Bishop Connolly Announces Faculty for New Regional'High
Jesuits to Staff Boysl School
World Famous Educators Accept Invitatio'n
The Society of Jesus - better known as the lesuits - will staff the new diocesan regional high School which will open to Greater Fall River boys hi the Fall of 1966. Announcement that the world-famous teach Ing order will establish its first community in the Fall River diocese was made today by the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River. It is expected that ultimately a total of approximately 30 members of the 400-year old teaching- order will live in the faculty residence building which will adjoin the educational insti.
Boston College High, Boston. Xavier High, Concord. Cranwell Preparatory, Lenox. Fairfield Preparatory, Fairfield, Conn. Cheverus High, Portland, Me. Jesuits, who have been laboring in the United States since 1833, conduct three of the better known New England colleges. They are: Holy Cross College in Worcester, Boston College in the Commonwealth's capital city and Fairfield Uni versity in the wealthy Connecticut community.
~ution.
"The proposed institution will be the sixth eolleg-e preparatory school in New England con ducted by the Jesuits and will bring to a total of more than 50 high schools directed by Jesuits in the United States," Very Rev. John V. O'Connor, S.J., New England Jesuit Provincial said today. The Fall River Diocese has provided the Jesuits
with a number of priests since it was first estab lished as a Diocese in 1904. The other five New England college prepara tory high schools conducted by the Jesuits are:
There are a total of 3,100 boys studying in the five New England high and preparatory schools conducted by the Jesuits. The new regional high school will be built in the northeast section of Fall River in the area bounded by Elsbree Street, President Avenue and Route 24.
The drive for funds to finance the construc tion of the new school plant will be launched this ... Fall. The Fall River School will be the fourth Regional High School built under the guidance of FR. O'CONNOR, S.J. - BISHOP CONNOLLY "Bishop Connolly.
The ANCHOR
District Serrans Convene Sunday At Bishop Stang High School Serra District 40 Convention will open Sunday at noon with a Mass for Serrans and their wives in the Chapel of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth. After brunch, wives of Serra Club members from New Bedford, Providence, Fall River and social hour followed by the ban Attleboro will follow a pro quet at 6:30. MQst Rev. James L. gram of interest to them Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall from 2:15 to 4:45 while their River, will speak at the banquet
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 12, 1963
Vol. 7, No. 38
© 1963 The Anchor
PRICE tOe $4.00 per Year
Fall River Women's Council Installation Next Sunday Officers of the Fall River Diocesan Council of the National Council of Catholic Women will assume their postR at 3 Sunday afternoon. Sept. 15 in the chapel of Our Lady of Good Counsel Retreat House, East Freetown. Bish op Connolly will install the Me., national direc group, assisted by Very Rev. WaterVille, tor of the NCCVV. Thomas F. Walsh and Rev. The first business meeting of William McMahon. Benedic Turn to Page Twelve tion will take place at this time. A tea will follow, with mem bers of the New Bedford district as hostesses. Mrs. Leo J. Teles manick. president of the New Bedford district, and Mrs. James Leith are in charge of arrange ments. Miss Margaret Lahey has planned the installation cere monies. Among honored guests will be Mrs. Evareste LaVerdiere of
Boys' High Campaign The initial meeting for the hnd Raising Campaign to eonstruct the Boys' High School in Fall River will be held Thursday night, Sept. 19, at 7:30 in the Sacred Heart Pa rochial School Auditorium, corner of Linden and Pine Streets, Fall River. . All pastors and a steering committee from each parish will meet with Bishop Con nolly at this first stage of the '1,750,000 campaign to be con ducted in 36 parishes' in the Greater Fall River area.
PAUL vanK. THOMSON
Dual Blessings Bishop Connolly will officiate
at a dual blessing at Espirito Santo Parish, Fall River, Sunday morning. At 10:30, the Ordinary of the Diocese will bless the new parochial school and then bless the new Chutch at 11 o'clock.
husbands and other Serrans par ticipate in convention activities. Master of Ceremonies for the afternoon will be Attorney Maurice F. Downey of the New Bedford Serra Club, host to the Convention. He will introduce District Governor Dr. Allyn Sul livan and Rev. Joseph Hughes, Director of Vocations of the Dio cese of Providence. . At 3:15 there will be panel discussions with the Providence Serra Club presenting one on "Attendance and New Member Indoctrination," the Attleboro Club discussing "Program Pan el," and the Fall River members treating "Club Activities." Very Rev. George A. Schlichte, rector of Pope John XXIII Sem inary for Delayed Vocations, 'Weston, Mass., will speak at 4 o'clock. At 4:45 the Serrans will be joined by their wives for Bene diction of the Most Blessed Sac rament and then there will be a .
Catholics, Protestants Join in Inter-Faith Meet At St. Augustine's, Vineyard ~aven The ecumenical movement has brought out at least one problem pastors of all de
nominations share ..:- every one has trouble getting his con gregation to sit up front! This was demonstrated at a memor able inter-faith discussion held in St. Augustine's parish hall on the island of Martha's Vineyard. But after Rev. Cornelius O'Neill, pastor of St. Augustine's, and Rev. Henry L. Bird of Vineyard Espicopal Parish, co-sponsors of the event, managed to move people into the front rows, everything went swimmingly. It started out swimmingly, in fact, when Rev. Charles Von
Euw, professor of patristic theo logy at St. John's Seminary, Brigb.ton, and Paul Chapman,
FR. CORNELIUS J. O'NEILL
director of Packard Manse, Stoughton, a headquarters for inter-faith discussion, arrived on the Island for the program. They went swimming and splashily agreed that ecumenism was a fine thing when it afforded op portunities for such relaxation :on a hot Summer day. Swimming apart, however, the program grew out of amiable discussions among the Vin~yard clergy, and with the permission and encouragement of Bishop 'Connolly, plans were made for the inter-faith gathering, which was attended by ministers of all Island churches, also residents and Summer visitors including a sprinkling of vacationing sem inarians, p r i est 8 and other ·churchmen. Turn to Page EighteeA
and featured speaker will be Dr. Paul vanK. Thomson, director ot the Liberal Arts Honors program for talented students at Provi dence College and professor of English there, who will speak on "The Church and Changing Times." A native of New Jersey, Dr. Thomson received his A.B. de gree from Columbia University and the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Brown University. During VVorld VVar. II he served in the Navy and was attached to the Turn to Page Twelve
Somerset Parish May Construct New Edifice A new church for St. Thomas More Parish, Somer set, will be provided be ginning next Spring if the parishioners desire it, Bishop Connolly noted in a letter to the pastor, Rev. Joseph K. VVelsh. The letter was read at all Masses in the Somerset Church on Sunday and a copy of it was reprinted on the parish bulletin that was distributed to fill the parishioners.
Turn to Page Eleven
Grade Teachers Meet Tomorrow William Reedy of the Sad lier Co.., one of the authors of "Our Life in God," reli gion textbook series adopted this year by schools of the Dio cese, will be featured speaker at an all-day institute for ele mentary teachers to be held to morrow at Sacred Heart School, Fall River.
Mr. Reedy will discuss and ex plain the kerygmatic approach to catechetics as used in the new Turn to Page EighteeA
2
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 12, 1963
Clergy Meeting On Race Issue In St. Louis ST. LOUIS (NC)-Priests of the Archdiocese of St. Louis have been invited by Joseph Cardinal Ritter to attend a three-day "Clergy Con ference on Race" here as a prel.. ude "to a program of action in our parishes and in the entire archdiocese." The conference is one of the first' major moves of the newly established Archdiocesan Com mission on Human Rights. In his letter, the Cardinal said: 'Pr~ralll of Aetion' '"The C h u r c h , especially through its priests, cannot and must not delay anY longer in giving leadership in the civil rights issue, since justice and charity have so :flagrantly been i&nored or rejec.ted· • • "It is our wish that the Clergy Conference on Race lead to • program of action in our par llIhes and In the entire archdi oeese. It is also our wish that our priests, well informed on current issues and motivated by a love for all men, will rally our laity to the cause of those who have suffered so long at the hands of those who have de nied them not only their God given rights, but the charity of Christ as welL"
Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sun. day. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Common Preface. SATURDAY-Exaltation of the Holy Cross. II Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of the Holy Cross. SUNDAY - XV Sunday After Pentecost.II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect Seven Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-S5. pornelius, Pope, and Cyprian, Bishop, Martyrs; III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect 55. Euphemia and Companions, Martyrs; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY - Mass of previolHl Sunday. IV Class. Green. Masa Proper; No Gloria; Second Collect Impression of Stigmata of st. Francis, Confessor; no Creed; Common Preface. WEDNESDAY-Ember WednK day at September. II Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo ria; second Collect St. Joseph of Cupertino, COnfessor; no Creed; Common Preface. THURSDAY - SS. Januarius, Bishop, and Companions, Mar tyrs. III Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface.
Canonization of Father- Judge Possible
Boston-Born Priest Founded Trinitarians WASHINGTON (NC) - The first step has been taken here toward the possible canonization of an American-born priest who founded two religious commun ities and a lay apostolic organi zation. An ecclesiastical court has been established to investigate the life and writing of Father Thomas A. Judge, C.M., who died here Nov. 23, 1933. Persons who knew Father Judge will testify before this group in the months ahead. Father Judge, a Vincentian priest, waa founder of a com munity of priests and Brothers (the Missionary Servants of the Most Holy Trinity), a commun ity of nuns {the Missionary Ser vants of the Most Blessed Trin ity), and a lay organization (the Missionary cenacle Apostolate). Cenaele Apostolate The men'. community num bers 238 members staffing 93 missions in the United States and Puerto Rico. Its headquar ters are in nearby Silver Spring, Md. The women's community has 522 members in 24 dioceses in the U.S., including Fall River, and in Puerto Rico. Its headquar ters are in Philadelphia. The Missionary Cenacle Apo. tolate has some 2,000 members, chiefly in areas where the Trin ity priests, Brothers and nuns have their religious houses. Thomas Augustine Judge was born in South Boston, Aug. 23, 1868, the son of Irish immi grants. He helped his mother support the family of six chil dren following his father's death in 1887. Recovered trom Dlness At the age of 21 he entered St. Vincent's Seminary, German town, Pa. He was ordained a Vincentian priest in 1899. At the time of his ordination
'Pharmacists Plan First Convention NEW BEDFORD (NC)-Father' Albert F. Shovelton of St. James Church here, spiritual director of the Catholic Pharmacists Guild, will offer Mass in St. Peter's Church Chicago, on Monday, Oct. 7, for delegates to the first annual convention of the National Catholic Pharma cists Guild of the United States. Mass will be followed by a Communion breakfast. Timothy P. Keating of th~ city, guild president, said the organ~ation was formed to pr~ mote the moral teachings of the Catholic Church as well as com pliance with all civil laws and regulations in the practice of pharmacy.
The guild, which is affiliated with the National Council of Men. numbers graduate Legion of Decency Catholic and registered pharmacists The following films are to be throughout the country among added to the lists in their respec . its members. tive classifications: Keating said reports of the or Unobjectionable for General. pnization's first year of op&a Patronage--Siege ~f the Saxona. tion and election of officers will Unobjectionable for Adulil feature the convention. and Adolescents-The Haunting. Unobjectionable for Adulta- Dr. Crippen. Hierarchy to Keep
Old Prayer Forms FORT,¥ HOURS DEVOTION Sept. l~H 0 I Y Cross, Fait River. Sl .Joseph, Attleboro. Sept. 22--st. Roch, Fall River. Sacred Heart, Taunton. SePt. 2O-Sl Louis de France, Swansea. Sl Anthony of Padue, New Bedford. Oct. 6-Our Lady of the HoI y Rosary. Fall River. Our' Lady of the Holy Rosary, Taunion.
BUENOS AIRES (NC)-The Argentine Hierarchy has decided to maintain the traditional Spanish versions of the Our Father and some other major prayers instead of the revised forms provided in the new Latin-Spanish version of the Roman Ritual. The Argentine Bishops' Con ference at its meeting here in dicated, however, that the new forms of the prayers might be adopted at some later time. Prayers involved include the Apostles' Creed and the Con. fiteor. The new ritual, which pro vides for the use of Spanish in much of the rites for adminis tering the saera~nts, Wall pre pared under the auspices of the Latin American Bishops' Coun cil. It wa. approved by the Ho17 See ill June. Ita.
FATHEa .JUDGE
he was suffering from a serioull case of tuberculosis and was ex pected to die soon. But he re covered and lived another 35 years. Between 1903 and 1915 Father Judge was a member of Vincen tian mission bands stationed at Germantown and at Springfield,
Mass. He was active in many parts of the eastern U. S. as a . preacher, confessor and spiritual director. . In 1909, as assistant pastor at • St. John the Baptist church,· Brooklyn, N. Y., he formed the' nucleta of his lay apostolate group. which engaged in spir itual and corporal works of mercy, especially among immi grants. Forms Communities In 1915 Father Judge became superior of the Vincentians' mis .ion at Opelika, Ala. Unable to obtain nuns to start a school there, he brought in members of his lay apostolate group. It was from among them that the two religious communities were' formed, with their first head quarters at Holy Trinity, Ala. Father Judge was given per mission by his superiors in 1920 to devote his full time to devel opment of the new groups he had founded. Under his direc tion, their work spread to many parts of the eastern and south ern U. S. and· to Puerto Rico. Father Judge himself was known for his warm friendliness and his devotion to the spiritual life. Following his death here- in 1933 Father Judge was buried at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Philadelphia. The Holy See in 1958 granted pontifical status to the communities he founded.
Catholic Schools Open Peacefully NEW ORLEANS (NC)-eath. olic schools of the Archdiocese of New Orleans began their sec ond year of integrated classe. without disturbances. Msgr. Henry C. Bezou, arch diocesan superintendent at schools, said he did not know how many Negroes were in the! schools since the office does not keep records on the race 01 pupils. There were two trouble spow when schools' opened last year. One was at Our Lady of Good Harbor school at Buras, 60 mile. below New Orleans. The other waa at Our Lady of Prompt Succor school in Westwego, across the Mississippi river Irom New Orleans. The Buras school was dam aged Aug. 26 by a fire and ex plosion. Archbishop John P. Cody, Apostolic AdministratOl' of New Orleans, has ordered the school closed. Last year it opened with integrated classes, but after a few days no studenta showed up. The school was boy cotted the entire year. At Westwego, school enroll ment last year dropped from. nearly 800 students to about 250 when two Negro children at tended/ classell. The enrollment there this September is up .W about 600, including one addi tional Negro child.
Necrology SEPT. 11
Rev. Charles A. J. Don\)vaJl,
Disputes Press Myth Vatican Official Denies Roman Curia
Opposed to Vatican Council
NEW YORK (NC, - A Vati can official, who is a former editor of a U.S. Catholic news paper, has disputed a "myth"~ created by the secular press of "the opposition of the Roman Curia to the second Vatican CounciL" Msgr. Raymond Etteldorf, for mer editor of the Witness, Dubu que, Iowa, archdiocesan new-s paper, now attached to the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Church in Rome, as serted "the impression has been widely received that the Curi. stands as a powerful, ultracon servative force against the pro posed reforms of the council.· In an article in the current issue of America, Jesuit weekly magazine, the monsignor wrote: "This is false for three rea IOns: by reason of the Curia'. constitution, it could not happen; by reason of itt juridical func tion, it may not happen; and by reason of the actual stand of its individual members, it does not happen." . Assist Pope The monsignor explained the Curia, the Vatican administra tive staff, is not • single body, but "an aggregation of offices and persons" used by the pope iD exercising his authority. He
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Msgr. Etteldorf said the "pur pose of the organs of the Curia is to assist the pope in adminiB- . tering the universal affairs of the Church." He also stressed that members of the Curia are collaborators of the pope and are appointed personall7' by him.
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said 12 ~ngregations, three tri bunals and six offices are in the Curia make-up. He asserted: '~Any statement to the effect that the Curia has a policy on the council, or on anything, is incorrect. The Curia cannot have a policy on the council, or on anything else, be cause it is not an organic unit;. rather it is made up of separate organic units."
1949, Pastor, Immaculate CoJ'o ception, No. Easton. SEPT. 15 Rev. Henry J. Mussely, 1934, Pastor, St. John Baptist, Fall River. SEPT. 16 Rt. ~ev. Jean A. Prevost, P.A.. P.R., 1925, Pastor, Notre Dame, Fall River. SEPT. 1'1 . Rev. Thomas F. McNulty, 1954, Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bedford. SEPT. 18 Rev. Luke Golla, SS.CC., 1945. Seminary of Sacred Hearts, Wareham.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept.· 12, 1963
Catholic College Students OlJtline Year's Projects
Forty Girls Enter Nursing School
MINNEAPOLIS (NC) Projects to discourage school dropouts, pro v ide college Icholarships for Neg roe s, and critically examine academic in Catholic colleges will be major concerns of the National Federation of Catholic 4!:ollege Students in the coming lFear. Delegates to 'the NFCCS 20th annual congress here voted these "special projects" as the basis for the federation's 1963 64 programing. Congress delegates left imple mentation of all three special projects to the option of member eolleges, and provided that the federation may formulate and elassify as "urgent" other pro jects that may develop during the year. The school dropout project, new for NFCCS, recommends 4ttat member colleges research and discuss "the full scope of 4Itis problem ..... to establish t'he possible avenues of work ill their specific areas." Colleges of the New York lllew Jersey region have pio Ileered such efforts with tutoring ef dropouts students and com munity center study sessions. SPOD8Ol' Scholarships The s c hoI a r s hip program messed support of Catholic Scholarships for Negroes, Inc., "'through publicity and fund .ising." Some N·FCCS member colleges previously have contributed to the organization, which h8fJ aided 450 Negro students since • was organized 16 years ago. "Further," the federation pro ject plan states, "it is hoped that aany student groups * . . • will .ndertake projects 10 sponsor echolarships on their own part or in conjunction with their .mool." The pIe to examine college eurricula calls for "discussioruJ on campus between students and 6lculty ... • • to find out what we have now, and if it is meet ing our needs." Campus conferences are to lead to regional seminars "com piling the results and ideas" and to national conferences and pro ject reports.
~rricula
Holy See Answers
Appeal for Funds
UNITED NATIONS (NC) ~e Holy See has donated $10,000 in reply to an appeal for funds by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The office said it made its ap peal to complete progr~ms on behalf of the last group of post war refugees in Europe who still require international aid. The Sovereign Military Order of Malta, ancient Catholic mm:. tary and religious order which engages in international charity work, contributed $1,000.
REV. ROBERT 1.. STANTON and CAPT. FRANK A. ANDREWS
Father Stanton With Thresher Search Group !ligh in Praise of Catholic Commander "The most interesting e~erience of my life." That's how Rev. Robert L. Stanton, curate at Immaculate Conception Church, Fall River, described his role in efforts to lo cate the nuclear submarine U.S.S. Thresher, lost 260 miles off Provincetown with 129 men aboard last April 10. A Naval Reserve Chaplain since 1957, Father Stanton received a hurry call to serve as sail the seas in defense of coun commanded a variety of naval chaplain to Task Group 89.9, try. His devotion to duty is ex vessels, and headed the scienCe charged with responsibility ceeded only by his love of God," department at the Naval Acad. Nine Children emy. He was promoted to his fur final search for the 'l'hresher. He was with the unit from Aug. 15 through Sept. 1 and is high in his praise of Capt.· . Frank A. Andrews, Commander of Submarine Development Group Two based in New Lon don, Conn., who headed the search party. "Captain Andrews is an ex emplary Catholic," says Father Stanton, noting that throughout the days of search for the Thresher, the Captain served Mass and received Holy Com munion daily. "He arose in time for 6:15 Mass before suPervising the op erations of the bathyscaph Ti"ieste. His example to young officers and members of the erew produced· an atmosphere of dedication and wholehearted cooperation. "He is a naval officer in the highest tradition of those who
Captain Andrews, a native of Newport, graduated from the U. S. Naval Academy in Decem ber, 1941. He served aboard de stroyers and submarines in World War II. He holds a doctorate in phys ics from Yal~, has done research work in physics at the U. S. N a val Research Laboratory,
Honor Fr. Hartigan PORTLAND (NC) - Father
John Freeman, chaplain of the
Illinois State Farm, Vandalia,
Ill., was elected president at the American Catholic Correctional Chaplains Association ann u a 1 meeting here in Oregon. Father Edward Hartigan, chaplain of the Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Walpoll, was elected president-designate.
.Says Race Question Is Moral, Religious SALINA (NC)-Fair employ
ment practices were advocated
as a means of establishing racial' harmony by Salina's Bishop
Frederick W. Freking here in
Kansas.
""Unless all racial and national
groups are given an equal oppor
tunity to work and to educate
and train themselves for ad
vancement," the Bishop said, "it
will bt> a long, hard struggle be
fore we achieve in practice the
racial equality which as Chris
tians we profess."
- Bishop Freking said the heart of the race question is moral and religious since it concerns the rights of man and his attitudes toward his fellow men. He re
minded that this was emphasized in the 1958 statement of the U. S. Bishops.
TAKE TIME OUT For Personal Inventory and Renewal
PERPETUALS: Brother lerome Lowney, C.S.C., son of Mrs. Irene Lowney, of Somerset, made final profes iion of vows at St. Joseph's Novitiate, Valatie, N.Y.
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present rank July I, 1961. Married to the former Maxine Johnson, he is the father of nine children. The family lives in New London. Father stanton's association with the Navy began during the Korean War, When he served as a full-time chaplain. His Re serve duties include lectures to trainees, service to Navy fam. ilies and administration of Navy Relief.
Of 40 students entering St. Anne's Hospital School of Nurs ing, Fall River, 31 are from the Diocese, one from Malden, Mass., and, eight from other states, in. cluding Rhode Island and New Hampshire. From Fall River are Mary C. Alix, Barbara Ann Barboza, Rita Chouinard, Diane D'Amour, Pa tricia Faria. Kathleen Ledo, Annette Le vasseur, Charlotte Pelland, Jeanne St. Amand, Madeline Souza. From New Bedford: Lorraine Belanger, Brenda Bonneau, Gail Charbonneau, Jocelyn Demers, Mariette Gagnon. Patricia Gleason, Jeannette Leger; Constance Loranger, Con_ stance Martel. From Taunton: Tarley Miller, Donna Murphy, Barbara West. gate. From Fairhaven: Patricia Ann. Oister, Sandra Patenaude, Marie Perry. From other parts of the Dio cese: Mary Ann Baxter, Center ville; Doris Hebert, North West port; Madeleine James, Matta poisett; Patricia Maucione, West port; Frances Zembo, Somerset; Barbara McManus, Swansea. From Rhode Island: Catherine Bounakes, Mary Ann Latella, Mary Ann Simpson, Tiverton; Gloria Campbell and Vivian Kelly, Pawtucket; Eileen Me tayer, Little Compton. Also Dorothy Lacasse and Lor raine Thibault, Claremont, N. H .. and Jeanne Peterson, Malden, Mass.
To Attend Parley Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson" Sacred Heart Parish, North At tleboro, will be among delegate. to the annual meeting of the Superior Council of the United States, Society of St. Vincent de Paul. The conclave is scheduled for Friday through Monda~ Sept. 27 to 30, in Cleveland.
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THE ANCHOR~
Assub e.-,rIet. EN.tIication· h Onl, ewe Ie, Prejudice
Thurs., Sept. 12, 1963
British Catholics Attack Official's Morolity Stand LONDON (NC) - Brit ain's Minis'ter of Education, Sir Edward Boyle, came un der fire from Catholics here for defending one of his senior officials who publicly condoned premarital promiscuity. The row started when Dr. Peter Henderson, the principal medical officer of the Ministry of· Education, told a meeting on health education at Cambridge 00 did not consider an engaged couple who had intercourse un chaste. Catholics and other Christian leaders protested, saying he should be reprimanded or dis missed, as such a statement was particularly dangerous coming fr(lm one of the top men in the Education Ministry. But Sir Edward Boyle in an official statement said: "Some people think it wrong that there should be no official ministry view but it is not my duty to lay down the law on this sub ject. Different views are held by honorable people on the ques' tien whether premarital inter course, between engaged couples is in itself immoral. Neither I nor my pre dec e s s 0 r shave claimed the authority to lay down that on2 view was right and all others wrong. , Urge Confrontation "The position has always been and remains t'1at under our sys tem of education the teaching of moral values is the province-of the teachers inside the schools just as inside the home it is the province of the parents. The ministry does not lay down what teachers should teach on these matters'" '" *" The Universe, national Catho lic newpaper, declared that "·public opinion has been af fronted by this public servant." It urged Catholic members <Yf Parliament to confront the min ister on the matter when the House of Commons resumes in October. Lord Longford, chief Catholic spokesman in the House of Lords, in a letter of protest to the Guardian national news paper, objected to the minister leaving morality to the teachers in the schools. "What if they recommend adultery or homo sexuality?" he asked.
Ask Ohio Tax Funds For AU City Pupits WICKLIFFE (NC)-The local Citizens for Educational Free clem group is circulating peti tions for a charter amendment which would authorize distribu tion of school tax money to all children, regardless, of the school they attend. Harold Woodman, area CEF executive director, said if enough signatures are obtained the proposed amendment will go on the ballot in November. If it passes, he declared, it will authorize an amount of not less than $50 for each school pupil each year in the city. The money would be paid directly to - the school selected by the child's parents. The proposal is similar to OIle rejected last May by the city council and school board of Bay Village in neighboring Guya hoga County. The Bay Village proposal also was initiated by 1lhat area's CEF, but no effort was made to bring the issuedi rectly to the people.
GIAN'f-CYO DAY: San Francisco and Bay area cham pionship teams from the fourth through the eighth grades received trophies prior to the Giants-Cardinals game~ Stan Musial and Auxiliary BiRhop :Merlin J. Guilfoyle of San Francisco assist Jimmy Davenport in presenting the seventh grade championship trophy to ,C1i.pt. Glen Marchant of Holy Name Parish. NC Photo.
GARY (NC)-"Complete -erad Economic opportunity. "Be.-. ication" is the only remedy f(]I' cause the Negro has been hin race prejudice. Bishop Andrew dered in his preparations for 00 G. Grutka has declared. cupati0!1S 'l'equirlng special skills, The Indiana prelate in a pas justice calls for special efforts toral letter on racial justice said in the behalf of his training." "inbred social evils" such as race 'Two Faces' prejudice sometimes require Education. "It is hypocrisy to "drastic action" to correct them. teach democracy "in segregated He said "right thinking per .schools." sons and practicing Christians" Organizations and institutione;· should "lend them (Negroes) a "Organizations bearing the name hand" in their efforts to win 'Catholic' or associated wiUt equal treatment. Catholic causes ought to have On specific topics Bishop qualifications for membership Grutka made these comments: which are identical in every re Housing. "Christian' doctrine spect for any sincere applic,ant. and democratic principles .af * * * No one who considers him firm the rights of all persoAS to live where they choose .and, in, self .a Christian should join aJll1' association which has as' ii* homes which their economic f)6 stated or implied purpose the sition can afford." Legislawrs hindrance or the humiliation elf' and voters should back lair another group because of r_.housing laws.
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l\USSIONARY SERVANTS: Active in Attleboro, Hyannis, Osterville and Wareham are the MissionarY Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity. At Attleboro Cenacle, in Holy Ghost parish, Sisters operate kindergarten
Official Opposes Schools' 'Barring ·Mentionof God PITTSBURGH (NO) - A new public school superin tendent told his teachers in a pre-school meeting here
for over 100 tots, also do home visiting. Left, Sister Mary Matthew, Sister Regina Marie teach catechism. Right, Sister William Catherine visits parish home.
,Missionary Servants Oifer Share in Works To All Members 01- Family A religious community that offers membership to the entire family - that's the Missionary Cenacle Apostolate, of which the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity, active in Attleboro,. Hyannis, Osterville and Wareham, are a part. The Mission QlfY Cenacle Apostolate, as the larger organization is known, was founded in 1909 in Brooklyn, N.Y. by Rev. regular meetings, monthly re acles, the Sisters operate kinder Thomas A. Judge. Starting treat exercises, days of-recollec gartens and pre-primary schools in addition to teaching catechism with five members, he "out tion and annual retreats. On the active side, members to public school children. Other lined for them the good that
,that Church - State separation doesn't mean barring all mentwn of God in schools. "In my opinion and in no ,way differing 'from the Supreme ilOUhl be accomplished for souls Court, I believe that the separa ttY a, highly spiritualized laity, tion of Church from State does ..alert .and self-sacrificing in the IIOt demand a separation of God in.tel'esU of the Church!' .bm schools," Si.dDey P.Mar Father Judge was active in lland. ;Sr., declared. ~ving_ parish missions and he SpeaklOgatan ·amwal.-meet ffitve!oped' units of the new 1)r ,JIig of public school tearners ,gani2lation .in various .parishes
'held .before _the o.peniJ,),g of the ,.where 'he was called. By 1915 the
«:bool ·year, Marland .said he CeGaele' Apostolate ·was firmly
40es not look for any "ritual .or 1 roM-ed; .and today it is estab
eeremony.or prayer" in pub-lic l.iaAc:li, in 26 American Archdio
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"'Sut I do not thinkthet.teadt 'PuKIlO :Rtco. en or chlldrenmustJle expeded 'Intlldditionto the Sisters' eom : . pretend. Qy ·word .or 'deed mumty,there i$;.a eommunity while in ,school .that .there •isao _ priests. -and brothers, known Cod, if that is their belief," the .as. . the 'MissioDal'Y servants of .-choal superintendent said. ,theMest Holy Trinity. Find 8Ubstita&e .JlIer La3'people '''The teaChing of monal .and ',Married women may join the • ~iritual value~, consistent with CIte broad non -demJIJunati<Hlal ·M·adonna Cenacle of 'the aposto truths of our cUlture, is inescap 'la.lIe. 'l'beSisters say that the wcation of marriage -presents able;" be added. . Teachers were instrueted at ,many ·()pportunities to bring the' the meeting to remove Bible iaUh to· others, in ways as simple Ileading and recitation of ·the asa' backyard conversation or a Lord's Pr<\lyer from school fri-end-ly mid - morning coffee opening exercises, in line with 'break. I High school youngsters may ·last June's ruling on the issue join junior Cenacles and do such by the U.S. Supreme Court. apastolic work as teaching cate At the same time it was an chism, making sure little chil llOunced that faculty commit tees will be named in each ~ren get to'Mass, and aiding the eehool to find a substitute for M- iss ion a r y Servant Sisters the religious practices in "the where they are established in a best in our American heritage parish. 'Men have their own groups, ,in words and in thoughts ud in too. which may engage in such music." Catholic Action as pushing hos pitalized: wheelchair patients to Urge Mass Liturgy M~ influencing friends at work or sehoolmates, and i:ln Entirely in English gaging' in occupations where it PHILADBLPHIA (NC)A res is possible to influence others .olution advocating that the lit direttly, such as teaching, or urg·y of the Mass be entirety in _youth welfare work. Ji',oglillh was adopted ,at tbean Purpose of the Cenacle Apos aual meeting of' the Vernacular tolate, say the Sisters in the Society here. .Fall River Diocese, is "to effect Some 200 delegates approved ,that every Catholic become a ,tile resolution - and . half of ,missionary, to fulfill the motto: 8lem were priests. The resolu 'Be _good. do good, be a power tion stated that when Mass is 'fur good.''' .ffered in a parish church with Training is two-fold, spiritual people present, the liturgy and· missionary. Spiritual adi Shol11.-l he ~··q""ly in English for vitiesinclude individual spiri pastoral reasons. tual direction, conferences at
Says Council Wants Intelligible Rites LOUVAIN (NC) - A liturgy e x per t told 400 missioners meeting here that the Fathers of the ecumenical council want changes which will make the liturgy understandable, not juat changes in rules.
Fat her Salvatore MarsilI, O.S.B" moderator of the Ponti fical Liturgical Ins tit ute in Rome, said the clergy must con duties include home and hospi tal visiting, training of altar sider links between sacred cere boys and choirs and instruction . monies and actual civilizatifm. He was speaking at the Catholic of converts. University of Louvain'a 3Srd Vacation schools occupy the Missiological Week. Summer months and' ·of course there are the Cenacles for Ilt¥' peOtlle which operate year Whi... f ...... ,Dairy round, under the aegis of the Sisters. "SPECIAL MILK
may participate in leadership training courses, supervised mis sionary activities, CCD work, discussion clubs and recreational end youth work. Prepac:ate Faiib, The Sister-s, best-+known 81'm &f the apostolatein the Fall River Diocese, .concentrate on preservation rather· than propa gation of the faith. A primary 'Hyannis sqperior, or Cl1St~ tlWl js;;parish census:work. 0nce dien, is Sister Anita Marie; io. "the ,ab'a'n-dolbed, ,the unin Osterville it's Sister Stephen struckld, the needy and· tbe un Gerard-; in Wareham Sister baptized" have been discovered, Marie Michele; and in Attleboro the- Sisters do whatever is most Sister Grace Angelica. Alto needed for them. gether there are 15 Missionary . In other areali, the community. Servants in the Diocese and 'also concentrates on social -wel some 500 throughout the ooun-· fare work, especially the field try_ of child welfare. Sist-ers are Girls interested in the .work of often assigned to Catholic Wel ,the community should Ite be fare Bureaus where 'they "ar tween 16 and 20. They can ob range adoptions, ami cari:l for tain further information about the spiritual and temporal needs Us work from any of the Sisters of the aged, the unemphwed, in the Diocese or from Reverend the handicapped, the delin Mother Superior, 3501 Solly quent." Avenue, Philadelphia 36, Pa. Another and most important tool is the SImple one of friend ship. Missionary Cenacles, as the Sisters' convents are known, are open to all, and offer a warm Paint and Wallpaper welcome to every comer. The Dupont Paint real Host, say the Sisters, is New Bedford Christ in the Eucharist, and -cor. Middle St. eVi:lry Cenacle visitor makes a Q.~ 422 Acusb. Ave. visit to the Blessed Sacrament before he leaves the house. PARKING . In the Attleboro, Hyannis, Rear of Store Osterville and Wareham Cen
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6
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall. River-Thurs. Sept. 12, 1963
Needed, Link
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Film Festival Following in the tradition of Pope John, his predecessor in the See of Venice, Giovanni Cardinal Urbani, the present Patriarch, invited industry leaders of the Venice Film Festival to a reception and in his address to them placed emphasis on the positive approach Catholics must have to the movies. While pointing out that there were unfortunately too many films centered around a "painful reality, themes of exasperated sexuality and problems of congenital perver sion," the Cardinal voiced what he said was the prevailing view of the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council: that more Catholics should be interested in motion picture pro duction. . It is legitimate. for Catholics to criticize films and to evaluate what is being produced. But it is of even greater value for Catholics to involve themselves in the production . of movies and to bring their talents and values to films. The Cardinal asserted that "specialists are needed, and promising experiments and undertakings of various groups and institutions should be encouraged and helped." The psalmist has said that the earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof. Therefore, nothing in the world is alien to the follower of the Lord, and his influence, ill an artistic and creative way, can contribute much to the film industry, can help him develop his own personality, can influence his fellow men and help in the aim of "re storing all things in Christ.» The contribution made by the Catholic to the industry must not be heavy-handed and cannot plead good intention as a substitute for ability. But there are surely Catholics with the talent and desire to work in this -medium. They should know that they have the encouragement of their fellow Catholics to do just that.
,
. . By Rev. John R. foister... St. Aftthony's Church, New lIedfo",
CONFIRMATION IMPOSITION OF HANDS How expressive are the hands! They speak of • man's character and occupa tion without his having ...
tered a word; a flicker of the finger and people eome and gee the fingers close to form a fist and fear is felt; an open hand expresses willing h e I p; bands t urn e d toward heaven 01' palm - to palm aid and inspire prayer. No wonder then, that the Church has used the hands to externalIr show what is going on in the spir itual order. One of the earliest recorded liturgical gestures .. the imposition of hands. The Jewish Church used this im th~ portant sign "to show a trane mission of power, strength, authority and blessing." It WM Dr REV. ROBERT W. BOVD~ Catholie UniverBit7 theref()re only natural for the Apostles to use it in turn, "and the 'Acts of the Apostles' speake TODAY - Tbe Most HoI,. And what we are is therefore the imposition of hands • A great deal of time and attention in the country is Name of Mary. That this dignity of crucial importance. We oome of the means of ordaining the directed at youth. A great deal of energy is expended to belongs to the whole human to be transformed. We come so ministers of the New Testament Christ again will identify help young people make the most of their opportunities person and not just 10 • JnQn'. that soul ill clearly. Seen in the us 'with Himself, will feed _. and of imparting the power CIf and lives. Much effort is given to them and on their behalf. Blessed ViJ:·gin.Body and soul, with His Mystical Body aDd the Holy Spirit in Confirma. ti()n." And all that is well and good. she 'yielded herself 10 G~ and make us His Mystical Body. We instructive ,and meaningf" Still, it· is a refreshing change of pace to read some: became totally an instrument of come because we are only partq is So this sign, however, that the Hu. saving grace. Her neme is living and we want to live fully. thing directed in praise- of old age. Church has also put it to use .. In a young country - and America is young - and ill sweet to the human race ~ause So we ask in the Opening Prayer the . Sacraments of Baptism" in 'her we see God's will and His that the Church may "always be a land when so much advertising, for example, is directed· mercy for us all. ', ruled by your grace," meaning Penance, Anointing of the Siclr, Eucharist. She also extends • at pushing a product that is supposed to keep, prolong, or 'The history of salvation would your life, divine life, life divi. to other rites such as the Con regain youth, it is rewarding to consider the advantages be a di~erent story were it not nized. secration of Virgins, the Blessin. for her conception,' her womb, of old age and to s~e that there is somethi~g to be said MONDAY SS. Comeltu of -Abbots and Abbessess, Exo.. her giving birth, her nurture of for it. , the Saviour. Hymning her name, and Cypriau, Martyrs.. One may' cisms,and many blessings. ,- In Confirmation W. Somerset Maughan gave an interview a while ago we know - that more' thlin our wonder, looking at the martyr. We have seen that in the be in which he rejoiced that/he had reached a great age, one lOuis is involved in that historY. and the countless kinds of pain .ginning of the admistration. Gl ~nd suffering which human in that gave him 'many advantages over those younger than TOMORROW - M38& as OD genuity has contrived for the the Sacrament of Confirmation, himself. ' , Sunday. Our life it; divided correction of one's brothers, just the Bishop - from the altar· His age, he said, had liberated him from th~ tram among different duties and a what kind of "life" this is - to faces ,the candidates and while mels of human egotism - jealousy, envy, great uneasiness, variety of tasks. It ill so easy want and seek and pray, b . extending his hands over them, excited drives. He finds that at this age, he can afford . for us to isolate them and re This divinized life, this chrlt he calls down on. them the to be without bias and can view persons and conditions ' gard each of them as indepen-' ~d life, into which our gifts of th~ Holy Spirit. We also learn from our cate eucharistic worship immerses arouJl-d him with much more tolerallce and even a bit of dent. Sunday Mass calls for in ,us, 'chisms that the essential sip hoping that some of it will tegration (in more senses than humor. . (matter) of the Sacrament 01. one). It asSerts that, though this stick. His age enables him to look at himself somewhat less division of life is necessary and But it is a choice, we see ID. Confirmation is the impositioa seriously than ever before and this he finds delightful. proper, there ill one end, one both Scripture readings today. of hands. From earliest times, after the candidates had beea Of course, maybe a person has to have the personality purpose, one meaning· to it all between two priorities: God and baptised by the priests or dea -and therefore one orienta-tion. His saving deeds and the wm of a Maughan to begin with to age so well. those deeds reveal, on the one cons, the Bishop would adminis which must penetrate all the But it is good to know in the mid9t of the "cult of divisions. hand, and a narrow and animal ter the Sacrament of Confirma tion by, simply imposing handlt youth" there are those who see and enjoy the rewarda. This key to wholeness and "common sense" on the othel!. upon them and reciting a pray'eIl. that come with age. unity is not an idea nor a system, -TUESDAY - Mass on Su 'but a Person, Jesus Christ, who_ day. As we share the holy Bread It was only in the 2nd CentuIT that anointings were made and ~holds up the kingdom of God as today we sing: "The bread I 'the proper end of every human will give you is my own :flesh, only later that the ceremony de. veloped as we have it today.. Pope Paul, in stating once again the Catholic Church's ,!letivity. given for the life of the world." Two Impositions implacable opposition to Communism, is not casting any The first "imposition of handS SATURDAY - The Exaltation Given for life, and for all the f r e e d 0 m and expansiveness during the prayer 10 the Ho~ reflection upon the late Pope John. ,I)( the Holy Cross. Death itself, The Church's attitude on Communism has never in which human eyes see an ap which the vision of the risen Spirit is not the true and essen offers. tial sign of the Sacrament. • changed. Pope John, while just as determ'ined a foe of the :parently final division of man, Christ The moral demands of tbe is a meaningful gesture duriJl8 'body from soul, becomes in the atheistic philosophy as his predecessors and successor, First ·Reading are as much "be- a particular prayer which inter and Resurrection a pro chose to direct his attention chiefly to' communists, the ,eross yond us" as the glory of life prets for us' the intention' 01. damation of a fully human dig through-death, .but the letter Christ and the Church and ,bas people deceived by this system which promised them what :nity. has been given and invites the us concur with our heartfelt only the Gospel of Christ could deliver in full. His kind Jesus' triumph over death, ap If we _accept the latter "Amen" to the mention of the ness to communists could not and should not have been :~arent to us because He first former. we must at least engage our gifts of the Holy Spirit. ilubmitted to it, promises a re interpreted as acceptance of the anti-religion they held. ,The sec 0 n d imposition at :integration of the whole person selves with grace-luI effort wiih Pope Paul will surely show just as much love for these :in the life of the most holy the former. hands is that true sign of the people as Pope John. But he has found it wise to repeat 'rrinity. There is no area or part Sacrament as was described f~ EMBER WEDNESDAY. Agabt., the Church's position on Communism lest there be any i)f our life but will know that, the seasonal days of prayer,' us by St. Luke in the "Acts of Apostles". Here, the Bishop attempt to misinterpret his mind or that of Pope John on I~ompletion, no area, then, that fasting, ordaining, which we call the stretches forth his right hand i~ari be excluded from the eucha the communist philosophy of atheism and materialism. Ember days. The Gospel con over each individual candida~ ristic offering. vinces us of our need of Dew The Church enriched this mean life, a life in which prayer and ingful rite with other cere FIFTEENTH SUNDAY AF fasting fit. The Second Reading monies. At the same time, the ~rER PENTECOST. It is hardly :Iurprising that so many of the tells us about listening to the Bishop traces a cross on the i.mages the public worship of Book of life, the Bible. The First forehead of the candidate witla - the Church proposes ~ our describes the full flowering of Holy Chrism and also pr8')1ll life in the kingdom of heaveD aloud the Form of the Sacra minds are connected with ele mental things like birth and in terms of a perfect harvest ment. cleath, time and history, human festival, in terms of an un Effects ShO'Wll OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER 'acts. clouded enjoyment of the frui18 Thus in a simple act, the Publiahed weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of fall River
Today's Mass again is Christ of work well done. Church graphically illustrate. operating in mystery 10 put life .410 Highland Avenue
the effects of the Sacrament. where there was death, to trans Grace is transmitted; new powew fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-715-1
form man in the most radical and rights (greater partic9>a PUBLISHER
RICHMOND (NC)-City A~ tion in Sacred acts; Cathol:ie way possible. This is, after all, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.
torney J. Ellicott Drinard ha1I Action; etc.) are conferred; gif. basically why we come to Mass. ruled it is legal for the League are granted; new responsibilitiee We come to be transformed. It GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER isn't enough at all to speak of of Planned Parenthood to dis are shared. Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John PI Driscoll duty only, or of praise. For it· tribute oral contraceptives and But here the Church a:'" MANAGING EDITOR is we who do the duty and we advise on their use in city health , shows . us another meaningf1ll Turn to Page Fourteen ,~ho live the praise. clinics here in Virginia. HUliIh J. Golden
<Thnouclh. th.e. CWult <Wlth
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Old Age Rewards
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@rheANCHOR
Favorable Ruling
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 12, 1963
Diocesan Higli School. St~dents Participate in 'Active Program As Academic Year Begins
7
Advocates Drive To Win Catholic ~upils Justice
With the new academic year already more than a week old; students at Diocesan high schools are "hitting the books" in earnest. At Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, seniors are participating for the first time in a team teaching experiment in Eng feature ''I Accuse" lish under direction of Mrs. mascope while they can interest them. Charles Soforenko, Sis t e r selves in Junior Achievement Thomas Mary and Sister work If they're looking for
BROOKLYN (NC) - A . Catholic editor has urged modern day Catholics take up the work of seeking jus tke for Catholic school children in the spirit of Bishop John N. Neumann, C.SS.R., who will be beatified in Rome Oct. 13. Don Zirkel, news editor of the Tablet, Brooklyn diocesan news paper. believes the coming beat ification of Bishop Neumann, 19th century Bishop of P.hiladel phia, "should serve as a chal lenge" to contemporary Catho lics. '. He recalled Bishop Neumann served on a committee of the U. S. Bishops' First Plenary Council of Baltimore which in 1852 issued a decree urging all pastors to establish parish schools. More Than Words "Over a century hiu passed sinc~ that decree and we have waited long enough," Zirkel de_ clared. "More than half of the Catholic children in this country ·attend public schools and the percentage is increasing every year. "Why? Because we have been depriVed of distributive justice." He said it is "time that we got equal treatment for our children . on the local, state and Federal . le'lfeL"
Mary Hortense, principal. extra-curricular activity. These three teachers meet with their own classes except Alumni Achievementll for joint assemblies for specially Sacred Hearts Academy girls planned lectures or discussions. in Fall River want it known "Cooperative effort and ex that Michaeline Ruttle and change of ideas to enrich every Judith Cousineau, two partici unit of work are important fea pants in the. August March on tures of this plan," say the Washington are recent alumnae. teachers. And at St. Anthony's High, Each teacher is individually news has been received of alum responsible for certain phases of ni making honors at various in the work for the entire group in stitutions of higher learning. accordance with her particular Robert G. Poirier '62 has been interests and abilities. Mrs. Sof promoted 'to Cadet Corporal at orenko, for instance, prepared Norwich University, while Ray material on the modern novel at mond Bellefe\lille '61 has been a Brown University workshop named to the dean's list at Went this Summer. worth Institute. Rkbard Methia At St. Anthony's High in New '63 has been selected for parti. Bedford, seniors are hard at cipation in advanced courses of work on book reports, with two the liberal arts honor program. sets already handed in and a at Providence College. third due this MondaY.Shacady News, Sacred Hearts Students have already signed Academy newspaPf& in Fall vp for extra-curricular activi- River, sent Mary ~elly of its ties, including. debating, glee: staff to a journalism institute at elub. c.ommercial, science and Catholic University this Sum. French groups. . ;mer. Also in attendance were .. New Uniforms. :....~,tlld~nts from JeSUs-Mary Acad . Big new~ at Holy FamI1~, New ~y, Fall River. ". .. Bedford, 18 the new unifo~ms _ . Another Summer activity for worn by both ~oyS and girls. . many Diocesan students was Students at th18 sc~ool have ... participation in the New York neve.r before .worn uniforms and .City Summer School of Catholic It. A. WILCOX CO•
. ,tbeyre starting off in grand . ::Action,.sponsored by the Sodal . fiyle. . ity of Our IJady.. OFFICE FURNITURE
The girla' blazer 18 navy blue '. Class Officers ....... 1M I. . . . .c. Dell"..,
.wool f1a~lOel with a. school seal senior class .officers are Im-· NEW UNIFORMS: James Stager, sophomore and Mary • DESKS • CHAitS o~ the breast poc~et. It is worn nounced at St. AnthOny's High. blue, white and grey '- TheJ'.are Normand Menq. presi. Ellen .Crowley, senior, model new uniforms at Holy Family . FlUNG CABINm skirt and cotton or dacron and dent; Muriel Marois. vice-presi. High School, New Bedford. • FIRE FilES' • SNIS .' ..cotton . blo_us~. Cru socks are dent; Bernice Savoie, secretary; : FOLDING TABLES' • , w~rn 10 S.prmg ~d Fall and DIane Caron. Jean Paul Dumas is a member of St. Jamea parish elor's degree In textile engin AND CHAIRS eering. He is teaching gec:>metry, Wmter uniform .!Dcludes knee and Henry Lamontagne. treasu in New.Bedfor.d. economics. mechanical drawing ~ks. A Scottie style hat 'rera . . Prevost La,. Teachers matches the uniform. .' ' . . '. '. . At Fall River's Prevost High and religion at Prevost. A resi 22 BEDFORD ST. Boys are also wearing wool In lme With an lDcreasmg . dent of North .Dartmouth, he is flannel blazers with the sehool .. trend. in Catholic schools, Dioo-. High School there are two lay FAll RIVER 5·7838 married and has one daughter. seal. Trousers are of worsted -.. ~san institutions have added men on the faculty, Robert . Among his out-of-school activi. blend while shirts are button. " many lay teachers to their fac Tremblay lind Arthur Canuel. ties is service as a captain in the down~tYle of drip dry oxford ..ulties in recent years., Both are Prevost' graduates. National Guard. Mr. Canuel graduated from LitUe Leape cloth. Ties 'are of the same ma .. At Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, Bradford Durfee College of ' I Mr. Tremblay. a .graduate of terial as the girls' skirts to carry t.hey include Donald DeMarco . Technology in 1960 with a bach out the school colors of black and. and.Miss Susan Wesgan. Mr. De Bridgewater. Teach~rs·. College ~~~ . white. . Marco, a graduate of Durfee with • bachelor's degree in Black and white saddle shoes High School in Fall River and French. is a resident .of Fall fOl are worn witk the uniforms. Stonehill College, where he River. He teaches English, world Named President .~arned a bachelor of science de history and religion and outside LOS ANGELES ( N C ) At Bishop Stang High in North .gree, is a member of SS. Peter aetivities include presidency of Dartmouth, enrollment has ·hit and Paul parish in Fall River. Twen'ty-seven Lay Mission Help the Fall River unit of Little the 1,000 mark, aecording to He is teaching trigonometry, ers have pronounced solemn ~ague baseball Sister Anne Denise. S.N.D., prin .chemistry, biology and general promises of missionary sacri. cipal. Congratulations are in science at the Fairhaven high fices. The. 27. who have completed order there for Sister Winifred, school. HONG KONG (NC)-A totltl business and English teacher," Miss Wesgan who graduated a year of special formation in who has been named president from Uxbridge 'High. School and preparation for lay missionary of 17,114 new Catholics has in of the Northeast unit of the holds a bachelor of arts degree work, will be assigned to posts creased Hong Kong's Catholic Contad: Roland Gamache
in Africa and Latin America. population nine per cent to Catholic Business Education As from Annhurst College, Wood WYman 9-6984
They bring to 203 the number 205,791. sociation, a national organiza stock Conn. is teaching English of lay missioners trained and tion comprising 11 regional units and ~orld history at SHA. She sent to mission posts by the Lay as well as representatives in Mission Helpers program-which Canada and Puerto Rico. has headquarters here - since Sister previously taught busi NEW - unusual the first trainees went overseas ness subjects in Lowell paro in August• .chial schools and at Emmanuel ••• all-in-one ";College. She has served on the' LA PAZ (NC) - Joseph qar. .CBEA b01Jl"d of directors four· dinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. . •• low-cost years and has spoken on busi Louis, received the Condor of ness education in high schools at the Andes, the highest Bolivian WORLD-WIDE many meetings. · government decoration, in' re . Truclc Body Builders Tests and contests are on the cognition of his work for the Aluminum or ssee.
horizon at St. Anthony's. Seniors Bolivian people. 944 c::ounty St.
will be eligible to enter a na Cardinal Ritter visited the NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
tional essay contest sponsored by Boliyian capital during an in , Wv 2~618 Omega Psi ~ fraternity. This spection tour of the missions 'year's topic will be "Individual ~taffed in this country by priests HELPS PAY HOSPITAL BILLS Responsiblity and the American of the St. Louis archdiocese. The Revolution for Rights." CASH FOR: $31 p.r day for illness· Cardinal sent the first group of (up to $5,550-$10,950) Freshmen will have the op · U.S. diocesan clergy to this city OPERATIflG ROOM X-lIAT$ portunity of enrolling in a new in' 1956 to help overcome the DOUBLE INDEMNITY: RECISTERED NURSES, ETC. algebra program while they great clergy s h 0 rt age which .* •• per ..., f.. Accill.lIt· and the sophomores will take plagues Latin America. ·(185 days to 365 days per confinemelll) (up to $11,100-$21,900)._ achievement tests Monday, Sept. 1st Day Accident-Sickness Coverap Prot.ctlOll for' young and old withotlt
23. FULL Selected Beoefits paid r.llard.... discrimination In benefits.
On the lighter side, students of hospital ra0l!' charge are looking forward to the cine
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HOSPITAL- SURGICAL EXPENSE PROTEOION
*
134th Parish OAKLAND (NC) - The 134th parish in the Diocese of Portland, Maine, will be estab lished here Saturday. The former St. Theresa's mission ser viced by St. Bridget's church ia ·North Vassalboro, will become' an independent parish with Father OrigDe R. Guillet, u
pastor.
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THE At:'C.H,OR~Diocete
of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. '2,
'963
.Cothol:ic ·Nurses
To Attend Mass
Husband's 'Head of the House' Role Involves Responsibility
Fall River' Catholic Nurses Guild will observe its 35th an niversary by attending Mass and corporate Communion at 9:30 Sunday morning at St. Joseph'. Church,. Fall River. Rev. George E. Sullivan, pas tor, will speak at a breakfast to follow in St. Joseph's school hall. All Catholic nurses are in vited to attend and may make reservations with Katherine G. NaSh, R.N. or Kathleen G. Sherry, R.N., program chairmaa.
By Father Walter W. Imbiorski Dear Father: .. My husband takes this head of the house idea too seriously. He refuses to tell me how much income we have. He gives me a· set of explicit instructions for the week every Sunday night, including detailed menus for two or three meals. He almost never In the modern family, many it consults me on anything. On most courses of action should the other hand it is next to not be arrived at by discussion and impossible to get him to do mutual decision of hu9band and
Parishioners Renovate
anything around the house. Just wife. Today there had better be Residence for Nuns how is a oouple to unde~stand whoie s p her e s of authority thIs ,husband the head of the having to do with the running BELLE CHASSE (NC) - .A. house idea. It seems the Church of the home and, the raising of sailor from a nearby naval air favors men too much. the children, that a wise man station, a watchman, an office Dear Mildred: worker and a lab technician will leave to his .wife. Woe Ie The family i4! a society, albeit, the man who thinks he has AT GRADUATION: Bishop Connolly congratulates ~port every evening after work a very small. one; and a(l such nothing to learn from his wife, graduates of St. Anne's School' of Nursing,' Fall River. and 9n SaturdaYS to the vicinity It requires' guidance, and direc for frequently he will appear of Our Lady of Perpebuil Help From left, Lorna O'Keefe, Our Lady of Lourdes', Taunton; School tion. When discussion of a topic, ridiculous. here in Louisiana to oon Denise Rounds, St. William, Fall River; 'Doris Meunier, St. tinue' renovation work on' a - "Do we stay' in St. 'LOuis A man who refuses to tell his where all our family and friends wife his income'is obviously .Ann, New Bedford. house that will serve as a rea are or do we move to California afraid of her on some level and idencefor Sisters who will be wh~re . husbandS' job opportu gin teaching at the school thit NEEDS to keep his earnings a nities .are better", has reached secret, either because he is year. • an impasse, SOMEONE has' to, spending more than he should The men are parishioners who , make a decision for the good of on personal pursuits or perhaps have volunteered to become Men i" Construction Helmets-Gape at NunS1
the family. plumbers, carpenters, wall plas because he is earning so little Women With~Hoods Gape Back
Psychological Reason terers, electricians and whatever he is afraid of her opinion of . else is needed to complete res . Normally the husband should him. N~W ORLEANS (NC) - It's trip ar0uad the sprawling plant. toration work on the old three. He wants to strengthen hie IUfflCUlt to say who gaped the ,have this final voice and should The nuns are Sister' Mary be the one who determines the fading ego by feeling there is at most--the men in the steel con- "Augustus of the Sisters of the story building. Our Lady of Perpetual Help general' direCtions and ..policies least one area in which she ie :rtruction helmets or the three Blessed Sacrament who teaches of the 'family; . Why should. the totally dependent on him. women with the hoods of black physics and mathematiCs at School is new-first used - for the 1960-61 school year but the husband' have: his· authority? Answer for All nnd white cloth. Xavier Prep here; Sister Mary The..re are several possible rea But stare at each other they Eugenie, of the Marianites of the old house on the same plot _of A husband must realize that lIOns, but let's ~ note just one with authority oomes responsi did. . Holy Cross, chemistry and bioI. ground was b.uilt in about 19~7. The" schooi has been staffed by psychological·one. The women - three Sisters ogy instructor at Sacred Heart bility. The Pope himself iii re By her very femininity and by minded at his coronation that his who teach science at Catholic High School in Ville Platte; and lay teachers since. it opened three years ago. This year two her vocation to motherhood, power is temPorary and given Iligh schools in tMs area-went Sister Mary Karen, of the Do Dominican Sisters will admin on tour of the National Aeronau. minicans, chemistry teacher at woman is far more sensitive to to him for a purpose. As a wisp ister the school and serve· on the and concerned about persons .of flax is burned three times, tics and Space Administration Dominican College. and their feelings than is man. he is told "'I'hus passes the glory Illant in Michoud at the invitaOn their NASA tour the nuns faculty with five laY teachers. The mother must be· able to of this world" - "You al'i:l the tion of H. D. Lowrey, president saw one phase of the massive Saturn missile operation which ''know'' if her baby is well and · servant of the servants of God." (If Chrysl.er's space division. Ne~ Bedford Tea , Lowrey, 'w h 0 s e daughter aims at putting men on the warm and fed and dry, without The husband must be respon New Bedford Catholic Wom joined a siflterhood last month, moon in the late 1960s. oommunication. . sible, that is, able to answer for Lowrey told the Sisters that en's Club plans its annual tea Men on the other hand deal the whole family. It also means donned his own helmet for the more lm the level of ideas and , he must respond to fueir needs, '1:our and saw that each of the .the initial thrust in the first . from 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon, abstract values and are less con 'care about them and their nuns got one too. The, helmets stage is oompared to the power sept. 29 at the organization'. cerned with and'less swayed by feelings, and draw forth their wouldn't fit but the nuns dutiful. of 300,000 automobile. .going clubhouse, County and MadiS9D . Streets. . feelings. They are more able, · .talents 90 that they become ·liV carried them on the walking wide open down a road. if you like, to hurt or disappoint fully the persons God intended IOmeone if it is necessary to : them to be. aeoomplish a task. Being a husband and father ill a great deal more complex For Good of All '11hus, the Mayor of a city who than ju8t telling everyone 110 has tel put through an. express · shape up or .ship out. .... Head, Heart· . way, even if it mean~ uprooting Let husbands reflect on the a thousand families 'who have lived in a neighbdrhood for words of Pius XI; "the husband generations, must act for the is the head of the house the good of all. the citizens. The wife is the heart." With~ut a President declares war for a head the family is directionless. principle, . though it may cost Without a heart it is DEAD. Sometimes women take over tens of thousands of lives. Men, in general,. by tiheir their husbands responsibilities nature and training, are more in a hundred subtle ways. The apt to make decisions for the man may become a dictator in cwmmon good and lesS apt to be , an effort to get them back or swayed by personal' considera- he may just give up and play doormat. In either case his wife tion. .: Does this mean: mea are · is unhappy and seldom realizes better than women? No, not at she may be the cause of it all. all. Having authoritJt does not But more of that another time. necessarily mean su~riority as ~a person. Former Public School , : Some Men lDeaPable Become$ Monaste~y: . . Elizabeth of England' had an DEARBORN (NC) ::-. A authority in the Empiire, but she Yerted public school was dedi .... was not· nearly as· ~lented as cated as St. Paul;s Monastery' . , her subject, Wmia~" Shake here by Detroit'll Archbishop speare. The Pope Of Rome had John F. Dearden. aut h 0 r i 't y over the whole The monastery will serve. all Church, but he was not as holy the new home of the Society of IlIl his subject Francis of Assisi. St. Paul, a congregation founded Many people who' have held in 1914 to spread the Catholie jobs would be willing to admit Faith through the press, radio, they were smarter than the em television and movies. ployer who had authority over The society has five monas
them. teries in the U.S. The Dearh01'll
Mutual Decision monastery currently prints a
I Should the husba.nd always weekly Italian language news
be the head of the house? No. peper. Some men are incapable of it.
Cake Sale Today
They are emotional infants either too weak to take on the New Bedford District CouncD
task or so insecure' that they of Catholic Women is hoiding a
act like tyrants to cover-\lp their : cake sale today at the Star Store.
fears. Mrs. John Ryan, chairman, re , quests that cakes be delivered to the store after 10 tbismomiDg. .
Outstare Workers
Perfe'ct'
for School Lunches
eoa..
Somerset
~
-
~ub
Some~set Catholic Woman'll Holy Cross 'Fieldl)qy . f;lub wm meet at 8:~5 Tuesday. . T~ annual field day to ~e night, Sept. 17 ,in OldlTown HalL ., 'Prospective members are wei. fit the Holy Cross Sistere'; build .. come. Willia,m H. Thbrber, pres- ing fund will be held from nooB . ident of' a . Providen'ce jewelry . till 5 Saturday and Sunday after oompany, will speak knd show a noons, sept. 14 and 15, on the lilm on diamonds. Mrs: Charles · provincial and novitiate grounds, J. Hague, vice-presJd~nt, will be 357 Island 'Pond Road, 'Manehes _. N.H. The public: ill welcome. chairman of the social hour.
'.
OVEN-FRESH· 'DAILY·
your .NEIGHBORHOOD STORE
Hat Style ShoW To Aid Sisters
By Mary Tinley Daly . . Ginny finds it a bit hard to believe that college re~ tration day is almost here, and that she, at long last, will be in that registration line-up. Unlike the olden days when, during July or August, 'a high school graduate and the parents could decide that, carried home for bnmediate in "College might be a good spection of ather college bound thing - where would you friends. ''Wait for delivery? That like to ~o and how much does would take half the fun away, it cost?" tod8y'S freshmen had to plan, work and save from "way .back. So did the parents. For these post war babies now
.torming college and upiversity doors in over , whelming num bers, the prep-. 'aration start~d . earlr in junior ,Tear of high school: poring over catalogues, , , noting academic' requ\reine'n~, course offerings, geogra,PhicaI locations, costs and plans to meet those costs. . Then the "narrowing down" after consultation with high .chool teachers and couns~lors, application to those institutJops where one might..."stand a chance," sending on of. tran scripts, the taking and retaking of college boardS-those Satur days of prayer andcondmtra «on! . LoncWalt ., Then, during. senior year, the long, long wait for atlswers. A heart-warming public rela tions gesture-one new to us· at any rate--came to Ginny ·from the college which accepted her. On the outside of the envelope, hand-written, was the word "'Congratulations!" making this • happy letter to open, happier .,et to read, reread, and mem ,orize. College was reeny in the ofl. tnl, but it still seemed a long way oU: the full time Summer job, banking the pay check .with little out for Summer amuse ments; the reading of book after , book on that freshman reading list. (The tubes in our TV have bad • long, restful Summer.) Then the necessary arrange ments: dental work, eye exam ination, physical exam, x-ra.,s, removal of a pair of tonsils that had kicked up a Storm' laSt Winter. 1 These out of the way, came ; ibe shopping and the sewing, a rather eye-opening. experience , for one who has not kept up wita . the latest in teen-age fashions. "You'll need a suit," we be ,an, "and .weveTa1 dresees." Our freshman agreed. We soon found out a lot about what's being worn by the young knowledgab1etl of Fall, 'A. Ne longer leader, but follower, W'e I were taken OIl a tour: into ~ i part.ments of' our :familiar .stor~. : ftlat we didn't even know eXiSted. Executing a plan that must , have been hatching all Summer long under' a blonde Douffaat 'hairdo, we e.calated "up an4 down and came·hcBDe .itIl .. , wardrObe. The Co.t mlla have . been as carefully calculated • ~ the items themselves, far less than we had anticipated, And, of eourse, ever.,thing had to be'
The Queens Daughters ef Fan River will hold a coffee and hat showtoben~ttheWMteS~
ters at 8 Wednesday night, Sept. 18 at the convent hall, 194 Sec. ond Street, Fall River. It is noted that the
'Dear Ma.,.'
Ursufine Nuns Found
Coordination Center
NEW ROCHELLE (NC)-Tbe Ursuline Coordination Cater ha. been establillbed beft ... facilitate eommunieatioll aad cooperatiOJ1 among the Urauline nuns in the sisterhood" four American provinces. The center-was lippI'oved at • meeting of UrsuliDe provincial and local lJUperiOJ'll at the CeIoo lege of New Rochelle lien. Mother Maria Felicia PastooN; Prioress General of the Ursu lines of 1he Boman Union; said the center wiD have two JleCtiona -the national o.ffice for ~li gious life and the!llati.oDal office of education and ·apostolak SIle· said it was decided one of fhe four proTineial superiors would lerve .. aatiooal the center. MGther PIrilip BOyle, of VIle eMten ~ _ eleeted to aene .. :lint ...uo..l ebainnaft :for a *'"-7f*' --.
SHA Alumnea to Meet, Hear Mrs. O'Brien PLAN CHARITY BALL: Mrs. Richard H. Parsons, left, chairman for annual Charity Ball of New Bedford Catholic Women's Club, looks over,arrangements with Mrs. William A., Horan. Ball is set for Friday, Sept. 27 at New Bedford Country Club.
Expert on Communism Top Army Chaplain in Korea Is Lecturer,
Successful Playwright
CAMDEN (NC) - The newly named ranking U. S. Arm., chap lain in Korea is an expert on communism who if! al80 a suc cessful playwright. Ksgr. (Col.) Joseph S. Chmiel ewski, a priest of the Camden diocese, is a veteran of 21 years in the Army chaplain corps and one of the Army's most promi nent lecturers ill. the field 01. anti-communist indoctrination. After five years as "militaT)' pastor" of Catholic servicemea in the nation's capital Msgr. Chmielewski becomes seniOJ' chaplain with the Eighth ~ in Korea. "'The entire refigious program, ... well as the morale situation, wtl1 be my responsibility,· l'wl ·'said in an interview here:. . . will -be a big job." The DeW chief chaplaiB, . . . tor .five prod9Ced amon, other ~ • Washinctoa
Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL J. lESeR, Prop. ,
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Enjoy Dining
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TAUNTON, MASS..
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Complete
OXNARD (MC)-I'01IIl'SWen of. :M~ from. CaI.iior'aia are leaving -for Peru to OpeD a dis pensary .-d c:atedletical . . . . . in Aeora In the AJIcIia. Four more Sister. oIlifereT .....iIl joia
eh.... .,.
,h. life of • D"WHftI
Alumnae of Sacred Hear. Academy, Fall River,. Will Meet at 7:45 Wednesday night, Sept. 18 in the dool han. PrG~ Street. Mrs. Peggy Leger will preside and introduce Mrs. a. trude O'Brien. an alumM,who will speak on a:ffiHatMn fit tile organization and chairmaa eI. the family-parent committee eI. the Diocesan organization. Also· $I> be discus-sed is the an nual alumnae fashion shoW', let for Wednesday,' Oct, 16.
Bristol County
Trust Company
IN THE
.,ears-
Fairhaven Alumnae AIUJllD8e 01. Saered Hearts Academy in Fairhaven win ~nsOl' a st1le show at 8 Tues day night, Sept. 17 at Keith lunior High Schooi auditorium. Mrs. .Toha 1. Aiello, al\'tDlD&e : president, .announces .that the , affair is open to the public. Pr~ eeeds will benefit a acholarabfp fund.
han can
also be entered from the Bisbop Stang Day Nursery on Third Street. The hat show will be directed by Mrs. Eileen Fournier with Atty. Cecilia Newton Welch .. commentator. Tickets are ava~ able from members, the White Sisters or at the door. In charge of arrangements Is the organization's board of iuY ernors, . including Mrs. Mary F. Brady, Miss Mildred V. Carroll, Mrs. Mabel V. Clemmey, Mrs. Marie A.ConnefY, Mrs. Mariesta ,Donneny, Miss Gertrudt! A. Lynch, Miss Mary F .M;a1eady. Mrs. Esther M. Maloney and Atty. Welch.
Mom!" Finally, came more personal contacts with the school: a phone call from a sophomore living in our town who willingly answered all questions, and the "Dear Mary" letters.' One was from the Dean; another from a junior in nlbwis, telling of the school's social doings, traditions -both exuding a warm: atmo- sphere of welcome. . In a tantalizing temptation of extra-curricular activities, "Dear' Mary" 'also reCeived invitation. to join the Science ClUb, the Sodality, the French ClUb, to try out for dramatics, Glee Club and the rest. "Dear Mary," we warned, "you'd better confine your· ac tivities to the Hit-the-Books Club only, at least for the firSt· semester." -"My first activity," Ginny l,aughed, "wID be to tell. these pice p~ople that my name i& Virginia, Ginny for short, and that I was christened at an a~ .when I was too young to defend . myself. Matter of fact, giving each·of our five girls the first name of l\1:ary in honor of. the Blessed . Mother has caused recurreJ1t practical complications as each entered school, took a job, got married. Obviously, only one could we call Mary, the other. ~sing the middle. name. (''Mary" might better have been used lor the middle name.) , So now, as we sew "Ginny Daly" nametapes on sheets and ..pillowcases, underwear aDd blouses, Mary Virginia aeu ready for first launch from our house. We only.hope "all systems are go."
9
THE ANCHOR ·Thurs., Sept. 12; 1963
Prospective .College Freshma'n Prepa·res:. to . Leave Home
.. ....
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.......
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 12, 19~3 '
,
NORTH DIGHTON JUBILEE: Solemn Mass of Thanksgiving high Dghts golden jubilee celebration at St. Joseph's Church, North Dighton. Left, Msgr. Emmanuel Souza DeMello, present pastor of Our Lady of
Minister Reads Catholic Letter At Service
SE~cular Institute Members 'Really Quiet N~en and Women of Church'
Priest Lauds
NEW ORLEANS (NC) - The TUCSON (NC)- A ,Pr~ really quiet men and women of testant minister read ,the the Church in this country and U.S. Catholic Bishops' joint tht'o~ghout the world are mem-' of' secular institutes, a pastoral letter on racial' bers priest - college professor said ecjuality to his colored congre· here.' , .ation here. "They maintain a diScr~ si Rev. A. A. Morgan, pastor of . lenceand their membership tt.e Prince Chapel African Meth generally it! not known to' co edlst Episcopal church says he workers, or even to members of" !'ead the lett~r "to show my con. their own 'families," said Father ~egation that this subject of Patrick M. J. Clancy, O.P., phil racial injustice is a matter for osephy professor at Lora8 Col. the church to speak out on." lege Dubuque Iowa who is "One of the things that has pres'ident of' the Conference of erippled the whole integration the Life of Total Dedication in movement in America and has the World. eaused moral decay is that the The Dominican who carne dlurch has not spoken out clear here to conduct a' retreat for a ly enough in the past," Rev. community of nuns said the Morgan asserted. secular institute me'mbers, are from all walks of life _ secre Remedy for Hatred "'! also wanted them to see taries, teachers, social workers, that we are not alone in this prpfessional persons and those, in high government positions. fight for freedom," he added. Unlike members of religious "But most of all there was evi d~mce throughout this message communities, they 'have no dis-, that this issue is not merely a tinctive garb nor community life" but they do make promises of' racial issue. It is a problem to be solved in order to cleanse us obedience, poverty and chastity, as a nation, spiritually, or hate' Father Clancy said during an will destroy us. Christian love' interview. that prompts us to treat all men Their effectiveness as lay as our brothers is the only last apostles might be impeded ing remedy for hatred." greatly if their affiliation with Rev. Morgan said he bad sent a secular institute were known a copy of the pastoral letter to generally,. the Dominican as his ecclesiastical superior, Bishop serted. H. Thomas Primm of Los An Promises BindlnA' geles, who has jurisdiction over African Methodist Episcopal The promises of obedience, eongregations in' 16 midwestern poverty and chastity taken by and far western states. these people are just as binding as vows taken by Religious, Father Clancy added. They can' only be dispensed from the: promises by the Holy See, he detailed. ' WASHINGTON (NC)-A one Their promise of poverty does day seminar on "Planning a not mean they cannot own prop- : DIocesan Census" has been erty, Father Clancy said. 1t scheduled by the National Coun. means the giving up of extrava. eil of Catholic Men for Thursday, gances and material things not Sept. 19. necessary to their dedication ill Planned as a service to arch dioceses and dioceses which will engage in, census-t;tking, the ~minar will be held at the National Catholic Welfare Con. WASHINGTON (NC) -Dedi 1erence headquarters building. Some 20 diocesan councils of cation services for the 56-bell the NCCM have engaged in cen_ . carillon recently consecrated and installed at the National Shrine sus taking. The first was under taken in 1941 as the initial proj. of the Immaculate Conception here will be held Sunday. ect of the San Antonio (Tex.) Arthur Bigelow, bellmaster at Council of Cathoiic Men, then newly organized. It was the first Princeton University, will give time in the history of the concerts in the afternoon and evening. Archbishop Patrick A. Church in the U. S. that a 'house to-house, diocesanwide census O'Boyle of Washington; Luke E. Hart, Supreme Knight of the was taken by members of the Knights of Columbus; members laity. of the K. of C. supreme board of directors and other dignitaries will attend the afternoon con LOS ANGELES (NC) - The cert, which will be followed by C<mfraternity of Christian Doc Benediction. trine will open 51 elementary The bells and the Knights teacher training centers and 14 Tower which houses them are secondary teacher training cen gifts to the Shrine from the ters here this FalL • Knights of Columbus.
SChedule Seminar On Census-Taking
life, he said. They can own autos, houses and shnilar property, he said. ' On the po~itive side, he con~ tinned, these people are "dedi. eat.~d to the lay apostolate - to
elL ' 'rlurc h' V·Igorous '
Inl Puerto Rico ,SAN JUAN (NC) Conse cration of the first Auxiliary Bishop in the 451-year-old his to~' of the S~n Juan archdio cesc! was saluted by San Juan's Archbishop James P. Davis as evidence that "the Church in Puerto Rico is on a vigorous and militant march." Tile Most Rev. Juan de DioS Lopez de Victoria y Alberty was , con:;ecrat~d. Titu~ar Bishop of Met~o.polIs I? ASIa .to serve as, AU)i:llIary. BIShop of San, Jua.n b! ArehblshC?P Eman~ele Clarl ZlO, ."\postohc N~nclo to. the, ~O~ll~l1Can RepublIc, whose J~r isdl,~hon embraces Puerto RICO. Archbishop Davis, the 56th spiritual head to administer, the, , San Juan archdiocese, declared, in his sermon: "Of the many oc casi·ons for joy and spiritual sat isfaetion during my 20 years as Bishop of this venerable diocese, non,~ has given me so much con tent as this consecration of the first Auxiliary Bishop af San Juan." Archbishop Davis said "the nota ble ,increase" in vocations for the priesthood in recent yeal's "is tangible proof of the increasing sanctity of people and. priests" in the San Juan arch diocese. "This event is another proof that the Church in Puerto Rico is on a vi g 0 r 0 u s and militant march," Archbishop Davis said.
Prelate Deta ils Role of Laity
SASKATOON (NC)-The time being a witness to Christ in tile , has come for the laity to take ita , . place in the Church as "fuJI market place, both. prof~ssional.' grown adults," Bishop Remi De ly and ·socially." Roo of Victoria, B. C., advise4 Set Example the Catholic Lay Li:!adership They lead a truly Christian Workshop for the Prairie Regioa life in their everyday lives ahd here in Saskatchewan. attempt to set an example in ,The mission of the Church ill th~ir contacts at work and in 'the conversion of men, the trans.:. their social lives, the Dominican formation 'and perfection of t~ said.' world, the Bishop said. In the Daily attendance at Mass, Ire temporal sphere of the world" quent reception of the sacra· the laity has a particular co~ ments and daily mental prayers petence, he declared. are part of their way of living, "The temporal order, there-" he explained. Single persons, fore, must be redeemed if the widows and widowers are eli mass of men are to be led on the gible for membership in a secu road to salvation, and it must be lar institute, he said. brought to symbolize a higher People with these dedications purpose," the Bishop said. in life can mingle socially with "To complete the mission 01 others, Father Clancy said, but the Church, the laity must they restrict their social lives, translate Divine realities into at least to what they consider human values," be said. "Toda~ unnecessary ,or incompatable more than ever, all laymen must with their dedication. cooperate in all forms of the apostolate, permeating the whole of life, domestic, social, econom ic and political, with the Chri.. Fall River Junior Foresters tian spi.:'it." ' will enjoy a hayride Saturday night, sept. 14. Participants wil meet at the Catholic Community Center at 6:15. '
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Lourdes, Taunton, and first pastor at St.'Joseph's; Bishop Connolly, who presided at Mass; Rev. Leo M. Curry, present pastor. Right, women of parish enter church for Mass.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fafl River":"Thurs. Sept. 12, 1963
FIFTY YEARS OF SERVICE: Left, Rev. Donald McInnis, C.P former North Dighton resident and speaker at jubilee dinner; Auxiliar.y Bishop Gerrard; Rev. William O'Connell, assistant at St. Lawrence Church,
Of
Council Praises Catholic Desire For Renewal
,/
Somerset Pa rish
New Bedford, and first priest ordained from St. Joseph's, who preached at Mass. Right, Men of the parish join procession to Church for Mass of Thanksgiving.
Asks More Volunteers for Service Corps Shriver Urges Greater Catholic Student Role
MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-Peace ROCHESTER (NC)-The' Corps director R. sargent Central Committee of the' Shriver has called for Catholic World Council of Churches college students to "give a tithe" 01. their time to volunt.eer service l!laid here it gives thanks to organizations like the Peace God for the evidences of long.' ~rps and the Papal Volunteen ing for renewal it seee in the life of. the Roman Catholic for Latirl America. Addressing more than 600 rep..' Church. . resentatives of the National "Renewal in one church is • 80urce both of encouragement Federation of Catholic Colleges and of challenge to all other Students from all parts ,of the churches," said a report from. ,country, Shriver declared "Cath olic colleges have not fulfilled the committee, the supreme gov erning body of the world coun. their responsibility unleSl'l 10 per cent of their classes give two cil between sessions of its gen years of service" to volunt.eer eral assembly. Citing the first session of the organizations. If this were done, he said, it Second, Vatican Council as evi dence of the desire for ,renewal, "would change the face of the Western hemisphere." the committee also said that be,. Shriver reported there are cause of the council there has been an "immense opening up of '"more" Catholic college gradu relationships" between Roman ates in the Peace Corps "than a year ago" but he "is disappointed' Catholics and other Christians. "This does not mean," said the that not more join" the corps, committee at its annual meeting, . the Papal Volunteers and reli. gious orders. "that the great issues of faith . This would be in accord with and order upon which we are· the "social dimension of the divided have been settied or are Churc~," he emphasized. "From on the way to settlement. the sacraments" a person "should Ground for Hope get enough spiritual energy to "But there is ground for hope work beyond the limits of ,t.he that the new atmosphere will family." make possible the beginning of a Shriver told congress dele genuinely ecumenical dialogue gat.es that "the tremendous scope between the Roman Catholic for spiritual benefits in today's Church and other churches in which these profound dogmatic world is a call to serve--an ob ligation that you serve." diHerences can be faced in • "I am fully aware of the mar spirit of love and humility." velous achievements for good The committee urged that "every opportunity" be taken th'at result from the selfless ded ication of Catholic college stu "for the development of this dia logue at every level of the life . dents," the Peace Cotps director asserted. "but no matter what of the churches." It added that one of the "in you have done in the past, or dispensable conditions" of good plan for the present, it will not be enough for the future." dialogue must be "an honest ex Challenges Americans amination" of the missionary The Papal' Volunteers need policies and practices of churches "that we may learn not "1,000 times more Catholic men to hinder, but rather to help and women to help the Qhurch each othel' to be true witnesses south of the Ri() Grande," Shriver declared and the Peace of Jesus Christ." Corps does not "get enough Cath.
olic college graduates, either as
volunteers or as staff members."
"Whatever your major, what
Continued from Page One The letter to Father Welsh ever your vocation, there are stated "No doubt you and your places of service waiting," he congregation are a bit concerned Franciscan Heads at the implications of a campaign for' a boys' high school, lest it interfere with the reasonable Training Program wish to have a new church." CHICAGO (NC)~Father Pan
"The lessons of our campaigns cratius Conway, O.F.M. Conv., in other less numerous areas are veteran of 12 years' missionary t1'at far from being a hindrance work in Costa Rica, has been these high school campaigns are named assistant director of the the means of promoting greater Inter-American Cooperative In interest and generosity in pa. stitute. rochial as well are diocesan The institute is a newly matters." formed adult education program "You are free to read this let designed to teach self-help ter to your faithful next Sunday techniques to persons preparing and assure them that if they for service in Latin America. want a new church it will be The first six-month training provided beginning next Spring. course will begin next January They themselves, however, must at St. Mary's University, Ponce, provide proof of their interest... P.R.
11
Christian Brothers Name Provincial
WINONA (NC) ~ Brother L Ainerfcans to make a reality of Basil, F.S.C., president of St Mary's College here in Min their visi()n of a free world or dered by law and to "commun. nesota, has been appointed Pro icate that vision to other people," vincial of the new Winona Pro vince.of the Christian Brothers. he rioted. An Obliraiion Brother, Josephus Gregory, The Peace Corps, he said, "ap_ F.S.C., director of the Brothers' ~als to ,people who have been • novitiate' here, has been named endowed either intentionally or, president of St. Mary's college•. The appointments were made by accidentally, consciously or sub consciously, with the same Brother Nicet-Joseph, F.S.C., ideals of service proclaimed by Superior General of the Brother. the Christian faith and urgently in Rome, Itali. endorsed by the Cat hoI i e church." "Their purposes," Shriver de FATIMA (NC)~Three hun died American pilgrims here clared "are eloquently summed up" in Pope John's last words, for the dedication of the Byzan tine Rite chapel at. international "That we all may be one." "Pope John's prayer and tbe headquarters of the Blue Army , of Our Lady of Fatima heard .success of the Peace Corps do ' the Dean of the Sacred College not represent final victories or • PHARMACY of Cardinals declare that the an occasion for rejoicing. They represent a challenge and all Russian people are becoming • Hearing Aid Co. "increasingly religious." . obligation," he concluded. ,Eugene Cardinal Tisserant • Surgical Appliance Co. said that although religion has been tolerated by the Soviet regime since 1942, the bask Irene A. Shea, Prop. anti-Church doctrine remains unchanged. Nevertheless, he said, adult baptisms, religious 202 - 206 ROCK STREET marriages and vocations 'are in•. 245 MAIN STREET FALL RIVER, MASS. creasing greatly in the Soviet FALMOUTH-KI 8-1918 Union. OSborne 5·7829 ~ 3-0037 "Examples ,of Soviet condem ARMAND ORTINS, Prop. nation of religious practices can be multiplied, which means we must fulfill the Virgin Mary's call at Fatima for prayer and ON CAPE COD penance," the Cardinal said. "This prayer is not in vain," he said, "because the Russian peo ples are becoming increasingly religious." Cardinal Tisserant stressed SPring 5-0700 . that the conversion of Russia would take place through the in creased piety of clergy and pea. pIe who pray for Mary's inter cession. stressed. "But everyone of them requires a personal commitment, demands patience, fortitude, tol erance, maturity and character." "Communism is undergoing a revolution," Shriver 'said, "be ing' given a spiritual content. with the power to draw d·iverse humanity to its cause." , This philosophy challengeS
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 12, 1963
I
Too Much, Too Little
.... ~-
Betty Smith's S~cond Novel Like Mary Pickford Film
God Love You
Is this the "Atomic A«e" In whieli we live, or ia It the ''UUJl&'er A«e?" WhiCh Is more explosive: the fission of a 1II'&Iliwa
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Twenty years bring marked changes. That is the interval betwe~n the publication of Betty Smith's first novel "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," and the appearance of h;r latest, "Joy in the Morning,'" (HarPei' and Row. $4.95). The former was crit the doctor, have been fas icized, in some quarters at with cinatedly listening, or simply a least, as harshly realistjc. crazed crone who imagines herThe latter is sure to ·.draw 'Self the daughter of Agamem
atom or the starving stomachs of the poor! Nations nuclear warfar.e, but emptiness is human dynamite.
charges of extreme and uncon non and Clytemnestra. scionable sentimentality. There Disorder, DiBease are resem blances be The classical versions of the tween. the two doings here presented .are, it is bOOkS, just true, replete with horror. But.in there are un those v e r s ion s the dreadful mtlltakable re events, although not toned down, semblances be were not immediately viewed. SPEAKER: Rev. John E. tween both and They were. recounted in a Boyd. Diocesan Director of the author's : ' restrained, reflective way. In own life. In the Catholic Charities, will ad volved in them we were, but we new one, the dreHS a communion break were not plunged into a steamy beroine is An stew. Though they affected us fast of St. Anne's Hospital me M c G air y . emotionally they did not leave School of Nursing Alumnae who is 18 years old in 1927, the time of the us in a cyhical mood or in a following 9 o'clock Mass welter of despair. .tory·s start. Annie is a Brookly Sunday morning, Sept. 22, in nite who goes, to a middle Mr. Treece, on the contrary, the hospital chapel. His topic western town to marry Carl makes us wade neck - deep . will be "Brotherhood." In Brown, also a Brooklynite, who, through 'unspeakable disorder aged 20, is a law; student at • and disease. Every possible kind chaJ~ge of' arrangements is Mrs. Helen Viveiros. .tate university. of perverted and poisoned re lationship is brought into the DetaU•.Adjusbnent narrative. Annie's lot has been hard. She Utter CQITllptiOD ~ left school upon Completing tile eighth grade and has worked Even Nestor, traditionally a C.)ntinued from Page One .ver since. She hall known no synonym for sage and temperate the year will be held llnd Mrs. relief from gritty poverty, and age, here becomes another dirty existence at home: has been un , old man. I am not saying that Aristires A. Andrade of TalJ.ntoa pleasant and sometimes WOl"ae. the author indulges on every will t>reside. Yet she has a gallant spirit, a page in elaborate description of The following comprise the mind intelligent and inquisitive; disgusting' aberrations. Some Dlocesan board for the current she is a perky believer in herself times graphic, at other times he year: end has done qui~ a bit of good. may be merel,. coolly allusive Fa,ther Walsb, Diocesan mod reading. where vice il concerned, erator, aided by Rev. Raymond Between them, 'she an!f Cad But the effect is of utter and W. McCarthy. Rt. Rev. Hugh A. have a tiny mm of money. He senseless corruption, of insensate Gallagher, Rev. James Lyon-. 'WOrks delivering' papers and depravity, without a glimmer 01. and Rt. Rev. Leonard J. Daley, washing dishes ui' a re9taurant. higher human quality. district moderator.; and R~. Married by,a justice of the peace William McMahon, Rev. Joseph This book is' remarkable hi its L. Powers, Rt. Rev. Raymond T. (neither seems to have any reli gion), the,. go to live ill a' consistent portrayal of .a doomed, CoruJidine, and Rev. Walter A. rooming house. Carl struggles to devil-driven brood. And the Sullivan, Diocesan spiritual di Christian reader is 'bound to keep up with his studi~; Annie rectors. audits some classes and tries her think of the witness it· bearS, Mrs. Arlstides A. Andrade, unintentionally, one is sure, to band at writing. The book details their first tbe need of a Redeemer for a Diocesan president, aided by Mrs. James O·.Brien Jr., W. ,.ear together: their adjustment fallen race. Lillian Ross, Mrs. Edward Galli to each other, the constantly re 'The read~r who would avoid curring financial crises, the being shocked and dismayed had gan, Mrs. Harold Hayes Jr. and coming of their fir~ child, the better pass up Mr. Treece'. book Mrs. Helen F. Donahue, yw.. uncertainty as to whether Carl and get t~ story of Electra, as presidents. can continue school, Annie's well as thoae of Agamemnon, Mt.s Margaret M. Lahey, Mra. progress asa novice playwright. Clytemnestra, Iphigenia, Orestes, Enullett P. Almond, Mrs. John Homely, Touchinc and the others from the ela.uics. J. )(ullaney, and Mrs. Gilbat J. l'roonan, past presidents and It is all very homely, often 'Sword at ·S11llSe!t' direetonl. quite touching., now and again Another cherished legend gets cloying. Miss Smith manages Distriet PreIlIident. a startlingly different sort of many telling strokes, as when Also Mrs. Adrien Piette, .... treatment in Rosemary Sutcliff'. Annie says to Carl, after he deplores their straits, "But it's massive ( 495 pages!) novel, tion:11 chairman for family and parent education; MiSII Kathleea not the tenement kind of poor. ,"Sword at Sunset" (Coward-Mc That'll being poor :for nothing. Cann. $6.95). It is the Arthurian C. lRoche and Miss Adrienne But we're poor for !IOme-thin«." epic which II reworked - and . Lemieux, leCretaries; Miss Lydia On the other hand, it is • little radically so - by Miss SutclHf'. Pacheco, treasurer; Mrs. Georp hard to believe in the invariable Aimble brain and tireless hands. Bau::a, auditor; Mrs. JoaquiDl Berrlal'do, historian; !Ira. Noon benevolence _ n d detJs-ex-ma King Arthur i. here rendered china helpfulness of almost _ Artos the Bear, a war leader an., )arliamentarian. eYeryone with whom Annie and who finaU,. becomes higb king Mlrs.Mlclaae1 . J. ' McMahoa, Cerl come in touch. Occasionally of Britain in the fifth century. Mrs. Leo J. 1.'elesmanlck, MrL tile narrative ,has the qualitJ' &f The Romati, legions have left the Ricbard M. Paulson, Mrs. all old" Mari: Pickford movie; ishind; tbe 'Church retains some Chal'les X. Landry, Mrs. ~ And some of Annie', Ifaffes hold on the people. Robl~ou, ~ct 'p~liaeM. (lOch as ren~ring.n:tagIla cum The Saxons are' not only Milas Helen Chace, JItn. Wil laude as 'Maggie-cum-IoUder) raiding the coasts but driving liam F. Goff; Miss Lahey~ lira. make one wince. inland and taking over whole Han,.. B. Loew, Mrs. O'Brietl, This is dbtinctly an old, fash areas. The various indigenous Mrs. Joseph G. McCann, Kn. ioned type of novel. As such, it tribes do not stand together Michael F. Fitzgerald, Mrs. will be gleefully welcomed and the invader but actually Alm[)nd, Diocesan committee relished by some, sniffingly dis . against ease bis way by contendinl chairmen. missed by others. Both sorts nm among themselves. to excess. But as a literary per formance, this is M ,great shakes, 'Amber Princea' F<>r a jolting contrast to Miss Cohtinued from Page One Smith's book, there is. rean, First Marine Division. grim stuff in Henry Treece's He is the author of: "Amber Princess'~ (Ran do m Why I Am a Catholic~ a perHouse. $4.95), a re-telling of the sonal account of the doctrine ancient Greek legends of the and history of the Church and fall of the house of Atreus. The a biography of the C-atholic poet amber princess of the story is Francis Thompson. He has pub n"omas F. Monaghan Jr. Electra and she is the narrator. lished many articles and is an .~he .b?Ok pur~or.ts, to be her.. editorial writer f()l' The Provi ;, ,Tr~",.r4lf recitation, in old age and when, dence Visitor and a member of being attended by a Hittite phy-:, the School Board of ,the Diocese sician, of thel(mg-ago' eventi '.' 01. Providence ",-: '142. SECOND-STRln which climaxed in the Trojan . War and the destructiOn" of the A convert to the Church iD. OSborne 5-7'56 dynasty of which her father was 1949, Dr. Thomson has long been , . '. ,":' the last reigning representative. interested in the ecumenical . FAU IIVB At the very erid ,we are left, movement, in which he played wondering whethe~ this is in an active part pciOl' to his cOo &c:t Electra to whom we, alone wnlOllo
as
In:stallation
Serrans Convene
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.
MONAGHAN
ACCEPTANCE
CORP.
trf&'~er
Hunger is the more terrible because it is the opposite of riches. One-fourth of the world gets richer; almost all of the rest become poorer. Economic development enriches the rich, and soul-explosion (or what is improperly called population ex plosion) impoverishes the poor. A French writer tells us that before World War II 38 per cent of the world's population did not have enough to eat; now 60 per cent are in that condition. No, the starving have no army, but they have a General- and his name is Hunger. . This is not an economic condition; It Is a mora) condition. And the burdeD. falls
principall,. on the Church. Take the YOW of ponrty. Bow man,. hUndreds of mU lions In Africa, Asia and Latin America would take the vow tomO'lTOw if the,. could live as weD u those who profess It. These people Jive In a state of compulsor)' fasting; the)' have not the vow of poverty, but the "vow" of destitution - and destitution is not a vow because It ia forced on them. Sometimes, too, individual vows of poverty go hand in hand with corporate wealth. It is like having no apple on the plate but a barrel full in the cellar. "Blessed are the poor in spirit," said the Lord. Does not that apply to aU who are signed with the Cross? In the face of 25 million in Brazil who subsist on $84 a year have we not a duty to share' our possessions with thepl.? Givell 'a land where 500 of every 1,000 babies perish in their first year and the rest go on a diet of molasge8 and manioc-root flour, with no milk, have we the moral right to put up a cathe dralor a church ~sting over a million dollar:s without sharing? The laet Is, we have too much and others too Jittle, and the Son 01 God bida us be.. the burdeDi 01 others. Instead of adcUnc wealth to wealth, buUdinl' to buildlnc, we should be addln&' shack to shack, hut • hut in other lands. In some places, the dead are not buried In coffins, but in paper because wood ia too oostl)'. 08e hundred thousand people in one cit)' are totall)' anemplo)'ed and spend. their time seavenginc; an other 100,000 work a ria)' 01' two a week for 45 cents ada,. anll pay 65 centa a week for their mud hut to some landowner. Oh yes, :We give the Holy Father a collection a year for all hi. poor in Africa, Asia parts of Latin America, Oceania and Northern Europe - an averag~ per capita contribution of 27 cents per Cath olic. But should it not be .$27 each, or $270 each? And this not because we fear the revolt of the masses, but because we fear for the Church 'and the faithful in the United States unless we stop providing .for our wants before we care for the needs of our brethren in Christ. Millions will read this and. say "How true'" But how man,. dozen will read' it and say: "I will be true to Christ Who died f<>r me: therefore I shall do a little dying in sacrifice for those in whom He relives His poverty. If you will be one of these dozens, send the results of your sacrifice or write for information on wills and annuities to The Society for the Propagation O!- the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York.
GOD LOVE YOl1 to Anonymous tor $11 "Mone)' saved rolUq DIJ' own ciclU"ettes. working overtime and other eco nomies. With a roof over m)' head and three meals a day, I am rich eompared to your missionaries." ••• to J.A.H. for $10 "For a ll)eCial favor." ••• to LS. for $% "Most of m)' ten children' need shOCll. A dear friend cave me' $%0 l!IO I will Bend this to &he MI!leions and hope it helps a little." ••• to Mr. and Mrs. K.H. f_ $5 "'l'hia small aua wu left oYer a f . we returned from a nice vacatlon."
~
Cat .. _"' BeY.til. eolaJmt. • eat
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to It and mall it ..
hUOD J.Sheen, National Director of &he Society , . tbe J'NpacaUoD of &hePalth, IN ..Iflb Annue, New York
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1HE ANCHOR-DioceM of Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 12, 1963
ESPIRITO SANTO SCHOOL
FALL RIVER
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14
THE ANCHOR-Di~~ese
Of Fan River':"Thurs. Sept. 1~, 1963 .'
Tells Teen-agers Maintain y D~thful Outlook, 'Idealism By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J.
BONELESS
TOP ROUND OR
BOTTOM ROUND
I'm a little hazy on 'this, but I heard somewhere tnat every. action is supp~sed ~ produce an equal and opposite reactIOn - or somethmg hke that. Whether this column is an equal reaction or not, I'm not sure, but at least it is opposite. It's a reaction to . ·the constant emphasis on "giving" doesn't usually begin "What's Wrong With You?" until after it hurts. "What's Wrong With Your There Is an honesty to youtq. Kids?" "What's Wrong With You - or perhaps it could be better And Your Kids?" After awhile called a frankness - which is one beg ins to natural and instinctive. It con won d e r if sists in openness, in the right the r e 's any~ind of blunt simplicity, and in POSTULANT: Miss Lil thing rig h t an eye that can spot the phoney ,about anybody, a mile away because it isn't lian Phenix, daughter of Mr. · and, incidentalfooled by the camouflage of and Mrs. Leo PheniX, 167 ly, if the r e c o l o r . Irving Street, Fall River, has might not be There is a fairness which enterea the postulancy of the s 0 met h in' g judges a human being by what he Sisters of St. Jeanne d'Arc w ron g wit h is and not by what he looks like. tho s e so obAll these virtues come hard to at Sillery, Quebec. She is a s~ssed wit h those who have lost the 'youth in graduate of J esus-"Mary Aca w~at's wrong their hearts, because they have demy. WIth everyone had to compromise with so many else. pJ.1oneys, beginning, maybe, with Not that everything's right themselves. " wjth everybody. Obviously it The really young are charac ,isn't, and shutting your ey.es to terized, before the artificial fears ., your drawbacks isn't just stupid and neuroses of sophistication . T AIPEr (NC) Formosa's . ...,.- it's dangerous. And after. all get at them, with an incredible ·,the ostrich who buries his head brand of courage. A young man Cath.olics have increased by b:!. the sand still leaves a rather will fight for an ideal no matter more than 100,000 or 69 per cent '. prominent area of himself ex- what the risks, no matter how during the last five years ac posed. enormous the odds, and with no cording to figures released by the .Bishops here. There are so many things right apparent t~ought of conse Catholics numbered 244,876 on '. about you teen-agers, positive quences to himself. things you can build on that Part of his courage, true, caa June 30, 1963. Five years pre it's a real tragedy if you 'wa!ste come from his lack of experience viously, on June 30, 1958, they . your lives just trying to root with consequences - like pain, totaled 144,731. Th.ere were 18,496 adult and out defects. After all, if you're for instance - but much of it 9,557 infant Baptisms during the going to fill a glass with water.C9111~~.~mplyfrom his youth. past. 12 months. you don't try to drive out the . 'i'11e .increase during this pe air first and then pour in 'the Faith and a Bock riod, from the 219,214 figure of water. No, you pour in the water Some years ago, the news and that pushes the air out papers carried an unforgettable Jun,e, 1962, is greater than the easily and naturally. , . picture, taken in East Germany. total. Catholic population 01. The pictur~ shows two ~n-aged Formosa 10 years ago. In June, boys standing in front of a 185:1, there were 25,175 Catholic. Tremendous Thinlr .' " Soviet tank, its .huge glHl trained herE!. . The first and most obvioU8 directly on them, as they throW' Catechumens enrolled to take ! thing to your credit il' your' relil~ious instruction number ,.outh itself. Youth is a treinen-' rocks at the monster. 51,31!18, according to the Bishops. Only the young at heart would dous thing - not necessarily the' The laBt remaining Apostolic youth that goes with few years, fight tanks with rocks. Cl"llZY. PreJ'ecttire, that of Hualiea. but the youthful outlook. Even you say? Maybe. Maybe not. was raised to the rank of a diO There was a yOung gUy once who cese eadY.in 1963. 'Formosa noW' a guy as serious as the philoso pher Thomas Aquinas, when he got pretty good mileage out of . comprises the Archdioeeae 01. a medium-sized rock. His name Taipei and six dioceses. wrote about youth and booze said that in general young p.eo~· was David. And all he had was a Missioners .-here are encour pIe ought to leave the stuff rock;: his faith and m. youth. aged by the figure for adult Bap .. So postpone as long as you tisms of the last 12 months. alone, since they're already balf drunk because of their very age. can the bored sophistication' of :"'=i~;o,...;;;;r.........;o,.......;;o;;;;r,
His point was that, while older' an accele~ated and fake 'adult people may need an occasional hood. Put off the "fatigue" of old I~" ,BEFORE YOU shot. to restore their energy and age, the pessimism of a disap BUY - TIY enthusiasm, the kids have no pearing youth. Give 'the lie to the need for such boosters, since' lie that there are no more their natural blast-off power can frontiers, no more worlds to COD quer. Because, evea if there get them pretty high ail by it were no other frontiers, you a1 . \ · self.
ways :\lave at least one huge OLDSMOBILE' Because genuine youth means world to conquer - YQurself. energy and enthusiasm, zip, pep
pldsmobile-Peugot-Renault - call it what you will. And we'
87 Middle Stfee\, Fairhav:en took on the kid without these
~~~~""".......~~~~!!I
things as old or square beyond rrl rr,'1 fiG his yeaJ;s,. just as we consider DRY CLEANING the older guy over the hill when . Continued from Page Six and
he's all wound out. And it reallY act: the Bishop takes possession FUI STORAGE
~n't years it's attitude. of this new Christian. Hence . ,. forth, -the confirmed can be Worthwhile Goals counted on. He or she is a re sponsible member of the Church Youth is a time of idealism II time of looking towards' goal~ . militant, a soldier. From now on the confirmed is ready to openly 34-44 .CphannetStr.et that may sometimes be una chievable; but are at least worth-. display all human activity the TClunton VA 2-6161 Sign of the Cross traced on the while. And, often enough, be forehead. True, the candidate is cause of the simple refusal of a soldier. But that does not mean youth to believe ·that just be cause a dream is enormous it that he or she must wait for some diabolical force to come cannot be realized, the unachiev storming against the Church in' able goals are accomplished. No "old man" could reach such an invasion. It means that the candidate, a goal because he'doesn't have the y,outhful idealism even to trY strengthened by the Holy Spirit, consoled and enheartened by for it, or maybe even the youth NEW, BEDFORD ful eye to see it. And bear in this new closeness and confi mind, burn' it in mind maybe, dence of Christ, now shall act : that an "old man" is one whose: ,with the strength and loyalty. of INDUSTRIAL OilS
outlook is old. We've all seen a soldier. Religion will be lived "old men" of 18 and ''younl1 with conviction; never shall one H~ATING OilS
bargain or barter with revealed. men" of 8 0 . ' P trnths; ne:ver shall one blush to TIMKIN
Honesty and Coura.ge live always and everywhere acThe truly y o.u n g (maybe cqrding to these truths. Oil' BURNERS
"young at heart" is a better exEasy? No. A soldier's lot is pression) are dissatisfied with never easy. He mum ever train & mediocrity. They want no part and practice. So we who are of the lukewarm "challenge". confirmed are all soldiers. But' 501 C:OUNTY ST.
'1: Tell them to "give till it hurts ". fact is not ·enough. We must live a~d they instinctively shr~ as soldiers-actively deepening NEW BEDFORD
their shoulders, because they showing and defending the trust realize - again probably in-'· placed in wi by Christ at our WY 3-1751 stinctively - that this would not confiJ:mation. ' , really be giving at alJl. since Next article-Hoq Chrism
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THE ANCHOR Thu'rs., Sept. 12, 1963
The Parish Parade
IT• .JOHN BAr.nST, CENTRAL VILLAGE
ST. MARY'S, MANSFIELD
The Ladies Guild win meet tonight in the church hall. Mrs. Genevieve' Whitty, Mrs. Anne Yocum and Mrs. Anne Ouellette will be hostesses. Members are asked to bring an article for a Chinese auction which will fol low the business meeting. Mrs. Whitty announces that a rummage sale will be held this month. Donations may be left at the church hall on Main Road at any time.
The first meeting of the Cath. olic Woman's Club for the Fall season will be held tonight at St. Mary's Hall. Sister Blanche Agnes, S.U.S.C., will show slides and speak on the wor,k of her community in Africa.
OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, OSTERVILLE
Plans for the Women's Guild include a spaghetti supper on Columbus day, a Christmas ba zaar Saturday, Nov. 23 and a Christmas greens and food sale Friday, Dec. 13. .First regular meeting of the unit will be held Thursday, Oct. 10, preceded by Benediction in the. church. VISITATION GUILD, EASTHAM
New guild officers are Mrs. Leroy Babbitt, president; Mrs. George S. Duffy Jr., vice-presi. dent; Mrs. Elsie Wehage, secre tary; Mrs. Fred LaPiana, treas urer. They will take over their duties at a business session to night at the home of Mrs. Bab bitt, Nickerson Road. SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER
Parish Boy Scouts have been reorganized, with new adult leaders and 40 new members. Meetings are from 7 to 9 Wed nesday nights in the church hall. Cubs have added a new Cub master and three new den mothers. First pack meeting is Rt for Friday, Sept. 27 in the ehurch hall. Junior CYO members win sponsor a dance Friday night, Sept. 20, also in the hall. Senior CYO members plan a hayride and picnic in Westport tomorrow night. Social chairman Patricia Mizher is in charge of arrangements, together with adult adivsors Mr. and Mrs. James H. Sullivan Jr. Two Bluebird units of 20 girls each and one 20-girl Campfire unit are meeting Thursday afternoons after school in the ehurch hall. The Women's Club will hold a tea for new members at 3 Sun day afternoon, Sept. 15 in the church hall. Mrs. Roger Dube, chairman, will be aided by Mrs. Stanley Janick, co-chairman. All past and present club officers will be on the reception commit 'tee and prospective members are invited to attend, as well as all present members. ' NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER
The Council of Catholic Women announces its annual style show for 7:30 Wednesday, night, Sept. 25 at White's restaurant. Miss Collette Rousseau, chairman and Miss Paulette Charron, c0 chairman, announce that tickets for the show and 'for special prizes will be available in the e h u r c h vestibule ,following Masses this Sunday. Miss Elea nor Dumont is in charge of the special prizes. ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER
The Women'. Guild plans a Fall fashion show Thursday, Oct. 3 and a harvest supper Thurs day, Nov. 7. A leries of whist parties will commence Tuesday, Sept. 17. SACRED HEAIlT, FALL RIVER
The Women's Guild Bowling League will open its season at 8:30 tonight at Capitol Alleys. In charge 01. membership aPe Mrs. John Patota and Mrs. Leo Baldwin. ST. MICHAEL, :J'ALL RIVER
Parishionera wm celebrate iheir patronal feast with • mal asada supper and veriety show at 8 SundQy night, Sept. 22. Scheduled 1M 7 Saturday night, Sept. 28 Je • clem boil and ehou rico aupper., followed, 'by deDc
me.The program will be cnmaxed
Sunday, Sept. 29 with. solemn tM.gh Mass, IJtreet procession, ba zaar, band concert and Poria 1Ueee~
Louisiana Bishop Asks Cooperation In Desegregation BATON ROUGE (NC) Bishop Edward E. Tracy has appealed for cooperatiOJl with local public school board
OUR LADY OF FATIMA, SWANSEA
Plans are complete for an auc tion to be sponsored by the W<lmen's Guild and Holy Name Society beginning at 6 Saturday night, Sept. 14 in the church hall. Inspection of articles will start at 5, at which time a snack bar will open, to be in service throughout the evening. Joseph McDonald and Herbert Chace are co-chairmen of ,the kitchen committee, with Charles Lacerda of Somerset announced as auctioneer. Refreshments will include hot dogs, ham salad rolls, homemade squares and a variety of beverages. Other chairmen are Mrs. Nor. bert McKenna, serving commit tee; Mrs. Ambrose Powers and Mrs. Charles Lacerda, white elephant booth; Miss Ruth Mer cier, homemade baked goodS; .Mrs. Marion Flanigan, grab-bags. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER
The Social Group announces a cake sale following Masses from 7 to' 11 Sunday morning, Sept. 29. The event will take place in the lower church. Mrs. Mariette St. Pierre will be chair man. The unit's next meeting is set for Wednesday, Oct. 2. ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER
1S
SILVER JUBILEE: Rev. Lionel Aubin, M.S., Fan River native, marks silver jubilee of ordination at St. Michael's Church, Ocean Grove. He gives blessing to his brother, Joseph, sexton at the Ocean Grove parish. An other brother, Raymond, is a La Salette Brother, stationed with Father Aubin at Our Lady of Sorrows Seminary, Ipswich.
Orthodox Sincere
Swiss Prelate Lauds Russian Bishops'
Efforts for Better Relations'
officials in desegregation of pub lic high schools here. "I appeal t<l all members of our Catholic family to provide right-minded leadership in the community," said the Bishop 01 Baton Rouge. Twenty-seven Negroes enrolled in the twelfth grade of the East Baton Rouge Parish (county) schools under a grade-by-grade desegregation plan prepared at the order of the U. S. District Court. Bishop Tracy noted that other rel~gious leaders and civic spokesmen also have pledged cooperation. "Let us pray," he said, "that, we may meet, conscientiously and prUdently, the delicate so cial problems of our times and that Almighty God may give us the courage and the judgment to be faithful to our religious principles, our concept of human dignity and our respect for the law and order of the land."
. Where A
The Women's Guild will open its season with 'an acquaintance GENEVA (NC) - Russian Or toward easing international tea social at 8 Monday night, Sept. .ions." 16 in the Catholic Community' thodox Bishops are sincere in Center. A registration period their efforts to better their Means A Church's relations with the Holy and business meeting will pre See, a' Swiss prelate said here cede the social. NO Joa TOO 110 after a recent visit to Moscow. SACRED HEART, Bishop Francois Charriere of NON' TOO SMAll NORTH ATTLEBORO Lausanne, Geneva and Fribourg Rev. Patrick O'Neill, Diocesan spoke in an interview given to Superintendent of Schools, will Kipa, Swiss Catholic news agen highlight the list of speakers at cy. The Bishop was named' by a banquet closing Lay Apostolate Augustin Cardinal .Bea, S.J ~ PRINTERS Sunday, to be held in the parish President of the Vatican Secre Oct. 6. His topic will be Parent tariat for Promoting Christian Main OHice and Planl Teacher Relations. Unity, to be official representa Moderators of afternoon ses LOWILL, MASS. tive of the Catholic Church at sions, based on the theme "Edu celebrations in the Soviet Union 01852 cation for Christ," will include to mark the 50th anniversary of T.....hon. Joseph R. G. Gelinas, president the consecration of Patriarch 565 of the parish Home and School Alexei of Moscow, head of the 451-6333 and 457-7500 Association; Sister Mary Urban, Russian Orthodox Church. His, R.S.M., principal of Bishop Fee appointment was authorized by ,Auxiliary "anh han High School; Claire Poirier; Pope Paul VI. ,BOSTON Sister Claire Elizabeth, S.U.S.C.; Bishop Charriere said in hill OCIANPOItT, N. J. , Open Evenings Raymond Lallier; Raymond interview: Vaguener; Richard Levesque; Seeks Improvement 'AWTUCKET, It. I. Sister Louise Rita, S.U.S.C.; "I have the impression that Roger Thibault; Sister Claire 1he Russian Orthodox Hierarchy Antoine, S.U.S.C.; Sister Theresa sincerely desires to bring about Jeanne, S.U.S.C.; Sister Lorraine an improvement in its relations SelYing the Saver Edmond, S.U.S.C'; and Gerard with the Holy see, and that it
Desilets. and Home Owner has the full backing of the Or
ST. JOSEPH, ·'thodox faithful in its endeavor." The Specialized Job of a Cooperative Banlc FALL RIVER The Bishop said he could not
Senior CYO members wnt tell what had prompted the
sponsor a cake sale f<lllowing all Soviet government to adopt a
Masses this Sunday morning in new policy regarding the Cath VA 4-4084 the school hall. Donations of olic Church or whether its pres
cakes may be left in the hall ent attitude _ is permanent -or
WINTHROP STREET - TAUNTON between 7 and 8 Saturday night. temporary
ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE POST OFFICE
"But," he added, "it is quite
OUR LADY OF VICTORY. obvious that the Moscow author
CENTERVILLE' Where it PAYS to get together Future events for the Women'. ities now recognize the work of Guild will include a ruinmage the Holy See for peace and sale and harvest supper in Octo ber; a public card party ill November and a Christ.mell bapar in December.• featuring
GOOD HAME GREAT DEAL
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OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER A potluck supper wID
be sponsored at 6:30 Wednesd8y night, Oct. 2 by the Council aI. Catholic Women. Al60 on the group'. calendar hl • November baEaar.
"Th. Gaslight Room" Ideal for Communion Breu fa.t., Orpnization Banqueta
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ST. JUDE
SOLEMN NOVENA IN PREPARATION FOR THE FEAST, OCTOBER 28th Preacher: Fr. Richard J. Callahan, O.F.M.
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK FOR FAMILY' BANKING
Chapel Devotions Thursdays 10:00 AM.-12:10 Noon-5:10, 7 and 8 P.M.
RADIO NOVENA WSAR - Fall River-1480 an Dial-6:45 P.M. WPLM - Plymouth-1390 on Dial-9:15 P.M.
ArTLEBORO • SO. AlTLEBORO • SEEKONK MEMBER FDI C
Write for Booklet and Medal:
Ourladys ~hapel
FRANCISCAN FATHERS 600 Pleasant Street New Bedford, Mass.
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FIELD ':DAY, -RID·ES - GAMES
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F'RE-:EPARKI'N,G
SATURDAY, SEPT. 14
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Tltis Message is Spclnsored' By Tlte' Following Individuals and Business Concerns in Greater f,,11 Rive,: Building I Materials, ,Inc. Duro Finish.ing Corp. Enterprise ~ Brewing Co. The Exterminator Co. Fall River Electric Light Co. Fan River' Trust Co.
Glc.be Manufaet.uring Co. Plymouth; Printing Co.. Inc. KOlrmon Water Co. Sherry Corp. R. A. McWhirr CompanYSobiioH Brothers MCllcKenxie & Win$low, ,Inc. Melson Furniture Showrooms Sterling Beveragel, Inc. Meloney & Co. Inc. Textile Workers Union of Ne!wport Finishing Co. America, AFL-CIO.
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THEANCHOR"-Dioceseof Fall !N'Vef'4-Th",rs. Sept. 12, 1963
Denies, Charges O'f Favoritism To Church
Integrate, Schools in Soutlt Carolina
NEW YORK (NC) F&ther Patrick O'Connor, veteran foreign corregpon dent of the N.C.W.C. News Service, hCis challenged charges of favoritism to the Catholic Church by the government of South Vietnam. Father O'Connor of the Soci ety of St. Columban said in a letter from Saigon to the New York Times that it is "mislead ing tf> talk of 'great privileges' given to Catholic institutions when these render great public services that the government cannot now give." . He was replying to a letter to the Times by Erich Wulff in which Wulff accused him of writing a "misleading" letter on the Vietnam situation which had been published in the Times July 25. Commenting on that earlier letter, Father O'Connor said he had not intended to "report comprehensively on South Viet nam or to defend every policy of President Diem." 'No Qourel' On the issue of alleged reli gious persecution of Buddhists in Vietnam, he declared that "anti-government Buddhists re peatedly affinned that they had no quarrel with the Catholic
Church."
He denied "that what has hap
pened her e could properly be called religious persecution" and said other foreign observers share this view, including for mer U. S. Ambassador Frederick E. Nolting, Fat her O'Connor rebuffed Wulff's claim that a government financed review, Extreme-Asie, had until the end of May pUb lished pictures of Catholic reli gious ceremonies with Vatican flags flown. He said he COUld "find no ~lJch pictures" and. added that the only similar picture in the re view which he could find was one showing a nonreligious cere mony with Vietnamese national flags displayed. Tribesmen Ga.~ La.ncl As for alleged favoritism to' Catholic institutions, Fat her O'Connor said that three Catho lic hospitals recently built in Vietnam were constructed on land given not by the govern. ment but by the mountain tribesmen whom the hospitals were to serve. "Each was built with Catholic money," he added. While the government has given land for some Catholic schools, he said', it has given "land. building materials and money for Buddhist pagodas." "It gives school sites because more schools are acutely need ed," he said, "It is no fault of the Catholic Church if Buddhist groups in Vietnam have been slow in providing educational facilities or if they have estab lished no hospitals or leprosaria."
Consecrate ~ishop I n Red Vietnam SAIGON (NC)-A.44.year old Bishop has been appointed by the Holy See and consecrated for the Bac Ninh Diocese in ,com munist-ruled north Vietham. Bishop Paul Joseph Pham ding Tung of Bac Ninh has been consecrated by Archbishop Jo seph Trin nhu Khue of Hanoi, capital of north Vietnam. The Bac Ninh diocese was va .cant for eight, years. During that time, Bishop Pierre Khuat van Tao of Hiliphong served as apos
tolic administrator,
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STAMPS. TOOl
CHOICE GRADE
NEW SCHOOL: Bishop Connolly lays cornerstone at Our Lady of Lourdes School, Taunton. School op~ned last week, is staffed by Sisters of Mercy.
200, Applicants Men With. Varied Backgrounds" Enrolling,
In Seminary for Delayed Vocations BOSTON (NC) - A former tions have come from men out Anglican minister is among stu side the New England area. He dents enrolled for the new $4 'estimated the seminary eventu million seminary for delayed ally will be educating between vocations being built in nearby 30l) and 400 men. Weston, to open in September, "These are men of responsibil 1964. ity and we will not have to in Other students in the initial still a feeling of responsibility class will include two physicians, in them," the monsignor said. a superintendent of schools, a "The seminarians whose ages' chemical engineer, a high school will range upwards into the headmaster. and a high school fiftie~ and even older, will be teacher according to Msgr. able to get the feel of the priest_ Geor'ge' A. Schlichte, seminary hood by doing work with youth, director. assisting in the liturgy publicly, Planned by Richard Cardinal teaching catechism and giving Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, instructions to prospective con verts." the seminary will serve on a nationwide basis men who have advanced beyond the usual age of seminarians and believe they have a late vocation. Maintenance- Supplies'
Founded with the approval of the Holy See, the seminary will SWEEPERS. - SOAPS
be named fOr the late Pope DISJNFECTA~TS John XXIII, the Cardinal has FIRE EXTINGUISHERS announced.
SCHOOL
'Men of RespensibiJity-' Msgr. Schlichte, former vice rector of· the North American College in Rome, said applica tions have been received from some 200 men in a variety of professions and occupations, in tent upon studying for the priesthood. He said most of the applica
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Teachers Meet
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 12, 1963
Inter Faith .Meetings
Continued from Page One Keynote of the session was 1I1at similarities in many areas of religious thought· outweigh dividing differences. Father Von Euw and Mr. Chapman spoke twiee each, then answered ques tions. First speaker was Mr. Chap man, a graduate of Andover-' Newton Seminary who decided he could do more for ecumenism as a dedicated layman than a minister. He describes Packard Manse as an "organization spon soring groups of Christians for discussions of various matters of common interest." He has spoken lit St. John's Seminary on numerous occasions and he and Father Von Euw spoke last Spring in New Bedford under Protestant church auspices. Father Von Euw is a trustee of Packard Manse and liaison for ecumenical work for Cardinal Cushing. He aecompanied the Cardinal to the Second Vatican Council as his personal theolo gian and also served as a "peri tus" or expert on Eastern Rites for the Council. He was a guest '-'at Faith' and Order meeting of the World Council of Churches recently held in Montreal. - Divisions That Rend Mr. Chapman pointed out thre~ divisions that rend society at the present time: between East and West, between Chris tians and Jews, and between Negroes and whites, notably in the United States. He said these divisions cannot be disentangled' from the divi sion that exists between Catho licism and Protestanism, a divi sion having its roots in the 10th and 11th centuries split between the E a s t ern and Western Churches. "As we become prepared to honor the division between Eastern and Western Churches, we become prepared to honor the East-West division in political reality," he noted, He said that the further divi sion of Christianity into denom inatlons has weakened the de sire for unity among sects. "We are not hurt by the brQkenness of the body," he said and averred that because we take the Protes tant - Catholic d i vis ion for granted, we also take for granted political and colored-white di visions. Instead of fostering un~ty, the Church is herself rent apart, he said. "We should be one 'in one Lord, but we are not." Defines Ecumenism Father Von Euw gave a defini tion of "ecumenical" as em bracing the nation of Christian unity. with Christ as center and focus. "It is Christ our Lord who wills this unity" he em .phasized. .. Ecumenism, he said, is not s0 ciological nor primarily ptag matical, but is aimed at "con version in ·the sense of turning or returning to Christ." He offered a definition by Rev. Gregory Baum of ecumenism as a "fostering towards perfection of separated Christian patri monies" a'nd noted that the quest for unity must help us to see Christ better in ourselves and others. He stressed the "aggiorna mento" or renewal that Pope .lohn XXIII hoped for as a prime achievement of the Vatican Council. .This theme of renewal was also emphasized by Mr. Chap man in his second. talk. He said that Christians can work towards a renewal of understanding by reflecting the Gospel in their own lives; of love by giving it without worry as to whether it is returned; and of prayer life by conforming their prayer to the needs of the world in these times. Practical applications of ecu menism were listed by Father Von Euw in his concluding talk. He said that a positive approach, a sense of humor and a spiri '" tually rooted concern for unity were needed by members of all faiths. He noted that Catholics tend to lump all Protestants together, wheareas there are vast differ ences among denominations, and
he rocommended a seeking for ways of coming together outside formal church services. Meal Symbolizes Eucharist "A meal together can symbol ize the Eucharist:' he said. "There can be prayer and read· ing of Scripture together." "When you receive commun ion," he continued, "is the ques tion of our disunitedness fore most in your mind? Are you' aware that the will of Him whom you are receiving is not being perfected? If you are .not, then you are. not converting." "Until the anguish of separa ion of every Christian," he con tion is realized in the commun eluded, "there will not be unity." At a following question period, Mr. Chapman noted that com" man community projects have some value in working towards unity, but that the danger exists of their becoming a substitute for true unity. "For example,' in matters of schools, unless one examines and understands why Catholics want their own parochial schools, then these questions can turn into arguments and sources of division, rather than means of unity_ . . The speakers would not com ment on what the results of unity might be. "Our imagina tion cannot grasp its end result," said Mr. Chapman. "The Holy Spirit is moving us and towards what, we do not know." Common Worship? . As to common worship, Father Von Euw pointed out that canon law forbids "communicatio in sacds" because we might lead ourselves or others into error. "Many advocate 'intercom munion,'" he said, "since the Eucharist is the Sacrament of unity. But for this very reason, those around the table must al ready be united to each other. So the Eucharist is rather a tragic reminder of our division." He noted, however, that there are many areas "in which we can pray together, such as civic and community events." Mr. Chapman gave as example 'of areas where cooperation is possible, "concern for what 'the others' are doing." He mentioned the feeling of all faiths at the death of Pope John, and also suggested the possibility of Bible study or study of worship across denominati.onal lines. Ecumenism was demonstrated most tangibly at the close of the meeting asa joint committee of ladies' guilds from the Episcopal and Catholic parishes served re. freshments to the more than 200 who attended the meeting. To the question "Will there be another meeting like this on the Island soon?" the answer of all concerned was "We hope so." The event is believed first of its kind under Catholic auspices in the Diocese.
BROTHERS CELEBRATE: Very Rev ~ Luke Chabot, O.F.l\'I., center, marks silver jubilee of ordination with two priest brothers to help him celebrate. Left, Rev. Bertrand Chabot, St. Anthony of Padua, New Bedford; right, Rev. Gerard Chabot, pastor of St. Theresa Church, South At tleboro. Brothers celebrated solemn high Mass of thanks giving- at native parish, Sacred Heart, North Attleboro.
MCJlth Essentia I For Learning MILWAUKEE (NC)-Mathe rna tics is becoming as essential a tool for learning today as Latin was at the time of the Renais sance, a Jesuit physicist told a Marquette University confer ence. Father Joseph S. Mulligan, S.J., chairman of Fordham Uni versitJr's physics department, spoke at Marquette University during a conference of 80 mathe matics and science teachers from midwestern Jesuit high schools. Father Mulligan said that the perfect Christian must know mathematics, "the language of our time as Latin was the lan guage of St. Ignatius' time," and what science is and what it is trying to do. "Not to know these vital ele ments in our culture is to be out of tou~h with reality, to live In an uneeal dream world. It is to fail lobe a perfect Christian," he said.
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Continued from Page Six series. He will speak three times to the teachers, who will be from all parts of the Diocese. Sessions will begin at 9. The talks will introduce a 30 week college credit course am plifying material found in the religion teJets. '],'0 be given by three priests of the Diocese, they will be held Saturday mornings at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River. Rev. Edmund T. Delaney, Holy Name parish, Fall River, will conduct sessions for primary teachers; Rev. Peter Graziano, 81. Mary's Cathedral, for inter.' mediate grades; and Rev. John R. FoIster, S1. Anthony's, New .Bedford, for seventh and eighth grades. Also on Saturday mornings at the academy, an in-service course on modern mathematics will be offered by Sister Mary Richard, S.U.S.C. and Sister Bar bara Mary, S.U.S.C. Its purpose will be to familiarize teachers with concepts and methods in volved in the "new math" now taught in schools of the Diocese. At the closing session of to morrow's institute, Robert Hoye of 8eience Research Associates will speak on the testing pro gram offered by his organization.
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THE ANCHOR-
Patriots in Auspicious Debut Meet San Diego on Sunday
Thurs., Sept. 12, 1963
Says Repression 'Very Unwise'·
By Jaek Kineavy It's pro-football time apin, that season of the year wheJl the man ill the hOO8e goes into Sunday hibernation ill his den not to emerge until sometime in mid-December by which time the 1963 schedule will have become history. Keynoting the NFL cam 10 avenge last year's 17-0 set paign which gets underway back. -this weekend was the Labor High school squads in the area Day exhibition - what a are also busily engaged in daily misnomer - between the Giant. and the Packers in Green Bay. It was 10 good, as a matter of fact, reg u 1 a r sea.on play may well prove anticlimactic. Our own Bos ton Patriots, having suHered through f i v e winless pre season exhibi tiOR tilts, .an swered the 8tarting bell authoritatively 10 pin a 38-U setback on the re vamped New York Jet. Sunda7 at Boston College'. Alumni Sta dium. Thia was indeed a quick reversal of form for :Mike Holo vak'. charges who just a week earlier had been decisioned by those same Jets, 22-20, in an exhibition lame at Rutgers. The Patriots are ICheduled ... meet San Diego this Sunday and the performance of the Boston club in this one should prove an effective barometer by which to judge the team's capability. Unfortunately, it would seem that Boston will be without the services of ace running back Ron Burton for the remainder of the season and perhaps for good. If memory serves true, Burton was one of the first grid draft choices to be lured away from the NFL. His loss hurts. Sunday's game at the Heights was a timely homecoming for a quartet of former Eagles all of whom saw service during the course of the afternoon. Serving with distinction in the flanker back spot was Art Graham who had two completions' for the afternoon, one good for 38 yarda and a T.D. Graham spelled an other former B.C. luminary, now a veteran in pro ranks, Jim Col clough. whose .pulled leg muscle limited him to spot duty. Local Prod• •
Bolding down a defensive tackle spot was Larry Eisen hauer who as an undergraduate played a lot of end for the Eagles in the same era as Ross O'Hanley whose area of respon sibility with the Paw is the deep secondary. Here's a fellow who gives away a good deal in size but more than compensates with m. speed and aggressiveness. Homebred talent - defensive end Bob Dee of Holy Cross is another mainstay - and the ability to maintain a contending positIon in the Eastern Division eould see a return to the 40,00Q plus crOWM that to jam Fenway 22 years ago when the Eagles were nationally promi
used
nent. College ball moves on to the sports periphery this weekend though no games of regional eonsequenee are scheduled. Most 01 the New England college. have game scrimmages lined up as a llOrt of final dress rehersal for the season which most will launch the following week. There is one major contest on Saturday, however, and U's ~oin~ to be nationally televised. This is the Georgia Tech I'lorida tilt and the Engineen playing at home will be looking
drills readying for the sea!lOn'. opener which for most is still two weelta away. The annual Falmouth and Wareham J ambo rees are scheduled for Friday night, Sept. 20 but more on this next week. One modification of the high school rules this year will permit two substitutes for each team to enter the game on fourth down. Formerly, they were limited to one a piece with the clock running.
Coaehes' Meetinc A fine turnout of area coaches Jut night responded to the invi tation of the Southeastern Foot ball Officials Association to go oyer the rules changes pertinent to the 1963 high IChool season. The group then viewed an 8 eellent film, sponsored by the NCAA, in which two «>ntrol ~anut acted out the more com mon, yet controversial, fouls which occur in the game today. Most effective was a discourse on the ethics of the game by Bud Wilkinson of Oklahoma. Unfortunately, des pit e re peated attempts, there were no roughing the kicker situation in the film. In some 16 shots of punting sequences were set up but in each and every in stance, the photographer - an experienced grid picture-taker - followed the action of the ball downfield. The film was made in Arizona and it wasn't until the NCAA officials sat down to edit the results in New York that the oversight was dis,.. covered. Here we are talking football when the baseball season has yet to be concluded.· And if that isn't overlapping, consider that hockey and basketball are set to begin workouts this weekend. No news of John Pesky's reten tion as field manager, but in all fairness we trust no change is contemplated. . Well, conjecture comes easy but Ws universally invalid. Suf fice to point out, I think, that the Sox presently are just about the same level. pereentagewille, as they were last year at this, time and some "1 ,games or so further off the pace than a year ago. Conley's loss has to be measured here, of course, and if anyone factor is predominent in the Sox' failure to improve, re latively, this is it. But then, there'.. always next year.
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Asserts Time for 'Soft TaIk' On Race Question Is Over PORTLAND (NC) -·A Fran eiscan Third Order leader said here in Oregon. that the "time for !IOIt talk. is past" on the ques tion of racial justice. "Our whole future as a nation and as a religious people may well be determined by what we do about racial strife in Amer ic~ within a very short time," sald Wally Roebuck of New York. Roebuck, New York area ch~man of the Th~rd Order's ActIon for InterraCIal Under standing apostolate, said "we Negroes want full human free dom and dignity-and we want, it now, with the simple, uncom-
Attleboro Pre-eana A Pre-Cana Conference will be held at 7 this Sunday night at 51. John School, Attleboro, for all intending to marry this
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plicated'directness of a man like Francia of Assisi.He spoke at the 12th conven tion of West Coast Franciscan Third Order groups held at the University of Portland. Cites Alternatives Joseph Dowling of San Fran cisco told the convention that the country now must choose one of two alternatives on the race question - either a united effort for interracial justice "or we can deny the humanity that lies beneath our skins and set about the insane business of violence and anarchy." "It is tragic to realize that I as a white man could not -down at a rest~urant table in' parts of our country with a man who might be St. Martin de de Porres or St. Benedict the Moor, though I could eat at those same tables with the most im~ moral Ol' derelict white man, DowlinJ said.
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WASHINGTON (NC)-A new staff member and two consul tants have been named to the I'amily Life Bureau af the Na. tional Catholic Welfare Confer
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ASSOCIATION Oft
FINAL HOLIDAY: Children from Nazareth Han, Fall River, board bus for the last of three outing days at St. Vincent de Paul Camp in Westport.
HYANNIS PORT (N C) President Kennedy said the Diem government of commu nist-threatened South Vietnam was "very unwise" in taking 'repressions against Buddhists. However, the Chief Executive said he believed the Diem gov ernment could regain support of the people through changes iD policy and in personnel. He ex pressed his views in the nation ally televised interview given to Walter Cronkite, CBS new caster, here. "The repressions against the Buddhists, we felt, were very unwise," the President said. "Now all we can do is to make it very clear that we don't think this is the way to win. It is my hope that this will become in creasingly obvious to the gov ernment, that they ,n;1l t'1 1<e steps to try to bring back popu. lar support for this very essen tial struggle." Asked if he believed the Diem government had time to regain popular support, he said: "I do. '-~. With changes in policy and per haps with personnel I think it can. If it doesn't make those changes, I would think that the chances of winning it would not be very good."
Family Life Bureau Names Staff Member
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Rlver-Thun.Sept. 12,1963
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