09.30.65

Page 1

The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Sept. 30, 1965

Vol. 9, No. 39 ©

1965 The Anchor

PRICE 10c

$4.00 per Yeat

.100,000 to Participate

In. Mass at Stadium

, NEW YORK (NC)-The Mass Pope Paul will cele­ · brate in Yankee Stadium Oct. 4 will be a low Mass with participation in English from the 100,000 persons expected. The service, which will begin at 8 :30 P.M., EDT, and be nationally televised, will be a will consist of five petitions. : Mass familiar to the vast PoPe Paul will introduce the majority' of U.S. Catholics prayer in Latin; laymen will de­ · under the new liturgy deTurn to J'age Thirteen :crees, according to a spokesman 'fior the New York archdiocese. A leaflet missal ,containing 0 ·prayers and hymns of the Mass 'will be included in a commem- ' ours~

'orative brochure given those,

holding admission tickets to the ·stadium. Rev. Joseph L. Powers, : The congregation will be in­ Diocesan Director of the vited to recite in English the Introit, Gradual, Offertory, Our Confraternity of Christian .'Father, Sanctus (Holy; Holy, Doctrine, has announced an Holy), Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) eight-week doctrine course for and the Communion chant. 'elementary' and high school ; English hymns will be led by teachers of the CCD to be con­ a choir composed of 200 men ducted in the five areas of the ,fcom area seminaries. Diocese. The Epistle at the Mass will The location and opening be read by Ii layman, affiliated date of the courses are as fol­ 'with the United Nations. The lows: Fall River, Mt. St: Mary's Gospel will be read by a deacon Academy, Wednesday, Oct. 6; selected from a New York arch­ Rev. Richard P. Demers.

'New Bedford, Bishop Stang

Aiocesan seminary. 'After the Gospel, Pope Paul High School, Tuesday, Oct. 5, will deliver a brief homily in Rev. John R. FoIster. English. Taunton, Bishop Cassidy High :' The Prayer ,of the Faithful Turn to Page Thirteea

CC D T Presen t T eac h ers' e On Doctrine

Catholics Must Balance Faith and Involvement VATICAN CITY (NC)-Striking a balance between their faith and their involvement in the modern world must be the characteristic of "conscious and faithful sons 'ot: the Church," Pope Paul yr told his weekly general audience here. Speaking to .thousands gathered in St. question not to provide a solu­ tion but 'to warn those at the Peter's basilica (Sept. 2?), audience to prepare themselvetl the Pope took up the theme Turn to Page Thirteen

then being discussed at the ecu­ menical council, the schema on the Church in the modern world. Preserving and professing the faith while at the same time taking part in modern life is the "immediate problem in con-' sciences of the faithful," he said, "'the more so in proportion to their desire to be good Chris­ tians and sincere Catholics.' "Our times -- times in which everything is changing, every­ thing demanding our acceptance and conformity - raise continu­ ous difficulties for one who wants to remain free and logical, and who cannot and does not want to set himself apart from a world which conditions, ab­ sorbs, shapes and overpowers him." Pope Paul said he raised the

AMERICANS READY TO GREET SUPREME PONTIFF: His Holiness Pope Paul VI will make a special trip from Rome ,to New York City next Monday to plead for world­ wide pe&ce to the United Nations Assembly. Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, Auxiliary Bishop in New York, will serve as special narrator during the short Papal visit to this country.

Country, UN Await Monday Papal Visit NEW YORK (NC)-Complete television coverage of Pope Paul VI's visit to New York, Monday, during which he will '.address the United Nations General Assembly and meet' with President Johnson, will be provided by a multi-network television pool. Ap.­ proximately 65 TV cameras wil1 be used. They will include a eamera in a helicopter flying over the motorcade from " Netwo'rk members of the telKennedy Airport to Manha~ Bishop Sheen will participate tan, and cameras in mobile evision pool are ABC, CBS and in the daytime coverage of Pope NBC. Bishop Fulton J. Sheen Paul's arrival,· his reception ill· "flash" units that will ac~ will serv:e as special narrator New York and will interpret company the motorcade in which the Pope will travel through the city. Several handheld.cameras also will be utiltzed. Of the total, seven will be NBC color cameras located in Yankee Stadium for color coverage of the 8:30 nighttime Mass to be celebrated there by the f'ope.

on CBS television and radio !'etworks.: Fred W. Friendly, CBS News presi'dent, said Bishop Sheen, who is national director of the Society fo'r the Propagation of the Faith and auixiliary bishop of New' York, will come here from the fourth session' of the Second Vatican Council for the assignment.

C0n fed lence Keynote of Council Voting The Fourth Session of the fire to council activities: reli­ Vatican Council has taken on gious liberty vote, the detailed a new optimism. Some feel votes on Divine Revelation and that the bishops will be home not only by Christmas but even for Thanksgiving! The great doubts attached to the religious liberty schema had for some time provoked a grave uncertainty among the Fathers. Rumors ran wild' concerning~ possible intrigues, politics, sud­ den and embarassing opposition, etc. But when the doubt was dispelled, a current of fresh ail' boosted the spirits of aU. It is the contribution of many factors that has touched new I

Schema Dealing With Mankind The Council ~athers are now discussing chapter-by­ chapter the schema - once called No. 13 (actually now No. 16)-which deals with "The Church in the Modern World." This schema seeks to review Turn to Page Five

Apostolate of the Laity, the squashing of opposing-the-ma­ jority tactics, a quick getting down to work on the Church in the ModeI'll World schema, other new schemas ready and waiting for the vote. The clear force of the majority in resolving the religious lib­ erty vote was a turning point in the history of the council. All intrigue fell to the side and even the decision of the Coordinating Commission to put off the vote was overshadowed by the deci­ sion of the Pope himself."There ihall be a vote-now." Turn to Page Five _J'

..

for viewers the evening outdoor Mass offered by the Pontiff ill Yankee Siadium. ' Pope Paul VI will enter th~ city in a modest ,motorcade over a 24-mile route to the greetinga of millions. , The Pontiff, who turn'ed 61 years of age last Sunday, win expose himself to a grueling schedule whose highlights wiU be a visitwith President John­ son, an appeal to the United 1'lTations, a talk with representa­ tives of Catholic, Protestant and Jewish groups which maintain contacts with the UN and a Mass for Peace at Yankee Sta­

dium. Beneath the outward 'calm around the United Nations, St. Patrick's Cathedral and the resi­ dence of Francis Cardinal Spell­ man, where the Pontiff will rest, there were however, strong un­ dercurrents. Police officials estimate 3,000 reporters want to be present, but there is room for less than one-fourth the number. The tightest security net in the city'. history has been spread because TUfn to Page Thirteen


2

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, 196'1

Particular Council

To Meet Tuesday

Proper of the 'Mass

Seventeenth Sunday After Penteco~t

The monthly meeting of Fall River Particular Council, Soci­ ety of St. Vincent de Paul, win be held Tuesday night in Sacred Heart School' hall followinl Benedictio'n of the' Most Blessed Sacrament in the church starting at 7:45. Rev. John E. Boyd, supervisor of Diocesan charities, will repOrt on the annual convention of the St. Vincent de Paul Society held this week in Philadelphia. President Edouard W. Lacroix has urged' council members to attend a Requiem Mass in St. Patrick's Church at 8 Saturday morning, Nov. 20, for the repose of the soul of Mrs. Catherine Niedbala, long a faithful worker for the council.

INTRIOT: You are just, 0 Lord, and your ordinance is right. Deal with your servant according to your kind­ ness. Happy are they whose way is blameless, who walk in the law (\f the Lord. Glory be to the Father, etc... You are just, 0 Lord, and your ordinance is right. Deal with your servant· according to your kindness. GRADUAL: Happy the nation whose God is the Lord, the people the Lord has chosen for his own inheritance. By the word of the Lord the heavens were made; by the breath of his mouth all their host. Alleluia, alleluia. 0 Lord, hear my prayer, and let my cry come to you. Alleluia. OFFERTORY: I, Daniel, prayed to my God, saying, HHear, 0 Lord, the prayers of your servant; show your face upon your sanctuarY, and favorably look down upon this people, upon whom your name is invoked, 0 God."

Mass Ordo

COMMUNION: Make vows to the Lord, your God, and fulfill them; let all round about him bring gifts to the terrible Lord who checks the pride of princes, who is terrible to the kings of the earth: Please Clip and Bring to Church on

Nine

u. s.

S~nday

Presidents'

Have Met ~opes Ulysses S. Grant, in March, 1878, a year after leaving the U.S. presidency, and while on a world tour, was received in .audience by Pope Leo XIII. He was accompanied by Mrs. Grant and their son Jesse. William Howard Taft, be­ fore his election' 'to 'the pres­ idency, was received by POllE! 1956, three years after leaving Leo XIII, in June and again the White House. (whlie he was his ~aughter Margaret in July, 1902, while .serVing President, was received by Pope Pius XII

·fESTIMO.NIAL BANQUET: At banquet honoring Brian Corey, president <;Jf New England Council of Catho­ lic Youth and member of St. Joseph's parish, Fall River, are, from left. Abel Marceline, Diocesan CYO Coordinator; Corey; and Rev. Joseph P. Lennon, O.P., Providence Col­ lege dean and chief banquet speaker. I

GirIScou', F~r -_"'Il*el w

("~mpfiD'e

',Af~~ther

If Girl Scout and Cam:;>fini Girl

prayers mean anything, Satur­ day will be a lovely day. That's the date Greater Fall River members of the two organizations will enjoy their second annual as chairman of the Philippines in 'June, 195i.) , c.ay of recollection. Enjoy is the Land Com'mission.·Gov~Taft was Dwight D. Eisenhower has met right word. As much possible accompanied by Mrs. :Taft, their ' three popes, one of 'them while " of, the day's program will be son Robert and: daughter Helen. he was U. S. President. On Dec. , held outdoors among the autumn Woodro'\' Wilson, first incUm­ 6, "1959, President' Eisenhower splendors of St. Vincent de Paul bent; President 'of thE! United States to leave the American' was received by Pope John' Camp, .Westport. The rosary, for continent, was received by Pope XXIII, .whom he previously met. instance, will be recited by Benedict XV On Jan. 4~ 1919, in Paris in 1945, as 'Archbishop small' 'groups as they walk a­ Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, Papal round the campsite. while enroute to the Paris Peace Nuncio to France. In September, Last year, says Rev. John F. Conference. 1945, General Eisenhower, then Andrews ,area youth chaplain, Herbert 'Hoover met three popes, before and after his term U; S. Commander in Germany, ' 350 girls attended the first day of rec,Qllection, held at Girl as President, while engaged in and his son Lt. John Eisenhower, were received by Pope Pius XII Scout Camp Tattapanum. This war relief missions in Europe. year he's hoping for 500 young­ He was received by Pope Pius at the Vatican. While still Presi­ dent he met the future Pope sters, noting that the site is near­ XII in March, 1946, and Febru­ er Fall River 'and that word of ary, 1947; by Pope Benedict XV Paul VI (the then Giovanni Car­ dinal'Montini) on 'June' 5, 1960, Inst year's successful event h~ in 1920; and met the future Pope Pius XI, (the then Arch-, at Notre D;une University, Indi- ' permeated youthful cirCles. ana, where both received h0Il-0r­ Girls attending the day will ' bishop Achille Ratti, Papal Nun­ ary 'degrees. (Mrs. Eisenhower do to Poland) in 1919. and her mother, Mrs. John S.· Future Pope . Doud, were received in special Franklin D. Roosevelt, follow­ ing his reelection to the u. S. 'audience by Pope Pius XII in Anti~Smut presidency in November, 1936, October, 1951.) SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) Two ,PoPes received in his Hyde Park, N. Y., John F. ;Kennedy met two IV£embers of the Union County ho~e, the ~ture Pope Pi\1ll XII Federation of Holy Name Soci­ (the ~her. Cardinal ~ugenio popes. As I'resident he was re­ Pacelli, Papal Secretary of State, ceived in audience by Pope Paul eties were asked to supportb anti­ f who was touring the United VI on July 2, 1963, four months obscenity legislation now .e ore before' ,Mr. Kennedy's death. the New Jersey Senate. States). Harry S. Truman, accompan­ When ,he was a ,U. S. senator, , The appeal was made at the he was received by Pope, Pius federation's aIlI).ual installation Ied by Mrs. Truman, wasre­ cejved by Pope Pius XII in May, XII in 1955. (Mrs. ,Tohn,F. Ken­ meeting,' .by Assemblywoman nedy w:as received by Pope John Mildred Hughes, a leader for on March 11, 1962, while she was years iiJ. ,the fight against smut: "First Lady" of the U. S.) The two bills already have LyndonB. Johnson and Pope passed the Assembly and' will Paul VI will meet in New York, be taken up by the Senate when . Oct. 4, during the latter's peace it returns next month. One mission to the United Nations would define obscenity in speci­ headquarters. It will be the first fic terms. The other would' set Oct. 3-St. John of God, 'Som­ time a reigning pontiH has' vis­ up a commission to study all erset. ited the western hemisphere and ;;:spects of the problem in the will be Pope Paul's third visit to state. The latter measure has Our Lady of the Im­ the United States. While Vice been amended in preliminary maculate Conception, President of the U. S., Mr. John­ Senate proceedings to reduce Taunton. son and Mrs. Johnson and their the number of commission pub- , daughter Lynda Bird. were re­ Oct. 1G-Our Lady of the lie. members and lower the ceived in audience by Pope John amount of funds to be made Holy Rosary, Fall XXIn on Sept. 7, 1962. River. available for the study. Theodore Roosevelt, the year Our Lady of the Holy following his term in the White Rosary, Taunton. House and while on a world tour, asked for an audience with BOGOTA (NC)-A group of THE lKCHOR Pope Pius X. This was scheduled Colombia Catholics left this Second Class POstaa8 Paid at Fall RIver, for April 5, 1910, but the a:­ So. American city for New York Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 President, displeased with some to meet Pope Paul VI and a~ "IBhland Avenue Fill River. Mass.. 02722 ". tile Catllollc Press of the Diocese of Fill of the prelilrlinary stipulatiem.. tend :Mass in YankeeStBdiua I9ver. SubscrlptiClll "ice ~, . .U, JOI1pIIlI eaneelea Jaia P~olloaed.· visit. _ the eveain& CIt Oct. "

as

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Colombian Visitors

"'00'" ,....

Girls Pray Sotu'!'doy

register at the camp from g to 10. At 10 two conferences are scheduled: 'one, by Rev. Mau­ rice R. Jeffrey· of St. Jean Bap­ tiste parish, Fall River, for 12 to 16-year olders; and one, by Rev. Kenneth A. Michael of St. Anthony of the Desert parish, also Fall River, for nine to 12 year old girls. An outdoor dialogue Mass' will be celebrated at 11 by Father Andrews and'lunCh will follow ttt 12. Hungry Scouts and Camp­ fire Girls should enjoy the menu: chicken salad, punch, p.otato chips and cupcakes. ' . interiorly strengthened, the girls will gather at 1:30 for a question box period, followed by the rosary' and conferences, divided as in the morning: Outdoor Benediction will close the day. As last year, the lay chairmen of the day are Mrs. John Reed for the Campfire Girls and Mrs. Lucy W~rd for the Girl Scou~.

Urges Priests Joi.,. In Dialogue Groups

FRIDAY - Mas s of previous Sunday. IV Class. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 2nd Con. , St.. Remigius) Bishop and Con­ fessor; Common Preface. OR St. Remigius, Bishop and Con­ fessor. W hit e. Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. Two Votive Masses in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus permit­ ted. Gloria; 2nd ColI. St. Re­ migius, Bishop and Confessor; no Creed; Preface of Sacred Heart. Tomorrow is the first Saturday of this month. SATURDAY - Holy Guardian Angels. III Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. SUNDAY-XVII Sunday After Pentecost: II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-St. Francis of Assi­ . si; Confessor. m Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; 'DO Creed; Common Preface: TUESDAY. - Mass of Previous Sunday. IV Class. ' Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 2nd Coll. SS.Placidus and Companions, Martyrs; Common Preface. OR SS. Placidus and CompanioM, Martyrs. Red. Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. WEDNESDAY-St. Bruno, Con­ fessor. 'm Class. White. Ma. Proper; ,Gloria; no Creed; CoIilmon Preface. ­ THURSDAY-BleSsed Vir gl it Mary of the Rosary. II Clasii. }Vhite. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd ColI. St. Mark, Pope and Confessor: Creed; Preface eI Blessed Virgin. Votive Mass in honor of JeSus Christ, the Eternal High Priest, not permitted.

Necrology

OCT. 10 Rev. James C. J. Ryan, 19111, BRIDGEPORT (NC)-Priests ~tant, Immaculate Concep­ tion, No. Easton. of, the Bridgeport diocese are encouraged to join, ministerial OCT. 11 ~ev. James A. Downey, 1952, associations ,or cooperate in forming such groups under "in­ Pastor, Holy Ghost, Attleboro. terim directives" on ecumenism. OCT. U issued by the diocese. Rev. Dennis M. Lowney, 1911" The directives, prepared by Assistant, Sacred Heart, TilUD­ the priests' comtnittee of the, ton. Diocesan Ecumenical Commis-. &ion"ar~ published in booklet COMPLETE form and have the approval of Bishop Walter W. Curtis. Priests are ensouraged to be­ anywhere on Cape Cod come acquainted with the clergy 01 other denominations, join with them in dialogue groups, • RESIDENTIAL and work with them for the common gQOd. • COMMERCIAL

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College- Head' E-mphasizes ~tudent Work,_ Discipline

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 30, 1965

See Plans Golden Jubile-e Tribute To Cardinal

WINOOSKI PARK (NC)-Discipline must be imposed .by professors and accepted by students to create a proper atmosphere for lea;rning, the president of St. Michael's College told. two "'separate meetings in the Vermont edu­ eational community. -Father Gerald E. Dupont, S. S. E., that is required of him. A posi­

.answer will .resolve ·all the

told a student assembly that tive problems." the "discipline of study" is Hard Work

aecessary to produce a trained Father Dupont said the stu­ intellect. "There must be free­

dents must be made to work and dom. from emotional distur­

work hard. "Every teacher must bances and from strife, so that realize that the classroom is a J1eflection is possible," he added. workshop and it is his duty to Regulations are imposed to work on the minds of the stu­ ereate this condition of "relative dents in that classroom. He has tra~quility," he said. "Controls not accomplished this task by are necessary to develop young lecturing, no matter how bril­ men in,to adults." He told stu­ liantly, unless he can measure dents they should remember the growth of his students under "it is not their role to change the influence of these lectures." the stated objectives of the col­ He added: "The students will lege or the means by which -the grow intellectually under disci­ eollege strived to reach these pline and it is the task of teach­ objectives." ers to impose discipline. No Student Views teacher can expect many stu­ He admitted, however, that dents to impose this discipline views -of students can be valu­ :themselves." able in some areas. When ex­ pressing their views, though, the students should "offer them through committees rather than Individually. They should offer them through discussion with the proper official rather than NOTRE DAME (NC) - Stu­ through a griping letter to The dents at the longtime neighbor­ Michaelman (student news­ ing University of Notre Dame paper). We do pay attention tet and St. Mary's College here fi­ a committee presenting a com­ nally have come around to a plaint as being representative . sort of ':shared-time''- program. of a considerable segment of the_ Some 35 girls, students at St. student body.". Mary's, -now are commuting to Fath~r Dupont told a meet­ the traditionally male Notre Jng of teachers the same day: Dame campus several times a ­ "There- ison~y. one sound crite­ ~eeek for c·ourses in computing rion for teachers to follow. This ad.vanced Russian, para­ is their own conscience, the _~ience, judgment they make UPQn Jhe ~tology, RenaIssance art, French, quality_ of thei.r performance in 8()eech and drama, and political liCi«lnce.. ftte classroom. A tellcher should Some 25 Notre Dame students analyze his _position and ask registered for· courses at himself whether he is doing all . St. Mary's in education, genetics, Mrican histOry, anthropology, -Engl~sh writing,' play -directing, and adolescent and educational psychology.. Officials of both institutions ROCHESTER (NC) - The said the coordinated program president of St. John Fisher Col­ was established for the "benefit lege here advocated' student un­ ~f both institutions and their rest in an address to the institu­ students," and stressed that it tion's 1,000 students at the open­ does not involve any idea of a ing of the school year. merger of the two institutions. "Be restless," Father Lavery ­ Notre Dame. is conducted by arged, "until justice and truth Holy Cross Fathers and St. ;tnd freedom are the possession Mary's by Sisters of Holy Cross. of all men." _ He urged the students to rea­ son more clearly, to think wisely and with a determination to act humanely and humanly. He said he was not suggesting demon­ WASHINGTON (NC) :- The strations or placards, distur­ Catholic University of America bances of the peace or disrespect will begin construction of a $1.6 for law and order. - . million speech and drama center "No 10Qger can you live and in the Spring thanks to a $1 work oblivious of the problems million donation pledged by a of poverty, illiteracy, discrimi­ local- builder. nation, lawlessness, and lack of Father Gilbert Hartke, O.P., peace," he· said. "No longer can head of the university's speech lQlI leave the temporary solll­ and drama department confirm­ tion of them to a few volunteers. ed the, grant pledged' by Jerry You will have to live with these Wolman, Washington builder problems and. you will have to and president - of the Philadel.. be a part in effecting a change." phia Eagles professional foot­ The 14-year-old college in this ball team. Wolman is a non­ New York community is con-' Catholic. ducted !?y the Basilian Fathers. The new horseshoe-shaped center will include a 700-seat 'theater a.d 'modern facilities for stage, drama, movie and

television studies and will en­

LISLE (NC)-Twenty college able the department to offer a presidents, 132 representatives doctorate in speech and drama for the first time, Father Hartke of colleges and universities, and said. 300 guests witnessed the formal inauguration of Father Roman S. Galiardi, O.S.B., as the sev­ enth president of' SL Procopius LONDON (NC)-A non-Cath,­ € o llege here in Illinois. olic woman has been appointed The induction was conducted as the first full-time archivist by Abbot Daniel W. Kucera, O. for the We:;tminster archdiocese. S.B., chancellor of the Benedic­ John Cardinal Heenan of West­ tine college and former presi­ minster gave the job to Miss· dent. The inauguration addl,'ess E!.izabeth Poyser, assistant rec­ was given by Father Cl?merford ords clerk at the House of Lords, I. O'Malley, C.M., chancellor of Britain's upper chamber of par­ 8ePaul University, Chicago. liament, for the past 15 years.

Colleges Plan Sha red Ti""e

He

Ed ucato, Urges Student Unrest

Pledges $1 Million For Drama Center

Benedictine College Has New President

Diocesan Archivist

;3'

NEW YORK (NC) - The New York archdiocese has announced plans for a "Gold. en Jubilee Tribute to Francis

CARMELETTE CAPPING IN FAIRHAVEN: Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, acting Vicar General, capped 16 Carmelettes who do volunteer work at Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven. Standing: Monsignor Considine and Sr.· M. Rosarie, moderator. Kneeling: Deborah an.d Dolores Du­ fresne, twin sisters who were capped.

Catholic P~pulation Ratio Up in-U.S.,'Dow-nin World CINCINNATI - (NC)-catholics in th'e -United States are increasing more rapidly than the tot-al population, but­ th~ ratio of .Catholics to the· total world population is grad­ ually diminishing. These facts were reflected in the new World Mission :M:-ap publish- pet:' cent. ­ In 1965 the percentages . ed -by the Catholie Students' of Catholics are:50uth Americi, Mission Crusade. According 91.7; Mi_ddle America, 93.2; and to -the map, w"hich oopy- West Indies, '72.8. ­

is

righted by CSMC National Center, Cinncinati, the Catholic population of the U. S. totals 45,640,619; or 23.4 per cent of the total population of 194,631,000. When the first map was 'published'" a decade ago, Catholics were only 19.4 per cent of the total U. S. population. Since then, according to CSMC statistics, the Catholic ratio has risen four per cent. , The map also shows that since 1954, Catholic population has grown by 119,940,000, but the percentage of Catholics in the world has shifted downward from 19.1 to 18.4. _ Highlights Other highlights of the World Mission Map, which is edited by Harold J. Spaeth, inclUde: A decline in the proportion of Catholics in Latin America. In 1954, the CSMC reported that South America had a Catholic population that was 93.6 PeT cent of the total, middle America (including Mexico), 95.5 per cent, and the West Indies, 81.8

Nocturnal Adoration Group in Attleboro St. John the Evangelist Noc­ turnal Adoration Society _of At­ tleboro that is sponsored by the Knights of Columbus, St. John's Coun.cil No. 404, will provide men for continuous adoration at the Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament on the First Friday of October. Lawrence N. Duffany, presi­ dent, invites all men of the At­ tleboro area to join this organ­ ization and reap the many spir. itual benefits derived from­ membership and participation. The men may select any hour b~tween -9 in the evening and 7 in the. morning. Call 222-6782 for registration.

A rise in the percentage of Catholics in most parts of Africa. Central Africa in the past 11 years went -from 20.3 per cent Catholic to 28.4 per cent; East Africa, from 13.8 per cent to 19.3; West Africa, from 3.7 per Cent to 5.8; South Africa from 5.8 per cent to 8.5. The Philippine Islands remain the Asian nation Wit!!. the' high­ est percentage of Catholics-86.1, but i'n 1954 the 'population was only 81.8 per cent Catholic. On the other hand, the Near East nation of Lebanon, which was 37.5 per cent Catholic in 1954 now is only 31.2 per cent. ' Gains Substantial -gains were notcd in Australia, which rose in the past 1.1 years from 17.6 per cent to 22.9 per cent Catholic, or an increase of 5.3 per cent, and in ~ew Zealand, up from 11 to 14.4 .per cent. Only one c~)Urttry was rep~rted to have 100 per cent Catholic population-the- semi-independ­ ent RepubIlc of Andorra in the Pyrenees, all of whose - 10,500 people are Catholics. Among those with more than 90 per cent Catholic population are Belgium, 95; Italy, 99.4; Irish Republic, 94.3; Portugal, 91.5, and Spain, 99.7.

Cardinal Spellman in 1966 on the occasion of his 50th anniver­ sary as a priest. Next year will also coincide with his 20th anniversary as a cardinal. C Auxiliary Bishop John ~. Maguire, Vicar General, urged priests and laymen of the arch­ diocese to contribute to a "Golden Jubilee Fund" in the cardinal's honor to enable him to carry out several planned charitable projects. Priority Projects The fund will be presented to Cardinal Spellman on his ordi­ nation anniversary in May, 1966. Among his priority projects are establishment of an educational television network for archdioc­ esan schools, construction of two new high schools, and providing grants in aid to Catholic hospi­ tals. Cardinal Spellman was or­ dained in Rome May 14, 1916. He served in the Boston archdiocese from 1916 to 1925 and in the Vatican Secretariat of State from 1925 to 1932. In 1932 he was named Auxiliary Bishop of Boston and in 1939 he became ,Archbishop of New York. He . was named a cardinal in 1946.

College Completes

Kennedy- Center

L'ORETT'o '(forC) -The ne" Kennedy Student Cen­ ter at St. Francis, College here ht Pennsylvania will be blessed­ during . a parents' weekend, Oct. 16-17. The· $800,000 recreational fa­ cility for students and faculty i'­ is the 13th major building con­ str.ucted on the campus since 1954, when a $10 million expan­ sion program was initiated. ­

~ohn .F'.

Sp~cial

Limousine

For Pontiff's Visit

NEW YORK (NC)-Pope Paul VI will travel in a custom-built Lincoln Continental with a backseat, electrically operated throne during his Oct. 4 visit to New York. The custom features af the car are the work of the Lehmann­ Peterson custom car firm in Chicago. The limousine'S throne ca-n .be raised or lowered elec­ trically.

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4

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, 1965

uevelopment New Name for Peace

Says Many Correspondents Have Common Problems

SANTIAGO (NC) - Bishop 'possess atomic weapons," ftJe . Manuel Larrain Errazuriz of bishop stated. "Our threat _ Talca, Chile, said "the assess­ peace is called 'underdevelop­ ment in blood which the under­ ment.' developed world pays each year The words of Cardinal Fe]tiJl is a scandal that cries out to the of Paris express a clear tru1ll Heavenly Father." and give us a norm for actio. In a pastoral letter, Bishop 'Development is the new name Larrain,president of the Latin for peace.' American Bishops Conference, "Latin America has both the said that poverty, hunger and right and the duty to seek that sickness brought about by un­ aid which alone will bring derdevelopment cause as many growth to our continent," Bishop deaths in Latin America each Larrain wrote. "But Latin Amer­ year as occurred in Europe ica must not expect its develop­ throughout the entire period of ment to come from the outside. the Second World War. It must concur in an active, eft­ thusiastic and decisive manner "The world has never seen a more fearful battle," Bishop to achieve it," he added. Larrain wrote. "The assessment "To work for development in blood which the underdevel­ means to cultivate what is most oped world pays each year is a human in man in order that he scandal that cries out to the might fulfill his vocation as a Heavenly Father. child of God. For this reason, my "War is not the primary threat conscience has obliged me to . to us Chileans, or to any Latin speak. out once more on this Americans, because we do not subject."

. By Joseph T. McGloin, S.l. As I 'have mentioned here more than once, it is most difficult to answer ~rious problems (actually, there is no other kind) adequately through the mail. Where advice is necessary hi the solution of on~'s problems, it can be most profitable when given and taken face to face. There is brothers, and sisters were so a give-and-take in conver­ much better than you. I play no An excellent way, this, sation which cannot obtain favoites." of doing just that.

via the mail. In direct conversa­ tion, questions can be asked and answered, and some judgment can be made about person­ ality and so on. And so, when an attempt is made to "an­ swer" probems in this column, it should be supposed t hat this little bit is not enough, but that face-to-face advice should also be sought. Secondly, one reason I even attempt to answer any such problems is that perhaps a com­ mon chord can sometimes be struck which will be of some help to others with the same or a similar problem. This is, in fact, one thing which makes a problem a prob­ lem-the fact that we feel lone­ ly and unique in our problems, as though no one else had ever been burdened with such a problem. Finally, I sometimes attempt here to answer or help with problems because my corre­ spondents don't give me any address to write to and this is the only means I have. Teens' Behavior To expand on the above ideas a bit, I'd like to mention a few things I've noted as common to some of the problems which come through the mail. There are a number of letters from parents asking about the disappointing and sometimes heart-breaking behavior of some of their teens and pre-teens. And showing through many of these letters are, all too obvi­ ously, several things: (1) The teen-ager in question has not been challenged to anything beyond mediocrity, so it is not surprising that he or she has not risen any higher, (2) All too often, there is clear fa­ voritism shown within the fam­ ily-which can, admittedly, be real or. imagined on the part of the teen-ager. But even when it is only imag­ ined, this fact would not make it any less serious a probiem for the teen-ager. Besides, in the ease where a parent protests "igorously that he or she is not playing favorites, the protest is often too much, so that one sus­ pects that the favoritism does, indeed, show through despite protests to the.. contrary. One can easily imagine such a parent saying to the teen-ager, at least implicitly, "I'll never bring up the fact that your

Thirdly, parents sometimes fail to treat their children as in­ dividuals and to give them some gradual independence. No per­ son, young or old, likes to be directed and told how to do things all the time, even if he does some bungling of the job, or perhaps especially if he bun­ gles it a bit. TO OFFER COURSE: Rev. Lesson for Parents Roger Brisson, M.S., S.T.L., Just the other day I was vis­ iting a home where the boy had a graduate of the Angelicum been hunting for a job. He had in Rome and of Ottawa Uii1­ applied at a subsidiary of the . versity will offer. a course company his father worked for. in religion for laymen at La His father, in an effort to help, asked; "Why didn't you tell Salette Shrine, Attleboro, them who you were and that I Wednesday nights, begin­ worked for the company?" And ning Oct. 6 and continuing the boy replied quietly, "I through next April 27. Reg­ thought they would hire me on istrations are being-accepted my own." There is a tremendous lesson at the shrine. here for parents, and they are going to do enormous harm until they do learn it. Certainly they are able to do at least some' jobs more efficiently than their kids can. Certainly they can use their WASHINGTON (NC)-Father influence to get things for their Frederick P. Gehring, C.M., has children. But one thing which bugs kids eeen named national chaplain more than any other is that they for 1965-66 of the Catholic War are not allowed, often enough, Veterans of the U.S. by national to make their own mistakes, to commander Martin G. Riley. Father Gehring, a native of get a job on their own merits, or to be ,refused on their own Brooklyn, was the first Navy chaplain to receive the Legion apparent demerits. of Merit medal in World War Compromise Helps Fourthly, sometimes you find n, and also won the Presidential that parents, in disagreeing 'Unit Citation for. heroic rescue with each other on the degree of work behind enemy lines. Father Gehring became known discipline which their child should be subject to, exaggerate as the "Padre of Guadalcanal" their own convictions so that for his work during the bitter i:>attle~ for that island. their child. becomes the- battle­ ground of parental opinions. A Father Gehring is currently little compromise here would ~uperior and rectol of St. Vin­ help both parents and children. cent's church, Germantown, Pa.. Recently, I did a column on pre - tee n s, and I am Students Welcome

finding that "problem letters" from parents' is heavy on this Science Advances I

particular group. HARRISBURG (NC) - The They are, perhaps, far more confused than any other group rapid advance of scientific today, the reason being largely knowledge is a challenge that "most -science students appear that they are seemingly being to welcome," a nun-teacher said pushed into things they are simply not going to be ready to here in Pennsylvania before leaving for a science teachers' handle for years yet. institute at Harvard University. Sister Mary Josita, a chemis­ try teacher at Bishop McDevitt Westminster Abbey High School here, is the only To Mark Centenary member of a religious order at LONDON (NC) - Benedictine Harvard's year-long Academic Year Institute for Science and abbeys in Britain and through­ Mathematics, sponsored by the out the world have been in­ vited to the ninth centenary National Science Foundation. She commented: "I have found next year of Westminster Abbey, Lon don, principal Anglican that the students are enthusiastic about scientific advances. As a church in the British Common­ wealth, founded and originally matter of fact, because of this owned by the Benedictine Order. interest there are very few dis­ The ninth centenary is being ciplinary problems in a science class these days." marked not only by abbey ser­ vices but by historical and other College to go Coed exhibitions, broadcasts and tel­ Prays for Success

evision programs on the Bene­ After 93 Years dictine tradition and the abbey's Of ,Pope's Mission

JERSEY CITY (NC) St. history and by sacred concerts LOS ANGELES (NC)-Pray­ Peter's College, 93-year-old Jes­ and organ recitals there. erful petition and penitential Westminster Abbey, actually uit liberal arts college for. men, sacrifice for the success of Pope will become coeducational in consecrated il). 1065, was sup­ Paul's peace mission to the pressed as a Benedictine founda­ September, 1966. . United Nations have been urged The proposal, favored by the tion by King Henry VIII, pil­ facullty, has been approved by laged and desecrated but kept by James Francis Cardinal Mc­ the Jesuit Superior General, intact and taken over by the Intyre of Los Angeles. "The Cardinal said the Pope Church of England. It still con­ Father Pedro Arrupe, S.J. Eve­ ning classes have adniitted tains the tomb and shrine of St. will "plead that peoples may be women on a part-time basis, but Edward the Confessor, King of restored to normal pursuits, to next year's freshman girls will England, to which Catholics go the resumption of universal be the first enrolled as regular' on private pilgtimage every_ welfare in the love and protec­ tion of a merciful God." Oct. 13. students.

Vete,rans Name

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TWELVE

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THI HDLY 'ATHER'. MI••IDM AID.TD THI DRIINTAL CHURCH

When he Ia called to care for the dying '" Boscioca, Ethiopia, our missionary priest must travel 40 miles by ml,lle. The hazardous trip usually takes 12 hours•••• He goes to the village regularly twice a month, besides, to offer Mass and hear confessions. He sleeps on the ground In 8 reeking clay hut 32 years old. Catholics of the Cunama tribe (hundreds of children among them) crowd about him at Mass in the open air.••• Boscioca, with more WHILE tnan 1,000 residents, has no Catholic church. THE POPE The Cunama tribesmen have no money be­ TOO cause they are indentured to others. Yet. IS church and rectory are needed at once to con- I THE solidate the gains our selfless missionaries MOVE are making.••• Build this church (or the rectory) al~ by yourself, In honor of your favorIte saint, In your loved one!!' memory? A church of brick will cost only $3,100 sinc. I our people will do the work free·of·charge. A three· room house-for 8 full·tlme priest can be built for 8S little as $900•••• Whether your gift is large or Imall ($3,100, $2,000, $900, $500, $250, $100,. $75, $50, $25, $10, $5, $3, $1), please send It now. The rainy season ends this month, 10 construction ~n begin n . Immediately. .

ON

Peace, poverty, the missions overseas-sub­ jects like these will be on the Holy Father's NOW mind when he flies here to ask eve7,0ne to OR help.••• How much can you do? Your 'string­ WEVER less" gift enables the Holy Father .to help where help Is needed most. Write "stringless" In the coupon below.

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ct A middle-aged woman from Arkansas helps with the harvest In Indiana so that she can help build • mission church with what she ACTIONS earns.••• In Brooklyn a teen·ager baby-sits SPEAK two evenings a week to help trsin ($12.50 a month) a native Sister in the Holy Land•••• For only'$10 a month ($120 a year) you can feed a refugee family. Remind us to send you, in thanks, an Olive Wood Rosary from Jerusalem. ­

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1 THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Sept. 30, 1965

Council Voting

Continued from Page One They voted and the mind of the Church was clearly seen: the text and ·the debates of the Fathers are to be put in a de­ cree form. The Secretariat for Christian Unity is already hard at work on the new text and it is expected to be easily adopted as a decree of the council by the end of October. Divine Revelation There was another uneasiness among the council Fathers and this was in regard to Divine Revelation. During the First Ses­ sion, debate had been so bitter that Pqpe John had to withdraw the schema and form' a new com­ mission to treat of it. Even during the other sessions, there were very extreme posi­ tions taken by some of the Fathe'rs. How would the Bishops and the Christian non-Catholic world react? What a pleasing relief to see the schema adopted by a 2111 to 44 vote! The encouragement given to today's biblical scholars to use the most modern of methods in their study and the expressed hope for a common Bible CQ!Ild not but buoy the spirits of all Christians. There need be now only the work of a commission to work into the text the amendments suggested by the Fathers. Apostolate of the Laity This schema too was approved by an overwhelming majority and the layman loomed in the eo.uncil hall as the mediator be­ tween the Church and the world. Church in Modem World Getting down to business con­ eerning this schema seemed the Gnly problem. It was no longer a problem when, by a standing vote, the Fathers brought gener­ al discussions to an end and turned to a detailed chapter-by­ chapter study. Atheism loomed as problem No.1 but it was pointed out that it could be annihilated not by the fqrceful stomping of the Church but rather by eliminat­ ing the causes that force men to turn their backs on God. "We must lead social values back to their authentic Christian source," stated Patriarch Maxi­ mos. ''True socialism' is to be found in Christianity. We can defeat atheism if we live our Ideals of brotherhood," he con­ eluded in an apparent reference .., Marxism. Duties of Bishops Yesterday, the bishops also started voting on the last draft ef the decree that" speaks of the Duties of Bishops. Here many of the emotional appeals of the Bishops will take on practical decisions. Of special interest will be the votes concerning the practical worlr)ng of Collegiality , and the binding force of regional episcopal bodies.

Episcopalians Honor Detroit Prelate DETROIT (NC) - Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit re­ ceived a special "appreciation" citation for "outstanding contri­ butions to unity" from St. Cyp­ rian's Episcopal Church 'here. The archbishop received the award in absentia Sunday. He had already left for Rome to at­ tend the fourth session of the Second Vatican Council. Also cited for the annual awards were Damon Keith, a Baptist, co-chairman of the Michigan Civil Rights Commis­ sion, and Stanley J. Winkelman, former president of the Jewish Community Council.

School To Close SAN ANTOINO (NC)-After 69 years, Our Lady of the Lake High School will cease opera­ tions next Fall. It will 'be used for students attending adjacent Our Lady of the Lake College here in Texas. '

5

Schema on Man

KENNEDY'S PEW: Mrs. Leo Gregoire, Barnstable, of the Women's Guild of St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, points out plaque on pew occupied by late President Kennedy 'when he attended the Church. Guild placed plaque.

Kennedy, Pen' at St. Francis JXavier Church In. Hya,~nis, Still Attracts Reverent VL~itors It is almost two years sinee the assassination, but they still tiptoe through St. Francis Xavier Church in Hyannis-people quietly looking for the pew where President Kennedy sat with his family-a pew marked now with a simple metal plaque: "In mem­ ory of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, 35th President of the United States, 1917-1963." When they find the pew, the second from the front 'hose days-all the ushers knew the senior Kennedys in memory of Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., in the east' arm of the cru­ him." Many Kennedys stm attend killed during World War II. ciform church, they pause. the church when they are in "Mr!1. 'Joseph Kennedy attends Children touch the plaque with awed fingers, grown-ups, look­ ing a little sheepish, may slip into the pew for a moment, kneeling where the leader who has already become a legend knelt. "Sometimes visitors light can­ dles. I think they are for him," said Rev. Thomas Harrington, curate at ;St. Francis Xavier's. But neither F'ather Harrington nor Very Rev. William D. Thom­ son, pastor, was assigned to Hy­ annis when the President at­ tended Mass there. One who was is Rev. James P. Dalzell, now at St. Patrick's Church, Fall River. "His pew was chosen because it's near an exit," he recalled. "H~ sat in the front pew at first -until a lady tried to kiss him. Then he moved back to the sec­ ond pew: 'We always had crowds at the Mass he attended, and Secret Service men were sta­ tioned throughout the church. "I was at St. Francis Xavier when he was a Senator," contin­ ued Father Dalzell. "Sometimes he'd take up the collection in

Hyannis Port, said Father Har­ rington. They scatter through the building, exhibiting no spe­ cial preference for the marked pew. "People are considerate. They don't bother them much," re­ marked Father Harrington. He said that the church's high altar was' donated some time ago by

AreQ Scout Head Is Guil",ette

William N. Guilmette, former commissi'oner of Massasoit Boy Scout council, has been named chairman of the Fall River Area Catholic Committee on Scouting by Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Dio­ cesan Scout chaplain. Guilmette succeeds, Walter P. Wilcox Jr. who has been ap­ pointed executive secretary of the Diocesan Catholic Commit­ tee on Scouting. The new Fall River official, just returned from a two day conference on Scouting for Catholics in Wash­ ington, D.C., announces that Arthur Bergeron, secretary, and Arthur Gauthier, treasurer of the area committee, will continue TAIPEI (NC) - Archbishop, in their present capacities. Joseph Caprio, apostolic inter­ nuncia to China, blessed the

newly constructed regional ma­ o WASHING'l'ON (NC) - The jor seminary of St. Thomas' at Senate has passed and sent to ceremonies attended by all For­ the Hoase a bill which author­ mosa bishops before they de­ parted for the Vatican council izes the President to designate 1966 as "the Year of the Bible." ill Rome.

Ble$s Seminary

Year of Bible

daily Mass very' frequently," he said. "The Robert Kennedys are on hand nearly ever.y Sunday in the Summer although sometimes they attend other Cape churches. Senator Robert Kennedy drives himself over." The plaque on the Kennedy pew was placed by the Women'. Guild of the parish, he said.

Continued from Page One the major problems faced by citizens of the world today and to give the Christian approach in solving such problems and anx­ ieties. Suggestions concerning both the problems and the answers came at first from all the bish­ ops, experts, scholars, societies and universities consulted by Pope John XXIII in the prep­ aration of Vatican II. Recently, these suggestions have come from an enlarged commission of bishops (to better draw from universal experience) and from consultations with the laity. The problems in bringing these contributions to .text-form have been length (there are many problems that call for complicated solutions today) and language (Latin often is not the best vehicle) . . The schema is composed of a descriptive introduction and two parts. These parts are broken down into chapters: . C. 1: MAN: There seemed to be real need for a "Christian An­ thropology" so the first chapter deals with man himself and "The Vocation of the Human Person." C. 2: HUM A N SOCIETY: Man's personal fulfillment can be found in society and by con­ forming himself to the Gospel. The basic principles of the social order are joined with an outline of Chriso-centric human exis­ tence. C. 3: EARTHLY THINGS; THEIR TRUE VALUE: Does the progressive evolution of the world, the great scientific vic­ tories, 'have a value of them­ selves in the balance with the promises of heaven? Here the vital problems affecting man with be faced. C.4: THE CHURCH, TEACH­ ER OF SALVATION: Here the goal of the schema is shown: the Church is the principle and teacher of salvation in the world. The chapter is an exposition of God's plan of salvation. Arch­ bishop Garrorie, who introduced the schema in St. Peter's basil­ lea stated: This dictrine had toe be set forth not as a philosophy, but as a genuine economy of sal­ vation • • • Consequently t h. people of God, which is the Church, manifests its commun­ ion with the world in which it is present. It is clear that Christiall life cannot be separated from world realities nor can there be any faith orutside of life." It is in this context that prob­ lems like war, the atom, popu­ 'lation, atheism, marriage, etc. are to be reviewed.

ATWOOD

Golfers Pay , CLIFTON (NC)-Benefit golf tournaments are fairly common, but· the one scheduled for the Upper Montclair Country Club on Oct. 7 will be different. This time the players put up the money. Some 150 golfers will .pay $100 each to play in the tournament, scheduled to raise funds for the Newark Archdioc­ esan 'CYO leadership training program.

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r' 6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, 1965

Welcome, .Paul VI

Offertory Pra'yer

Th.e Pope's Visit

. It was only a few years ago that the weekly news­ paper of the Diocese of Brooklyn, The Brooklyn Tablet, took The Anchor to task for an editorial supporting the United Nations. And now the world and the nation await Pope Paul's visit and address to the United Nations. There has always been a group of Catholics in the country suspicious of the United Nations. Perhaps they expected too much of it or wanted it to do what it was never intended to do. But they have seen its presence as a threat to the. sovereignty of this nation. And support for the United Nations was viewed as a touchstone of left-wingers.. But Popes John and Paul, logically following out the .. ideas of Pope Pius XII on the unity of all men, have hailed . the United Nations as a worthy instrument of world peace and brotherhood that men dare not overlook. The presence of the Pope at the United Nations is a dramatic sign that he is not overlooking the role that the UN has and can play in the world. There are those, of course, who fear for the Pope's prestige, seeing in his visit simply a gesture that will soon lose its impact, or as a lessening of dignIty in making pleas and suggestions that will fall on deaf ears or be distorted for various propaganda purposes. :By th;s time the Pope has certainly given enough evi­ dences that he is a man and strength and humility who is not afi-aid to depart from the trappings of sovereignty to walk among men as their brother under God. He is not afraid to risk his personal prestige and even his life to bring the ~ospel of Christ to all men. What if his words do fall on deaf ears? What if his" presence is but a dramatic interlude and no more? It hardly seems likely that this will be the case. But his trip will show that he 'cares for men and that is not a loss. And, in any event, he is a big enough man to know that the only failure can be his and not his office nor his work. And he is humble' enough to risk failure for the cause of Christ and peace.

Right To Be Let Alone

Report Urges Businessmen

To Support Birt,h Control

By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) In the last two reieases of this column we have taken the position that the Federal government ought not to get into the business of advocating or promoting birth control as a part of its anti-poverty program. In developing this position, we have said, Businessmen are told that they among other things, that have everything to gain by some of those who are in checking the population growth favor of a governmentally in this country-rising profits,

financed program of family planning for the poor are moti­ vated, at least in part, .by a desire to cut down on the cost of public relief and thus to save money for the taxpay­ er. This allega­ tion has been questioned by some and sim­ ply denied by others. 'We have been told that those who are urging the government to un­ derwrite birth control clinics in the slums are merely interested in putting the poor on an equal footing with middle-class or well-to-do Americans in the matter of birth control informa­ tion. This is undoubtedly true in the case of some of those who favor the establishment of birth con­ trol clinics as an integral part of the government's anti-poverty" program. On the other hand, there are many who oPlTnly contend that the government should go be­ yond the mere supplying of birth control information to those poor people who voluntarily re­ quest it, and should actively en­ courage the poor to limit the size of their families. This is not merely a guess or a hunch on our part. It is a mat­ ter of public knowledge. Frank Appeal Let's look, for example, at a recent report, "The Poverty of P bundance," issued by the Com­ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF .FALL RIVER merce and Industry Committee of the Planned Parenthood Fed,.. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River eration - a committee whose membership includes many of 410 Highland Avenue

the most influential businessmen .Fall River, Mass'. 02722 675-7.151

in tpe United States. This report lays it right on the PUBLISHER line. It calls upon the American Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O.• PhD., business community to suppod birth control progrnms" because, GENE~Al MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MJ" A.GER allegedly, birth control is good Rt. Re"__ Baniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll for business and geod for the MANAGING EDITOR American system of private en. terprise. Hugh J. Golden

The United States Office of Education .has announced that it will no longer support research programs that pry into attitudes on sex, religion and family relationships. A Congressional sub-committee ,has revealed that federal money supported questionnaires in whiclr school children had been asked about their belief in God, the social activ­ ities of their parents, the number of times they quarreled and whether they were ashamed of their homes and families. An official of the Office of Education admitted that such inqUIrIes were an offensive intrusion. It was Oliver Wendell Homes who said that one of the basic ~ights in a democracy was the right to be let alone. It is a right that is suffering more and more all the time. Offices and shops, waiting rooms and, in places, even public traJ1sportation subject people to piped-in music whether they like it or not. The planes,. once a refuge from all earth-bound annoyances, now flaunt the fact that the movies al'e pursuing their passengers on transcontinental trips. And even ,youngsters cannot walk down the street or go to t,he store without the ever-present transistor radio glued to their ears. People are stopped on the streets and waylaid in their homes by ~elephone and doorbell-ringing salesmen and sur­ vey-takers, and it is a commentary on the age that few ever respectfully decline to answer. They are used to having their privacy invaded. So this new decision by the Of~ice of Education strikes a blow for the right to be let alone. May there be more to foJJow. \~

@rheANCHOR

Papal Mass

safer investments, a break on· spiraling taxes for support of welfare services, more. prosper­ ous markets abroad, a more prosperous and productive pop­ ulation at home, and greater in­ dividual and corporate freedom. . Sense of Values .The authors and sponsors of this report must be credited with sincerity when they say that, while the dollars-and-cents cost of population growth in this countr~· is "deeply disturbing," the cost in human suffering, ig­ norance and illness is "perhaps more important." On the other hand, that little word "perhaps" is rather disturb­ ing, for it would seem to sug­ gest that, when all is said and done, what is really worrying the members of the Planned Parenthood Federation blue rib­ bon committee of busines lead-' ers is the dollars-and-cents cost· of the so-called population ex­ plosion. With all due respect to these distinguished gentlemen, it must be saili that °their all-out deter­ mination to cut Wpwn on the number of people in the United States so that the rest of us can make higher profits and pay lower taxes speaks very poorly for their sense of values. . Compulsory Sterilization The worst of it is that, logi:' cally, the argument which says that too many babies are bad for business (to quote. one of the sponsors of the above-mentioned report; is being used in some circles to justify not only birth control but compulsory steriliza­ tion as well. A few years ago, fo'r example, two comulsory sterilization bills were introduced in the Virginia State Senate. One of these bills would have requirec" the steril­ ization .of any woman .receiving welfare payments who had two or more illegitimate children. "This is not a relief matter, but purely an economic matter," the sponsor of this bill told the Virginia legislature. "M~' pri­ mary interest is to sa.Je taxpay­ ers some money." D.a {rankly ad­ mittea.

The following is the Prayer of the Faithful that Pope Paul will pray at the Mass he win offer Monday evening at 8:30 ill Yankee Stadium: In this prayer of the people 'of God which we are about to offer in common, let us not pray for our own needs, but let us together beseech Christ the Lord for the peace of the whole world. -That God may continue to guide our Church in a ceaseless search for ways to bring "the peace which the world cannot give" to men who recognize that they are brothers. Grant this, o Lord, we humbly pray. -That God may grant this peace to all peoples and instiB trust in place of fear in the com­ munity of nations. Grant ... -That God may grant to offi­ cials of all governments wisdom in knowing, courage' in accom­ plishing and dedication in ful­ filling the responsibilities of -their office. Grant ... -That God may awaken the sympathy of every human heart for those whose hunger and nakedness and exile are the re­ sults of armed conflict. Grant ..• -That God may inspire wise leaders to use the growing mas­ tery of nature to provide the necessities of life and a decent measure of comfort for all men. Grant ... Our God, our refuge and our strength, and source of all good­ ness, hear the holy prayer of your Church and grant that we may fully obtain what we have asked for in faith through Christ Our Lord. Amen.

Cites Freedom In Lithuania VIENNA (NC) - A Soviet news agency carried a story here written by a Catholic priest in Lithuania describing the free­ dom enjoyed by the Church in that country. The Nowosti Press identified the priest as Father Jonas Deks­ nis,_ pastor of St. Anna's church in the city of Vilna. He declared in the article that communists put no pressure on the Church and that Catholics. are not fop­ bidden to practice their faith. "I oQon't know one example of a priest or believer being pre­ vented from doing his duty to God or to the Church, or of any­ one being prevented from pray­ ing or going to Communion. Such interference would be pun­ ished by law," he wrote. TwQ Bishops Father Deksnis' article con­ flicts with other reliable reports that tell of continued religious persecution in Lithuania. Only two of the seven Church dis­ tricts in the country have bish­ ops. Government authorities have thre~tened to close churches because, they say, Catholics are not using them. While praising religious lib­ erty in Lithuania, Father Deks­ nis included one telling descrip-. tion of how the "liberty" works in practice. "While we preach the faith of Christ in our churches," he wrote, "atheists propagate their beliefs very ac­ t;vely in schools, in newspapeI'8 and in public lectures."

University Post MILWAUKEE (NC)-For the first time in history Marquette University has named a layman vice-preSIdent for academic af­ fdirs. Arthur C. Moeller, 46, dean of the college of engineering, was' named to the post to !o'Uc­ ceed father John P. Raynor, 8.J.,. recently appointed presi­ dent of the university•


Those Textbook Leaves 'Are Flyinl Right Along with Autumn ~eaves As Teenagers Return to 'Study

Brother Directs Agency to Fight· Youth Unrest·

Fall leaves are flyin' and so are :textbook leaves as teenagers throughout the Diocese, buckle down to study. Starting the year pleasantly is announcement of National Merit Scholarship semi-finalists. Among them is Jeanne St. Onge, senior at Sacred Hearts Fairhaven. She's the mEm boy~ to explain the school's policies and programs. second'student at the Fair­ athletic Mothers of students at Sacred haven academy to have mer­ Hearts Academy in Fall River

ited this honor since the Nation­ al Merit' program began. , Girls at Mt. St. Mary Academy in Fall River also started the ac­ ademic year pleasantly as they celebrated the feast of Our Lady of Mercy, patroness of the Sis­ ters of Mercy. Highlighting the day was an assembly at which Elsie Pelton, school representa­ tive to Massachusetts _Girls' State, gave a summary of her week at Bridgewater State Col­ lege, and delegates to the Sodal­ ity-sponsored SUmmer School of Christian Apostolate in New York reported their experiences. After Slttendance at a special Mass students climaxed the day with' attendance at a movie, "Pnnce of Players." New Faces New faces abound at Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro, where 220 freshmen arid nine new fac­ ulty members are getting ac­ quainted with each other. Wel­ eomed to the faculty are Sister Mary Julian, Sister Mary Kilian, Sister Mary Claude, Sister Mary Hope, Sister Mary Protase, Sis­ ter Mary Paschaline, Sister Mary Rose Angela, in addition to Mr. O'Boy and Mr. Perkoski. Summer workshops and round­ ups were featured at a get­ acquainted assembly at Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton, with Carol Sylvia, Pauline Lee and Patricia King reporting on a leadership workshop held at UMass. Delegates were placed in eouncils, rep 0 r t s Antoinette Costa, and asked to solve stu­ dent problems such as lack of school spirit, overcrowding, in­ tenectual mobbery and cllques. Lectures, meetings, hootenannies 8Ild dances combined to offer participants a varied program. Catherine Champayne pi. the Cassidy school paper staff at­ tended a high school journalism Institute for four weeks at Washington's Catholic UnlVi!r­

slty, returning abubble with

good ideas for Cassidy's "Paw , Prints." And Donna Perry, Christine Victoria, Maureen Kelliher, Susan Larivee and Annmaria Procopio t 0 I d fellow-students about the International Girl Scout Roundup held during the Summer at Farragut, Ida. They were particularly impressed by an evening ceremony at which each of the 9,000 Scouts attend­ ing the roundup lit a candle "in the pitch black of a WesteJ;D night." Class Officers Senior class president at St. Mary is Jane Chicca, who's. also a member of Sodality, the French Club, the National Honor Society and the yearbook staff. Tests have been in the air at all Diocesan highs, as students took various achievement tests.

Later, results will be interpreted

to extremely interested parents.

And athletics aren't forgotten

as teams begin workouts every­ where. At Feehan. a special meeting is sched~ed by Athletic Director Hanewich, with fresh-

m.

Gift to ',College DETROIT (NC) -A $25,000 gift to the silver anniversary fund of Mercy College here will be used to help erect a science building in the institution's. expansion program, Sister Mary Lucille, president, disclosed. The gift came from the Michigan Consolidated Gas ComP3D1:.

7.

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 30, '965

LINCOLNDALE (NC) ­ Brother Aquinas Thomas, F. S.C., known for his work in the field of juvenile delin­ qUency in the New York ar:a, has been named director of SOCIal

service department and admin. held their first Sucordium Club istrator of the psychiatric clinie meeting Sunday, welcoming the of Lincoln Hall, a large center opportunity to meet their daugh­ for treatment and re-education: ters' new teachers. At Feehan, of delinquent boys conducted by: Sister Mary Urban, principal, the Christian Brothers here. announces that she'll meet with Brother Thomas, a Christian: parents at an early date. Brother for more than 30 years, Sister Mary Enda, Latin and has worked at all levels in the English, teacher at Feehan,. was educational field from elemen­ among delegates to a NatIonal tary schools through graduate Council of Teachers or English workshop at Sa].ve Regina Col­ programs in college and univer­ lege last weekend; and also at sity. Feehan Sister M. Therese Agnes He founded two organizations has e~barked on a Winter's which have sponsored a contin­ uing series, of forums to aid study of modem geometries, police and other law enforce­ probabilities and statistics with ment officials in gaining a better the aid of a National Science understariding of crime and the Foundation grant from Rhode motives of those who commit Island College. crimes. ' Senior pictures are already Lincoln Hall works with civiC! "in the works" at Mt. St. Mary's, and eourt officials in the treat!­ with girls hoping to have their ment, not punishment, of youtboo finished portraits bT Christmas. ful law violators. And also at the Mount, 40 sen­ , iors will participate in an annu­ al pilgrimage honoring Our Lady of Fatima Sunday, Oct. 3 CLASS OFFICERS: Class officers at St. Anne's Hos­

at Mt. St. Rita's Convent, Cum­ pital School of Nursing, Fall River, are, from left, Constance berland, R. I. Ten girls from NEW YORK (NC)-The debrt . each senior homeroom win Martel, New Bedford, secretary-treasurer; Jeanne Peter~on,

West Medford, president; Viviane Parent, Westport, VICe­ and credit sides of Catholicism march in the pilgrimage wear­ in the 20th century will be dis­ ing their uniforms as represen­ president. Sister Rita Marie is moderator. cussed on four Sundays of Octo­ tatives of their school. ber on the Catholic Hour radio Rev. Gerard Boisvert, director Frost, president; Louis Gazzola, to the faculty of Prevost High program, produced by the Na­ of St. Anthony's High School, vice-president; Christopher Ser­ School, Fall River. Brother tional .Council of Catholic Men. New Bedford, presented class Roger Is the new principal; rings to the seniors at a solemn vant, secretary; Stephen Fisher, Brother Paul is in the language and carried each Sunday at 1 :05 treasurer; Carol Miller, clerk of P.M., by the NBC radio network. ceremony in the school auditocourt. Representatives fro m department; Brother Celestine is Participants will include Jo­ Offers Guidance teaching French; and Brother seph Cunneen, editor of Cross­ home rooms include five seniors, A pamphlet eompiled by Sis­ Daniel's subjects are physics and currents magazine; Mrs. Marie ter Mary Frederick of Bishop five juniors and five sopho­ chemistry. Ponsot, poet and playwright; Feehan's faculty offers guidance mores. The debate club is also under Daniel CaDahan, associate editor New Brothers to seniors. It includes advice Four new Brothers of Chris­ way at the Fan River school, o.f Commonweal magazine, and on preparation for coiIege, out­ having held its first meeting, lines what' students should do tian Instruction have been added and Roger Lizotte and Richard Barry Ulanov, author and Bar­ nard College professor. this 'year to get ready for their Charland are editors, for the The discussions are scheduled big upward step next year, and school paper, the Maple Leaf. lists names of colleges. junior Roger is also Anchor reporter tor Oct. 3, 10, 17 and 24. On oct. :tt the Catholic Hour will' pre­ colleges and nursing 'schools for this year. sent a progress report from the currently being attended b)' And Sodalista are alrea~ PALM SPRINGS (NC)-When Vatican Council. .June Feehan graduates. Also at the Attleboro lIChool, Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Monica looking, ahead to next Summer'.

student eouncil members have observed the 26th annual re- Summer School of Christian

been named, including Brian 'newal of their marriage vows Apostolate in New York City. in Our Lady of So~tude Church They're sponsoring a Christmas here it was a. family affair for card sale, with proceeds. to bene­

fit a fund to send Prevost del­

ONE STOP

them and their 12 children­ each is named after one of the egates to the annual event.

SHOPPING CENTER

CHICAGO (NC)-Dr. Francis 12 Apostles.

• Television • Furniture J. Braceland, an internationally The youngsters, who range in • Appliances • Grocery known psychiatrist, has been age from 23 to 11, all have an WINDSOR (NC) ­ Bishop G. named to receive the 1 9 6 5 Apostle's name for either their 104 Allen St., New Bedford Emmett Carter of London has Stritch Award Medal from Loy­ first or middle name. WYman 7-9354 ola University. The Monicas were married In named Gerald McGuire, 35, to head a new religious adult ed­ A clinical professor of psychi­ St. Joseph~s church, East Orange, atry at Yale University and sen­ N. J., and came to California 20 ucation center here, the first layman in Canadian history to ior eonsultant at the Institute of years ago. Among other activi­ the Living, Hartford, Conn., Dr. ties, the parents and 12 children hold such a post. ELECTRICAL Braceland's career has included compose the Monica Ch~ra1 Contracton medical education, public ser­ Group, whch specializes in Gre­ vice, and fostering a close rela­ gorian Chant music for Requiem tionship between religion and High Masses. psychiatry. " A former dean of Loyola's Inc. Stritch School of Medicine, he Rec~lIs will be honored at the school's FUNERAL SERVICE $250-a-plate annual award din­ ner Tuesday, Nov. 23. He is a NEW YORK (NC) - In the NEW BEDFORD, MASS. native of Philadelphia. bitterness of defeat the great 944 County St. 549 COUNTY STREET AI Smith used to laugh over the New Bedford story.

It cropped up when the fa­

mous governor of New York was

Changes at Espirito Santo contesting with Herbert Hoover School, Fall' River, have been in 1928 for the presidency of the I announced. They include Sister U. S. Bigots, attacking Smith's M. Gabrielle Annonciata, F .M.M., Catholic faith, openly claimed

changed from fourth grade to that if he were elected, he would

bring Pope Pius XI from Rome

seventh grade; and Sister Mau­ I

reen Therese, F .M.M., assigned to help run this country. 'the story went that after the

to third grade. Both Sisters made Contt-aetor••iHee 1913 final profession of vows earlier was defeated, Smith sent a one­

this month. .

word message to the Pope. It

Sister MarY St. Clement, was-"Unpack."

703 S. Water Street WYman 3..Q911 F.M.M. has been named princi­

Today, 37 years later, the sen­ I pal of the school and' Daniel timent in this country toward New Bedford I Medeiros, a graduate of SMT!, Pope :Paul VI appelU'S to be the J, is teaching fourth grade.

~ther way arowr.i.

Catholicism Theme Of Radio Series

12 Monica Children Named for Apostles

University Honor For Psychiatrist

CORREIA &SONS

'.

Heads Center

~

~

Michael C. Austin

~.

Pope's Visit A,I Smith's Story

Announce Changes _ At Espirito Santo

~~~

,- ­

JEREMIAH COHOLAN

• •

,-

PLUMBING & HEATING

-

- -

- -- - ------­ ~

-


THE ANCHOR-Dioce,se of FaJi Rlver-,",ur•• Sept. 30, 1'965

Association Asks Obscenity Study

Problems of Working Mothers Call Forth Many Opinions

SAN JUAN (NC)-The boani Qf governors of the Puerto Rican Bar Association has called f~ establishment of a lawyer's com-. mittee to investigate "all consti­ tutional, legal and moral as­ p('cts" of recent obscenity aJIoo rests here. The action by the bar asso­ ciation group followed' police raids on a drug store, photo. equipment shop and travel agen­ ('~' in which more than 600 al~ legedly obscene magazines were seized. Obscenity charges werEi filed against the owners-the first time in a quarter-centurY, this has been done in Puerto Rico, it was reported. ' Meanwhile a representative 01 the American Civil Liberties Union in Puerto Rico denounced the police raids and filing of charges as "unconstitutional-' in light of U.S. Supreme Coullli rulings on obscenity.'

By Mary Tinley Daly , , A recent column on working mothers has caused many yes-and-no reactions and brought forth some thoughtful opinions, helpful to working mothers and those consider­ ing taking a job. One, an older single woman who has worked for more than 20 pert stenographer.) We have a years, writes that she does littie girl three years old and a not know "whether that col­ baby who has just celebrated his umn was meant as encour­ first birthday. The girl down the agement for working mothers or not." (Frankly, it was meant neither for en'" couragement nor discour­ agement on a blanket scale; rather it was a plea for a care­ f u I appraise­ ment of all fac­ tor s involved before an indi­ vidual family, and mother, makes a decision to enter or re­ enter the work force.) From her personal observa­ tion, this woman says, "In my estimation the ones in this dis­ trict need holding back, rather than encouragement. The pic­ ture I get of most working mothers is very unctlmplimen­ tary. I am being frank because I feel that many slick women's magazines gloss over, or ,choose to ignore, the faults of this sys­ , te m. " She then recounts several in­ stances in her working life when she has been the victim of rude­ ness and injustice on the part of working mothers, leading to the feeling that "I have little sym­ pathy for them as a class." Single Woman's ViewPoint From the viewpoint of a single woman earning her own living, she makes a telling point: "I have observed that a family with two wage earners and few ehildren often complains more about lack of money than do other. families. Often, it is not the income, but greed and in­ ability to handle money that causes this (situation). There is something wrong with a society where a working woman, with husbl'lnd working, and one teen­ age child, can complain quite often about being broke. 1 worked beside such' a woman for a while. , , "I myself am one of a family of seven children. We were in a lower income group and mother never worked outside the home. We had all the neces­ sities of life and were happy. 1 know from experience that such • family can get along reason­ ably well:' Mother of Two From another: "I wish I had given the 'thoughtful, well con­ sidered care for all factors in­ volved' which your recommend­ '.d before 1 took the plunge and went back to. work. . . "I just plain got boredwitll housework and baby-~endingSo j begged my husband to let me 10 back to an office. (I'm. an p';

street, who has two children of her own, agreed to care for ours -glad to get the money - and away I went! The first two months were wonderful. We'd get up at 6:30, feed and dress the kids and while my husband was taking them to the babysitter, I'd wash .the dishes, put on my makeup and the two of us would zoom into town, just like the first few months after we were married. "It was exciting to be with other working people; 1 could hold my own with any stenog­ rapher in the place and, if I do say so myself, 1 looked as good as any of the unmarried girls. "At five o'clock my husband would pick me up, we'd reverse the morning procedure: pick up the children, give 'em baths, supper, bed 'em down, then have t~e evening for our own dinner and household chores. "After a while, 1 found 1 was getting more and more tired of an evening and the weekends were spent getting caught up on things I'd let slide during the week. So we hired a woman to come in and iron; then to iron and clean; we were buying more and more pre-prepared, and ex':' pensive, foods; I had t9 get new clothes-and we weren't nearly as rich as we'd thought! . "Pay-off came when the baby sitter's children got measles, then ours came down and 1 had to stay home and take care of them. That, 1 can assure you, Mrs. Daly, did not go over with the boss, nor with the girl who had to. take over my work as well as her own., "When the children were wen enough to return to the former routine, we took them to the babysitter and Ellen, the three­ year-old, put her arms around my neck, cried and clung to me. 'No, Mommyl Don't go 'way­ please!' "From that day on, the office lost its glamour. I've giveJl notice, to my husband's relief and the boss' irritation. Just as soon as they can find a replace­ ment, I'm going home! "Maybe, when the children are In school":'" these two and the others we may have-I might go back to work. But, believe me, when that time comes, I'll con­ sider 'all factors.' In the' mean­ time, I'll do some typing at bo~ for money and we'll probably be M. well off financiaI17. and better off, e~otionally!" .

Men's College Admits Women Students

SOQALITY OFFICERS: Officers of Our Lady's S0­ dality at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are ready to plunge into plans for the year's program. From left, Kathy Koss, vice-prefect; Mary Ann Demetrius, prefect; Susan Bochenek, treasurer.

He,lp Blind , N. J. Prisoners Make Braille Neighborhood

Maps to Assist Sightless in Travels

.

TRENTON (NC) - Prison~rs isolated in the maximum securJty section of the state prison here will help blind persons­ alded by the Mount Carmel Guild in the Newark Archdio­ rese-to "see" their own neig­ borhood for the first time. Braille maps made by prison­ ers with mechanical drawing and draftsman skills will be duplicated by the Guild and dis­ tributed to the blind. The street­ by-street maps will be .J!lade by the prisoners from large mock-

Aid Former Pastor's New Orleans Church

.

composed of cardboard blocks provided by the Guild. Since August 1964, men in the maximum security section have Peen .assisting with the work for the blind. The project- was il'augurated by Gerald Moore and John Tomlinson, instructor­ f'ounselors on the prison staff. The prisoners have' produced Braille labels bingo cards Christmas cardl and books ' •

ups

Archbishop Suggests Sermon at Daily Mass DETROIT (NC) -Archbishop .John F. Dearden of Detroit has suggested that pastors give a sermon at every Mass, even on weekdays. The suggestion was one re­ I!IU1t of an archdiocesail-spon­ sored survey on the new liturgy. The sUrvey showed general ap­ preciation of the homily. The archbishop ,also 'urged tbatM:~ be offered fachfg the people "811 often as pastoral co~ , sideratlons ,warrant oUeling the Holy Sacrifice in this fashion," becaUse "It has become clear thet a large number Of People find it helpful to their partici­ pation and devotion to have the eelebrating priest face them as he carries out hi. J'ole at' the

VIENNA (NC)-A drive spark­ ed by parishioners of Our Lady 01. Good Counsel church here in Virginia has collected some 16,500 pounds of food, clothing and medicine for a hurricane­ ravaged parish. in New Orleans. Idea .for 'the collection origi­ ~l;l~ci with J.'rank Gadell, who thought of It as "a little token Departure Rites, Hor)Ol's Of . our appreeiation" to Father ' B' d S·~ t'· , J o . s e P h C. TOT, O,'s.I'.S.; former ,Pe,ru-. ~un, ' . IS, e~s, ; pastor· of OUr Lady of Good MILTON ,(NC) -Four Counsel Dow stationed at St~ of St. Joseph, first members Of·, .,Vincent 'dt! Paul cbureh 1ft New Novitiate Friends ".' Friends 'of the 'Presentation ef . their community: ever assigned, O!leanll.... Mary Novitiate,' Dighton, will ~ a fO,eign mission, were hon"; . L;argest cOntributiOIl to the ored at a departure eeremony " drive was 10;000 pOunds of sup.;.' , sponsor a whi~ party: at ,8 Sat­ urday night, Oct. 30 in St. Anne'l here before leaving, for ,Llm8, ,plies fr<?m the Hyattsville, Md., seminary of the Oblates of St. altar.School of Nursing auditorium, Peru. Richard Cardinal Cushing pre- Franci.s .de Sales, Father To)",' Fall River. A Christmas sale is listed from 10 in the morning sented mission crosses to Sisters commumty. M. St. Timothy, Rose Agnes,

until 9 at night Friday and Sat­ Ecumenism

urday, Nov. 12 and 13 at Marian Malmaura and M. Helen Edward at ceremonies in Fontbonne SALINA (NC) - A Catholic

Manor, Taunton. SHEET METAL Academy. nun gave the opening convo­

J. rESER, Prop. The community will send an cation address at a Methodist INDUSTRIAL St. Anne friends additional nun each year to the college here in Kansas. RESIDENTIAL Sister Monica Schneider, Friends of St. Anne's Hospital, parish of San Ricardo until an I COMMERCIAL Fall River, will hold a card adequate staff to handle the chairman of Marymount Col­ parish work is attained. Each lege's philosophy department" party Thursday, Nov. 18. Co­ 253 Cedar St., New Bedford chairmen are Mrs. Emile Cote nun will serve for three years addressed the students of Kan­ WY 3-3222 sas Wesleyan University.. and Mrs. Patrick Hurley. ' -or longer if she wishes.

Sinen

Norris H. Tripp

OLYMPIA (NC)-The last all-male collegiate stronghold ill: the state of Washington toppled as 72 women students begq their first. day of classes. St. Martin's College, foundel! in 1895 by the Benedictines, sur­ rendered its exclusiveness with­ out a struggle. One of the 450 male students said the college "lost a little" when it admitted women because "there was se­ renity here." Another said be expected .to like it. ''The main problem is that you bave ~ watch your language." Father Michael Feeney, O.s. B., college president, made • point of welcoming the women in an opening day address, but admitted later: ','It did see. odd to 'Brothers and sisters .. Christ.' ­

Shared-Time EducatiOll At Catholic Schools

AKRON (NC)-A new wrm­ kle in shared-time education has been laUnched here in Ohio. It involves students at a CathoUe boys school and students at • Catholic girls high school. Thirty-five girls from st. Mary's High, taught by Immac­ ulate Heart of Mary nuns, win take their physics course at the all-boy ~chbishop Hoban High, taught by Holy Cross Brothers. Up to now there are only four boys in the course with the girls. The situation came about when a science teacher was not assign.. ed to St. Mary's and the school was unable to hire one.

Mourned ILHAVO (NC) - ArchbishOlt Manuel Trindade Salgueiro of Evora, 'Portugal, died here at the age of 67 following a lOBI illness.

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Feast of HolyCuardian Angels

Calls for Home Celebration

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 30, 1965

9

Legion of Mary

By Joseph and Marilyn Rooeriek . There is a period of about two weeks beginning in mid-May where there is very little color in, my garden,

Sets Retreat

The Legion of Mary of the Fall River' Diocese will spon­ sor its annual retreat at Cathe­ dral Camp, East Freetown, the . weekend of Oct. 8. Open to men and women, the spiritual event is intended for active, auxiliary and junior Legionaries, .as well as friends and relatives of mem­ bers. Retreat reservations should be made by 7:80 Tuesday night, Oct. 5, at which time the Dioce­ san Comitium of the Legion will meet at St. Michael's School, Essex Street, Fall River. Non­ Legionaries wishing to make the retreat may register by mail to 49 First Street, Taunton.

the only significant' flowering plants being the iris and oriental poppies. I am not particularly' fond of iris, al­ though I do, enjoy the little Dutch iris which I grow the job of being parents. If we the presence of these from bulbs, so I let the POP­ doubt guardians of our offspring, we pies take the brunt of the need only spend a few moments

job of providing color in the watching them hanging preca­ garden. riously from trees or learning to Oriental poppies come in a ride a two-wheel bicycle, to re­ number of colors, including alize that someone with a great­ orange, pink and red, and they er power than ours is doing a ,vary in form from the old-fash­ full time job of watching over ioned single to the newer dou­ them. bles. This is another of those Churches, countries, Christian flowers which may be had from communities and religious or­ any gardener who has them, ders also have their special since. they spread very rapidly Guardian Angels and ,St. Francis and have to be pulled out of the de Sales wrote that all Bishops ground or they will take over a have too. It is quite fitting there­ Says Simple Charity

garden. My father has a running fore that these overworked pro­ battle with poppies in his gar­ tectors have a day set aside to No Lonqer Enough

den which has been going on for honor them and October 2nd is PACIFIC GROVE (NC)-Sim­ as long as I can remember, and the day the Church has chosen. pIe charity is no longer enough I must admit that although he Mary Reed Neyland, in her to demonstrate concern for fel­ hasn't given up as yet, the pop­ book The Year And Our Chil­ low men, the president of the pies are winning. dren, suggests making a family National Council of Catholic Poppies may be transplanted mobile ,- to honor the occasion. Women said here in California. any time now. They are not par­ The mobile could have as its Mrs. Marcus Kilch told an ticular as to soil, but they do base a wire coat hanger either NCCW institute that "modern need sunshine. They will grow painted or covered with ribbon poverty is not the same poverty in partial shade but the flower­ or foil. Mrs. Newland favors . which was blessed in the Ser­ ing stems will crane for the, having each child contribute his mon on the Mount. We no long­ available sunlight, which makes own angel (these could be made er hold such a static view of them appear ungainly. Poppies of carliboard or poster paper) social order. Our modern expe­ have a single tap root much like with his name written on It. RING OF PROFESSION: Sister M. Lucy, O.P., daugh­ rience has taught us that change a carrot, which reaches far down Even the most inexperienced into the soU so they must be dug young artiSt can make a flying ter of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Sears of St. Patrick's Parish, Is inevitable and that we must deeply in order to ensure that shape and as long as they don't Fall River, receives her ring from Rt. Rev. William L. Doty be concerned with guiding the of transformation toward the plant survives the trans­ forget those wings it will be rec­ at profession ceremonies conducted at Rosary House, Haw­ process good ends." planting. They may die down ognizable. If you want to use thorne, N.Y. Sister Lucy will serve in one of the homes con­ Immediately after transplanting something a little more decora­ man had the knowledge ducted throughout the country for patients with incurable toBefore but it- has been my exp~ence tive and you're one of those peo­ build dams, the gift of water that they send up new' growth ple who can lay hands on their cancer. to a thirsty - man was an ade­ about a week or so after the Christmas decorations In 0cto­ quate work' of charity, she ex­ original set of leaves dies down. ber, you could use some of your plained but now that man My father claims that the tap store-bought angels to trim your knows how to supply water for root may be cut into several mobile. However, no matter how the masses, the simple act of pieces and planted and that ,each professional or how amateurish charity is no longer sufficent u piece of the root will· give off your finished product, It Is the Extension Society Volunteers Assist

a measure of concern for one'. leaf growth but I have never Idea of the celebration that fellow men. Poor in· Southwestern States

tried this since we have 80 counts. A fitting prayer to be, many poppies available that I said at the evening meal of that SAN ANTONIO (NC) - Sib borhood reunions at night. Announce Change have never been concerned day is the followir\g: A "apfritual renewal" missloa about numbers. • Angel of God my Guardi8D. and Dan Farrell, husband and Queen's daughters of Taun~ wife team of Extension Society at St. John's churCh highlighted . dear,

We have the simple popw announce postponement of their Volunteers, aren't trying to save the final week. Volunteers en­ which has the almost artificial' To whom God's love commits

annual installation dinner from the world. couraged residents to attend the me here, appearance of a waxed flower, Like other volunteers, they're mission and walked with them Monday, Oct. 4 to 6:80 Monday Ever this day be at my side but the doubles are equally just trying to make It a better from their homes to the church. night, Nov. 1, in Sacred Heart To light, to guard, pretty. The beauty of poppies is place in which to work, play and More than 400 Spanish-speaking auditorium. The change win To rule to guide." In their color which carries a permit members to teleview the Catholics and non-Catholics There Is no better way to top pray. great distance, so that they' are Mass of Pope Paul VI in New The Farrells, who come from packed, the _church on missio~ off a celebration of this sort particularly useful for an out-of­ York's Yankee Stadium. Boulder, Colo., are two of 62 nights. the-way section of the property than with an elegant Angel Pie The causes of poverty are which can' be seen from the dessert. The following recipe is volun~ers who are' beginnin! work In Spanish-speaking par .. numerous in Kenwood. The vol­ house but where they can be easy, delicious, and can be pre­ pared in the morning. The ishes in seven southwestern unteers knew this. They also allowed to grow at will. In a NO JOB TOO BIG sta~s. The volunteers .received knew they alone couldn't solve massed effect, they are without cherry pie filling may have sub­ NONE TOO ::MALl their assignments followmg com­ them equal. They require no special stituted for It drained, ,thawed, pletian of a three-week training ,,; . frozen berries of any other fruit care and as such are one of the course at St. Mary's University It s a matter of commum~most pleasurable little flowers to that is available. here. ' tion," Farrell said. "We're trying be found in our Spring gardens. Cherry-Angel Pie . Antoni th't f to engender a spirit of -commu­ S an PRINTERS 0 • was e SI e 0 nity friendship. I suppose you In the Kitchen

1 cup sifted flour one of two tralOing centers for could call it the 'miracle of 6 Tablespoons confectioners' , No parent should let OCtober

Main Office and Plant

volunteers who will assi!Jt the love' • sugar 2nd go by without a grateful

underprivileged. The project -is • 95 Bridge St., Lowen, Mau.

cup butter or margarine Dod in ,the direction of her chil­

sponsored by the Catholic 1 package (3 ounces) cream Church Extension Society. dren's Guardian Angels and her

Tel. 458·6333

cheese

own too; for someone must .help

BEFO,RE YOU Preparing for their' assign­ Auxiliary Plants 1 cup dairy sour cream

a mother and father hold on to

ments , the volunteers attended BUY-TRY teaspoon vanilla

their equilibrium as they faQe

BOSTON

elasses, participated in field 1 can cherry pie filling

work and lived with Spanish­ CAMDEN, N. J.

.- 1) Combine the flour and J apeaking 'families. ' ,Nuns ConduCt Motor OCEANPORT. N.,J...

Tablespoons of the sugar in .' Spiritual Renewal

small bowl: cut 'in the·shortening MIAMI 'Miss{on for Deaf with :l pastry blender until the . Kenwood,' a ,poverty pocket

OLDSMOBILE PA\NTUCKET, R. I. located in St; John's parish, was

ADELAIDE' (NC)..:.....~eginnirig mixture is crumbly. Oldsmobil· ot-Renault, PHILADElPHIA next February,. two Dominican 2) Work dough into a ban and a final stop. For four days the

87'Mlddle Street, Falrliavea , Sisters in a car packed· With vis­ knead until smooth. Pat evenly volunteers visited the homes of

residentS. They 'took if census.

,ual aids will travel to govern­ over ·the bottom and side of • ment-sponsored schools to give , buttered 9 inch pie plate. Prick 'chatted with people about their

problems and conducted neigh'-,

-religious instruction to Catholic well with a fork; deaf children. 3) Bake in 425· over for 10 FOR' FAMILY BANKING Sisters Mary Mannes, O.P., minutes or until lightly browned. Fall River Nurses who will' be in charge of the Cool completely on a wire rack. .motor mission; has been teaching Fall River ,Catholic Nurses' 4) Soften cream cheese in '. at the Dominican Sisters' school medium size bowl; 'beat in the Guild announces it will sponsor for the deaf in Melb9urne, Vic­ sour -cream and the remaiing 4: a rummage sale tomorrow from luria, for the past five years. Tablespoons of sugar, along with 10 in the morning to 5 in the The Sisters of St. Joseph the vanilla. When smooth spread afternoon at 250 Llndeh Street, ATTLEBORO

8tarted Australia's first motor over the bottom and up the side Fall River. Also scheduled is mission in 1957, traveling to re­ of the cooled crust. Chill 30 min­ corporate Communion at Ii SO. ATTLEBORO - SEEKONK

mote areas to conduct catechism utes or until set. o'clock Mass, Sunday afternoon, classes. Recently groups of other S) Spoon cherry-pie filling Oct. 24 at St. Mary's Cathedral, MEMBER FDIC Sisters have joined in the motor­ to be followed by a dinner at into the center. Chill until Rl'­ JDission field. J/hite'. restaurant. Ying time.

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THE

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'l-JOR­

Thurs., ...·pt. 30, 1965

Newark Pre~ate Tells Ame",gcans Sunnort U.N. NEW YORK (NC) Americans should urge the federal government to con­ tinue its support of the United Nations, the U. S. bishops' representative for U.N. affairs declared here. Auxiliary Bishop John J. DOl1gherty of Newark told some 300 persons at a ;pecial Mass marking the beginning of the U.N. General Assembly's 20th session: "I fervently urged that the citizens of our land express to t-h e i r elected representatives their faith in the United Nations and their hope for continued support in the trying times ahead. I urge this upon all, and especially upon Catholic citi­ zens, since they by reason of the' theology and the social teaching Of the Church have a strong reli­ gious motivation to support the international body." The Mass was celebrated at the Church of the Poly Family here by Msgr. Alberto Giovanet­ ti, the Holy See's permanent ob­ server at the U. N. Mirror of World

Bishop Dougherty, president 'of Seton Hall University, South Orange, N. J., said he is "filled with dismay" at the thought of the world without the U. N., but admitted that the U. N. is "not perfect". "It' has been said that so many marriages are failures because so many failures marry. The U.N. is not a wedding of perfect na­ tions. It is a mirror of the world it represents. The darkened mir­ ror is the reflection of a dark­ ened world." But he cautioned the delegates not to lose hope. Bishop Dough­ erty said: "The vision of your goal must ever goad you on, and remembrance of the fact that, if the instruments of peace' have failed, much more have instru­ ments of war· failed. War solves' nothing."

WORKING SESSION: Secretary General'of the Coun­ cil, Archbi~hop Pericle FeUd, addresses- the Fathers in working session, rarely photographed. Patriarchs of the

Eastern Rite Churches occupy their place of honor, while behind them the choir sits in front of statue of St. Peter. NC Photo

New World Synod Elevates Position of Bishops

VATICAN CITY (NC)-"The aecisions. world synod of bishops is a Cardinal Marella also con­ symbol of the collegiality in firmed, that provisions of the the government of the Church," motu proprio could be "modified said Paulo Cardinal Marella, and perfected" as experience is president of the Vatican Coun­ gained. Clearly the synod will cil's commission on the pastoral be a permanent institution; al­ duties of bishops, at a press though its membership will conference here. change. Its functions will be Cardinal Marella, who was usually consultative, but Pope FORT BELVOIR (NC)-Papal 'entrusted by Pope Paul VI to Paul also can determine when hon"rs were b.estowed here in introduce the motu proprio "Ap­ it is to have deliberative func­ Virginia on the former director ostolica Solitudo" on the council tions. of the U. S. Army 'Engineer Re­ floor, stressed that the document It is not now contemplated search and Development Labo­ i'elevates the position of the bis- • t{at lay representatives will be ratories and his wife. hops," making it, possible for appointed to the synod, although Col. John H. Kerkering, U. S. the Pontiff to consult with his the Pope may seek their advice Army retired, was presented fE'llow bishops more directly and in· the capacity of consultors. with the Benemerenti Medal, intimately than ever before; while his wife, Marie, received The cardinal also pointed out the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice that national episcopal confer­ Medal. ...nces acquire through the new The presentations were made &ynod additional tasks of great on behalf of Pope Paul VI by Importance as organs of the Msgr. Ferdinand A. Evans, Fori Church. In the forthcoming re­ Belvoir staff chaplain. at a cer­ form of canon law they will emony in the main post chapel. be given juridical status on the HARRISBURG (NC) - Every It marked the first timt>' that strength of pertinent council man is his brother's keeper, a papal honors wer~ presented at Catholic laymen's conference this Army installation. was told here. "Our moral obligation is to love every man," said John NEW YORK (NC)-The sig­ nificance of, the historic visit of Lee, Jr., president of the Harris­ burg deanery of the Holy Name Pope Paul VI to the United Na­ CHICAGO (NC)-Father Pa­ Union. He spoke at the second tions will be explored in a one­ tr~ck McPolin, C.M.F., who has ann u a I laymen's conference served as Catholic chaplain of hour special broadcast Sunday, spononsored by the diocesan the Chicago police department Oct. 3 (10-11 A.M.) on CBS tel­ Union of Holy Name Societies. for the last 17 years, h~s been evision. Lee, a Negro, said, "Aided and Pope Paul will arrive in New tIansferred to Los Angeles where l>e will serve as provincial of Ybrk the next morning on what abetted by our non-Catholic and the Claretian' Fathers' western will be the first visit by a pope Jewish brethren, Catholics are finally recognizing the Negro as to the United States. 'U.S. province. member of the one race' that Father McPolin, who also ser­ Auxiliary Bishop John J. ...ed as moderator of the 9,000-' Dougherty of Newark, N. J., will God created-the human race." Father Walter J. Ciszek, S.J., a member Chicago Police Branch be one of a group of experts who of the St. Jude League, will be wiil discuss the Pope's visit with l5-year veteran of Russian pris­ succeeded here by Father Don-' CBS News UN correspondent on camps, told the conference aId Gaugush. C.M.F., who has Richard . C. Hottelet. Bishop banquet that he had met many l>een teaching at St. Jude Semi­ Dougherty is assistant for UN Russians who were uncontam­ nary, Momence, Ill. Father Mc­ affairs to the chairman of the inated by the communist ideol­ ogy. Polin began his service shortly National Catholic Welfare Con­

:But years of exposure, be said,

alter his ordination. ference administrative board.

Army Officer, Wi.fe Receive Honors'

The question was raised by 'reporters whether the synod was going to be "above or below the Roman curia." Cardinal Ma­ rella replied: "Neither over nor under, because the curia is nothing but a secretariat of, the Pope that operates. at the Pope's pleasur~ and under his direct instruction/!." He added that "the curia will be quite happy to cooperate to it" best ability as directed by the Pontiff if such cooperation is required by the synod." . Cardinal Marella said the motu proprio expresses and gives tangible shape and form

His Brother's· Keeper

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Holy Name Official Cites Obligation To Love Every Man

Claretian Provincial Is Police Chaplain

Special TV Show On Pope's Visit

a

to the close union and collabo­ ration that is provided for hy the desires of the council Fathers in the ·relationships between the Pope and the members .01. the episcopal college. ."It is a document of profound doctrinal, pastoral and historical significance," he said. "Under its provisions, the national epis­ copal eonferences will acquire the importance and authority of organs of the government of the universal Church. The functions of the synod are clear­ ly defined in this document, It will have no greater and no lesser functions than those speci­ ,ied.-

"have brought forth the indoc­ trinated man, the new commu­ nist man dedicated entirely te the idea of communism." What is needed now by all mankind, he said, is "social re':' form, not only from the stand­ point of the intellect, but most of all we must reform mankind from the spiritual side."

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, THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Rivero-Thurs. Sept. 30, 'YO~

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: A whole parish said "Happy Birthday" to Mrs. Chrisopher Brady of Corpus Christi, Sandwich, as its way of thank­ ing her for, 50 years of service, as sacristan and catechism teacher. Left, Rev. Ambrose Bowen, pastor, shakes hands with Mrs. Brady; center,

Pope to Greet Church Groups

,

1

she's congratulated by (left) Mrs. Albert Govoni, new Women1s Guild president, and Mrs. John R. Wilson, outgoing president. Right, she's with Mrs. Walter Alvezi, one of her first catechism pupils, and Michelle McNamara, a member of the current class. "

Eighty.Five She Swims,Hikes, ,Teaches CCD, c. F-. M. Federation Friday t Is Sacristan ·at Corpus' Christi, Sand'wich ToTheMeet Fall meeting of the Di­

NEW YORJ{ (NC)-Pope Paul VI will make a special stop dur­ By Joseph McNeiL ing his visit here Monday, Oct. 4 to greeet representative~ of "Dear Lord, keep me'busy 'til'Y die." That's the <iaily prayer of Mrs. Christopher Catholic, Protestant and Jewish Brady of Corpus Christi parish, Sandwich. That her prayer has been well and truly an­ groups which maintain contact swered is evidenced by the fact that this energetic 85-year-older teaches Confraternity of with the United Nations. Christian Doctrine classes and is sacristan for Corpus Ohristi. She's been on the job in The Pope will receive the or­ ganization representatives at both capacities for over 50 formed at St. Joseph's, Somer­ Mrs. Brady was born in Sand­ Holy Family church, which years. Parish gratitude was wich Sept, 26, 1880. It was here ville, in ,1922. ' serves UN pers,onnel. The church evidenced Sun day, when where she obtained her first ex­ She returned to the Cape in is part of a complex near UN over 100 friends, pupils, ex­ 1930 and continued to teach perience as a sacristan at the age headquarters that includes the pupils and associates gathered of 10, at the old St. Peter's Christian Doctrine and take care Catholic Center for the United in Father Clinton Hall for a re­ Church. Father "Thomas Clinton of the sacristy, which she is still Nations and the National Cath­ doing at the age of 85. Mrs. was pastor af the time. ception and testimonial honor­ Brady attributes her longevity olic Welfare Conference Office ing Mrs. Brady, and sponsored She attended public schools, for UN Affairs. by St. Theresa's Guild. graduating from Sandwich High to the fact that she is always School with the class of '98 and busy. Her favorite pastimes are The Pope's stopover there win Rev. Ambrose E. Bow'en, pas­ swimming, walking, reading and come around 6:05, P.M. after he tor, presented his supersacristan from Tufts College, where she playing bridge. leaves the UN headquarters . with a lovely gift on behalf of majored in history, in 1905. Fol­ building. Pope Paul will go to the parish and the ladies of the lowing graduation Mrs. Brady the UN in mid-afternoon to ad­ Chaplain 25 Years guild served a buffet after the t81ight school in New Hampshire, New Bedford and Somerville, at dress the General Assembly on reception. OTTAWA (NC) - Father the same time aiding her pastors the subject of world peace. (Brigadier) C. R. Herve Charle­ by teaching Christian Doctrine. After his address, he will meet bois, 53, director general of heads of state, UN officials and In Somerville she met and . Catholic chaplains serving with delegates at a reception 'and ~n­ married Christopher Brady. The the Canadian army, has marked cert and will also confer private­ marriage ceremony was per­ the 25th anniversary of his ser­ ly with UN Secretary General vice as a chaplai,n. He joined the ANNAPOLIS (NC)-'-A ruling U Thant. chaplain service in September, that public construction grants . Vocation 'Lack 1940, and has served with the to church-related colleges are Canadian army in Great Britain, Ends Service Hvalid and constitutional" has Jesuit College Gets Italy and northwest Europe. been appealed to the Maryland After 19, years of service, the Construction ,Loan Court of ~ppeals. White Sisters have left New WASHINGTON (NC)-A new The appeals court, however, is Bedford. The community, more men's dormitory for Rockhurst not eXPected to rule for more formally known as the Daugh-, College, conducted by the Jesuits than a year on the case-consid­ ters of the Holy Ghost, gave in Kansas City, Mo., will be con­ nursing service to the sick in. er~d a major test of the consti­ structed with a $900,000 college ,tutionality of aid to church­ their own homes. The move was

/ housing loan, the Community related schools. A spokesman dictated, said officials, by a lack

Facilities Administration here ,said a heavy backlog of cases of vocations to the community,

announced. would make it impossible for the which has its provincial house in The Federal loan will be sup­ court to hear arguments on· the Putnam, Conn. The New Bedford house was at 765 County Street. plemented by $15,000 of the uni­ issue for at least a year.' The community also has a versity's funds. The dorm will Target of the suit are appro­ provide housing for 215 men stu­ house in Fall River where the priations by the Maryland legis­ Sisters do home nursing and also dents. Construction is scheduled lature in 1962 and 1963 for con­ operate the Bishop Stang Day *0 be completed in a year. struction grants totaling $2.5 Nursery. There are no plans for million to four private colleges c1~sing this house. in the state.' ' 'Pope's Yankees'

Appeal. Ruling On College Aid

ocesan federation of the Chris­ tian Family Movement will be held at 7 tomorrow night at La Salette Retreat House, Attleboro. With Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Ker­ rins presiding, the program for the coming year will be out­ lined and speakers will explain how the subjects to be explored,­ International Life and the Use of Leisure Time, can be handled by individual CFM units. I To Get Awards Couples who have completed a CFM leadership course will be awarded certificates at a g'f!neral meeting slated for 8 Tlh~sday night, Oct. 5, also at the retreat house. The leadership course, begin­ ning in mid-July, was given for nine weeks in three areas of the Diocese. Mr. and· Mrs. Robert Fife instructed couples meeting in Taunton and coming from New Bedford, Fall River, North' Easton and Mansfield. Mr. and Mrs. F,rancis Stelte\' gave the course in Attleboro for Attleboro and Seekonk; and Mr• and Mrl;. Robert Wessman gave the course to couples from Nort)) Attleboro and Plainville.

DlJllFEFJ Starts Wed. Oct. 6

The schools are St. Joseph's NEWARK (NC)-The Newark College in Emmitsburg and the archdiocese office, 'like chan­ ceries elsewhere in the metro- ' College of Notre Dame of Mary­ politan area, has been besieged land in Baltimore, both operated with requests for tickets to the under Catholic auspices, Hood College (United Church of Mass which Pope Paul VI will say in Yankee Stadium Oct. 4 Christ) in Frederick, anc West­ following his visit to the United ern Maryland College (Method­ Nations. One request stood out ist) ,in Westminster. above all the others. A caller The plaintiffs in the suit are wanted to know how he could the Horace Mann League, an or­ get tickets "to aee the Pope', ganization of public school ad­ Yankees," ministrators, and 13 taxpayeu.

Women's Retreat A retreat for laywomen will be held tomorrow through Sun­ day at Our Lady of Good Coun­ sel Retreat House, East Free­ town. As this will be the only retreat this Fall for women, those· who plan to attend are urged to make reservations im': mediately either at the retreat house or with· district retreat chairmen.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, T965

To Cover Pope's Visit

God Love You

New Books Meet Popular

By Most Rev. Fulton 'J. Sheen, D.D.

Interest in Two Martyrs

We have been asked by CBS television network to be brief­ to New York to serve as sPecial narrator of Pope Paul vrs visit to the United Stat~. Their extensive coverage will begin at 9:30 a.m. (EDST) en October 4th and we will follow the Hol7 Father through hi" entire visit. What ali honor this Is. But what an un­ surpassed blstorial event Is the Holy Father's peace plea to the People of the entire world at the United Nationsl

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Two of the most successful Broadway plays of recent seasons have dealt with two English martyrs, one of the very remote, the other of the. rather remote, past: St. Thomas of Canterbury, who died in 1170, and St. Thomas More, who died in 1535. The But Thomas, although reluc­ plays were Becket and A Man tant to become archbishop, for All Seasons. Popular in­ stands firm for the interests of terest in these Christian the Church once he is in that

ly absent from the Council this week in order to come

heroes continues, and now ,to oHice. There is, almost immedi­ meet it; there appear two new ate conflict between him and the king, and this intensifies into books dealing

open and bitter warfare. The with them.

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FINAL VOWS: Sister M. Fine Novel el a b ou t st.

Thomas of Can­

Mrs. Mydans has set this forth Rollande de France, C.S.C., terbury, and

with a teeming abundance of th~ former Suzanne Payette, Born For

details which make the age, in daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Friendship by

aU its fierceness and color, come George L. Talbot, New Bed­ Bernard Basset,

to urgent life for the reader. She S.J. (Sheed and has depicted the antagonists ford, has professed perpet­ Ward. $4.50), which attempts to vividly and truly: the tall, raw­ ual vows as a Sister of the distill the spirit of st. Thomas boned, proud, almost fanatical­ Holy Cross. A graduate of More. ly uncompromising archbishop St. Anthony High School, Mrs. Mydans' novel is excep­ and the short, rugged, acquisi­ New Bedford, she is teaching tionally good. It is obvious that tive, frenzied king. first grade at Infant Jesus the author has done a great deal This is an altogether fine his­ parish, Nashua, N.H. ef peparatory work. Her re­ torical novel, faithful to fact, search has been thorough and presenting genuine and not con­ discriminating. She has ap­ trived drama, and plumbing the proached her subject fairly, her complicated depths of 'great fig­ ures of an age remote. portrait is objective. She relates the story of Book Has Pattem Thomas of Canterbury at ex­ Father Basset describes his Attleboro Particular Council treme length. Her book runs to book on St. Thomas More as not of the Society of St. Vincent de 439 pages.' But 'the' significant a biography but a study intend­ Paul will meet at St. Mary's word is fll'\!.IlS,". for this is a ed "to bring out less the histor­ parish, North Attleboro, at 8 novel which moves . swiftlY, ical details, more the humanity Monday night, Oct. 4. without lulls or ponderosity. It is and sanctity of the man." The meeting, to be held hi the very admirably put together, At first it may strike the read­ and holds one's interest from er as something of a hodgepodge, 1ICh001 hall, will feature a report on the national meeting of the first to last. and there are points (for exam­ Vincentians, concluded Tuesday The narrative begins with ple, conjecture as to why More in Philadelphia, and a talk Thomas' death, in Canterbury left the Charterhouse) which the Massachusetts Correctional eathedral, in the last days ,of may seem to be excessively con­ Institution in Bridgewater by its 1170. There, in the sanctuary, sidered and reconsidered. But it superintendent, Charles W. Gau~ the archbishop is cut down. by becomes clear that the book does ghan. ' . four knights who ha'l?'e acted on indeed have a pattern. Mr. Gaughan, a graduate of Xing Henry's plea that he be Father Basset comes up with Harvard University, holds mas­ rid of this pestiferous priest. information about More which ter's degrees from Boston Uni­ Then: the author goes back to I, at least, have not noticed in versity and Tufts. He is an assist­ the beginning, to trace the rise the biographies I have read: for ant professor in the program of and f~ of Becket. example, that he was careless . continuing studies at Bridge­ Rapid Advanee about his dress and indiHerent water State College, and has fre­ quently spoken and written in We see him first in the home about his food, that he had a ef his father, a London merchant keen interest in gardens and in the field of rehabilitation. In Cheapside, then at the mon­ animals, that in his career as a Meetings to Follows astery school at Merton, then in lawyer he made a great deal of o the r Particular Council training for' a career above that money and spent all of it in meetings will be held at St. of his merchant father, at Baron support of family, relatives, de­ Mary's, Mansfield, in November; pendents, servants (his house­ Bicher's castle in Pevensey. St. Mary's, Norton, in December; At 14 Thomas receives the hold at one time numbered '1), St. John's, Attleboro in January; tonsure (which in that era meant that he was 10 years older than Holy Ghost, Attleboro, in Febru­ his first wife and eight years ary; and Sacred Heart, North merely that one had the priv­ younger than his second, that he Attleboro, in March. ileges of a cleric, and not neces­ sarily that one was going to be was virtually forgotten from the The April meeting is slated for a priest). At 18, he goes to time of his death in 1535 until St. Mary's Seekonk; May. for Paris, to study at the university the beginning of the present Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, See­ century. for two years. . konk;,and June for St. ThereSa, Knew Scriptures Well Thereafter, he becomes. a 'clerk •South Attleboro. to the justiciar of London, an!! His spirituality was rooted in moves, up as clerk to Theobald, the Scriptures, which he knew..... the Archbishop of Canterbury. very well. He was versed, too, in l""IIIeWman, e egates His advance with Theobald is the writings of the Fathers, and Vote Name Change rapid, and there is a brief inter­ maintained that seripture and , lude in which he goes to Auxerre patristic learning was Ideal NEW. YORK (NC)-:-By ~ al­ . and Bologna for studies iD the preparation. for 'virtue: ' ,. most unanimous voice vote some '. ~wcanonlaw. His life seemed to. be a series 900 NeWman Congress delegates of steps to prominence, power, voted to strike the world "Club" KiJig's Cha~ce.llor He comes to ·the notice of the and affluence, but he recognized from the title of the National , king, the' canny and passionate .it as a path to.defeat .and para- Newman Club Federation and to : Henry, who takes hiJn into his doxical victory, with the attain- substitute the word "Student." service and soon names him ing of the highest steIr-that of . According to 'Ray Feerick, the chancellorship - as actually _congress information oHicer and ,Chancellor. The aggressive" am­ . - a student at Hunter College. here, 'bitious Thomas is delighted with the last stroke Qf doo~. More's integrity shines in the action ended agitation going his quick' success, sets up 'an these pages; not by assertion b~t back some five years to elimi­ elaborate establishment for him­ self, and lives on a grand scale. by demonstration. He stands nate the word "club," which had To the king, he is an invaluable forth as a man of genius and ex- often assumed a wrong connota­ taordinary probity, and one un- tion that Newmanites were pri­ servitor. The king is bent on complete commonly lovable. It is the vir- marily oriented toward social authority in his realm, and is tue of Father Basseta's uncon- and recreational goals. "This, of course," he said, "was vexed by the independence of ventional method, that, from a casually and even seemingly dis- never so. The movement has al­ the Church. When old Archbish­ Gp Theobald dies, Henry names organized beginning, it produces, ways been and will continue to in its cumulative effect, a like- be an organization with spiritual Thomas to the see of Canter­ bury, sure that, as primate, ness of More both more intimate and educational goals. Hence the Thomas will deliver the Church and more overwhelming than word 'student' will more fitting­ any we have had. l;y lend stress to our true aims.. tnto his grasping hands.

To HearGClughan 'In No. Attleboro

on

One has seen the desire of the Church to be more closely united with all who believe in God in the great ecumeniea1 movement of recent years. But the grad­ ual moving of the Church Into the world is an even more significant movement. Benedict XV was crowned Pontiff in the rear of St. Peter's at the altar of the Blessed Mother, about as far from the front dooor as ,one could possibly be in the Basilica. Pius XI moved forward from the altar in the rear to the main altar under the great dome. Pius XII walked from the main altar down the long nave, mounted stairs in the walls and stepped onto a balcony. This was the first time since 1870 that a PontiH was crowned outside of the Basilica of st. Peter's. John XXIII walked up those stairs, was' crowned outside on the balcony and bade the world come to himself,. stretching out his arms like the arms' of the columns of Bernini welcoming all men to himself. But Paul VI was crowned, not on the bal­ cony, but out in the 'square of St. Peter's in the presence of all men. The pilgrimage of Paul VI to the Holy Land was a return again to origlns, but also a movement to a civilization that is not Christian but Jewish and Moslem. His visit to India brought the Church closer' to Buddhists aJ)d Hindus. But the present visit shows to the world in a most dramatic way the Church's in­ volvement with all men of religions and all races in their com­ mon striving for unity and peace. How can each of us p'articipate in this '"movln&' out" ef the Church? By being aware each da,. that each of ·us Is a brother to all mp.n, b,. reeognldng that the Mystfcal Body of ChrIst, ef which we are all members, inclUdes the starving farmer in Latin America, the rejected leper In Africa, the slc1l: chUd In India who may never reach his teenS. The Societ,- for the Propagation of the Faith is ,the Holy Father's- own society to help the poor of 'the world. The dollarS ,.ou send to SPOF In honor ofhU visit and to help him and the poor are sent to him clireeUy and are distributed by him tbrougout the world where the neeed b greatest. To help him help the poor send ,.our contrlbutlona to The Soeiet,. of the Propagation of the Faith. 368 FIfth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. God Love You! GOD LOVE YOU to Anon. for $2 "I am 19 years old. I have done nothing for my brothel'\' Now Is a good time to start." ... to 'One of the Most Fortunate' for $8 ''This week I will begin· classes at a Catholic college. 1 ain well-fed, well-dressed and my parents are paying my tuition. Please see that this small oHering will reach the Holy Father for some hun~ mouth." .•• to S.D.B. for $800 ''I am a non-Catholic. 1 am sending this to you because I travel a lot In my work and have acquired a tremendous respect for the work the Hol;y Father Is doing in underprivileged coun­ tries." Cut out this column. pin your sacrifice to It and mall It to Most Rev. Fulton .I. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10001, or to your Dioeesan Director. Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Con­ sidine, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Massachusetts.

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Fr. Fi'nnegan, S..J., of Fall River

THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 30, '1965

Assistant Dean at Holy Cross The appointment of Rev.' Owen E. Finnegan, S.J., assistant professor of philosophy, as as· sistant dean at Holy Cross Col· lege has been announced by Very Rev. Raymond J. Swords, S.J., president. He will assist Rev. Maurice F. Reidy, S.J., as­ dean, and also share academic responsibilities with Rev. Joseph F. Donahue, S.J., assistant dean, as well as continue nis teaching duties in the philosophy depart­ ment. Father Finnegan is the son of Owen and Esther Finnegan of 124 Cottage Street, Fall River, where he was born on June 24, 1923. A graduate of Sacred Heart School, Fall River" and Coyle High School, Taunton, he served four years in the U. S. Army Air Force. In 1947 he entered the Society of Jesus at Shadowbrook, Lenox, Mass., after attending the' Uni­ versity of Virginia and St. An­ selm's College. He received an A.B. in classics at Boston College and completed philosophical studies at Weston College in 1954, where he received his M.A. degree. After he completed his theo· logical studies at Woodstock (Md.) College, he was ordained on June 21, 1959 by the late Archbishop Francis Keogh of Baltimore, Md.

Earns Doetorate His First Mass was sun'g in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall' River on June 29 and for the following year he studied ascetical theol­ ogy at St. Robert's Hall, Pom­ fret, Conn. He recently com­ pleted requirements ,for a Ph.D. in communications and philoso­ phy at Michigan State Univer­ sity, where he was a graduate teaching allsistant, and he will receive his doctorate in mid­ December. Bis thesis was "An Historical

Must Balance Continued from Page One 'for the problem and to think

Time Schedule Of Po paI Visit

Study and Metaphysical Analy­ sis of Natural Law Theory as Applied to Problems of Freedom of Expression in the United States". During the p'ast year he was a lecturer at the University of Detroit. Professional memberships in­ clude the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, the Association for Professional Broadcasting on Education, the Catholic 'Broadcasters Associa­ tion, Sigma Delta Chi and Phi' Kappa Phi academic.. honor so­ cieties. Father Finnegaa has two sis­ ters and a brother: Marjorie, Mrs. Joseph Raposa, Jr. of Tiv­ erton, R. I.; Elizabeth, Mrs. Nor­ man Phillips of East Hartford, Conn. and Joseph R. Finnegan of Portsmouth, R. I. He was appointed to the Holy Cross faculty earlier this Sum­ mer.

Papal. Visit

'cia.s.

Continued from Page One of the presence of Pope and

President. Chartered buses from up and down the Eastern seaboard, as well as far away as Montana, are expected here with thou­ sands hoping to see the Pope. Tickets which will admit the 100,000 'persons expected at Yankee Stadium have been mostly distributed. In addition to local parishes and large num­ bers of neighboring dioceses, tickets have gone to the National Council of Churches, the U.S. Protestant - Eastern Orthodox federation, and to the New York Board of Rabbis. I Whole Worl4 Traveling with the Pope • • group of cardinals he has per­ sonally selected to reinforce the purpose of his visit because they represent different parts of the world. • They are: Amleto Cardinal Ci­ cognani, his papal Secretary of State; Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, French-born dean of the College of Cardinals; Gregorio Pietro Cardinal Agagianian of the curia who was formerly Armenian ~te Patriarch of Cilicia and was born in what is now the Soviet Union. . In addition, there will be Francis Cardinal Spellman, of New York; Norman Cardinal Gilroy of Sydney, Australia, rep­ resenting Oceania; Antonio Car­ dinal Caggiano of Buenos Aires, repre~nting L a tin America, Peter Cardinal Doi of Tokyo, representing Asia; and Laurean Cardinal Rugambwa of Bukoba, 'Janzania, representing Africa.

LEGBNDS on map indicate some of the highlights

of Pope Paul's visit to New York (Oct. 4). NC Photo

Papal Throne Ready '"

Hand-Carved Victorian Chair Waiting

In Cardinal Spellman's Residence

I

NEW YORK (NC)-No one will have to arrange for a papal throne for the arrival of Pope Paul VI at Francis Cardinal Spellman's residence Monday, Oct. 4. A "throne" has been waiting. for 115 years since it was ac­ quired by John Cardinal Mc­ CIQSkey in keeping with a cus­ tom that cardinals be prepared fer a papal visit. In reality, the throne is all

ornate, hand 7 carved Victorlaa ('hair that has been painted gold. Normally It stands in a parlor on the first floor of the cardi­ nal's residence, facing the wan under a picture, of the reigning Pontiff. Pope Paul will come to the residence immediately after his arrival. He will be welcomed formally by Cardinal Spellman md in tum will extend greet­ inp to the cardinal

Mission Leader Sees New Sense Of Community Among Christians'

about It. He continued: "The problem Is a revival of the one which faced the first converts to Christianity, who were .com-' WASHNGTON (NC)-A Prot­ pelled to live in a pagan society. estant mission specialist told a In certain aspects of secular life, Catholic mission meeting here the Christian must stand apart, that developments in the mod­ defending himself and making ern world have led to a new' himself immune. In other as­ llense of, community am 0 n g pects he should search in his in­ Christians. ner being in an attempt to pen­ "We are beginning to under­ etrate secular life and redeem stand that in this new kind of it, as it were, with the goodwin world in God's Providence there with which his faith provide. has come into existence a world him. Christian community," said Dr. John Coventry Smith. Demandlnlr Dr. Smith, head of the Nation­ "'It is admittedly a demanding d Council of Churches' Division task, but it holds great advan­ Continued from Page One of Oversea~Ministries,saidthis tage and merits for those who apply themselves to it. It is a llver the petitions in the official sense of community has found task that makes the, Christian languages of the United ~atioJ18: an: expression among Protestants vigilant and yet militant. It Chinese, Spa n i II h •. Russia. 1ft the World Council of Churc~es and among :Catholica lives' him a cOnsciousness of self :French and English. TWelve, children Chosen' from ill the Second Vatican Council. and a knowl~ge of the problem. !UJlong ,those whoSe parents are ' : . New' Era , : 01 his times'.' It makes him WhIle It would he :unrealistie eapable ofUving a viay of life involved in tIM! work' Of the which 'we ,would, cait neW but United Nations win form' the ,to, expect doctrinal 'compromises ' h'oly, "self-assured but ,auStere, offertory procession. Only _ the : 1~ the sake. of religious uniW, ' open but eautioWi. It :i8 an: ,ex-' ehildren, will receive' CoiiUnun- : ~ ~d, neve~eless. separated ' -, Chlistianll today realize that they 'erCise' which must beCome' char­ 10ft at the Mass. 8Cteristie Of tile soris 'of 'the , T Ii e elementary' ~Molage' must. take each other into eon­ Church if they wish to he eciD-' youngSters will 'Proceed from. lIideration. .aous and faithful." ' ,. reserved, place' near t~e' altar ill "God won't let .. let each back of the baseban field's see­ other alone any ,longer." be ond baSe to the Pope and his IBid., 81Btants at the' Mass. The first pair will bring watei' and wine; the second; chalice NOTRE DAME (NC) - 'l'he and paten with hosts for the University of Notre Dame t. communicants: undertaking a study of narcotic The third pair will carry can­ Est. 1897 addition and vocational hamii­ dles; the fourth, two loaves of caps resulting from drug usage bread and the fifth, two small with the support of a $59,599 casks of wine-all, symbols of 2343 Purchase Street

grant from the vocational reha­ gifts from the people. New, ,Bedford

bilitation administration of the The sixth pair will carry a U.S,. Department of Health, :Ed­ dove and an olive branch as WY 6·5661

ucation and Welfare. ~bo1s 91 peace:.

Stadium Mass

University to Study Drug Addiction

13

as­

Dr. Smith spoke at a session for editors of mission magazines during the 16th annual meeting of U. S. Catholics mission-send­ ing societies. In addition to 1,000 Catholic priests, Religious and laymen, the meeting was at­ tended by some 25 Protestant and Orthodox church leaders as special guests. The meeting's theme was "Revolution in Mis s ion a r y Thinking: Our Response to De Ecclesia" (Vatican II's Constitu­ tion on the Church). Sponsor was the Misaion Secretariat, a Washington, D.C., clearinghouse . 01. information and services. Dr. Smith in his addrea pointed to' signs of 'developing' "w~rld civiliution" ~inc:lustria1,· ~echnological and urban::" and the emergence, wi~ the disap.. , pearance of. colonialism, Of'. ,"new e~ 1ft. human history,"~ He ,said he'. is "firmiy· eon­ vinced" 1bat such dum'ge. of God." ,

,"an

9:30 A.M. Reception at K&ftoo nedy International Airport. 10:00 A.M. Start motorcade. Cardinal Spellman's residence. 12:00 noon Arrival at St. Pat­ rick's Cathedral. 12:15 P.M. Enter residenc~ prepare for meeting with Pres­ ident before departing for United Nations. 3:05 P.M. Depart for United Nations. 3:20 P.M. Arrive United Na­ tions. 3:30 P.M. Address United Na­ tions General Assembly. 4:00 P.M. Meet United NatioIW officials. . 5.50 P.M. Address United Na­ tions staff. 6:00 P.M. Depart United Na­ tions. 6:05 P.M. Meet representatives of Catholic, Protestant and Jew­ ish groups maintaining contacts with United Nations at Holy Family church near UN head­ quarters. 6:30 P.M. Return to Cardinal

Spellman's residence.

8:00 P.M. Depart for Yankefi

Stadium.

8:30 P.M. Mass for Peace at

stadium.

9:45 P.M. Depart for Kennedy airport, with a very brief visit to Vatican Pavilion at the World's Fair. 10:30 P.M. Arrive airport for departure ceremonies. 11:00 P.M. Depart for Rome.

.

,.

CCD Courses Continued from Page One School, Wednesday, Oct. 8, n.e.. Thomas F. Neilan. ' ' Attleboro, Bishop Feehan School, Thursday, Oct. 7, Rev. James F. Kelley. . ' , Cape Cod, Holy Trinity SchooJ. West Harwich, Thursday, Oct. .,. Rev. Philip A. Davignon. All classes are in the eveninf from 7:30 to 9:30. Two concurrent eight-weelt methods courses will be given in the Spring of 1966. One course will be the second part of Ele­ mentary Methods, while the other, will be the first part of High School Methods. A methods course for Teach­ ing Exceptional Children will also be offered during the Spring period. '

mgtt

New Bedford Blind A Mass for deceased members 01. New Bedford Guild for the Blind will be held at 8 Saturday morning, Oct. 23. A meeting i. announced for Thursday, oct. 21.

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14

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, 1965

Educational Task Colos'sal In Latin' American Lands From "The Church in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. "How is it," asked Father Rahm EI Paso, Texas, a participant in Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Pro­ gram sessions held in Chicago, "that in these countries , where it is possible for Catholics to do so, we fail to put goo d religious instruction strict control. Therefore, high into what we know in the academic standards can be at­ United States as the public tained and more continuous teaching can be achieved on the school system?"

of

"This is a good question," com­ mented Father William Ferree of the Marian­ ists, former president of the Catholic University of Ponce, Puer­ to Rico. "Often today this may be successfully achieved. But we frequently fail to take note in the United States of the' fact that during a great period of the past and in certain areas even today, it is, the tendency in Latin America for opinion on religion to polarize. Until the recent birth of the movement of Catholic renewal, everything that was not official­ ly Catholic was anti-Catholic. In this tendency to polarize lies largely an answer to you: ques­ tion. If a person wanted to do some­ thing of a social nature and was not interested in' doing it in a Catholic way, he would normal­ ly join not only a non-Catholic but an anti-Catholic group to do it. So it is that while 'religious instruction in public schools has long been permitted 'by law, it has been regarded in many arelLl as difficult if not impossible to arrange. . Thank God, this specific Latin American phenomenon is chang­ ing as the Church assumes a role of initiative rather than of mere defense." CathoDe UDlversU,. Quite apart from opinions pro and con on Catholic education, it exists as a fact of life in Latin America. With dispassionate rec­ ognition of this, Magr. Ivan n­ lich, founder and director of the Center for Intercultural Forma­ tion at Cuernavaca, Mexico, ap­ praises one facet of the Church'. education system, the Catholic university. "We have to distinguish two functions in Latin America's Catholic universities," notes the Monsignor. "First they 'represent an institution which people fre­ quent to follow classes. They are also an institution whereby the Church becomes intellectually present within the nation's soci­ ety of thinkers· • • These two functions are to be considered as quite separate from each other. We cannot overlook the fact that the Church's role of pastoral action includes the university world. "Until the period of independ­ ence; the Church in Latin America held a monopoly on university trammg. Post-inde­ pendence governments too k away that monopoly and today the Catholic university in a number of countries serves in turn to break the government's educational monopoly. "What we in the United States call student unionl¥have in Latin Am.:_ ,. - totally and incompar­ ably di. function than in the United " , ' .... The state universities are vulner­ able to student con •• __ . Politics playa-big role and absorb a lot of the students' time, . "In Cat hoi i c universities student unions ?" ~llowed, Cll' at least 8J.. • under

part of the faculty. ' ''The disadvantages should likewise be listed. Generally the Catholic university creates the image that it is meant for those who can pay a little more, those who want special education for their children, those who want their children to learn how to make a career and a social place for themselves. Such universities tend basically to serve the upper class and to be less concerned about the social revolution con­ cerning which there is currently so much talk. "A second disadvantage stems from the fact that Catholic uni­ versities are finding out how tremendously expensive modern education has become. Thus the,. , sometimes have to be satisfied with second-rate education. "Thirdly, the mere presence of a Catholic university in a so­ called Catholic country at time~ introduces the idea of a divisorY factor in the educational field, • • • However unintended this impression may be, the impres­ sion can cause very serious damage to Catholic universities all over Latin America." Measurin~ Latin Edueation Whatever may be our partic­ ular angle of interest' regarding Latin American education or re­ garding the role of Catholic edu­ cation in" Latin America, all of us seek fundamental data that makes it possible for us to meas­ ure the dimensions of the educa­ tional task. These dimensionS" are colossaL nllteracy, for instance, is esti­ mated by the specialists as em­ bracing fifty to seventy million Latin Americans 15 years or' older. The continental~averageis 43 per cent, more than two out of every five. Dr. Gabriel Betan­ «:Ur, the distinguished Colombian educational authority, is now dealing with the broad lines of Latin America's education at the Paris office of UNESCO. HoW, asks the Doctor, in the face of such appalling preva­ lence of illiteracy, can many of the countries of Latin America proceed to solve their 'other key problems? In setting up the political and social structure of a modern state, or the technical structure for modem industry and commerce this heavy per­ centage of people who cannot read or write represents an enormous handicap. ' It is indicated that as of 1980, 78 out of every 100 children five to 14 years of age were in pri­ mary school. But only 15 out of every 100 young people aged 15 to 19 were in middle school. And only 3 ou~ of every 100 aged 20 to 24 were in the uni­ versity. The emphasis through­ out Latin America is on the im­ provement of middle school at­ tendance; without this there is no hope of a consequent heavy increase in trained public lead­ ers.. In 15 Latin American countries the grade school child averages only two and a fifth years in the classroom before dropping out; only 20 out of every 100 finish grade school. Principal reason for dropping out is to go to work on the family farm or to find some sort of a job if the famiJ.7 lives in the city..

Primate of Ireland to Officiate At Dedication ST. AUGUSTINE (NC)-Wil­ liam Cardinal Conway, archbish­ op of Armagh and primate of All Ireland, has accepted on in­ vitation to officiate at the dedi­ cation of the renovated Cathe­ dral pi St. Augustine here in Floriaa. Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, bishop of St. Augustine, said the ceremony will take place during the 400th anniversary celebra­ tion of the founding of St. Au­ gustine, but a definite date for the dedication has not yet been scheduled. St. Augustine was founded on Sept. 8, 1565. Cardinal Conway and Arch­ bishqp 'Hurley currently are at;. tending the fourth session of the. Second Vatican Council in Rome. The St. Augustine chancery office here said the coming of

the Irish cardinal fittingly un­ derscores the work done by pio­ neer Irish missionary priests. in building the church in the nation's oldest city. : It was recalled that the second Spanish occupation of Florida began in 1783. The following year Irish-born Father Thomas Hasset arrived in St. 'Augustine and served as pastor of the church. Cathedral Status The major share of the work in' the building of the church

_ Tithing PROVIDENCE (NC) - More than 20 Rhode Island parishes have or are planning "programs of tithing, termed "sacrificial giving."

was done by Father Michael O'Reilly, a native of Longford, Ir~land, who arrived with Father, Hasset and later became pastor when Father Hasset was moved to New Orleans, chancery records disclose. The plans for the historic church were approved by King Charles IV of Spain' ill 1790, to­ gether with a list of furnishings required which. was submitted by Father O'Reilly. Tlie work on the church was begun in' 1791 when Father O'Reilly blessed the cornerstone. The construction was slow, but the quadrangular church was dedicated on Dec. 8, 1797, by Father O'Reilly, the chancery records disclose. The church was raised to cathedral status ,in 1870.

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.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, 1965

15

COLLEGE DAY Oct. 12, 1965 on

Stonehill Campus liThe College you choose

today win determine the

value of .your thought to­

morrow." ., .

Rev. Edmund J. Hciughey,.

C.S.C., Registrar

"This is your opportunity to find the (ollege offering the courses that fit your ambition" ~ • • Rev: Patrick J. O'Nem Diocesan Superintendent of Schools

No. Easton

S»onsored by Ston·ehill

C~II~ge

andO, the Diocesan School Department

ADMINISTRATION BUILDING - STONEHILL CAMPUS

.

Representatives from more than 40 Catholic Colleges from the Mid~ we"" to the Atlantic seaboard will ,be present on The Stonehill Canlpus. Parents and Pupils from Diocesan, Private and Public Schools are cordia·"y invited CLASSROOMS lO-Noon Four Thirty-Minute Sessions

Hi~Jh

GYMNASIUM College Representatives Supplying Necessary Information

This Message ;s Sponsored By The Following Individuals and Business Concerns in Greater Fall River: Ann Dale Products, Inc. Brady Electric Supply Co. Cascade Drug Co. Gold Medal Bread Globe Manufacturing Co. Hutchinson Oil Co.

R. A. McWhirr Company Inter-:-ational Ladies Garment Workers Union MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. .Mason Furniture Showrooms Gerald E. McNally, Contractor

Sobiloff Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America. AFL-CIO Yellow Cab Company .~.


16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30, 1965 '-

Tells Girl to Take Priest's Advice on Moral Matter By John J. Kane, Ph.D. "I am keeping steady company with a nice young m' and we sometimes engage in petting. I have talked my prob­ lem over with a priest and he said this type of passion was only for married people and may not be exercised by any­ body else. I feel that slight should know that physiologically petting does not arouse the and psychologically, most men passions so much that you are aroused sexually more eas­ can't control them. What do ily than women. There, of' you tink?" I think you are quite wrong. The priest is quite right. But suppose we al­ low a third party to speak, a girl of about your age. She writes, "Please h~lp me right away if you can answer my problem in your column. I want to know how to regain my self respect. I was taught my body is a temple of the Holy Ghost but it s~ems not anymore. I go with two boys regularly and have got to t.he point of letting them get .qU1~e familiar with me. I'm afraid III give way entirely, although so far I have not. But I can't seem to resist. I don't know what's wrong with me. I resolve never to do it again, but I do." Dangerous Thing So you see, Sue, that a little "petting" is or can be a dang~r­ ous thing. The problem With your letter is that I cannot know just what you mean by "slight petting". Perhaps everyone has his or her own definition. Let me try to spell it out a bit. Different generations have dif­ ferent terms for what amounts to almost the same thing. Years ago it was called "spooning", later "necking", and "petting". "Necking was considered rela­ tively proper. It was limited to a good night kiss or an embrace. At any rate it was not supposed to involve real intimacy, al­ though no doubt at times'it did. You see we look for inocuous words to decrige behavior. When a person drinks he may get a "little tight", "a little high" or "stoned", or "crocked" or "bomb­ ed". None of these is really an 'accurate description of the indi­ vidual's state. What one calls a "'little tight", others may term "'bombed", i.e. really drunk. Absurd ConventioD The same is true of petting, necking or whatever you want to call it. We look for a mild term to describe our behavior when perhaps a quite stronger term is more accurate. The sex drive is a strong one exceeded only by hunger and thirst. God gave it to us for ob­ vious reasons, the procreation of the human race in marriage and the development of mutual love . and affection between spouses. Morally, it may be 'expressed only in marriage. No doubt you intend to pet only slightly, but even slight petting can arouse our passions, and when they are aroused it is quite difficult to control them. This. is true of both boys and girls, but some absurd conven­ tion in our society places the ,matter of control more in the girl's hands than the boys. You

Invite All Bishops J30GOTA (NC)-Befo-re leav­ Ing here for the last session of the ecumenical council in Rome, the Colombian bishops decided ..0. invite all the bishops of the world to attend the InternatiOllal Eucharistic . Congress here in 1,,68. lnvitations will be extend­ ed during the council.

course, are exceptions. Serious Petting When you permit a boy to be­ come familiar, you provoke the arousal of a strong drive in him. It may also happen to you. Just how do you turn this drive off? It isn't· like a water faucet which can be stopped by turning the spigot. Eventually, I predict, if you continue to permit "slight pet­ ting" it will become serious pet­ ting, and ultimately end in sex relations. And this may happen even if you protest. Soine men when aroused become strictly ruthless and do not hesitate to use violence. And, incidentally, this can happen even in the case of your "nice young man". But even if this does not oc­ cur, what about your reputation? Some men kiss and tell, and sometimes what they tell may be a gross exaggeration. Some like to boast of their sexual prowess and conquests, and your "nice young man" may not prove to be the exception that you ap­ parently believe he is. Matter of Morality But far more important, this is a matter of morality. I think you better have a long and frank tall with your confessor. Spell out for him, so far as he thinks it necessary, what you mean by '''slight petting". Perhaps you have already done so but you reject his answer. His prudent words of warning are falling on deaf ears. He is in a far better' position than I to make the moral judge­ ment necessary here. But from what you have written, I strong­ ly suspect that your petting is somewhat less slight than you think it is. In a phrase, my ad. ice is to avoid it. . Perhaps the letter of this other girl may help you. She is now becoming desperate, and desper­ ately afraid. Her present posi­ tion may be your future position unless you stop and stop NOW. . Of course, all individuals dif­ fer in the strength of their sex drives and their abilities to con­ trol them. But no normal man or woman is constantly strong enough to resist when the occa­ sions of sin are strong and frequent. Refuse Liberties Ironically enough, so m e studies show that girls pet be­ cause they. believe boys want them to do so, and .boys claim they pet because girls want them to do so. Who's kidding whom? If you really love this boy with whom you are associating he will have more respect for you and develop a finer and '-deeper love if you refuse to allow him improper liberties. How can you be certain he is not merely taking advantage of you? Naturally, he will assure you this is not the case. Millions of men have always done so, and probably always will. Frankly, I am a bit puzzled as to why you wrote me at all. The priest already gave you the an­ swer. It was based upon moral theology, and no doubt some ex­ perience in the confessional. I could not possibly give you a better or more accurate answer. Certainly as a sociologist, I could not condone what you are doing. As a Catholic I can only regret it.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" Mver-Thurs. Sept. 30; 196'5

The .Pari§h. .Parade

IMMACULA'I'B CONCEPTION. FALL RIVER Due to 'the televised Mass of Pope Paul VI scheduled for· Monday, Oct. ·4, the Women's Guild meeting will be postpone~ 10 8 Tuesday night, Oct. 5. in the church haD. Members will register and aD women of the parish are urged to attend. The unit will receive corporate Com­ munion at 8 o'clock Mass Sun­ day morning, Oct. 3. ST. PIUS X, SOUTH YARMOUTH New officers of the Women's Guild are Mrs. Wanda Eaton, president; Mrs. Margaret Haley, vice-president; Shirley O'Reilly and -Mary Fellows, secretaries; and Louise Gerkhardt, treasurer. . Mrs. Haley is in charge of a Christmas ~ard selling project, which will benefit the guild treasury. . OUR LADY OF GRACE, NORTH WESTPORT The Council of Catholic Women plans a fashion show for Tues­ day, Oct. 5. A potluck supper will precede a business meeting Tuesday, Nov. 9 and a Christmas party is set for Tuesday, Dec. 14. AlsO planned is a living ros­ ary for 7 Saturday night, Oct. 2. ST. MARY,

NEW BEDFORD

New Confraternity of Chris­ tian Doctrine officers are Gor­ don L. Baker, Rresident;Richard J. Lally, vice-president; Mrs. Bernice Green, secretary; Joseph S. Correia, treasurer. ST. THERESA,

SOUTH ATTLEBORO

The annual fashion show and card party are scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 3. Featured will be a showing of hair styles.

ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT,

FALL RIVER

Blessed M~ther Guild an­ nounces a cake sale to be held Sunday, Oct. Ii). The unit will hold its next regular meeting Tuesday, Oct. 19. Films of Leb­ anon will be shown. . ST. JOHN BAPTIST,

CENTRAL VILLAGE

The Women's Guild announces a plastic party open to the pub­ lic for 8:30 Thursday night, Oct. 14 in the pa'rish hall. In charge will be Mrs. Gilbert Souza, Mrs. Robert Viei.ra and Miss Dale Whitty.. SACRED HEART,

FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will open its season with a coffee hour and reception for new members at 8 MonddY night,· Oct. 4 in the lower school hall. Mrs. Matthew J. Roberts and Mrs. John J. Harrington . are co-chairmen, aided by executive board mem­ bers, and entertainment will be provided by 'the Fall River and Taunton Bar b e r Shoppers' Chorus. All parish women are invited to attend and become guild members.

ST. MARY,

NORTH ATTLEBORO

The Woman's Guild has an­ nounced its calendar for the month of October. Mrs. Daniel Cavanaugh, chair­ man, and Mrs. Francis Fitzpat­ rick, co-chairman, are hi charge of the Harvest Dessert Bridge scheduled for Monday night Oct. 4, 8 o'clock, in the K of ST. JEAN BAPTISTE,

C Hall on Smith Street. FALL RIVER

The regular business meeting The Council of Catholic Women of Oct. 19 will be under the di­ will sponsor a Communion rection of Mrs. Francis Reilly breakfast in the church hall fol­ and will be held at the Attleboro lowing 8 o'clock Mass Sunday Trust Company. morning, Oct. 10. Mrs. Omer Corporate Communion Sunday Martineau is chairman. for all Guild members will be • The unit's monthly meeting is conducted on Oct. 21 at the 8 slated for 7:30 Monday night, o'clock Mass. Mrs. Raymond Oct. 11 and will feature a Hal­ Lambert wiil serve as chairman loween costume party, with Mrs. of the annual Sisters' Silver Tea Aldrich Bamford as chairman. scheduled for the same day from ST. ROCH,

1:30 to 5 in the school hall. FALL RIVER

HOLY NAME,

The Women's Guild will hold FALL RIVER

an auction· beginning at 10 Sat­ The Altar and Rosary Society urday morning, Oct. 2 in the will hold, its aJll1ual meeting· school auditorium. Charles Sow­ and installation of officers at ter will be auctioneer and chair­ 7:30 Thursday night, Oct.' 7 in men are Mrs. Pauline Drobyski the school hall. All women of the and Mrs. Emily Perrault. parish are invited to attend and join the society. Rev. Michael ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI,

NEW BEDFORD

Kurylo of St. John's Ukrainian Church will explain and demon­ The Women's League an­ strate the Eastern Rite Mass. nounces a turkey award for No­ The Women's Guild will hold vember and a Christmas party its annual tea and reception of for Monday, Dec. 13 at Thad's new members at the parish Steak House. school from 3 to 5 Sunday a'fter­ ST. JOSEPH,

noon, Oct. 3. Members will re­ FAIRHAVEN

ceive corporate Communion at 9 o'clock Mass that morning. Mrs. Lionel J. Dulude, presi­ Prospective members should dent of the Sacred Hearts Asso­ contact a guild board member ciation, requests that the ladies by tomorrow. The unit will also of ~he First Friday Adoration sponsor a buffet dance Saturday unit check their assigned times night, Oct. 23 at Venus de Milo in order to assure a full quota restaurant. Tickets are available at all hours. from Mrs. Frank Kingsley and All members will receive Hoiy Mrs. William Renaud. Communion in a body at the Discussion clubs sponsored by 8:15 Mass Sunday morning. The the Confraternity of Christian regular meeting will be held the Doctrine will begin next month same evening at 7:30 in the rec­ and are under the chairmanship tory at which time the by-'l.aws of Raymond Beausoleil. and regulations. will be discussed.

at

Publishes Regulations For Education Programs

ST. KILIAN, NEW BEDFORD The Women's Guild will con­ duct a ~ummage sale tomorrow and Saturday in the rectory basement from 9:30 to 5. Mrs. William J. Richard will serve as chairman. Articles for the sale may be left in the rectory base­ ment. Articles for the cake sale scheduled to be held at' the Star Store on Oct. 22, may be left at the school on Earle Street, Thursday, Oct. 21, between 4 and 6. Mrs. Harrison Francis is chairman of the sale. BLESSED SACRAMENT,

FALL RIVER

Wednesday, Oct. 20 is the date set by the Council of Catholic Women for a potluck supper. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT The Women's Guild announces the first of a sedes of whist par­ ties for Saturday, Oct. 2.

17

u. S.

.

WASHINGTON (NC)-The U.S. Office of EducatioJl has published regulations for administration of the tw. principal programs under the new law to benefit secondary and elementary education. In regard to participation by eligibie pupils attending pa­ roch]'}J and other private portable equipment can be schools, the guidelines print- . placed on private school prem­ temporarily. ed ir. the Federal Register ises Banned are the paying of sal­

R E eEl V E S GRANT: Mother Lionel, R.J.M., of Je­ sus-Mary Academy, Fall Riv­ er, is studying mathematics at Rhode Island College un­ der a National Science Foun­ dation grant. V~SITATION G1JILD, EASTHAM New Guild officers are Mrs. Arthur 'Cestaro, president; Mrs. Edmond Hebert, 'vice-president; Mrs. Armand Lajoie, secretary; Mrs. Basil MacDonald, treasurer. A "clothes closet" and white elephant sale is set from 10 to 2 Saturday, Oct. 9 in the church hall, Massasoit Road, North Eastham. Donations. of usable clothing, . household articles or bric-a-brac ·are requested. A public harvest buffet sup­ per is set for Saturday, Oct. 16, and the regular monthly meeting will be held tonight at the home of Mrs. Hebert, Redberry Lane, Eastham. A business' session Will be followed by a social hour. An evening work meeting is scheduled for 7 Tuesday night, Oct. 26 at the home of Mrs. John Connors, Campground Road, North· Eastham. Items made at 'these meetings are offered for sale at ,public guild events ,planned during the year.

SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO Children will be received IntG parochial school l[lodalities prior to 11 o'clock Mass tomorrow morning. The school's annual candy drive begins tomorrow, concluding. Monday, Oct. 11. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women :will hold its annual potluck sup­ per at 6:30 Wednesday night, Oct. 6, prior to its monthly meet­ ing. Mrs. Mary Correia is sup­ per c,hairman. Holy Rosary Sodality an­ nounces corporate Communion for members at 5 o'clock Mass Sunday evening, Oct. 10. Instal­ lation ceremonies will follow the Mass and will be held in church, after which a banquet will be served in the parish hall. Guest speaker will be Sister Maureen, R.S.M., of Nazareth Hall, Fall River. A meeting will be held Sun­ day, Oct. 3 in the hall to further plans for the annual parish mys­ tery ride, to take place Saturday, Nov. 6, with Raul Fernandes in charge of arrangements.

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stress that while public agen­ cies must control the programs, non public school pupils must be counted in. In general, despite restrictions based on church-state consider­ ations, the regulations reinforce the intent of the law that non­ public school pupils benefit as far as possible from the pro­ grams. Concerning the law's provision under which textbooks and li­ brary materials will be distrib­ uted, the regulations contain a number of cautions designed to a v 0 i d church-state problems when dealing with private school teacliers and pupils. Variety Eut they do not specifically explain how the books will get hom the public agency which owns them to students and teact-ers in Catholic schools. It is expected that a variety of methods will develop,o ranging , from pickup of the books at a public library by private school pupils to delivery of the books to the pupils at their school by local public school personnel. Signed into law by President .Johnson on April 11, the major' program under the law will give money to public school districts to benefit pupils from families with an income of less than $2,000' a year. Parochial and other private school pupils in the same income bracket will, benefit through shared services and facilities lInder public school control. Participation of' nonpublic school children must be "sub­ stantially' comparable" to that of public school children, the reg­ ulations specify. Services The regulations state that spe­ dal projects can include "broad­ ened" health services, school breakfasts for poor children and guidance and counseling ser­ vices" in addition to strictly ed­ ucational offerings. ] f the parochial school pupils go to public schools, the regula­ tions state they are not to be separated in classes by school enrollment or religious affilia­ tion. The regulations also state that public school teachers can go to private schools to offer special services and that mobile or

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aries of private school person­ nel, 'constructing of facilities or the placing of teaching equip­ ment permanently within pri­ vate schools. Concerning the second princi­ pal 'program, aid for textbooks and library resources, the regu­ lations point out that the mate­ rials are to be lent by publie agencies to private school teach­ ers and pupils, not,to the schoolB themselves. Private Schools To be distributed to private school pupils on an equal basis with public school student num­ bers, the materials must be ap­ proved for use in public schools and can include books, period­ icals, documents, pamphlets, photographic works, musical scores, maps, charts, globes, sound recordings, films an. video tapes. Prohibited is the provision .. materials to be used in reli­ gious instruction or worship. , In addition, the materials "'must not supplant those being provided children, but must sup­ plement library resources, text­ books and their instructional materials." If constitutional restrictions prevent a state from allowing its agencies to act as channels for aid to teachers and pupils in private _schools, the regulations provide. that the U. S. Commis­ sioner of Education can provide for the distribution of the books 'and materials himself. Private school teachers and pupils must make an accountin« of the use of the materials, muSt return them to the state and, in the event they are lost or dam­ aged, must make up for the in­ jury, the regulations state.

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THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 30, 1965

Greek Primate

Urges Prayers

FOf Papal Visit·

NEW YORK (NC)-The Primate of the Greek Ortho­ dox Church of North and South America has asked ,for prayers for the success of Pope Paul VI's peace mission to the United Nations. In a statement, Achbishop IakQvos said that Greek Ortho­ dox are "most responsive to Pope Paul's historic forthcoming visit." "Though the Pontiff of Rome will be surrounded by the dis­ tinguished diplomats of the world when he speaks at the United Nations, his address should not be construed as dip­ lomatic or political," he said, adding: Exalted Mission

, "For his visit will be, in es­

IIence, the expression of the sin­

cere desire of a great religious

'leader, fully conscious of his re­ sponsibilities, to project peace in the light of the Christian Gospel, before the legislators to whom the task of ensuring peace, justice and security through the United Nations has been solemnly entrusted to them by their governments." "Let us then pray for the suc­ cess' of Pope Paul's exalted mis­ sion; and through our prayers and' entreaties bear witness that we 're'cognize the omnipotence and- omniscience of Our Lord and·Father in heaven, who above all can inspire' the members of &bis world forum to transcend the considerations of expediency, , and, to realize that the attain­ ment of a lasting peace with His .ivine guidance is their prime' responsillility toward' man and. . ~,," Archbishop Iakovos said.

Colleges Get Loans For Dormitories WASHINGTON (NC) - The, Community Facilities Adminis­ tration has announced loans for dormitory construction to four Catholilc colleges. They are: Emmanuel College, Boston, $1.9 million; St. Mi­ chael's College, Santa Fe, N .M., $800,000; College of the Holy Names, Oakland, Calif., $150,000, supplementing an earlier $590,­ 000 loan; and Dominican Col­ lege, Racine, Wis., $50,000, sup­ plementing an earlier loan of $550,000.

Named Professor DAVENPORT (NC) - Sister Ritamary Bradley, assistant eX­ ecutive director of the national Sister Formation Conference, 1961 to 1964, has been named a professor in English at St. Am­ brose College here in Iowa. She is the first nun to serve full-time in the regular school year in the college of liberal arts.

Heavy Opposition

To Sunday Vote

Stresses Sacrifice Viatorian Provincial Says ,Religious Life Is Hard, Dedicated AURORA (NC) - Religious a life of sacrifice." communities should stress the Father Stafford spoke to, the element of sacrifice in explain­ first annual meeting of the Mid­ ing themselves to prospective west Religious Vocation Direc­ candidates, 100 vocation direc­ tors Association. Vocation di­ tors were told here in Illinois. rectors of from 57· religious com­ . ''Tell them the religious life is munities aftended. a hard life, a dedicated life, a ' He maintained t~at mature committeed life, a sacrificial young persons in their late teens life," advised Father John W. are capable of responding to the Stafford, C.S.V., a former psy­ call for sacrifice. chology professor who, is now "Youth can know the meaning provincial of the Viatorian of love," he said. "A divine call Fathers. to a life of love lived for God Call for Sacrifice is a loving call that youth can "All this is not incidental to hear and understand. it or accidental to it, mere sun "And the answer to that can spots that hardly diminish its is also an act of love that youth splendor and glow of happiness," can make. Youth is' ready for he said. "All this is of the very the call, and if the call is not essence of the religious life. It answered then, it may never be heard again." is not a life with sacrifice, it is

WASHINGTON (NC) - Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois said here he has received some 10,000 letters' opposing a pro­ posal of his to set 'the first Sun­ day of November as erection day. 'The. ministers really came out of their corners on this one," ,Dirksen said. "I get the impres­ sion that the" church-going people don't like the idea much." Dirksen said he still believe. that holding elections on Sunday would make it possible for more people to vote without interfer­ ing with the church activities.

Named Bishop VATICAN CITY (NC):"-Pope Paill VI has named' Msgr. JorO da' Silva Saraiva, ~ector (Jf Rome's Portuguese College, as titular bishop of Mopta imd aux­ iliary to Archbishop Manuel Trindade Salgueiro of. Evora, Portugal.

Providence Priest Ge'ts Stein Award

_.J

NEW YORK (NC) -M~gr. Salv.atore J. Adamo, editor of the Catholic Star-Herald, news­ paper of the Camden, N. J., dio­ cese, will address the 11th annu­ al Mass and Communion break­ fast, of the Edith Stein Guild here Saturday, Oct. 9. Receiving the 1965 Edith Stein Award, for contributions' to Jewish-Christian relations, will be Father Edward H. Flannery•. editor of the Providence, R. I .. Visitor and 'author of the recent book "The Anguish of the Jews." The guild was formed to assist I'ewish converts and promote the beatification cause of· Edith Stein. A German-born Jew who eonverted to Catholicism, she became' a Clirmelite nun, and was .killed in the nazi concentra­ tion camp at ~uschwitz in 194Z.

Priest Quits Flying After Many Mishaps CINCINNATI (NC) - Father Albert I,leFrancesco, of this Ohio community, has quit flying. He made the decision after m.aking two emergency landings in the single-engine Cessna plane he had attempted to pilot from nearby Hamilton to a town in Indiana. Wind, fog, and dark­ ness caused him to land first at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, near Dayton, where he received directions for return­ ing to Hamilton. , The elements kept him off course again so he landed the plane soon after on Interstate 71, a new expressway, near Wil­ mington, Ohio. A flying instruc­ tor from Hamilton flew the p~ane back to the airport while Father DeFrancesco drove the instructor's car home.

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Key League Contests Mark Schoolboy .Grid Schedule By Fred Bartek Last year's Class C and D State champions in. schoo}­ boy football have picked up where they left off In theIr initia11965 contests. Stang High of North Dartmouth and Oliver Ames of North Easton, with impressive debuts, will find themselves back in the midst of the wars next the two-yard mark. Craig Si­ monson and Wayne Casey scored Saturday. Bourne High ,run­ in the final frame. Hull in the ners-up to Oliver Ames in past has given OA trouble but it

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Sept. 30,1965

Ron

G1nf:l~

19

01 Mansfield:

BC Defensive

Cor~er·=aekc~

Marketing Major May Try Career in Pro Rar.:;s By Phil Perreira

Ron Gentile, big and. rug..' ged corner back for the Boston College football team wasn't always 'the six-foot

Class D last year, which also. doesn't look as though they'll three-inch tower of strength he is today. Eight years ago, as.l­ started the season on the right put the Tigers in their tank this little but determined freshman foot, might find week. fullback for Coach Bill Parson's there is truth in A supposedly inexperienced Mansfield High eleven, Ron the old adage, Green Hornet squad from Mans­ made an 83-yard touchdown run "no rest for the field didn't look the part last ;md was then dumped on his weary," com e week. The Hornets, who downed back by heat prostration. t his weekend. Hol'Jrook 20-14, head for Frank- • . Defensive Stalwart The Tri-County lin Saturday. The 205 pound son of Mr. and Champions, the' Spartans Face Fairhaven. Mrs. Anthony Gentile of 95 Chil­ Canalmen from The Stang Spartans gave new son Avenue, Mansfield, has been Bourne, will be head coach Charley Connell a downed on 'the gridiron since vis i t i n g scare in his de­ that· day but opponents have Falmouth Sat­ but, but pulled found it to be a tough task in­ urday. Two fac­ 0 uta come­ deed as members of the Univer­ tor s indicate from-behind 20­ sity of Buffalo and Villanova that this· game 14 victory over teams, the 'Eagles' . last two op­ might be the 'one that will decide Nor t h Attle­ ponents, can sorely attest. the championship albeit the sec­ boro. They will A senior this year, Ron is ond game of this early season. play at Fair­ again a member of the starting First, •the Falmouth Clippers haven C;:.turday. eleven, as he has been since knocked off a reportedly strong The Blue Devils reaching B.C. Being first string Wareham club last ·weekend promise to give is nothing new to ~on Gentile, and secondly, Bourne, in its ini­ stang more op. tial contest,' squeezed out a last~ position t han Charley Connell . however, as he wall a standout piayer in football, basketball and minute one-point victory over they have in the past. Bill Mor­ baseball in high school. a previously lightly regarded gan Marty Henriques and Dick Ron picked up 12 varsity let­ Somerset eleven. The Canalmen Fletcher are top-notch defensive ters while playing varsity ball rode the toe of Garry Harding men and should cause a few from his freshman year on in to a 13-12 nod over' the Blue problems for the Stang Spartans. high school. Among the nearly Raiders after big Manny Britto The "experts" feel Stang's three dozen trophies in the had tied. the count in the final backfield will be too much for Gentile household are ones that frame. ' . , Falrhaven. The spartans showed certify Ron as having been an Bourne, .which· felt the hot never-die-spirit as they rallied All Diocese, All County, and pursuit of Falmouth all last l!ea­ from'a 14-'1 deficit in the fourth All' State fullback.· son, withstood it. But Saturday quarter against North Attleboro StudieS Come 'First may find the Clippers. overtak­ last week.. All was dark for . "He .eatS artd sleeps sports," ing their Cape Cod rivals, par­ Stang when the last frame his mother avers, "but he has ticularly if· the Bourne forces opened, but things brightened never forgotten that education\is don't display better. all-round when the defending Class C ti­ the prime. reason for being in play than they did against Som­ tlists climaxed 8h 87-yard march school and has always been a erset. with a six-yard sweep by Joe pretty good student." Perhaps it After their heartbreaking loss Bartek. The light dimmed as the RON GENTILE

was this fact that garnered of­ last week,: Somerset will host Conne]'mell missed the two point. fers . of.· scholarships from 21 Barnstable. Whereas Somerset conversion. When North rega!n­ Ron brought hIs weIght up to its Mr. Gentile Is a steelworker Ilf colleges and universities for Ron. was most impressive in their ed control of the ball; Bob Gas­ Holy Cross, Harvard, B.U. and present 205 pound state by add­ . Mansfield and Mrs. Gentile first game, the same cannot be tan intercepted a pass and then several midwestern powerhouses' ing more food and exercise to his works for an optical CO!l11")any. said of Barnstable. The Red marched his team down the field daily schedule. He has kept in They· never miss a game of Ron's· Raiders smashed by Dighton- again with Dave Broughton all bid for Ron's services when shape for football by doing con­ and this Saturday will be mak­ he 'finished high school, before Rehoboth 25-0,· must contain plunging to pay . dirt from the he took B.C. up on the four-year struction work for the past three ing.the trip to West Point to see speedy Bill Kaylor and plunging two-yard line. Summers. This past Summer he B.C. take on the Army cadets. athletic scholarship w 0 r t h halfback Ken Root of Somerset. Feehan at Coyle A number of Ron's fans who·· $10,000 they dangled in front of worked as a laborer on the new Raynham High School. Previ­ regularly make the trip to Bos­ Indians at Wareham North Attleboro Rocket­ him. He now maintains a B ously, he also played baseball for ton to see him play will be un­ Another big Tri-County loop eers will be seeking their first average while majoring in mar­ the Attleboro American Legion able to attend Saturday's game game Saturday. will find Old "" victory before the. home fans by keting in the business adminis­ team and was a standout pitcher because.of the distance involved, Rochester hosting Dighton-Re­ hOsting Tau n ton Saturday. .tration program. and' first baseman. Mrs. Gentile but. they,. like this writer, win· hoboth·. Both were sharp in their Coach Art Post's· North proved , ,Prefers Baseball he rooting for Ron and the boys openers. The Bulldogs, of Old it is to· be reckoned with last - 'Ron weighed a. healthy 195 ,said her son actually prefers playing baseball to the sport from .the Heights as they take Rochester displayed a powerful weekend, . It eould be tough for pounds when he graduated from on the Black Knights of the offense as they humbled Case. the Herringtowners. Bill Wheel­ Mansfield High ·School in 1962, he is now doing so well in. With a love for baseball and Hudson. of Swansea 26-0.· Wally DaVis ... er has ably stepped· into the QB but Eagle coach Jim. ~il1er Ukea the preparation he is now re­ and quarterback :.John Morgan position for the Rocketters. His hU boys on the brawny side • eeiVing at B.C. for a career in led the DR victory march over passing to Dave Dean high­ business what does Ron want to' Barnstable. The Bulldogs have lighted'his club's offense against . do when he gets.out of college? scoring power on the ground Stang. Wes Whidden showed Why play pro football, of with Cliff Lopes and Domingo that he is cast from·the aame die course, and In' Ron's case this is Pina. In the air Don Dorr to that made hi. brother an AU­ ST LOmS (NC)"':"The presI­ no idle dream because he has Dennis Akin is a hard combina­ County lineman. ' dent of the American Lutheran already had some strong feelers . . tion to beat. This encounter On the other side of the ledger, Church has expressed -deep dis­ from teams in both the pro should be close, a to~-up. Taunton, upset 8-6 by Feehan appointment" 0 v e r Pope Paul leagues who are interested in . . . ~~" WYman Dartmouth mgh, which opens .last week, win have to show a VI's encyclical on the Euchari8t, his talents. next Saturday at Wareham, tiad . marked improvement if it hopea .)Sa .l1li 3·6592 Mysterium Fideh The Gentiles are members of it most successful campaign last to prevail against North AttIe­ Dr. Fredrik A. Scbiotz of MiD­ S1. Mary's Church in Mansfield CHARLES F. VARGAS year, finishing fifth !n th!: ~ boro. The Herringtowners have neapolis said an' interview that , . Where Ron at one time played 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE C bracket. Hard hit by gradua­ a pair of good backs in Mike Del the encyclical expresses a "final­ basketball. Ron has a tton, reports indicate the IndillM Solio and Bruce Cornell. .. ,·NEW·· BEDFORD, MASS. tty. based less·in SCripture an4 brother; Edward, 16, a junior at have some problems due to ln~ Bishop Feehan of Attleboro, more in tradition"" -

M:an~eld . High School and a experience. . fresh oft the victory road, win Dr. Schiotz said 8cholars III prettyjood basketball ~d base­ On. the other hand, Wareham,' he back fa friendly Hopewen after losing 8-0 to Falmouth, Park'Jn Taunton to' faee Coyle the American Lutheran Church ball player himself. His older . h8dbeen ''led' to feel that IlODle sister, Nancy, 24, is single and hopes to bounce back and, at Saturday. The 1'!eehanites exhib­ the same time, make 8Jnends for fted a daring passing game Roman Catholic theolo'gians bad works in Boston. last season's loss to Dartmouth. . against Taunton. Feehan was let aside the doctr1De of tranII- . 5Ubstantiation" which ,.... The Case Cardinals will travel within strildn, distance • .eral strongly reaffirmed by Pope to Southbridge for a non-league times but faned beeause fJI. pen­ PauL fracas. alttes. A 'blocked punt pleked NSPECIAL MILK

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Oliver Ames win host Bull ... Tn and the two point eon­ fa the Hockomock League. The ftl'Sion made br J'roet . . . . . . Tested Herd N

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THE ANCHOR-Dloc.$. of Foil Ri'er_Thun. Sept. 30, 1965

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