turie. which aroulllts a spiritual will become. . His inabi lit7 to. an obligation to do 80. I hope' vibration. in him, who witnell8es nntnate JDa7' eYea result' ill 7OUl' husbaDd'. problem is not it, w~ich we might can • 'Ilia- .' lIOJDe seriduli' medicill 'paN>lenw 'reaIV a aeriouII _e or eveD torteal ~:" ~ope Paul de.ueh M an .ulcer; , if GDe' tIIat ~nbe han. claref,1. / This JI*at that the"~ cUed til. . . . ade~ coUnseling, The Pope Aid tIli. spiritual aions are· wer America", but. there Is just the possibilit)" Yib~tion brings the mind beck .m.es8 » 17:faeetu.... tbat tben -:tr be • serioUs pq- to "the slow difficult dramatic would tit iIIIlicate lIlat he cIIologial dislwbou\ce. march of humanity." Something is 1oo1Da& ~ to . . . kind Please note, 1 JDeS'el7 meotioD 01. tills feeling can be captured fIf a reftl'wfim n7 change in his . . as ...... PMIibility. I do • in visiting museiUDlS, monulife. Wbat tlDs .madl. JiIIIIIl daim it is. InIe. But because ments and libraries where treasworse, ~ A i& a lIilly stale- it is • powibUHiY, I mon,ly urge ures of the past are housed, • • ent. . ;rou to -.:tat -.ee. said.
fana.
JI!ou-
.eno-.
Seventh Daughter Joins Sisters in Religious life o 1111 A • A' (lIC) . ......: Per tIae 4laughters. OIl Hr. and·Mrs. AD. . . ,ZIaolek of VfftiDc, lowa, In • h~bit in mon WQS tban ~ -..en. Ie b e ' - - ' Whea Veftlllica Z-OJek . . . Neerlwed . into· tile novitiate ·ei tile . Sdlool Sislen Gl IJoWe Dani~ th&.-vent eIIapel here ... Nellnska,,' aBe became tIIle
a'
.-entll da~ et lbe z.o. leks· fa jolla 'tile ftIi8iou&. life. ae· cIloIe tbe . . . . SIsler ~ ...... at cer8llilnies OYer whtda. .Arch"'op Gerald T. _ . . . el ~ pnllldell. Three.of bR aiIIers ~ in . .
....Hew SpeC": _.afe T. AI, $cnowst
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, Suconlium CIu& 'f't1.e Sucordillm Quir of ~ Hearts A~~ r.n Bive. will: hold a -.cola Tuesday, oct.
17 wfih Ml'I. Stan1eT Bochenek
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TH~E ANCHOR-Djocel.. ~'p'a" Rlv~-,rtturl. Sept. 10, 1~ :,.;"
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··;;X.' _. . -. . •. Former ·~·o·tre Dame ·$ig'n~.,··I··~·Call, 1
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. ~ En joys Life as· Kentucky Sheriff
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Luthero" Bishop' ·Asks Marriage 'Rule Chang'e
The
STUTTGART (NC) -
A
for recogni~on of religious • • QIl th~ campuses of the six
leader of the German Evangelical (Lutheran) Church has declared that German
the: colleges vary.
Protestants will be willing te engage in joint pastoral work on mixed marriages with Cathoilics if the Catholic Church eases its ban on such marriages. Bishop Joachim Beckmann, head of the Evangelical Church in the Rhineland, said he is hoping the Second Vatican Council will act on the question, because Protestants "cannot be called 'separated brotherS' .and ~ treated in. canonical marriage law like heretics, even like pagans." Catholic Proposal ·'While.he did not specify the extent of the joint pastoral work, Bishop Beckmann said he would be 'willing to sign a CatholicProtestant statement warning against mixed marriages once the Catholic Church recognizei such marriageS are valid. He observed ,most Lutherans do not look upon marriage 8$ a "world-
pea(!,
~·eol~ges.
. Practices at
~WiSh, Catholic and Protestant
ea-
directors have asked for. • . - P,01icy .which would permit the .establishment of .club/! on . ' . .pus.
Father William J. Daly, state , . ~Of th~ Newman clUbs, .111' "il clarification state~ ~. wbmitted to the board ,. ~iiionth. The ; board, how-:. . -it will not act on the . ,. .,Until after suhmitting·the ~Jl'to the state attorney . _. .I'. loffiee for a legal ollin~ iGa.. I'reeent Policy
'.'
the requests, made by . e,n wf;'re these: recog. . . religious 01'-. ,muzatioDs.on campus, access . '. ,., BEHOLD THE LAMB OF 00'0: 'on campus fulfIll • h 25th annua1 .~~' .function/! , cQllege per.. , .1'"anguage 'ILl .I,u.a88 opemng t e
,~>~oluntary , . ' . . . .' ~o Msgr~ Fl'ederick M~ManU8 (eJebrates ~n English-,. .~ ~ L·t· . I Week· St M McManus,· 1 urglCa ' I l l . . UlS.. . sgr. '. . . . .r stud~is, faculty ,and ,,.••: Boston native whQ is a profes$or at Catholi~ University,' is· the· new president of the ly thing" or a simple ··...,.:~.rtieipatein.volun~y Liturgical 0onferenee. NC Phote. . ' ... , "For us marriage is
~al prqiI7~ms of
L a ". •
"
contract. a divine establishment and marriage can
~1,·e.~.:iI~n.t~;b~i1hti~. .~. ':G',,rade~D. rop'ping' . CGU..s.es. 'Chaos,." in Cities ~~a~fctd~~:~ ~:~s~ead;~~t:~ ~nt 'separa~ .....
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~Ievelond Pape.r, ,Asks",.White ' ,House '. ,,
At present officials at three· .... · , , ' . ... permit "" . . iIIrioUB eltibs on'campus; At one .".. .' .ue.cftae clubs are iecogniz~d .CLEVELAND (JIJC) The '1iMIt meet off campus.' At Plain Dealei' says' the possitwo 'othe.rs, religious· and bUlty of chaos in school system" 'Ol'cranizafions are. barred. . beeause of the strain faced by par.ochial schools wurantlt stuct;-· ". , ": :'.!.A. . It-Sioll ·.·.PIaR by·a White-Reuse commiSsion w . .,~ vn other federal bedy. : ~ :/,Diocesan ,Help The newspaper editoPialj SAGINAW (NC) ....,.. A lay DOted a trend in Catholic schOOls' .Aa.cher and . employee pension ·-ward .., ", ed • It -cited . grade-drop"'in lan Is now in effect in the the Cincinnati; archdiocese, where -10,'000 children are enter-· J ., na.... Diocese' here in Mich':' An tnsurance plan for lilY iog public, school' ftl'Jtgrades ,,;;;..... "bas also' been -an~ .thifl month because parochial "y the diQCesan school schools have cut out this grade. • . . . .;,..Benefits. undel' the' plan' The 'paper' said it has been esOn len.th of service. .,tbhated that this shift· will ooat' . .
~cial
in.an
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8tateand loc~l public ~hool d~-' them," the pape~ said. tricts about $4.5 million this . "All school systems are over..
ye~.
burdened by the rocketing pop_ ulation. None ·of them can ae" commodate sudden drastic shin. withOut'icreating chaOs in whieh eliilaren will be the pr~cipal victims. . "The crisis is of a magnitude that ·shOlllld warrant early exam_ ination 'lInd recommendations by Waite House. commission 01" " some feclteral body WIth facilities ,. for gath¢dng n~~onal inf~rmatwn. It' is a matter that cannot ". pa~bA!U~""to0fri~'~. comment~ . tbe. ...-......_
. "If-the trend -eontinues; it can ·bav. ~catastrepBic bnPaet on' public ·.eatiOll 'facilities an4 foods. It hubeen estimated thatit would cost $'1 billion to duplieate Catholic schoolsfaciUties as d $1.8 bilte they stood in 1960 and lion t~ maintain an opel't.
Quo'Ite
."
LEON
.
f.&t
C'h . ange
,.
(NC)~uanGarcia, o~
'Of' Spain's most f!!DloUs
bullftghtel's;' has ~mteted the Domin. 'WIW1 OrUer' as a novi~. . ,.
..
Christian, a brother,' does not. allow himself to be married in the Catholie manner with his Catholic partner," he said. • A proposal to change tht Church's maIT!age regulationa hu made by Joseph CartHnal FrinllB of Co1Qgne. .
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Seminarians Samba RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) _. Brazilian seminarians are tak. iog lessons in samba dancing. The purpose of this unusual ~aining Is to IKlquaint the future priests With the elements of foJk music 80; that they caD I~ter make effective use of it modern Brazilian Church music.
in
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Thurs., Sej)t. 10, 1.964
.ilion . has asked' repr~sent atives' of the major faiths fOr ~. "'clli~i:ficatio~" of their ap-
eel
And.to I
~THE ANCHOR....
Clu·bs. "
) .TREJNTON (NC) -
C
I
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:,
New Jersey Boai'd of Edu-
and the Jews, "The Deputy.... will be produced here in' midOCtober.
'a
to~ :~ost~~tion
\~.JiglouS
,play desc"';bed by its auth.or.:. u. as a reply to the controv~J!;' sial drama about Pope .PIU.
weeks of bog campaigning, _ Entitled ''The Comforter,".';' began to dQwn andinterest when ~ Ratterman inqUired what he was written by Father Edward. could do, ~e was advised to run J. Molloy; C.SS.R., and will be. for public··office. • . staged by the Blackfriars GUild.• The one-time quarterbl\ck a drama group conducted by the said the qbspel story of th~ Dominicans. "lilies of the field" convinc::ed "The Deputy," to which it II him that hl! lIDould, get all the a reply, was written by Germa~ way into the game. He related: author :Rolf HO,chhuth. It h~~ " . "I decided to get involved been produ~ed in several EU~O:" even though it meant less m o n e Y ' p e a n couiitri.es a~d is runnm•. Fights Grafter. And tbe Gospel worked liite on...Broadway•.The play accu~N charm: I've managed to .keep the'18f.e Pope Pius of indiffer-' . Ratterman disclosed· he deence to the fate of the.Jews sufeidedto run for public office to . ahead 'of home expense!! by fering nazi persecution durin,convince his Protestant friends. writing and selling a book abc)ut World War II. . that Catholics are interested in my football experiences," civic affairs. H.e said at a time Chariiy Over Revenl"e .p~ltlve" Pletu~e' . when politics in Newport were· Before Ratterman became , . . . . , .' _ • . ' Father Molloy said his purpose. as muddy as the Ohio River, a ALL IN F AMILY: Fledgling. seh~lars ~n~~!lr pr~~ ip writing "The Co~orter" was group of Protestants, clergy and sheriff there were 186 persons laity, had banded, together ~. in d t with gambling stamps' class at S.ae.Nd Hearts.. ElementarY.' give a positi,3e picture dfth.•. i"o...ere" were nine houSes nI If." . ' .' . " 1 ~4. . 'd'T . C'·l' ~ ke .t:ll't····h·o....;.~':-'.me of Pius Xu." '''Hochhutb' rid tb,e city of br.bery among j operating.'are -llll Wheel.9Ck ,. e:t",an; u: maintains that PiUs XII was si.politiClims, gambling and prosthere are none. ' . fuur months youpger than her JU~, 18 Tamnue s ·aunt.. lent because 'he was financially titution. . "No 'one went to jail" for alny . hlvolved;' that he was cowardly. When his ProteStant friendl of these offenses," he related. . iJl not'speaking out; that he wa.· asked why Catholics weren't 'dO~ helped many of them (get·,· :PI"O-nazi. I rebut. all the"e ". ing something to help outi Rat- "We mto legitimate types of work. . .' , '. '.. . points," he said. The priest said' ., termal'l.said he got into the cam· be ha'd discussed Ratterman said he plans to C ' ' his S play 11m wit~ 01 paign,. One of the first things Purcl1ase Electronic Machine tout o.s~. .:~:c;~r~a:::a:eeei:dh~:' ap:he did, Ratterman recalled, was eontinue in public office. He ...... 4ecl; 10 calIon Bishop Richard' H, saId he has found it easier to' conquer a community !hroulgh mprove Record Keeping .,..e pJ'Oval ,fot the proJ '; Ackerman, C.S.Sp., of Coving/ ! . " Amo~. ijie 1'eal,:,~if~' p,~rson( ton to request a public' state- 'clia,rity than revenge. 'LOCKPORT (lII:l) - A com- n~ncial accounting data 'on more appearing as ch~acters m'~ merit the situation. puter system will be used, start- than 24,000 students now a~tt:!ld", . 'play ~ Pope Plus" Msgr. GiG,._ Boston-Born Bishop Works Like C~rna mg in December, to try to 'ing theschoob an~ ther~hglou, vanni Battista Montini, then all Heads Nigeria See . reduce the cost of secondary order be~ievu It IS th.e fll'st 64-, .official Qf the Vatican Secre. "Bishop Ackerman waa way ucationalprogram. of Its, type to, riat of State and now Pope Paul. SOKOTO (NC) - . The fili'st and college education. consolidate student da~ from VI Chief Rabbi Anton Zolli (If American and the first Domin. is- ~- such broad geographical area Ro'me:and German Field Mar-. Pre-Cana Meetings ican priest to be consecrated a lagThemlielectronic de by attempt the Christll~n ' into' a centralized data prOCeH-' .•hal Albert Keellelring. _ Pre-Cana conferences for en- Bishop in Nigeria has been in•. Brothers, a Roman ~athohe' ing center. stalled in his new See here. teaching order. placed In oper-. . . ,; ; .aged couples will be held a~ He 18 Boston-born Bishlop ation pythe order. will be a. k Besides keeping up-to-ciate Fail' Housing- , 7 Sunday night, Sept. 13 in the Edward T. Lawwn, O;P., ot computet 'center at Lew,is.Col';'. records on students' grades, tu-.. OAKLAND' (Ne) '_ Relilio~ ,\.. :. following locations: Sacred Sokoto, missioner in this African lege in Lockport, Ill., to serve ition payments, ·laboratory a~d . "11 t ;Heart· School, Fall River; Cath- nation for 13 years. The SokQto me record-keeping need of 45 special fees, the aoo system wJ11 leaders. of many faiths WI tn~, .' olic Community Center, New diocese, created in June by Pope .' Christian Brothers s c h 0 0 18 analyze and compare student. at St. Mary'. College. on Oct. 1~ .... test data wJt . h IocaI ann{l d ti0 nal W' man strategy Ca-liforPaul -VI, is about the s~e of., tliroughout a 15-state area -., , {ir h hlgtoI 'Save .which are Bedfoftl; St. John's Auditorium. Alabama•. It' h~s 7,000 Cafholl~ the Midwest. . results . and ,even reallocate - ,nia s 8 ()Us aWfl 11 thil Attleboro; and CYO headquar- 'in a predominantly M~I~m, ""The cen~ will prpcess and e~ssroom :facilities ill tGe ~ ,being ehallenged aUhe po s . ,. 'i ta'"In . 'all'. ."adA-I·" and 4.l.. , ,:Jall. • ters, Taunton. man .. _ ........ ~ .schoo" ' .' ~pulath>n Of 4.5jnillio~ ", ·,:.1
'.
, . State College . .
. To' 'Deputy "', NEW YORK (NO) _ 4
ahead of me," Ratterman related. "He 'already had drafted a·. statement." , Next he Hood up a number of his Catholic friends and formed the Committee of 000, dedicated to clean g~vernment. After ~
..J...-:"
>.. xp.vnati~"
.-'of StegeR,pl,)
.. - "
LOUISVILLE (NC)-Remem:bel' George Ratterman, the Notre Dame signal caller of the mid1940's? Well he's not making anywhere near the money he drew four short years ago from pro football, but the satisfaction he gets from serving as sheriff of Newport, Ky. - that's wort)l a fortune. "The scrimping and saving, and the respect my children have for public office is .worth it " the burly 6-4 Ratterman has U:ld a' Christian Family Move· ment meeting here.
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·Po'Ian Pr6ducttoil:i!t.;.'
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'2
TH! ANotOR-~efFaft River-,"""". Sept. TO, 1964
~.
:. ._~;r&"
Fresh' 'and Uve1j' ""l_ding ..... In English History' By
. . . . . . . . FultOil J. S1Me14 nA
All expeet God to iudIe first and most severelt • 0ciIla-..... ~ 01 . . CIIurclh. But Oed"s wan .at ' . . . . wap. Do we thilt ~dgeat,. whee it ~ ... .... the ~ JlIlIl wltIl tbe worid. It will DIlIt be.. ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . God. but witil lie wlle ~ .......... 1o'IeG04 ~ lane not sen'ed ow nefab'-'L . . Ap .,. ()qr :tnnI to ttae beautF ., tilt-. .. · ........, ill 1he acanaiIlIC sunrise, but Our I..enI lI8if4."';" • fill. . . r.tple would be left upon a . . . . 1a . . · ... 'l't8P41 pel&' God'a ,..... t was: "Begin with the ~ st. ..........1.... to . . . . . Test_eat, . . . . .:' "7Ddca I t. . ·. ...... wiIfl . . ~ «II Qed.& .
Rt. Re.... Msar...... S. X - . .
Sir Arthur Btyant,. the celebrated msiorian. ahes lIB. in The Age of Chivalry (Doubleday. $696). a maasiu.. closely written book which requires. and rewards careftIl reading. It.deals with the of three of England PI&Ilt;age,net kings, the Edwards ~t-t _... .:l m and .......... aDd _ I e efteda. .... Bumbered I , n J - , Aad tIlese an ~ tnaeed. th~ ,beginning of ~he reign b~ tile autbcIr. ".l'Il-. _ . . . . . of the ill-fated ltichard n. in weapou ad. 1Ilc:tica JDade''The period co-..red is roqh17 a ~ta leis JmpodaDt _ c.acentw'y. from 1214 to 13&1. Wb7 balmts. aDd ,..... ~ .
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ahouid anythine . . reznote be of. i1rterij~
tbe latter abOaIIl, ~ in lIOCiet;y, 1bat'~ mere woddI;r
to _
today! and' ~ sboula we-" ill the !Su~er"lJ qing'day*, desert freeway Ot fairw~y to do the w(lrk whieh m a s't e r i n g,
tb&J' wta
so substantial a volume re-
quires? To an. .er the lIeCODd .part 01 1M question, the -.olume is aJl in-
deU8ht. • book which:Which we get Our teeth. and feeds the mind aDel
tellec~
iD~
eaJl
ODe
fins ~ imagination. AsfM the &st Part, Sir Al"thur's re-ereatioa of England III the fourteeDtIa ~tury helps . . to under'IItand the powth of politieal M'ld social iDstitIltioDs of whieb we are benefk:iaries in OW' OWD time,. ~o wiU1ess the ~wiDg of the- ~s whieh were to come te biite!' frWtiDa ill the ReforIllation two eenturies later, and to be.chastened b;r evideDee as to how little. human nature, ambition, and folly e~. . War Is Or..n Waris a scarlet threIldthoup the whole hilstoI7 heI'e pn!IIeDted. It was. practically constant in those '. days. ~ the chronicle opens,::Edward I is retunlinlf t&om one 01 the crusades. Periodkally Ulerufter· he 'aDd his ~ l!IIPMk of c:nuacIin« oeee Qain,. but thf17 are kept ..., tightin« .. other ea-. CoItteIlu. Wita I'raaee. ~ ez....le,' .... ~... 'A ~ . . . .
"_I'd
WIllI _
-.ad" h\s nob1tl*
AJl«eftn;.. lIPOke' French;
tile bUsiness of. his law eow1s was carried on in French. And ~ had the heioeditary title t4I tile region of Gascony in France. Alway~ the French crown was making incursions into GascOfty, and always the PlaRtagenets were . hurrying annies into France to defend their feudal holdings there. This conflict ebbs and flows through the century "surveyed in the book, with the fortunes of the English rising to a peak in the heyday of. Edward I1,·only to sink to their nadir when that same monarch, once the' brilliant knight ideal of Christendom, maunders and flounders in his dotage. . There were other wars as well. Edward I, after repeated efforts finally succeeded in reducing fractious Wales. But Scotland, although again. and. again subjugated and prostrated, invarlably rose in fresh self-assemoR and, 'when the English arms were occup~ed elsewhere, raided over the border and terrorized the N'ort~ co~try. All, thIS strife led to epochal advances in the art of warfare: for example in weaponry. We see Ute introduction 'of the long bow ~y the Welsh and its adoption I;ly the English. ~nights . Less Important It ~~ol~tionized warf~re, and was prlIft:lpally responsIble for astounding victories won by England over France, which was far richer, more populous, and more' renowned for military prowess. But warfare had tremendo~.
the
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the eoDditiOll widell ... p~.~~ ';nm,..,q.alit, been tbelrS. . ~ ....... We see. 1100, tile padual _ti,a,tioD of feudalism Utd . . of t~ most ezc::itiDa pad. of a book iIuItiDet with drama is the description. at tile ftI7 ead, of Wat T7Iers. ftbeDioD" a ~ liOll of the peaantt7 ;IeiDed 1»»' the proletariat of the ~ to..... in the dQs 0Iltidlard Irs ~gn. It was not meftJy the accldents of peremUal warfare wbieh chaD&ed the Jives an4 ... tion ()fmen. ' . Mercantile developments bad a profound effect. And there was a slow but steed7 extension and
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w eaeIt diocese '- . . 1JBIteA. State. will ... _de a pefteutal'e' or fts annual· cIt•• IS............. e;..,. . _ that qnMJae . . . . . ~ the AD' AtdM. A81a'" elsewhere will .ot _ _~ 1IIJIIl . . . . . ..... • ~ear. We 8Q7 tItat Ute 1JIibr. . . iI• • tI .. at__ in . . n Sw.. will also selMl . . .ee .... . . . . II.8b It Jed t beelDs wltIl the CJaurch. as It ......... Wit 8le CIuInIl" . . lI1roIIi4 S1aMII,' It was • Pa&"aII wile ~harIIJr . . . noC bedil .t lIMBe . It beCina·. . . &lEe ea.tift JIp&ical ~ ..~ . . . . 1IIlI-' . ae worN. Oar _ _ ela ~_ ia ' ....... U cll'w'des . . . . . tIlenPCMd. b_, '11M CJuanIl Ia . . ~ . . . . . . . . '''=acW' JIft1IeaI __ ., c.mt, III ......... • .... taU_ tile " )" " iIlliIIa ..
I"
FUTURE LITURGY:
F~
d87•. DOt Oftbt iii ·ttie EnC~' ing the ~tioD, Joseph oi'igtilal, bat in deriftthoe legj&.- Cardinal Ritter of st. LoWs latures in maDY parts of the offers' Mass in the EngIish-
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Te tile 6JOl7 of the ~ OM 1IiIihGp1EE. tile U~ . . . . .... tbis _ cteuV Ie a ... E " . . -* lEliadi4lIa _ ""eB\Ie . . the fer PNJl ., .... 1IIraaPoC ... -..M; pl'iellt $1 ·tiIe •• ' • and masS stipends- which he garMftll Soc:ieI.1r .. Propagation of; the Faith bf living ~ prie8t ... bnUler bodlllll'Dt tillIlllDoaey. cetmtless lII'e the laity -. . . . · Jitt1e IMEt 1.... with the poor of 'the world.
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-..oaid.. The legislative process and the power to tax· are ezamined in their evobJtioIl. '!he J'01e of the 1..". .. eIarifted, 1Ioth . . a force ia the ~ . 01 aacI as a pnetWOfter' ill . . CCMIri& ' . .... 'l'Ile ~ of justke e](foliated in England iD tIile fewteenth c4}tl"', had 'its toOitil ill religj.OJ).Eng~d was, of course, ~athoHc d.W.'ing. these reigns.., ChUl'ehand State wereintimate-' ly, sometimes indistiDguilbaD4', assocfa1ed, l;nlt the Qa~ .npresented the peopMis . . a.Ilegiance beyond the :\dng. It is estimate4 that ~ were between eight aDd niDe thOWlUld parishes in England theft, and the parish churda was trle centre aro\Qld which tile Hvea et 1Ile common folk revolved.. But all was not well III the J'eligiaua sphere. The higher: dergy were cut off both from the' people and from their deric:el iDferion. Ma~y of the kinc"- prindpal mi,nis~rs were &iven bJahoprica that they might be supported by the . revenues from thee.. ftey were churehmell aec~~ if at. all; their primal7' aDd function was atatec:nft .. -.ere bureaucracy. . Menastielun AI'" . The golden qe .,. 1M aoD' asteries had passed. TIlat Ie .. say" the D)oQiUtedes and. ~ nunneI'ies-st!ii existed • a*n~ ty and flourished ru~~But they' were ever more 'dIvorCed from the people. In large' pari, the1' .. 10nIer served the purposes tw ,.Wch they wene fouQded. Tbe7' .. were harsh landlords. We wiace whee we read that ~e'a~"~ once calml:vtolcl hiS tenanta that they nothing but tbeir bellies. Monotonous? 'Never; Tbis . a rich, lively, enthralling, numinating, splendid.17 ·trapestled book.
.
;
t~oar
..................... .embers
e n ~ of poU9cal rights. The continuing modification of monarchy takeap1¥e bef~e our eyes, the'~ Git the' and the fact of rule by the king. not alone, but in padiaIJleJl~ and tile' first I!rtages of • Rouse . of COliutlofts ~ :we know i1 to.
__
1 t. ~ Abila . iIlI '
&_'-.1•••'
CIIrIII"a . , . . . . ... _ _ -~ ~
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language form appNved by the BishQPS of the. United States which is expected
t.
come into use generally la~ this year&C¥di1lalJut~is' the BePior AmerlQu, member OIl the iDtematiODal oom-
mittee
for"~ ~' no-
ltewal of the·· forms' 01 ....... s.1lip. 'NC .rh~t~.,
Health Gr.'.
(NC) ...... si. Xavier Colle. will, he the redpieQt ..
•cm<::.aGQ
......
National lDstlt1lte. ctf . Men'" :ae.JtIl to tlilrtII.« . . pngraIft «II PllJdUatrie Il1II'SiDC- 'The co11ea MmQUIteed tIlat the &st grant, beplll July 1. AdditioMl: Cl'8nts will ~ upcie ~ congressiOilal IIPP"Priatibna.
$1_.
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GOD LOft YOlO •. n.L for "... ....... ~ wIaidIt ~
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QolI . . . . . lI"ibutioD:·if he would helpm.e dilIpoee of a'¥'llO' difficult. house • 'tell. He l\ears .JDJ' ~; tile tl'aD8adi.c»1 . . . f1nel17 ~ mated" . . . . . P.T. fer t10 HI, WQft-tbiil on ~.lucV race. PerIutpI .. rpaaioBlU'7 . . 1I8e- at is hill efhrt win " • • • • U.
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WORLD~• • _r1a.4~" . - - . . ~.
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tiM Most ..... h'heo I. sa-a, ~. DiaetOlf e(- U. SOdetF ' for tiM ~ of the ...~ _.:~ Av_ _, - . . . . . 1, ·N. Y.. or 1'0\11' ~OOIlIMJ)ireetQJ',ltT. ~.BAYMQiMD '1'•. '
CONSIDINE. a68 North ..... 5tr~ ~ JU"., . . . .
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CORIEll" __ ,ON!
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s..o,flNG CINTR: • JlU,¥f. .:
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• Mi'llttANC!S ' . ~.
16M Alten St. . . . . . . '¥'fill.. 7·9'"
.............,& ~.. t..,'~
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of SatisfW ' . . . . '. 106 NO :• •·• hi River ~\ {; ~ ~';
'----.. .---_-..oIi..
STORE ,MOUltS' . TO BE NUN: .~~~ary Griffin, dauahter Of :Mr. alftl Mrs. Kenneth E. Griff'm of St. Mary's parish. Taunton, ltill enter the Holy Union novitiate in .Fan Rivei' next.
Sunday.
.
{.i,
~ON, .ond TUES. 9:00 a:m~"to S;:JO p.m. -WED., THUR$..· and FIL- 8:3Q a.m. t~ 6:30 p.rn. ~1Osed All Day Sunday ..
SWORDFISH Ib~-' SSe Maclean's Sea. Foods UNION WHARIt, MlattAYIN
nu.s. f I I
Airmen "elp Migrant Workers Improve Living
1'HE A~CMOtl-Dioce!e of f:otl River-Thurs. Sept. 10. 1'964
13
AMARILLO (NC) - A g-l'OUp of volunteer U.S. air men headed by a priest from the Springfield, Ill., diocese I
J l,'
f
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are spending their Saturdays to improve conditions for migrant workers living in II former prisoner of war camp in the Texas Panhandle. .' Director and initiator of the effort is Father Thomas Gallen bach of Decatur, Ill.,· Catholie chaplain at Amarillo Air Force :Base. More than 5G airmen ravel each Saturday 14) the St. .roseph Mission labor camp near Hereford, about 45 miles .!IOuth west of Amarillo. . "Although the. weekends are free for most student airmen and a trip to town invUing, these men instead dedicate their free time to helping those. who need help to help themselves," FathElT Gallenbach said. The labor camp, a vUlage of 36 converted prisoner of war barracks, faces the Graymoor Mission of St. Joseph. The proj 1';~' ...:,1J ect started in 1947 to provide low cost housing for migrant workers. Most migrants are American families of Mexiean descent. During the peak of the harvest season, more than 2,500 persoL\fl live in the camp. About 100 fam ilies stay year-round. ",.,.f .,)1< In less than two months, help ful airmen have completed badly needed carpentry work, put iJl LAY PARTICIPATION: Hosts of unleavened whole sidewalks, cleaned out areas for 'wheat were used at the Liturgical Week conference Masses future playgrounds and' are in in St. Louis last week. Participants, like this young girl, . the process of digging a sewage took wafers from the Communion tray as they entered t system. placed them in ciboriums, which were later earrieci'to the . A barber has set· up a t>ne ehair shop to give haircuts te altar in the Offertory procession. NC Photo. children. Nurses from the base hospital often join the weekly visit to help at the camp's hos pital and rel~ve overworked staff nurses. Worker Ex~etllIJ CASTEL GANDOLFO (NC)- heritage which • • • has beeJl
"The enthusiasm' shown III handed down to us," the Holy
almost unbelievable,'" 'Father Pope Paul VI says the 'dangers Gallenbach stated. "The project of modern life force Christians' Father stressed, adding: "And
to act to preserve their Christian for us, the most precious heri
started just as a means for help tage is the sense of the Christiaa
ing the men find sOmething heritage, . Calling attention to the 9igns lift!, of the dignity of man, of
worthwhile to do on a free Sat urday. But it has bk>ssomed into of the present time, the Pope - the liberty and purpose of our
one of the most successful public emphasized that among the more existel\ce, which transcends the
notable is the continuous novel- ~ry time in which we live;"
relations and humanitarian proj ects the base has ever experi .ty. and radical change in every - ·e'harity is the secret of every . enced...• sphere of material and spiritual true co]]a'boration on the social Father GaUenbach says It has life. and human Plane the Supreme come to the point where airmen In order to remedy these neg- Pontiff observed, saying "pro
must be selected because there a-tive aspects and dangers it is fOUnd religious sense is the es
are more volunteers than can be "neCessary 110 act, to toH • • ... or sence of every true and effective
accommodated on the buses. we shall lose the most precious Christian activity in the world."
y'!'
BOD) -. .
Pope Emphasizes Need for Action To Preserve Christian Heritage
CHICKENS
cut-~33C Who~ 29C
fryen & Broilers - 2Y:a .. 3Y:aLB AVI- Reilly to Coole
CHUCK STEAK
OtOICE GRADE ~
..... ilfICI
~uscit>ul
u49c
IARnETT- full of Juicy flavor
.'EARS
3
1'""'' '. Prune Plunis '2
Testy.,
"'esh
Pete
GoteJefl. Club Soda"
Dry or
(Contents Only)
Cott Ginger Ale 6 FRUtT DRINKS - AU Varieties
B. C. Cocktail
$1.00 'QTt4~z 39c QT
BOTS
CAN
FlNAM - Rich lropical Flavor
Pineapple Juice sticed or Halves
Peaches
.INAST alNG
Fully Nourishing
Vels'Dog,... HOMfMAK!R - Pee. leltow Ey.t Red Kidney
Baked Beans·
4·1~~oZ
RICHMOND - Green or Wex
ENTERS RELIGION: Miss Sheila HarringtOn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J.. Harrington, New' :Bedford, has e.ntered Mother of Mercy. Novitiate, Cumberland, :R.L Two sisters, Sister'Mary Gil patrick and Sister Evelyn Mary~ are in religioU6 life and 'a brother, Brian Har rington, is a seminarian at St. Johnta, Brighton.
Cui Beans • 8RIH6 AIDS.
ZENITH. ACOVSTICOH • UNIX
.. COSMDICS . • 1I0LOGIUlS
Call
• YIIAMIIS
675-7829
RICHMOND - E:uts & lip
Asparagus
·4 2
·IS'no! CANS
14Y.o!
CANS
98c 6ge . 49~.
IRENE R. SHEA, PROP.
IIrompf. Free
201 ROCK
DelWerr" fAll RIVER, SOMERSEl, 1lVERTON & VIClHm
n.
(CORNER OF PINE ST.)
FALL RIV.R
a.me Low Self·Service Prices In At! Stores In This Vicinity;; lWe Reserve tIie RighI to limit Quanfil1e<'
-
14
THE ANCHOR-Dioces!! of Fall River-Thu.rs. Sept. 10, 11964
Gives $10 MimI
Says Nuns Should Co~si'dler' People's Fin~.ncial'Problerirls
Aid to Bolivia In Nin'e Years
I
LA PAZ (NC)--CaUlillic Relief Services - NatiiJtJ;tl Oatholic Welfare Confert~ rll'e contributed more than $Vl
CINCINNATI (NC)--::Sister ought to learn the cost of a pair of shoes, the price of meat and the amount of the monthly bill for electricty in order to make her practice of poverty realistic.' Sister Margaret, president of Tri:rlity College, Washington, D.C., questioning" the practice of made this sugg~stion to the poverty by religious, and re Conference of Major Super marked that they seem t<l be iors of Women here at their asking for "total material pov
million to Bolivia in the p"st 'nine years and its aid hal; reached into every part of thi country. ' This was' reported by Joh ", Foster, director of CRS-NeW \ here in Bolivia, during a join , meeting of the Bolivian Cathol; " charities organization and rf'p pesentatives of the America Catholic relief agency. Purpose of the meeting was t~,1 coordinate the work of hlt,,, organizations and to de('d: upon a social and econo" , program for Bolivian Catboll charities. CRS started work in Bolivi in 1955. Up to last June, it pro vided 79.2 million pounds of ,food products with a monetary value of over $8.5 million. More 'than $2 million spent for second-hand clothing, medlc~l . supplies and teaching materials.
national meeting at the College erty" on the part of the Sisters. of Mount St. Joseph on-the But "total material poverty Ohio. becomes less and less possible All Not Rich as action in the apostolate be Sister Margaret, discussing comes more prominent," she "Poverty: Detachment and asserted. "For that reason, the , Trust," told the 400 s4periors: spirit of poverty, of detachment, "If today's religious is not to becomes that much more im become identified with bygone ' portant. ages, if she is to understand Knows Our Needs what poverty means and is in "Poverty cannot be viewed the lives of those who have not as negation, consisting 'in a vowed it, she must in training series of small privations and NATIONAL NEWMAN CHAPLAINS: Msgr. John F. come face to face with the real of petty dependence for such ity of the cost of things, with articles as soap, toothpaste, etc., Bradley, left, is the new chaplain of the National Newman Apostolate and Father Paul F: Halloran has assumed the the grim existence known to SO Rather it will be the large ges. many as 'life'." newly-created post of chaplain of the National Newman ture of confidence by one who Sister Margaret said that knows full well that the heav Club Federation, student unit of the National Newman "through reading contemporary enly Father knows all our Apostol~te. NC Photo.' studies and reports, ,th.rough needs," Sister Margaret declared. 'Operation Children' . Some apostolic project carried "Poverty in the Hfe of the on in so-called leisure, time true religious will be the testi The Bolivian Catholic Chari wherever possible, one can at ,mony ,of love from one who ties organization, supervised by least know some of the problems knows herself one of 'God's the bishops of Bolivia, has as of poverty." sumed . the responsibllity of poor,' possessing only one ambi This kind of knowledge and channeling this aid to individ tion: ,the furtherance of: God's experience will give the Sister kingdom~" uals. "greater understanding of finan- . Due to the fac~ that NCWC cia I worries, experienced by the NEW YORK. (NC)-'commis aid was reduced this July, CRS will be a'ble to succeed in coop people who comprise her si:mer Rob'ert E. Lee of. the erative efforts where individu NCWC and Bolivian Charities apostolate." decided at their meeting to re .Fl~deral ,CommunicatiQ~s. Com ally such efforts 'COUld' remain duce the number of aid recipi mission has urged all educatiOnal on drafting boards." Too Many.Drives Pilgrimag~ ents by 17 per cent and to con groups-public and nonpublic As a result, "perhaps year LONDON (NC)-Thirty An The FCC recently approved centrate their efforts solely on to step up their cooperation in book drives, patron drives, the applications of two New -"Operation Children." chance books and the like will glicans joined 800 Catholics educational broadcasting. York Catholic dioceseS-BrOOk Under this plan, Nor'th Amer Speaking at Fordham Univer not so often be her solution to from London in the annual pil solving problems of need," she grimage to Walsingham, Our si:;y's fourth annual Educational lyn and Rockville Centre - to . ican Catholc aid will be used Lady's ancient shrine on the Television Conference, Lee cited construct facilities for utilization primarily to improve the nutri. observed. . the new microwave ,band Which of the new ETV service. Several tion of children of school and The college president referred, English east coast. other dioceses are preparing ap pre·school age coming from h£IS been made available for to the "many people in and out , Other Anglicans anc;l Catholics plications to the FCC. joined from various parts of the needy families. instructional television and said: of religion" who are "strongly country for the procession w·ith "The day has arrived when the statue of Our Lady' of W'al al1 educational interests - pri singham to the ruins of' the vate, parochial and public-must, ancient pre-Reformation a1:)bey consider joint planning to im where prayers were said foil' : pl·ement these channels in order Christian unity. CHICAGO (NC)-The super that conflicting channel requests The Anglicans then left to hold are avoided and in order that intendent of Chicago's Catholic schools said the system will a special service of their own equipment and teaching tallilnt· employ more Negro teachers in and receive communion. can best be utilized and ex the coming school year on an Some of the Anglicans had changed. integrated basis. taken part the previous night in "Educators bound together in Msgr. William E. McManus, a torchlight procession and Mid their mutual interest of im 'archdiocesan schools superin night Mass. Some also joined proved teaching via television tendent, reported particular ef about 60 pilgrims in all-nil~ht forts are being made to locate vigil at the shrine. qualified Negro teachers. Some In Acomb, near York, about schools will 'be integrated for 600 people walked in four sepa the first time. rate processions kom the loc:al :BONN (NC)-A newspaper in Some Negro teachers will be Catholic, Anglican, Baptist and Czechoslovakia, has employed in schools which have Methodist churches for a united Prague, all white student bodies, the open-air service on the vilage published the first encyclical of monsignor said·. . green. Some Quakers also to-ok p()pe Paul VI, Eclesiam Suam, two weeks after the document The new effort stems from a part. W~IS made public in Rome. directive issued last April by 'rhe encyclical was printed in Albert Cardinal Meyer of Chi K~.tholicke Noviny, a publication cago who told pastors to make of the "peace priests": Sections a "zealous effort" to have both KongChildr~I' of the encyclical dealing with white and Negro teachers in the HONG KONG (NC) - Three "ideological systems which per parish schools. The Cardinal new multi-purpose vans .and sec:ute the Church" were omitted said: "A racially integrated fac funds to operate them for a YE~ar in the Prague version, according ulty will teach our children last to KNA, German Catholic news ing lessons on the virtues of have been presented to the Car itas and Maryknoll missions in ag"mcy. racial justice and love." Hong Kong and the Caritas mis sion in Macao to help the chil dren they serve. ' Transm~tter (\10 JOB TOO BIG 'The three caravans WE~re marked "gift of the people of the NONE TOO SMALL JATAl (NC) -A ne~ radio United States through Catholic transmitter was received here Relief Services--N.C.W.C." Each • by the radio station of the, Jatai cost $3,137. They will be used diocese to enable it to broadcast primarily to deliver hot nourish PRINTERS to all parts of the diocese. ing meals to poor refugee chil AUTO LOANS - HOME IMPROVEMENT The equipment was purchased dren. Easily removable seats Main Office and Plant
with funds raised by the make it possible also to trails. LOANS - PERSONAL LOANS "Friends of Bishop, Coscia" in port handicapped children to 95 Bridge St., Lowell, Mass.
Brooklyn, New York, and the school. CENTER BANK-Purchase William Sts. Tel. 458·6333
. .and . "Men of the Brazilian Missions" Keys to the two vans were NORTH BANK-Acushnet Ave at .CoHin Ave.
organized by Archbishop Celes presented to Bishop Lawrence Auxiliary Plants SOUTH BANK-Cove St. at Rodney French Boulevard
tine J. Damiano, Bishop ·of 'Cam Bianchi of Hong Kong by HE'r BOSTON den, N.J. man A. Washington, ~hief of the LUND'S COrtN-=R BANK-Acushnet Ave. near Lund'. Cor...
CAMDEN, N. J. The new transmitter has a Refugee Migration Unit (RM1J) WEST BANK-Kempton Street Cd Mill Street
power of 1,000 watts, niplacing a of the American Consulate here. OCEANPORT, N. J. 250-watt transmitter. B ish 0 p DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near RocIc:dale Ave.
Father Julio August Massa, ad MIAMI Benedict Coscia of Jatai pur ing for Bishop Jose Paolo Ta DRIVE-IN SERVICE AT ALL BANKS .chased the radio station in 1963 varia of Mactao, who is enroute PAWTUCKET, R.I. with funds donated by frienda to Rome, accepted the keys for PHILADELPHIA in his native Brooklyn. the Macao children's bus.
;1
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Church TV Stations
FCC Approves .Educational Channels
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Chicago Integrates
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I
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THE ANCHOR
Bishop Asks .Laity to Pray For Success of Council
Thurs., .Sept. 10, 1964
15
Pastor Feeds ,Slum Children
The Most Reverend Bishop requested the prayers M the clergy and laity for the success of the Ecumenical
J BANFIELD (NC) - S 1 u m Council in a letter read at all masses in all diocesan churches dwellers who live in the wooden
shacks that stretch along a mud
Sunday. The Bishop's message follows:
dy path in this· town near . ' ,
Beloved in Christ: Buenos Aires have one impor As time approaches for the resumption of the Vatican tant advantage not shared by in Council, I turn to you, ~n union with the Holy Father and habitants of other Argentine all Ecumenical Bishops, to solicit your prayers that God slums.
Every day; 130 youngsters re brings great good out of our deliberations. More things
ceive a free hot meal, perhaps are wrought by prayer than this world dreams of. Of this their only meal of the day, from we have had indications many times over. So let us keep their parish priest, Father Oscar up our interest confidently. Let us do all we can for the Delgado Carrizo.
success of the Council.
When the priest first came to
serve the poor parish of the Holy The clergy of the Diocese are again instructed to add
Family, in which the slums are to their masses, whenever liturgical rules permit, the Col- .. located, the children roamed the lect, Secret and Post-Communion prayers from the Mass of streets hungry.' the Holy Spirit. They are further directed to hold in each Free Clinic
That was five years ago. To
church and chapel a solemn tridrlum of prayer from Sep-
day, each gets a- hot meal thanks tember 12th to' the 14th. .
READY FOR ACTION: From left, Mary Jane Collins, to the priest wIiorallied suppoi-t All the faithful, clergy and laity alike, are' to recite Judith Perry, Marguerite Desjardiris with Rev. John J. in the parish for the poor. . after Sunday and daily masses and devotional ceremonies, . Sullivan, National Director of Extension Lay Volunteers, In the past five ,years, the cru the simple prayer to the Holy Spirit that we have used at Chicago training course before they entered on one year Nlding clergyman has also built previously: ' . a free clinic for the' poor and teaching assignments. was instrumental in the con "0 Holy Spirit, Spirit of Truth~ come into our ".*uction of a parish school. Tllepeople' he has served said hearts. Shed the brifJ'hf"~"c; of Thy Light on thank you at ceremonies in Au all nations, that they may be 'one in Faith and Ilust at Which he was presented' pleasing to Thee. Through Christ Our Lord" , - with several tokens of apprecia Amen.~
,
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Progress Report' on Apostolic Unit Features Three Diocesan ,Girls
Fan River will be represented in expansive movement aimed Grateful for your Christian loyalty, 'and confide~t th'at at analleviating national social your prayers will folow me .and all members of this sig problems as three area young nificant gathering, and }loping in God's Provid~nce te be people join the Extension Lay . Volunteers this, Fall. ' returned to you in late Nov~riiber, I remain, . , Since 196'1, the Ex·tension Lay Devotedly in Christ, . Volunteers, sponsored by the . ~ JAMES L. CONNOLLY, Catholic Church Extension SoBishop of Fall River . ciety, have penetrated the south ern and western United States f1:om' Provo, Utah, south to Ponce, Puerto Rico, and east ward. to Kiln, Miss. In 135 mis sions there are 345 VOlunteers, WASHINGTON (NC) - The humiliation and hopelessness, , including 33 who are stationed in Chicago's campus· and slum local Interreligious Committee that resentment smoulders until, areas. on Race Relations filed a state one day, it explodes with vio Fan River's volunteers are ment supporting a proposed fair lence.
Judith Ann Perry, daughter of Stabilizinl' Aspect employment practices regulation , 'or. a'nd Mrs.'Thomas Perry, HO for the nation's capital. "It is a reflection of the good Bradford Street, Provincetown, Washington's Archbishop Pat sense and forbearance of our who will teach in Oklahoma rick A. O'Boyle who forwarded Negro citizens, as ,well as the City. A .June graduate of the the statement to the District' of sincere desire of the Commis Columbia Board of Commis sioners to identity and correct College of New Rochelle, Miss Perry was active in the choir, sioners, the city's governing areas of discrimination and po glee club and the athletic asso body, said: "In our judgment, no tential conflict, that such inci other issue is more basic· to full dents have not occured in the ciation. She has worked with the realization of the guarantees em District of Columbia. The pro Camp Fire Girls and the .Junior bodied in tht~ Civil Rights Act posed fair employment practices Catholic Daught~rs. Marguerite Desjardins, daugh of 1964 than equal opportunity regulation, if promptly and vig for our NeglO citizens in the orously enforced, should help 'to ter of Mr. and Mrs. Armand J. field of employment. stabilize a particularly sensitive Desjardins, 355 Cornell Road, Frustrations Explode and important aspect of civil Westport, will also teach at "We believe this to be a moral rights. We are glad to endorse Oklahoma City. She is a .June graduate of Rivier College, issue, for the right of a man to it." Nashua, N. H. where she was a work that is commensurate with Director in the Rivier College his ability and experience is in Dismiss California drama society and an editorial timately related to the moral board member of the Rivier principle of human dignity Interracial Leader paper. under God. Moreover, failure to SAN F'RANCISCO (NC) accord the Negro equal oppor Henry F. Organ, elected presi One Year Service tunity in employment sets 'Up a dent of 'the San Mateo County Mary Jane Collins, daughter vicious circle. Without a decent Catholic Interracial Council job, the Negro cannot afford de early in August, has been dis of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Col cent housing in wfIich to raise missed from his post for criticiz lins, 236 Montgomery Street, and educate his family. And ing Francis Cardinal Mcintyre Fall River, will teach at Albu without education, he cannot of Los Angeles and Archbishop querque, N. M. She was gradu ated in June from the Newton get a suitable job. Joseph T. McGucken of San College of the Sacred Heart, "It is in frustrations like these, Francisco. New~n, where she was active in the gnawing sense of injustice, The action was taken by in the National Federation of James T. McDonald, archdioc Catholic College StUdents, the esan CIC president, in accord Student Council and the House Benedictines Open ance with a resolution passed by Council. the executive committee of the New Mona'stery OXFORD (NC)-Holy Mother organization. Organ, a Negro, was elected First in India
of God monastery, new Benedic tine foundation, is located here to his post on a platform that BOMBAY (NC)-A group of
in North Carolina on the site of demanded the removal or trans Blessed Sacrament Fathers and Woodlawn, an estate dating back fer of Cardinal McIntyre for Brothers have arrived to estab
failing to take a stand on Cali to colonial days.. lish the first foundation of their The founding superior· is fornia's fair housing referendum, society in India. Father Peter· ~inard, O.S.B., and ,that also was critical of who originally was attached. to Archbishop McGucken. McDonald said Organ's refusal the Abbey of St. Martin, Liguge, to retract his stand that was France, and who served as nov ice master at several Benedictine contrary to the policy of the FUNERAL HOME, INC. monasteries. Members of the CIC forced the, dismissal. Mc R. Marcel Roy - G. lorraine Roy new community will lead eon .Donald said the interracial eoun Roger laFrance templative lives and support cil doeS not intend to interfem-e
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
themselves by their own manual with other dioceses and he
labors. added: "I do not agree with him
15 Irvington Ct.
The 29-acre tract was donated about a lack of leadership :from
WY 7·7830 to the Raleigh diocese in 1944 by the (San Francisco) ehancery New Bedford Mrs. Martha Lanier Chewnin&oHice."
Nation's Capital City Catholics Back Fair Employment, Move
BROOKLAWN
Volunteers such as these three tion. · serve for one year and are placed according totheir unique · .talen~, interests and education. · Extension Lay Volunteers in cluding men and women ra~ging
from' 21 to 45 years of age, now
- staff ·parishes as teachers, social _ workers, parish missionaries campus missionaries,. and medi~ NEW BEDFORD ical .Personnel. There are 14 married couples in the program. I~DUSTR'AL OilS , More than ninety per cent of the volunteers are college gradHEATING OilS , uates' who employ their profes-c · sional training and personal tal TIMKEN ent in communities where such fully developed human resources OIL BURNERS are npt readily available. : Volunteers are now serving ill
places such as:
-the Newman center in Ox ford's University of· Mississippi, 501 COUNTY STREEr: where recent racial strife thrust an imposing, challenge toward NEW BEDFORD the . maturity and courage of Christian students there. WY 3-1751 -Cardinal Cushing School, Mansura, La., which would be forced to close its doors to 353
Negro students were it not for
the volunteers.
-Las Vegas, N. M., where most Spanish-speaking citizens
are on relief rolls.
-St. Malachy School in Chi cago, where 27,000 people in , habit a seven block area in the trouble-torn Negro high rise housing projects. * * * and 131 other places, each Comprehensive reylew and of which has its unique and com preparation for C. P. A. Exam plex human problems. Ination
To find out more about this • Section 1 new , growing Christian move Accountlnll 'radlce an' ment, write either national Theory of Accoun.. 'headquarters, 1307 South Wa • Section 2 Auditinll bash Ave., Chicago, or Rev. • Section S James W. Clark, 1335 North F.cleral Taxation Main .Street, Fall River, Mass.
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Qualified indh,iduals who ·t1mply desire impraYement or lI,eoler Itnowledg. in pa,ticurar oreal .of aecounlin\J or. welcome to parlicipat. In this <:. P. A. re· view program •••
Sencl Immodiatoly for ',ochuro whkh include. Dpplication form or ceoll: local Phono: 231·2052 -
101lon L1no' 696·'050 .r A.... ly In P .. son: Mend,y
, throu.h Friday, Ad",lnhl.o.l.n lulldi... from ',30 A.M... 4:30 P.M. ' Regiltratlon Deaclline Sept. 22
•
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'6
THE ANCHOn-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 10, 1964
ALMEIDA
SPECIAL PERMIT
Americans Oppose Cleric:al Support of O.ffice-Seekel's
TO THE NEW YORK
By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director, NCWC Social Action Department
WORLD'S FAIR
The Congressional Record makes for rather dull read Ing most ~f the time, but every now and then it unexjpect edly provIdes at least some small measure of innocent and diversionary entertainment. Consider, for example, the' fol lowing tongue-in-cheek col loquy between Senator Long force hi~s:lf to be serious in .' d S t such a trIvIal context-the rea! ctf L OUlSIana an . dena. or point which I think the S enat or R usse II 0 f Georgla urmg from Louisiana and the Senator the r:c.ent. marat~lOn debate on the CIVIl Rlg·hts BIll: MR. LONG. I Does the Sena- tor from Georl!:ia recall what was said in the Sermon on the M 0 u n t about hypocrites? MR. R U SSE. L L . Yes * * * MR. LON G. The Sermon on the Mount 'continues to the effeet: 'First remove the beam that is in thine own eye and then thou will see more clearly how to remove the moat that is in thy neighQor's eye.' Does the Senator from Georgia know of any female priest in the Catholic Church? MR. RUSSELL. No. MR. LONG. Would that not OCCuI' to the Senator to be dis- erimination and in direct conflict with the provision provid- ing for equal rights for women that was passed lately? Straighten Own Affairs MR. RUSSELL. I am not un- -< k' . d th . thO IS de....a mg to JU ge 0 ers m case as much as lam resenting • prejudgment by them. MR. LONG. Can the Senator think of any female priests? MR. RUSSELL. I have never seen or heard of one. MR. LONG. Can the Senat(}l' tell me how many altar girls he knows or has heard of in the Catholic Church? * * * Would not the Senator think that those who are trying to straighten out conditions of others should take heed of the lesson from the ser- mon on the Mount and try to straighten out their own aHairs first? Clergy, Stay Out! I take it that the point of this delightful little charade was that those members of the clergy who were advoc'ating the enactment of the Civil Rights Bill would be well advised-in the· light of the Sermon on the Mount, with its condemnation of hypocrisy-to mind their own business, at least until 9Uch time as they could produce certified photos of some female priests, ministers and acolytes. Well, if that's the exhorbitant price that the clergy are expected to pay for the privilege of supporting Civil Rights legis lation in the public arena, this clergyman, for one, is prepared to retire gracefully from the fray and let the laity carryon the battle all alone. SeriouslY, though-if one can
Musical Composition Honors 22 Martyrs WASHINGTON (NC)-A mu sical composition for voices and native instruments has been written by a citizen of Uganda in honorof 22 of his countrymen who are scheduled to be canon ized saints in Rome this Fall. The Uganda Martyrs Center here has announced that the eratorio, the first ever written III an African language, has a1 teady been published in six languages. It is the work of Jo ~ph Kyagambiddwa of Uganda, who studied music in this coun-
Cay.
.
TOURS FROM
CAPE COD NEW BEDFORD FALL RIVER
from Georgia were trying to make in their dead-pan, pokerf-ace colloquy about the alleged IN NOVITIATE: MiS& hypocrisy of anti-feminist clerics is not completely without .~nne Marguerite Crave, merit. What the Senators were daughter of Mr. and Mrs. really saying is that the clergy J~'rancis Crape, New Bedfortt- . ought to "stay out of politics." has _entered the novitiate of Rights Bill Exception the Sisters of the Holy Cross ][ wouldn't agree with them in the case of the Civil Rights Bill, and Seven Dolors at Man for if ever there was a bill be chester, N.H. She is a niece fore the Congress of the United of Sister Mary of Ste. Ame States which involved an abso. lutely clear-cut moral isuue, dee, C.S.C., New Bedford na tive now teaching in the surely this was it. On the other hand, the clergy Diocese of Burlington, Vt. of the United States, it seems to Sts., New Bedford and Central St., in front of Central Lunch, me, will want to think long arid Fall River. hard before coming out again so strongly in support of or in opposition to a particular Congres I~eed New Bedford $16.40 Leaves 6:00 A.M. sional bill. Children Under 12 CASTEL GANDOLFO (NC) 9.20 What I am suggesting is that, Fall River $l5.10 Leaves 6:30 A.M. as a general rule, the moral is- --For the second time in less Children Under 12 8.55 sues involved in matters of than a week Pope Paul VI has r4!iterated the necessity of peace. public policy are seldom sUlffi The Pope stressed that peace ciently black-and-white to war rant a repetition of what the does not concern only politicians Cape Cod $33..50 Leaves Saturday 6:00 A.M. clergy did, by way of except'ion, --it concerns everyone. "It is New Bedford 28.90 Leaves Saturday 7:00 A.M. not only a political, but above in the Civil Rights campaign.. 27.60 Leaves Saturday 7:30 A.M. all a moral theme," he declared. Fan River Presidential Election "We must foster peace by ed Wh d h t d th u<:ating ourselves and reforming 0 raw e r . ereb'an I ow th t'~ Cape Cod $48.55 me IS. 0 .VlOUS Y ano er ma "",r, our mentalities, fashioning our Leaves Friday 7:30 A.M• but, sbckmg to the current scene, . minds according to the desire, New Bedford 43.95 Leaves Friday 1:30 A.M. I would say, for exa~ple, th·at pI'Ogram and purpose of peace. Fall River 42.65 Leaves Friday 9:00 A.M. ~he clergy has no busme~ tell- We must be the sons of the Gos pel which outlines our program: mg people h~w ~ vote I? the 'Blessed are the peacemakers.' commg PreSIdentIal electIon.. ~ape Cod d $69.85 Leaves Sunday 9.00 A.M. The fact that two distinguished That is to say, we must give to f our mode of thinking, of Hying eHwR~d or 65.25 Leaves Sunday 10:00 A.M. Protestant theologians for and of undertaking social and 'v., 63.95 Leaves Sunday 10:30 A.M. whom I have the highest admir ation and respect-and severa". international relations, an evan gelical orientation which is less prominent ministers hSlve already done so in the pages of br:>therly, that is to say human, : FIRST CLASS ECONOMY TOURS • or in other words open to many Christianity and Crisis and T'he Christian Century makes this so1.utions which are not those of Includes admission to the Fair and ConW.tntal Break•• violence or of killing the broth more than an academic issue. • fast en route. • er~: with whom we do not agree.'~ I have a feeling, by the way, I~cludes !W~ days at II first-class' hotel, baggage hand- • tnat if these clergymen had fij~st I!ng, admiSSions to the Fair, ride on the Monorail, Con•• Act Together of all sampled the opinion of • tlnental Breakfasts each day, fireworks. • LOUISVILLE (NC) - Clergy their lay constituents of both political parties they would have , men of the churches and sYna I~cludes thre~ days .at first-class hotel, baggage hand- •• ling plus dally Continental Breakfast. Sail around the gogues of Louisville will gather held their peace. • beautiful Island of Manhattan, viewing the Statue of • Oct. 5 and 6 for the first Con It is my impression, in other Liberty, United ~ations Buil~ing . . • Panorama Trip •• words, that the overwhelming fer,~n-ce on Religion and Race in : o~ the Hudson River, East River and the Harlem River. thi:; Kentucky area. majority of Americans--Repul> : Ride the Monorail . . • a spectacular display of fire•• Hcans, Democrats and Indepen,i works. Also includes Fair Admissions and show at the ents--are opposed to, not to say • Fair. • "merica's Economy King resentful of clerical support of I~cludes five. days ~ first-class hotel, baggage hand • or opposition to a candidate f':lr • hng plus dally Contmental Breakfast. Sail around the • political office unless, of course, beautiful Island of Manhattan viewing the Statue of • • F,n the Best Deal Come '10 said candidate stands for a pro • Liberty, Unite~ Nations B.uilding • . . Panorama Trip of • gram which is not merely imthe Hudson River, East River and the Harlem River. Ride • 'Broadway Rambler :• prudent, imperfect or unwi8e on the Monorail ••• a spectacular display of fireworks. • INC.
but is clearly and unmistakably .• Also includes Fair admissions and show at the Fair. • 768 BROADWAY
evil.
r
I'ope Again Cites for Peace
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RJ'YNHAM, MASS on Rt. 138
End Youth Program With Rally, Dance BROOKLYN (NC) - About 500 Negro, Puerto Rican and white youths of different faittls marched through the streets of Brooklyn to a giant rally and dance that marked the close (of Nleir Summer youth programs. They were addressed at the rally by speakers that include:! borough President Abe Star:~ and by Father Vincent Powell, director of the CYO for Cathol'ic Charities in the Brooklyn dio cese. The march and the rally wer.~ the first of their kind in Brook·· lyn. Taking part in the march were members of the "Brook·· lyn Peace Corps" - a group o:f Catholic seminarians who hav4~ lived and worked since June in ~W' of the boroulh'. puwl1es.
CIIIARLES J. DUMAIS, Pres.
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CAREY TRAVEL AGENCY 54 Depot Ave., Falmouth 548-3545 CAPE -COD TRAVEL AGENCY Main St., Hyannis 775-3109 CHATHAM TRAVEL INTERNATIONAL 453 Main St., Chatham 944-1200
NEW BEDFORD FRANCISCO OLIVEIRA TRAVEl AGENCY 26.5 Rivet Street WY 4-2471 PELLETIER TRAVEL SERVICE 1350 Acushnet Avenue WY 2-9321 CUILHERME M. LUll & CO., INC. TRAVEL AGENCY . 101 Rivet Street WY 3-2296 WY 7-8081
HODGSON TRAVEL SERVICE INC tHy 3-2613 CATHOLIC TRAVEL OFFICE
28 Bullock Street
28 Bullock Street WY 3-2613 WHITEHEAD'S TRAVEL SERVICE 342 Acushnet Avenue WY 3-4122
FALL RIVER FALl RIVER TRAVEL BUREAU, INC. 29 No. Main St. OS 5-7408 AMERICANA TRAVEL BUREAU 49t Division St. as 7-9331 FAilINHA'S TRAVEl AGENCY 70& Eaiter. Avenue OS 3-ll88t
SISSON TRAVEL BUREAU, INC. MA 4-8472
CONNORS TRAVEl BUREAU
1418 South Main Street as 3-0951
TOURS AND TRAVEl 1078 County St., SoIvrset OS 4-3504 LACE "Am. 1Ut£AU 434 8Iy Street OS 3-1551
39 Main Road, Tiverton
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 10, 1964
17
Bishop's Directives on New American Ritual
Continued from
~ge
One
The Rite of Baptism for Adults, arranged accord of the catechumenate, may be used. It is especially suited for the reception of a group of converts, or during Lent in preparation for Baptism at Easter. ing
to the stages
CONFIRMATION ,. Pastors and other priests enjoy,ing the power, should use faithfuHy the faculty to administer Con firmation to a person in danger of death. If the Bishop is not actually present, the pastor may reasona,bly presume that he is unavailable and proceed to admin ister the Sacrament.
PENANCE 8. Sacramental absolution is to' be g'iven in English, and the penitent is to listen to the formulary and reply: "Amen".
C) and I firmly resolve never to commit them a-gain." (c) If the penitent fails to do so, the priest should aid him with such questions as: "Are you sorry for all your sins?" "Are you determined never to commit them again?" (d) After the penitent has made hi's profession of sorrow, the confessor should give the penance and absolve him. The penitent re plies Amen to the formula of absolution. 9. Whenever absolution from censure is given in th~ external forum, the proper' form should be used.
FUNERALS 10. The first part of the Burial Rite takes place at the house or the place where the body is laid out. This consists of Psalm 12P and the concluding Prayer.
(a) The faithful should be instructed to recite
If the priest is unable to carry out this rite on the day of the funeral, he may do so the preV'ious eve ning. Otherwise, he is to perform this part of the rite in the vestibule of the Church.
the Act of Contrition after having exam ined their conscience and before entering the confessional,
If the procession to the church does not take place; Psalm 50 is omitted. The Responsory "Subvenite" is sung or said as the body is brought before the altar.
to con clude his confession with 1. an expression of sorrow for all his past sins, 2. preferably also with an explicit accu sation of a past sin, 3. with the expression of a firm purpose of amendment, e.g. A) "I am sorry for these and for all my sins, B) especially for all sins of _ _
The rite of absolution concludes with the Prayer. 'J1he anitiphon "In paradisum" should be sung 1!S the procession leaves the church. If however, the body is not to be brought to the grave for burial, the con cluding prayers are said in the church.
This means that:
(b) The penitent shoU!ld be instructed
MARRIAGE 11. The Nuptial Blessing is always to be given to the spouses (Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, art. 78). One form has been approved for use at Mass and
another when the marriage takes place apart from Mass. The Rite for the Sacrament of Matrimony when Mass is not celebrated; may also be used for a mixed marriage. (Canon 1102, ~2) If the n:m-Catholic p-arty is unbaptized, the references to Christian marriage should be omitted.
MISSAL 12. Since distance, poor acousti~ and other fac tors will interfere with the relationship that should exist between celebrant and congregation, the pastor should strive to reduce these distractions as they may be found in his church. 13. For the sake of good order the faithful should be instructed to participate in Holy Mass in the manner approved for the Diocese of Fall River.
14. Ceremonial actions, standing, sitting, etc. aTe adopted from the rules for ~igh Mass because the parish Mass, even when not sung, should be celebrated with due solemnity. 15. It is fitting to sing hymns at Low Mass at the Entrance, Offertvry, Communion, and at the end of Mass. Hymns should be chosen for their appropriate ness to the Mass itself and to the liturgical season. (CF.-Peoples Mass Book, World Library of Sacred Music, Cincinnati). 16. The celebrant faces the people when he reads the Epistle and the Gospel. But if a lector reads the Epistle, the Celebrant f-aces the. lector, or sits, and listens. • 17. The homily should be given on Sundays and Holy Days at every Mass attended by the faithful (Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, art. 52) 18. The faithful should receive the Eucharist at the proper time, after the Communion of the Celebrant.
Expect Demand for Teachers • To Reach Peak In 1964-65 This, he added, would mean "a WASHINGTON (NC) - The sharply increased supply of demand for teachers in elemen teachers, lay as well as religious, tary and secondary schools of within four or five years when the United States will reach its they have completed college peak in the year 1964-65. Schools and novitiate training." will have to recruit some 210,000 Bishop Elwell said "the actual teachers for the next academic number of vocations and reli year to take care of new class rooms replacement of teachers gious teachers has been on the increase without interruption, leaving service and the retire calamity howlers to the contrary ment of some emergency teach notwithstanding." ers. "We have not, of course, had The challenge is described as a supply equal to the tremen "reflecting the final academic dous increase of babies since accommodation of the elemen 1946, but wait until the 1946 tary-secondary schools to the baby group gets old enough tc high birth rate, of the mid knock on the convent door, forties." The number of teachers which is June of 1964, this pres needed in the years following ent year," the Bishop continued. this record-breaking need "will "Then wait four or five years fall well below the peak level." more for them to finish college This situation mirrors the drop and novitiate years. Then I am in the number of births for a confident, the crepe-hangers few years after 1947 and their slow-down in rate of increase in will have to eat their predic tions." the 1950's. These projections are made in a study prepared by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U. S. Department of Labor. The study was concerned with manpower CHICAGO (NC)-A leader in in teaching rather than pupil interracial justice work saluted movement. the action of the Knig-hts of A study made by Auxiliary Columbus w h i c h abolished Bishop Clarence E. Elwell of "blackball" procedure employed Cleveland made public last March said the Diocese of against prospective Negro mem. bers. Cleveland had a 72 per cent in Matthew Ahmann, director, crease in religious teachers in National Catholic Conference for the 20 years between 1944 and lnterracial Justice, in a letter 1963. The Bishop, superintendent of to Supreme Knight John W. McDevitt, commended the K. of Cleveland's diocesan school sys tem, noted that the June, 1964 C. action which changed the by-laws and required a one high schOOl graduating class was third vote of members present tc be "the first of the large post war classes (the 1946 birth class to disapprove a membership application. Previously the re now 18 years old)," and said quirement was five votes. that "if the increased percent "'J1he leadership you have age of vocations holds, it should shown as Supreme Knight and mean a larger-than-ever num the leadership of a good number ber of vocations this Fall" of your state deputies are a tribute to the catholicity of the Knights of Columbus," Ahmann MONTREAL (NC) Paul -wrote to McDevitt. "From Mundy, chairman of the sociol around the country, K of C del ogy department at Loyola Uni egates recognized the moral is versity in Chicago, is the new sue in racial segregation and president of the American Cath took the only action possible by olic Sociological Society. Catholic men."
New K of C Rule Brings Praise
Pick Chicagoan
School of Nursing Registers Sixty In Class of 1967Sister Madeleine Clemence, Ph.D., Director of St. Anne's H?spital School of Nursing, Fall RIVer, announces that the School has accepted 60 students to be gin their three-year training to become nurses. The young ladies registered on Tuesday. Twenty-one of the students are from Fall River, 17 from New Bedford, five from Taun ton, six from Somerset, two from both Acushnet and Middle town, R. I., and one each from Lakeville, Little Compton, Tiv erton, Portsmouth, No. Westport, Newport and Bristol.
NEW CLASS: Being enrolled in St. Anne's Hospital School of Nursing by its director, Sister Madeleine Clem ence, are, left to right, Susan Hardy, Sandra Bento and Sandra Audette, all of New Bedford. ~
World Affairs Body Netherlands Political Scientist Sees Church Commission Aiding Justice and Order THE HAGUE (NC)-A well known specialist in interna'tional law has called for the estab lishment within the Catholic Church of a commission on in ternatonal aHa irs patterned af ter that of the World Council of Churches. Frans Alting von Geusau feels there is a great need now for such a body which would work closely with the WCC commis sion in seeking to develop a Christian vision of world af fairs. Alting von Geusau said the Catholic Church should take the lead . in inspiring people whc work for the establishment of international justice and world
order. As an initial step, he as serted, the Second Vatican should give solemn backing to the United Nations organization as a step toward world order and should also proclaim m support for the UniversaL Decla· ration of Human Rights. The political scientist labeled the papal diplomatic service as a remnant of the past and said that it should be abolished. By doing away wi·th the system of sending papal nuncios and del egates abroad, and entrusting their work to local bishops and competent lay people, he said, the Church could serve the world better.
Class of 1967 Cynthia ArrUda, Sandra Au dette, Sandra Bell, Sandra Be~ to, Norine Bird. Paulette Boule, Claire Bru nelle, Marie Calvey, Margatet Clairmont, Carolyn Cote. Diane Daigle, Susan D'Andrea, Maryann Dias, Lorraine Dun ham, Tamara Fernandes. Rachel Frett, Joan Gallagher,. Marian Gasior, Rita Giberti Kathleen Goulart. Joan Grant, Susan Hardy, Judith La-becki, Patricia La berge, Muriel Larrivee. Lynne Lawrence, Judith Mc Gann, Lorraine McPartland, Constance Martel, Ann Mayher. Dolores Mello, Michele Morin, Susan Normand, Maria Nunes, Beverly O~iveira. Elaine Oliveira, Margaret Oli veira, Therese Oliveira, Viviane Parent, Jacqueline Paul. Maureen Plourde, Leslie Rog. ers, Pauline St. Gelais, Claire Ste. Marie, Susan Santos. Margaret Saunders. Mary Shaw, Joanne Simmons, Claire Soares, Kathleen Spero. He len Sullivan, Frances Swiszcz, Claudia Trahan, Su zanne Trudeau, Sheila Vickers, Susan Whelly, Norma White, Bernadette Willetts, D ian a Wisniewski. Susan Zych.
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18
..m: AN\..HUft-Ulocese ot Fan Ifiver-Thurs. Sept. 10,
.
~hurch Is Win'ning
l'i'64
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The 'Parish Parade
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Cardinal Wyszynski Says Virgin Mary Win , Come to: Defense of Polish Nation
. VISITATION GUILD, EASTHAM' I ,New Guild officer's are Mrs. Evelyn Babbitt, president; Mrs. Terry Walwer, vice-president; Mrs. Mae La Piana, treasurer; lYIrs. Flora Kane, secretary. All I,ad served in the same offices previously with the exception of Mrs. Walwer. ST. MARY, MANSFmLD The Catholic Women's Club 'will open the Fall season at 8 Thursday night, Sept. 10 in the church hall. Rev. Raymond Kelley of the Maryknoll Mission ary Fathers in Formosa will sPeak on his work among the aborigines of the area. ST. MARY, NORTON A luncheon and fashion show will be sponsored by the Catll olic Women's Club at 1 Satur day afternoon, Sept. 12 at Fer nandes Circle. Mrs. Michael Murphy, chairman, announces that the public is invited. S.T. JOSEPH, I'ALL RIVER Women of the parish will meet at,8 tonight, in the school hall. ~ The Men's Club will have a clamboil preceding its first Fall meeting, Tuesday, Sept. 15. S~. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER . A whist party is planned by the Woman's Club for Monday night, Sept. 14. Also on the Fall agenda is a coffee hour for new members, to be held Monday, Oct. 5. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, FALL RIVER A strawberry festival will highlight a meeting of the Council of Catholic Women set for 7:30 Tuesday night, Sept. 15 in the parish hall. ST. MARY, NORTH ATTLEBORO The Parish Guild will hold its annual banquet at 7 Tuesday night, Sept. 15 at Stone Ends. Mrs. Edward Garlick is chair man and Rev. James F. Kelley of Mansfield will speak. SACRED HEARTS, NORTH FAIRHAVEN Co-chairmen for .next year's parish bazaar will be Mr. and Mrs. Russell Tremblay and Mr. arid Mrs. Roger Trudeau. A chicken dinner is planned for October. This semi-annual affair is in charge of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lussier. Mrs. Flor ence Desroches and Mrs. Leola Furtado are chairmen of a coun try auction set for November. A change in schedule for Fall and Winter Sunday Masses has been announced. New hours are 8, 9:30 and 11. Confraternity classes will begin after 8 o'clock Mass this Sunday and public school children from ages five to 18 are expected to attend. ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER Members of the Council of Catholic Women will meet at 7:30 Sunday night, Sept. 13 in the church for Benediction. A coffee hour will follow, with Mrs. Thomas Tache as chairman. All women of the jarish are in vited. The unit will hold its first . FaU-weeting. at 7:30 Monday night, 'Sept. 14 in the church hall. Mrs. Norman Levesque will be in charge of arrangements imd a business session will be followed by a whist party.
Liturgy Con'ference MANCHESTER (NC) -More than 2,500 priests, Religious and members of the laity will attend a liturgical conference at St. Anselm's College. Bishop Ernest ~. Primeau of Manchester will explain scheduled liturgical changes in the Manchester dio
cese.
ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN Association of the' Sac:~ed Hearts members will receive corporate Communion at 8:15 Sunday morning, Sept. 13. A meeting will be held at 7:30 that evening in the school hall. A guest speaker will discuss the Bristol County Health Associa tion and information regarding parish fund drives will be pre sented. SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO The Holy Name Society will sponsor a bowling league for the coming season. Activitiies will begin at 6:45 Tuesday nigih.t, Sept. 15 and will continue each Tuesday thereafter. Members will receive corpor .ate Communion at 7 o'clock M~lss Sunday morning, Sept. 13. . Parishioners will sponsor a Christmas sale Thursday and Friday, Nov. 12 and 13, with nIl organizations being in charge of specific tables. ST. LOUIS, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild announces a cake sale to follow Mass,es Sunday, Sept. 20 and a potluck supper to precede the meeting for Tuesday, Oct. 6. Also in OdJ bel' will be a rummage sale, to be held in the church hall Thursday and Friday, the 1st and 2nd of the month.
HOME Promote:i Fair Housing FLINT (NC)-A group head ed by Catholic laymen dedicated tQ promotion of equal housing opportunities for Negroes has been officially organized her'e in Michigan. Known as HOME, Inc., the voluntary non-profit organiza. tion hopes to provide a 'listing service by which sellers and Negro home buyers can be brought together. The initiah;, HOME, stand for Housing Op, portunities Made Equal. George F. Plum, chairman of the group, said letters explain ing the purpose of the organiza tion have been sent to mor,e than 400 clergymen and about 200 real estate men. Cooperate With Brokers Plum said listings obtained b:r HOME, Inc., will be made avail able to brokers who sign a pledge of good will to show homes on an open basis. A pledge form was enclosed with the letter to real estate men. The organization has an·. nounced it is not competing with licensed real estate brokers, but "in fact, our intention is to co-: operate with brokers as much as possible." "We feel' that the ultimate, success of HOME, Inc., will be, reached on the day when such ~. listing service will not be. needed to provide fair housing: opptYrtunities," Plum said.
BERLIN (NC)-Ste£an Cardi. nal Wyszynski has told nearly 50,000 people assembled at Po land's national Marian Shrine at Czestochowa that' the Catholic Church is winning its struggle for survival in this communist dominated country. -
TO BE CARMELITE: Miss Janice M. Lussier, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Lu.ssier, Fairhaven, will en tel' the Carmelite Order for the Aged and Infirm Satur day, Sept. 12, when she will go to St. Patrick's Home, Bronx, N.Y.
Cha lIenges Youth
Be Different
TIC) ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) Courage to be different can change the world for the better, a priest told 550 delegates at the I96~ Franciscan Third Order Youth Congress at St. Bona venture University here in New York. Msgr. Frederick Stevenson, di rector, N.C.W.C. Youth Depart ment, in the keynote address cou tlseled the delegates: "Deter mination and dedication can cha :lge the world. Forget the materialistic attitude prevalent today and dare to be different." Each generation has been merely a reflection of the older gen,~ration, Msgr. Steve~son said as :'J.e urged the young people to "break the vicious circle." "Put to work the rights and justices of the Divine Saviour," he ~dvised. "Get beyond the Ten Commandments and the sacra ments of the Church-don't for get them, but get into the field of Christian compassion. "You have the vision and en ergy' to change the face of the earth.," he continued. You have the knowledge and, at your age, you have all the wisdom of the worl.d. You know where you cam,~ from, why you're here and where you're going. Put youl'self totally at the service of others. Help them to know, love and serve God. If you don't the world will not change."
~'hat
About You?
ness.
"But," said the cardinal, "the powers of darkness have quieted and the cross has remained."
. Dentists Chaplain 'NASHUA (NC)-Father LaW4 renee J. Hughes, eurate at st. Christopher parish here, hM been appointed as the first chap lain of the 87-year-old New Hampshire Dental Society. B~ fore beginning studies for the priesthood, Father Hughes WM
';i'ii b';i;s" ';0 i deeD IV EHT S• j EVER IMAGINE WHAT IT'1i LIKE NOT to have Mau . . .unday1 Or what WI like NOT to have a priest when YOU dieT_ Hundreds of newly-baptized Catho Ucs in' PULIENKODE, INPIA, .,an" hear MUll at all because the bamboe shed, which was their church, .. now a heap 01 rubble. It collapSed in a rain storm and cannot be repaired • • • The prospects for more conver aions are bright, and BISHOP ATHANSIUS, 55, asks our help. All he neeu for a permanent church, made of stone, is $3,100 • • • The people in PULIENKODE cannot jt, Hoi, Million Aill give money (they can hardly feed /<w ,h, O,;,n'M ChNreh their children)-but they will build the church with their own hands, free-of-charge. Can you help them purchase the materials? • • • The Church roof completed will cost only $600, each wall only $350. It's little enough to pay for a house for God .•. Pin your gift (even $1 will be a Godsend) to this column, and mail it to us right now. You'll be helping converts in PULIENKODE to get to Mass on Sunday.
,.,hff,
THE EASY WAY TO HELP REGULARLY? . . . Join a MIs sion Club. The dues are only $1 a month, a prayer a day ... Your money wlll be used for what you want-lepers (DAMIEN LEPER CLUB), orphans (ORPHAN'S BREAD>, future Sistel'l (MARY'S BANK), the aging (PALACE OF GOLD CLyB) ••• You'll know, for lure, you're helping someone unselfIshly. "The rotted floor gave way beneath a Sister, and she broke her leg . • • It rains indoors as well as outdoors . . • There are bllf holes In our floor which we have stuffed with scraps and melted wax • . • We really are afraid of what winter .will brlng."-8ISTER MARIE CLARE, Superior, describes living eonditions In her cloistered (Poor Clares) convent in NAZA RETH • . . Can you do anything to help these heroic nuns? They give their lives In prayer for all of us. SOMEONE'S PRAYING FOR YOU if you are a member of this Association. You share every day in the Masses and prayers of Pope Paul VI, Cardinal Spellman, and the thousands of priests who look to us for help. When you join this Associa tion you help the Holy Father keep priests and Sisters. hard at work in 18 mission countries. Why not enroll your family? The offering for Family Membership is only $5 for a year, $100 for life ••. Drop us a line right now. TWO JESUIT PRIESTS need help to open a Catholle Infor mation Center in TIRUVALLA, INDIA, a bull's eye of Commu nist agitation and unrest. They'll use the center for instruction of converts and meetings with non-Catholic clergy. The Jesuits need $825 to start • • • Can you spare $I, $5, 10? WHEN YOU MAKE A WILL, MENTION THE MISSIONS.
OUR LEGAL TITLE:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
Offer Thanksgiving
For Oil Discovery
SARGENTES DE LA LORA (NC)-The Benedictine abbots of Valle de los Caidos and San Benito de Buenos Aires, (Argen tina), officiated here in Spain at a religious ceremony in thanks giving for discovery of petro-' leum in this region of the prov ince of Burgos. At well number 1, the two prelates, Abbot Justo Perez de Urbel and Abbot Lorenzo Moli nero, blessed the image of St. Norbert presented to the town by a couple. Then a Mass of thanksgiving was offered and a procession was made with the image of the saint. Petroleum was discovered on St. Norbert's feast day.
"Eight years ago/, said the Polish Primate "we swore oUr allegiance to the cross and the cross returned to our' walls 'and to our hearts and most impor tantly to our liv~s. We were concerned that this would cause a wave of protest from atheism and from the powers of dark,,:
years as a Christian nation, Cat' dinal Wyszynski said: "The future of Poland and the Church are intertwined and win remain intertwined. Even if we have to' suffer we can be certain of. our st~ngth, because of those who have strength. We can be certain that the Virgin Mal')' will come to the defense of the Polish nation,'"
Dear Monsignor Ryanr
.. ,A Franciscan Sister! GIVING' YOURSELF to a life com pletelv dedicated to the salvation of soul:; .. through prayer, work, sac rific,! and joy .•• by using your tal ents as a Nurse, Laboratory and X-Ray Technician, Secretary, Accountant, Di etitian, Seamstress, Cook, as well as in ol:her hospital departments and in a neN extension of our work in Cate chet cal and Social Service Fields.
There Is No Greater Charity! (Writ.!-giving your age-to Vocation Dlrec1:or, 767·30th Street, Rock Island. Illinois, for further details of thIs happy life.)
Enclosed please find
for
.
Name ..••••••••••••••••••••••••• :••. _
.
Address
e .•••
City ..•.••;••••••••••••••••••••••.. Zone
State
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~'l2eart8stO)jssionsBli
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Mig', Jo"" T. I,aa, Nat"1 Sec·,
Send all COllilnlnlcatlou tOI
CATHOLIC NEAR iAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION 331 MadllO. Ave. at 42" St.
Ne. YerIl. N. Y. 10017
'lItE At«:HOI •••••• fJI Pall ............ Sept. " . . .
Archbishop Alter Urges Espousal Of Unity Theme NOTRE DAME (NC) Archbishop Karl J. Alter hM called for "more emphasis on the ecumenical movement as a first step in strengthening the missionary role of the Church." The Cincinnati archbishop told more than 4,200 hiiIh school, college, and seminary students and faculty mOderators at the 21st Catholic Students' Mission C r u 8 ad e national convention "there is no choice left to us but to espouse the uuse of Christiaa unity!' Sure F01lnclatloD "No Christian can be neutral, no one can be indifferent. All. followers of Christ must with' conviction and with persistent eHort promote every action which will bring Christians to gether into the one Church of Christ," said the prelate who is the CSMC national president. "No sincere Christian," the Ohio prelate added, "can be in favor of separation, disunity, or conflict concerning the truth of "'hrist." "In order to be more effective :in our program in foreign lands, we must cultivate an un derstanding of the ecumenical movement," he stressed. "Only 1'hus can we give reality to Christ's prayer for unity and ~:uild a sure foundation for the 'total missionary, program of the t:hurch."
Bolivian Church Soaring Upward COCHABAMBA (NC) - "The Church in Bolivia is soaring up ward like a jet plane on take off," according to Archbishop Carmine Rocco, apostolic nuncio to Bolivia. The nuncio warned that there are still dangerous obstacles to the Church's growth in tilis country where he has repre sented the HolY See for more than five years. A sign of progress is the· fact that two new minor seminaries ' will be under construction soon. Their erection and the new cen tral major seminary show that' the "long upward battle to in erease the number of native vo cations is slowly being won," he said. More Needed The spread of the Cursillos de Cristiandad movement - short courses in Christianity and apos tolic action--is another impor tant factor in the Catholic life of the country, the archbishop noted. . "There has been a remarkable increase in the number of Reli. gious and priests who have come to this pOor country from Eu rope and the United States since my arrival in Bolivia," Arch bishop Rocco said. While many are needed, greater efforts must be made to make the Church self-supporting from within the country, he added.
Says Vatican Ties
Are Up to Mexico
MEXICO CITY (NC)Any es tablishment of diplomatic rela twns between Mexico and the Holy See will have to be initi. ated by the Mexican government, not by the HolY See, "according to Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, dean of the college of cardinals. Replying to questions at a press conference after his arri val in Mexico, the prelate stressed that the Catholic Church does not interfere in political affairs. "The people are the ones to decide on their form of government and they are the ones to enjoy it or suffer under it." the cardinal declared.
CAPE COD SISTER, FEEHAN HIGH TEACHERS: Sister Mary Rochelle, R.S.M., Feehan High, Attleboro, left; Sister Mary Dolorest a.L.V.M. t superior of the Catechetical
Center, West Harwich, center; and Sister Mary Kater!, R.S.M., Feehan High Attleboro, selects the appropriat p "vork sh.ops that befit their teaching assignments.
Step-Up Movement Toward Stronger Academic Conte·nt Admission Standards, Tuiti,on Costs Are Problems Continued from Page Three teacherS; and recommend im provements. The response has been overwhelming. He is booked solidly - and I mean solidly-until next Spring," said Father Koob. The federal government will give the academic improvement drive another push forward, he believes, when it corrects a legal defect that has kept large numbers of private school teach ers from taking part in federally sponsored Summer institutes for teachers. "We will see far greater par ticipation by Catholic secondary school teachers, especially the lay people, if Congress passes the bill which proposes they get the same stipend now given only to public school instructors en rolled in the institutes," be declared. Small Schools Father Koob also said his de partment is publishing a series of curriculum reports by special national committees. The sUb jects are science, mathematics, English, social studies, foreign languages and religion. ' "These are having a strong impact not only on our educa tors, but on other professionals too," he said. The days of the small parish school are numbered, he opined. "You cannot today run a good high school with less than 500 pupils," he said. "Academically and econom ically it doesn't work. Even a school with 300 pupils compli cates things enormously. You cannot offer all the courses you should and the back-breaking cost of acquiring equipment such as is needed for good lab oratories is not worth it for a small school." But eVeA with bia, Dew
schools, he said, students will still be turned away for lack of space. Because of this, Father Koob sees the day when the Confra-' ternity of Christian Doctrine and Catholic high schools will· work hand-in-hand on the high school level under direction of the diocesan superintendent of schools. He predicted that Catholic high schools will make their facilities available to CCD pro grams and will invite Catholics in public schools to join their activities. Father Koob thinks that the CCD and Catholic high Schools will coordinate religious instruc tion programs, using the same textbooks and perhaps often the same teachers. Higher: Tuition Shared.time education will further this coordination, he said. Under shared-time plans, students can split their school
Facing People GRAND RAPIDS (NC) Grand Rapids diocesan priests have been granted permission to offer Mass facing the people whenever they deem it advis able.
days between Catholic and pub lic schools. "Shared-time is going to blos som. I am convinced of it. There will be more and more, as the climate changes toward accepta bility of high schools. I think the day will come when new Cath. olic high schools will be built on close proximity to the public schools," he said. As for tuition, Father Koob sees it as going higher. "I'm sure it wilL The whole question is what the school must have and what the traffic will bear." Admission procedures will continue to be troublesome,
especially hi those areas where high schools already are u!lable to enroll all graduates of Cath olic grade schools. "Every diocese hand~es this problem in its own way," he ex plained. "The challenge is not to limit enrollment only to the brightest kids. To avoid this, so m e diocesan superintendents have divided the standard IQ rankings into divisions and ac cepted a set quota for each di vision from applicants. "I'm afraid we will have tel get used to the idea that not everyone is going to get in any more," he commented.
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20
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Sept. 10, 1964
Dioc"esa n Di rector To Give Talks For Air Force Rev. Raymond W. McCar thy, assistant at St. Patrick Church, Fall River, and Di rector of the Family Life Bureau of the Diocese, left Mc Guire" Air Force Base, New Jer. sey, on Tuesday to assist in an Air Force program in England. " Traveling as a Technical Ad viser to the Chief of Chaplains he will conduct a series of Cana and Pre-Cana Conferences for Air Force personnel. The Conferences will be held at Air Bases in West Ruislip, Lakenheath, Bentwaters and Beize Norton. Father McCarthy will also give a series of talks in London to Air Force personnel on moral standards and conduct.
Mark 34th Feast In Fairhaven Labor Day weekend marked the 34th annual observance of the Feast of Our Lady of the Angels at St. Mary's Church, North Fairhaven. The celebra tion originated with the devo tion of a group of men fmm the village of Aqua de Pau, St. Mi guel, Azores who in 1928 com missioned a sculptor to fashion a replica of the statute of Our Lady of Angels that stood in their native parish church. PARISH MODERATOR,. CONGRESS PRINCIPALS: The replica arrived in the Rev. Thomas J. Neilan, moderator <>f the CCD of St. Ann's United States August 19, 1930 and was enshrined in St. Mary's Parish, Raynham, center, m4~ets with Leonardo Luiz, New Church, North Fairhaven. Since that time, with the exception of the war years, the annual ob servance "has been faithfully carried out. This year's program inc1u~ed • parade; music, fireworks and auctions. A solemn Mass was KINGSTON (NC)...,-An inter celebrated Labor Day morning, racial justice worker criticized we can sweep away the sluma in 10 years if we acknowledge followed by a traditional dinner "Catholics in general for having every Negro man and woman as and procession. Portuguese deli allowed "the Church to appear OUr brother and sister. And cacies were available to the as the Church of the middle mean it." " thousands attending tile three" class white man.", Father Twomey, a philosophy" day festival and honored parti Father Louis Twomey, S.J., of of lavr professor at Loyola Uni cipants were surviving members versity'law school, asserted: of the committee that brought New Orleans, a member of "I J~et exceedingly weary of the statue and observance of President Johnson's Citizens the ar,ti-comm,unists. In my part Committee on Community Rela the feast to this country. of th,~ country, the South, the tions, has told some 300 repre sentatives of the New England anti-communist m 0 v em e n t s Christian Family Movement at which draw many Catholics,
the University of Rhode Island, have many people who are seg
"I have not come all these miles regati:mists or are lukewarm ill
the civil rights movement. to indulge in sweet nothings."
Broth"er M. Jude Thaddeus, "These people fail to realize" He said he wondered, "Why is the former David J. McCarthy, that c·>mmunism rises out of our son of Mrs. Sarah McCarthy, it that the Quakers, the Jews, failurHs." and the late David A. McCarthy, the secular humanists seem more He related that in recent ra of 252 BlackstOne Street, Fall willing than" Catholics to take cial disorders in several large chances in the civil rights move River, SS. Peter and Paul Par cities "many of the whites in " ish, has been professed in the ment?" volved were Catholics." Brothers of Our Lady of Provi. "We drive through the slums,
Discu~sing the rise of commu- . dence in a ceremony that also dust off our clothes and say, marked the fifth anniversary of 'Thank God I don't live there,' If nism in "95%nominally Catho lic" Latin America, Father the founding of the group by he declared.
Most Rev. Russell J. McVinney, Weary of Some
D.D., Bishop of Providence. Admitted as a novice into the Father Twomey called CFM community was Brother M. members to engage in social ac
Philip of Jesus, the former tion programs in slums, the
James M. Bizier, son of Mr. and presence and acceptance of Ml"S. Philip Bizier of Blanding which "is one of the most seri ROUTE 6, ,HUTTLESON AVE. Road, Rehoboth, Our Lady of ous indictments against the Ne,n Fairhaven Drive-In Mt. Carmel Parish. United States." Italiun Dinners Our Specialty The ceremony took place at "I believe," the 58-year-old the Novitiate of St. Joseph the Service On Patio Worker in Warwick, R. 1., and Florida-born Jesuit said, ''that presiding at the ceremony was Rt. Rev. Arthur A. Sullivan. ~
Bedford, left, and" Patricia Makin, So. Dartmouth, right, who participated in panels in the 17th annual CCD 00. . vention.
Jesuit Cr'iticizes Catholic Laity in "Race Issue Asserts 'Communism Rises' Out of Our Failures'
Men of Diocese Society Members
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Annual Pilgrimage
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Members and friends of L'Union St. Jean Baptiste d'Amerique will make their lOth annual pilgrimage to La Salette Shrine, Attleboro, Sun day, Sept. 13. Msgr. Stephen Grenier, Woonsocket, is in charge of the religious program and announces that the pilgrim age sermon will be delivered by Rev. Albert H. Brindamour of St. Ann's Church, Woonsocket.
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Twomey said, "our brethren in of our attitude toward tianity and democracy." the southern hemisphere, in "It is going to be hard not .. cluding bishops, priests, nuns' conform and to give witne98 .. and Brothers, and the weIl heeled and well-scrubbed laity Christ in the" extremely impoPoo have allowed themselves to be tant area of race relations," tM Jesuit said. identified with the oligarchy." He asserted that "we canncn roll back communism without a Christian solution" to" such. problems" as race relations and poverty. He calculated: "Atti
tude toward race is the acid test
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