1965 Mission Style: Folk Siuying' & °Guitar
,
,
Oblate Packs 'Em In Parish' Hall
,, By Patricia McGowan I . ~ Write a feature story about a mission? "Ohhhh, Dullsville," thought I, borrowing a phrase from one' of the mad mob continually. circu mung around' ou,-" house. Not that missions aren't worthwhile and 'a vital stimulus to parish life-but l).ow t() say anything about a particular mission that wouldn't be interchangeable with an account of any other mission? ., Full of such inspiring thoughts, I took daughters One and Two by the hands and trudged up to St. .fean Baptiste Church, Fall River. A few priestly admonitions wouldn't,do them a bit of harm, I firm ly wId them, tearing them from the delights oJ the U inch screen. ' Surprise number one. What s()rt of a mission Was held in the parish hall instead of the church? Surprise num}}er two. Why were those leather jacketed, Beatl~-banged types of adolescents lurkTurn to Page
F~ve
ENTHUSIASTIC YOUNGSTERS FOLLOW SiURITUAL PIED. PIPER
OJ
Explodes Population Myths
The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Oct.. 21, 1965
Vol. 9, No. 42 ©
1965 The Anchor
PRICE lOc $4.00 per Year
Spirit ,of 'Love Marks
Ecumenical Council·
BY MSGR. HUMBERTO S. MEDEIROS
Diocesan Chancellor - Council Peritus
This fourth session of V ~tican Council II is daily being marked as the council of love. The opening allocu tion of Pope Paul VI to all attending this session was his lyrie hymn to love and it inauguarated the spirit of love, love for God, love for the Copin of "La Croix" that, "Love, Church, and love for man presented by Paul' VI as the kind. This love must come essential activity of the Church from the Holy Spirit who is in our time manifests the true the very life of the Church. This sublime thought of the Holy Father inspired Brother Roger Schutz, of the Protes tant community of Taize, to send to Paul VI a telegram in which be said that the Pope's inaugu ral discourse was the most pro found ever h ear d -under tHe vault of St. Peter. "It is a light shining brigpt on the, en tire Session." The "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung" commented that in the Holy Father's allo cution "was clearly heard the voice of a new Pentecost." ''Le Figaro" of Paris reflected that the theme of love gave the discourse an exceptional' clarity which invites us to read it rath er than to comment upon it. The "Osservatore Romano" re marked that the whole discourse .. Jike a ~eology of ecclesial
Turn to Page Ten
Cites Many World Areas of Lower Density BELGRADE (NC)-How oan succeeding generations, each larger than the one be fore, achieve living standards worthy of man's dignity. The' challenging question, pre sented in many forms at the United Nations World Population Conference here, provoked spirited controversies between those who would give major stress w development of economic and natural re sources. Many conference ob pense of giving' adequate atten chemical resources would pro '_ servers agree that: 1. Popu tion "to the important subject of vide enough for trillions of the relationship between' food people, he said. lation c()ntrol sentiment pre supply and population." Except for Western Europe, vailed. 2. -The leading proponents of population limitation are Amer- . icans. 3. The conference itself was U. S.-dominated. ,Father Henri de Riedmatten, O.P., the Holy See's observer at the meeting, stressed the danger of the conference "falling into a ' unilateral, one-sided conception of all population problems." He declined to single out the U. S. as the main source of the alleged :"one-sidedness." But the priest said it seems "a tragedy that . those who represent the great :hope of the, world of tomorrow in terms of development" be cause of their human and scien tific resources would take "a 'very negative" approach to the :populatiou problem. 'Advocating an intensified' 'world program to bring more land under cultivation and to apply modern methods of tech nology to already existing farm acreage, Dr. Sean O'Heideain of Ireland, lashed out against what he termed an "emotional cam paign" for world-wide birth con trol'at the conference at the ex
the "carrying capacity" for pop. O'Heidain then focused re ulation in areas throughout the newed attention on the confer ence's most optimistic presenta world is far higher than the ac· tion, Ii paper on "Food Resources tual number of inhabitants, ac· of the Earth," given earlier by cording to Wilhelm Winkler of K.M. Malin 'of the Soviet Union. the University of Vienna. For The Moscow research expert example, South America is uti~' claimed that the food potential izing only six per cent of its of ,the earth is "really limitless." actual carrying capacity, he Malin held that it is possible, claimed. Western Europe is in a without capital expenditures, to favorable position because of its economic techniques and or· extend cultivated areas to pro vide normal food for more than ganization, he said. seven billion people, more than He proposed that stres~ be twice the world's present,popu placed throughout the worI<i on lation. With capital expenditures,O development of the successful planted acreage can be expanded 'European formula. to care for up to 130 billion peo Father Jacques G. Denis, S.J.. ple, he' claimed. Use 'of solar who teaches social geography at energy, the tapping of oceans the state-operated university at Turn to Page Ten and regulation and utilization of
More Simple Mass Structure Liturgy Commission Aim , ROME (NC)-The Comissi()n for Implementation of the Q()nstitution on the Liturgy met w study proposals to make the Mass and the administration of the other sacra ments simpler and more readily understood by the poople.' The commission, headed . _ by Giacomo Cardinal Ler. caro of Bol()gna, began a week-long sessi()n this week
Silver Jubilee,' for' Plain C·lathes' Nun' s I
Specialists..in CCD Work Now in JOth Year in U.S. LO~
ANGELES (NC) - The o Kplain clothes" Sisters celebrate the silver jubilee of their com munity this month. ' Sisters Devoted to the Sacred Heart, who wear contemporary dress and use a badge as their only religious symbol, were founded in Kocise, Hungary in 1940. Today their motherhouse is in Los Angeles where Auxiliary Bishop John Ward has blessed a new novitiate provided for them by James Francis Cardinal Mc Intyre. The Sisters' also are celebrat ing the silver jubilee of their And Father Scrima, the per superior general, Sister Ida . . .al representative of the Or Peterfy, who was part of the thodox Patriarch Athenagoras original community, in Hungary. III Constantinople. told Noel· The communityia, in ita lOUa
.....
•
SISTER IDA PETERFY
Superior General,
year in Los Ailgeles, specializing in Confraternity of Christian Doctrine work. Members conduct teacher training classes, teach religion to children, engage in home visitation and give lel3,dership. courses to teenage girls. The foundation grew out of a sodality in Kocise. Its members often risked their lives to try to save Jewish .friends from the nazis. Nazi efforts to alienate people from' the clergy and Religious contributed partially to the deci sion of the new foundation to , wear no distin.ctive habit. ,The Sisters - now have three -convents in Los Angeles, another in Reno. There are 23 members.
since the ecumenical council is recess. The 43-member' body includes Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis and Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta. High on the agenda for the meeting was a demonstration of a "new look" for the Ordinary of the Mass submitted by Msgr. Johannes Wagner, chairman of the committee on the Mass and ,director of fhe ll'turgical insti· tute at Trier, Germany. The plan developed by Msgr. Wagner's body would seek to restore "the noble simplicity" in the rite of !\jass called for in the Constitution on the Liturgy, which was enacted by the coun cil in 1963. If the commission approves it, Pope Paul may permit its exper"; ime'ntal use in a limited number Tum to Paie ~venteeA
'~in
2
oTHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall
River~Thurs.,
Ca, lif. Educators
Hit Liberali~ed
Abortion' Laws
Oct. 21, 1965
CmCAGO {NC)-Liberal ized abortion laws logically would be followed by pres sures for legalized mercy.
Pope Paul Regrets UN Of Many of Countries' VATICAN CITY (NC) - It fa true that Pope Paul VI fa saddened by the fact that many important nations do yot belong to the United Nations, but that does not 'mean the Pope is actively advOCating their memberabip.
Pope Paul was quoted by an American magazine as sorrow /
ing over the absence of nations like communist China, East Ger
many and Indonesia In the world
organization. The magazine said
the Pope was scanning a list of the 117 UN members prior·to hill New York trip, when he said to an aide: "Look at all those who don"t NEW YORK (NC)-Thelast belong. Germany and East Ger many-a beautiful country. In · visto'rs to the Vatican Pavilion donesia-think of It, 100 million at the New York World's Fair passed through the $6, million peopl~walked out. China with its millions and millions. It structure Sunday and the pa would be good if all these could vilion has closed its doors for take their places with dignity, · the last time. During its two years of ex respecting the rights of others." istence, the pavilion was visited Correct Quotes It is reported here that the by more than 25 million persons. quotes attributed to the Pope · Its many works of art will be are substantially correct. They sold or returned to their owners, do not mean, however, that he II . and the pavilion itself will be demolished.. ~ctively backing the admission of Red' China and Germany to Ground for the pavilion was the UN at the present moment.' broken Oct. 31, 1962, when Pope He was merely expressing regret John XXIII pushed a button in that because of various circum his Vatican City library to start stances so many Asian and Euro pile-driving operations at the pean nations are not membel'll site. of the UN, wl10se goal Is to es Paid for by sPecial collectioDi tablish peace among nations. In churches throughout the U.S., . He was expressing sorrow that it was completed shortly before because of circumstances--some the opening of the fair and dedi of them understandable---60me cated April 19, 1964, by' Paolo countries remain outside the Cardinal Marella, Prefect of the UN. Sacred Congregation forst. The words he spoke privately in Rome must be understoOd in terms of his public address to the UN and his comments on its rightful strictures on member NEW YORK (NC) -Father lhip. Vincent T. O'Keefe', S.J., in his last public appearance as Presi dent of Fordham University, presided at groundbreaking cer NOV.! emonies for a 14-story academie ~ Rev. WilJ,iam H. McNamara, building .and a three-story the 1924, Pastor, St. Mary, Mansfield. ater and auditorium building at Rev. Louis N. Blanchet; 1927, the university'•. campus at Lin Assistant, St.John Baptist, Fall coln Square. Father O'Keefe will leave River. " • Rt Rev. John F. Ferraz, 1944, shortly for Rome where he will Pastor, st. Michael, Fall River. be one of four chief assistants to the Jesuit superior general• . Rt. Rev. George F. Cain, '1953, Pastor, St. Matthew, Fall River.
Mass Ordo I'RIDAY-M a 4l I of previous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Common Preface. BATURPAY-St. Anthony Mary Claret, Bishop and Confessor. m Class. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. SUNDAY-XX Sunday A fl.e r Pentecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd CoIl. (under one conclusion) for the Propagation of the Faith (from the' Votive Mass); Creed; Preface of the Trinity. MONDAY-St. Isidore. COnfes sor. m Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; 2nd ColI. SS. Chrysanthus and Darla; Mar tyrs, Common Preface. 'l'UESDAY-Mass of previous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; 2nd COIl. St. Evarlstus, Pope and Martyr; Common Preface. OR St. Evarlstus, Pope and Mar tyr. Red. Gloria; DO Creed; Common Preface.
Oct. 24-St. Michael, Fall River. St. Patrick, Somerset.
11f1 ANCHOR
M.OD Plr JIIar.
}
.
NOV. Z A Memento for the repose 01.
the souls of our priests not OIl . this list.>' Rev. Jo.seph S. Fortin, 1923, Founder, St. John Baptist, Fall
River.
Rev. Michael V. McDonough, 1933, Chaplain, St. Ma17 Home, New Bedford.
. FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET FALl RIVER, Mass.
More Than 25 Million Persons Visited Catholic Exhibit 'at Fair
052·3381
Wilfred C. .James E.
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Necrology
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D. D. Sullivan & Sons
Vatican Pavilion Closed
Fordham Expansio.n' Program Underway
'WEDNESDAY-Mass 01. previ ous Sunday. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria Ol' Creed; 'Common Preface. 'l'HURSDAY-SS. Simon and .Jude, Apostles. n Class. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Apostles.
second Clas8 Postage Paid It Fall lIver. Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue.!. Fall River. Mass.• 02722 by the catholic ..re88 Dt the DIocese of Fall IIlver. Subscrlptloa prIce . . . . .II, PlIItJIIld
COUNTY CRUSADERS WELCOME COACH: John
Donahue, new basketball coach' at Holy Cross College,
Worcester, is welcomed by the Hoya Alumni of Bristol
County. Left to right: Rev. 'George E. Sullivan, pastor of
St. Joseph's Church and Rev. James A. McCarthy, assist
ant at St. William's, both of Fall River extend congratu
lations to Coach Donahue.
killing, two California educatoN have warned. \ Dr. A.C. Mletus, clinical pro fessor of obstetrics and gynecol ogy at the University of Callf01'lo nia, and his brother, Norbert ~ Mietus, chairman of the division of business administration a6 Sacramento State College, be lieve "the attack on life is essen tially the same" in both abortioa and euthanasia. They said some persons would justify abortion of unborn in fants who would be crippled ~ defective. But, the same norma could be applied to decide whether or not to kill adult. who are crippled, mentally 01' physically defective, sen II e. blind, bedridden-or even ove!' weight, the educators noted. "No human being is perfect. Has the world gained or lost. from the services of the epilep tic Micnelangelo, of the deaf Edison, of the hunch-backed Steinmetz, of the Roosevelt&- both the asthmatic Theodore and then polio-paralyzed Franklln~ they asked.
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The bUilding's oval-spiral de sign was specially created for smooth crowd-flo.w during peri 571 ·Second Street ods' of peak attendance. The' Fall River, Mass. struc~re is of white cement stucco and ornamental marble, OS 9-6072
with 10 bas-relief sculptured MICHAel J. McMAHON.
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senting the Church, the Creed, Reqistere ' Embalmer
the' Commandments and the liturgy. Visitors entered through • ~,...,...~~ long hall which led to four ramps-three moving and one stationary-'-that pass Michelan gelo's famed Pieta, illuminated by soft blue lights and protected by bulllet-proof glass. The Pieta, the pavilion's main attraction, was oHered by Pope John XXIII to Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York for the 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ( fair in 1962. Its trip to the U.S.,
~ NEW BEDFORD
in special, ultra-sale packing, marked the first time it had ., WYman 2-5534 , left Italy since it wailereated by Michelangelo in 1500. It win be returned to st. Peter'1 Basili .. ca in early November.
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-THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 21, 1965
Bishop Asks' for Donations Based on Missi~:nsl Needs
Pope PaulWeighs Making Changes In Fast Days
f:tWe being many are one body'in Christ." Rom. 12:5
; The Second Vatican Council has already made a great impact on our thinking and our way of life. Re VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul VI is weighing the £orm of the Liturgy is renewing__ our manner of worship advice of representatives of and our sharing in the Sacraments. At every Mass we the bishops of the world on ace reminded of our oneness with Christ, for it is through a plan to reduce drastically the number of fast and abstinence him and with him and in 'him that we give to our -days for lay people and parish fa~her in heaven all honor and glory. priests. The Pope decided to meet to This unity is spelled out for us in the Constitution -day with the chairmen of the bis):J.ops' conferences of the on the Church, and we thoughtfully reflect that as world to hear their opini('ns on members of Christ through Baptism, we are obliged an apostolic constitution he pro poses to issue on the penitential to' do what we can to help realize his priestly prayer, discipline in the Church. ""that they all may" be one, as thou Father in me and, The proposed decree would re quire- fast and abstinence for all I i~thee, that they also may be one in us, that the world only on Ash Wednesday, Good GERARD E. SHERRY JAMES R. DUMPSON lruiy believe that thou hast sent me:' (John 17:21) Friday and the forenoon of Christmas Eve. Only Fridays of The driving force that impels us towards this unity Lent would remain days of ab is Christian Charity oc love. It was out of love for us _ stinence for everybody. But the current laws of fast and absti that our heavenly Father sent his Son into the world.. nence would remain in effect
,Georgia Catholic Editor, ~unter College It was love for, us that moved Christ to suffet and die throughout the year in semi
naries, and for Religious houses,
, Social Work Head Gain 1965 Honors' and rise from the dead. We cannot, for. our part, share including those of secular insti
fully in oneness with Christ unless our_hearts are filled, ~EW YORK (NC)-A Catho gation to a seminar of the tutes - with the exception of
Nations Economic and priests who are engag~d in par
with love for God and for his Divine Son. Neither can lic, editor and a former New United York city welfare commissioner SoCial Com'mission for Asia and ish work.- They would be dis we contribute much to the unity of his Church, unless wili receive the 1965 James J. 'the Far East and UN advi~er -pensed along with the secular Hoey Awards for Interracial and chief" of_ training in social, - clergy. we are motivated by love foe ?'Ir fellowman and have Justice welfare for the government of While repealing the traditional of the Catholic Inter Pakistan. " laws, the constitution would recthe supernatural insight or faith to see the image of racial Council of New York. Sherry,native 'f E gl an, d fast Award winners are Gerard o- n -ommend d b t· observing the .old . God in the person of our neighbor. E. Sherry, editor of the Georgia became a naturalized U.S. citi- a.n a s In:nceas PiOUS ~rac, Missionaries, both men and women, have b~en much Bulletin, Atlanta archdiocesan zen in 1955: He has covered tlces, espeCIally on the FrIdays of the qu~rterlY ember weeks. newspaper and James R. Dump- racial events in Selma, Ala., and more sensitive to this fact than we have. They give up ,son, former New York Commis Americus, Ga. the Catholic InCathohcs would be urged to home, family and friends, and the comforts we prize sioner of Welfare and now as terracial Council said he has comp~~ate for the ~elaxed l~ws by stnvlI~g to le~d vIrt~ous h~es sistant director of the Hunter "brought to Atlanta a fresh so much, to bring hope and love to those afflicted in College School of Social Work. Christ' an light . I b and by mcreasmg- theIr active ,,1 on SOCIa pro .works of charit . The Hoey awards' are given lems. He has served as preSl y mind and heart, to bring _words of faith to tho~e who annually to a white and a Negro of the Atlanta Archdioce have never had the good news of redemption preached Catholic for "outstanding contri dent san International CounciL TAVARES to the cause of interra to them. Inspired by a strong and" living faith, these men butions UPHOLSTERING SHOP
cial understanding." " Custom Made Upholstered Furniture
and women have taken Christ seriously. They act in Presentation of the awards Chicago Rabbi Joins Reupholstering • Quality Workmanship
eonfident conviction that Christ himself is crying out will be made here on Sunday SeminClry Faculty Oct. 31. Large Selection Fine Fabrics
to them for all those who sit in darkness. The prayer of Dumpson, aut h 0 r of sev TECHNY (NC)- A Chicago Work Guaranteed • Free Estimates
"REMOLDElING OUR SPECIALTY"
Our Lord rings in their ears, "that they all may be eral books, has been a mem rabbi is a guest lecturer on the ber of the President's Commis Psalms at the-Divine Word Sem 992-2891 one • . . , that the world may believe that' thou hast sion on Narcotics and Drug inary here in Illinois. 1602 Acushnet ~ve., New Bedford Rabbi Herman E. Schaalman sent me." With the love of Christ urging them on, they Abuse; chief of the U.S. dele- spiritual ieader of Emanuei Congregation in Chicago, was go elsewhere, seeking to bring together in one Faith Trinidad Churches invited to join the faculty at " of God. the scattered children the Catholic _seminary after givFight School Bill _ing a series of lectures last Wherever the need is most acute, there the mission PORT-OF-SPAIN - (N C) Spring to students and faculty aries are -to be found, bearing witness to God as other Trinidad's three largest Chris members. The rabbi, a member of the Christs, teaching and tending physical as well as spirit tian denominations have joined forces in a concerted effort to executive committee of the ual needs. But their first work is to bring faith in God defeat what they see as an at American Jewish Committee, is tempt to take over private sec also on the faculty of the' Gar and in his providential mercy. Their task is arduous, ondary schools by the govern rett Biblical Institute of North their life lonesome, save for the fact that- they find ment of Trinidad and Tobago. :western University. Catholic, Anglican and Presby Christ working through them in all their labors. terian leaders sent a letter to
We who share their faith and oneness in Christ Prime Minister Eric Williams
asking him to reconsider a pend
ELECTRICAL should be filled with' admiration for these men ~nd ing education act which they be Contractors women. More than that, we must have the same love lieve violates an existing church state agreement. of God _and neighbor. Their zeal is n0t so much to be The state of Trinidad and To
envied as imitated. Their total self-giving should be an bago has been an independent nation since 1962. The agreement SAVE AT THE BANK inspiration to us. rei a tin g to denominational was drawn up by the Preoccupied as we are with personal concerns, we schools SPECIAUIING local government, but before in must nevertheless be conscious that we too have a share ~ependence, giving the churches to control the curricula IN SAVINGS! 944 County St. _ ~ in Christ's mission to the world. Some of our own prie~ts, freedom teachers and enrollment in thei; New Bedford religious and laity as well have dedicated their lives to schools. • Regular Savings the missions. They look -to us 'for help. If oneness in • Notice Accounts Christ" is truly meaningful to us, if it is a prize to be l1 • Club Accounts IIPremium Heating Oils handed on to others, then we cannot turn a deaf ear ~'" ,....."'''~ t-o their pleading. The DADSON OIL BURNERS ~~llCo~ Our generosity should be measured, not so much ~* SHELL'~~ 24-Hour Oil 'Burner Service ~:§-. by our means as by _their needs, which ar~ increasingly Fall River Savings Bank Famous'Reading HARD COAL ',_,;,,~ ~\I/& 5,--:: great. But if the Charity of Christ burns in our hearts, NEW ENGLAND COKE ~ ~::'~ these needs will be met by the generous measure of 141 NO. MAIN ~~~ support we give on Mission Sunday. FALL RIVER Believe me, with every blessing for all who help the 873 COUNTY Church to increase her service to all the world,
Hoey Awards
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JAMES
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New Bedford
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River....:..Thurs., Oct. 21,1965
Catholic Pharmacists Guild Votes To Continue Decency Program
Explains Close Connection Between Manners, Morals By Joseph T. McGloin, S.J. In every question and answer session it's surprIsmg how many of the questions asked under the guise of moral questions pertain more to manners than to morals. And the fact is that there is some connection at times between manners and morals. Take Not too many years back, the so-called "dirty' joke," this sort of griping was usually
for instance, a form of cru· frowned upon, to put it mildly
dity and rudeness which will just as were all other bad man
ners as well.
Sometimes we Americans can
become unmannerly 'and' rude
because of the near hysteria of our very active lives.
Purpose of Life
Now it's good to be busy and efficient. But when this dedi cation to our own activities be comes selfish to- the point of. poor manners, then we're taking ourselves far too seriously and DELEGATE: Pope Paul also probably losing sight of
the real purpose of life in our VI has appointed the Most absorption in the things of this. Rev. Augustine Sepinski, world. Minister General of the Or· We see this in the commuter der of Friars Minor, as ap (male and, unfortunately, also ostolic Delegate of JerJl female, who starts with an ad salem and, Palestine, and vantage) who rudely crowds ahead of everyone in getting named him an Archbishop. on a bus or plane or train. NC Photo•. We see it in the insistent cus tomer who crowds ahead of everyone else in the ticket line. Virtue of Charity We see it in the character But there is another perhaps who has to disturb everyone more indirect connection of in a theatre or at a game by
New officers of the Christian manners with morals, the fact $"etting out early to his car. Family Movement Federation of that good manners can be the And yes, we even see this form the Fall River Diocese are Mr. of boorishness near the end of and Mrs. William Crowley, St. practical application of .the vir tue of charity. It is bad manners Sunday Mass, because the im
Mary's parish, North Seekonk, to be rude to someone, and polite person is unmannerly vice-president couple; Mr, and even to God. it is also uncharitable to in
Mrs. Edward Rogers, St. Mary's, Mexican Incident flect your bad manners upon North Attleboro, treasurer cou him. . Not long ago, a nun told of ple; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Mc And the range of seriousness an incident which happened to Laughlin, St. John's Attleboro, in .such b'ad manners runs the her in Guadalajara. In lay dress, public relations'committee chair whole gamut from the character she and a companion boarded men; '-Mr. and Mrs. William who eats like a pig and so em. a bus en route to a meeting Crowley, growth and develop barrasses anyone who has to -at a church' across town. Since ment committee chairmen. The federation has 'organized be with him, all the w~y down there were only a few people to the racist who has the crude on the bus, everyone, including . pilot groups, which will study the bus driver, got into a con the Anti-Poverty program and manners to treat others as es the possible relationship be versation. sentially beneath liim. When it came out that the 'tween CFM and the Cursillo Unfortunately, we Americans, program. The former group is for all our great virtues, also sisters were going to this par have our share of bad manners ticular church, everyone else, ,headed by Mr. a~d Mrs. Eugene Moore, St. John's, Attleboro; and including the bus driver, wanted on occasion. the latter by'Dr. and Mrs. Joseph to see the church too. ~ Poor Sportsmanship And so the entire bus took Kerrins. In the fact of an apparently off on its own, through side Also announced by the feder overwhelming majority opinion, streets and the most· direct way ation is formation of an art club I do not, for instance, consider to the c~urch, where everyone for children of CFM members, booing at spectator sports a lov made an extended visit and ages 11 to 15. It will be directed able, red-blooded American' cus looked it over thoroughly. by Mrs. Robert O'Donnell, St. tom, except perhaps .when clear John's, Attleboro, and will meet For God and Man· ly done in fun. weekly. It would, of course, be noth Not that I haven't done my ing short of earthshaking were share of arguing with umpires, . an American bus to leave his and with other authorities too prescribed run for a minute. But on occasion, but at least I've this Mexican driver thought it Dever been able to convince much more important to show -myself that I was just being a these two women this little bit good American sport in so doing. of politeness and also to visit On the contrary, this still seems the church himself. . COMPANY like just plain' bad manners And we Americans could, on and poor sportsmanship as well. occasion, use a little of both of Complete Line
. Ladies First these purposes of his: a little Open up a chow line among greater readiness to inconveni Building Materials
teen-agers sometime and try to ence ourselves for others on oc figure what happened to the casion, both for man. and God., 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN old "Ladies first" idea. Part And you .could call this, in a of the reason for this gentle sense, "manners." WYman 3-2611 man's stampede is, of course, the' dread terror a· boy has of seeming to be polite to a girl in public, but part of it un- . doubtedly begins at home, too LOS ANGELES (NC)-Four where Mom has become the cook, getting no word of thanks teen new churches designed to permit celebration of Mass fac for the most part, but with plenty of griping if the meals ing the people have been com pleted here in the past year. ,are not just right. Twenty-two more are on the" drawing boards. ' Thomas A. Kelly, construction coordinator for the Los Angeles Fall River Catholic Guild for the Blind will meet at 2:15 Sun- . archdiocese, said that "every day afternoon in St. Joseph's new church in tbe Los Angeles lite Falmouth National 8_ Church. Speaker will be Rev. archdiocese is now being de Falmouth, Mass. signed to permit celebration of Edmund Delaney. St. Patrick's ., ... Vlllale Iren SllICe tl21 Women's Guild will be hostesses. Mass facina the people."
apparently be with us as long as there are ignorant loud· mouths trying to be social suc cess e s. Yo u
could not say that the "dirty
joke" is always
something mo rally w ron g. But you would have to say that in the vas t majority of cases it is
very bad man ners. uD i r t y k e" is not necessaritly connected with sex. Sex like everything else in . bu~an life, has its humorous Ilspects too, as ~ell as its tre mendous dignity. But the dirty 'oke ill a crude ridiculing of either that awesome 'faculty or Bome purely animal aspect of tillman nature.
WASHING'I:ON (NC) - ',I' h e Natlonal Catholic Pharmacis~ Guild has voted to continue its anti-obscenity program, which focuses on distribution 'of "promotion of decent literature" placards to druggists. . The decision to continue the decency program was taken at the guild's third annual n:J,eeting held here. During the meeting the organ ization reelected the following officers: Clarence H. Winkelmarm, St. Louis, president;' William J. Habig, Bethel, Ohio, first vice president; Joseph A. Kientz; New Orleans, second vice president; and Ursula E. Heyer, Baltimore, secretary-treasurer. Father Albert E. Shovelton of New Bedford, is ,spiritual direc tor and Timothy P. Keating of New Bedford is executive secre-
Fall River Guild
MEXICO CITY (NC)-Church authorities here have asked par ish priests to quell rumors circu lating through much of Mexico that the ecumenical council will legalize divorce. Although' they offered De proof for the assertion, the ru mors have spread rapidly by means of conversation and printed leaflets. They usually re peated the claim that a change on the law of divorce was im minent.
THt: Put=lE AND
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THE PDDR-~
T~E HDLY 'ATHER'S MISSIDN AID TDTH~ DRIENTAL DHURell), HE
DurIng hI. visit to these .hores earlier thl.
ASKS month, Pope Paul made clear to us all his con 'OUR ::LP
cern for the world's poor. In southern India, a. In 17 countrIes In the Near and MIddle East,' , the Catholic Near East Welfare Association Is the \ Holy Father's own MissIon Aid Society, helping: the poor to help themselves•••• He seeks your' help for people luch as the Impoverished refu ees of Marottlchal, Kerala State, south India. hese penniless souls live In a com'pletely moun , talnous region, with no school, hospital, or even a good road of access. They must fight wild beasts, the fOrest, dread disease, In order to eke out a meager Bustenance of one meal a day. The determination of the small Catholfc population (outnumbered ten'to one) Is due to the tireles. i :.THER efforts of Father George Koohan. Until he ar r::EORGE rived two years ago, no religious services were OOE5 conducted. Immediately, Father George bUilt a TOO temporary shed, a place at least to say Mass. . "If we ~re ,to bring God to my people," he says. ' "we must have a permanent church and a modest center to conduct religious trainIng for the young and old alike." '.' • These are the people for whom Pope Paul asks your help. $2300 will build the church Father George need. . 80 badly. $900 will. enable him to erect a re- ' IIglous training center. Your ·gift of any size ($100, $7.5, $50, $25, $10, $3, $1) will help.
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•• ." WHAT ARE !::GORIAN MASSESI
FAIRHAVEN
LUMBER
Mass Facing People In New Churches
Authorities Warn Against Rumors
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Pick New Heads For Family 'Unit
tary. Keating received the guild'. first National Catholic Pharma cist Guild Award at the meeting. The organization's 1966 meet ing will be in St.Louis. The guild now has members in 3i states.
Many people ask us this question as November, _ the month dedicated to the souls In-Purgatory, approachel. GREGORIAN MASSES are a seri.. of 30 Masses celebrated on SO consecutive day. for the soul of a deceased person•••• If you'd like to arrange now to have Gregorian Masses j' offered for you after death, ask us abcut our "Suspense Cards"•••• OUr missionary priests In the Holy land and the Near East will be pleased to offer promptly the Massu you r.. quest for.your loved ones' deceased.
o 'A GIFT Another easy way to help the Holy Father Is to \ THAT KEEPS use our legal title when you make your will GIYING CATHOLIC NIAll EAa1' WELFARE AuOCIAnort.
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THE ANdfOR-Dlocese of Fan RIver-thurs., Oct. 21. IHi
ST. ANTHONY HIGH SCHOOL SILVER,JUBILEE: More than 1100 graduates of the New Bedford Parochial High School commemorated its twenty-fifth year at ceremonies con,ducted on Sunday. Left; Rev. Victor O. Masse, who received authorization from' Bishop Cassidy to build the school; Bishop Connolly, who assisted at the Mas,s and spoke to the graduates; Rt. Rev. Albert Berube,' founder and first director of the
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school and at present is pastor of the parish. Center: Roger W. LeBlanc, Alumni president, and, Mrs. Armand S. Cote, chairman of the commem orative plate committee, admire the jubilee memento, Right: Reminiscing are Mrs. Paul Machado, general chairman of the affair; Emilien Berthi aume, first alumni president, standing; Mrs. Hector Roy, an alumna. Rev. Gerard Boisvert is present director of the school.
Friendly Giant Oblate Priest Offers Unique Mission at Fall River Parish
Ing in the back of the hall? We found seats (with difficulty, there were very few vacant), and awaited events. Onstage came a Friendly Giant ttf a priest, Rev. Kenneth Rancourt, O,M.!., all six feet, 265 pounds of him. With him came his guitar, repeat, guitar. Up straight sat the leather-clad youngsters. This, obviously, was going to be something to see. No Cmcifix First, Father Rancourt removed his large crucifix, part Df the habit of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. "Have to take it off," he explained. "It scratches my guitar." Loud laughter died down as he quletly added, "We don't need Christ in • piece of steel if he is in our hearts as we gather here to hear his word, 1965 style." Then he swung -into "This Land Is Your Land," revealing folk-singer expertise in singing and on the guitar. "Michael, Row Your Boat Ashore," followed. "I've heard gospel words put to this," commented Father Rancourt, "and the kids said, 'What a phony.' But the real words are enough. Listen. 'Sister, help to trim the sail'-you can't do it alone, Mike - you need help, "The River Jordan is chilly and cold, Chills the body, but not the' soul'-we all have our bumps and bruises as we go through life, but they only hurt our bodies, our souls go on: 'The river is deep and the river is Wide-Milk and honey on the other side'-that's the Biblical description of the Promised Land." Next in the ml'ssion sermon, '65 style,' came "This Train" and "500 Miles." Of the latter the missioner commented, "'Not a penny to my name, not a shirt on my back, Lord, I can't go home thisaway'-nor can we go emptyhanded to our true home." 'Sssh' Say Adults By now, the Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts squatting on the floor in the front of the hall and
the teenagers in the back were clapping in rhythm to the songs. Here and there an embarrassed ad u 1 t ':Ssshh" sounded, as grown-ups obviously thought this wasn't mission decorum, but the important thing was that the usually restless teenage con tingen\;_ was absorbed. The clap ping proved it. A showstopper was Father Rancourt's rendition of his own composition, written when he' was -a seminarian, a rollicking folk-song version of the story of David and Goliath, featuring the refrain: "Goliath, Goliath, your head-is too tall. It will have to come off-that's all." Serious again, the missioner presented "Blowin' in the Wind," with its searching queries: "How many roads must a man walk down, Before you call him a man? How many times must a man look up, Before he can see the sky? How many times can a man turn his head, Pretending he just doesn't see?" F,ather Rancourt had a query of his own: "Is your life an an swer to the questions asked in this song?" No Telegram "Christ isn't going to send us a telegram signed God," he said, 'in preface to his next song, "but he may speak to us iri a jukebox song." Then he sang "Jesus Met the Woman at the Well," accolll panied by a spontaneous clap ping from the jukebox set. "Jesus meets everyone at the
Heart, to find its hands were lacking. He put a sign on the statue: "I have no hands but yours." With that in mind, Father Rancourt asked the con gregation to join in singing "He's Got the Whole World in Our Hands." "Not HIS hands," he noted. "OUR ilands. We are. Christ's hands in the world today. Let us look at our hands, each of us, and dedicate them to his work." Night Prayer Following a break, Father Rancourt asked the congregation to join him for a songfest, fol lowed by a community night praY,e'r. Most stayed, singing along with several new songs, favorites such as "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," and end ing with the haunting "Kum baya." "This is our night prayer," said Father Rancourt of "Kumbaya." "It means' Come by here, Lord, and we can use it to pray for all in need: 'Someone's struggFng, Lor d , Kumbaya; Someone's praying, Lord, Kum baya.; " Father Rancourt, who is 30, said he' has been using his guitar playing and singing talents in conjunction with his mission
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"We meet God in joy and iden tify holiness with a love for God by means of these songs," he said, "and we find a deep reli gious sense of brotherhood as we sing. The people are preach ing to themselves." The song session is only used once during the mi"Ssion, he em phasized. "Mainly we preach the Gospel." Wish He'd Come After the program I asked my young companions how they'd liked it. "Oh, I WISH he'd come to our school," said one, while the other was too busy humming the new songs she'd learned to answer. But a little later Chris sie, 9, produced a composition in honor of the occasion: A Singing Hit Father Kenn made a real hit last Thursday night when he played a guitar and sang. One song he sang was one he com posed himself. The best part of the song was "Goliath Goliath your head is to tall it will have to come off that's all. He sang Blowin' in the Wind and some other freedom songs, This show was the best one I have seen ill a long time!
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well," it ended, "and he'll tell us everything we've done." "So many of us ask what'll happen to us if we help some one," said Father Rancourt. -"We should ask what will happen to the other person if we DON'T help." Then he sang, "There, But for Fortune, Go You or I." "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" came next. "There are
no answers given in this SOl~g," said Father Rancourt, "but we have the answer-right in the Resurrection. Why don't we get up and tell everyone where the have gone? Why don't New Bedford Bli~d flowers we praise God with our lives?" New Bedford Catholic Guild The missioner ended the for for the Blind will meet at mal (if it could be called that) Knights of Columbus Hall to part of his program with the night. Phyllis Dupont is enter-' famous story of a young soldier tainment chairman, aided by of World War II who repaired a Mildred De Pierre. blitzed statue of the Sacred
services for about a year. ''The youngsters love it," he said, "and'most of the older people do too, although some of them are a little doubtful at first." The rotund priest, who has a brother and sister who are pro fessional folksingers, said he had been asked to appear on tele vision with his guitar, but de cided against it. "I don't want to be known as a guy with a gui tar," he declared. "If I'd wanted that, I'd have gone into show business. I'm first a priest." He builds his missions around the scriptures, he said. "We en shrine the Bible at the first ser vice of every· Oblate mission," he noted, _"and many pastors like the idea so well that they leave the Bible in a place of honor in their churches even 'after the mission." The missioner urges his hear ers to read the Bible daily, "even if it's only for five minutes." This is how to arrive at a deep knowledge of Christ, he said. As well as being founded Or:I the Gospels, Father Rancourt ,said his missions are based on joy. This is why he includes -a folksong session at each mission.
FOR COMfLETE INFORMATION CONTACT:
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TJ-IF A!'ICH9R~Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
Council
Reaffirmation
Bi~hops
Busy 'in Recess'
';I'he Fath~rs.of the Vatican Council have voted favor . REV• .JOHN R. FOLSTEIl ably and by a great majority on the schema entitled, "On As the aum. of' St. Pete" the Relation of the Church to non-Christian Religions:' Basilica once again tempo The element that has captured the attention and the rarily becomes the simpie discussi?n of most people has been that treating the Jews, nave of the world's greatest and the schema states that "what happened to Christ in church, one might wonder what Ris Passion cannot be attributed to, all Jews, without dis has happened to the bishopS> tinction, then alive, nor to the Jews of today." The schema labored Latin that for some year~ now has bounced off the is thus a specific rejection of any idea of the Jews as an church's marble walls. ' accursed people. Catholic theology, indeed, has always taught A first glance might tend to that Christ, died because of the sins of all' men and the have us believe that "all's quiet fact that his opponents during His life on earth were -they're on vacation". But soon Jews is simply due to the fact that His whole life was the answer "it sure is" would lived in a Jewish historical context. His friends and ,sup -,~,,,/ • reassure those doubting whether ...,.., the council is still active. porters and Apostles and His mother were also Jews. But, ., .,J' ,. Many of the bishops are busy unhappily, over the centuries different ages have used the grasping with the overwhelming opposition to Jesus,'by His own people as a basis for anti ~~ work of putting their fellow } ~ Semitism, hidden or overt. The Council is putting on record ~ •• _,~ ',;d, ,', bishops' ideas and suggestions and before the eyes of the world its rejection and condem / " _.•~~. into decree form so that they might be voted on the more ,..., nation of such anti-Semitism which is so alien to the heart ." ,' ,easily. Others-often the same of the true lover of Christ. -_""'-'.,'---' ~ '-,-,,' ones--are also meeting in na Other elements of the schema which are significant tional groups to find some are the expressions of ~everence for the other non-Christian tiOilS to the problems thatsolu are religions of the world-Hinduism, Buddhism, Islamism, as D, more particularly theirs. well as for theiewish religion. The schema urges Catholics to "recognize, preserve By Msgr. George G. Higgins ing which he would like the ,and promote those sp,iritual and moral goods as well as nationally-assembled bishops ~ those socio-cultural values" found among adherents of these (Dir~ctor, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) make comment and suggestions:. non-Christian religions. This is a reminder tha,t trutll :is On Sept; 29 the Chicago Daily News ,carried a report It is thought that some of these one and that the Catholic Church looks for and finds and by its Rome oorrespondent,George Weller, which:was' headed topics include, Qirth control, fast recognizes arid approves truth whereveritmilybe.' , "Bishops 'Want Vatican II" to Lower Sights. H According and abstin.ence, etc.' ' , ' '": ' Once again this Council action is a _reaffirmation of to Mr. Weller, who has" Covered Rome off-and-on f~r'a: With the ,Oct.: 16th meetin.. however, the CoUncil took up' .. th,e ooncept of the brotherhood of all men, 'the recognition number of years" a bloc o f ' ' n e w phase. Most of the -work that, as the schema puts it; "day by day, mankind if; being English - speaking bishops It is true, of course, that the would be done in the back:" drawn closer together and the ties between various peoples from all over the world have English-speaking bishops meet ground. On Oct. 25, the bishoPs are becoming stronger.;' ,This truth, insisted, upon again agreed 'in '''secret' sessions", periodically to discuss counciliar. will again pack into St., Peter'. and again by Pope Pius XII, proclaimed in the words and held o1,!tside the plenary m¢et problems of mutual interest. It, and take up the formal council . life of Pope John XXIII, reaffirmed in the utterances and ings of the council that.. schema is completely false, however, to' , bus,iness. say that the so-called EngUsh- . Ne;t More Debate ' pilgrimages of Pope Paul VI, is being placed once more 1 3 0 n t h e ' · th speaking bloc is built around All the schemas have already before the ,eyes of men so ,that' all may take it into their Ch urch In e the Americans. modern world
been discussed and debate"d' in. hearts and practice it'more fully in their daily lives and in is "too imper American participation in the the council hall. Therefore, no their own families and neighborhoods. feet to be lJc periodic meetings of the Erig bishop-unless, he has 70 other lish-speaking bishops is hardly bishops sign his petition to speak All the noble words and high-minded declarations of c e pta: b I e as
more tl].an nominal. The so-call -can take up business that has the Council are vain unless they influence and change and long-range po and "are
ed English-speaking bloc is been already discussed by the make better the lives of man. Truth, ideals, virtues-these licy" planning to ask
built around the British hier council fathers. This procedure do not stand alone but exist in men. , Pope Paul VI to archy, not the American. ' would apply only to the- shcema
en.-e's., Amer.-,can Prelates' Have 'Secret' Stra'tegy ·tio~~~ ~~~ :r~~:~sh~~n~~:
Vignette of History
reduce the Va Moreover it is not, by any on the Priesthood only, tican Council's stretch of the imagination, "the To Be Promulgated History is usually regarded a,s something one reads commitments to most compact pressure group The Holy Father has decided about in books-events and figures from the past. It comes a lower scale." in the council," nor is it a' that in a public' general meeting "The Bishops," Mr. Weller re "secret" bloc except in the sense to be held on October 28 in honor as a shock for those who see history in this light to realize that it is ,something that is going on all the time,' some ports, "are suggesting retreat, that its meetings, like those of of Pope John XXIII, he will in all humility, acknowledging all of the other national, region officially promulgate the follow thing that they can reach out and touch. the limits of their own judg aI, or language groupings within . ing schemas: The Pastoral Duty This reflection is heightened by a fascinating historical ment. They fear that the Church the council, are, naturally, closed of Bishops, The Renewal of Re story that is being played out now in an otherwise sedate may be hurried, by internal to the press. ligious Life, Seminary Forma Careless Talk tion, Christian Education and courtroom in New York City,a story more intriguing than' pressures or external demands I might add that there is a The Church's Attitude Toward any depicted in the movies or on televi!lion. Indeed, the into making premature doc central figure is there precisely because he was depicted trinal utterances that .will fetter little too much careless talk in Non-Christian Religions. The'in , the press about the "secret'" stra tention of the day's concele in a television drama and is suing a television network for later generations." , brated Mass will be for peace in Grain of Faith tegy of various groups of bis ,the world. invasion of privacy. ,There is a certain amount of hops within the council, and no And this central figure is none other than the admitted truth in ·'this report. Many of' tai>iy' of the Americans. The Revision Aeepcted assassin of Rasputin, the "mad monk of Russia:', Prince' the council Fathers, including plain fact of the matter is that Two' other schemas must be Felix Yousoupoff, aristocratic and frail and calm, admitted some from English-speaking the American bishops as a group formally acecpted.by the bishops ly is the man who fifty yea~s ago joined with three ot;herB countries, would undoubte~Uy have no strategy-secret or by a vote on each _schema as a prefer to see schema 13 reduced otherwise-with respect the whole. Already' the bishops h~ve in luring Rasputin to his palace in Russia, feeding him from the status of a constitu .status or conciliar weight of accepted each individual amend poisoned eakes, shooting him, beating him with a heavy tion to that of an allocution or schema 13.
ment and have ,signified' tl\eir message or collective pastoral, ' There simply isn't any-Amer acceptance, of. individual. para... Iltick and dumping his, body in the Neva River.' .' iean' "line" .. on this particular graphs. On Octobe.r 25, they ~iH This is a vignette of history, a minor tale in the great letter. . They are of the opinion, ill matter. In, fact, it has never now vote final acceptance: of Iltory of the fall of Imperial Russia and the great leap of . other words, that the, subject even been discussed by the Divine Revelation 'and The Lwj that nation into the Twentieth Century and into the com matter of schema 13 is too con Americans meeting as a group. Apostolate. munisteamp, but it is history nonetheless. And it comes tingent or changeable to be
The same is true with regard Yet Awaited as a surprise to look at the front page of a newspaper treated authoritatively in a per to the specific problem of war The Council Fathers must and to see history that one thought long dead and gone manent conciliar constitution. and peace which was debated still review the individual para As Mr. Weller puts it, they again in the council during the graphs and the amendments to staring up with the Immediacy of toi:lay's stock market want to be sure that the fonn first week of October. Many three other shcemas: The Church closing quotations. of the schema "does not prevent critics of schema 13's handling in the Modern World, The Misl& them from later updating their of this very difficult problem sions and The Priestly Life and ideas as science changes the seem to be under the impression Ministry, world." This is an accurate read that the American bishops are Significant Dates Are Then: ing of the mind of at least a working behind the scenes to sizeable minority of the coun prevent the council from con Oct, 16-24: Temporary recess cil Fathers with regard to the demning the possession of nu to allow the commissions to handling of the schema on the clear weapon,s for purposes of catch up and permit the bishops Church in the modern world. national defense. to meet in national conferences. Inaccurate Report This is sheer nonsense. The Oct. 25: Resumption of coun OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER On the other hand, I would American bishops have never cil activity in St. Peter's with Published weekly by The' Catholic Press ot • ..,~ Diocese of Foil River seriously question Mr. Weller's taken a position on this matter, voting on the individual parts of statement that the move to lower and again, have never even dis the Divine Revelation and Lay 410 Highland Avenue the council's sights with respeet cussed it as a group. Moreover, A..postolate schemas. Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 to this schema is being spear the record will show that they Oct. 28: Public meeting during " PUBLISHER headed by a "secret bloc" of had absolutely nothing to do- which Pope Paul will promul Most Rev. James l. Connolly, D.D., PhD., English-speaking bishops "built either secretly or otherwise gat five schemas passing them GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MA~ :AGER largely around the 220 ,Ameri with the drafting of the,particu from the council hall to the Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll cans." To the best of my knowl lar chapter of schema 13 which world and having them become MANAGING EDITOR edge, this is not an accurate I'e deals wi.th the problem of nucle part of the life of each individual Hugh J. Golden port. ar weapons. Catholio.
to
@rheANCHOR
I iEDICATION OF ST. MARY'S PAROCHIAL SCHOOL, NEW BEDFORD: Left = Preparing for the insertion of cornerstone is Rev. Bernard H. Uns worth, pastor; Bishop Connolly, who laid the cornerstone; Rev. MiChael McPartland, assisting. Center: Discussing the new parish structure, are;
Says. Declaration on Jews Opens,Two~Way Street.
. RO~ (NC).-Theroad of coOperation and mutual understanding' which, has' ,been opened. by passage Of' the declaration on relations with non-Christian religions, eS pecially the Jews, must be a two-way street if it is to be a success. Bishop'Frailcis P. . . 'declaration denies an age old Leipzig of Baker, Ore" chair.- 'myth of collective Jewish re man of the subcommission sponsibility .for the crucifixion, on ,Catholic-Jewish relations which caused so much harm in of the U. S. bishops' «!Cumenical commission, said success in fu ture developments between' the two faiths will depend on both aides. Speaking at the U. S. bishops' press panel Bishop Leipzig said he was delighted at the approval of the declaration," and that it was "of great ,significance * * • I am sure it will usher in a new era of friendship and coopera tion with our Jewish brethren for -the benefit of all men." Bishop Leipzig, in a printed Iltatement, noted that there were -in my opinion, minor" imper fections in the declaration. He said the document contains some .' weaker expressions than one would want. "But individual ex pressions or sentences carry less weight than the entire docu ment. What counts is the overall text and the overall spirit. Significant Event "I look forward. to the time when the council's wish for more . , deepened. conversations w:ith our Jewish brethren will be imple-' mented, and I pledge my· whole !J.earted support toward. that im ·portant purpose." .Another statement was issued by Zachariah Shuster, European director of the American Jewish Committee. He said the declara tion's acceptance by the council is a "significant event i~ the his tory of Christian-Jewish rela tions and cannot fail to have an impact in various parts of the· world." . He termed it "unfortunate" that the document had some passages which !night "cause misunderstanding and confu sion," but he added: "It' must be recognized, however, that the
Supreme Pon'tiH. Rec·eives American Astronaut VATICAN '. CITY' (If C) ,...,... He told the astronaut, he was American astronaut John' Glenn happy to be able to. express the was received by Pope Paul VI good Wishes he had in his heart . and received a· memento· of the 'when Glenn became the first . Pope's, visit to the Unit~· Na-' American to orbit the earth. He lionS. '. : extended his good wishes to all . Glenn, his wife and members Glenn's fellow spaeemen and to . of the National Aeronautical and. aU who are in some way blazing Space Administration were thetralls to outer space.' ceived by the Pope immediately Glenn, a Protestant, was asked . after the weekly public audience. . if this was his first visit to Rome.
~ ,,~
Wednesda7,:Noy.
~
re-
"It's My flrstvtsitto:·:!mope,· Glenn said.
The Pope smiled. "But :J'O'I
were able to see the wbole world from sueh a J1llln'e1ous vantage point," he said. After the audience, Msgr. Paul Marcinkus of Chicago, an .offieial Of thli! papal secreta#at of state. took the Glenns and their party en a tour of the' Sistine ChapeL
the past. The declaration 8Iso speaks out against persecution and anti-Semitism. Both of these assertions have been long over due. and constitute an' acto! elementary justice."
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With a flamefess. electric clothes', dryer you can eliminate that clothesline iungle in your basement
74 Williamson Street See the new electric clothes dryers at Your A~pliance Dealer or. t~~
'Home Unit 'Elects New officers of St. Vincent'. Alumni and Friends of St. Vin cent's Home, Fall River, are Mrs..Mary J. Webb, 'president; Mrs. Nellie Donergan, .vice-pres Ident; Mrs. Gladys Barre and Miss May Lawlor, secretaries. The group ,win sponsor a ehicken pie supper and 'food sale at 6:~ Saturday night, Nov•• at the home. Tickets are avail
Gordon Baker, Parish CCD president; Miss: Patricia Regis, kindergarten teacher; Raymond Veronneau, a parishioner. Right: Mrs. John Dziuba scans a class book with her daughter, Michele, a kindergarten· pupil. The school will be staffed by the Sisters of Mercy. .
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.8
THE. ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. i , Oct. 21~ 1965
Catholic Women Set Schedule
Crazy Cake Causes Questions As Readers Revise ~ecipe
Future events for Fall RivelP Cathchic Woman's Club include the annual tea and reception :for new members from 3 to 5 Sun day' afternoon, Oct. 24 in tM clubl)ouse, 742 Rock Street; a Mass for deceased members at 9 Saturday morning, Nov. 6 iJl St. Patrick's Church, followed by a- breakfast in the school hal); a dessert card party at 1:80 Saturday afternoon, Nov. 13; and a men's night program Tuesdap., Dec. 14. The unit's literary department will open its annual lecture se . ries Sunday afternoon, Oct. • with an address by Sister Eu genia Margaret, S.U.S.C. Subse quent speakers will be Owen: McGowan, librarian at Bridge water State College, and Rev. Francis Weiser, S.J., noted lit\H'- . gist and author.
By Mary Tinley Daly Mea culpa, readers of this column: . Telephones have been'ringing, letters have been' writ ten about "Crazy Cake" mentioned recently' general eom plaint being, "You forgot to give oven te~perature and . . length of baking time." M a t - · . ter of fact both were in- h~at' from the tube to bake its ! mIddle as well as its· sides . eluded but m such a round-' The pan should be greas~d be about way that it's no won- fore adding batter. Unlike angel
tier they were overlooked. This cake, whose egg whites depend Is the crazy way we put it: ''The on lack of fat to achieve light oven bakes ness, this cake has plenty of fat 'Crazy Cake,' a in its very structure. And here's favorite at our a tip from my Aunt Lu,' cake house, f~r 50 baker extraordinary even at the minutes while age of 90: you'll get a delicious w e fee I a II' "crumb" to your cake if you . though our own grease that pan with butter, real t e m per a ture butter. ( were 350 de. No, you don't beat the eggs «rees!' Now, is separately. Just dump them in Establish Vocations
that a way to with the rest of the ingredients, Directors Committee
give directions and beat the whole business. If In are ci p e? your eggs aren't verY large, bet OTTAWA (NC)-A nationel
Definitely not-h~nce. the mea ter use more than four. Add the committee of vocations dired
e\ilpa. '. % cup water suggested. if batter ors from Canada's religious or
Some Doubters seems too stiff (We find it waters ders has been established by the
Some letters and calls have down the flavor of the cake). provincial superiors of the com f.lUestioned the ingredients - a Watch the oven and if, at the munities, . ,
erazy combination certainly end of 40 or 45 minutes, the Father Walter H. Principe, '. and have asked that the recipe cake appears done-that is; if it Basilian priest, who is professor be reprinted-which it will be pulls away from the sides of the of theology at the Mediaeval art the end of this column. Some pan, is high in the . middle and Institute, Toronto, was named of the circumstances of those golden brown, take it out and chairman of the I5-member trying it were interesting. . put on cake rack to cool. committee. One woman made it for her Have I utterly confused you? wedding anniversary; another, to Hope not. Have meant to be Ilerveto her Cana Club; a 13- helpful. Now for the recipe for SERVING
year:"old girl was trying it for Crazy Cake: her mother's birthday. A group' 1 pkg. yellow cake mix FINE ITALIAN FOOD
of secretaries at the U.S. Sen1 pkg. instant vanilla puddin. ate was having 'a "Crazy Cake I cup sour cream Party" and had several queslf4 cup salad oil RESTAURANT and LOUNG
tions about the cake's prepara4 eggs CARMELETTES: Volunteer aides' at Cath~1ic Memo on ·Lake Sabbatia
tion. Three correspondents from Beat all ingredientS together three different parts of the coun- well and bake in an angel food rial Home, Fall River, are received as Carmelettes. Patricia 1094 Bay Street
O~Shaughnessy :receives pin from Rev. William Galvin, try, discovered that the finished pan, dusted with. mixture of TAUNTON VA 4·8754
. ba~er was probably too stiff and one-quarter cup of sugar and home chaplain. added a quarter-cup of water. one-half teaspoon cinnamon, or ,,,.Another, upon making the cake top with your favorite coffee
for the second time, found that cake topping before baking. Or
the addition of a half-teaspoon ice with your favorite icing.
of vanilla heightenEld the flavor. Bake in pre-beated 350 degree
Mrs. R.B. of Chicago, upon her oven for 45 to 50 minutes. Cool Ilecond try, made a basic change on rack.' . In ingredie~ts, substituting a Good luck I package of instant lemon pud ding in place of vanilla when she Intended to use a lemon icing. Double Contributions Our Mary (Mrs. Tom Gorman) . To Higher Education ereated this workable quirk:' NEW YORK (NC)-Americ_ when the cake is cOol, punch corporations contributed a quar holes with knitting needle and '81owly add heated sauce to be ter of Ii billion dollars to college. absorbed. Sauce: 1% .'cup sifted and ~versities la.st ,ye.ar, ae . confectioners sugar, two table'T . cording to statisties released bF the councli for Financial Aid to . . ~ns lemonjtiice; 1 *~bl~spoon' Education.··.'· . \ .' . .. butter. Let stand a day for belt· Holgar . J~ Johnson, ~UJi. .' results.. Makes' a delicious des,;, president, .said the busine!ill ..ert, Jl(l icing needed.' . world's .' e~ntributioris' to higher . . For New'Users . "ducationJilore than doubled ..-Now,for sp.ecific answel'J! to fr~ni $109 million: to $250 Jnillloil QueStions of those trying Crazy -between 1956 and 1964. During Cake for the first time: the same period college enroll Yes, it should be .baked in a ments rose from 2.6 million to tube pan, no~ a loaf pan, Batter, nearly five million, and their being of rather heavy, close budgets !;limbed. from $4.8 .bil:" grained consi~tency. needs the lion to $10 billion, according to the U. S. Office of Education•. "It was especially gratifying Sisters of Providence to learn' that the business com To M~rk. Anniversary munity plans no decrease in its TERRE HAUTE (NC) - The program of financial support, Sisters of ,Providence of St. despite the greatly increased Mary-of-the-Woods will mark flow of federal government the 125th anniversary of their _ funds into higher education," foundation·in the United States Johnson said. ..' GAS' BOltERS tomorrow.' . ~AND Major event of the celebration • • • II•••••••••••• ill GAS FURNACES will be formal dedication of a • .. • ..... Gas Company witt continue its usual free $1,25 million library on the cam- • . . service policy ~,,-nd In addition will replace any
pus of St;Mary-of-the~Woods • ' • . ' CM$' CONVERStoM College near here, the first in- • ' , , • defective parts on the .•q~ipment for a peri~
BUtaNfRi lltitution opened by t1)e French- • ., lO yea'" froM the dote' Of purchase ....
based ·sisterhood.. • '.. '. • • . . . laG, eOe~: . .' The'community now has about : . o. D"artmou"t'h' " , 1,500 .members teaching nearlY • .•
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9
••-fIE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
Avers Leaves Not SoValu,a'ble
To Garden As People Think
----_.:.....--- ----
occw
Arranges Youth Progrdm
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick As surely as the leaves begin to fan the trees iJi
:Autumn one can be certain that a number of articles will
appear -in the gardening magazines telling us of the value
of leaves. They will extol their virtue· as "no cost soil con ditioners" and make every. If you're at a loss for 'ideas,
gardener feel guilty when he your publie library probably has
sets a, match to the first pile. some very good party books
Nevertheless, I· have long with endless suggestions for
off
.'
since stopped feeling guilty and In fact I rather enjoy the sight and smell of burning leavelrburned, of course; With due regard for local fire ordin·ances and wind conditions. There is no. question that leaves do condition soil and with this I have no argument. But I do feel that organic gardening exponents are not always very practical. For example, it would take the leaves from about 200 trees to have any appreCiable effect in conditioning my garden and I cannot see myself raking, hauling, and shredding leaves. for a month to do a job which can be accomplished with readily avaibable soil conditiolJ'ers. 'In order to have a beneficial effect there are a number of ateps: whieh· must be taken· with leaves: (1) they should be shredded, (2) they must be incorporated in the soil and· (3). they. must be fertilized .in order I to bring.. about a reasonable rate of decomposition. Shredding involves having a ·.hredding machine· or chopper _ which will cut the leaves into fine pieces. Some writers recommend shredding with an eleetrie or gas mower. I have never . done this or seen it done but I have often been tempted to try It, if only to amuse the children. It might not be necessary to • hred the leaves if they· were put on in small amounts, because then they would not pack-but In order to have any value, leaves shoUld be put on heavily. Leaves cannot be thrown on the surface of the soil and be , expected to decompose. They must be incorporated into the soil, and of course "this means spading in order to get the leaves 'below the surface. Anyone who has to do this by hand in the Spring, as I do, has enough spading then, and is more than Willing to forego repeating the .job in uW Fall. , Fertilizing is 110 problem in 'an empty bed but is ruled out for an esisting' flower bed. Leaves decoqlpose a ~eat deal · faster witbfertillzer to start bacterlal decompOSItion .but .the 'added fertilizer In an established flower bed maY promote· too Inuch growth on plants just ltefore Winter sets in. In tile Kitchen Sem.e ,people need an exeuse to gi.ve a party: someone's birtbday, an annIvelBal')' or even. a bousewarming. Lacking'any of these reasons every month has:.
"What's Right with Today'. Youth" win be the subject of a panel discussion to be sponsored by the Youth Committee of Dis trict Four of the Diocesan Coun cil of Catholic Women at 7:30 Sunday night, Oct. 24 at St. Jo seph's School hall, Taunton. John J. Cannon and Paul .Johnson of the speakers' bureau of the Rhode Island Peace Corps Service and Gilbert Carvalho, action technician of the Com monwealth Service CorPs, will speak, and a former Peace Corps member is also expected to be present.
decorations, table settings, food,
etc. This month also, a national
women's magazine has devoted • a whole issue to· clever party giving, with more original ideas than you could use in a .whole year of entertaintng. What to serve is generally the upmost thought in a hostess' Completing the panel will be mind and the solution generally Miss Barbara O'Brien, Bristol can be found in the type of County Extension Agent. for evening it's going to be. A for home economics, Taunton mayor mal sit down dinner certainly Benjarilin A. Friedman, and Rev. requires a different kind of James Lyons. Mrs. James E. Wil menu and plaIining than does liams, District Four president, a buffet such as you would serve will moderate and program for an informal eyening such as chairman is Mrs. Hector Demers, an election party. Youth Committee head. The Through trial and much error, event is open to the public. I have learned two important rules about food. Serve dishes that can be prepared ahead of time with very little fussing. LEADER WELCOMED: Mrs. Marcus Kilch of Youngs at the- last minute (that. is. un- . town, Ohio, president of the National COuncil of Catholic less you can- hire prmessioIial Women, visiting West Germany as part of a Radio Free help) and secondly, for an In fOTmal evening, provide a menu Europe inspection trip,· receives from Berlin .¥ayor Hein rich Albertz a replica of the _Freedom Bell given to West that can be nibbled on :from time to, .time as the mood hits the Berlin by the American people. NC Photo. ~st, not a dish 'such as a souffle that demands instant eat 273 CENTRAL AVE. I11g. - •
I Food for an Election Day party
must have been enjoyed as. far
WY 2-6216. back as 1828, for that was the Members of District No. 5 DCCW Conduct Day year that a recipe for an Elec Of Recollection and Installation tion Cake was entered into a NEW BEDFORD manuscript cookbook now on bell, assistant at the Falmouth Officers of District No.. 5, display in Old Sturbridge. Vill age: Ingredients·i n c Iud e d 7 ,DCCW, of the Cape Cod .Area Church, and Father Thomson. pounds of flour, 2 pounds of have ben installed'by Very Rev. butter, 21h pounds of sugar, 18 William D. Thomson, pastor, eggs, 1 quart of yeast, th pint of St. Francis Xavier Parish, Hyannis, and District Moderator, milk and spice to taste. . . ATTENTION! The up-to-date recipe for this at ceremonies conducted in St. Patrick's Church, Falmouth. cake is as 'follows. This is more Officers for the year are: Mrs. like a fruit bread than a cake. Frederick English, Falmouth, Old "Hartford Electi~n Cake MOVEMENT FOR A BETTER WORLD: OCTOBER 29, 30, 31
1 T bl b tt t h · president; Mrs. James QUirk, h rt a . espoon u er or 0 er So. Yarmouth, vice-president; (For laymen and laywomen)
Mrs. George Towers, Pocasset, s ~ .;n~fg .
a "MOVEMENT FOR A BETTER WORLD: NOVEMBER 2 to NOVEMBER 9
secretary; Mrs. Richard G. Pra~ 1L t espoon ·alsutgar ..
(For Priests, Sisters, laymen and laywomen: the Christian Community)
Falmouth, treasurer. 7Z' easpoon s . .
th yeast cake, dIssolved In :t,2
Heading the vartous commit 'FAMILY RETREAT: (parents and Children) NOVEMBER 12; 13, 14 eup. lukewarm water
tees are Mrs. Manuel Cad6se, SINGLE GIRLS: (Ages 18-25) NOVEMBER 26, 27, 28 ~Yt cUPsbfltotUr rl
Provincetown, spiritual devel 7Z cup ,u er or marga ne opment; Mrs. John Lauzonis, SINGLE MEN: '(Ages lS-25) DECEMBER 3, 4.5 ' 1 cup sugar
Falmouth, Diocesan spiritual de 2 eggs, well beaten ,
: EHGA~ED 'COUPLES: DECEMBER 10, 11,12 ...velopment: ,Mrs. Gnbert .No!>nau. lk teaspoon nutmeg .. '
Falmouth, 'organization and 'de For Information and Reservations· Write to: 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind velopment; Mrs. George S. Ca 11th teaspoons lemon juice hoon, Falmouth, publicity. lEV. GilES GENES:T, M.S., LA SAlE~ RETREAT HOUSE. 3Jt teasp~on soda Guests of bonor' at the dinner Attfeb«;,fo, Mc:rss.,02703 Tef.: (61n 222·8530 1. cup raJ~ , following 'the' installation were 1/4. 'cup sliced eritron Rev. James E. Gleason, pastor 1/4 teaspoon salt of St. Patrick'li Church, Fal';' ~ cup flour mouth, Rev. Vincent Y. ReiDy; :t,2 cup brandy O.P., director of the day of rec';' 1. ~isSolve yeast in lukewarm. oHection that preceded the in water and. add one tab1espooa stallation, Rev. William Campbutter, su~, salt and tbe H'. cups flour, mb:fng well. "ALL JUVD Foresters Elect 2~ Set aside in .. warm place IlODle event 1ft It tbat a gal e-. to- rise' ovenught.
Our Lady of Victory Court, lISe as. an euuae to-put on: her .3'. Blend 1Ile- J,i, ClIP· tJL butte!' ·Fall River Foresten; will hold. best and·fmoite her friends ,to· and the- remaining 1 eupo of 'dessert bridge party Thursday, -..p. One treat reuon c:omIng. augar and" cream until light and Nov, Ua! American Legion H311. · lIP in. N mrember that practically· fluffy.. New officers will be installed at ~ to be· celebrated by friends. 4. Add the' eggs"rabJiDs; citron, Stone Bridge Inn. They include, haVIng the ame intere-t b1, lemon rind and juice Mrs. Belen Donnelly,' ernef Election ~. 5 Sift 4'hn ther the' .I_~ • ranger; 'Miss Mary Burley, vice . Joe and I have found that ' ........e . -I. ~ chief, ranger; Miss Maureen Me"; whether it ia .loeal or natiOR8l gredients, the soda; remammg Closkey; treasurer; :Mrs. Mildred JlesUltsyou're awaiting,· moat' flour, salt and D~eg and add Ryan andMisa Catherine Har people do ,QC)tplan to . ~ft. . to, the' ~eamed mixture, alter rington, secretaries. ' tmtil the last returns- are Ia. nately Wlth bran~. ! i'herefore what betterwa,,' to'I.' Co'm.!>ine raised· dough with ,-s»end ,thb. tooc .evemng than'· ~ke< dough..pour ,into well AnLEBORO'S
with good' eompany good food greas,ed: bread pan .aDd let. rise LeadlntJ Garden· Centw
an atmosph~ of warm in a warm place again abOut 1 ,American hospitality. hour. EveL .Mono: th,uSat. 8:30, P,'.M. ·Sun. Eve. 8 P,M, i Half the fun. of giving a 7. Bake in a moderate oven MAYS. WED•• SAT.~ SU~ ~'f~:oO .: . party. is the planning, and it (350°) about one hour or until .. exactly at this poInt that· a . done. While w~ ice with con"; : " 011 ~~ .• ~. :~ flit the .~erri..carcf Shop ScM,Jtb Main: & Wall sts. ~ ~ccessfu1 ,~U't7 can -be· bora. fection~rs! sugar- which ~ beea.. !'rom ~ iIst to menu, cue- dissolved: in eoough warm water SPECIAL AnENTION TO S¢HOOL, CYO" CHURCH· GROUPS .... forethGught·· caD' ~ to ·make· It -ftIe. ,eonsistenC7'. -cd . .;(1-. ,~-0234 ~OU' a smooCh-l'WlIIiaa, eveniQe. lelni.
lmd'
BLUE RIBBON .LAUNDRY
Women
!!
RETREATS AT LA SALETTE
DU!{l"EE
CONLON &
DONNELLY
.ATTLEBORO
rICkets
NOW PLAYING
New
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THE ANCHOR
Population Myth
Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
.Continued from Page One Bujumbura, . Burundi, Africa, took strong exception to a stat ment by an American participant that the world would be "better off with a drastically reduced population." He held that Africa, south of CINCINNATI (NC)-In the Sahara suffel's from under . ~reased state aid to ~tudents population. attending private .colleges . "Demographic pressure often and universities would help is at the beginning of economic preserve "freedom of choice," improvement," he said. "In Af an official of Citizens for Educa: rica, one of the greatest obstacles tional Freedom told the Ohio to development is the lower pop. Board of Regents. . ulation density." Paul C. Mecklenborg, president People are too scattered Of the Ohio CEF, warned that throughout "vast underpopu irtate colleges and universities lated areas" and this makes de threaten to crowd private insti velopment programs, road build tutions out of the field. 'The re';' ing and essential services diffi gents supervise higher education cult to initiate. :In Ohio. "Whatever the population den He pointed out that in 1900 sity is enough, you can move," more than 60 per cent or college ,he continued. "The problem in .rodents were in independent Africa is not the same as the eollege or universities, but by problem in Asia." 1964 the ratio was down to 37 Not Overcrowded per cent and is expected to sink A recent article by Dr. GeOl'ge to 20 per cent by 1985. W. Carter, professor of geogra Monopoly phy at Johns Hopkins University Mecklenborg emphasized that' in Baltimore, admits that there «overnment-sponsored colleges are problem areas such as in and universities are necessary India where "the population In order to have a well-educated growth exceeds the production eitizenry and admitted. that pri growth record." But this is more ~te institutions "have not met faidy attributed to political the educational needs of all the muddling, posing as planning people." than it is to anything eise. India But to let the state colleges is not over crowded :bY other na monopolize higher education tions' standards: India-300 per would be "national tragedy,". he square mile, England-600 and ~serted. Holland-BOO." "As good and necessary as it is lor the government to provide At the conference, the Inter FOR GOD, FOR CHURCH, FOR ALL MANKIND: Spurred on by Pope Paul, Va IIOme university training, it national ?lanned Parenthood tican Council has given threefold proof of the fact that-the Church is a society found would be detrimental to aca Federation sponsored a "medical demic freedom if the government ed on the unity of faith and the universality of love a~d the sacrifice of the Cross. seminar" at which a color movie lIhould obtain a virtual monop on the "suction method" of ~y in higher education," he said; abortion was preserited, Tuition Gap Colin' Clark, the London pop
Mecklenborg cited the "tuition ulation expert and a member 01.
pp" as the basic re(lson for de the papal commission on mar
eline of independent colleges arid riage and population, declined
-.niversities.. to be interviewed because of ·his
He pointed out that "One solu Continued from })age One. . is love, love brought to men by 'Church puts love first. The Pope membership' on the commission.
tion is the provision of substan strength of, the Church, ·which the Church not because of their affirms that the .Council ·is a 'and its policy of secrecy. But he'
lial government schQlarships and, is precisely not to stop at hermerits or because of their inter solemn act of love .for all man told a reporter: .
'tuition grants ·to ~eedy students, self but to tend always towards ests of the Church herself but kind. "The abortion filril should to be used only at any approved the Lord and towards all· men." solely because of the lQve of And yet; says Paul VI, this be igD.ored: I' hope you .wili get eollege or university.'! , , , ' Bishops' Vocation God. love of the Council and of the the news about it in the Ameri . l'doreover; t~e lower operating' First of .all, the Council has The Council has given proof Church for all men is 'not al~ papers, so that people will . eosts. of. independent. colleges ' in a sense torn the' Bishops away . of its, threefold act of love for. ways met' with sympathy. But· know just what PlanD.ed Parent;', , would result in a' saving to the. froni- the quiet of their daily God, foJ.: the Church, and for all this is the way of love; 'it meets hoOd is up to." ' , '. ' , Mate, Meckleborg said. In Ohi!', routine and 'has"awakened hi mankind. in the spl~mdid arr~y . and aro,Us~s .Indifference, oppo . "e estimated, this would amount them .the fulleonsciouness of . of ,Con.stitutions and Decrees:. sition; 'eontempt, and hostility. ~ $1,400,000 a ,year for, .every their vocation· arid" mission,"." that have, been, pr{)mulgatedf>r No tragedy. can' be compared to" 1,000 stUdents 'who,',o to Jode-. urging theni' to' proclaim' the 'will be 'before the end of this the hatred -others had for him: ' . I'AIRBANKS (NC)-Ursuline' ~ndep.t colleges.' " :,.' 'faith' and 'the glory" of God, Session. All of them are· works of . ,the sacrifice of· Christ on the· Sister Thecla, .whO' was named· . , '. mviting' theinto"& closer union love, .inv91vil)g ,countless hours 'Cross' .who suffered ahd. died .ihe·"beSt'baIierori the'Yukon" ia . with Jesus· Cnrist and. bring to' o~ work, J)rayer,.' and penance; '. preCisely because of the love He . 1941 In 'Akuhirak" has marked the world with renewed" vigor ., The Constitution tlieLi- .haclfor 'others; . h~i diamond jubUee' as a nuii b~ire. the mystery of Revelation 'and' .ttirgy is a' profourid ad o f ' l o v e . 30" Ja'SatieriDC' and., het: 46th ye~ iil Alaska.' .... , ". .' '. COLUMBUS . (NO) ,~. Ohio 'Redemptioii: " , . ,.' forGod;the'Constitut~onon,the'·''':rhe·,art.of love," says the, Xnights·ofCoil1mbus·are·iaun.ch~. . T~ l~~e God is to'inalFe Him' ~hu~ch,;-Oil' the pastoral 'office . ·Pope,J'is .often changed: to the ..•_ __ ..;0. ...;.;.. " litg: a five-point plan to' c;ombl;lt, know~{ and loy~~ ·everywhet.«:,_ "of J3is~o~s; .on· the. priest~y. life . art of. suffering." . This ' is . .tile . ebscene .literature~, . '.' ..ThIs loye,of the CouJ.lcW:rat~~r~, and IDI~St?, ~n the ~.llg1?n~,e~e· wit,h . the ¢hurch. is.. s~ec:'The .' Rocco VeneZiano ',of Wooster,:. .for .~d.lC!~d~'·th~~.to brin~ re- , on ~e~mna~e~, 0';1 ChrIStIan ed-' ~C),.give up 'J:1er.mission6f ,love. ..
Mate Co\mcil,activity;chairma~, ,gef,to th,e ,s.()~fo~foftliewo~td, ' ucatIon, on the lay apostolate,: becaulle. of th.e ris}ts', or: diffillUl- .
8IlYS ·the· Kriigpt's .hop~ i,to en~ ,.,,·toal~ 10t;lOI! ~~bulrla}lm~llery ..l~, are .sincere and ardent aets !'~ .. ,ties she maY. -have' to ~e'ncounter?
.ilSt. ·th,e ,help. of c6nj.miInitY'.spitfi of.wh~t they: sce: aroundjov~ for·the CJ?,urch;- ~he decre~:'CertainlY not;· Paul VI 'says that: . ·and··clergy .of oll faiths". ". th the F a,th.er,s, f tl e,1" ~ d eep on Ecumenisrri is an, act of love ' .Council . . .humbly, asks, the. .' , leaders ' ,em., ....., . the , , .. . t·t . th for - oursep'arated breth.reo'n ',' the"LOl'd for the ., , ' .. ' in' the campaig'n. The"c.ampaign.. : !l~d qu,ie~ cer ludeQ~cause " ey.. grace' to be wortny, th I' t b e:, the ;e-. d . declaration.' ·on.,rel,ig·lou,s f.reedo,ni, ... .inl:iutfering .., .. , will parallel' a four~pQiriVplan. ,~. '--' ~nOW :'em:se v.es 0 ,to: find joy' outrages. 'approved at the K.of C. lia':' ,fender!!. of the• things' of the on the non Christian religions, for .the ·name of Jesus... . convention last. Summer. " ·t th" Schema . Its·attitude·towards those who tional spi rl, " eguardi ans 0 f the". d es... and, the now celebrated . . d the In . t erpr~t ets '13 are acts of strong' and rea- attack' Christ and His Church, Fqr~our Car . A statewide survey will be'' add f ~nyo mank'In, . . f the t rue hopes f me~, All . listIc love for all mankind: ed to the Ohio' program. 0 who have. recourse to threats to "Ohio Knights will supple this shows to the world that the Service io All
,paralyse men who are devoted ment ,the nationwide K. of' C. Council.' "has believe~ in the .The love which is the soul of to the Faith of the Lord, will al CAPE COD'S decent literature campaign by love whiCh God has for us." the Church and comes from God ways be the attitude of humble F or Pau 1 VI th"s eollducting' statewide polls of. 1 Council teaches' her a sense of universal kindness taught her by the Di LARGEST BANK all dealers of magazines and brings to the realities of today's 'ity; the truth she possesses vine Master. This Council shall . PAYS books who wish to cooperate in world the highest, the clearest drives her to charity which is not condemn those who make eleansing the racks of obscene and the most human affirmation translated into responsibility. the Church suffer cruelly today. literature," Veneziano said. of a sublime religion which was The Church does feel respon For them she has sentiments of After the survey, dealers who .l,wt invented by man but has sible for. all mankind. kindness and peace. The Council agree that pornography should "been revealed to man by God. She is in debt to all men. She will pray with love for them so ItOt be displayed will receive a This. religion Is the relationship is at the service of ,all peoples; that they may receive from God Interest Compounded and window decal designating them which' God the Father has es she must make Christ present the mercy which we -ask our payable quarterly on our lIS "cooperating merchants" who tablished with mankind ,through to all, to individuals as well as selves. And the Pope concludes, Investment Savings Account _ 'not sell obscene literature. Jesus. Christ His. Son and our to nations 'as generously as pos . "May love be the victor for alL" , . ,brother, in the Holy Spirit who sible. This her mission,' She is Counci'! and Love gives. Ufe. the herald of love; the peace ael Faith Basic maker of the Lord. Paul VI's We may call this Council the GR'EENSBURG (NC)-A $50, The Council also has brou,ght pilgrimage of peace to the U.N. Council' of love. Pope John 100 grant by the Sarah Mellon. .home, to the Fathers more than' is in fulfilment of this respon XXIII convoked it so that the - SOUTHYARMOUTM .caife Foundation of Pittsburgh· ever before the truth that the l'libility. love of .Christ in His' Church . - DENNIS PORT •
to Seton Hill College here' in .Church is a society founded on There are some who propose mIght bring to troubled man -HYANNIS
Pennsylvania will assist inti:" the unity ot the Faith and the to build·the city of men on other kind the' comfort and hope of a - YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA
Ilancing construction of science . universality of love. 'The bond principles such as power, wealth, lasting peace through the broth• 'OSTERVILLE facilities. which unites men in the Church science, -and even war. ThAt Tutn to Page Eleven
Private ColI~ge Students Need State Aid .
Spirit of Love Marks Vatican Council ,'Most Profound' Inaugurc;wl Discourse
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Ohio K· -of' C Starts Obsceni'ty .
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THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 21, 1965
Urge Legislation To Guard Rights Of Minorities
11
Portland Diocese Bans Lighting Votive Lights "-
HARRISBURG (NC) The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, speaking for the
PORTLAND (NC)-Bish. op Daniel J. Feeney of Port land has ordered an end to the practice of lighting vo
state's eight Catholic dio
ceses, has urged enactment of new state legislation to guaran tee the rights of Negroes and tive candles in churches of this other 'minorities. diocese. Among the proposals endorsed In a letter to ~11 pastors, the by the conference was one that bishop ordered that the practice would 'forbid church-related col be halted as soon as current sup leges to discriminate on racial plies of candles are exhausted. grounds. Two hazards fire and theft The conferen~e said the 25 were given as reasons for the Catholic institutions of higher decision. education in Pennsylvania had Bishop Feeney asked pastors asked it to "place them on, rec to explain to the people that be ord as vigorously opposed to" understands the motives of those exempting church-related, col lighting the candles and has re leges from anti-discrimination gard for them, However, he said, provisions. in the past 10 years fires caused The Catholic Conference has by the candles have caused dam endorsed civil rights legislation ages of $119,000. before. In 1961 it supported a GAIN WORLD-MISSION HONOR AWARDS: Mr. and Mrs. Geqrge Zirkel 0:( Quee~s Previously, one fire caused fair housing bill in the state leg $202,000 damage. In addition, be Village, N.Y., left, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Neumann of New Hyde Park, N.Y, have islature. ' been awarded the ninth annual World-Mission plaques by the U. S. mission-sending so explained, there have been Rungless Ladder thefts in eight churches recently cieties in the nation's capital ~ity, Washington. Reviewing the racial justice because of the presence of offer picture in Pennsylvania, the con ings for the votive candles. ~ ference said in its new statement that the past, century has seen "successful efforts in law and in policy to qeny the Negro citizen ,the benefits of the freedom BERLIN (NC)-Poland's com which had supposedly been DETROIT (NC)-Spokesman guards to public school pupils degree to children in parochial munist government' bas now granted him." granted passports to two bishops "The Negro family found itself for 'four major private school shall extend these in the same and other private schools. The private school spokesmen from whom it originally with at the bottom of a rungless social systems have appealed to the held permission to go to Rome Detroit Board of Education' io took particular exception to a ladder," it said. implement a new auxiliary serU S charge that extending special for the fourth session of the ecu While "law alone" can't solve I services to, parochial school menical council. all problems, the conference vices law. They also protested statements children might foster racial Bishop Jerzy Ablewicz of Tar said, nevertheless "it is through of the board's counsel, George now, said here to have been de NEW YORK (NC) Vice- se gregat·Ion b y promp t·mg w h't 1 e law alone that all-important op E. Bushnell, Jr., who publicly t s t 0 WI·thd raw th' nied a passport earlier because elr c h'l 1 portunities can be opened up ~y questioned the constitutionality President Hubert Humphrey paren d ren f rom publi c sch 00I s. of his outspoken cri,ticism of the hailed the visit of Pope Paul VI wtlich Negro citizens m ay of the new C a lling th e c h arge "f . • Polish government's treatment Services Act. Auxiliary School as ,giving new spirit to the 0 fenslve, achieve' a better life." of the Church, has now been au United Nations. Weber said: The Catholic ,group said cer Speaking' before the . board thorized to make the trip. Humpyhrey spoke at the 21st Opposite of Serre~ation tain civil rights measures "can were Paul W. Weber of Detroit, So has his auxiUary, Bisho)) and' must" be adopted by the representing the Michigan Cath- annual dinner of the Alfred E. '. "'The inference was plain that Karol Pekala. Bishop Ablewicz olic Conference;' John Feikens, S m it h Memorial Foundation.' eur schools are segregated white current session of the state leg had been able to attend earlier islature. It endorsed proposals hi representing the C h r i s.t ian Francis Cardinal Spellman of ,schools. Nothing could be far Schools of Michigan; Dr. John New York presided at the $100- ther from the facts. There are sessions of the council. Over 30 the fields of housing,. employ ment arid education, as well as , 'Choitz, of the Lutheran High a-plate dinner whose proceeds 68 Catholic p,arochial schools 'bishops from Poland are now School AssoCiation; and Rabbi benefit Catholic and Jewish hos," in the inner city of Detroit. taking part' in the council. legislation strengthening t,h e powers, of, the Pennsylvania 'Norman Kahn, administrator fJIl . pitals, a Harlem youth center They have a total enrollment of Beth Yehudah sehools. and other charitable organiza- '30,109 children. Of this total, Human ~lations Commission. ' The 'new law" requires that tions. 5,463 or 18.1 per eent are Negro public school 'districts giving : Humphrey applaude,d the children. such serviceS as mental 'health 'papal visit and, speculated on "Of the 68' Detroit Catholic . Just Across The , . " exainiiultioDll 'and- St.'r~t 'crosSin," :what it might have meant to schools, 52 have Negro pupils. C4»ggeshall St; Bridge' Continued from Page T~n:' _ " . . , '. .' Smith, th,e four-time governor of The average enrollment in these , Fairhciveni Mals.. • r~ ,of ,all, men u~der the .' . ' " New York who in 1928 became schools is 423 children, and the' fatherhood.·of God. the'first Catholi~ to run, for the average number of Negro chilBut this peace through b r o t h - ' ., . presidency. He lost by a land., dren. 103, . ' percentage 'fJI. , 'SEAFOOD' , erly 'love 'as offered 'by ihe ·.,F, TV· elide to the l~te Herbert HO,over, 24.7, percent." ~d Anywhere ~ Also Church in ,Council· is .not to be , ., ,,' in a campaign marred by vicioue ' . . '., ' achieved without freeaild . IoYMONTREAL (!fC)~A'; ,'.nti':'Catholicism. ' .". , "These percentages _,re much SlEAKS-CHOPS-C;HICKEN ' ' . '.' . . .' or~ A't'" " higher than the percentage of ingacceptarice of, the plan of' ~ember ~e CanadIan Parlia', .. the end 01. , a, prepared ' N g 'fa' 'li -' , ' f ' .,' the God 'for ;ill of Us. -It is 'a ',rave ~ent, ha~ demanded an apOlogy' . epeech ,predicting that the Soviet· , C'''aethTOli_ ~ 'tesh' ~do. eSSt~ng, t'h G' 0'd" s plan" IF' .,,' of State , . U · " · movemen .. t 'ow!!r t d'"ae~ , , t 0 accepas " t error om Canada's Secretary mons . ,,'0 .... .. ~ al 'te' -In et. '"lca Ingr e.. only what.~ms agreeable to'to- for'. a Tv ,skit' aiatirizing' Pope eeptance of the profit ni~tive:r:_.~l ,legrega lon, ' " , 'williead to greater freedom 'in ........ "
daY''S· mentality-; It ill a' 'fatai' Paul Vi. error to.trYto refor,m Godis'p~aii ,', lihe skit wu Itrod~ed by'- other areas, 'Humphrey men to serve 'our pleasure and ambi:': IOvernment-siibsidized Can"adlan tioned the Pope's visit andSmitb. tion. 'r ' 'Broadcasting' Corporation .and ,'~Imagine his joy' 'ana' exclte ,There' is ~,attitud~ abroad presented 'on' the show,' "'This ment," said the ·Vice PJ;esident, which has much of the Holly- ' ~o~r Has Seven Days," broad-' "if be could have been with »s" wood policy in it' which says, , cast the night before' the' Pope when Pope Paul "visited this "Lets give the public what it came to the U. S. x' . " eity and' nation and gave new wants." It is not so much What The skit showed a televisiOll life and IIpirit to the l1nited LINCOLN-MERCURY-COMET
the people ask for that will bring executive suggesting to the Pope Nations." FALL RIVER·NEW BEDFORD
peace, but 'rather what God has' that he umpire a baseball game "'Where Service
instituted as the means of our' in Yankee Stadium, since he Is a ~. ,tter of Pride 'peace and reconciliation. The would be the only umpire whose love which makes us one in the' judgment could be considered Church is the love which urged' infallible. the Son of God to do His Fath':' Ralph Cowan, a Liberal party ROUTE 6, HUnLESON A VI!. er's will and die on the Cross. member in the last Parliament The Cross is a sign that is and a candidate in the November Near Fairhaven Drive-In
and shall be contradicted. Those elections, demanded Of Secre It. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport Italian Dinners OUf ~pecialty
who take it up will not seek tary of State Maurice Lamon Service On Patio
what is their own but God's, tagne that the CBC apologize f()r WherE; The
nor wilt they follow 'their own affronting the Pontiff. Entire Family
way but the way of God. This ,Can Dine
Council of love is seeking to bring to the world the full light VIENNA (NC)-The Cath~lic EconomicalJy
of God:s ,truth on the tormenting Youth Organization in Austria ONE STOP
problems of today, but their so is holding a series of' "mission SHOPPING CENTER
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the world expects: God's ways young people, of the work ~ • Television - Furniture RESERVATIONS
are not the ways of men. God's Austrian missionaries. • Appliances • Grocery PHONE
way is the way of love, but of The organization has also plan OS 5·7185,
104 Allen St., New Bedford love that leads to the Cross. "The ned a national eollection to art of love' is often changed 1e help build a pastoral institute 'WYman 7·9354 the art of BUfferin£" , ill the Philippines.
Private School'men Unite for New 'Law Ask 'Auxiliary Services for All Pupils
Two Polish Bishops Granted Passports
H mprey h H.I aI P ope s V.Isit
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12
THE ANCHOR-Diocese Of Fall River-Thurs•• Oct. 21,1965
Mission Sunday - Ode 24
Says Sorenson's 'Kennedy'. Authoritative, Objective
God Love You By
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Theodore C. Sorenson, who was closely associated with the late President Kennedy for 11 years, has written an enonnous book (758 pages) about him entjtled Kennedy , (Harper and Row. $10.) It is not an autobiography in any exact sense. Rather it is an cause Kennedy did not .really approximation' of the ac- know the men (in the CIA, for eount of his administration example) on whom he depended which Kennedy had intended for advice, and declined to go
M~st
Rev._Fulton J. Sheen, D.O.
I hate to beg! But the Good Lord bas cast me in ftds mle for over fifteen years. For two reasons only, I find begging lov able: 1) I am doing it at the command of the Holy Father lor his Society for the Propagation of the Faith; 2) He distributes what I collect to the poor of the world. Because the Good Lord haa thrust a tin cup into my hands, I have made as the motto of beggarly life the words of St. Paul:'"I seek not yours, but you· ~ike Paul, I do not want your money without your sanctWcation, nor your annuities without your charitY, nor your bonds without, your holiness, nor your almighty dollar without love of the Almighty, nor your checks without a desire that God may pardon your sins. ,What good will your 31 cents (our annual
per capita Catholic contribution to the
Holy Father for all the Missions in the
world) do for any poor person' of the,
world unless it also makes you love God
more? Only as you enter into communion
with Christ do you 'enter into the won-,
'drous love for His' Body everywhere in the world.,
m,. _
to give had he lived. It opens against their advice although he with a description of Mr. Soren- had the gravest misgivings about sen'~ f;r,st meetit. ing with the No Panic man he; was to But he did not panic in the J,U B I LA R I A N: Sister serve so notface of dismaying failure; he Mary" Dulcedo, the forme,r ably,' reviews learned from it, and took swift Mary McDermott of New Kennedy's work' steps to insure against its repeti as, a senator, tion. When' the confrontation Bedford, has marked her golden jubilee as Sister of ,details the bewith Khrushchev' ove_r the in ginnings of his stallation of Soviet missiles in St. Francis at the commu drive for the Cuba was posed in 1962, '. Kennity's motherhouse, Wil Presidency, pronedy was ready for it, and there liamsville, N.Y. She is sta eeeds through was no failure this time. tioned at St. Gerard's Con the primaries The contrast between' the vent, Buffalo, N.Y., where of 1 9 6 0, the early chapter on the Bay of Pigs eonvention, and the campaign, and the much later chapter on she teaches seventh grade. and examines every facet of the missiles crisis is striking in Area relatives attending the Kennedy's performance in the deed. Kennedy, and the country, jubilee celebration included Presidency. had come a long way in 1l year a sister. Mrs. Carl Govoni of Mr. Sorensen's first impression -and' a half. of Kennedy was that he was an Mr. Sorensen says that fOJ;'eign Fairhaven. ordinary man,' yet both conrplex affairs. interested and. occupied and competent in no, ordinar,- 'Kennt!dy far more than domestic way. Very remarkable was Ken- affairs did. His approach .to nedy's detached view of himself, them, as to aU else, was factual. his ability to stand outside him- rational, and realistic. Certainly. self, as it were, critically ex- there were enough desperate sit amine himself, and' comment on uations' abroad during Kennedy's WASHINGTON (NC)-Father himself with a rueful sort of three years-Berlin, the Congo, Clarence Rivers of ·Cincinnati. humor. Laos, Vietnam, Cuba, etc.-to initiator of a new style of Catho Kennedy struck Mr. Sorensen concern the' President. lic Church music, will be a prin as be;ng the oldest type of liberForeign Policy
cipal speaker at the national al, a free man with a free mind. Into each such situation, and . convention of the National Cath His- energy 'was prodigious., as the Kennedy handling of it, Mr. olic Youth Organization Federa was his capacity for work. He n Sorensen delves. One is enabled tion in Chicago starting Thur& showed' an ability to learn and to see not only what the Ken day, Nov. 11; to grow, as needs and circum- nedy administration did in each The priest, who has arranged stances required. instance, but also how each fita musical setting' ,for the Mass ' He was a superb politician, ted into the over-all pattern of which draws its inspiration' in but' never merely a politician. foreign policy in that period. part from Negro spirituals, will Of the art of politics he was a But the President did not scant 'speak to the teenagers on "The master,' and the game of politics domestic affairs, nor does Mr. Challenge 'to Love," CYO na he greatly enjoyed. For a long Sorensen. The fights against re tional headquarters here an time h~ was contemptuously re- cession ana inflation (including nounced. garded by the pros as an ama- the beating back of the rise in Father Rivers, born -in Selma, teur or dilettante, but he sur- the price of steel) and the strug Ala., teaches English at Purcell passed them all. gle for equal rights are followed High School, is assistant pastor M'ldel Organization' step by' step. The tempering of at St. Joseph's church and a His' unexpected' and unsuc- Kennedy and the emergence of member of the archdiocese litur eessfut for the vice presi- his powers of leadership are gical commission, all in Cincin dential nomination in 1956 demo: strongly brought" out in the na~, onsir~tcd his need of' an organchapters devoted to these sub In, 1964" Father Rivers' was ization in any bid for national jects. featured on a record, "An Amer . office: 'An organization waS put Religion figured; too, in the ican Mass Program," which together, and it still stands as ".pposition to aid-to-education music he authored for use in St. a model for political aspirants; bills he presented to the Con .Joseph'. :parish. ' Righi" now: for' example, In, the' Uess.' He resented the- Catholic eamp:'l'~ for the mayorality of hierarchy's criticisms of tJlese -.;. New' York City, the Kennedy measures, and appears to have, plan and procedure are obvious- felt that the Catholic bishops IT being carefully copied. w~re, almost to a ,man, against . This is definitely not a gos.. him and dealt, unfairly where his 8iPY book or. a set of intimate aid-to-education proposals were relevations. But it'"ms the concerned. reader's confidence as being.auRIch Book thoritative and, in the mail\; It seems. not to have ,oecurea --1# WYmaft objective. "to him that it was up to the ~ 3-6592 ' ,]by 01 Pip ,CrIsIs courts to .PI'Onounce, on c:onstitu .' CHARLES F~ VARGAS '!'hese.characteristics are 'Iouft4 ti6mality, 'and that the bishops also in the rehearsal of the,~- eonk! not. ,have been expected, 2 54 ROCKDALE AVENUI paign. of 'the election itse~ 01. te, 'forfeit ,the consti~oaal '4EW lEDFORD, MASS. its immediate aftermath., 'aDd -01. rights of millions,of Catholie ~ . the White :Bouse years. Mr. So- youngsters. Tbis, eUrlously, 18 rensen says some place that' he the nne instance in which ~en was "close (to the PreSident) in neely's objectivity 'and fairness a peculiarly impersonal 'W:37," ,functioned' limpingly. ' and the reader will probably feel Mr. Sorensen's is .. rich book that precisely this is Ihis own· ex--and ;far more subtle than ~ ~rience as he goes through the casual .reader ,may judge it. It book. ~. crammed with information,.if . The youthful Presidentim- ;studiously devoid of color. No ,~edintely scrapped ttle W1Iite one is subjected ~', sWinging House administrative system frontal attack in it; 'but there Used by 'General ',Eisenhower. Be is not a Httle delicate ,sword fLSBemblcda team of ~usua1 work. ...,,,,'~ variety and competence, just as Blessedlyfi'ee of sentimental.. ~e filled cabinet pOsts; ,in the : .ily, this is an admiring and ,af. joain, .with men of outstanding fectionate portrait ¢ a man who .bility aIi:i1.accomplishm~;', ' aspired' ,to 'greatneSs; ':and in no .... t' c. ,.; 1 His ~irstgreat, test was.the , mean meastU"e. a~ed it. ·It-, is , ~ i)'f Pigs' criSis, 'in,April"of " ~ an eftgrOssing recapitulati. ' 1961. <:nd the test was failed. as of an administration. aM ded8iv~ the auth&r":cimaidly admits~,'be-' .. ' .it ,waif 1dWn. '
a
Cincinnati ,Priest CYOSpeaker
Q
If I succeeded in persuading you to' glv!!l $10,000 to the
Holy F,dher to build a hut church in Ghana without making ,your,
heart blaze a little more for love of ,Ch,rist, I would only be
another fund raiser, or, a high-pressure salesmaD, ora hatchet
man for the Missions.'Behind your dollar bills and your checks
and your money orders aDd your annuities, I pierce through the
veil 'to, meet you as a brother or sister iD Christ. I try to make
you see that you are more blessed wheD you give to those who
have DOt than to those who already have much. What°ts the
use of my helping • soul iD Africa unless I help. soullD tbe,
'UDited States? .
I hate begging because it' inv()lves money; I love It because'
can be excllanged for the blessings of Christ. I love it
because I am not begging for one of the 639 religious. societies of
the world, but for all who :serve the Missions. I love it because
what I,receive is distributed by the Holy Father, not by me. I
love it because I beg not for' the rich United States, but for the
poorest of the poor and for Christ's sake. Because I hate to do
it, make it easier by giving to the poor, this Sunday, October 24th.
Mission Sunday is the ONLY time in the ENT~E year when we e<
ask you to give in the colle<;:tion to help the ENTIRE world. God
Love You! mon:~
God ·Love You to M. Z. 'Ior $19.35 "'Here is the sum I wouict
have speDt iii. two weeks for cigarettes. Please use it to feed
my starving brothers!' .... to Master, P.V. who sold a toy and
seDt the money to a poor boy in the Missions.
It is October, the month of the holy rosar:v. This is your
ehance to be the backbone of the Missions by means of your
prayers. The Worldmission Rosary's different-colored decades re
minds you to pray for "others" everywhere. To receive your
rosary blessed by Bishop Sheen send your request' and an offer
ing of $2 to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366
Fifth Avenue, New York, N. y~ 10001.
,
run..
'YOUR OilHEATI
,.,,.Jel.
PER ANNUM
INTEREST
PAID QUAR.TERLY OHPA,'D-LfP ;,
. S·
HEATING OI:L'
.
1%NEW HIGHER -2 RATE Of
'SAVE MONEY ON
•
('
Cut out this column. pin tour sacrifice to tt and maU It ..
Most Rev. FultoD J, Sheen, N8.tional.Director of The Society lor
the PropagatioD 01 the Faith, 366 F:ifth Avenue, New York. N. Y.
10001, or, to 'your Dioe:esan DirectOr, Rt. Rev. Raymond T ... Con.. ;
udine, 368 Nortb Main Street> Fan Biver, Massachasetta.
SHARE CE.r,',CA'''fS Deposits W....... hi Multiples of $200.00 up 10 $30,000 . . Single and Joint Accountlt Up 'to$60,OOO-for Corporations
DIVIDENDS PAID 4 'TIMES A YEAR ',february, May, August, and November All Deposib' Inlvred In fuft
THE ANCHOR-
Team Teaching, Experiment Called Successful in English,' Religion Classes at Bishop Cassiet.Y, . -'
r
\ 'I
II
I
Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
the mighty seniors. Six hundred and seyen paperbacks have 1?een ordered for the annual reading program, with best sellers in T-E-A-M-YEH-TEAM ! ! ! A vistor at Cassidy High cluding Hamlet, Oedipus Rex, in Taunton hearing this cheer might naturally conclude House of Seven Gables, Babbitt, it's from the cheering squad, and so it is; but not on the FBI Story, Lost Horizon, Swiss Family Robinson and Hot Rod. gridiron. This time it's in the classroom, and it comes from A bicycle club's been organ students and teachers sing Prevost seniors are planning a ized 'at Bishop Casidy, while ing the praises of team dance to raise money for the tennis enthusiasts are swinging teaching in senior and junior senior prom and the senior gift racquets at Hopewell Park. on English and religion classes. to the school. A lot of seniors in Tuesday afternoons. Meanwhile CassidY debaters are anticpat Once a week a lead lecture is that sentence. 'ing partiCipation in the Boston presented to 108 seniors as a' And also at the Fall River College tournament' at the end springboard for discussion later boys' school, sodalists have ad of November. in' small homogeneous groups. dressed classes in an attempt to Juniors at SHA Fall River are Usually given on Monday, this recruit new members. Emphasis deciding whether to break with lead lecture is attended by the was placed on the sodality's new tradition and order new-style entire teachIng staff, who ob action program. ' school rings" or stay with the serve and evaluate the proce ,Ring Day was the biggest re tried-and-true. Also at SHA, a dures. With its provision for cent activity for Stang High contest is under way for the best flexibility in grouping students, School seniors. Following the suggestion for' a theme ,for a and its recognition of outstand ring, ceremony and Benediction, dance to be sponsored next a buffet dinner for students and ing teaching ability, team teach month by the Seventeeners., ing is an exciting neW project. parents was held, then seniors AT TRYOUTS: At tryouts for soon-to-be-p'roduced Prize will be two free tickets to ,Those participating include: were guests of juniors' at a , play, "Seventeen Is Awfully Young," ,are aspiring thespians the aUair. At Mt.' St. Mary the Religion~ister Jane Raymond, "Ring-A-Go-Go" darice. dance news centers around the Sister Rose Angela, and Sister Name Heads from St. Anthony's High, New, Bedford. Standing, from traditional, Thanksgiving Har Eugenia Marie. In English-8is Heading the athletic associa left, Patrick Robitaille, Ronald Gobeil,Henry Duval, Antone vest Hop, being planned by the ter Mary Hortense, Sister Paul tion at Dominican Academy, Fall Andrade; seated, Denise Duhamel, Lillie Leblanc, Pauline student council. And at Bishop Elizabeth, and Sister Jane Ray River, are Cathy Sullivan, pres Feehan senior and junior oUicen Boivin, Joyce Desautls, Doris Dube. mond. ident;' Linda Fournier, vice are planni~g a Thanksgi viD' Commenting on the experi president;' and Elaine Talbot, " ' ment, Sister Mary Hortense, secretary. . I chocolate bar sale contest at happy birthday partY. The eele~ Saturday social. 'Cassidy High Al.ltivities' chairman of the English team Students at DA and SHA Fan SHA; Fall River, with top sellers bration by toga and sandal-clad guests included songs about the ' Six groups of players from the claims, "The extra time a teach River have heard a lecture by including Elizabeth Simas, An drea D'Errico and Irene Corey. honoree; a sketch of Virgil's life , junior English classes are busy er gains while another teacher Dr. Kenneth Shand on the,haz by Leslie Bishop, and a recita preparing for their annual Play Eyeing the number one posi has taken over the class .can be ards of smoking. fruitfully used to plan the next Bowling Lea~e members at tion in the Narragansett Debate tion from the Aeneid by Maljr Festival. Folowing the preliin Ann Demetrius. inaries, an all-star cast will be day's assignments, to prepare Prevost High, numbering 65, are League, Stang debaters 'are plan To Elect chosen to present their produc team lectures, and to correct meeting weekly on Wednesday ning strategy for the season. tion at an assembly. All students Club coaches are Sister Frances papers." afternoon to pursue their chosen Sodalists at Bishop Stang are are struggling for an ideal title "The teachers get a chance 1:«1 sport and are ,also planning a Veronica and Joseph R. Daley electing officers and planning a' for the Oct. 30th Fall Hop. The concentrate on their special trip to a professional basketball and student debate club presi weekend retreat, while the cleverest title will bring a free fields," states Sister Jane Ray or hockey game. High three dent is Myles Tillotson. Spartan cross-country team, di ticket to the originator. , And intellectually speaking, mond. And one of the seniors string total of 572 was posted l~ rected by 'Coach Kevin Hayes, Delegates elected to represent Spartan Village (as' they call expressed her reaction as fol week by Richard Rashed. is rejoiCing over a 26-29 victory Cassidy High at the Southeast themselves out Stang way) is lows: "You work in a relaxed at Jesus-Mary Academy is wen' over Brockton. ern Mass. Student Council Con mosphere which enables you to represented' among officers of proud of Ronald Bourassa and' At Holy Family students heard vention scheduled for Oct. 27 at James Wilson, both seniors, who learn better." And another Notre Dame parish CYO. Connie a talk by a New Bedford Serra Sandwich High School'are Carol pointed ,out, "Since all are in Gagne is vice-president of the won $100 and $50 prize!! respec Club representative, and there Sylvia"Patricia Pinto and Paul tively for essays on fire preven one group part of the time, we organization; Anne-Marie Gril too Saturday will be the day for ine Lee of the senior class. JUD tion. share each other's opinions and 10, secretary; Paulette Caston PSAT. National Honor Society iors will be represented by Rose Diane Ratte heads the DA ideas." guay, social chairman. With bowling league and at Prevost officers at the New Bedford mary McKenna and Janet Me Thus far the lead lectures in ,other officers, they'll be in school are Barry Harrington,' Carty. English have concentrated on ducted Sunday, Oct. 31 at st. an intramural volleyball cham president; Robert Gaudreau, Tryouts for the Drill TeaM pionship contest is under 'way Anglo-Saxon poetry, the Ballad, . Mary's Cathedral. ' vice-president; Mary Cote, 'sec are being conducted under the among the three, upper classes. Chaucer, and Shakespeare. The Religion lectures have developed Elections still go on at Dloc A .25 fee charged each player retary; Donna Place, treasurer. direction of Mrs. James Baptista. Will there be a junior prom Rev. Raymond Lacasse, S.M., salvation history and the Liturgy. esan highs and at Coyle in will provide a $6 award for the Holy Family High School Taunton the Debating Society winning. class' treasury, while at Prevost High? That's the' retreat master for this year'. , has chosen Robert Lackey pres ,seniors in New Bedford are plan the runner-up class will receive , burning question, and behavior spiritual renewal introduced of students at junior-sponsored some' novelties in the three-da,., ning a semi-formal dance for ident; Mich~el Felong vice-pres $3. Friday ,night, , Oct. '29. Decora ident; Vlneent Andrews treasu And also at JMA, the sehool informal dances will be the de- program. A panel of Catholic ,tions, under direction of Kath rer. And' the Coyle jayvt!e!l are paper, Jem, has gone 'to press, eiding , factor ,in granting or couples helped iron 'out som. , proud to report their first vie withho'ding of faculty permiB- of the 'differences that arise be leen Kennedy and Ronald Abra tory over' the Ne B'edford with distribution expected at lion." " "tween ~enagers and their p~rmonth's end. Editors are Anne ham, will follow the theme ... Also' at Prevost; 'upp'erclass- ents and ,Father Lacasse fol "Fall Fantasy~" Jo-Ann Robi High dittos. ' Marie Grillo and Rita Laflamme. doux and Mary O'Rourke head Bishop, C~idY studentS '1ft, Over at Taunton's Coyle High men's word 1:«1 the freshmen'» lowed it, up, with a,' conference " ' the ticket committee. Taunton will hear coliege repre':' the Viking staff is at work on its "Hey, leave us some!" InduStri':' ' ,for pa~e~ts: " annu'al" ad' -eampaigri. Yearbook c,ua ,frosh ,haveborro'!ed ,:sa ,~The .. ~tTeat ,~so. lnclu?ed,. And also" at':IiF, 'f!enior elali8 - sentatives from U Mass and Boa to~, College ,~ , the> neii r f\J.t1,Ire • bUsinessJDariager, W~lliani' Cote bOoks 'fro~ the, scb091 'library, ,; 1?ibleV1~1.,a?d~he singmg .,~ officers are Michael' Doherty p·resident.' :R 0 n'a I d Abrahani', 'Thi,~ in ,addi~on.to the ,,pano- ' annoUnces the drive will close'at ' as' opposed 10 U borrow-edDY.'" Fat~~r ,Riv~rs ,Mas~:~~starthJ1' ~h8, "II bJ', jUnioriaild ;& by " but, well r~ivecl'tiy.allpa~~ vice":president; Elizabeth', :Mc~ ranuc display ,9f, CQlleges $fford-o the beginhing of November. . , " pan~. Rlstojoy of 'CoJlununlsm :' Quillan, secretary; Mary Louise ' ed ,Diocesan highshCpole~ who O'Rourke treasurer. ' attended,St01'l~h1nCollege I ape. , Social studies class~s aiBlsh~p .; " , eialday earlier this month. ' e&ssidy High are analyZing filin':' , Book S e l e e t l o l l t l T o AldMI$sI~iIB 'Iti'ips; tracing 'the historY ,01. Book Discussio.n: Clubs at Mission Club' officers at Hol)" communisni. "Frightening. Ii d J3ishop Feehan HIgh in AttIe- i'8Diily' are Claire Lewis, presi enlightening" ill the summation boro have received their lists dent; Jeanne Finni, vice-presi. of one senior. for the year, with ,17 or 18 titles dent; Susan Eno, secretary; Su Sophs at SHA Fan River are to <:hoose from. This month, sesan Trahan, treasurer. Sister engaging in intramural volleY lections for freshmen and soph- Mary Diane. R.S.M. guides the ball under direction of Mrs. om~res, are Night Flight, Pyggroup in its efforts to aid home George Snyder, gym instnictor, mahon and Call of the Wild.. and foreign missions while fourth year Latin classes Juniors and seniors are offered St. Margaret's te~ WOB • decided they'd give Virgil,. A Bell for Adano, A Separate Peace, Enemy of the People and
Status Seekers.
UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN At Sacred Hearts Academy,
..~ # • • • ~~~............, , ......
Fall River, congratulations are'
in order for' Margaret Pruitt,
WITHOUT, TRAFFIC '& PARKING PROBLEMS' .. who has been awarded a tull at the tuition scholarship to Our Lady
of the Lake College, San Anto.;.
Dio, Texas. The same award has
gone to Donna Place, outstand
SOMERSET, MASS. ..~', _ ing senior girl at Holy, Family. '
An41 .at ;prevost Bigb, a1eo
PaU River, IIOphomore, clll8ll eleeThe "fttott 'frtendly" democratic BANKofferlnl'
tlOftB have Damed ; Raymond pi Q' B"
Gariepy and Robert Rheaume.. '.', 'c»1II " . fle·.:topaning ,"
NATIO~AL:': preSlde1ilU Of. 1be tWo', d_ MeCtW AccountS ' .' '.' ;" Auto Lacina
of BRISTOLl:OUNTY tloDs; Denniti Lamarre and Checklftg Accountt ' Business LoaM
~rt l'Italien .. vice-presidentl;lavi.... Accoun.. " Reol Estate lOQ'" ,
1M! AREA'S MOST ACCOMMODATIN'O' BANK' ,
:Y ES, wehov,;'
Genuine
CAPE' BAY,
SCALLOPS
MacLean's SeaFoods
CONVENI ENTBANKI NG
'SLADE/S FERRY, TRUST' COMPANY C
S
,MANUFACTURERS
Ie"
bANK .
an-
Paul Liio«e' 'ad ThQmas
• 'seeretariea;
Thiboutot· ancl
, .. naeurenJ,":
Kem
~'~
.... ::_.
',"~:i"~,, .
1
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"
"Me. \.; . ..__...
and Ronalda.,
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,iii: So.......' . . . . . :~;..lh:iIhtman ,St. "idee
'~ ~." ",.wance Corporation '
IIII!!...~~ioiiii_~_~
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"~'N~RTH ATTLE~ORO'
.MAN·SFIELD -
'ATTLE~RO-FALi.s
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14
THE ~l'IOR-'Dtoces~ of Fa" River"':Thun., Oct!. 21, 1965
The .Parish .Parade
Basic Education in Brazil -Ut.ilizes Radio Schooling
ST. ANTHONY, MATTAPOISETT
Members '01'" the AItar and RosarY Society will hear: a: talk by Dr. J. Greer McBratney Wednesday night, Nov. 3. He will discuss his experiences aboard the hospital ship Hope.
. Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. From "The Church in the New Latin America;' Miss Marina Bandelra of the Basic Education Move ment of Brazil (MEB), describes characteristic aspeets of the Brazilian picture in this hour deeply marked by change: a) The existence of areas where agriculture is carried out with ancient methods and where society obeys age-old mental education for social patterns. In a few of these organization. Step by step, MEB educates areas new industries are people to resolve the basic prob
rising, new influences are 'being felt, and people are giving evident signs of dissatisfaction after knowing the existence of • the r, bettet,
Itandards
of living. The
people are
abandoning the
fatalistic atti
tude a Ii d de
. manding their mare of the' riches. b) They are becoming aware of their rights; the Peasant ~agues,.the urgan 'and rural- ,.unions, the: preaching in favor of land re-' fOrm; are. breaking doWn . old' -aiyle relationshIp'lletween ployers and employees In. the' discussions' to settle new' wages' and new -work contracts·and-the
lems of health and work, of their relationships in the family, on the land, and in the presence of
God.
..
ST. MARGARET, BUZZARDS BAY
The Parent Educater of CCD is having 'a series ·of. forums concerning "Rest>onsibilities of Parents towards the Religious Education . of their Children." Rev. James F. Kelley, St. Mary, ST. KILIAN, Mansfield will give a talk on NEW BEDFORD Oct. 27th, at St. Margarets, Buz The Ladies Guild will sponsor. zards Bay. This will be the first a cake sale tomorrow at the Star of the series. Other series to -Store. Mrs. William Richard,' be held on J;n. 19, Mar. 16, and guild president, and Mrs. Charles May 11. Gonzales are in charge· of a The Girl' Scouts and Cadets whist to be held Wednesday, of St. Mary's, Mansfield are do Nov. 10 in the school basement. nating their time to be baby-sit ters so that both parents may ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, attend these forums. FALL RIVER Mrs. Armand Thiboutot and Mrs. Roland Lafleur are in ST. MICHAEL, charge of arrangements for a FALL RIVER A public whist is set for Wed turkey whist· set for Saturday nesday, Nov. 10 by the Council 'night, Nov. 6. of Catholic Women. Donations NOTRE DAME, for prizes should be left at the FALL RIVER A Fall Frolic will be sponsored rectory by Saturday, Nov. 6. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Dorothy by the Council of Catholic Wom en at 8 Saturday and Sunday Tavares and Mrs. Albina. Car nights in the school. A children's ·valho. performance is planned for 2. ST. JOHN BAPTIST. Sunday afternoon.
CENTRAL VILLAGE
Origins of MEB In the year 1958, the National Secretariat for' Social Action of the-National Conference of Bish CANONIST: Rev. Peter ops of Brazil promoted the first, M. Shannon of Chicago has meeting of Catholic radio sta been eleeted president of the tions. The National' Association of Canon Law Society of Amer Cat h 0 l i c Radio S t a ti 0 n s ica. NCPhoto. (REI'JE~) was founded: This new organization w h i c hrepresent. today more than 80 radio sta CORPUS. CHRISTI,
The Ladies' Guild will spon tions, set up a ~ep~rtment J'e'" SANDWICH sor a rummage sale in the parish sponsible .. for -givi~g aSSistanCe Corpus Christi-St.' Theresa's hall from 9 to 12 Saturday morn .and support to effo$.conneete4 Ladies Guild has for. ·officers ing; Oct. 23. Mrs. Frederick With radio schools 'which were IOWA .'CITY . (NC),..,...cFather Mrs. Albert J:' Govone, presi Best is chairman. beginning in'. Brazil, bUed' oft John B. Bremner, a priest of dent; Mrs.. Charles C. Dalton, the· Colombian eXj)erieneeof the archdiocese ··of. Brisbane, vice-president;' Mrs. Mi'chael Mc " JOSEPH. ST. SutatenZa. - - - . , . . Australia, has been 'appoi~ted' FALL RI.VER . Alter a . periOd .of exPerimen;' head of the news-editorial Namara, secretarY; Mrs. William BettleY,treasurer. The guild will A children's penny sale w11l tation and testing and 'collecting journalism sequence in the iike. " hold a food sale from 10 to be held in the school hall tomor University of Iowa. "c) Th.es~, manifestationS Jre' relevant dat~,this service feIt noon Saturday morning, Oct. 30 row afternoon, and the second etear, imd:in some areas· have. it was in a position to 'extend-its A 'member of the journalism at McDonald's Hardware Store. session of an adult penny sale activities. In 1961 a project and ~come·a~te. T~ey willgeoome faculty at the state university Mrs. Sally Latimer is chairman. is set for Saturday night at 8. eontagious wherever there is a· budget were ·accepted. by the since the 1964 Summer. session, A penny sale is slated ,lor New members of the Men's man who begins··to worry about . President of the Republic and Father Bremner received his Friday, Nov. 12 at Father Clin-' Choir may join at - rehearsals acknowledged by a Decree and the sad lot of his fellow men. -Ph. D. in mass communications .~ ton Hall. Mrs. Earle Dwyer, held every Monday night fol This man will fight. for juStice. various agreements signed by in January of this year. He is chairman, announces that the lowing 7:30 novena services. MEB with the Ministries of Ed in residence at St. Joseph'. major prize will be a color tele- . Basic Education Movement The Women's Guild will hear ucation, Health, Agriculture and parish, Hills, Iowa. vision set. Rev. John Andrews, former With: the foregoing background other organizations. Father Bremner was national ST. MARY. curate, at a communion break en current conditions in Brazil, MEB waS born -as a service of . fast set for Sunday, Oct. 31. Miss Barideira nQw moves to a . the Bishops' Conference but has secretary of the Society for the NEW BEDFORD description of MEB, Brazil's today its own legal status, linked Propagation of the Faith .in A potluck supper will feature HOLY NAME. basic education movement.: very closely with the Bishops' Australia from 1945 to 1948 and a Men's Night .program to be FALL RIVER editor of the society's' three sponsored Monday, Nov. 8 by To understand the work of the Conference. The Women~s Guild will spon magazines. Bas i c Education Movement the Women's Guild. Square ItS Board of Directors is con (MEB) we must bear in mind stituted of bishops. The work it He was associate editor of The' dancing will be iil charge of sor a buffet and dance Saturday night, Oct. 23 at Venus de Milo the picture above outlined. Florida Catholic, Orlando, in Mrs. Manuel Menezes. A Hallo self, however, including the ad restaurant. Ticket chairmen are MEB was not born to be an 1953-54 and from 1954 'to 57 ween dance from 8 to 12 Satur ministrative, financial and ·tech other tradition-loaded move day night, Oct. 30, will be in Mrs. ~rank Kingsley and Mrs. nical aspects is the responsibility was associate editor of the Tid ment, to sustain what exists at . of lay p~ople. . ings, Los Angeles. charge of Mrs. Alden Counsell. William Renaud. A parish bazaar is planned· any price. It stands fQr the neces Also announced is a Mass. for Joining the faculty of the· Organization of MEB sary .changes.. It stands for the deceased members at 8 Saturday for Saturday, Nov. 20. University of San Diego in 1957, Miss Bandeira's report contin full· participation of the peasant he served as director of the mo~ng, Nov. 6. ST. LOUIS, and urban workers in all the ues: department of journalism, di FALL RIVER ST. MARY, Throughout the whole orgaiza ma~ers that 'concern them. rector of public information and NO. FAmARVEN A ham and bean supper' and tion, including. ~d~nistration, MEB is not just another cam- assistant to the president before Immaculate Heart of Mary Christmas bazaar are planned palin . against -illiteraracy. It MEB does its utmost to obtain leaving in 1961. Praesidium will sponsor an eve for Wednesday, Nov. 17 by the ftg4ts .ag;:tinst. illiteraracy to .help . the greatest possibie decl!ntrali-: . ning of recollection for all Ie:' Women's Guild. zation. The wJ:1Qle organization is. destroy this chalice event: But and friend on Sunday MED dedicatElS its best efforts to carried· out in such a WaY. that study of the results for the gionnaires evening at '7 o'clock in the OUR LADY OF THE CAPE, responsibilities are distributed do something ·much deeper. BREWSTER Church on North Main Street. and decisions are made at 'Qa~ National Center. Basic 'Educationas' MEB un New Women's Guild officers . , Following the ser~ces in the c) A group of well-trained derstands it, aims ·at helping a . tional,'state, and iocai ieveis.. are Mrs, Mary Johnson, presi monitors: Church, a question and answer The obj~ct "ot this system. is, , human.being· to open ,his own The monitor must 'be a person period under the direction of dent; Mrs. Fred Maher, vice eyes, to Il;lOk for and Understand not only to obtain the best possi president; Mrs. Francis Gallant, his own problems; usmg hiS own ble adaptation of the' work to from the local community 'who the spiritual director, Rev. Allan secretary; Mrs. William Jones, Nagle, ss.ce·., will be conducted the characteristics of each dif is willing to render service free. initiative, walking with his own treasurer. A me.eting Tuesday, ferent area, but mainly 'to give He is the pivot of the group of and the evening will close with . Oct. 26 will feature a linen feet with consciousness'. " '. I the .different tel;llIlS, the possibil pupils that follow the radio the serving of refreshments. It is a special type of. adult shower for ·the parish's new education that reaches men ity to ,show their capacity and transmissions because he is the ST. MARY. rectory. Major (ret.) Doris Jen test the possibilities of promot link between the teacher and the MANSFIELD that have the need, not only sen is chairman. ing the most able people within. pupils. The monitor must be in The Catholic Woman's Club to read and write and to become will hold its annual spaghetti tellig~ntand capable, and, even acquainted with some techniques ,MEB. supper for' the benefit of Rose A radio-school system (i.e. a if m!>st of the time he can' bare that are essential for their work: MEB also has the mission of . group of schools receiving the ly read and write, he must have Hawthorne Home in Fall River helping men to interpret the broadcasts from one central . leadership qualities an~ h~ve a at 6 tonight in the pa-rish hall, Church Street. Take-out· orders sending station) supposes: sense of responsibility. social situation that is cOndition a)A preliminary indispens Ing their life and their d~tiny. The monitor enrolls the pupils, will be served from 4:30 to 5:30. To explain better what we able work consisting of: marks their presence each day, Mrs. William De Baggis, chair mean, one- must speak of the in The study of local problems; follows carefuliy the instructions man, will· be aided by a large culcation of conscientious re Meetings with the localleadera given by the teacher: writes on comprlttee and the club's execu and authorities; sponsibility-that is, the discov the blackboard, sends pupils to tive board members will be hos tesses. High school girls will be ery that makes a man aware of A well-adapted publicity; the blackboard, corrects the .ex waitresses. • his value as a hU1nan being, of The choice of personnel. ercises. his problems, his duties, his b)'The organization of a su d) The radio school exists in More Parish Parade on' Page 18 rights, including the .right to perVisOry team with the follow very rudimentary conditions: fight for a just solution for his ing responsibilities: A social center room, a parish problems. To assume responsi Close study of the area; . bilityfirmly is a clear sign of Preparation and transmission. hall, . a private house or 8Il)' PLUMBIN.G & HEATING, INC.; other shelter available; "conscientization." of the radio programs; A transistor receiver which for tlomestic Having found his oWn value, Organization and execution of a 11 0 w s the organization Of .' . and Industrial leg. Master Plumber '2930 human and eternal, a man win the administrative work; . Sales and Service . .schools where thefe. ia no elee GEORGE II. MOfm.E find not only a style of life, a Selection and training of'mon ·tricity; 01 Burnet'S' basic behavior, but the :need to itors and maintenance of con Over 3S Years WY 5-1631
assert himself. Man disCoven stant contact with them; Material such as elementa17 of Satisrted Service that apathy Us haiInfuI and iso Supervision. of the radio textbooks, a blackboard, COP,. 2283 ACUSHNET A VENtI!
106- NO. MAIN. STIlEI' lation is a deadly ~';"";shness. sch~ls; . books, chalk and ker~ NEW BEDfORD
FoB River 05 5-7497· IrIEB, therefore, is &.;0 fuDda Preparation oi reporla· aDd lamplL
the em-"
Austra:lian Priest On Iowa .Faculty
>
fttuJdtoo1
CUendrles
Montie Plumbing &
Heating Co.; Inc.
LEMIEUX
~
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River~.rhllrs" Oct. 21, 1965
.
15
MISSION SUNDAY October 24, 1965
•
t MEMBERSHIP Ordinary - $2.00 Individual Enrollment for one year. Special- $6.00
Includ~s
ten persons living or dead.
Perpetual- $40.00 Individual Jiving or dead (payable at Oftce or within a yeor).
$100 Family-includes mother,. father, .
and
their
sons an~ daughters (living or dead) poyc:tble
ot once or within a year.
Why $2.00 now lor a PropDgation
Member alter all these years?
How lor last year's dollar to the
Holy Father on Mission Sunday
go to help
300,000 1,000,000
Foreign Missionaries School Children
10,000,000
Lepers
20,000,000
Who go to 'bed 'hungry
2,000,000,000
~
IINght
Pagans, people of God, children , of the Holy, ~a~? ,
\
. ,
.'
. . .
.
' .
.
I
.
"'As long "" yo~ did it for one ef· these, the least of my _.thren. yow did it for me.'" Matt. 25:.40
RT. REV. MSGR. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE
THE SOCIETY FOR THE· PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH
368 NORTH MAfN STREET, FALL RIVER, MASS. 02720 This Message Is Sponsored"B, TIte Following Individuals Gnd, Business Concerns III Greater Fall River: Ann Dale Products, Inc. Brady Eledric Supply Co. Cascade Drug Co. . Gold· Medal Bread Globe Manufaduring Co. Hutchinson Oil eo.
R. "A. McWhirr Compony International Ladies Garment Workers' Union .' "MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Mason Furniture Showrooms Gerald Ee. McNally,-, Contractor
Sobiloff Brothers Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of America. AFL·CIO Yellow Cab Company
,
,
-....
16
me ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Oct. 21,1965
Asserts Marijuana S'moker Poor Pt:ospect as Husband
ANNIVIISARY
By John J. Kane, Ph.D. " "I am 18, my boy friend is 20. He comes from a poor family and has lived in a bad neighborhood. I met him at a dance and I have been going with him about six months and I believe I really love him. But I am worried abOut one point. He occasionally man as he presently is. smokes marij uana. So do thisFew Permanently Cured others in the crowd with Furthermore, eventually he which he assoGiates. He has will be apprehended by the po-. asked me to do .so, but I refused. Last week he told me that he had joy popped. -r I don't know what this means. I s marijuana dangerous? Should I break off going with him, or is - it possible through our mutualloye he can over come this hab-
'-> it?" Perhaps you will reject this advice outright, Margaret, because it will be very difficult to accept and carry out. The kindest thirig you can do is to inform your friend's parents of what he is doing. I presume they do not know. The second thing is to tell him unless he seeks professional drugs, you will immediately break off the relationship. Just in case you think the matter is less serious than I make it, let me say a few things about the use of marijuana and joy popping. Presents Dangers _ Strictly speaking marijvana is not an addictive drug. It comes from Indian hemp, which incidentally grows wild in most 'parts. of the United States. The strength of it varies considerably and the American' variety is less strong than that found in the Near East. But marijuana itself presents certain dangers. If an individual really knows how to smoke ,it, and I assume your boy friend does, the result is a disturbance in his spatial relationships. A room seems larger. than it is, steps seem higher than they are, and a person under the influence of marijuana driving a car is just as dangerous, perhaps more so, than a drunk driver. The really great danger in marijuana-and your boy friend has already moved into it-is that persons do not stop with marijuana, but go on to the use of morphine or heroin. The joy popping to which' he refers is the injection of a narcotic, or a mixture of a ,narcotic and a stimulating drug, under the skin. As this continues, and I am afraid it is likely to do so, he will not get enough "kick" out of joy pops and will move to mainlining. Increase Dosage Mainlining is the injection of the drug directly into the vein. The effects is practicaliy instan taneous. As time goes on, he will increase the dosage more and more, not to get kicks, but to keep from feeling miserable as the effect of the drug with, draws. In other words, your boy friend is along the road to be coming a true narcotic addict. The cost of this habit is tremen dous, and very many begin to .commit petty thefts and ulti mately larger thefts in order to purchase the drug. To think of marrying such a person is utterly absurd. He will find it impossible to obtain, or if he obtains one, to retain a decent position. He will work sporadically or not at all, and you as his wife will be support ing him and his expensive habit. You are asking for a life of complete misery if you marry
lice. Depending on the city in which you live, it is likely that he will be sent away for a CUl;e, but unfortunately, very few are permanently cured. Some are. What happens if you have children, and your husband is in prison? There isa matter of family disgrace, the terrible economic burden that you and the children will have to bear, and the stigma that is attached to narcotic addiction.
I have no doubt that if you discuss the matter seriously with him and threaten to break off your going together, he will probably promise to reform. Practically all addicts at some time or other in their lives make a firm resolve to peform. They promise to kick the habit. They may do so for a time, but almost invariably they re turn to it. Perhaps the best thing you could do, aside from what I have already said is to break this relationship off as quickly, but as quietly as possible. Already Hooked It would be very interesting to know just why he took up narcotics. I suspect in his case, that it began as a mater of asso ciation, of doing something with. the gang for the sake of kicks. This is how many start, but eventually they become hooked. I frankly believe that your boy friend is already hooked. By be ing hooked I simply mean that right now he is, practically speaking, an addict. But since he has only recently began joy popping, there is more hope than in cases in which this has been going on for a long period of time. Drug ad- diction is something like alco holism in that for a brief period of time it puts the person into another world where he feels happy and secure . But the phase is short lived. So in his treatment, he not only must learn how to give uP' nar cotics entirely, but he must also have his personality reshaped. This is no simple matter.. It takes a long period of time. Proof of Intentions If he is really sincere about kicking the habit after you talk to him, make sure he proves it and proves it over a long period of time. The best proof of sin cere iritentions would be to have himself hospitalized for treat ment. This is why I think telling his parents may prove helpful. Perhaps they will see that he is admitted for treatment. Drug addiction is a serious problem and it does occur among some young people although probably not to the extent that the Sunday supplement would lead you to believe. Actually the Federal Bureau of Narcotics claims that there are only around 50,000 addicts in the en tire country. However, this re fers to known addicts, and no one is certain of how many aci dicts go undetected. Right· now he is a miserable' prospect as a future husband. And I am hoping to be honest and tell you I do not hold out a great deal of hope for him. But if you want to make the greatest mistake you can pos sibly make, you will do so in marrying him before he' has proved over 'a year or two that he really has given up narcotics,
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SUMMER SOUVENIRS: Their most rewarding Summer was ex perienced by these three Sisters from the Fall River Diocese as they aided child enrichment programs in New York City and Washington, D.C. Left, Sister Magdalena Maria, S.U.S.C. and Sister Marlon Joseph, S.U.S.C.,
Liturgy Continued from Page One of parishes and religious com munities, as' was done before the rite for concelebration of the Mass was given general approval. Elimination One proposal, for instance, is for elimination of tl:ie initial prayers at the foot of the altar, which were shortened by the liturgy commission a year ago. With the omission of the Con fiteor and other prayers, Mass would start with the entran~ chant, and the celebrant after bowing before the altar and kissing it would take his seat to preside over the worshiping community. As for the Scripture readings, in keeping with the constitution the texts of the Sunday lessons and Gospels would be spread out over a period of years, instead of having the regular annual eycle. Some texts now in use could be eliminated entirely for instance the genealogies, which no longer convey the meaning they once did. Simplification The basic -structure of the Mass would remain. But certain elements, such as the prayer over the offerings of bread and wine, could be simplified along with the whole of the Offertory rite. The principle here is that the prayers of the Offertory llhould neither anticipate nor duplicate those of the Canon. This might mean doing without the Orate, fratres. The number of genuflections and signs of the eross, already greatly reduced, would be cut still more. That such changes are entire ly feasible within the overall basic framework of the euchar illtic celebration can already be eeen in the rite of concelebra tion, in which the main part of the rite is said by all the cele brants aloud together, while the secondary parts are divided up. As ~ result, the rites that are essential become richer and more meaningful. Within Canon Within the Canon itself, an obvious area fOJ; change is in the Dames of the saints who are mentioned. Some do not - have ani..ersal significance, and it would seem better to concentrate on those appealing 10 the Chris tians of ioday.
..strum guitar and recall housing project hootenannies. Right, Mother St. Suzanne, R.J;M., shows snapshots of Summer pupils to her Winter stu dents at Notre Dame School, Fall River. From left, Kenneth Forand, Do~ aId Deschene, Patricia Levesque.
Holy Union, Jesus-Mary Nuns Say They Got More Than They Gave to Needy Tots" "Every morning we went along the streets like Pied Pipers, collecting chil<\ren. At night we had hootenannies in housing project playgrounds." That's howSist;er Marion Joseph and Sister Magdalena Marie of the Holy Union of the .Sacred Hearts spent their Summer, as they worked with Negro and Puerto Rican children in New York City. Mean while Mother St. Suzanne, The Fall River religious was R.J.M. was enjoying "the charges, said Sister Marion ~o richest experience of my life" sepb. "The mothers helped us a assigned to teach reading to she said, adding that she three groups of children, 11> per in Washington, D.C. as she lot," thought this was an example of group. They were first, third
participated in Project SEEK how prejudice melts with direct with the District of Columbia contact. tots. Parades and numerous field The three Sisters from the Fall trips were on the Summer agen River Diocese were among hun . da, said the Sisters and they bad dreds" in all parts of the United numerous opportunities to visit States taking part in various en homes of children. "One family richment projects for under had 11 children, and lived in privileged children. " two rooms," said Sister Magda " "They told us, You'll get more lena Maria, "and they kept ehickeri"S on their fire escape, that you give,' " said Sister Mag dalena Maria. "I thought it was too!" In proof, she displayed a snapshot of herself with the just a platitude, but it was really true. 1 was enthralled with family, surrounded by children and"chickens. the work." The Sisters made their biggest Mornings in Park hit with their evening booten Sister Marion Joseph, fifth annies, they said. Sister Magda grade teacher at st. Michael's lena Maria handled a guitar, School, Fall River, and Sister while Sister Marion Josepb Magdalena Maria, who instructs strummed a ukelele. "We really a lucky first grade at St. Mary's wore out 'Michael, Row the School, Taunton, were attached Boat Ashore,' " they laughed. to "Summer in the City," an en In Washington richment project sponsored in, Mother St. Suzanne, wbo 40 city centers by the Archdio cese of New York in cooperation teaches sixth and seventh with the anti-poverty program graders at Notre Dame School, Fall River, had never worked of the federal government. with Negro children before this The Diocesan Sisters' head Summer in Washingtan, "but 1 quarters was St. Francis de Sales, a Holy Union School on was very anxious to do so, so I East 87th Street in New York was chosen to go." The SEEK program, sponsored City. There teenagers were of fered math and English classes by the Washington Archdiocese in the mornings, but most of the with the federal government, Sisters"activities took place "out concentrated more on school of doors on the city streets where work than did the New York they could be accessible to all project, explained Mother St. Suzanne. and involve the greatest num The initials stand for Social ber.~ Educational Enrichment Centers. "It helped us with the Puerto Centers? If you can have a Rican children that we were Kute Kiddies' Kamp, said some Sisters," said Sister Marion Jo one defensively, why can't you seph. "They had confidence in have a Kenter? So the Archdio us." The Sisters, af~er collecting cese did.' Whimsy ceased with their Pied Piper troupes each the name, however. In six weeks, morning, took them to Central said Mother St. Suzanne; the Park. project accomplished near-mir Mothers Helped acles with youngsters aged 5 to Affluent Fifth Avenue mothera 12 in need of a friendly 'pusb and children used the park areas with school work. wbere the Sisters took their Varied Program
and fourth ~raders, she said, and she had them for 40 minute periods. After reading, they had classes in art, dancing, science and physical education. Mother St. Suzanne had done no reading on civil rights or the particular needs of Negro chil dren before going to Washing ton, she said, with the exception of reading "Black Like Me," by John Howard Griffin, whom she also heard speak last Winter at Mt. St. Mary Academy in Fall River. Will Mother St. Suzanne re turn to Washington next Sum mer, when SEEK will be in its third year? She certainly hopes so, noting, however, that supe riors. have to make real sacri fices in sending Sisters to work with such programs. "Usually we study during the Summer," she explained, "and complete re quirements for advanced de grees."
Long Range View "What's the long range view of projects such as Summer in the City and SEEK? Possibly it was best summed up by one of the Holy Union Sisters in New York, who wrote: "I think that we have to keep renewing the spirit within us and purifying our inteRtion. There are those who are sceptical about the fruitful outcome of this whole program and who are continual ly throwing cold water on it. Th"is, perhaps, 'is due to the fact that we as Americans are prone to look for quick results in whatever we do. The success of this program isn't going to be measured at the end of six weeks. This is only a beginning. The Church is just beginning to get involved and it may take years before we see any tangible resulia;"
Owes New Job To Pope John MILWAUKEE (NC)-The new vice-president for academic af fairs at Marquette University Ja convinced that if Pope John XXIn had not' been concerned about the layman in the Church, he would not be in his new job. ··It's a manifestation of what Pope John felt and the trend he began," explained Dr. Arthur C. Moeller in ari interview. "But there is no reason to believe this is an isolated situation and that it won"'t be duplicated some where else." The 46-year-old former dean of the college of engineering is the first layman to hold the sec- . ond highest administrative post in the 84-year history of the uni versity. He succeeder' Father John P. Raynor, S.J., who re cently became president of the· university. Dr. Moeller believes the na ture of the job is such that whether it is held 1)y a layman or a Jesuit does not make much difference.
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18
THE ANCHOR
Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
The Parish Parade HOLY CROSS, FALL RIVER
CYO officers include Thad deus Makuch, president; Steven Sliva, vice-president; Bet t y Czerwonka, treasurer; Joy c e Stec, secretary. ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER
The Women's Guild has sched 1Iled its membership tea for Z Sunday afternoon, Oct. 24 in the parish halL A turkey whist is set for Saturday, Nov. 13. New CYO officers are Michael Medeiros, president; Donna Ca tabia, vice-president; Michael Souza, treasurer; Joan Vieira, secretary. ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER
A turkey whist is planned for ,''' Tuesday night, Nov. 16 by the Women's Guild. .
Prel~te
House GOP Members
Favor Food Study
WASHINGTON (NC)-Warn
ing of a crisis of "epic propor
tions," a' Republican group in
the House of Representatives
has urged Congress to create
a commission to study the prob
lems of feeding the world's
growing population. .
A statement issued by the Re publican agriculture "task force" says that "only recently has the population problem begun to receive the greater public at _tention it so urgently requires '" '" '" Unfoit~nate)y much of this attention remains entirely super ficial in character, limiting it self to loud announcements that there is a problem, and that 'we ought to do something about it." . The proposed com m iss ion would evaluate present and fu ture food needs of the United States and' the world and' reco mmend ways in which U.S. agri culture could help meet them.
Sets .Up .
Special Committe
WOMEN AUDITORS AT COUNCIL: Leo Cardinal Suenens of Belgium, right, stops for a chat with three women auditors at the Ecumenical Council in Rome. They are, left to right: Margarita Moyano Llerena, president, World Fed eration of Young Women and Girls; Maria Pilar Bellosillo, president, World Association of Catholic Women's Unions and Gertrud Ehrle, president, German Catholic Wo~n's Union. NC Photo. ,
TUCSON (NC)-Brshop Fraft cis J. Green of Tucson has estab lished a diocesan committee aimed at using the Church's as sets for community improve. ment. The committee will stimulate involvement of lay Catholics, recommend and coordinate dioc . esan action, and provide consul tation and advice to Church agencies in this Arizona diocese. Named to the 15-man commit tee were officers and represen tatives of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Men, the Catholic Youth Organization, Catholic Charities, the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, the St. Vin cent de Paul Society, and the Home and School Association.
World Congress NEW YORK (NC) The eighth World Congress of the Catholic press will be held July 1-6, 1968, in West Berlin.
ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN
Parishioners 'will sponsor II holiday style show at 7 Monday night, Nov. 8 in the church' hall, Spdng .and Adams Streets. Co . chairmen are Mrs. Harry t.. Young and Mrs. Clement Medei
ros. VISITATION GUILD, NORTH EASTHAM
Guild officers are Mrs. Arthur Cestaro, president; Mrs. Edmond Hebert, vice-president; Mrs. Ar mand Lajoie, secretary; Mrs. Basil McDonald, treasurer. A meeting will be held tonight at the. home of Mrs. Hebert, Red berry Lane, Eastham, and a 'work meeting is scheduled for 7· Tues day night, Oct. 26 at the home of Mrs. John F. Comiors, Camp Ground Road. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT
Women's Guild members will leave from the church parking lot at 6:45 tonight to attend a living rosary service at Our Lady of Flltima Church, Swan sea, .sponsored by the District Council of Catholic Women. Hairstyling and beauty tips will be discussed at a business meeting Monday, Oct. 25 by Mr. Louis Sanft. Guests are invited. A whist will be held at 8 Sat urday night, Nov. 6 in the school hall, SACRED HEART, NORTH ATTLEBORO
The Home and School Asso ciation will sponsor two contests in the parochial school, one for sixth and seventh grade history students and one for eighth ~aders, on the effect of the re
newed liturgy.
OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL 'RIVER Pi; Halloween dance will be
held from 8 to 12 Saturday night, Oct. 23, under sponsorship of the Council of Catholic Women. Prizes will be awarded for cos tumes and refreshments will be . served. Mrs. Dorothea Almeida,
general chairman, announces
that tickets will be on sale at the
door.
Holy Rosary Sodality is hav ing a cake sale following all Masses Sunday, Oct. 24, in the east" side vestry. Donations may be brought on Saturday after· noon. In charge of arrangements is Mrs. Mary Braga. A' planning meeting for the annual mystery ride, scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 6, will be held Sunday, Oct. 24,
u. S. D. A.
Choice
Grade Only
7" Cut - 3rd Thru 7th Rib First National's Famous Ribs of Beef
Sirloin Tip Roast
2
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A cake sale, sponsored by the Women's Guild will follow all Masses, from 8 o'clock on, Sun:- . day, Oct. 24. Donations may be left at the parish school from Z to 4 Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Prices effective in Fall River and Somerset Lucille Witkowski is chairman.
96- ,
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil Ri.,...--Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
Tri-County Loop Grid Title Is on. Line Next· Saturday By Fred Bartek
Saturday is the half-way mark ~n schoolboy footb~ schedules and everything points to a very rugged day In both the Tri-County and Bristol County I Leagues. The key game of tb~ jay will bE' Lawrence High of Falmouth at Old Rochester. In all prob Ames 'of North Easton and Can ability, this game will decide ton. They are at Milford Satur the Tri-County champion day• . Oliver' Ames plays host to ship. Bourne High, defend ing Tri-County champion, has Taunton in a non-:-league encoun all but been eliminated from ter. The North Easton Tigers The . are presently 2-1-1 while the te t i con n on. Taunton club is 1-2-1. Canalmen have The top independent game of been defeated the week will be New Bedford by Old Roches at Revere. The Crimson have ter t: n: t:a~ won three straight after losing mou , 0 their opener. They came up who m s p 0 r t with their biggest upset in sev spotless records eral years with a 7-6 nod over at 4-0. Coach d Weymouth last weeken. . . Frank AIm eida has been at Old In ,other Tri-County games Rochester since ,Wareham is at Barnstable and the s c h 0 01 Dighton-Rehoboth at Somers~t. opened. It a p - ' ~ Barnstable last ~ee~ e~ened Its pears that his hard work is now record at 2-2 by upending Dart going to payoff. mouth, 18-0. Wareham is 3-1, Eyes on Cape having lost only to unde~eated The Bulldogs. have the sman Falmouth. The Dighton-Reho est enrollment in the league but both Falcons balanced their sea they have the best quarterb~ck lIOn mark at 2-2 by' downing in Don Dorr who has ability plus ~e of Swansea last Saturday: valuable experience. Dorr led (20-6). Somerset lost to Fal his team to victory by scoring mouth last week-end making its the winning TD over Bourne last record 1-3. week. Sparians Bounce Back Falmouth kept its winning. Dennis-Yarmouth at Bourne streak going by topping Somer and Case at Dartmouth are non set, 22-6 last week. The Clippers . league games on tap for Satur met frustration last season lo§ing day. Both Dennis-Yarmouth and the crown by only one game and Bourne were on the losing end they don't relish the thought of last week. Bourne is' 2-2 while that happening .again. This is D-¥ has yet to win. The Dart the big one and anything ean mouth Indians are still looking happen. ." for their first victory. Case has . Sewelers Move Up an identical 0-3 record, too. Jumping over to 'the Bristol Rounding out Bristol County County League, two games shape league play. New Bedford Voca up .. the "important ones." At tional will be at Stang tomor tleboro will be at Coyle in Taun row. The game is an away game ton and Durfee of Fall River at for the Artisans, but they will Bishop Feehan in Attleboro. At be playing on their home tleboro and Bishop Feehan each grounds (Sargent Field) since have chalked up two wins in Stang does not have a field. The county action. Durfee has three Stang Spartans _came back wins, but one loss in the league strong against Rindge Tech of ranks. Cambridge last Friday, 26-0, The first place position seems after having their 16-game win to be 811 slippery 811 a greased streak boken the week before. watermelon, but looking to Sat The Spartans are currently 3-1 urday'. contest it appears that while Vocational is 1-2. The Ar Attleboro (3-1) may be closer tisans lost to Attleboro 24-:14 to the driver's seat than anyone last week. else. Gain initial Win Durfee has looked good sinee North Atti~boro is at I'air It was demolished b)" Attleboro haven. The North Rocketeers three weeks ago. The Hllltoppers WOD their first game lut Satur sb8llhed Stang's winning streak day by taking Coyle 20-6 and hfo weeks ago and. then crushed DOW are 1-1-2.. Fairhaven also Taunton 26-0 last week. Feehan, earne up with its, first victory OIl the other hand, eaused a little last week, but the Blue Devil stir in the early season with willa win was of the spectacular kind over Coyle and Tauntc>n. But last beating previousq undefeated week the Shamrocks wen Peehan Hlgh. downed by • previously wlnIe. Fairhaven eleven, 13-6. Mansfield Oat Front Manafield High h811 gone to the top in the Hockomoek League. The Hornets, have suprised WASHINGTON (NC)-Catho everybody ~th victories over. lie University of America, which the two top league teams, Ollvel' dropped varsity football In 1951, will return to a one-game inter C~rmelite eolleglate eeason Nov. 13 against st. Peter'. College of Seney City. BARRINGTON (NC)-Father William T. Daley, chairman Bonaventure J. Gilmore, O. of the university'. Nov. 12-13 Carm., has been named the first homecoming week end, said superintendent ; of schools for llmlted intercollgeiate eompeti the Carmelite Order. tion of the 80rt envisioned by He will oversee the education Catholic University and already al work of' the Carmelites in practiced by IIOme other schools high schools In Arizona, Cali represents "a new level of com fornia, DllnOi8, Kentucky, New petition that may well turn. the Jersey, Texas, 1.1ma, Peru, and eollege tide .back to football, Santiago, Chile. H1I' headquar but OIl a healthier basis" than ters will be .at the, Carmelite before. Provincial House here in Dllnols. Daley W8II a eenter GIl tbe Father Bonaventure h811 been Catholie University vanity foot .ervin« .. principal of Sal baH teams 01. 1M., and 1948. Be pointe Hip Sc:bool ill TUCICIII, . . DOW director 01. the 1Inlver AriaoGa. . , . SpeecIa .... BeariDl QlDie.
One Contest Season For CU Gridders
Schools Have New Head
19
Bill Asaclc 01 Raynham:
Huskies· ,Defensive 'StalW'art
Car~r
Northeastern Junior Eyes Business By Phil Perreira "B~g Bill" Asack, the 265 pound tackle for Northeas tern University, scampers around the girders of a
building now beginning to rise over Tremont Street, opposite the Common in downtown Bos ton all week, with the Mohawk Indians, who are his fellow iron workers and then on Saturday takes to the field as a Huskie defensive. stalwart. Does he sound like a ringer or someone who gets paid to play ,football when he really isn't a member of the team? He might, but he isn't. Coyle Alumnus William L. (Billy) Asack, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis· G. Asack of 464 Pleasant St., Rayn ham; doen't get paid to play football, nor .is ,he on a football scholarship, he just plays for the love of the game and his un usual occupation is accounted for because he is enrolled in Northeastern's co-op program whereby students alternate per iods of study with work stints for the five years necessary to get a degree. In . the case' of the 'six-foot five':inch . junior, who earned All Bristol County honors as a tackle in 1962 in his last year .at . Coyle High School under Coach Jim Burns, this program means attending classes for ap proximately 10 weeks and then working for the same period of time as an iron worker toti'ng steel girders on lofty construc tion projects. This ties into Billy's plans because he is'sWdy ing business at Northeastern with an eye towards entering business for himself, possibly hi the conStruction field. Louis G. Asack Sr., father GIl the 19-year-older is' in the con structi.on .business himself and is currently general superinten dent of a Rhode Island construc tion firm. The elder Asack at 235 pounda is- no dwarf 'himself and neither are Billy's two older brothers. Robert, 25, and 240 pounds and 24-year-old Louis· Jr., who weighs In at the 260 pound mark. Both are no strangers for to the football field. Both played tackle for C0 lumbia University OIl footheD IICholarships with Robert gradu ating: from there in' 1962 and his· brother the followinlJ·year. The,. were competitors for the taekJe position during their time there together and received Ilaticmal aeelalm as wrestlers while lead 1Il« Columbia to its fim 1",-. League championship in that aport. In their respective .mor years-they eaptured fourth plaee III the NCAA wrestling cham piODShlps•.
BILL ASACK wrestler than hi. two eldest boys, but, unfortunately, North eastern does not hl,lve a wrest ling team. It might- be juSt. 811 wen; he thought, because he in sists that his boys put the em phasis In school where it belongs -on the books. Upon his father's insistence, Billy did not compete -for the Huskies last year because his father wanted him to devote all his time to his studies. The ma neuver paid off and BIt much 8tl Coach Joe Zabilskl hates to lose • player like .young Asack, he likes to have his players rank
'
wen up In their clan as BI""
did ,last year.
The Asacks BJ:'e m~mbers 01.
st. Anne's· parish In RaYnham.
Billy lives at home and' com- .
mutes to school In Boston.
There. are two' Asacks who are younger· than Billy,· Denni. 13; an eighth-grader in Raynham and Donna, 18, who goes to the Chandler School' in Boston. Northeastern is again having a fairly succesful season with the pigskin and in large measure surely some of that credit must «0 to "Big Bill" Asack-s'tudent -ironwork~r- football playa.
Buy the best • ,Buy Gulf Hill Milk .GuaranI." Locally freslt
GULF HILL DAIRY s.ning Room Moun
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to 10 p.... WY 8-5691
South Dartmouth, Mass.
Marks Come PInt The father GIl the braWD7 A8acks voiced the opinion that "Big Bill" could be a better
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Jlft! ANt:ffOR-Dioce~eof; fol1
I
River-Thurs., Oct. 21, 1965
New Bedford Nativ.e at Work
Franciscan Brother:
•
In
For East -Missions
I
..
Laboring In Vineyard lor God 'there are scores and scores of men and women from the Diocese of Fall River working in all four corners of the world to spread the Word of God. These Fishers for God belong to many orders and religious com munities. They have btit one de termination - to bring the Word of God to all that they meet in 'order\to build upon the Rock of Peter. They have given up aU the material things of life. They are' in the tropics, in Africa, in- Asia and in So. America. They are specialized in many fields as they tend to the sick, the, diseased, the infirm, the lepers and the blind. Bro. Albert Kaszynski, O.F.M.,· Conv., native of New Bedford, ex emplifies the typical missionary. ' This diocesan man, who landed at
Normandy in France with the U.S. Army Artillery on D-Day,' now spe!1ds his life working with and, teaching the poor and lepers at their colony in Kagoslima, Japan. His affectiol} for children is ob vious in the picture layout. The Franciscan Brother has two blood sisters who are members of the Bernardine Sisters. One is in South, Dakota and the other in 'Washington, D.C. His parents are deceased. The diocesan faithful will be afforded an opportunity' to support the work of these Laborers for God on Sunday next which is Mission Sunday. Remember these men and women when you go 'to Mass next Sunday. These holy workers need funds to continue their labors. You can assure their continued diligence in their e£f~c.
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